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April 29, 2004
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.
What is the mathematical, fractal relationship between shapes found in beehive honeycombs, a pineapple, tesselating hexagons, and African-American hair braiding? Dr. Gloria Gilmer, founding president of the International Study Group on Ethnomathematics, is glad you asked. Link
Originally posted by Xeni Jardin from Boing Boing Blog, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 29, 2004 at 04:22 PM
AgoraXchange, an online community for discussing and designing a massive multi-player global politics game...
Architecture, Design and Development by FDTDesign.
A must-have for all fans of Sequential Art:
I just received a copy of Prophecy Anthology, Volume 1. A beautiful, full-color, 9.5" x 13" book published by Sequent Media and featuring a plethora of sequential art by artists such as Shannon Wheeler, Scott McCloud, Sho Murase, Yuko Shimizu, Nathan Fox and Bernie Mireault and many others.
Get a copy here.
for reference: episodes 1, 2, and 3 [via]
 
After three days in Bilbao, we are heading to Manchester now for FutureSonic. Kaki will be leading a workshop, and I will be exhibiting and speaking about the Wifi-Hog project. Please stop by and say hello if you are in the area! As for Bilbao, I checked out the exhibition finally and there were some really interesting projects including John Kilma’s long awaited, Terrain Machine (pictured w/guts), a real-time depth display with hundred of motorized potentiometers with stretched spandex connecting each point. The result is a moving “terrain” with a projected image of a woman floating on the surface, allowing users to manipuate the depths of the pots as they cast a shadow. I am in the process of writing up a more detailed report, so I will post a link soon. Also checked out the Guggenheim Bilbao which definitely reminded me of an updated Guggenheim NYC. The best was on the recorded tour when the voice says, “The stones of the building were crafted by robots!”. Nice touch.
Originally posted by jonah (mailto:jonah@coin-operated.com) from coin-operated, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 29, 2004 at 09:57 AM
"I turn emails into music. You can send titles, lyrics, directions, and anything else that can be described in words and they may end up on this site as little songs (1m:11s or shorter)"
The CUWiN project wants to allow self-forming, noncentralized, mesh-based Wi-Fi networks using standard, old PCs with no configuration. Slightly more advanced units could be ruggedized boxes using Compact Flash, but the basic unit would be a 486 or later PC with a bootable CD-ROM or bootable floppy that bootstraps a CD-ROM. Once booted, a unit finds other similar units without any other configuration or control and forms a mesh.
Read the rest of this post at Wi-Fi Networking News
Originally posted by Wi-Fi Networking News::Glennf from unmediated, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 29, 2004 at 09:55 AM
The original Nintendo Entertainment System, or NES, serves both as whimsical background music and as motivational tool for a rock band.
The current issue of Scientific American features a mind-blowing article by W. Wayt Gibbs about "synthetic biology," the effort to create designer organisms from the bottom up:
"This nascent field has three major goals: One, learn about life by building it, rather than by tearing it apart. Two, make genetic engineering worthy of its name--a discipline that continuously improves by standardizing its previous creations and recombining them to make new and more sophisticated systems. And three, stretch the boundaries of life and of machines until the two overlap to yield truly programmable organisms. Already TNT-detecting and artemisinin-producing microbes seem within reach. The current prototypes are relatively primitive, but the vision is undeniably grand: think of it as Life, version 2.0."
Link
Originally posted by David Pescovitz from Boing Boing Blog, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 29, 2004 at 09:30 AM
Self-propelled swarming robot traffic cones: nuff sed.
The new road markers have been developed by Shane Farritor, a roboticist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, in a bid to help reduce the $100 billion per year that the Department of Transportation estimates is lost to the US economy through accidents and delays caused by highway lane closures.
The self-propelled markers take the form of robotic three-wheeled bases for the brightly coloured barrels that are set out to demarcate road repair zones. Farritor says they can open and close traffic lanes faster and more safely than humans.
Link
Originally posted by Cory Doctorow from Boing Boing Blog, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 29, 2004 at 09:29 AM
April 28, 2004
Scientists program the world's smallest computer, made of DNA molecules, to detect and treat prostate cancer. They hope the mini machine will one day be administered as a drug, where it could search for and combat disease in every cell.
