hacker culture
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hacker culture
Summary
hacker culture is a subculture[1]. It draws 301 Wikipedia views per month (subculture category, ranking #32 of 79).[2]
Key Facts
- hacker culture's field of work was hacking[3].
- hacker culture's instance of is recorded as subculture[4].
- hacker culture's instance of is recorded as social group[5].
- hacker culture's subclass of is recorded as underground culture[6].
- hacker culture's Commons category is recorded as Hacker culture[7].
- hacker culture's has part is recorded as hackspace[8].
- hacker culture's has part is recorded as hacker[9].
- hacker culture's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/015r4g[10].
- hacker culture's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Hacker culture[11].
- hacker culture's page banner is recorded as Hacker tourism banner Keyboard.jpg[12].
- hacker culture's has effect is recorded as hack[13].
- hacker culture's has effect is recorded as education[14].
- hacker culture's has effect is recorded as development[15].
- hacker culture's has effect is recorded as free content[16].
- hacker culture's has effect is recorded as free software[17].
- hacker culture's BBC Things ID is recorded as ccbb2351-cd15-4196-9e40-6ca31271183f[18].
- hacker culture's different from is recorded as security hacker[19].
- hacker culture's Quora topic ID is recorded as Hacker-Culture[20].
- hacker culture's Zhihu topic ID is recorded as 19578404[21].
- hacker culture's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as hacker-culture[22].
Body
Career and Affiliations
hacker culture's field of work was hacking[3].
Why It Matters
hacker culture draws 301 Wikipedia views per month (subculture category, ranking #32 of 79).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] It is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]