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diff --git a/content/formations/mediatheque.md b/content/formations/mediatheque.md index 192aa7a..5923000 100644 --- a/content/formations/mediatheque.md +++ b/content/formations/mediatheque.md @@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ extra: # Des podcasts -🇫🇷 **Xavier de la Porte, "Le code a changé", France Inter** +<span aria-label="(En français)">🇫🇷</span> **Xavier de la Porte, "Le code a changé", France Inter** ![Vignette du podcast Le Code a changé <](/img/cover/code.jpg) *"Le code a changé" parle de numérique. Mais comment ? Pourquoi ? Et en quoi toutes ces technos changent quelque chose à nos vies ? Xavier de La Porte tourne autour de la question avec ses invités dans ce podcast original.* @@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ extra: # Dans les blogs -🇬🇧 **Mike Tully, 'On Community Memory', Blog are.na, 2022-05-19** +<span aria-label="(En anglais)">🇬🇧</span> **Mike Tully, 'On Community Memory', Blog are.na, 2022-05-19** ![Photograph by Gwen Bell. Courtesy of the Computer History Museum. A black-and-white photo of an old Community Memory terminal with flowers planted in the spot where the keyboard should be, pleasant and surreal. <](/img/cover/compmem.jpg) *In the early 1970s in Berkeley, California, Lee Felsenstein, a computer science drop-out from UC Berkeley, started thinking about a more technological approach to community organizing. Felsenstein had participated in the Free Speech Movement and anti-Vietnam protests in the years prior and saw potential in the computer for efficiently bringing people together for social change. But at the time, computers were typically only found in government agencies and research institutions, not accessible to the general public. One notable exception was at the technological commune Project One.* |