Sam Arbesman has written up an initial analysis (PDF file) of the results of the Memespread Project. In discussing the spread of memes, it's common practice to utilize familiar biological terms: viral, epidemic, contagious, incubation, etc. My favorite quote of the article along those lines is "Jason Kottke is an informational equivalent of Typhoid Mary". Heh. But in this case, MetaFilter turned out more Mary than I: What seemed most...
Originally posted by jkottke from kottke.org, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 28, 2004 at 04:48 PM
Highlights affordable and reliable compression technologies, transport protocols, software and hardware setups for video streaming.
Given the vast panorama of video technologies available nowadays, this research could fill up way too much paper in the attempt of covering every aspect of this field, instead i'll just try to narrow the focus to certain advanced aspects of streaming video, also trying to give a quick reference guide to the usage of selected free software.
Link.
Originally posted by del.icio.us/rybesh::rybesh from unmediated, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 28, 2004 at 04:48 PM
The next dorkbot-socal meeting will take place on Saturday,
May 1st at 8pm at the Arts Computation Engineering Bunker (Building 522)
at the University of California Irvine. Presenters: Tom Jennings -- Car
Parts and ASCII; Mark Allen and Sky Frostenson -- Waco Ressurrection
Project; Beverly Tang -- Sublimina invisible-sensing "third eye"
necklace
FreeJ is a digital instrument for video livesets, featuring realtime rendering of multilayered video and chained effect filtering directly on the screen. FreeJ deals with every video source as a layer, making then possible to dynamically apply on each a chain of filters, loadable as effect plugins and easily customizable.
Originally posted by del.icio.us/rybesh::rybesh from unmediated, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 28, 2004 at 04:46 PM
It looks like EAI is starting to promote on-line work. This site features video and net art from various artists, including few Eyebeam alums.
A symposium at the Guggenheim on May 8th about new techniques for preserving digital art (PDF file).
While walking home from work the other day I passed a group of guys emerging from a pizza joint. After a few handshakes and goodbyes they parted ways and made arrangements for their next meeting. And then one of them yelled across the street, "something me on Thursday." His friend looked a little confused, but I knew exactly what he was talking about. He added, "IM, call, email... I don't care."
Despite our proximity to MIT, these guys did not strike me as the type who wear t-shirts that say Go away or I'll replace you with a simple shell script or tote around Leathermans in their utility belts. These were just normal guys with too many ways to talk to each other.
I'm guessing that we have reached some saturating point in communication technology where the actual medium itself has become unimportant. When I thought about the expression, "something me," I realized that we don't have a satisfactory, general expression for communicating in our common vernacular. It seems like an issue that will only become more important as we add media and devices to the current equation, but at current I can't come up with anything better.
Originally posted by cameron from overstated, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 28, 2004 at 09:37 AM
"Phone Dial: To use it, one dials an IP address rather than typing a URL. Dots are entered by pressing a button, external to the dial."
Flesh Gun: Dutch artist Joanneke Meester holds up a replica pistol made out of an eight-inch piece of her skin. Joanneke made the pistol from a flap of her own skin which was surgically removed from her abdomen. The puckered skin was stretched and sewn with nylon over a plastic and fiber mold.
"If everyone made a pistol from their own skin, I think they would think twice about using a gun. I think there would be less violence in the world," she said. "But it's not that easy. Violence will always exist."
Scambaiting is the sport of baiting and messing with 419 scammers.
April 27, 2004
Paintings by Teresa Margolles made by dipping paper "into the water used to clean human corpses after autopsies" (Part of her ''Muerte Sin Fin'' exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in Frankfurt.)
Philip Kollar writes "AllRPG has just posted Games As Art, Part 2. In this article, I attempt to create a viable list of things that come together to make a ...
Originally posted by michael from Slashdot, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 27, 2004 at 04:05 PM
check out the rest of Roi's portfolio [via]
Spectra-txt is a 30ft high metal tower, which changes colour when people "call" it on their mobiles.
BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Music | Bowie asks fans to bootleg songs Oooh! How exciting! How avant-garde. Look! They even have a picture of DJ DangerMouse in the same article. This must be the punkest expression of anti-copyright activism from a well-know star, right? W R O N...
If you download and run these applications, make sure you know how to force quit.
A system that projects light beams directly onto the eye's retina could change the way we view the world.
based on the original fake [via]
Colors, the magazine owned by the Italian apparel company, returns with surprisingly little resonance to the political turmoil of the world.
