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- - - - - - - | 0 0 . 0 8 | - - - - - - - | <nettime> announcer | a << | - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | b | - - - - busy-owner@hgb-leipzig.de : MediaArt Files UP/DOWNLOAD at verybusy.org | 0 1 | - - - - trial40@Camtech.net.au : "Bigger Picture" Home Page Discussion List | 0 2 | - - - - NOMADS <nomads@nomadnet.org> : AUDIOPHFILE v.3.0 | 0 3 | - - - - xandy <xandy@zamir.net> : archive | 0 4 | - - - - coca rivas <coca@coca.fsnet.co.uk> : UNXposed opening | 0 5 | - - - - francis <francis@hgb-leipzig.de> : [lounge] Gdansk | 0 6 | - - - - Phil Graham <phil.graham@mailbox.uq.edu.au> : A, T and O of C C | 0 7 | - - - - Jennifer Ley <anemone@sprynet.com> : Women and Technology | 0 8 | - - - - kaucyila brooke <kaubrooke@earthlink.net> : Photography Positions | 0 9 | - - - - Gregor Muir <gregor@lux.org.uk> : Lux Gallery Update | 1 0 | - - - - Alan Sondheim <sondheim@panix.com> : Lost Project and the Projects | 1 1 | - - - - | - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | | delivered each weekend into your inbox | | mailto:nettime-l@bbs.thing.net | | - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 1 | - - - - NEWS at: www.verybusy.org ::: center 4 hardwired arts :::: : : . . ........Media Art executable files at <FILES> DOWN-/UPLOAD Center................... ....english :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::: : : . . The mediaart server www.verybusy.org provide it's new <FILES> menu where an upload and download of small executable files concerning mediaartistic works was enabled. The upload of new files can simply done directly from the provided webinterface in just 4 Steps. Aswell as the download within 1 Step.. We starting up the page with works from Jodi, Webstalker (I/O/D), V2 Labs Netherlands and Marciej Wisniewski's Netomat and hope you'll let the center grow fast. Please take care of the following rules: - AS EXECUTABLE FILES COULD CONTAIN BUGS, VIRUSES - AND IN WORST CASE MAY HAVE NEGATIVE EFFECTS ON YOUR COMPUTER, WWW.VERYBUSY.ORG TAKES NO RESPONSABILITY FOR ANYTHING YOU DOWNLOAD/UPLOAD. - WE ACCEPT UPLOADS OF ANY FORMAT, IN BEST CASE PACKED ARCHIVES AND ANY PLATTFORMS. - UPLOAD LIMIT IS 2MB, TO ENSURE SMALL BUT NEAT PROGRAMMS - THE RIGHTS OF DOWNLOADABLE FILES MAINTAIN BY THE ARTISTS. ____________________________ Sincerely, spiv. busy admin staff. > >>> you're artist and your work can't be found on hundreds of common searchengines ? submit your work to verybusy.org the hardwired arts finder : http://www.verybusy.org/add.htm __________________________________________ ___ __ _ _ www.verybusy.org ::::::::: the :::: center:::4::hardwired::::arts ::::::::::::::::::::: :::: ... . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 2 | - - - - Welcome to the Bigger Picture 'proto-home page' discussion list. The = Bigger Picture is considering the launch of a web site. However, it currently lacks the finances, expertise and = acknowledged community support to get one under construction. So this 'listbot' e-mail is being circulated to gather = the community support, expertise and finances to get an internet home page web site underway. You are being asked to = subscribe to this free list to indicate your agreement to the project, and to offer help. Thanks for the wavy = Aboriginal flag are due to=20 www.aboriginalgenocide.com.au, for the Ngarrindjeri flag to = www.chariot.net.au/~raymur, and for the other=20 Aboriginal flags to www.vicnet.net.au/vicnet/koorie. Please subscribe = to the list to indicate your agreement to constructing a Bigger Picture web site home page, and to give your input = now.=20 =20 There are five (5)".htm" files from Listbot attached for you to study = before making a commitment. Your voluntary agreement to participate in a Listbot list is needed now before the list = can be listed, apparently. Anyway, if you have some better idea please e-mail nlpa@camtech.net.au with your suggestion. = The list needs to be A/c free. If you wish to begin the list yourself as the Bigger Picture list owner and include = trial40@camtech.net.au as a member just make sure there are no costs to the members. =20 The basic questions about a Bigger Picture web site and home page = revolve as much around interest in the project as they do in its cost, location, development or control. The support you = can show or extend to the Bigger Picture=20 Campaign office will directly increase the capacity of the Ngarrindjeri = Justice Fighting Fund to access donations. =20 *************************************************************************= *************************************************************************= ***************************************************** = =20 