___    _   _                 _                     _        _    _      _     
 / _ \  | | | |               | |                   | |      | |  | |    | |    
/ /_\ \ | |_| | __ _ _ __   __| |_ __ ___   __ _  __| | ___  | |  | | ___| |__  
|  _  | |  _  |/ _` | '_ \ / _` | '_ ` _ \ / _` |/ _` |/ _ \ | |/\| |/ _ \ '_ \ 
| | | | | | | | (_| | | | | (_| | | | | | | (_| | (_| |  __/ \  /\  /  __/ |_) |
\_| |_/ \_| |_/\__,_|_| |_|\__,_|_| |_| |_|\__,_|\__,_|\___|  \/  \/ \___|_.__/ 

J.R. Carpenter

                                   
                    -        
               %@@@%@+@                        
              @@@=-*=@@#                             The term 'handmade'
             %@%#:-+%%#@%                       usually refers to objects made
           ++@%@%*:*%%%%@#                  by hand or by using simple tools rather
             @@%%-+@#+**#*                 than machines. The result may be homely — 
             @@#*-@#+=@@@#              as in a child's clay ashtray — or exquisite — as in
             *@%#*:*#@@@%              a pair of bespoke brogues.I evoke the term 'handmade
              @%@+**=+*@@%            web' to refer to web pages coded by hand rather than by
              %@#+*++==*@@            software; web pages made and maintained by individuals
               %@@@==-=+@@              rather than by businesses or corporations; web pages 
                %@@:-==%@@%               which are provisional, temporary, or one-of-a-
                %%%-==*+@@@                 kind; web pages which challenge conventions 
              *  @%*=*++*@@                   of reading, writing, design, ownership,
              ++*@@==**=%@@                      privacy, security, or Identity.
                 *@%-+=*+@@                                     \
                  **+--=*@@#                                     \
                  +#*+-=#@@@                                    Handmade web pages flourished in the 
                  ##+%@@@@@%                                 mid-to-late-1990s,	in the brief period after 
                   #*+*#=#@#                               the academic web and before the  corporate web. 
                  +%%+#*--%@                              ‘Handmade’ is by  no means the only or best term to 
                  #+=*-=#%@%                             define the web of this period. In her essay, A Vernacular
               *%**+=*#**@@                             Web (2005), Olia Lialina describes the web of the mid-1990s 
                *%:*-=*==@@                            as: bright, rich, personal, slow and under construction. It was 
                %#-+-+*#*@%                            a web of sudden connections and personal links. Pages were built  
                #+=#****@@%                            on the edge of tomorrow, full of hope for a faster connection and  
              *+#*+****%@@                             a more powerful computer... it was a web of amateurs soon to be  
                %#+%*++@@@                              washed away by dot.com designed by usability experts. For more
               -@*%%--%@@*                                information on Olia Lialina and Dragan Espenschied's excellent
               %%#@=+#%@%                                    research on the amateur web, see: One Terabyte of
               @#@#*+@@@                                       Kilobyte Age: Digging through the Geocities
              +%@%-*@%@%                                          Torrent. I evoke the term 'handmade web'
              #%@**%@@=                                               in order to make a and handmade
              %@#*@@@+                                                  materials, such as zines 
             +%@##@@@                                                     and artists books.\
             %@**#%@#%                                                                       \
            =@#%#@@#+#**@*                                                                    \
           ##%%*#@@  =                                                                         \                                    I made my first 
       # ##=#@#-*@@# #                                                                          \                             web-based work in 1995.The 
       #*#+#@%*=*@@@+@                                                                           \                       impetus for Fishes & Flying Things 
       +*@@@@%=-+@@@+                                                                             \                     came from the material practices of fine 
      #@@#=@##===#@@+                                                                              \                  art and book-making.The text evolved from an
     @@@  .@@%#@@@@@@                                                                               \               installation art exhibition I had on at the time. 
           @@@@@@@+@@                                                                                \             From this text, I created a small book-work which was 
           #@@#@+%=@@                                                                                 \          meant to tell a circular story but when people got to the
           @@#@@@@=@*                                                                                  \        end they stopped reading because that’s the way books work.
           @@ @@%@.                                                                                     \____  In the web version, the last page linked to the first; the
              %#                                                                                             story circled round and round. Of the installation, no physi
              |               		                                                                          -cal evidence remains.Of the book-work, only one copy. The Quark
              |                                                                                              Express file is stored on a 44 MB SyQuest cartridge which I still 
                |                                                       +  +                                  own, but the contents of which I can no longer access.The handmade
                |                                                     +      +                               website, on the other hand, is still online and it still works.The 
                  |                                                 +          +                               handmade web emerged at a time when print and digital enjoyed a
                  |                                               +              +                                more symbiotic relationship. This is evident in the early out
                    |                                           +                  +                               put of the trace Online Writing Centre founded at Notting
                    |                                         +                      +                              -ham Trent University in 1995.Over the next decade,
                  |                                         +                          +                               trAce evolved into one of the most influential
                  |                                       +                              +                               online writing communities in the world.trAce’s
                |                                       +                                  +                              first output was a word-processed photocopied 
                |                                     +                                      +                             booklet which contained links to distribu
              |                                     +                                          +                             ting journals and zines. Fittingly,
              |                                   +                                              +                              trAce’s last output was also
            |                                   +                                                  +                            a print booklet, in which
            |                                 +                                                      +                                  it is stated:
          |                                 +                                                          +
          |                               +                                                              +
                                         +                                                                +
                                        +                                                                    +
       |                                   +                                                               +                                   
       |                                      +                                                        +                                                    The trAce community
        |                                        +                                                +                                                  embraced both camps, and some early
          |    -.                                      +                                    +                                                      chatlogs contain lively discussions about
           @%.@#-@                                           +                      +                                                        the use of mixed media in writing… The creative hypertexts
           @@.@%-@-#:                                                +        +                                                                and hypermedia in the trAce Archive can easily be compared