April 26, 2004
"Read real-world hyperlinks with a camera phone. A semacode is a URL barcode. Click on the semacode with your camera phone, and the semacode software will automatically load the corresponding web page in seconds."
The Modern Compendium of Miniature Automata: "Discover, identify and create your own Steam Age nanobot." And, while you're about it, papermachine—an interactive puzzle, also by the Lycette brothers—is worth checking out too, though I haven't yet managed to complete it.
(Via Steve.)
Originally posted by hmw26 from join-the-dots, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 26, 2004 at 03:48 PM
The Surrealist Compliment Generator...
Similar to voice-mail, Tecnomen's solution allows unanswered calls to be forwarded to a video mail service. Callers then see subscribers' video greetings and can leave video messages.
Originally posted by Digital Media Europe - digital media news from across Europe:: from unmediated, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 26, 2004 at 03:29 PM
Some ideas for customizing the outside of your iBook (Niche business alert: will rich hipsters pay for custom designed iBook exteriors?)
perfect for all your cartographic slicing and dicing
One of my favorite things about robotics hobbyists is that they're always driven by one overwhelming goal: To create a robot that can serve them a beer. The closest we've come so far is the Androbot, sold back in the 80s, which came with an "Androfridge" attachment so that it could carry beers to you as you rot, senescent, on your barcalounger. But now Brian Pietrodangelo, a student at the Univerity of Florida's Machine Intelligence Laboratory, has created Koolio -- a "travelling autonomous refrigerator robot". Anyone at the Lab can order a drink online and Koolio will deliver it. This requires a terrific bouquet of navigation techniques, including: - Sonar for accurate long distance coverage. - IR for close obstacle avoidance. - Shaft encoding for accurate navigation once location is determined. - Web cameras for reading room numbers off the wall. (Thanks to Slashdot for this one!)...
Design your own lightshow, and have it displayed over the city of dublin. Get in line, the sites been slashdotted!
Claire Chanel, the person behind the Jay-Z Construction Set, has decided to net.judo-ify the RIAA's spoof tracks, random noise disguised as top-40 singles which it promulgates on the P2P netowrks.
As a follow-up to our last project, the Jay-Z Construction Set, Scary Sherman and I decided to take a fair & balanced route by highlighting one of the positive moves made recently by music industry leaders.
The RIAA-Mix Vol.1 is a compilation of the hottest underground remixes of top40 hit tracks produced by the upcoming talent at Overpeer. These homages to 20th century noise artists and avant composers pull a frightening bait and switch on listeners veering wildly from recognizable pop hooks to jarring digital distortion.
Available at riaamix.com as downloadable mp3s, streaming flash audio, or on a compact disc, we're hoping our compilation can help support the arrival of challenging new music to mainstream exposure.
Link
Originally posted by Cory Doctorow from Boing Boing Blog, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 26, 2004 at 11:42 AM
niktesla writes "Scientific American is carrying a story about sythetic life - genetic engineered "machines" made from DNA building blocks called "BioBricks". ...
Originally posted by Hemos from Slashdot, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 26, 2004 at 10:08 AM
Earlier this month, we posted Monochrom's call-for-submissions for jpegs of random punchline-text from comic strips. Now, Monochrom brings us the outcome: a web page werein a single-frame comic and a punchine are combined at random. The results are funny-esque and very weird. Reload often. (Thanks, Johannes!)
Originally posted by Cory Doctorow from Boing Boing Blog, ReBlogged by jkottke on Apr 26, 2004 at 10:04 AM
"touch. DEPRIVATION" was a series of actions that were seldom emotionally touching or gripping, as seen at the Joyce SoHo on Saturday.