Donations to the NGARRINDJERI JUSTICE FIGHTING FUND may be made to: BANK = SA - BSB 105-165 A/c No. 015569840 - any $ funding greatly appreciated = ! The Bigger Picture Campaign Office Contacts: TEL (08) 85751 744 = {ansafone}/ FAX: (08) 85751 766 *************************************************************************= *************************************************************************= *****************************************************=20 BIGGER {DRAFT#1} PICTURE TEL:(08) 85751 744FAX:(08) 85751 766 HOME = PAGE =20 e-mail:c/- trial40@camtech.net.au = Post:c/- PO BOX 126 MENINGIE SA 5624 =20 = =20 =20 *************************************************************************= *************************************************************************= *****************************************************=20 =20 Donations will be spent to address the present unfair balance in the = scales of justice when it comes to social recognition, respect and understanding for Indigenous rights. Someone = please e-mail a public domain icon of "justice scales" you have accessed so we can place it on our website = home page. LINKS:http://www.faira.org.au; FAIRA Aboriginal Corporation - publisher of "Land Rights Queensland" = news;and the Kumarangk News from Ray=20 Murphy at http://www.chariot.net.au/~raymur/KNEWS.html. =20 =20 To establish your support for the Bigger Picture Campaign immediately, = please distribute all Bigger Picture=20 attachments you have access to, including this new one, or may have = kept, to all your e-mail and internet contacts, and please distribute this free list update to them locally, nation wide = and internationally ASAP and ask them to=20 circulate THE BIGGER PICTURE vision/update to their networks if they = agree with the Bigger Picture's vision of=20 justice, peace and a 'fair go' treaty for Indigenous people! With the = establishment of a web site and home page the=20 Bigger Picture Campaign can gather the people power to win the fight for = justice - The Bigger Picture Campaign.=20 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 3 | - - - - AUDIOPHFILE v.3.0 http://www.nomadnet.org AUDIOPHFILE v.3.0, a bimonthly sonic art exhibition organized by NOMADS, is now on-line at <http://www.nomadnet.org> v.3.0 features work by Forbidden Reproduction (Washington, DC), Sabot (Tabor, The Czech Republic) and The Trance and The Arcade (Washington, DC). AUDIOPHFILE requires the Flash 4.0 player and a java-enabled browser. As always, we recommend the use of headphones or speakers for the best listening experience. AUDIOPHFILE is funded, in part, by the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities and the National Endowment for the Arts. -- Laura McGough Co-Director, NOMADS www.nomadnet.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 4 | - - - - ATTACK Vukovarska 237 c /2 100 00 Zagreb Croatia Zagreb, 19. February 2000 ATTACK Autonomous culture factory, Attack, is a project which has started on september 1997 as an initiative whose goal was to open an independent social and cultural space which will promote alternative culture and culture of civil society in Zagreb. Attack has dealt with many issues such as anti racism, human rights, environment etc.. Our main goal is to open and maintain a space wich is open for alternative culture. This space will be an old factory building that has been empty for a long time. We got this building from the city and will move in in january. We want to use the building as an independent cultural center including an alternativ library/archive. ARCHIVE ATTACK has got some books, magazines etc. and wants to set up an archive. We are updating what we´ve got now and would be happy to fill our archive with more medias. Our archive is supposed to be a multi media archive and we can use every kind of prints, videos, tapes, cds and cd-roms, subscriptions etc.. There is no place in Croatia yet where people have access to political, cultural, ecological, feminist etc. medias for free in an alternativ space. We don´t have a lot of money for this project. We wonder if you could contribute with any material or money, anything is welcome: any subject, language or media, but we're focused on alternative things. Please contact us to tell what you can spare, or to get more information about attack. We publish a newsletter in serbocroatian language every month that we can send you. Thank you, yours Alex Korb - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 5 | - - - - We would like that you join the UNXposed mailing list (London Edition). If you´re not a video artist, please try to hide it. http://www.azar.ms/unxposed