1. Feed

    Feed

    feed01small.jpg

    Feed: interactive installation to show how life is fed by media – According to Pier Luigi Capucci, nowadays the relationship between arts and life follows two different paths. The first and more ancient is deep-rooted in the organic matter and is inspired by scientific disciplines: biology, biotechnology and genetic. The second path, more recent, comes from different approaches: artificial life and robotics. The essential difference between the two (apart from tools, approaches and technologies in use) is that in the first path life is presented as it is, while in the second it is represented, i.e. simulated. Shane Cooper’s installation Feed, recently displayed at Museum of Contemporary Art Taipei’s Zone_V2_ Unstable Media, combines the two paths. The work is composed of two halves. The upper half is a video wall of television screens, each tuned to a different channel and playing at low volume. The lower half is a garden of ferns that can survive under conditions of extreme lighting. The television screens provide the light to the plants, which grow towards them in a constricted space, eventually colliding. People interact with the installation because the garden survives thanks to the people presence as infrared cameras convert images of visitors into light. Cooper presents life as it is through growing ferns but also applies the biological network to social network, which is deeply influenced by technological civilization. Feed sums up the relationship between new media and human beings poking fun at people who spend their days laying in front of television, fed by TV meals and news, believing that the tv screen is the only source of knowledge and entertainment.” – Valentina Culatti, Neural.

    (Via http://rhizome.org/syndicate/fp.rss.)


  2. Twitter / r_echos

    Twitter / r_echos

    r_echos

    (Via http://r-echos.net/.)


  3. Twitter is low-expectation IRC

    Twitter is low-expectation IRC

    By Nat Torkington

    I’ve been spending more time on Twitter than I have reading blogs. It reminded me of the time in my mis-spent youth when I got lost in IRC, spending evenings heckling the TV with my IRC friends. This is the geek equivalent of being stoner, by the way, with roughly the same effect on cognition.

    As I got older, I acquired kids and a mortgage. Work took the full-focus time that I had spent on IRC. IRC and I drifted apart. Periodically I’d log in and try to catch up with my friends, but it was like hooking up after breaking up—neither satisfying nor fully enjoyable.

    Twitter, however, I can be much more casual with. If I am called away by kids, work, house, wife, school, or any of the other distractions in my life, Twitter doesn’t care. Nobody gets offended if I don’t respond immediately, nobody uses uppercase if I dare to leave the keyboard to stop the kids from fighting. It’s a very loosely-coupled conversation.

    There are bursts of tight-coupling when back-and-forths happen between people who are “on” at the same time, but they’re the exception rather than the rule. For the most part it’s a stream of thoughts, wisecracks, questions, answers, and updates that carry with them no commitment for me (the reader) to interact, return fire, comment, create, or update in return.

    I love the liberation.

    As the social software space matures (to the point where only oldbies like Matt Webb call it social software) I hope to see more projects like Twitter, playing with the dials to give us a familiar experience that’s new in an unexpected dimension. Food for thought: is there low-expectation video chat? LJ Radio is very low-expectation audio chat.

    (Via O’Reilly Radar.)


  4. Dopplr’s Berlin Release: Trip Pages and a Coincidence Feed

    Dopplr’s Berlin Release: Trip Pages and a Coincidence Feed

    By Brady Forrest

    dopplr logo

    Dopplr, the traveler’s social network, punctuates its releases with conferences. Today they are announcing the Berlin release to coincide with the Web 2.0 Expo Berlin. In it they are including a number of features that they have trickled out since their last release (Amsterdam to coincide with Picnic). In it they are releasing trip pages, a blog badge (viral marketing), and a coincidences feed.

    dopplr

    As a Dopplr user it’s the coincidence feed that I am happiest to be gaining. Instead of seeing the travels of all my friends it limits it to just the trips where my friends and I overlap (for example until I did this post I had no idea that Schuyler Erle, geo-expert I consult frequently would be there). Dopplr is made for serendipity. Letting me reduce the flow of information to the most essential was a great design decision (dear facebook news feed team, please observe).

    dopplr trip page

    The trip pages are also a useful new feature (see CTO Matt Biddulph Berlin trip page above). It will aggregate Flickr photos from that period, connect to Upcoming (if appropriate), and remind me who else was there. My favorite feature is the fun and gratuitous sparkline that shows your travel at that time. Dopplr definitely keeps things fun.