Now in its 9th year, the upcoming incarnation of Manchester, England’s Futuresonic festival could be the most innovatively programmed and conceptually integrated to date. Focusing equally on contemporary music and media art, the festival explores multiple intersections of the two through workshops, demos, artists’ talks, panel discussions, and performances. Featured are two festivals within the festival: a celebration of the 25th anniversary of the Technics 1200MK2, and a series of mobile technology adventures and installations located in and around the city. Venerable intellectuals and writers like Sadie Plant and Hugh Davies are finally scheduled alongside club genii like Greg Wilson and Andy Votel – implicit recognition of the parallel achievements of each cultural legacy. From the time-jumbling laptop queen Kaffe Matthews to stalwart fusion keyboardist Joe Zawinul, the musical styles here span genres, while the musicians themselves span generations. This year’s Futuresonic looks to take note of where we are and where we’re heading through an intermingling of media/music pioneers and enthusiasts. – Andrew Choate
http://www.futuresonic.com
Welcome Jason Kottke
Please welcome Jason Kottke who will be guest reBlogging this week. Jason is a pioneering and influential weblogger. Over the past 6 years, his site (kottke.org) has reached millions of people and helped define a new medium. Jason is also a professional web designer and a speaker at leading technology conferences. Take it away, Jason.
Posted by jonah at 12:05 AM
April 25, 2004
Originally posted by benjamin from del.icio.us/benjamin, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 25, 2004 at 10:44 PM
Originally posted by cory_arcangel from del.icio.us/cory_arcangel, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 25, 2004 at 10:44 PM
from an amazing page of NES Speed Videos, distributed with BitTorrent
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 Urth (even though I can never get a table), in part because their coffee is dark, sweet, earthy, and delicious -- and in part because the guys who make it draw little hearts and zigzags and bunnies in the foam. Link (Thanks, Jean-Luc!)
Originally posted by Xeni Jardin from Boing Boing Blog, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 25, 2004 at 06:33 PM
Computer users tend to form strong ties with a particular machine, researchers have found.
Why have so many photographers imitated painting? The exhibit "Art History" invites the viewer to speculate.
I'm not sure how I feel about being in the WSJ for my stupidity, but I agreed in order to emphasis my point to more people.
April 23, 2004
Not only am I posting a link to the web site for the INAUGURAL AVON HERITAGE DUCT TAPE FESTIVAL, but AVON, OHIO is practically my hometown. It’s the town where my mother and grandmother live.
It really isn’t my hometown, Elyria, OH has that glorious distinction, but it’s pretty damn close.
I never thought I’d ever type this, but, thanks for the link Mom!
Cell phones and tiny cameras magnified attendance at a riot in Iowa this week.
(thanks to Wil Natzel)
Originally posted by Bryan from Smart Mobs, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 23, 2004 at 10:47 PM
20 roman candles, one motorcycle helmet, one t-shirt with a target on it and one drunk boy makes for a good party
DScaler is a piece of software that grabs analog, interlaced video, and deinterlaces it to make it a progressive scan feed then allows scaling to any resolution for use on your computer monitor or projector.
Originally posted by yatta from unmediated, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 23, 2004 at 10:38 PM
interesting information design [via]
A panel that recommended decertifying Diebold's touch-screen voting machines in California also wants to see the company face charges for violating the state's election laws. Kim Zetter reports from Sacramento, California.
A riveting, all-elbows-and-knuckles documentary about the proto-punk warriors known as the MC5.
The upcoming festival marks their 25th aniversary.
Originally posted by jhp from del.icio.us/jhp, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 23, 2004 at 01:11 AM
Hundreds of photographs of flag-draped coffins at Dover Air Force Base were released on Thursday on the Internet by a Web site dedicated to combating government secrecy.
April 22, 2004
A symposium about responsive environments and new technologies being explored by contemporary sound and visual artists.
Originally posted by yatta from del.icio.us/yatta, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 22, 2004 at 04:51 PM
A voting panel urges state officials to stop using voting machines made by Diebold. The panel also asks the attorney general to consider slapping the company with civil and criminal lawsuits. Kim Zetter reports from Sacramento, California.
Wrap rage - "Extreme anger caused by product packaging that is difficult to open or manipulate" (To open a recent DVD purchase, I had to go through a layer of shrink-wrapped plastic, three "security" stickers, and these little plastic tabs they're putting on DVD cases now. Rage!)
Chris Gondek writes "Rocketman Eric Scott shot 46 metres into the air in London and promptly claimed a world record. Scott, 41, from Dallas, Texas, donned his ...
Originally posted by michael from Slashdot, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 22, 2004 at 12:03 PM
Renee Graham in the Boston Globe notes the 25th anniversary of Rapper's Delight. The piece is unusually kind to Sylvia Robinson, who is often portrayed as a shady character. I remember she sued Blaze magazine after they noted her reputation...
