Position Available at MIT : Academic / School

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<a href="http://www.media.mit.edu/about/jobs.php?action=detail&id=46" >Direct</a> the Media Lab. (Academic stature warranting the rank of Full Professor at MIT is also essential.)
    <p><em>of possible interest to some of you.  --mr</em></p>

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Originally posted on Eyebeam reBlog by Rhizome


Day-to-Day Data

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Makes blogging seem almost sane. Day-to-Day Data exhibits the work of artists who seek inspiration from insignificant details in their own or the publics’ everyday lives - artists who use daily experience as research material from which to obtain their data.

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Originally posted on WebWalkAbout by Rhizome


akamai net usage index

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akamai technologies, which hosts & caches Internet content for other major companies, has just launched a new website that shows the aggregate network traffic to indicate the interest in major news events in real time. the website tracks the number of viewers per minute by geography from about 100 major news sites, & identifies the times of day when news viewing peaks in different parts of the world. the according visualization displays spikes in network traffic, revealing a 'coming wave of news demand' so websites can get prepared in time.

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Originally posted on information aesthetics by inf*


Haunted (Interactive) Art

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Usman Haque’s latest project, Haunt, uses “. . .humidity, temperatures and electromagnetic and sonic frequencies that parapsychologists have associated with haunted spaces, this project aims at building an environment that feels “haunted": a non-visual architecture.

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Originally posted on coin-operated by Rhizome


Teaching Turing

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Teaching Turing, by David A. Mellis and Aram Armstrong is an easy to understand, fun environment for learning about and programming Turing machines. The goal is to show people how Turing machines work by having them program a Turing machine themselves.

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The structure of Teaching Turing is divided into a series of levels with the earliest stages very clearly walking the user through the basic controls of a Turing machine, then working up to a series of graphic puzzles solved through programming. Users can move at their own pace through the levels, or proceed to free exploration and programming of the machine.

Demo of Teaching Turing.

PDF describing Teaching Turing.

Related: A train that can calculate, the Cut-Out computer.

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Originally posted on we make money not art by Rhizome


The Algorithmic Revolution

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The German Centre for Art and Media (ZKM) in Karlsruhe is currently showing the exhibition The Algorithmic Revolution which presents a historical outline of this radical change in the fine arts, music, design and architecture. The exhibition draws both on the ZKM collection and selected loans. It can be experienced until December 2005.

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Originally posted on Rhizome.org Raw by Søren Pold


Treasuremytext

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Treasuremytext is a project in which thousands of users are contributing their deepest, private messages into a public space. What do people really send, and why do they want to keep this stuff forever?

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Originally posted on Rhizome.org Raw by Katie Lips


Bob Moog, R.I.P.

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Bob Moog, inventor of the Moog synthesizer and revolutionizer of music, just died. May he rest in peace. Below are excerpts from two posts that appeared on this page last year about the film Moog. They were mostly critical, but the gripes were about the film and not the man, as I have nothing but admiration for him and his work.

The highest spots in Moog involve not the keyboard instrument but the Theremin, which Moog got his start building. Solos by Pamelia Kurstin and Moog himself are beautiful and otherworldly--music from thin air, only two controls (pitch and volume), no moving parts, it's the soul of economy and still inherently futuristic. How did we ever lose track of the concept?
And later:
It's interesting to watch Moogs being assembled and to hear the inventor talk about them--he's quite the spiritualist, and says he intuitively knows what sounds the circuits will make. He emphasizes the importance of playing live before an audience, and seems to distrust "music made alone to be listened to by people alone." [...]

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Originally posted on Tom Moody by tom moody


Learn quicktime. Free online training library

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Online training from lynda.com - Free 24-hours pass
Learn - Quicktime Compression Principle
and - Quicktime 5 Pro - (good for qt7 users)
Offer expired 08/31/05
Highly recommended !

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Originally posted on DVblog by doron


Schema

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XML Translation of Dan Graham's "Schema" by matt_butler: In 1966 conceptual artist Dan Graham composed a language-based work entitled Schema. The artwork consisted of a formal procedure for how to describe a document, or a "set of pages," with no real reference to the content of that document. This schema, as he called it, shares a remarkable similarity with XML, invented over 30 years later.

The conceptual artists of the late 1960's and early 1970's were interested in the nonvisual abstraction of art and how artworks might be represented as information. Using language in a non-literary and non-poetic manner, they sought to continue the tradition of visual artists in a search for abstraction and minimalism. Many conceptual works of this time were simply words on paper, instructions, or thought experiments. Schema allowed the viewer to be aware of the material nature and structure of the document they were holding — as well as any document they might hold. Using XML, I have created a machine-readable translation of his 1966 work. Schema was originally published in issue 5+6 of Aspen magazine. It is now being archived at UbuWeb.

Biography:

m.f.a. university of iowa (intermedia art). ph.d omega university (unaccredited parapsychology). maybe logic academy (robert anton wilson instructor).

matt is currently employed at the iowa city public library where he produces television programs for the library channel. he also teaches digital art at coe college in cedar rapids, ia.

matt has participated in a variety of art and technology events including versionfest at the m.c.a. chicago. his published books can be found at printed matter, inc. new york. [via Rhizome]

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Originally posted on networked_performance by jo