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[[File:ComputationalPublishingandWriting 2023.pdf|thumb|left|''*the title is: (and then a series of checkboxes) (insert here your suggestions :} ) +1+1+1+1+1'' (April, 2023)]]
[[File:ComputationalPublishingandWriting 2023.pdf|thumb|left|''*the title is: (and then a series of checkboxes) (insert here your suggestions :} ) +1+1+1+1+1'' (April, 2023)]]


Collective produced during the ''Computational writing & publishing talk/workshop''.
Collectively produced during the ''Computational writing & publishing talk/workshop''.


On 21 April, 13.00-18.00, NICA/RMeS Workshop with Geoff Cox and Winnie Soon, at Utrecht University, hosted by David Gauthier.
On 21 April, 13.00-18.00, NICA/RMeS Workshop with Geoff Cox and Winnie Soon, at Utrecht University, hosted by David Gauthier.

Revision as of 15:23, 10 November 2023

https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/varia/octomode

Octomode is a collective editing space for PDF making, using Etherpad, Paged.js and Flask.

Inspired by the multi-centered, tentacular cognition capabilities of the octopus, we imagined a space in which the artificial boundaries of writing and design can be crossed; where writing, editing and designing can be done in one environment simultaneously, allowing the format to influence the matter and vice-versa.

Ongoing circulations

Octomode is strongly relying on (Ether)pad and shared habits of collective note taking in such collaborative environments. In the end, octomode is just a combination of a few free software tools, and we like to think of octomode as a boilerplate, that can be re-configured and re-transformed into other possible environments. It is anyway strongly inspired by the beautiful work of others, including:

Octomode is published under CC4r: please feel free to use, change, transform and republish into many directions, within the limits of the conditions formulated by the COLLECTIVE CONDITIONS FOR RE-USE (CC4r) license.

How to use octomode?

If you want to work collectively on making a PDF, you can make a new octomode environment here: https://cc.vvvvvvaria.org/octomode/.

You can write any name of in the input field, this will be the name of the new octomode environment and pads that are used.

More documentation can be found here: https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/varia/octomode

Octomode default templates

PAD.md

---
title: octomode
language: en
---

<!-- 

                                      |      
  __   __ _|_  __   _  _  _    __   __|   _  
 /  \_/    |  /  \_/ |/ |/ |  /  \_/  |  |/  
 \__/ \___/|_/\__/   |  |  |_/\__/ \_/|_/|__/
                                             
  
  This document is opened in octomode.

  pad          : all materials for the PDF are collected here (written in Markdown)
  stylesheet   : all CSS rules for the PDF are collected here (written in CSS)
  html         : render the structure of the lay out as a HTML (with PyPandoc)
                 [note] this view does not render any styling!
  pdf          : render the lay out as a PDF (with Paged.js)

  https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/varia/octomode

-->

<!--

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
This is a pad on *creative crowd*, a Varia server for publishing experiments.
This server is still pretty fresh and in progress!

How can this server be available AND unstable, public AND being paid for,
free to be used AND situated, a production environment AND in transformation?

While surfing the contradictions, we are working on the collective guidelines
for engaging with this server... Visit for updates: https://cc.vvvvvvaria.org
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

-->

<section id="cover">
# *in octomode* { #title }



</section>

<section id="main">
Octomode is a collective editing space for PDF making, using Etherpad, Paged.js and Flask.

Inspired by the multi-centered, tentacular cognition capabilities of the octopus, we imagined a space in which the artificial boundaries of writing and design can be crossed; where writing, editing and designing can be done in one environment simultaneously, allowing the format to influence the matter and vice-versa. 

```
Edit this text in the PAD view.
Edit the styling in the STYLESHEET view. 
Preview the page in the HTML view.
Render it on pages in the PDF view.
```

</section>

PAD.css

@charset "utf-8"; 

@page{
    size: A5;
    margin: 10mm 20mm 25mm 20mm;

    @bottom-center{
        content: counter(page);
        font-family: monospace;
    }
}
body{
    font-size: 12px;
    line-height: 1.5;
    color: #822b01;
}

/* ------------------------------------ cover */

@page:first{
    background-color: #f3c6ff;
    color: #822b01;
}
section#cover{
    break-after: always;
}
section#cover h1#title{
    font-size: 300%;
}

/* ------------------------------------ main */

section#main pre{
    color: magenta;
}

CSS Print

Some CSS Print examples can be found at: CSS Print

Octomode on the CC server

Octomode is installed on the server at: /var/www/octomode/ and runs as a system user octomode.

You can restart octomode with: $ sudo service octomode restart

Or see its status with: $ sudo service octomode status.

The code that is used for octomode can be found here: https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/varia/octomode.