Originally posted by jsmooth995 from hiphopmusic.com, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 22, 2004 at 12:03 PM
PunkerTFC writes "I'm sure most of you remember the movie Back To The Future. Well, now you have a chance to own your very own 1982 Delorean, fully equipped ...
Originally posted by simoniker from Slashdot, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 22, 2004 at 12:01 PM
Originally posted by cory_arcangel from del.icio.us/cory_arcangel, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 22, 2004 at 12:01 PM
Gone are the days when sound effects for your phone calls had to be homemade, like holding your nose when you called in sick. Now owners of selected Nokia and Sony Ericsson cellphones can use a utility called Soundercover to add recorded background sounds to their phoned-in alibis. If you are lingering over a latte but want to say that a traffic jam is holding you up, for example, Soundercover can add the sounds of honking horns and screeching tires to your call.
April 21, 2004
this is the dude who recently discovered the flaw in TCP. awesome.
Originally posted by rsg from del.icio.us/rsg, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 21, 2004 at 10:41 PM
osx xp - 0 notes - osx style apps for xp
This guy spent three years building an enourmous model of Star Wars Super Star Destroyer -- Darth Vader's flagship. It's to the same scale as the 4" figurines, making it a kind of jumbo skiffy dollhouse for your Lucasfilm dollies. It's pretty amazing. Bidding stands at £305 right now with four days left.
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!
Link
(Thanks, Peter!)
Originally posted by Cory Doctorow from Boing Boing Blog, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 21, 2004 at 10:53 AM
OMFG! Jay Maynard's TRON costume is tight! Werd! Here's some more TRON costumes.
April 20, 2004
always makes me happy to see someone understand why i'm a fan
Originally posted by anildash from anil dash's daily links, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 20, 2004 at 06:31 PM
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." Link
Originally posted by Mark Frauenfelder from Boing Boing Blog, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 20, 2004 at 01:39 PM
Maybe better than yesterday's,...special thanks to the ElectroDiscoPunks mailing list for these....
Originally posted by cory_arcangel from del.icio.us/cory_arcangel, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 20, 2004 at 11:54 AM
The San Jose Sharks are the hockey team of Silicon Valley. Their tech savvy shows: A coach uses a tablet PC with TiVo-like functionality to review plays and capture opportune moments, all while the game is in progress. By Katie Dean.

Kaden hand-builds and sells these functional mantelpiece/desktop replicas of medieval siege engines, which he calls "antiques from a parallel universe." I'm partial to the ballista.
Link
(Thanks, Kaden!)
Originally posted by Cory Doctorow from Boing Boing Blog, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 20, 2004 at 10:58 AM
Guardian Unlimited | Special reports | Big Mac boss dies of heart attack...
April 19, 2004
for $195, I could almost buy a new iPod [via]
Video mash ups maybe proove that mashups aren't over yet..........also: I wish I would have thought of this....
Originally posted by cory_arcangel from del.icio.us/cory_arcangel, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 19, 2004 at 03:50 PM
Anyone watching Blogdex over the past few months knows Hot Abercrombie Chick, a.k.a. Amanda Doerty. This site has popped into the top 10 least 5 times since I started noticing. I became interested last week when I saw it for the third or fourth time, and delved a little deeper. As it would turn out, all of the sites that Amanda was posting to were weblogs that posted their most recent comments on their front page, hence exposing comments to Blogdex. In other words, Hot Abercrombie Chick has been gaming Blogdex.
The notion that this attractive college freshman was spending all of her time trolling weblogs looking for exposed weblogs seemed implausable to me. But looking through the comments themselves, it appeared that most, if not all, were at least marginally on topic. In addition Abercrombie Chick was interacting with hundreds of commenters on her own site, and doing quite a good job of it. A person this prolific would have to be unemployed and completely focused, which anyone who has been unemployed knows is impossible.
Something was amiss, and I had to prove that Hot Abercrombie Chick was either a) a totally different girl, b) a guy or c) some team of people creating an identity. And I was devoted to outing this fraud. It turns out that Julia Set beat me to it:
Just received an inside tip that the recently famous Hot Abercrombie Chick is really a male college student capitalizing on cute pictures of his girlfriend (previously unbeknownst to her) in a rush of "beggars" trackbacks. In retrospect, it's pretty obvious that he is quite the player. Over the course of the last couple of months, "Mr. Abercrombie" has played every text-book trick for raising his popularity on the blogosphere.
