Announcer on Mon, 21 May 2001 02:18:57 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> Announcements [19] |
Table of Contents: FW: E-consultation workshop in Belfast "David Garcia" <davidg@xs4all.nl> [ot] [!nt] \n2+0\ dsi <dsi@digitalsistersindeed.org> Second Media Ecology Convention "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> non*Symposium Cornelia Sollfrank <cornelia@snafu.de> B.E.C.O.M.I.N.G. "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> position available: Visual & Digital Arts: Head of Department & Programming matthew fuller <matt@axia.demon.co.uk> Webcast of Conference: A Figure for Europe - now on! honor <honor@va.com.au> Harvesting the Net :: MemoryFlesh diane ludin <duras@thing.net> to former 7-11 participants Lisa Hutton <hutton@research.umbc.edu> UK Design Council Slide Collection Archives,On-line collection "George(s) Lessard" <media@web.net> Calling all outlaw artists: phenomANON seeks entries for our anonymous n30mural@speakeasy.net FW: UT "megan rainey" <megan@va.com.au> ThankU4YourMailsAbout[photongraph] hidenori watanave <derin@lovelink.co.jp> cast01: Living in Mixed Realities / Submission Deadline May 31, 2001 cast01@netzspannung.org DOODS Audio Collage "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Blowing smoke up your ass "Nicholas Hermann" <NHerman@hga.com> Eduardo Kac: Time Capsule, Genesis, Teleporting An Unknown State "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Interview Yourself + Plagiarist Traveling Road Show Amy Alexander <plagiari@plagiarist.org> Call for Contributions: "That's Retrotainment!" Tiffany Lee Brown <magdalen@magdalen.com> ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 May 2001 14:13:44 +0200 From: "David Garcia" <davidg@xs4all.nl> Subject: FW: E-consultation workshop in Belfast - ---------- From: David R Newman <d.r.newman@qub.ac.uk> To: d.r.newman@qub.ac.uk Subject: E-consultation workshop in Belfast Date: Wed, May 16, 2001, 20:27 How can computers and the Internet be used to improve the human processes of public consultation? This is a question people in the public, voluntary and private sectors in Northern Ireland started asking after being deluged with consultation documents last June, as a result of devolution legislation. So we set up a study group. The first fruit of our labours is an: *E-consultation workshop* to be held on 25 June 2001, 0900-1300 in the Peter Froggatt Centre, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, Northern Ireland. http://www.qub.ac.uk/mgt/e/consult/ After Stormont minister Dennis Haughey opens the workshop, we will have a morning learning from people who have experimented with computer support for each stage of mediation. They have: * run political chats in the only neutral venue in East Belfast: the Internet, * researched electronic mediation support systems in Germany, * developed voting and rating systems for finding consensus among people who hate each other in Belfast and the Balkans, * and run half the official public e-consultations in the Netherlands The workshop is for anyone who might be setting up e-consultations and/or responding to them, whether you come from the public or community sector, from inside or outside Northern Ireland. - -- Dr. David R. Newman, Queen's University Belfast, School of Management and Economics, Belfast BT7 1NN, Northern Ireland (UK) mailto:d.r.newman@qub.ac.uk Tel. 028 90335011 FAX: 028 90335156 http://www.qub.ac.uk/mgt/staff/dave/ ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 17 May 2001 21:25:05 +0100 From: dsi <dsi@digitalsistersindeed.org> Subject: [ot] [!nt] \n2+0\ ++++++++++ I am image therefore I am text. Understand my text. I am text therefore I am 4Real. ID-tag: DSI is the ultimate panglossian adaptationist + intraperitoneal art-project. DSI is the consequence between the appropriation of a human self and nato.0+55 DSI is a bio moving [f]act. You may use it as a statement. It should be a bio extension on a 4Real dimension. DSI is for rent + needs explications on functioning. Komplicated softwr desires komfort. http://www.eusocial.com/dsi http://www.membank.org/dsi http://www.digitalsistersindeed.org/dsi http://www.m9ndfukc.com/dsi http://www.ggttctttat.com/dsi You need to have your eyeballs swimming in my liquid. - -- +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ DSI dsi@DigitalSistersIndeed.org It was pure bliss when I finally achieved silence. http://www.digitalsistersindeed.org ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 May 2001 16:36:03 +1000 From: "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: Second