Art Concepts Long-term Thinking The Big Here Digital Dark Age Organizational Continuity Futures Millennial Precedent Archives Long Shorts Long News Projects Announcements Long Now Talks The Clock of the Long Now The Rosetta Project The Interval Long Bets Revive & Restore PanLex Manual For Civilization Disciplines Art Business Cities Civilization Climate Change Computing Culture Economics Energy Environment Evolution Genetics Globalization Government History Infrastructure Language Psychology Science Science Fiction Space Technology Year 02022 02021 02020 02019 02018 02017 02016 02015 02014 02013 02012 02011 02010 02009 02008 02007 02006 02005 02004 OLDER Archives Fandom Relics and the Enthusiastic Past Fandom memory offers a lens through which to understand the challenges of knowledge preservation between generations and across technologies. By Allegra Rosenberg Art MYR takes a Human Eye to Deep Time MYR is not just a collection of art but a place for contemplation, a way to internalize those worlds of deep time that can otherwise be so hard to grasp. By Jacob Kuppermann Manual For Civilization Dracula in Real Time A new adaptation of Bram Stoker's horror classic turns the story into a six-month-long journey, playing with our expectations and time itself. By Jacob Kuppermann Futures How to Imagine Climate Futures The imaginary worlds of climate fiction can help ready us for whatever comes next. By Jacob Kuppermann Art A Film 600 Years in the Making Two filmmakers are two years into production on a new film exploring slowness, long-term thinking, and our relationship with time. If all goes as planned, they'll be at it for another six centuries. By Patrick Shen Archives Interview: Rick Prelinger on Lost Landscapes 02021 & The Human Side of Infrastructure Rick Prelinger’s Lost Landscapes films have become a Long Now December tradition. This year, his cinematic vision expands out from San Francisco to cover the infrastructure of California. We talk to Prelinger about the creative & archival process behind Lost Landscapes 02021. By Jacob Kuppermann Long Now Talks Rick Prelinger Lost Landscapes 02021 — Earth, Fire, Air, Water: California Infrastructures Long Now Talks Neri Oxman Nature x Humanity Long Now Talks Neal Stephenson Termination Shock The Big Here Letters to the Future Uses Plastic Waste To Send Lasting Messages A Vietnamese creative agency finds an unlikely long-term ally in single use plastic. By Jacob Kuppermann
Archives Fandom Relics and the Enthusiastic Past Fandom memory offers a lens through which to understand the challenges of knowledge preservation between generations and across technologies. By Allegra Rosenberg
Art MYR takes a Human Eye to Deep Time MYR is not just a collection of art but a place for contemplation, a way to internalize those worlds of deep time that can otherwise be so hard to grasp. By Jacob Kuppermann
Manual For Civilization Dracula in Real Time A new adaptation of Bram Stoker's horror classic turns the story into a six-month-long journey, playing with our expectations and time itself. By Jacob Kuppermann
Futures How to Imagine Climate Futures The imaginary worlds of climate fiction can help ready us for whatever comes next. By Jacob Kuppermann
Art A Film 600 Years in the Making Two filmmakers are two years into production on a new film exploring slowness, long-term thinking, and our relationship with time. If all goes as planned, they'll be at it for another six centuries. By Patrick Shen
Archives Interview: Rick Prelinger on Lost Landscapes 02021 & The Human Side of Infrastructure Rick Prelinger’s Lost Landscapes films have become a Long Now December tradition. This year, his cinematic vision expands out from San Francisco to cover the infrastructure of California. We talk to Prelinger about the creative & archival process behind Lost Landscapes 02021. By Jacob Kuppermann
Long Now Talks Rick Prelinger Lost Landscapes 02021 — Earth, Fire, Air, Water: California Infrastructures
The Big Here Letters to the Future Uses Plastic Waste To Send Lasting Messages A Vietnamese creative agency finds an unlikely long-term ally in single use plastic. By Jacob Kuppermann