This course takes advances in both media technology and computation to address the development and future direction of fully mediated environments. What is variously called ‘ubiquitous computing’ (Ubicomp), ‘pervasive computing’, or ‘ambient computing’—leading to the derived concepts of ubiquitous, pervasive or ambient media—explore developments in new interfaces, sensor and tagging technology as well as new forms of digital communication, connectivity and data storage to consider the implications of intelligent, personalized, synchronized, multi-user environments. At the centre of this course is the argument that we are entering a post-cyberspace age in which "the Internet" will no longer be a virtual space that we enter via portals (computers) but that computerization will increasingly be brought out into the real world and distributed everywhere. This is the age of interconnected smart objects (otherwise known as the Internet of Things), smart buildings and smart cities. The first part of the course will introduce some of the central researchers in this relatively new area of academic and corporate endeavour to draw out the central questions that need to be addressed in this new and increasingly immersive media ecology. The second part of the course explores some of the most pressing issues of our time, namely the phenomenon of big data and the ever-increasing use of algorithms; the growth in robotic technologies; and issues around data mining, prediction, surveillance and the smart city. The course will also interrogate the relation between the human and the technical as we increasingly defer operations, cognitive functions, social relations, and memory to these new media devices and environments. The course addresses the problem of increased technological embodiment and technological embeddedness that are essential for any understanding of ubiquitous media. In the third part of the course we will consider the implications of this for our personal use of devices and networks, and how those issues might impact on the future of cities and our urban environment.