Media Ecology Convention The Second Annual Convention of the Media Ecology Association Sponsored by the Department of Culture and Communication New York University June 15-16, 2001 Lipton Hall at the D'Agostino Residence NYU Law School Campus in Greenwich Village 108 West Third Street (between Sullivan & MacDougal Streets) New York, New York 10012 If you're interested in: - - the nature, history, and impact of technology, media, and symbol systems; - - the study of communication, consciousness, and culture; - - technological determinism, media evolution, information theory and cybernetics; - - the study of media codes, media literacy, and media education; - - orality, literacy, secondary orality, and post-literacy; - - oral, scribal, typographic, and electronic cultures; - - the graphic revolution and image culture; - - scholars such as Marshall McLuhan, Harold Innis, Walter Ong, Neil Postman, Lewis Mumford, Edmund Carpenter, Jacques Ellul, and Erving Goffman, then you won't want to miss this summer's hottest convention in the coolest part of New York City. Keynote speaker: Joshua Meyrowitz, author of the award-winning NO SENSE OF PLACE: THE IMPACT OF ELECTRONIC MEDIA ON SOCIAL BEHAVIOR (Oxford University Press, 1985), as well as dozens of articles about media and culture. Professor of Communication at the University of New Hampshire and a graduate of NYU's doctoral program in Media Ecology, Dr. Meyrowitz will speak about promises and challenges of media ecology research. Featured presentations by Camille Paglia and Douglas Rushkoff. Additional participants include Richard Barbrook, James Carey, Mark Dery, Susan Drucker, Ray Gozzi, Gary Gumpert, Robert Logan, John Pavlik, and Jay Rosen, among others. PRE-REGISTRATION INFORMATION Convention Fees The Convention is open to MEA members only. Non-members add membership fee to convention fee. $20 2001 Membership $30 Pre-Registration (before June 1, 2001*) $10 Student 2001 Membership (please include a photocopy of your full-time student identification card) $20 Student Pre-Registration (before June 1, 2001*) *Registration after June 1, 2001 and on-site will be $40 for members and $30 for student members. A printable version of the pre-registration form is available online at <http://www.media-ecology.org/events_conference2_.html#forms>, where you can also find the Convention schedule (updated periodically), as well as a list of hotels and hostels in Manhattan. Directions to the NYU campus are available at <http://www.nyu.edu/maps.nyu>. Mail completed pre-registration form and check or money order payable to Media Ecology Association to: Janet Sternberg, MEA Convention Coordinator Department of Culture and Communication New York University 239 Greene Street, 7th Floor New York, NY 10003-6674 Questions? Email Janet Sternberg at: netberg@compuserve.com (preferred) janet.sternberg@nyu.edu (alternate) DEADLINE FOR PRE-REGISTRATION: Friday, June 1, 2001 - ---------------------------- The Second Annual Convention of the Media Ecology Association Sponsored by the Department of Culture and Communication New York University June 15-16, 2001 SCHEDULE AS OF 5/14/01 updates & details at <http://www.media-ecology.org> All sessions except Friday evening reception take place at: Lipton Hall at the D'Agostino Residence NYU Law School Campus in Greenwich Village 108 West Third Street (between Sullivan & MacDougal Streets) New York, NY 10012 FRIDAY MORNING 8:30 Registration Opens 9:00 - 9:30 Introduction and Greetings Janet Sternberg - New York University Terence P. Moran - New York University Lance Strate - Fordham University 9:30 - 10:45 Session 1 - Panel Perspectives on Our Age Moderator - [TBA] The National Information Infrastructure and the Shape of the Script in the Next Millenium Edmond Chibeau - Eastern Connecticut State University The Form of News: U.S. Political History and the Media Environment Kevin G. Barnhurst - University of Illinois-Chicago John C. Nerone - University of Illinois-Chicago Beyond Linguistic Apocalypse: The Political Theory of Marshall McLuhan David P. Parisi - University of Albany Cybercommunism and Cybersociety Richard Barbrook - University of Westminster 11:00 - 12:15 Session 2 - Panel Communication and Urban Forms: From Mumford to Wired Cities Moderator - Thomas F. Gencarelli - Montclair State University Cities without Lines: Demassification in the Age of Informatics James C. Morrison - Massachusetts Institute of Technology Is the Wired City Really So SMART? Gary Gumpert - Communication Landscapers Susan Drucker - Hofstra University Taking Private Matters to Public