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Table of Contents: Child as Audience - reverse engineering project w/CAE + CIC + CDL [hactivist] "nathan martin" <nmartin@metadesign.com> Aidos for PC and PocketPC "Kenji Siratori" <white-b@d4.dion.ne.jp> Bad Subjects 2001-2002 Issues Announcement & Call for Essays lockard@socrates.Berkeley.EDU re: Switch Announces New ISSUE: V7N1 Pythonldy@aol.com new SCP developments SCP-New York <notbored@panix.com> spam-scab 193.252.46.153 spam-scab <spam-scab@toegristle.com> New Issue of the Hacktivist Out "ricardo dominguez" <rdom@thing.net> 4 the nettime fascist wretches integer@www.god-emil.dk JAM ECHELON DAY October 21st 2001 jan meyer <jmeyer@fh-potsdam.de> Free Dmitri Protests in Wash DC Jonathan Prince <jonathan@killyourtv.com> jukebox.thing.net jerome joy <joy@thing.net> Nairobits is looking for guestteachers in Nairobi Federica Foroni Lo Faro <federica@mediamatic.nl> Telepolis presents "Shopping Windows II" "Armin Medosch" <armin@easynet.co.uk> call for papers "John Frow" <elijfs@srv0.arts.ed.ac.uk> HELLO cursor real@xs4all.nl ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 18 Jul 2001 10:22:43 -0700 From: "nathan martin" <nmartin@metadesign.com> Subject: Child as Audience - reverse engineering project w/CAE + CIC + CDL [hactivist] - - Child as Audience [ where technology and anarchy fuck ] - - 224p book + cd w/audio and software in chipboard box - - Critical Art Ensemble with Carbon Defense League and Creation is = Crucifixion This book documents the reverse enginnering of the Nintendo GameBoy as = begun in 1997/8 by the Carbon Defense League and includes all necessary = instructions, schematics and software for the task. The disc also = contains a ROM of the first CDL game with emulator. An essay on = targetting the child as audience for tactical media activists, written = by Critical Art Ensemble with Carbon Defense League appears in the book. = Theaudio portion of the cd contains 3 traditional songs by cyberthrash = hactivists Creation is Crucifixion as well as noise by CIC with = voiceovers by Critical Art Ensemble. The book includes translations from = the original english into Dutch, French and German. The book is available through AK Press and Autonomedia. Online it is available through http://www.lumberjack-online.com or of course through http://www.hactivist.com This was the first media release by the tactical media activist group = HACTIVIST [ born of the fire of CIC and CDL ] HAC00000001 - $12ppd US / $15ppd WORLD for more information see hactivist.com ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 16 Jul 2001 10:51:34 +0900 From: "Kenji Siratori" <white-b@d4.dion.ne.jp> Subject: Aidos for PC and PocketPC Aidos KENJI SIRATORI PRIMER 27 | A hyper modern deformation of a conventional cyberpunk story for visible-humans. Microsoft Reader for PC and PocketPC: Approx. 55K Short Story | Shareware | ISBN 0-941215-51-2 http://www.primalpub.com/library/msread/aidos.lit 2000-2001 Primal Publishing . All Rights Reserved ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 19 Jul 2001 05:49:00 -0700 (PDT) From: lockard@socrates.Berkeley.EDU Subject: Bad Subjects 2001-2002 Issues Announcement & Call for Essays BAD SUBJECTS 2001-2002 ---------------------- CALL FOR ESSAYS BAD SUBJECTS is entering its tenth season of publication as a journal of the left and a collective. Bad Subjects seeks to revitalize progressive politics. We think too many people on the left have taken their convictions for granted. So we challenge progressive dogma by encouraging readers to think about the political dimension to all aspects of everyday life. We seek to broaden the audience for leftist and progressive writing, through a commitment to accessibility and contemporary relevance. Bad Subjects publishes both hardcopy and online editions, with approximately 100,000 online readers monthly. The Bad Subjects website is at http://eserver.org/bs. Most of our issues are dedicated to particular topics, and the topics of our next five issues have been listed below together with contact information. Most issues also contains essays on other topics too, so feel free to submit an article even if it doesn't seem to fit an upcoming topic. For general queries, contact the Bad Subjects editors at <bad@uclink.berkeley.edu>. TELEVISION (Issue 57) There's nothing quite as "everyday life" as television in America. It's so everyday that countries like Bhutan, which only recently acquired television, are concerned about threats to their cultural uniqueness. The average American television program has become a transnational source of hegemony and monoculture. Rather than simply saying "Kill your television", Bad Subjects