This is a fabulous idea by Mark Sample: studying digital culture through file types. He mentions MP3, GIF, HTML, and JSON, but of course there are many others worthy of attention. Let me mention just two:

XML: XML is remarkably pervasive, providing the underlying document structure for things ranging from RSS and Atom feeds to office productivity software like Microsoft Office and iWork — but secretly so. That is, you could make daily and expert use of a hundred different applications without ever knowing that XML is at work under the hood.

Text: There’s a great story to be told about how plain text files went from being the most basic and boring of all file types to a kind of lifestyle choice — a lifestyle choice I myself have made.

If you have other suggestions, please share them here or with Mark.

2 Comments

  1. It would be an interesting exercise to look at this in terms of successful/mainstream file types versus also-rans and more niche formats: think MP3 versus, say, RealAudio and FLAC.

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