[Themaintainers] Maintainers at BHC, and a reading suggestion

Dick, Stephanie sadick at fas.harvard.edu
Sun Sep 11 23:39:53 EDT 2016


Thanks Nathan, and everyone. I would also love to be a part of this reading group. 


--
Stephanie A. Dick
Junior Fellow
Harvard Society of Fellows
sadick at fas.harvard.edu
http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~sadick/





> On Sep 11, 2016, at 9:52 PM, Philip Scranton <scranton at scarletmail.rutgers.edu> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> Sent from my iPad
> 
> On Sep 11, 2016, at 8:36 PM, "Greene, Ann Norton" <angreene at sas.upenn.edu> wrote:
> 
>> I’d be interested in a reading group!
>> Ann
>> 
>>> On Sep 11, 2016, at 3:00 PM, Ensmenger, Nathan <nensmeng at indiana.edu> wrote:
>>> 
>>> I will add my voice to the chorus of folks interested in a Maintainers panel at the BHC.  By my count Bernardo, Ellan, and Andrew have all expressed interest, and we can take the conversation off-list.   If anyone else would like to chime in, just send me an email.
>>> 
>>> On a completely different point: early on in the history of this mailing list it was suggested that we do a virtual reading group.  I have been thinking recently about how communities of maintainers communicate tacit knowledge, and was reminded of what I would argue is one of the greatest history of technology accounts of maintenance work ever written, namely\
>>> 
>>> 
>>> Orr, Julian. Talking About Machines: an Ethnography of a Modern Job, ILR Press Ithaca, NY, 1996.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> If you have not read this book, which is about Xerox repair technicians, you should so as soon as possible!   If you are too busy to read the whole book, read chapter 8  (“war stories of the service triangle”), which describes the ways in which these technicians use stories (vignettes, as Orr describes them) to teach each other the complicated knowledge required to diagnose and repair complex machinery.  These stories were typically shared over breakfast at informal gatherings.  When the company tried to formalize this tacit knowledge into a database driven expert system, the whole system broke down (as did the machines…)
>>> 
>>> Andy and Lee (and others) have done a fabulous job getting the word out about *why* we should study maintenance. Orr’s book is an excellent example of *how* to do it.  If we do decide to do a #maintainers reading group, it might be a good place to start.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> -Nathan 
>>> 
>>> --- 
>>> Nathan Ensmenger 
>>> Associate Professor of Informatics 
>>> School of Informatics and Computing 
>>> Indiana University, Bloomington 
>>> homes.soic.indiana.edu/nensmeng/ 
>>> 
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>> 
>> Ann N. Greene
>> Associate Director for Undergraduate Studies & Assistant Professor
>> Dept of History and Sociology of Science
>> University of Pennsylvania
>> 
>> Author, _Horses at Work: Harnessing Power in Industrial America_ (Harvard, 2008)
>> 
>> 391 Claudia Cohen Hall
>> 249 S. 36th Street
>> Philadelphia, PA
>> 
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