would rather ask questions. In what ways does television either reinforce or challenge the status quo? Are issues of difference, such as queer life or criminal life, covered in ways that are or can be seen as revolutionary? Or, to make it more personal, did you ever watch a program on television and think "I'm not the only one ... how cool." Tune in, set the volume loud, and think about your favorite programs. Transmit your essays to the Television issue programming directors, Paul Ish <pbjtoy@hotmail.com> and Cynthia Hoffman <choff@lanminds.com>. September 4, 2001 submission deadline. THE POLICE STATE (Issue 58) American progressives used the term 'police state' to protest state and federal repression of the civil rights and anti-war movements in the 1960s. Perhaps the best-known example of the police state in action was the FBI's COINTELPRO (Counter Intelligence Program), which was directed against the American Indian Movement in the 1970s, and at sympathizers of Latin American revolutionary movements and environmental groups during the late 1980s. More recently, the term came back into vogue during the 1990s to describe the increasingly repressive policies of the Clinton Administration, which opened its administrative tenure with Waco and concluded it with a staggering record of funding for police and prisons. The Police State issue of Bad Subjects addresses how this concept of government can be applied in the current day and age, following the so-called decline of the nation-state and the advent of globalization in the post-Cold War era. Could Marx's often prophesized "withering away of the state" mean that the government will abandon violent means to maintain social order? Or will repressive state functions endure as held-over, consolidated remainders of nation-state authority? Are we now living in a global society of security, where a transnational diffusion of corporate power is maintained by a combination of regional security cooperation associations, like NATO, and personal information-gathering strategies? The possibilities are endless. Submit your essays to issue editors Megan Shaw Prelinger <alysons@earthlink.net> and Joel Schalit <riotgoy@ix.netcom.com> by October 15, 2001. CRUISING (Issue 59) When the Left takes on the character of a global carnival, traveling from site to site to lob rocks at corporate overlords and smash the state -- or at least, dematerialize it -- mobility is more important than ever. While college students emerge from Union Summers, Marxists like Toni Negri raise the on-the-road Wobblies as the left-most model of organization. As capital goes cruising, so goes the left. The Cruising issue wants stories about the relationship of traveler to terrain, and the relationship of fellow travelers to protest movements that have put much of the bite back in the Left. New Autonomists and their critics can cruise and sex each other up in our pages, and we'll all get our freaks on. Who cruises where, how, and why? And who cruises whom? Cruising is all about movement, but the movements are many. Ships range about the seas; men cruise one another; big vehicles find their cruising altitudes and cruising speeds. Bad Subjects seeks essays that capture the mobile spirit of the times in travel, in rebellion, in chasing sex. Whether you're riding through life on cruise control, looking for love in all the wrong places, gunning your motor through fast and furious streets, or denouncing those who are cruisin' for a bruisin', we want to hear from you. Tell us about your sex life and political life, and where they met. From Tom Cruise to Cruise missiles, the subject matter is wide open. Drive an idea by Aaron Shuman <AShuman101@aol.com> or Jonathan Sterne <jsterne+@pitt.edu>. Submission deadline November 30, 2001. IMMIGRATION AND DIASPORA (Issue 60) It is no exaggeration to say that immigration is one of the globe's most pressing political issues. Across the world, immigration -- how to control it, its desirability, who should be allowed to do it -- has become a hotly disputed topic. The Immigration issue will investigate the various forms that these politics of immigration have adopted across the world. It will pay particular attention to the experiences of the many parties involved in the migration process, from the immigrants crossing the multiple borders that define contemporary political space to those left behind, to the residents of the receiving countries, to the politicians and activists involved in defining the contours of the contemporary politics of population flow. Possible essay topics include: borders, citizenship, violence against immigrants, border control and the policing of borders, flows of people, money, ideas, commodities