Jeff Maki is a creative technologist, researcher and activist whose work examines and interprets the ordinary systems behind daily life.

His work provokes audiences to take a more active role in the management of public and private infrastructure—systems that increasingly represent power in everyday life.

Jeff’s work has been funded by NASA, Google, and the National Science Foundation; he is currently working with Publicworks Office.

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My early inquiry into infrastructure and work…

standpipes

Standpipes are the backbone of a modern fire suppression system. Often, standpipes connect to fire sprinklers, the latter designed to automatically douse a fire when activated by heat. Fire sprinklers are enthusiastically endorsed by those with strong incentives for safety; installing (or not installing) fire sprinklers becomes an explicit value judgment on human life, visibly codified into a structure.

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steamr

Steamr is a tool to allow the iPhone-carrying public to report potentially dangerous leaking steam to ConEd Steam Operations.

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critical infrastructure

Critical Infrastructure is a walking/field guide intended for people who, as they move through the built urban environment, want to see and better understand infrastructure—and what stories these systems tell.

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neighborhood nets

Neighborhood Networks is a long-term research project that combines community arts, participatory design, informal learning, and engineering to articulate and discover how communities use, or might use, emerging technologies.

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friends of larimer

Friends of Larimer was initiated in collaboration with Alexandra Woolsey Puffer in the context of human-centered design methods and civic engagement. The project was created to encourage a more favorable environment for social change in a stressed Pittsburgh neighborhood.

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gigapan

Gigapan is a platform to share gigapixel+ panoramic photographs from around the world, taken with a special robotic mount and a standard digital camera. Gigapans appear as a layer on Google Earth, and have been featured in major media outlets such as The New York Times and CNN.

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maphub

MapHub is a web-based, multi-user, group-managed geographic information system (GIS). MapHub allows users to share information about people, places, and events, to document unseen narratives and histories in theme-based “hubs”.

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mapmover

The Carbon Defense League and MapHub exhibited MapMover as part of Making Things Public: Atmospheres of Democracy at the ZKM Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe, Germany. The installation consisted of two parts: a system to collect field recordings in the city of Pittsburgh, and a physical device in Karlsruhe to display them.

Participants in Pittsburgh made recordings around the city using their mobile phones. Participants input the location of the recording by GPS coordinate, street address, or intersection. The recording was then uploaded to the MapHub system, accessible for playback or for commenting on the web.

For the physical device installed in Karlsruhe, we collaborated with artist Greg Baltus to create a robotic mechanism that played the recordings in real time. It moved an LED marker behind a translucent, wall-mounted map to the location of each recording as it was played (see video).

The exhibition was curated by Peter Weibel, Bruno Latour, and Steve Dietz, and a companion anthology (also titled Making Things Public: Atmospheres of Democracy) was published by the MIT Press in September 2005.

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click!

Click! Urban Adventure is a mixed-reality, live action role-playing game that teaches middle-school-aged girls important STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) skills in the framework of role-play as a crime scene investigator.

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feed/twitter

Get ready for the impending transformation of America into a police state: Kevlar is now "in"(!): http://nyti.ms/7D4SPJ
One month ago

I'm glad we got who shot Hassan straight. NYT: do we really need the theatrical adjectives for this? Show some class. http://ow.ly/BHVC
3 months ago

Megatons to Megawatts: Russian nukes power US homes?! http://ow.ly/B3JR
3 months ago

An idea long overdue: road trains! http://ow.ly/AMps Totally brilliant!
4 months ago

Plug vs. plug: plug-mediated nationalism. And this time, the US didn't win! http://ow.ly/zhu0 I love it.
4 months ago

feed/flickr

Standpipes


9 months ago

Standpipes


9 months ago

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