READ ME: (28/06/2017) The attached items in this digital artefact comprises the contents of 'Every minute of every day: a collaboration between Richard House and the Department of Sociology, Goldsmiths', a blog that began in the autumn of 2013. The content here includes: - files of all blog posts as .png files (non interactive images) - 'Richard House, first visit' - An m4a audio recording - 'Sensory Ethnography and Walking'- A .avi video file - PLEASE NOTEL: A number of sound cloud links and one video were not accessible at the time of this archiving 28/06/2017). Additionally, the upload section includes as webarchived version of the website saved here as an.mht file*** (see footnote). Please open this with Internet Explorer to view. ----- 'Sensory Ethnography and Walking' Published on Apr 18, 2013 A 3 hours sensorial walking conducted by Bill Psarras (Arts/Technology) & Sarah Feinstein (Sociology) - research participants of the 'Real Time Research' ethnographic project of Goldsmiths University of London; led by sociologists Les Back and Yasmin Gunaratnam (Dept, of Sociology, Goldsmiths University of London) Areas of the walk included the whole High Street, part of Barking Road and West Ham's stadium. The walk took place on the 19th of April 2013, from 11:00 - 15:00. Walking/Talking/Notes: Sarah Feinstein and Bill Psarras Photography and Video Editing: Bill Psarras ------ FOOTNOTE: *** MHT file is a web page archive format, which is also known as MHTML format. It stands for MIME HTML. Microsoft Internet Explorer provides a facility to save the web page on the local disk in various file formats, out of which MHT file format is the convenient one. The browser creates a single MHT file for the complete web page, which contains all the images, CSS, Javascript, internal links of the page. Basically, it creates an offline representation of the content by remapping all the internal and external web links to a single MHT file. These MHT files can be used in future to have a direct access to the web page.