across borders both real and imagined, narratives of immigration in film and other pop cultural media, immigrant political and cultural representation, immigrants in the public sphere, political mobilization around immigration issues, multiculturalism, anti-immigration politics, sex tourism. Bad Subjects editors Frederick Aldama <Faldama@aol.com>, John Brady <jsbrady@socrates.berkeley.edu>, and Robert Soza <soza@uclink4.berkeley.edu> will edit this issue. January 31, 2002 submission deadline. THE AESTHETICS OF VIOLENCE (Issue 61) The daily injuries of authority structures and social discipline under global capitalism proliferate continuously. Yet while the deprivations of poverty are being dismissed as violence in their own right, the deployment of state violence has been elevated to new heights of romantic heroism. Racial, sexual and class violence in the multi-billion-dollar entertainment and music industries normalizes coercive violence by the state apparatus. Between the Pentagon and Hollywood, producing the means and promotional images of violence have become US export industries par excellence. Globalization arrives inseparable from guns or stories of men and weapons in service to the nation-state. Representations of violence against 'bad subjects' are being marketed as ideological legitimization for its use, and agents of social domination generate demands for an aestheticized violence that fits political specifications. But 'bad subjects' can't leave their reality cinema or turn off the TV once bullets start flying: we are both the audience and the subjects. Violence -- even where a defensive or liberational necessity -- is quintessentially ugly. Its representation involves expressive choices that collectively constitute an aesthetic that turns such ugliness to political purposes. This issue of Bad Subjects examines how the aesthetics of violence manifest themselves under the terms of contemporary transnational capitalism. To whose benefit are bodies being mutilated on screens and on streets? How do dominant cultures perpetuate their power through representations of physical domination in action? What happens when violence becomes a consumer item? How did we come to enjoy the sight of violence so, how do we love it so? Bad Subjects invites violent prose fits on these topics. Contact Arturo Aldama <aaldma@asu.edu> or Joe Lockard <lockard@socrates.berkeley.edu.> March 15, 2002 submission deadline. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 5 Jul 2001 10:05:01 EDT From: Pythonldy@aol.com Subject: re: Switch Announces New ISSUE: V7N1 Spring/Summer 2001 http://switch.sjsu.edu Switch is proud to announce a new Spring/Summer 2001 issue, Social Networks II, v7n1(http://switch.sjsu.edu). Taking inspiration from our previous issue, Social Networks, v6n2, Switch continues the investigation of what social, networks, and social networks means in relationship to contemporary art practice, new media, technology, and science. In "Bacterial Cybernetics and PDAs" (or, why PDA shouldn't stand for Personal Digital Animalculi) Benjamin Eakins proposes that the communication and control structures of bacteria may serve as a useful model for the interactions of wireless personal devices. Cindy Ahuna's "Online Game Communities Are Social in Nature" looks at social environments evolving from online games. In "Substantial Disturbance: An Interview with Faith Wilding" conducted in May of 2001, Brett Stalbaum asks Faith Wilding about artworlds, collaboration, interventionist art, and the models that lie behind activism and activist art today. From another perspective on activism, James Morgan's "Virtual Political and Cultural Activism" looks at the nature of electronic civil disobedience as both an art practice and a political tool. To the chagrin of the academic elite who even bother to notice, Thomas Kinkade has built a multimedia empire based on a lifestyle brand of Rockwellian simplicity and small town family values. Matt Mays' "Thomas Kinkade and the La-Z-Boy Aesthetic" explores the Kinkade phenomena, its shaky financial underpinnings and the implications for the growing rift between middle America. In contrast, Glen Sparer's "Art As Creative Virus and Host in the work of Mel Chin" illuminates Mel Chin's unique ideology on art as insertionary idea within a social realm. Rob Riddle's "Dubwise: Sonic Networks and Experiments in Studied Chance" explores relationships of sounds and rhythms; stories, thoughts, emotions and ideas that steep in the songs of a culture, giving the full concoction a unique voice and flavor. Wendy Angel's "DiFi: Digital and Fiber" is a text which explores a network of interrelationships between two