UNXposed is a web tool for video artists. We focus on resources in London but most of the information is also useful for video artists elsewhere. The main objective is to provide a fast information service for brand new videowork: submissions to festivals (ordered by deadline); distribution companies that handle video; galleries and showcases; websites with online video streaming looking for shorts. We aim to select those sites that most closely engage with the specific issues relating to video art as opposed to mainstream narrative video and film. The festival section rates entries according to how geared they are towards video art (in relation to film or less experimental work), how user-friendly they are for submitters (format, fees, administration), and includes comments and feedback from users of the UNXposed list and and direct from the UNXposed team.!!! ************************************* Coca Rivas 11, Beck Rd. E8 4RE London 00 44 (0) 181 533 6534 UNXposed team. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 6 | - - - - Dear Friends On Thursday 24th we establish our LOUNGE for 4 days at the Wyspa-Galerie/Gdansk. Would be fine to meet You there or You may have a look to the website that will give short reports daily. http://www.hgb-leipzig.de/lounge best greetings francis - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 7 | - - - - /* Artists, Technology, and Ownership of Creative Content */ By way of the New Media Research list >Greetings all, > >Mark Latonero here-- doctoral candidate at the Annenberg School for >Communication, University of Southern California. I'm part of a >organizing committee for a February 2001 conference-- "Artists, >Technology, and Ownership of Creative Content." An interdisciplinary >collaboration of academics along with industry folk, we are exploring the >tensions that arise as cultural (media) products enter into the age of >digital reproduction and Internet culture. We are focusing on three >areas: film, music, and visual art. The format is for one person to >present an original case study, and panelists to discuss. I admit that >the focus is more on the American case (in terms of Law and industry) this >time around, yet we intend to expand discussion for international-global >concerns for a later conference with a similar topic. > >If you are interested or can suggest the top scholars, researchers, or >practitioners doing work in these specific areas please forward names to >me at <latonero@usc.edu>. > >BTW in case u missed Phil's intro of me-- I'm investigating Internet >music's development and its impact on the socio-cultural >structures/practices that constitute the music economy. I'm also a >researcher at the Normal Lear Center: "Exploring implications of the >convergence of entertainment, commerce, and society" ><http://entertainment.usc.edu> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 8 | - - - - Apologies for cross-posting The new issue of Riding the Meridian: Women and Technology is online at: http://www.heelstone.com/meridian/ the Literature: Miriam Axel-Lute, Michelle Cameron, Wendy Taylor Carlisle, Ruth Daigon, Claire Dinsmore, Johanna Drucker, Claudia Grinnell, Diane Gromala, Christine Kennedy, Adriene Jenik, Tina LaPorta, Mez, Jessy Randall, Neca Stoller, Sue Thomas and Teresa White the Dialogue: A roundtable discussion with professors and theorists N. Katherine Hayles and Marjorie Perloff, Eastgate aquisitions editor Diane Greco and hypertext writers Shelley Jackson and Linda Carroli CK Tower interviews Daniela Gioseffi the Theory: A Progressive Dinner Party showcasing the work of 39 women who produce hypertext web work, created by contributing editors Carolyn Guertin and Marjorie Luesebrink, with commentary by N. Katherine Hayles and Talan Memmott Guertin examines the underpinings of the upcoming Eastgate release, _Califia_, by M.D. Coverley the Means: An interview with Judy Malloy Tabetha Dunn, geniwate and Deena Larsen share their experiences working with technology *** questions? contact Jennifer Ley, Editor: jley@heelstone.com **** Conspire, edited by CK Tower, will feature a concurrent issue dedicated to women who write at: http://www.conspire.