Scott Paterson on Mon, 4 Nov 2002 18:57:01 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] PDPal - Request for feedback |
Apologies for cross-posting Hi all, We recently completed the alpha phase for an art project called "PDPal" for PDA's and were wondering if the members of this list would be interested in giving feedback about the project. I don't want to spam the list with the application but it is available for download at www.pdpal.com. For those of you who don't own or have access to a PalmOS-based PDA, there is, a stand alone version(2.3MB) for PC's that will run on your desktop. I am making a presentation of PDPal at the Doors of Perception conference (Nov. 14-16) and would love to get the project out there and hear feedback. Below is a description of the project. We look forward to your comments. Best regards, Scott Paterson Marina Zurkow Julian Bleecker + + + http://www.pdpal.com + + + About PDPal PDPal is a public art project for PDA's (personal digital assistants) in which users create pictographic maps, noting and exchanging moments from their urban experience. PDPal is the first art project to use the mobile platform as a mediating and recording device in order to transform everyday actions into a dynamic portrait. Currently in its first version, PDPal is hosted by an "urban park ranger" agent named Malewski. Users are prompted to collect and share their maps with other users via the infrared beaming capability of PDA's. User's are able to add notes to their maps, and then "beam" their maps with the notes to other users. In the next version, PDPal will track where maps have been beamed from user to user throughout the world. Using hot-sync technology, PDPal will upload users' maps to the PDPal server, thereby extending the application to the web. PDPal transforms our conventional understandings about maps and geography. When PDPal's users record their "position" as a set of "emotional coordinates", they are considering their experiences in the city as something beyond just street addresses and intersections. The city of grids becomes the city of experiences. By inhabiting both the real and virtual realms, PDPal transforms the PDA into a device for writing and visually rendering your very own city of experiences. "We think of PDPal as an emotional Global Positioning System," says Paterson, one of the three-artist team. Evocative of Italo Calvino's Invisible Cities in the ambitions of transforming the everyday or static place into a personal experience, PDPal relies on fluid emotional qualifiers to define social place, instead of the formal precision of latitudes and longitudes, or street addresses and zipcodes. The current version of PDPal is on exhibit in installation form at Eyebeam Atelier in the Chelsea neighborhood of New York City as part of the group show, "Beta Launch". Malewski - a retired taxi driver specific to Chelsea's primary, non-art related industry - is one of 10 Urban Park Rangers in development. Each park ranger is developed specifically for a particular neighborhood. PDPal is distributed through a beaming box developed by the public art organization Creative Time, as well as through the internet at www.pdpal.com. Through the beaming box - on constant "beam mode" - PDPal is offered freely in storefronts, galleries, lobbies, retail locations and elsewhere. The final version of PDPal will launch during the Summer 2003 at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. PDPal will also be made available through ten beaming boxes throughout New York City as part of Creative Time' s wireless initiative. About the artists PDPal was created by polymedia artist Marina Zurkow and architect Scott Paterson in collaboration with technologist Julian Bleecker. The project conceptually merges Zurkow's work in experience design, narrative and character development with Paterson's interest in the interface between physical and virtual space. Bleecker brings expertise in mobile platforms and a passion for technology as a mode of cultural production. Zurkow is best known for her animated internet series, "Braingirl" which screened at Sundance, the Rotterdam Film Festival and on MTV. Paterson's work seeks the possibility for "architecture", as a protocol between the virtual and the real, that is an interface between the activity of our daily lives and the space of the internet. Bleecker's work focuses on the material and semiotic means by which knowledge about the world is established, and how technology is able to create playful and serious contestations as to the sanctity of this knowledge. Prior to PDPal, his work has been largely as an essayist, reviewer and commentator. PDPal represents his first serious foray into the realm of technology as artistic practice. About Creative Time Creative Time, a New York-based nonprofit organization, has commissioned and presented adventurous public arts projects of all disciplines. Creative Time co-commissioned PDPAL with the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. About Eyebeam Eyebeam Atelier is a not-for-profit new media arts organization established to provide access, education, and support for students, artists, and the general public in the field of art and technology. PDPAL was developed during an artists' residency in the summer of 2002, and is part of Eyebeam's "Beta Launch" group exhibit, running Oct 15- Dec 1, 2002. About the Walker Art Center The Walker Art Center, a pioneer and catalyst for new media and traditional forms of art granted PDPAL an "Emerging Artists, Emergent Media" grant in 2002, with support from the Jerome Foundation. The Walker Art Center is a co-commissioner of PDPAL with Creative Time in New York. About Palm, Inc Palm, Inc., a pioneer in mobile and wireless Internet solutions and the world leader in handheld computing, was founded in 1992. Palm, Inc generously supported PDPal through a donation of Palm Pilots. _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold