/home/adminoer/public_html/lib/SearchEngine/DefaultEngine.php:615 "Search Engine Debug 🔎 🪲"
Engine Type ⚙️: "SLiMS\SearchEngine\DefaultEngine"
SQL ⚙️: array:2 [ "count" => "select count(distinct b.biblio_id) from biblio as b left join mst_publisher as mp on b.publisher_id=mp.publisher_id left join mst_place as mpl on b.publish_place_id=mpl.place_id where b.opac_hide=0 and (b.biblio_id in(select bt.biblio_id from biblio_topic as bt left join mst_topic as mt on bt.topic_id=mt.topic_id where mt.topic like ?))" "query" => "select b.biblio_id, b.title, b.image, b.isbn_issn, b.publish_year, mp.publisher_name as `publisher`, mpl.place_name as `publish_place`, b.labels, b.input_date, b.edition, b.collation, b.series_title, b.call_number from biblio as b left join mst_publisher as mp on b.publisher_id=mp.publisher_id left join mst_place as mpl on b.publish_place_id=mpl.place_id where b.opac_hide=0 and (b.biblio_id in(select bt.biblio_id from biblio_topic as bt left join mst_topic as mt on bt.topic_id=mt.topic_id where mt.topic like ?)) order by b.last_update desc limit 20 offset 0" ]
Bind Value ⚒️: array:1 [ 0 => "%hacktivism%" ]
Medieval Hackers calls attention to the use of certain vocabulary terms in the Middle Ages and today: commonness, openness, and freedom. Today we associate this language with computer hackers, some of whom believe that information, from literature to the code that makes up computer programs, should be much more accessible to the general public than it is. In the medieval past these same terms w…