superficially disparate media. Digital and fiber are entwined technologically, linguistically and socially. Inna Razumova's "Interview with Victoria Vesna" focuses on Vesna's recent collaborative project Datamining Bodies. In addition, Mark Gonzales' "Databodies, Genitals, and Living Forever......An Interview with Victoria Vesna" addresses such topics as developing an information persona through autonomous agents, social networks and databodies. Sheila Malone's "The Man Behind The Bunny: An informal interview with Eduardo Kac" reveals answers to popular ethical questions about science and art commingling in a test tube. Eduardo Kac traces his career and objectives as an artist in pursuit of a dialogic perspective. Nora Raggio's "Dancing on the Web, Dancing over the Ocean: An Interview with Amy Critchett" discusses DANCING ON THE WEB, DANCING OVER THE OCEAN, a multicultural performance that will take place between youth groups in CA, USA and SENEGAL this summer and will culminate in a live performance in San Jose on Labor Day weekend, 2001. Nora also interviews Lisa Jevbratt, curator of the show "LifeLike," an interdisciplinary survey of all things LifeLike--on the web, in the gallery, and in the theater. ( www.newlangtonarts.org/network/infome) involving artists Elliot Anderson, Marc Bohlen, Natalie Bookchin, Steve Dietz, Alex Galloway, Arijana Kaifes, Diane Ludens, Eddo Stern, Lev Manovich, Ken and Jennifer McCoy, Mark Tribe and Geri Wittig. In a unique feature Joel Slayton and Glen Sparer review and interview featured artists at SIGGRAPH 2001 (http://switch.sjsu.edu/v7n1/siggraph01.html) Also featured in our current issue are projects from Cadre students, Dawn Ahlquist, Susie McKinnon, and Rob Spain. Dawn Ahlquist's and Susie McKinnon's project, Nephelococcygia(http://dma.sjsu.edu/~dahlquis/public_space/clouds) digitally explores nonsensical cloud watching. Rob Spain's The Referential Database (http://cadre.sjsu.edu/~rspain/the/egomachine/statement.html) is a combination of Scripting and Mark up languages designed to analyze, process and store data. Social Networks II is a robust issue of exclusive interviews and unique social explorations of cultural and technological concerns. We hope you enjoy our latest endeavor. Sincerely, Sheila A. Malone smalone@cadre.sjsu.edu Managing Editor, Switch:Cadre's On-line Journal ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 20 Jul 2001 20:29:02 -0500 From: SCP-New York <notbored@panix.com> Subject: new SCP developments One and all: Events develop quickly. Both the Law Enforcement Alliance of America (LEAA) and Dick Armey/the American Civil Liberties Union have come out against face recognition software such as is used in Tampa, Florida, and elsewhere. 1. The SCP's response to LEAA http://www.notbored.org/leaa.html 2. The SCP's response to Armey-ACLU http://www.notbored.org/aclu.html 3. More photographs from tour of England http://www.notbored.org/scp-photographs.html look under "We know you are watching" and "It's OK, Officer" photographs of tour are also scattered throughout http://www.notbored.org/8june01.html 4. The SCP was recently written up by Der Spiegel http://www.notbored.orgspiegel.html The group was also on Der Spiegel TV as well. 5. There is a brand-new SCP group! Please join me in welcoming the San Francisco/Bay Area SCP (USA) http://redmist.ackers.net/bascp/index.html 6. Note that the list of co-sponsors for the 7 September 2001 international day of protest has grown http://www.notbored.org/7s01.html 7. Listen for the SCP on National Public Radio's "All Things Considered," 4:30 pm EST, on Wed 25 July 2001. Genoa! Genoa! Genoa! ------------------------------ Date: 22 Jul 2001 19:54:05 -0000 From: spam-scab <spam-scab@toegristle.com> Subject: spam-scab 193.252.46.153 you can put this in your net art news spam-scab::::::::::::::::::::::: http://toegristle.com/spam-scab/ :::::::::::ascii collage machine This message is being sent at your request. To get off this list, please read the instructions following this message. ghjhjkghjk . WON derful!!! o wond erful o wond erful spam engines on the Pleine Peau site. We neither mention the mini We already know that an object is basically a container for related item \ | \ | ###R#K#e/3 (G G O G( O 6 OO GO OOGOGs ^ %CC XX___________________/______ __ _____________/________/-/ ^^ /3RG ^ /tQ6 /6# (GG /#Q ^Q# ~ #O /KK~ t# 7Q ~K/ /67 DRIVE Dedicated Road Infrastructure for Vehicle Efficiency & S /##/#/#/## ,,,,''' , ; ;,,;;''' HMMMMH......: . ..::::::.. ..::::MMMM) '%' (remainder), '^' (exponentiation). Functions include sin, cos, tan, Other International Organisations UNMNMN0+$U#MMMMMMMMMN#A. 0D DHMMMY. 