Dream by Dream, Dreams Come True

Merry Christmas
Applet Art from Bora Bora
http://art.teleportacia.org/exhibition/merry\_christmas/

Already for 3 years we live in the new millenium. We have fast
computers, broadband connections, huge flat screens, there are even
three buttons on our mouses. And there are so many of us that the bridge
over the Digital Divide will soon break under our weight. We are in the
future.

But very often WWW makes this impression dissapear. Leaving messages in
blogs, rephrasing thoughts for google, openning and closing tiny pages
that do not even have a scrollbar and skipping intros is not the future,
it is the fantasy of developers prepared for Y2K crash, but not for Y2K.
Emergency scenario.

Absolutely another feeling is when you see how 90s utopias come true.
One can now put 3000 animated gifs on one HTML page and the browser will
not crash. You can go through VRML worlds fast and smooth. Background
images download before you finish to read the first paragraph.

Dream by dream, dreams come true. Recently I found out that Java Applets
don't freeze my browser any more. Lakes, puzzles, mosaics, lenses,
fractals, plasmas, running texts, rotating menus. It is exatly them who
make the web to be a very special place. What a pity that they were
overlooked by designers and artists (probably because they never worked
on Macs) and are not a part of the web of today.

It is really a shame that we were not patient enough and blamed java
applets developers every time our PCs crashed. As if it is the biggest
trouble in the world to restart your computer.

To correct this aesthetical injustice I decided to devote the
Teleportacia net art workshop at French Polinesian Bora Bora to java
applets. To come back to the roots and to work with classics of the genre.

Fortunately my plan worked: Young Bora Borian artists appeared very
sensitive to the traditions of the web. Without any ambition to conquer
the European media art market they made an invaluable contribution to
web culture.

I would like to thank Fabio Ciucci and all the participants for their
enthusiasm. Marc-Andre Zani of L'Appetisserie Cyber Cafe

Comments

, Rob Myers

On Monday, December 01, 2003, at 10:46AM, Olia Lialina <[email protected]> wrote:

>Dream by dream, dreams come true. Recently I found out that Java Applets
>don?t freeze my browser any more. Lakes, puzzles, mosaics, lenses,
>fractals, plasmas, running texts, rotating menus. It is exatly them who
>make the web to be a very special place. What a pity that they were
>overlooked by designers and artists (probably because they never worked
>on Macs) and are not a part of the web of today.

This is certainly why VRML never took off (in addition to VRML 2 being an unimplementably complex mess, and can somebody please get X3D banned under the Patriot Act or something? We need a usable standard that people actually want), but Java always worked OK on Macs unless you wanted an AWT UI in which case things just looked horrible.

I used to work for a Java house doing financial work. We had to target specific version numbers of PC IE for our work as the mathematical errors varied with each one's JVM and you don't want that when scoring people for credit…

- Rob.