           +@=#@-%-@=                                                                                                                               to the multifarious pages of an artist’s book. (PDF 
           %@@@@@@:@-                                                        One of the                                                            /     trAces: A Commemoration of Ten Years of 
     @@+   @@@#@@@@@-                                                      many interesting                                                       /             Artistic Innovation at trAce,
      +@@:-@##==-%@@.                                                   things many interesting                                                  /                        page 14)
       -*@@@@@=-+@@@.                                               things about the online archive                                             /
       .:+=%@@*=*@@@..                                            of the trAce Online Writing Centre                                           /
       . -#.*@#=*@@- -                                          is how much it reflects the context of                                        /
           =*%%#%@@                                          the creation and dissemination of its contents.                                 /
            .@*%#@@=:%*-                                  Whereas archives held in museums or libraries generally                           /
             *@+*#@@--                                 contain artifacts created elsewhere — manuscripts illuminated                       /
             :@@##%@-                               in a monastery, for example, or photographs developed in a  darkroom                  /
              *@%#@@@.                           to exist in the medium within which they were created. That said, the frames  __________/
              -%@+##@@.                        through which we view them continue to change. In "Media Archaeology:Method and
              .%@@:*@#@.                        Machine versus History and Narrative of Media" (2011) Wolfgang Ernst observes:
               *#@**+@@%                        "If a radio from a museum collection is reactivated to play broadcast channels
               -%#@==#@@:                           of the present, it changes its status: it is not a historical object
                @*%%--%@@                           presence." Similarly, when viewing old web pages in modern browsers
                %%*%#++@@+                             we are confronted with a temporal paradox. Layer upon layer
              ::*#+##**%@@                                of dated web-design aesthetics overlap and peel like
                =*=#**+*@@:                               wallpaper, revealing earlier versions beneath. Pages  \
                -#-+:+**#@#                                 optimised for lower resolutions now take less than   \
                .#:#:-#==@@                                   a third of the screen. Ghosts of browsers past      \
               .+=#+:=%#*@@                                     mingle with occasional page errors, dead           \
                  #+:*:=##@-                                        automatically. Warnings abound,                 \
                  .##=#*-:@#                                          issued from earlier eras,                      \                                       For example, M.D. Coverley’s 
                   #*=+#=%@-                                            addressed to readers                          \                          The Personalization of Complexity(2001) "explores the 
                  :%*%@@@@@-                                              who are not us.                              \ __________       ways  in which each of our personal computers have become idiosyncratic,
                  =%#=:=%@@-                                                                                                       individualized entities, only sometimes manageable by the owners." Fittingly,the piece
                  +*+:-=#@@:                                                                                                  itself warns that it is viewable only on Level 4 and 5 Microsoft Internet Explorer and Level 4
                 .@%:+-*+@@                                                                                                Netscape. Netscape 6 will not support many of the features in this essay. There are not artefacts
              .  *@*:=-+*@@                                                                                            of a dead web but rather, signposts on a map of a living web pointing to a web as it once was, a web in prog
                =@@::-+%@@.                                                                                         -ress, a web in the making. I evoke the term 'handmade web' in order to advocate for an ongoing active engagement
                ...%@--++=@@-                                                                                       with the making of web pages and of web policies. In The Web We Lost (2012), Anil Dash writes: "In the early  days 
                  :%%-=-+*@@-                                                                                       of the social web, there was a broad expectation that regular people might own their own identities  by having their 
               .@@#=-:++@@                                                                                           own websites, instead of being dependent on a few big sites to host their online identity." In February 2015 the 
              %%@-#*-+#@@-                                                                                            online journal QUARTZ published an article with the provocative headline: Millions  of Facebook users have no 
              -@%+*+-==#@@                                                                                             idea they’re using the internet. As the article states:"This is more than a matter of semantics. The expect
             :@@#*.*%@@@=                                                                                                ations and behaviors of the next billion people to come online will have profound effects on how the int
             *@#*-@%+=@@@+                                                                                                 - ernet evolves."In October 2014 the online journal GIZMODO published an article  heralding The Great 
             %@@+.+@%*#*#=                                                                                                    Web 1.0 Revival. Its author Kyle Chayka observed: The booming size of today's mainstream social 
             -@%* :+%@%@+                                                                                                       networks and the constant level of noise we have to deal with has inspired a sudden return to
           :.%@@*.:*%@%@@-                                                                                                         a time  when the internet was quieter, safer, and more intimate… We're nostalgic for the 
               .%@@@@+*                                                                                                         /     close-knit, DIY nature of the early web, where everything was smaller...The DIY 
               =@@-:*=@@+                                                                                                      /          aesthetics and practices of the mid-1990 , which hosts a small community of
                                                                                                                              /             users on a single unix computer. For some, TILDE.CLUB serves as a  platform 
                                                                                                                             /                    for revisiting amateur web aesthetics in a contemporary context.
                                                                                                                            /                        For example, on her page,  Olia Lialina invites users to view 
                                                                                                                           /                               a new net art work 640x480- a 4-tab browser installation.
                                                                                                                          /                              For many others however, TILDE.CLUB has served
                                                                                                                         /                                    as little more than a hip territory to 
                                                                                                                        /                                       occupy. Many pages remain blank.
                                                                                                                       /
                                                                                                                      /
                                                                                                                     /
                                                                                                                    /
                                                                                                                   /
                                                                                                                        
