Designing for repair?: infrastructures and materialities of breakdown

This paper explores issues that come up in practices of breakage and repair through two projects: the 'XO' laptops of One Laptop Per Child in Paraguay and public sites of facilitated repair in California, USA. Collectively drawing on 15 months of ethnographic fieldwork, 156 interviews, and archival research, we find that breakdown and repair are not processes that designers can effectively script ahead of time; instead, they emerge in everyday practice. These practices are shaped by material, infrastructural, gendered, political, and socioeconomic factors -- such as manufacturing limitations, access to repair parts and expertise, and environmental convictions -- which designers often did not, and may not have been able to, anticipate. We call the material realities and practices of repair negotiated endurance, which is illustrated by four themes from our findings: the negotiated identification of breakdown, collaborative definitions of worth, the fraught nature of collaborative expertise, and the gendered stakes of repair.

[1]  B. Verstappen Human rights reports , 1987 .

[2]  Lucy Suchman Plans and situated actions: the problem of human-machine communication , 1987 .

[3]  Douglas Harper,et al.  Working Knowledge: Skill and Community in a Small Shop , 1987 .

[4]  J. V. Maanen Escape from modernity: On the ethnography of repair and the repair of ethnography , 1990 .

[5]  Ruth Oldenziel,et al.  Boys and Their Toys: The Fisher Body Craftsman’s Guild, 1930–1968, and the Making of a Male Technical Domain , 1997, Technology and Culture.

[6]  D. Wellman,et al.  Talking About Machines: An Ethnography of a Modern Job. , 1997 .

[7]  J. Orr,et al.  Talking About Machines: An Ethnography of a Modern Job. , 1997 .

[8]  M. M. Maldonado,et al.  The Mechanics of Workplace Order:: Toward a Sociology of Repair , 1999 .

[9]  C. Henke The mechanics of workplace order : Toward a sociology of repair , 1999 .

[10]  Susan Leigh Star,et al.  Layers of Silence, Arenas of Voice: The Ecology of Visible and Invisible Work , 1999, Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW).

[11]  N. Oudshoorn,et al.  Configuring the User as Everybody: Gender and Design Cultures in Information and Communication Technologies , 2004 .

[12]  Mark Pilgrim Greasemonkey hacks - tips and tools for remixing the web with Firefox , 2005 .

[13]  N. Thrift,et al.  Out of Order , 2007 .

[14]  Eli Blevis Sustainable Interaction Design : Invention & Disposal , Renewal , 2007 .

[15]  Eli Blevis,et al.  Sustainable interaction design: invention & disposal, renewal & reuse , 2007, CHI.

[16]  Christina Dunbar-Hester Geeks, Meta-Geeks, and Gender Trouble , 2008, Social studies of science.

[17]  Christopher Kelty,et al.  Two Bits: The Cultural Significance of Free Software , 2008 .

[18]  David W. McDonald,et al.  Learning how: the search for craft knowledge on the internet , 2009, CHI.

[19]  Matthew B. Crawford Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry into the Value of Work , 2009 .

[20]  Jonathan Bean,et al.  Learning from IKEA hacking: i'm not one to decoupage a tabletop and call it a day. , 2009, CHI.

[21]  Phoebe Sengers,et al.  Mapping the landscape of sustainable HCI , 2010, CHI.

[22]  B. Rieger From People's Car to New Beetle: The Transatlantic Journeys of the Volkswagen Beetle , 2010 .

[23]  T. Dant The Work of Repair: Gesture, Emotion and Sensual Knowledge , 2010 .

[24]  Steven J. Jackson,et al.  Things fall apart: maintenance, repair, and technology for education initiatives in rural Namibia , 2011, iConference.

[25]  M. Ames Can One Laptop per Child Save the World's Poor? , 2011 .

[26]  Nalini Kotamraju,et al.  Playing stupid, caring for users, and putting on a good show: Feminist acts in usability study work , 2011, Interact. Comput..

[27]  Nicola Dawkins Do-It-Yourself: The Precarious Work and Postfeminist Politics of Handmaking (in) Detroit , 2011 .

[28]  Daniela Karin Rosner,et al.  The material practices of collaboration , 2012, CSCW.

[29]  Dawn Nafus,et al.  ‘Patches don’t have gender’: What is not open in open source software , 2012, New Media Soc..

[30]  J. Burrell Invisible Users: Youth in the Internet Cafés of Urban Ghana , 2012 .

[31]  Steven J. Jackson,et al.  Repair worlds: maintenance, repair, and ICT for development in rural Namibia , 2012, CSCW.

[32]  B. London Ending the Depression through Planned Obsolescence , 2014 .

[33]  Sara Wilkinson,et al.  How buildings learn: Adaptation of low grade commercial buildings for sustainability in Melbourne , 2014 .