    Dopplr’s still in a closed Beta. If you’ve been wanting to try it check to see if your company or MBA school is part of the Dopplr 100 program.

    Simple, fun, and aggregating my content together — Dopplr continues to be a useful web app. I want more apps that use my data and my friend’s data to make smart observations that I can use.

    (Via O’Reilly Radar.)


  5. The Art of News Feeds

    The Art of News Feeds

    Newsreaders and RSS aggregators aren’t known for being particularly flashy. But some mashups transform headlines, photos and other ephemeral nuggets into expressive exhibitions. The result? Bohemian RSS! By Eli Milchman.

    RSS newsreaders deliver headlines with all the panache of a brick.
    But a growing number of bohemian RSS mashups are combining news feeds with style, art and whimsy.
    Electronic artists are tweaking RSS interfaces, harnessing Flash animation and relational algorithms to breed outlandish, new ways of presenting information captured from news feeds.
    Average Shoveler, for example, resembles an old Commodore 64 game that lets the user wander through the streets of New York, stopping to shovel piles of snow that suddenly transform into images from current news.
    Passersby blurt out chunks of news — drawn from Yahoo’s news feed — in cartoon bubbles. All this is set to music composed by Gabriel Yared, award-winning composer of scores for movies such as The English Patient and Cold Mountain. Average Shoveler was created by artist Carlo Zanni. The graphics were inspired by the late-’80s classic, Leisure Suit Larry.
    Another artsy newsreader, Phylotaxis, presents an array of gently quivering dots that contain a photo, a story preview and a link to the story’s web page. Its elegant, sunflowerlike pattern was created by Jonathan Harris based on the Fibonacci series.
    Meanwhile, Ofer Luft and Yaniv Steiner combined the popular Flickr photo site with RSS news feeds, creating FlickrFling, which pulls Flickr images tagged with words that match headlines picked from several news services. The result is a kind of collage of not-quite-random images correlating to news headlines.
    Poeme Dada RSS looks like a cross between news headlines and popular fridge-poetry magnets. Robin Stein’s project draws RSS feeds from three major news services and then allows virtual poets to further pare down what subjects to draw headlines from, like the Middle East or science. Poeme will even randomly pluck words from headlines and offer up sage — if enigmatic — messages.
    While original and interesting, these flashy mashups generally don’t present news in a way that’s actually meaningful. So why create them?
    Zanni says he is trying to “overthrow dead culture.”
    “The Shoveler is another attempt to describe our society, our daily life, our fight with information and disinformation, and many other themes more or less hidden in the game,” he says. “Another very important aspect of this project is the collision between the fictional environment in which you are immersed and the real and shocking feeling driven by the online feedback you are playing with.”
    Attempts to make the web more visual are nothing new. A slew of companies, like Apple Computer and Xerox spinoff Inxight Software, have tried to map information graphically, with mixed success. Apple’s HotSauce, for example, was a mid-’90s project that presented the web as a 3-D space. It never caught on.
    Tim Bray, co-creator of XML, helped start the now-defunct Antarctica Systems in 1999. The Canadian company tried and failed to develop a way of navigating the web in 3-D.
    Bray said: “I think there is a huge opportunity for someone to develop a new style of user interface … (but) I have a lot of hands-on experience in trying to visualize the net, and it’s rife with huge conceptual and psychological and scaling problems.”

    [tags]reblog, rss, feed, art, info_hub[/tags]

    (Via Wired News.)


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