Sick.

posted : Monday, March 17th, 2008

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“ Washing underwear in the data stream

posted : Sunday, March 9th, 2008

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posted : Saturday, March 1st, 2008

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Design and the Elastic Mind: Honeycomb Vase Posted by: squee.gee on Tuesday, February 19 2008 (via Design and the Elastic Mind: Honeycomb Vase)

Design and the Elastic Mind: Honeycomb Vase Posted by: squee.gee on Tuesday, February 19 2008 (via Design and the Elastic Mind: Honeycomb Vase)

posted : Friday, February 29th, 2008

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posted : Friday, February 29th, 2008

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“ I’m not you.

posted : Thursday, February 28th, 2008

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SF I.

SF I.

posted : Thursday, February 28th, 2008

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“ chilaquiles by Tom Delillo
— None

posted : Saturday, February 9th, 2008

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Ternary logic (-1, 0, 1)

Looking at very popular media art form such as ‘interactive installation’ I always wonder how people (viewers) are excited about this new way of manipulation on them. It seems that manipulation is the only form of communication they know and can appreciate. They are happily following very few options given to them by artists: press left or right button, jump or sit. Their manipulators artists feel that and are using seduces of newest technologies (future now!) to involve people in their pseudo-interactive games obviously based on banal will for power. But what nice words you can hear around it: interaction, interface for self-expression, artificial intelligence, communication even. So, emergence of media art is characterised by transition from representation to manipulation.

 - Alexei Shulgin 

 From We Make Money Not Art 

posted : Saturday, February 9th, 2008

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The Best Research


“A great design strategist someone who has had a few different professional identities and gets excited by the spaces where disciplines, schools of thought, and methods overlap. They are curious and easily intrigued: they like to observe what’s going on around them and they’re good at listening to people. And they know how to use all this data to synthesize new patterns and communicate them clearly to a range of audiences. Charlie Stross, in the sci-fi book “Accelerando”, describes the profession of a “meme broker” and the intense amount of content they have to assimilate every day in order to do this. Bruce Sterling calls this activity “scanning“ looking at all the sources one can and constantly asking what does this mean for my clients. Being able to work through all those data sources and pull out the implications is crucial for design strategy.

(…) The best research brings to life the imperfect and messy stories of real people and presents generative frameworks that lead the way forward for new designs, products, services, features, communications, or whatever is needed.”

Influx

posted : Saturday, February 9th, 2008

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