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 0 9 | - - - - Visiting Artist Positions California Institute for the Arts Program in Photography Artist/Theorist/Historian/ emphasis in Photography, Media, and/or related Theory. Two positions available: One year long position starting from September 2000 to May 2001 and a second position for one semester only. Responsibilities include two courses per semester, supervision of independent study projects, participation in student reviews, and student advising at both the undergraduate and graduate level. Significant record of exhibition or production, ability to address range of media and all levels of practice. Include letter of application, CV, slides of work, publications, video, CD ROM &/ or url, three references, SASE. A/D April 15, 2000 but application review will begin March 15, 2000. EOE, WMA Kaucyila Brooke Director, Program in Photography Cal Arts 24700 McBean Parkway Valencia, CA 91355 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 1 0 | - - - - KUTLUG ATAMAN's SHOW OPENS THIS SUNDAY AFTERNOON, 3 - 7 pm. WOMEN WHO WEAR WIGS Kutlug Ataman The Lux Gallery announces the first UK presentation of Women Who Wear Wigs (WWWW) – a four screen video installation by internationally acclaimed artist and filmmaker Kutlug Ataman. An endless stream of subjectivity, WWWW weaves together accounts from the lives of four ordinary, and not so ordinary, Turkish citizens. The surprise is their complex and unique relationship with wigs. As the film progresses, each confession reveals an undertow of raw emotion, while at the same time reflecting a society coming to terms with shifting sexual politics and social upheaval. Consumed by the sound of chit-chat, and focusing on bizarre anecdotes and recollections of personal traumas, the work exudes a profound intimacy with it subjects. Subtitles flash up across the four screens as we are increasingly compelled to surf the text for its compelling layers of gossip. “Fundamentally, Ataman’s work remains mythic in our imagination yet domestic in its presentation. The home-movie format creates intimacy, while the work blurs the boundaries between fictional film and documentary, experimental cinema and television.” Katya Garcia-Anton Women Who Wear Wigs was acclaimed at its first showing at the 1999 Venice Biennale, selected by Harald Szeeman. In 1996, Ataman was awarded Best Turkish Film and Best Turkish Screenplay by the Turkish Film Critics’ Association for The Serpent’s Tale. In early 1999, Ataman presented the video semina b unplugged - a seven hour, forty two minute interview with Turkish diva Semina Berksoy. He also wrote and directed the feature film Lola and Bilidikid, about a Turkish boy’s encounter with a transvestite singer in the clubs of Berlin, which has a national release and opens at the Lux Cinema on 10 March. Private View: Sunday 20 February • 3.00 - 7.00 Exhibition open: 23 February - 26 March, Wednesday - Sunday • 12.00 - 7.00. Supported by Visiting Arts. Gregor Muir Lux Gallery Curator 2 - 4 Hoxton Square London N1 6NU t + 44 (0) 20 7684 2785 f + 44 (0) 20 7684 1111 gregor@lux.org.uk - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | 1 1 | - - - - THE LOST PROJECT at trAce The Lost Project is up and running at: http://trace.ntu.ac.uk/lost/index.htm Please go to the site and add your name, email address, and a name and / or description of something you have lost, irretrievably. --------------------------------------- Consideration of the trAce Projects The trAce online writing community, directed by Sue Thomas, originates from Nottingham Trent University, England; the URL is http://trace.ntu.ac.uk . I was the second virtual writer-in-residence at trAce (following Christy Sanford Sheffield); I used the six months to write a diary; work on my own texts; participate heavily in the Webboard (BBS) discussion (this also included initiating a number of conferences); and developing four projects, all of which are concerned with writing, semantics, organization, and deconstruction. Three of these projects - LoveandWar, The Yours, and The Traceroute (or trAceroute) Project - are at http://trace.ntu.ac.uk/writers/sondheim/index.htm; the Lost Project is at http://trace.ntu.ac.uk/lost/index.htm . The following is a brief descrip- tion of the individual projects, and some of the issues involved in them. a. LoveandWar: Five pages or backbones - anyone can add text to any of these. The content/direction was a "novel" based on several characters I have used in my own work, including Jennifer, Julu, and Nikuko. Parti- cipants added other characters (Cybele for example) and texts, which may or may not have contributed to the narrative. Threads tended to wind around each other, disappearing from one backbone, only to appear on an- other. As with The Yours, below, each backbone developed its own char- acteristics, its own mood. During the course of the project (about two months), one or another backbone would be busy - at most, two at a time. The second and last were popular, but all of them eventually became fairly lengthy. The total project time was based on a felt optimum - after a while, the pages seemed to have