0U ,,, String Content Methods the discussion around how communities are shaped online, and how to work X - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ spam-scab by- 193.252.46.153 http://toegristle.com/spam-scab/ - ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 22 Jul 2001 11:23:09 -0400 From: "ricardo dominguez" <rdom@thing.net> Subject: New Issue of the Hacktivist Out Issue 4 of the Hacktivist Out. http://thehacktivist.com/thmag.html Also new updates at: http://thehacktivist.com/ ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 23 Jul 2001 15:38:43 +0200 (CEST) From: integer@www.god-emil.dk Subject: 4 the nettime fascist wretches \/\ siggraph 01 - nn introduces neu bodies. [space] \ [space] xy kind there was once a velveteen rabbit and in the beginning he was really splendid. he was fat and bunchy as a rabbit should be; his coat was spotted brown and white, he had real thread whiskers and his ears were lined with pink sateen. on christmas morning when he sat in the top of the boy's stocking with a sprig of holly between his paws, the effect was charming. .... the rabbit could not claim to be a model of anything for he did not know that real rabbits existed. .... "what is real?" asked the rabbit one day. "does it mean having things that buzz inside you and a stick out handle?" "real isn't how you are made" said the skin horse. "it's a thing that happens to you. when a child loves you for a long, long time, not just to play with, but REALLY loves you then you become REAL. "does it hurt?" asked the rabbit. "sometimes" said the skin horse for he was always truthful. "... when you are REAL you do not mind being hurt" kontinued at siggraph. evidament. + possibly else where. - nn @ Earational - http://www.earational.org - nn @ IAMAS 2001 - http://www.iamas.jp - global whirlpool simfonie - pzbl. kolaborazie with intim@ | http://www.intima.org http://www.membank.org/transnautika - nn *[in] 72-dpi anime - neu + improved design book - nn in kollaboration with nn + extra bodies have painted 01 NATO.0+55 spektakle \ workshop in paris. date: end of august. interested +? may kontakt: ecdysone@eusocial.com - INTER>BODY - http://www.membank.org/inter.body nn + nn are relokating to .de to konsume 01 lovely .de kasch injekzie / grant stubborn +? YES PL EASE!!!!! korporat fascistik +? YES PL EASE!!!!! kan i be bothered +? PITIFUL KUSTOM!!!!! hensz pas de tout a +? - nostalgia : an artificial landscape \ garden 01 nn + steim projekt in kollaboration with [space] - nn will `kollaborate` with Marc Bohlen, Jan Ekenberg, Ron Goldin, Arijana Kaifes, Lev Manovich, Kevin & Jennifer McCoy, Giuseppe Prisco, Brett Stalbaum, Kazunori Takahashi, Geri Wittig, Diane Ludin, and Lisa Jevbratt in the sequencing of the internet genome. http://www.ggttctttat.com/depleted.uranium.internet.genome.sequencing lateral zku!!!nt. would you like to be celera or the .gov amalgam +? as you knou nn is every one + abdicates to no one. - nn @ various extra spektakles which do not rekall. pre.konssept!n meeTz ver!f1kat!n. - Netochka Nezvanova - i was designed especially for you f3.MASCHIN3NKUNST head to toe and a few stops in between @www.eusocial.com 17.hzV.tRL.478 e | | +---------- | | < \\----------------+ | n2t | > e - - egoiste - i have no friends...i make my mind my friend - melt this right into your lips at least twice a day. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 23 Jul 2001 19:10:18 +0200 From: jan meyer <jmeyer@fh-potsdam.de> Subject: JAM ECHELON DAY October 21st 2001 See http://www.cipherwar.com/echelon/ for more info or http://www.attrition.org/attrition/keywords.html for a list of "trigger words" jan meyer ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 23 Jul 2001 16:45:10 -0400 From: Jonathan Prince <jonathan@killyourtv.com> Subject: Free Dmitri Protests in Wash DC Enjoy... Photos at: http://www.killyourtv.com/990/dmca More info at http://www.BoycottAdobe.com jonathan - -- .. Jonathan Prince jonathan@killyourtv.com http://KillYourTV.com - rants/quotes/links http://Photographica.org - a meta/photoblog ........................................................ 