- PII
- S013216250004591-3-
- DOI
- 10.31857/S013216250004591-3
- Publication type
- Article
- Status
- Published
- Authors
- Volume/ Edition
- Volume / Issue 4
- Pages
- 109-117
- Abstract
- The purpose of the article is social study of global systematic process - softwarization, the deployment of which is beginning to have a deep impact on modern society. The research tasks of the article are to identify of contexts and sources softwarization, to study the process of penetration of software into many spheres (economic, political, scientific, cultural) of modern society and systematize models of generated at the intersection process softwarization with of the category «social»: «the software-sorted society», «the software of society», «the society-oriented software», «the software-defined society», «society 5.0». In the article, systematic essence of the global technological macrotrend of softwarization is studied from the positions of the information society, the media and the digital society. A special role in the article is assigned to softwarization interaction with other modern technological maсrotrends: digitalization, datafication, sensorization and concepts «Internet of Things», «Industry 4.0», «Smart Planet».
- Keywords
- softwarization, source of softwarization, context of softwarization, the software of society, software-sorted society, software-defined society, software-oriented society
- Date of publication
- 28.05.2019
- Number of purchasers
- 89
- Views
- 679
References
- 1. Berry D. M. (2013) Against Remediation. In: Lovink G., Rasch M. (eds), Unlike Us: Social Media Monopolies and Their Alternatives. Amsterdam: Institute for Network Cultures.
- 2. Frabetti F. (2010) Have the Humanities Always Been Digital?: For an Understanding of the «Digital Humanities» in the Context of «Originary Technicity». In: Conference «The Computational Turn». Swansea: Swansea University.
- 3. Greenfield A. (2006) Everyware: the dawning age of ubiquitous computing. Berkeley, California: New Riders Publishing.
- 4. van Dijck J. (2014) Datafication, dataism and dataveillance: Big Data between scientific paradigm and ideology. Washington Historical Quarterly. No. 2 (12): 197-208.
- 5. Kitchin R. (2011) The programmable city. In: Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design. Vol. 38. No. 6: 945-951.
- 6. Manovich L. (2013) Software Takes Command (International Texts in Critical Media Aesthetics). London: Bloomsbury Academic.
- 7. Meisel W. (2013) The software society – cultural and economic impact. Bloomington, IN: Trafford Publishing.
- 8. Tercek R. (2015) Vaporized: Solid Strategies for Success in a Dematerialized World. Vancouver: LifeTree Media.
- 9. Thrift N., French S. (2002) The Automatic Production of Space. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers New Series. Vol 27. No. 3: 309-335.