Sean Cubitt on Wed, 7 Nov 2007 17:47:32 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Goodbye Classic ? |
hi david good to hear from you ;) this is the kind of problem that existts all over the digital: we mock the planned obsolescence of Detroit c. 1960 but live by it month by month (and its worse in mobileland). It isn't only software (but what happened to all those hypercard stacks?) I recycled my legacy mac when i moved to australia last year. With it went my last floppy drive and my last zip-drive. Bye bye all the art that came on them. Shoot, I even still have a couple of discs of textworks made for the green screen Amstrad . . . Emulators help but pose other problems: you can build a vurtual computer inside a new machine, but things like colour gamuts, response times and refresh rates are all changed. Old code simply runs too fast: see Vivian Sobchack's essay on nostalgia for quicktime in Millenium Film Journal. Or check jon ippolito's site for his account of technical issues emulaing Graham Weinbren's Erl King. Funnily enough i'm en route to berlin where the re:Place conference has a key strand dealing with the problems, technical and aesthetic, of archiving digital art. Archivists talk about centuries and longer ? their profession is about preserving Dead Sea Scrolls. Its clear already that not everything can be saved, not for the kinds of timescales an archivist has to think about. And each medium that comes along seems more fragile than the last: paper last better than film lasts better than magnetic lasts bettter than optical (where are the laserdisc players of yesteryear?) The questions include: which artworks are worth preserving (all the porblems of canon-formation) which operating systems are worth preserving which software apps are worth prserving? which hardware is worth preserving? . . . and at what cost, ie how much is it worth diverting from contemporary production in order to archive the (relatively) immediate past? because in many situations, that's the choice. Or we bite the bullet - which is i think what i/o/d have done with the Stalker - and declare that one medium=specific quality of digital media is their ephemerality. Or we use old media - print and cine - to document work that will not necessarily survive - because *we* don't know what the future will be interested in The berkeley 'how much information project' reckons global information production in exabytes per annum. Which sporting event telecast is destined for oblivion? The vast majority. no answers, but some devilish questions . . . sean Sean Cubitt scubitt@unimelb.edu.au Director Media and Communications Program Faculty of Arts Room 127 John Medley East The University of Melbourne Parkville VIC 3010 Australia Tel: + 61 3 8344 3667 Fax:+ 61 3 8344 5494 M: 0448 304 004 Skype: seancubitt Web: www.mediacomm.unimelb.edu.au Editor-in-Chief Leonardo Book Series http://leonardo.info # 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: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org