                                                                          In other corners of the internet, Web 1.0 aesthetics have never
                                                               disappeared. My own website, including this page, which uses fixed-width table
                                                         cells, is based on a template I created in HomeSite in 1997. Web 1.0 aesthetics persist in
                                                    source code and stated objectives of the massive Ubu Web site, an "independent resource dedicated
                                                   to all strains of the avant-garde, ethnopoetics, and outsider arts." On 16 December 2014, the founder
                                                 boasted on Twitter that "the whole damn site is still hand-coded in html 1.0 in bbedit, from templates made
                                                  in 1996." I shall put off updating my website templates until out-of-date design is no longer cool. I evoke
                                                 the term 'handmade web' in order to draw attention both to the manual labour involved in the composition of web
                                                 pages, and the functioning of the web page itself as a 'manual', a 'handbook', a set of instructions required for
                                                  a computer program to run. For most of its history web pages have been read on desktop or laptop computers.
                                                  Readers have had the option of right-clicking on any page, selecting View Page Source, copying, pasting,
                                                                      and re-writing the source code. In this manner, readers become writers.
                                                                                    /
                                                                                   /
                                                                                  /
                                                                                 /
                                                                                /
                                                                               /
              In February 2015, Matthew Rothberg created a website called Unindexed which
      continuously searched Google for itself. It survived for 22 days before being indexed,
   at which point it was permanently deleted. Rothberg has since shared the source code on GitHub,
  so you too can create a website which self-destructs the moment Google indexes it. Dozens of readers
 have re-written the source code of Nick Montfort’s Taroko Gorge (2008). For many, this was their first
experience 'making' a computer-generated text. I have rewritten Taroko Gorge three times. Further to the close
relation between the handmade web and ephemeral print materials, excerpts of output and source code from the first
iteration, Gorge (2010), were published in my very small press print book GENERATION[S] (2010), which, I believe,
is now only available as a PDF. Gorge is a never-ending tract of computer-generated text spewing verse approximations,
     poetic paroxysms on food, consumption, decadence, and desire. I evoke the term 'handmade web' in order to draw
                                    attention to the physical body.
                                  |
                                  |
                                  |
                                  |
                                  |
                                  |
                                  |==============================================================       Consider the manual labour carried out by the mouse hand in Daniel Eatock's
                                                                                                    The One Mile Scroll (2008). A few entries appear at the top of the screen - Denver,
                                                                                                   The Mile High City - my grandfather’s grave, Denver - after that we scroll and scroll.
                                                                                               The hand is made to work. Through the labour of the body the virtual space of the browser window
                                                                                            is transformed into an actual, physical distance. Ironically, handheld devices have distanced us from
                                                                                          the handmade web. In *Reading Writing Interfaces: From the Digital to the Bookbound* (2014), Lori Emerson
                                                                                         argues: "The iPad works because users can’t know how it works" (15). Reading the web on an iPhone, iPad, or
                                                                                        similar device, readers do not have the option of viewing the page source. The iPad provides consumers with
                                                                                           access to materials created by others, but cannot easily be used as a tool in the handcrafting of new
                                                                                          materials. I evoke the term 'handmade web' to suggest slowness and smallness as a form of resistance.
                                                                                               In today's highly commercialised web of multinational corporations, proprietary applications,
                                                                                                   read-only devices, search algorithms, Content Management Systems, WYSIWYG editors, and
                                                                                                     digital publishers it becomes an increasingly radical act to hand-code and self-
                                                                                                     publish experimental web art and writing projects. The more proprietary,
                                                                                                        predatory, and puerile a place the web becomes, the more committed
                                                                                                               I am to using it in poetic and intransigent ways.
            
                                 
                                  

Presented at:
Slow Media, Thursday 26th March 2015, Bath Spa University, UK
TIMES AND TEMPORALITIES OF THE WEB, 1-3 december 2015, CNRS/Paris-Sorbonne/UPMC, Paris. France
Published in print in:
Uniformagazine No. 5, Axeminster, UK, January 2016