networked performance
Pioneering Second Life artist to inspire Australian artists
TEST_LAB: PLAY!
Intermedia Art Show
LABworkshops: Second Life & Chiptunes
Josephine Bosma, Mediated Remains:
Digital Art Weeks 2007
transmediale.08 Conspire ... | club transmediale.08 - Unpredictable
Upgrade! Tel Aviv-Jerusalem
Found Footage Workshop
Digital Borders
National boundaries have survived in the virtual world
"... [W]hat we once called a global network is becoming a collection of nation-state networksnetworks linked by the Internet protocol, but for many purposes separate.
The bordered Internet is widely viewed to be a dreadful development that undermines the great network's promise. But the Net's promise was not fulfilled by the 1990s vision of an Internet dominated by the English language and the idiosyncratic values of the American First Amendment. People who use the Internet in different places read and speak different languages, and they have different interests and values that content providers want to satisfy. An Internet that accommodates these differences is a more effective and useful communication tool than one that does not. [...]
To understand the virtues of a bordered Internet, consider the opposite: an Internet dominated by a single global law. When you choose a single rule for six billion people, odds are that several billion, or more, will be unhappy with it. Is the American approach to Nazi speech right, or is the French variant? To what degree should gambling and pornography be allowed? Should data privacy be unregulated, modestly regulated, or heavily regulated? A single answer to these and thousands of other questions would leave the world divided and discontented..." From Digital Borders - National boundaries have survived in the virtual worldand allowed national laws to exert control over the Internet, by Jack Goldsmith and Timothy Wu, Legal Affairs.
Luke's Binoculars
Pentagon to Merge Next-Gen Binoculars With Soldiers' Brains
"U.S. Special Forces may soon have a strange and powerful new weapon in their arsenal: a pair of high-tech binoculars 10 times more powerful than anything available today, augmented by an alerting system that literally taps the wearer's prefrontal cortex to warn of furtive threats detected by the soldier's subconscious.
In a new effort dubbed "Luke's Binoculars" -- after the high-tech binoculars Luke Skywalker uses in Star Wars -- the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency is setting out to create its own version of this science-fiction hardware. And while the Pentagon's R&D arm often focuses on technologies 20 years out, this new effort is dramatically different -- Darpa says it expects to have prototypes in the hands of soldiers in three years...
The most far-reaching component of the binocs has nothing to do with the optics: it's Darpa's aspirations to integrate EEG electrodes that monitor the wearer's neural signals, cueing soldiers to recognize targets faster than the unaided brain could on its own. The idea is that EEG can spot "neural signatures" for target detection before the conscious mind becomes aware of a potential threat or target." From Pentagon to Merge Next-Gen Binoculars With Soldiers' Brains by Sharon Weinberger, Wired.
[iDC] From a Crisis of Value to a Crisis of Accumulation
FLOSS + Art = people.makeart
Re-Mediating Literature Conference
Spinal Rhythms:
Dislocate 07 - Exhibition and Symposium - Tokyo
Treadmill jogging in Second Life
Moriash Moreau had the same thing going almost a year ago. [via 3pointD]