peaked - and it was announced (on the Webboard and elsewhere) that the project would soon shut down. This gave participants a chance to add final sections. There was also an accompany- ing Webboard conference; this was eventually closed and archived as well. b. Out of LoveandWar came The Yours, which contained four pages or back- bones; this time, there was no overall direction indicated. The project quickly self-organized around various themes, which flowed in and out of each other. It was fascinating to see this in operation. In particular, narratives appeared, only to disappear - the same was true of poetic or prose forms. One could consider the project a form of linear seeding. Both this and LoveandWar can be read "anywhere," but there is more of a sense of overt structure or articulation in the latter; The Yours almost seems to spread out forwards and backwards in time. c. The Traceroute or trAceroute Project centered around the Y2k problem and the 1999-2000 New Year's celebration. In this case, there was only one page; I asked participants to use the traceroute or tracert application in Unix/Linux or Win95/98 to trace Internet connectivity at that time; some Webpages with traceroute applications built-in were also employed. The result is a record of the (very healthy) state of the Internet - connec- tions were faster than usual. In addition, participants were asked to comment on local Y2k problems, other items of interest. I didn't want any sort of graphic interface - they're all too common on the Net, and many aren't that useful - but wanted instead a narrative of the world-membrane, during the period of supposedly peak computer difficulties (which didn't materialize). The final result is a textual mapping of the telecom world around the millennial moment. Participants, by the way, not only were able to enter traceroutes from their local nodes, but, through the Webpages, were also able to connect various sites with each other - for example, Moscow with Perth. The resulting topology was more of an overall skein than a multiple-star topology. d. The Lost Project: One page or backbone; users are asked to give name, email address, and description of lost object or person. The three entries are presented in three different files; the project page itself is created (by Simon Mills and myself) as broken html and linking. The form on the page shakes; the background image peels off around it. But the html isn't broken, and the error message (after submitting the information, an Error 400 appears) is false; clicking on it leads to the entries so far. In this project, the lost object is disassociated with the name and email address - to date, many of these are falsified or playful in any case. Things tend to disappear into one or another file, just as nodes, objects, people, languages, protocols, and media disappear in the real world; I have 8" floppies, for example, that are now completely unusable, the information lost forever. The Lost Project is also a Project that is Lost - that has disappeared, to the extent it appears submerged in error, removed from perhaps a previously pristine or pure existence, when everything existed in the world, and everything worked. 1 Inscription-machines The Yours, LoveandWar, and Lost projects are inscription-machines: spaces for writing/inscribing within a specific form (name/email address/text) based in a specific server, organized through particular protocols. The operation is the same for everyone; the content is configured/articulated within a space regulated by invisible background programming. In the Lost Project, the regulation itself is suspect; the background is foregrounded to the extent that it is a false background, unworkable, unworking - which is not the case at all. 2 Linearities All four projects have the potential for links placed by participants, but their structure is linear or comb-spaced. LoveandWar has five tines or backbones; The Yours has four; the other two (Traceroute and Lost) have one each. At times, I would place cross-referencing links within the first two (i.e. one backbone connecting to another), but the overall tenor of the pieces are linear. There is, in other words, a tension between collab- orations/texts which extend and differentiate, and linearity, which tends to unify, concatenate. (However, the linearity of Lost is slightly broken, since there are three sheets - the name, email address, and lost object sheets - which are only roughly correlated. These may be considered three tines, added to simul- taneously, to the extent that name, email address, and object text are entered at all.) 3 Peripheral Phenomenologies - what shows up at the margins (grey