Unfortunately there's still no reference to this indictment on Amanda's site, and still very little evidence beyond Julia's post that this inside tip is true. Recent links to the site on Blogdex reveal that someone else is using Amanda's tactics to call her out ("Comment Spamming Bitch Riding High On Blogdex!").
And I feel like a tool... she's a man, duh!
Originally posted by cameron from overstated, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 19, 2004 at 02:32 PM
Just received an inside tip that the recently famous Hot Abercrombie Chick is really a male college student capitalizing on cute pictures of his girlfriend (previously unbeknownst to her) in a rush of "beggars" trackbacks. In retrospect, it's pretty obvious that he is quite the player. Over the course of the last couple of months, "Mr. Abercrombie" has played every text-book trick for raising his popularity on the blogosphere. The most recent flood of activity, which probably led to his bust, occurred by spamming comments on popular blogs all over the net. Obviously, since he spammed so much, search engines boosted his ratings enough for his girl friend to find out, er, ex-girlfriend that is. Through the clever use of metaphysical dicsussion topics, polls and requests for help, this sick guy has probably sucked in many a lonely geek. Yuch.
people are still creating innovative work for the 2600 [via]
If you're visiting New York be sure to check out Paper Rad's show at Foxy Production, through May 29. This three-person collective makes video, paintings, drawing, clothing, and artist books with a kind of transcendental, cyberhippie-meets-kid's-show vibe. There are other artists working along similar lines, notably dearraindrop, but 'Rad seems closer to the old Russian constructivist spirit of integrating media and styles into a "unified work": a continuum running from Shockwave sunburst effects to van-style airbrush to simple watercolors to sewn fabric. Think Yellow Submarine, Rubik's cube, mid-90s homepage design, Gary Panter, and for a really obscure reference, the early 70s psychedelic illustration of Bob Brockway and Brad Johannsen. Installationwise, instead of jamming everything into a room (as dearraindrop did), the Foxy show is measured, geometric, and has breathing spaces; the six monitor video stack, featuring contributions by each member in a kinetic, ever-changing repertoire, is exceptional. An earlier video worth seeing is gumby: life is a mister-e: Gumby is too depressed to go on his birthday trip to outer space, so God's arm comes down from a cloud and gently massages away his troubles (and his head). Childlike and disturbing. 
Paper Rad: Detail from Weekly Comic. A couple of cell phone camera pics from the opening by bloggy
Originally posted by tom moody from Tom Moody, ReBlogged by cory_arcangel on Apr 19, 2004 at 12:17 PM
The rapper Shyne signed with Def Jam, despite the misfortune of being in prison.
Welcome Cory Arcangel
Our new reBlogger is Cory Arcangel, a computer artists and a founding member of the BEIGE Programming Ensemble. Cory's work is currently on view at the 2004 Whitney Biennial and at the Seeing Double Exhibition at the Guggenheim. Cory was a teaching resident at Eyebeam and is an on-going contributor to projects developed within the Eyebeam R&D department. His work has been featured on the reBlog before, but now he will be the one selecting the content on the site. Take it away, Cory.
Posted by jonah at 01:38 AM
April 18, 2004
A small group of 'hacktivists' in Toronto are looking at ways of bypassing government controls on the internet.
April 17, 2004
In a week, Kaki and I will be heading to the CiberArt Bilbao conference to give talks. My talk is in the “Computational Sociology” tract of the conference and is titled “Redefining Network Context: Creating New Paradigms Through Deconstruction”. Kaki’s is in the “Body and Nets” tract and is titled “The Social Fashioning of Emerging Communication Infrastructures”. The conference itself seems like a really interesting event - Richard Stallman will be giving a keynote talk on “Software Freedom and Culture Freedom” which sounds like his normal rant, but I’ve never seen him talk before so it should be fun. The second day of the event features a tract on “Synaptic Cartography” with a keybnote from Christian Huebler of Knowbotic Research.The event will also feature an exhibition of net.art, interactive installations, live acts, and more. I am planning a longer write up of the conference for my Festival Reports page, so stay tuned!
28 MAY - 6 JUNE 2004 at the ICA LONDON
|