This symposium looks interesting and I’m thinking of attending the “Emulation Performance” by jodi and the afternoon session. Get the details here (click symposium).
The symposium accompanies the exhibition “Seeing Double,” which is very successful IMO. According to the press release:
This exhibition tests the promise of an experimental treatment—emulation—for rescuing new media art from the ravages of time.
The art work seems to have been “rescued.” The does more than just that. By exposing ‘how’ you emulate new media art it you also illustrates to the public the ‘material’ of digital art.
That’s to say, most people go to a museum and look at a moving image on a screen of some sort and it’s not self-evident what the material of the image is. Is it simply a video? Or is it a computational piece which is getting real-time data from the Internet or running some software algorithm to auto-generate visuals or what have you. It’s not always obvious.
But in “Seeing Double” the materials become obvious through the process and exploration of emulation and that does new media art and the art public a real service.







Cool blog about the designs baristas can make in the foamy milk that sits on top of your caffe latte. My favorite coffee hang in Los Angeles is
Taking almost 3 years to make, this is the one of a kind 4" scale figure toy that I always wanted, and now I have built it. I just wish I’d had one of these when I was a kid. And for kids this Star Destroyer has been built. The ship is constructed almost entirely of wood and all the parts are quite chunky with nothing small to break off (unless abused). It is approximately 2 metres in length, 1.5 metres wide and 1 metre high, it is rather large but built solidly. Caster wheels on the base allow for easy movement and the top section can be removed for storage and easier transportation. Not for under 3s but great fun to play with from 6 – 60 year olds!
Dominic sez: "IDFuel is a daily Industrial Design magazine, and we have just published our first full length article about the exhibit of Ron Popiel's inventions at the Chicago Cultural Center. Lots of cool pictures and commentary on the Pocket Fisherman, the O-Matics, and a multitude of lesser known gadgets." 
Anyone watching Blogdex over the past few months knows