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summary: The Master Experimental Publishing (XPUB) at the Piet Zwart Institute and Varia are delighted to invite you to this double launch of the publications *Learning How to Walk While Catwalking* and *Vernaculars come to matter* on Friday the 17th of December.
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The Master Experimental Publishing (XPUB) at the Piet Zwart Institute and Varia are delighted to invite you to this double launch of the publications *Learning How to Walk While Catwalking* and *Vernaculars come to matter*.
XPUB and Varia are delighted to invite you to this double launch of the publications *Learning How to Walk While Catwalking* and *Vernaculars come to matter*.
The starting point for these publications is the project *VLTK*, a Vernacular Language Toolkit in the making by Cristina Cochior, Manetta Berends and Julie Boschat-Thorez. During XPUB's trimester project, the Special Issue 16, Cristina Cochior has channeled VLTK research threads as a guest tutor.
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**Location online**: <https://issue.xpub.nl/16/><br>
**Location in person**: Varia (Gouwstraat 3, Rotterdam)
XPUB welcomes you to the Special Issue 16 on vernacular language processing: *Learning How to Walk while Catwalking*. Our Special Issue is a toolkit to mess around with language. We want to legitimize failures and amatorial practices by proposing a more vernacular understanding of language through these tools.
XPUB (the Experimental Publishing master from Piet Zwart Institute, Willem de Kooning Academy) welcomes you to the Special Issue 16 on vernacular language processing: *Learning How to Walk while Catwalking*. Our Special Issue is a toolkit to mess around with language. We want to legitimize failures and amatorial practices by proposing a more vernacular understanding of language through these tools.
We decided to release the Special Issue 16 toolkit in the form of an API (Application Programming Interface). APIs organise and serve data on the Internet; what is not always evident is that they facilitate exchange of information following mainly commercial purposes. However, our API is an attempt at a more critical and vernacular (personal) approach to such model of distribution.