|    Login    |    Register

License to Spill: Where Dry Devices Meet Liquid Lives

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

License to Spill: Where Dry Devices Meet Liquid Lives

Contributors:

By (Author) Rachel Plotnick

ISBN:

9780262551588

Publisher:

MIT Press Ltd

Imprint:

MIT Press

Publication Date:

27th May 2025

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

621.381

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

320

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm

Description

How everyday wetness-from finger smudges, sweat, and spilled drinks to showering and swimming-collides with consumers' media devices designed to stay dry. How everyday wetness-from finger smudges, sweat, and spilled drinks to showering and swimming-collides with consumers' media devices designed to stay dry. License to Spill investigates the everyday moments, activities, and spaces where media technologies and liquids collide-from disastrous spilled drinks that corrode laptops and drops in the toilet that drown smartphones-to the greasy finger smudges and sweat droplets that sully screens and glitch smartwatches. Putting historical and present-day case studies in conversation, Rachel Plotnick considers how people's experiences with media devices inevitably encounter wetness, and yet how consumers-not the companies who make the devices-take the blame when leaks, spillages, and overflows occur. Along with thinking about preventive measures and device caretaking, License to Spill examines how water resistant and waterproofed technologies, through their design and marketing, imagine the brawniest and hardiest of users meant to "punish" and "abuse" their "tough" devices, granting them unfettered permission to get wet. Examining a long history of "torture testing" and hyperbolic claims of imperviousness, the book demonstrates how protective designs relate to broader cultural ideas about media use as sporty, luxurious, excessive, or messy. This context is especially relevant given that the market for water-resistant bags, cases, coatings, and seals has flourished over the past decade, with new rhetoric about wetness as "natural" and digital technologies as ever-present. The book pushes us to attend to both the ideals and problems that arise when designing "resilient" devices, ranging from the "right to repair" movement and lawsuits over ingress protection (IP) ratings to obsolescence culture and work-from-home activities in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Author Bio

Rachel Plotnick is a historian and cultural theorist whose research and teaching focus on information, communication, and media technologies in everyday life. She is the author of Power Button- A History of Pleasure, Panic, and the Politics of Pushing (MIT Press).

See all

Other titles by Rachel Plotnick

See all

Other titles from MIT Press Ltd