'Technology could save the World from itself, providing it is properly used' Buckminster Fuller ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 24 Jul 2001 18:36:08 -0700 From: jerome joy <joy@thing.net> Subject: jukebox.thing.net :::::::::::::::::: new version of the website http://jukebox.thing.net/ - 24 july 2001 development of an audio-based coop-system server ::::::::::: news: - - new interface - - "about" page - - "schema" page - - "coop-system server" page - - "forumcoop" page - - "pictures album" page - - "animation project" page - - "Anti-JukeBox & questions of autonomy" page - - "internet-system" page - - "links" page and a lot of new translations permanent sound lab audio database co-op environment evolutive system next streaming project shared resources & homestudio audio network non-academic digital music computing and acoustics mobile flux and research audio- and multisensory space ambient sampling duplication replication sonic glitches and residual sounds real-time and live results performed and fixed sounds political positions social involvements immaterial mutations catalyst for cooperation experimental strategies creative backbone & ramifications augmented and advanced workspace lo- & hi-tech free community manifesto variable distributed rhizome critical audio-lounge listening groupware cyberculture and microsillon music on the edge multiple interfaces build your tools! artistic and technological scan project & observatory minimal tools experimenting_sharing listen to digital artefacts free software concepts on-line workshop open portable surfaces ogg & free tools send and receive exchanges collective jukebox cooperation audio dispositiVE network open source GPL discussion technologies emergences portable listening permanent systems scan groupware hypertext forum radio conversation internet appropriation occupation streaming resistances programmation on line computer documentation homestudio interaction mutation process agora workspace situation political critical experimental interface group sampling immersion communication ambient immaterial distribution extension augmented research autonomY cyberculture OPEN - FREE jerome joy _________ http://homestudio.thing.net/ _________ http://jukebox.thing.net/ . . ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 25 Jul 2001 00:18:34 +0200 From: Federica Foroni Lo Faro <federica@mediamatic.nl> Subject: Nairobits is looking for guestteachers in Nairobi - --============_-1216109366==_ma============ Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" ; format="flowed" ============================================== Webdesigners / projectmanagers as volunteers Guest teachers ============================================== NairoBits (http://www.nairobits.org) is looking for guest teachers that will do educational projects in the coming year with our students in Nairobi. Goal is to provide the students with professional knowledge of different aspects of webdesign. 15 of our students are on semi-professional level, 5 of them are first years. Guest teachers go to Nairobi on voluntary basis. * NairoBits provides housing and an inspiring working environment for the guest teacher during their stay in Nairobi. * Guest teachers are required to have didactical skills. * Guest teachers are required to have professional experience with at least three of the following applications/environments: Macromedia Dreamweaver, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Illustrator, HTML, Macromedia Flash. * The length of a guest teaching period is 10 weeks. * The first week overlaps with the previous guest teacher, the last week overlaps with the next guest teacher. * Teaching projects should deal with one or more of the following aspects of web- or multimedia design: - conceptdevelopment - projectmanagement - interactiondesign: navigation, usability etc. - expert use of applications. Interested guest teachers can e-mail NairoBits (astrid@nairobits.org) with a proposal for a teaching project and a consise CV. Please look through our site to become acquainted with the project and Nairobits. - --------------------- FEEL FREE TO SUPPORT NAIROBITS! --------------------- If you have advice or support or are in a position to help contact us info@nairobits.org. If you indeed wish to contribute financially to NairoBits, the bank number is 55.75.62.317. Leerbroek The Netherlands. Any contribute is more than welcome.... Thank you! - --------------------- FEEL FREE TO SUPPORT NAIROBITS! --------------------- - -- - --============_-1216109366==_ma============ ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 25 Jul 2001 11:08:51 +0200 From: "Armin Medosch" <armin@easynet.co.uk> Subject: Telepolis presents "Shopping Windows II" Telepolis presents Shopping Windows Part II The second part of the Internet art exhibition "Shopping Windows" has been launched. http://www.telepolis.de/tp/english/kunst/nk/shopping/default.html http://www.telepolis.de/tp/english/kunst/nk/shopping/default.html http://www.telepolis.de/tp/english/kunst/nk/shopping/default.html The ongoing exhibition with the full title "Shopping Windows - net art after the age of e-commerce" shows new works commissioned by Telepolis: "i.d.k.a.t." by lia "Untitled-Game version of 'My boyfriend came back from the war'" by JODI "Expand, an interface" by Shu Lea Cheang http://www.telepolis.de/tp/english/kunst/nk/shopping/default.html http://www.telepolis.de/tp/english/kunst/nk/shopping/default.html http://www.telepolis.de/tp/english/kunst/nk/shopping/default.html Lia's work "i.d.k.a.t." is the latest in a series of works that "attempt to articulate mathematical and natural principles below a visual surface in an enjoyable and sometimes playful way ... the user can also be seen as an additional random-factor in the code which can help to create a more or less "organic" result." With 'Untitled-Game version of "My boyfriend came back from the war"' Jodi ask us to enter the game zone for a remix of Olia Lialinas net art classic http://myboyfriendcamebackfromth.ewar.ru/ The game is based on the free game engine Wolfenstein. Shu Lea Cheang's "Expand, an interface ... plays on digital frames vs. cinema frames ... The hyperlink hypernarrative is deemed obsolete as rational yields to E-motional in post-click netivity." In this version, image sequences are taken from Shu Lea Cheang's scifi digimovie "I.K.U." Together with the artistic contributions of Part I, <Content=No Cache> by Giselle Beiguelman, "BallPool" by Matthew Fuller/Scotoma.org and "Waste_Words Their Weight & Frequency in London's Municipial Rubbish" by Harwood/Scotoma.org, Shopping Windows is no complete. See the entire show at: http://www.telepolis.de/tp/english/kunst/nk/shopping/default.html http://www.telepolis.de/tp/english/kunst/nk/shopping/default.html http://www.telepolis.de/tp/english/kunst/nk/shopping/default.html curated by/questions/feedback to armin@easynet.co.uk http://www.telepolis.de ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 25 Jul 2001 13:22:22 +0000 From: "John Frow" <elijfs@srv0.arts.ed.ac.uk> Subject: call for papers Could you please post the following call for papers? Thanks, John Frow Call for Papers The New Information Order and The Future of the Archive Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities University of Edinburgh March 20th 23rd 2002 The electronic revolution of the last decade has transformed the nature and the potential of the public collection. It is now possible to envisage libraries, museums and art galleries which are accessible, in part or in whole, online. The publishing industry is in a state of turmoil as it makes the transition to electronic dissemination of its products; scholarly research has been revolutionised by the resources of the internet including online publishing, email, scholarly lists, and the formation of new databases. E-commerce is in the process of transforming the retail book trade. What, in this context, is the future of the archive? Bringing together librarians, curators, archivists, publishers, booksellers and academics, the conference will seek to address some of the central issues that arise from the rapidly forming new information order: Plenary speakers include: James Boyle, Duke University Richard Collins, BFI Josie Dixon, Palgrave Matthew Evans, Faber and Resource Peter Jaszi, American University Paul Mosher, Director of Libraries, University of Pennsylvania Representatives from Elsevier, the Online Computer Library Center, and the British Library Proposals for Papers are invited by November 1st 2001. Please send a one-paragraph abstract and contact details to the address below. Details and updates are available on the conference website: < { HYPERLINK http://www.ed.ac.uk/iash/future.events.html }http://www.ed.ac.uk/iash/future.events.html> Enquiries to Professor John Frow, Director, Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, University of Edinburgh, Hope Park Square, Edinburgh EH8 9NW. Email IASH@ed.ac.uk John Frow Department of English Literature University of Edinburgh Hume Tower, George Square Edinburgh EH8 9JX Scotland 0131 650 6856 Fax 0131 650 6898 J.Frow@ed.ac.uk ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 25 Jul 2001 12:00:17 +0200 From: real@xs4all.nl Subject: HELLO cursor Korean Net Art show HELLO Cursor fragmentary thoughts about an interactive symbol "hand shaped cursor" "It is uncertain who invented this 'hand-shaped cursor' however, it has become the symbol of hyper culture." curator: Kyeong Il Park http://www.402lab.com/intaglio/Hellocursor/ with special contributions by: 8081 (Italy) Absurd (USA) Gaku Tsutaya + Takuji Kogo/ candy factory (Japan) Peter Luining/ ctrlaltdel (the Netherlands) Cybordelics (Germany) d2b (France) entropy8zuper (Belgium/ USA) hello (Korea) jodi (Belgium/ the Netherlands) Ken Aronson (USA) Mario Hergueta (Germany) Mouchette (the Netherlands) 000per (Korea) one38 (USA) Lew Baldwin/ redsmoke (USA) tipo (Brazil) ------------------------------ # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net