page, white page, flash page, image page - on Yours - start page, end page, intermediary pages - on LoveandWar - traceroute residue page on the Traceroute Project - triple pages (two as residue) on the Lost Project - The four projects organized their inscriptive spaces (tines or singular writing-page) variously. LoveandWar is based on a narrative involving Jennifer and other characters/avatars I have written through; two of the tines are based on opening and closing strategies, and three others em- phasize narrative moments. These bases are, at best, initiations into the tines, which quickly organized into other characters, narratives, break- downs, and flows. The Yours has four bases, one for each backbone. The first is an three- dimensional "organic" image I produced in Blender; the second, a flashwork by Miekal And; the third, a light grey background; and the fourth, a white background. There was nothing else provided; texts self-organized within a much more open space than LoveandWar. Traceroute, based on tracing interconnectivity during the 12/31/99-1/1/00 turnover, had a basic purpose which more or less controlled the content - a monitoring first of Internet routes, and second of local (i.e. the user's) environments. And Lost, whose purpose is the recording of lost belongings, or a longing for be-longing, has to date produced more noise than anything - as if the broken portal were a catalyst for broken or hacked purpose. It's odd that, besides this, the projects have remained almost entirely free from spam, and there has been only one case in which a writer asked to have her contributions removed after the fact (which took some doing on the part of the administrators). 4 Bottom-up governance - scratch sheets, "level playing field," anyone participating Within the projects, each participant was equal; anyone could bend the text or imagery in any direction within the overall configuration. To this extent, the projects were scratch sheets. One constraint, however, was that the latest text would be entered only at the bottom - i.e., unlike a webboard, there was no way to place comments or material interstitially. Of course, and we take this for granted - the pages were open for writing and reading twenty-four hours a day; they were vulnerable, unguarded spaces, without monitoring. Only the Lost Project has minimal monitoring - email sent to sondheim@panix.com whenever an entry is made. 5 Literatures plural, "modalities" of writing The modes of writing included flash, html and dhtml pages linked to the backbones, inserted images, texts in various fonts, sizes, colors, and effects, etc. The styles are also extremely varied, ranging from tradi- tional forms to animations to graffiti. There is not one literature, but literatures; there is not one writing, but writings. The projects are multivalent, heterological, contradictory; they also possess "aura" to the extent that there are additional elements - not only the programming itself, but also back-channel, back-project private email correspondence; talk about them on the Webboard; advertising for them across the Internet (on various email lists and Webpages); dis- cussion in chat on trAce and elsewhere; lectures and seminars describing them at universities, real-life conferences, etc.; and so forth. 6 Writing and "wryting" In some of my theoretical work, I've made distinctions between "writing" and "wryting" - the latter referencing an almost hysteric embodiment, in which writing becomes symptomatic of physical absence - as if it were a residue or skin itself. It's the extreme positioning of text to re-present the body online. The image of the "tine" or "backbone" is an image of a body inserted online, a body of text and textual body. I see these pro- jects as inhabited, inhabiting, online spaces, as if avatars and avatar ghosts were present. The writing styles often reflect this, pushing the language to the limit of re-presentation. The projects are simply in terms of design, animation, and programming content; they're rough, open to the semantics of reading, linking, seeing, hearing. Whatever is "clever" about them is invisible. 