XPUB’s interests in publishing are therefore twofold: first, publishing as the inquiry and participation into the technological frameworks, political context and cultural processes through which things are made public; and second, how these are, or can be, used to create publics.
[Read more on pzwart.nl](https://pzwart.nl/experimental-publishing/)
An important part of the XPUB course is considering the implications of the technologies and tools we use, how the choices have an impact socially, environmentally, politically. In this spirit, rather than relying heavily on cloud services, XPUB (self-) hosts and maintains many of the servers and services that the course uses. Students learn and practice skills of programming and server maintenance in order to gain first hand experience with the materials of software and networks.
XPUB 1, in collaboration with WORM, invites you to participate in our first public event on November 20th. Through a series of experiments at Radio WORM, we’ve been asking ourselves: What is radio? What does it mean to “go live” and perform together? Imagine the thrill—and the nerves—of creating something live, using your voice, thoughts, and experimental sounds that use little to no conventional means of expression. [More info](https://issue.xpub.nl/25/)
Come to our graduation show at WORM’s Slash Gallery in Rotterdam!
We are Stephen, Irmak, Aglaia, and Ada; four graduating students of Experimental Publishing.
Experience our graduation projects, skim through our publications, and take part in our performances. On the opening evening there will be: 🍥 a performance of edible stories —come a little hungry inside, 🐝 chances to experience an interactive picture book — bring kids aged 7-80, 📇 performative bureaucratic reading sessions — come with a bureaucratic document that stresses you out and 😴 plays about work — bring your dreams and anxieties.
In this <b>dumped printers modding workshop</b>, we investigate the inner workings of a printer. With a DIY and DIWO approach we disassemble and reassemble printers "differently". Why? We all are frustrated by the fact that printers often do not work!
[Peripheral centers and feminist servers](https://issue.xpub.nl/23/) investigate multiple approaches to the conditions of serving. It interrupts the endless flow of data that fuels the economy, exposing the cracks and gaps of the techno-scientific paradigm imposed on society. Where commands are executed, connections made, trust exchanged, and resources shared.
This feminist data center brings to light the physical infrastructure and actual labour which enable the processes we perform every day. In this exploration, we think through feminist approaches that reveal the concealed layers of our on(off)line interactions. We broaden our understanding of how this tangible, energy-intensive infrastructure truly operates behind the seemingly innocent notion of the ‘cloud’.
The various projects within Peripheral centers and feminist servers expose their infrastructure, emphasizing the material conditions of their production. We advocate that the fairy tale of immateriality has real socio-economic-environmental consequences.
exciting news everyone: To kick of the new plotting-year there will be a PEN PLOTTING PARTY* on Monday feb 12. Save the date, and get ready for the launch of the PEN PLOTTING TABLE*, PEN PLOTTING ZINE* alongside various PEN PLOTTING ACTIVITIES*.
Not close to Rotterdam this day? Don't worry and join us online for TWITCH™ PLAYS PLOTTER* ([ref](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twitch_Plays_Pok%C3%A9mon)).
🖋
More information: <https://hub.xpub.nl/chopchop/PEN-PLOTTING-PARTY/>
[Special Issues](https://issue.xpub.nl) are multi-form publications related to a theme initated by a guest editor and produced collectively by XPUB first year students.
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Graduation projects and theses
![Screenshot of project.xpub.nl](images/grad.webp "Graduation projects")
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[Graduation projects and theses](https://project.xpub.nl); representing the culmination of their two year Masters study, each XPUB student produces a graduation work and a thesis.
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Course wiki
![Wiki](images/wiki.webp)
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[The wiki](https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/) is the lifeblood of the course: visit the [calendar](https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Calendars:Networked_Media_Calendar) to get an idea of a typical week, or see the list of current [students](https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Students) to see traces and sketches of work in progress. NB: The wiki is shared with the lens-based master, items specific to XPUB are indicated by *XPUB1* and *XPUB2* (to indicate the first and second years). The wiki is an example of a self-hosted instance of [mediawiki](https://mediawiki.org), the free software that underpins Wikipedia.
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Piet Zwart Institute
![Piet Zwart Institute](images/pzwart.webp)
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XPUB is one of six masters programs collectively known as the [Piet Zwart Institute](https://www.pzwart.nl/experimental-publishing/).
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Willem de Kooning Academy
![Willem de Kooning academy](images/wdka.webp)
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XPUB is a part of the [Willem de Kooning](https://www.wdka.nl/programmes/master-media-design-experimental-publishing) academy, and can be found on the fourth floor of the Wijnhaven building, with convenient access to the many facilities of the Art academy.
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Gitea
![GIT](images/gitea.webp)
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XPUB self-hosts a [gitea code respository](https://git.xpub.nl). This provides a public outlet to support the many code works done within the course such as [this page](https://git.xpub.nl/XPUB/xpub.nl/src/branch/master/index.md).
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Etherpad
![Etherpad](images/pad.webp)
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The [XPUB etherpad](https://pad.xpub.nl) is another crucial piece of course self-hosted infrastructure. Etherpads are all about realtime group collaboration with a minimum of prescriptive structures. Pads are used heavily in the course as a means of collective note taking, planning, [writing and annotation](https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Methods_xpub).
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servers for students & staff
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::: {.flex}
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Hub
![hub](images/hub.320x.jpg)
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The [xpub hub](https://hub.xpub.nl/) is a public relay to a collection of self-hosted and student-maintained local servers. Using a combination of [VPN](https://tinc-vpn.org/) (virtual private network) and [reverse proxy](https://docs.nginx.com/nginx/admin-guide/web-server/reverse-proxy/), the hub enables experimentation with self-hosting, server portability, local-first and low power infrastructure and [convivial](http://damaged.bleu255.com/Convivial_Computing/) and [feminist](http://damaged.bleu255.com/Feminist_Technology/) server practices.
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Zulip
![Zulip](images/zulip.webp)
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The [zulip](https://zulip.xpub.nl) server functions as a private bulletin board system for the XPUB community, and as a [self-hosted free software](https://zulip.com/) acts as an alternative to centralized proprietary services like Slack and Discord.
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Mailing list
![](images/we.lurk.org.320x.jpg)
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The course uses a mailing list provided by neighbor network [lurk.org](https://we.lurk.org).
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Hotline
![Hotline](images/jitsi.320x.jpg "hotline")
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The [hotline](https://hotline.xpub.nl) is a self-hosted [Jitsi Meet](https://jitsi.org) server, an alternative to proprietary services like Zoom, Teams, and Meet.
Special Issue #22: Signal Lost: Archive Unzipped – 7 Dec @ WORM
![](2023/signal-lost.png)
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> – — Radio makers, listeners and electromagnetic wave enthusiasts, do you copy? — –– In the middle of an on-going apocalypse what should be preserved, and what forgotten?
Join us IRL on 7 December in the efforts of scavenging and resurrecting a sonic archive.
It is only a question of time until all will be lost. Lend an ear as we collectively explore,
activate and transmit the archive of [Worm community Radio](https://radio.worm.org/). We must listen closely, we must
decide what remains and how we can rebuild upon a fractured past. BYOR (Bring your own Radio).
Become absorbed by a re-imagined reality through an archival deep-dive!
Prepare (with us) for the event –– — and tune in to Radio WORM
on 5 December at 10.00 for further instructions — ––.
* Date: 7 December
* Location: Wunderbar & Pirate Bay [WORM](https://worm.org/), Rotterdam
You have been summoned by Experimental Publishing second year (XPUB2) students! Feel free to join them on the 7th of November at Leeszaal West. The evening aims to make their graduation proposals public and open for judgement :)
![Radio Worm: Protocols for an Active Archive, 5 Nov 15:30-16:30, Zinecamp](2023/zinecamp2023.hotglue.360x.png)
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4 + 5 November, Worm
<https://zinecamp2023.hotglue.me/>
We will bring publications and zines in diverse forms from current and past projects (Special Issues and Graduation works) 📚. And you can meet and talk with tutors and students from the program!
Come and visit the XPUB stall this weekend: Saturday 4 + Sunday 5 November.
And on Sunday, you can join us in person and live on Radio WORM between 15:30 and 16:30 for a talk/live radio broadcast of "Radio Worm: Protocols for an Active Archive". 📻
> Special Issue #21 starts from a single technical object: a teletype machine. The teletype is the meeting point between typewriters and computer interfaces, a first automated translator of letters into bits. Equipped with a keyboard, a transmitter and a punchcard read-writer, it is a historical link between early transmission technology such as the telegraph and the Internet of today.
XPUB was a proud participant in 2022's edition of [zinecamp Rotterdam @ WORM](https://zinecamp2022.hotglue.me/). Watch the [video impression](https://media.xpub.nl/2022/zinecamp.mp4){.video}, featuring current and past XPUB/Media Design staff and students: Clara Balaguer, Aymeric Mansoux, Mara Karagianni, joak and a plotter, and more!
Special Issue #19 was launched in December, 2023 at [Leeszaal](https://www.leeszaalrotterdamwest.nl/), a local library and community center in Rotterdam West.
[Paged.js](https://pagedjs.org/) is a rendering tool for previewing, inspecting and designing a PDF in the browser, that is known for specifically accommodating designers using web-to-print techniques in their publications and book making practice. Julie and Julien both work (or have worked) as developers on the project, so the workshop gave students an opportunity to ask them about Paged.js as an open source project, and what it means to develop and maintain it. A nice example of paged.js in action is [Walkie Talkie](https://media.xpub.nl/2022/walkie-talkie-final.email.pdf), the 2022 XPUB graduation catalog.
Zine edited by Manetta Berends and Michael Murtaugh reflecting on the experiences of teaching programming and alternative tools in the context of the XPUB [Prototyping](https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Prototyping) class.
Online presentation by Aymeric Mansoux & Roel Roscam-Abbing including a description of XPUB as an example of making "systemic shifts" with alternative infrastructure.
<!-- not sure this is prominent enough, but would be interesting to develop the idea of an active/updated set of links (a la RSS) of networked activity -->
<divclass="item"><datedatetime="2024-06-19">[2024-06-19]</date><ahref="https://vvvvvvvvvvvv.net/">The Autoluminescence's School for AC⌁DC+</a> made a friendly fork of the <ahref="2024/call/">XPUB call</a> to announce an upcoming (online) lecture and workshop series starting June 25.</div>
This site is made with [pandoc](https://pandoc.org/), [markdown](https://pandoc.org/MANUAL.html#pandocs-markdown), and [git](https://git.xpub.nl/XPUB/xpub.nl/).