Error log

For some adventures in Octomode, please see the Error log.

Made with Octomode

SomeTimes/Af en Toe

First edition of the SomeTimes (April, 2022)
Eerste editie van de Af en Toe (april, 2022)
Third edition of the SomeTimes made for the 12th of October Counter-Cloud Action day (October, 2023)

SomeTimes is the (ir)regular printed newsletter of Varia.

Made in resonant publishing mode with octomode, multifeeder and multiple RSS feeds.

Initial layout and infrastructure by Simon Browne & Manetta Berends, to be versioned in the following editions.

https://varia.zone/en/sometimes-af-en-toe.html

https://vvvvvvaria.org/archive/2022-02-SomeTimes/

Bulgarian antifascist bulletin

Bulgarian antifascist bulletin (1, 2023)

In July 2023 an email landed in the Varia inbox with a request to use octomode to produce an antifascist bulletin in an Bulgarian context:

"I came by your space last week.. I am writing to ask for permission to use Octomode, which Danny told me about. It came up in the context of me being involved in the production of an Anti-fascist bulletin from Bulgaria. The idea is to gather short inputs every few months from different activists and collectives and compile them in a multi-lingual bulletin. We're mostly migrants and we thought this way we can contribute a little to the building of internationalist solidarity. I've never been involved in such fast-paced publications and rarely done much on the technical side of things but I am willing to learn.!"

https://cryptpad.fr/drive/#/2/drive/view/5Yg5tW5FR9XH1GAUparmy06vKJzF0rNWivJX7vLL1ps/

*the title is: (and then a series of checkboxes) (insert here your suggestions :} ) +1+1+1+1+1

*the title is: (and then a series of checkboxes) (insert here your suggestions :} ) +1+1+1+1+1 (April, 2023)

Collectively produced during the Computational writing & publishing talk/workshop.

On 21 April, 13.00-18.00, NICA/RMeS Workshop with Geoff Cox and Winnie Soon, at Utrecht University, hosted by David Gauthier.

The procedural qualities of both writing and coding lend themselves to the sharing of resources, collective actions, and social exchange through the use of experimental publishing tools such as wiki-to-print and git repositories. This points to conceiving a publication (such as a book) as a dynamic computational object that is open for re-versioning. Given these possibilities with computation, and despite the trend towards open access, it seems odd that relatively little has changed in academic publishing and scholars still seek to distribute their work through journals even when more accessible and sustainable forms are available. Similarly, workflows tend to follow a model that remains relatively unchanged since industrialism. The presentation explores these concerns through some of our recent projects, including the co-authored book Aesthetic Programming (2020). Our examples examine a parallel between writing and coding, attempting to open up the aesthetic and political potential of publishing as a cultural practice in which books can be coded, written, read and published as dynamic networked objects, not fixed in terms of attribution or commodity form or specific determination.

https://www.centreforthestudyof.net/?p=6996

Hosting with

Hosting with (self-published by Varia in July, 2023)

Hosting with is a zine capturing a conversation at AMRO22 in Linz around art servers and hosting practices.

Transcribed/layout/editing by Artemis Gryllaki, Manetta Berends and Angeliki Diakrousi.

Self-published by Varia in July, 2023.

https://vvvvvvaria.org/archive/2023-03-Hosting-with-others/

https://cc.vvvvvvaria.org/octomode/hosting-with-the-others/ (behind a passwd)

https://art-meets.radical-openness.org/program/hosting-with-the-others/

A Traversal Network of Feminist Servers

A Traversal Network of Feminist Servers (ATNOFS)

A Traversal Network of Feminist Servers (ATNOFS) publication, collectively made with Wendy Van Wynsberghe, Vlad Dobrițoiu, Teo Săvoiu, Spideralex, Sergiu Nisioi, Roel Roscam Abbing, Reni Hofmüller, ooooo, Nina Bothof, Martino Morandi, Marloes de Valk, Mara Karagianni, Maneta Berends, Lídia Pereira, Julia Bande, Femke Snelting, elodie Mugrefya, Donatella Portoghese, Danae Tapia, Cristina Cochior, Azahara Cerezo, Aymeric Mansoux, Artemis Gryllaki, Aggeliki Diakrousi, Anca Bucur, amy pickles, Alice Strete, Alex Ștefănescu.

Design/programming by Nina Botthof and Martino Morandi.

https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/dickreckard/atnofs-recipe

Co-published in March 2023.

This multi-headed webpage is hosted and asynchronously maintained by a network of networks that includes: Systerserver, Constant, hypha, Varia, ooooo, Marloes de Valk, LURK, Anarchaserver, Psaroskalazines, esc mkl and rosa (travelling).