7 Non-dhtml/web aesthetic orientation The Internet has changed radically in the past few years; the two major changes have been (following the abandonment of the NSF backbone, etc.) the emerging of a dominant corporate Net culture, and the development of the World Wide Web as all-encompassing. Accompanying both of these has been a slew of proprietary protocols as companies vie for online dollars and demographics. Almost all Net art is Web-oriented, animated, etc. I wanted to have an anti-aesthetic - pages that would be readable in a text- based environment, such as a linux shell account. I also wanted the empha- sis to be on written content - almost as if the pages or backbones were spoken, instead of written - almost as if there were a body embedded with- in them. And I wanted a sense of poverty, of bleakness, as if these pages were the last place or inhabitation of writing, as if these were all there was. I wanted them to load with minimal bandwidth, as if there were an ideal universal accessibility, as if the rest of the world could see them, without or without modems or Internet. And I wanted a certain hunger to prevail... 8 Writing and rewriting on the Webboard - other URLs, openings Beyond these projects, I wanted to contribute as much as possible to the Webboard, which tends to archive everything. There is a tension because of this - on one hand, an informal dialog framework, and on the other, larger and larger files, and increasing difficulty of navigation. It's as if the past creates its own articulation, formalization - interesting from a philosophical-epistemological point of view. I have been surprised that there are not more rewritings, reshapings - which owners of posts can do - and which would create detours, ruptures, in a flow already broken by multiple responses. I used the Webboard as a home-space, opening it, at least for myself, by posting numerous other URLs that represented the kind of work that most interested me. I did find the board increasingly conservative as time went on, and I have spent more of my own energy in the 7-11, nettime, webartery, and other lists, which are valuable resources for anyone interested in experimental work or the deconstruction, so to speak, of the desktop and its protocols and interconnectivities. The board operates somewhat as a teaching envi- ronment, somewhat as chat, somewhat as resource center; it is also an on- going body of work or working body - I tend to think of an inscribed body, not sexualized or psychoanalytical, but on the order of a limited tele- phone exchange, flooded with messages. The board is everyone's and no one's project, and that has been part of the fascination - while, at least for me, there has always been an overall tenor to it, the tenor changes constantly. Finally, there has also been the diary for me - which breaks down into diary.txt, diary2.txt, and diary3.txt, also at the projects URL. I have written about the function of the diary elsewhere; it is the first time I've kept one, and, like the backbone pages themselves, it has tended to extend linearly. At first an exercise, it became more and more a public portrait from my viewpoint - something anyone would look at, in order at least to begin to understand me and my work. It was also an occasion for venting and thinking about depression, obsession, exhilaration, despair, poverty, intensity. It rapidly developed into a work itself. 9 Rupture, hacking, spam There has been very little rupture, hacking, or spam across the projects or board, and that continues to interest me. There have been very few pieces that have worked "across" the webboard, for example, breaking de- liberately through the conference categories (one of them was an early version of the Lost Project, in which I went looking in various confer- ences for the missing). I'm surprised at this acceptance of boundary - it would have been easy for someone, for example, to link The Yours to LoveandWar and confuse texts. There was a form placed in one of the backbones that imitated the entry form at the portal - but this was an isolated instance. 10 Conclusion of Writing The object of the Lost Project, the unattainable object, part-object, flow or flood, objet petit a, masquerade, lure, seduction, transitional object, memory, drive, instinct - always a hunger or teleology, always a tendency- towards - this drives the epistemology of the projects, which portend new ontologies as the millennium progresses. Philosophically, the results and the processes are fascinating, fetishizations of language and space, the leaving of feathered traces across an infinitesimal corner of the Net. And all of these spaces or projects are ergodic texts, in the sense of Aarseth; they are also therapeutics, requiring different modalities of writing and reading. They foreground writing in a space of infinite choice, a literally chaotic space; and as such, they also foreground the reception of a writing which tenaciously holds its own. Alan Sondheim - http://www.anu.edu.au/english/internet_txt 2//00 ========================================================================== - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - > > > > # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net