Space Jack Barwind - Syracuse University 12:30 - 1:00 Featured Presentation Moderator - [TBA] Gender and Media: A Report on Revising the Curriculum Camille Paglia - University of the Arts 1:00 - 2:30 Lunch FRIDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING 2:30 - 3:45 Session 3 - Panel Art and Technics Moderator - Saul Ostrow -University of Connecticut Internet Artwork, Artists and Computer Analysts: Sharing the Creative Process Jean-Paul Fourmentraux - Université Toulouse Sense, Memory and Media Scott Weiland - [TBA] VISCOM: A Message and a Medium Robert M. Hall - Flagler College Cinema: The New Cathedral of HollyWorld Read Mercer Schuchardt - New York University 4:00 - 5:15 Session 4 - Roundtable Discussion The Future of News Moderator - Edward Wachtel - Fordham University Panelists James W. Carey - Columbia University Mark Dery - New York University Hal Himmelstein - Brooklyn College John Pavlik - Columbia University Jay Rosen - New York University Paul Thaler - Mercy College 5:30 - 6:00 President's Address Moderator - Janet Sternberg - New York University The Flight of MinErvA's Owl Lance Strate - Fordham University 6:00 - 6:30 Presentation of MEA Awards Mark Lipton - Vassar College [TBA] 6:30 - 7:00 Keynote Address Moderator - Lance Strate - Fordham University Morphing McLuhan: Medium Theory for a New Millennium Joshua Meyrowitz - University of New Hampshire 7:30 - 9:00 Reception Kimball Hall, 246 Greene Street, first floor lounge SATURDAY MORNING 8:30 Registration Opens 9:00 - 10:00 Business Meeting All are welcome to attend Moderator - Casey Man Kong Lum, William Paterson University 10:00 - 11:15 Session 5 - Panel Demeaning of Meaning Moderator - Neil Postman - New York University >From Cry to Speech: The Paradigm Shift from Signalic to Symbolic Functions of Signs in Human Evolution Christine Nystrom - New York University The Extended Mind and the Origin of Language Robert K. Logan - University of Toronto Some Unexplored Relationships Between Biology and Media Ecology: Why We Crave the Visual in Technological Extensions of Communication Donna Flayhan - Goucher College Re-Writing Literacy: How Contemporary Media Influence Young Adult Interest in Reading And Writing Lori Ramos - William Paterson University 11:30 - 12:45 Session 6 - Panel In the Human Grain Moderator - Salvatore J. Fallica - New York University Renaissance Authors: A Media Ecology Perspective David Linton - Marymount Manhattan College A Printer's Devil in the Age of Telegraphy: Samuel Clemens and the Nineteenth-Century Revolutions in Media Technology Richard Bucci - Mark Twain Project, University of California at Berkeley Using Anthropology to Rethink the Library or The Library as a Consumer Marketplace Neil Kleinman - University of Baltimore Using Media Ecology to Rethink History Stephanie B. Gibson - University of Baltimore 1:00 - 2:30 Lunch SATURDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING 2:30 - 3:45 Session 7 - Panel The Machine in the Garden Moderator - [TBA] Peoples of the Word, the Book, and the Laptop: Communication Technologies and Religious Identity Raymond R. Smith - Iona College The Post-Materialist and the Real World Hugh Curnutt - Georgetown University Praxis and the Social/Technological Divide Ken Yee Yip - State University of New York at Stony Brook De/Constructing Linguistic Metaphysics: Nietzsche as Media Ecologist Zhenbin Sun - Fairleigh Dickinson University 4:00 - 5:15 Session 8 - Panel Understanding the Media Moderator - Jerry Komia Domatob - Southampton College When the Medium Becomes the Message: "Reality" TV and What's Really Real Tibor Baukal - Drew University Drew Giorgi - Independent Scholar The Inflation of Cheerfulness: Some Cultural Effects of Advertising Christina Kotchemidova - New York University Paradoxes of Electric Media Raymond Gozzi, Jr. - Ithaca College The Interactions of Contextual and Abstract Media: A Foundation of Media and Mind Co-Evolution Norman Steinhart - University of Toronto 5:30 - 6:45 Session 9 - Panel Communication and Cyberspace Moderator ? Carol Wilder, New School University Coming Back on the Whirlwind: The Student Use of Student Beings Ralph J. Beliveau - University of Wisconsin Oshkosh Psychotherapy on the Web: Old Wine in New Bottles? Stephen Biggs - York University Gathering the Scattered in Cyber-Sacredspace: The Internet, Spiritual Identity, and Religious Community Cheryl Anne Casey - New York University Medium Specificity in the Age of Media Convergence Frederick Wasser - Central Connecticut State University 7:00 - 7:30 Featured Presentation Moderator - [TBA] Open Source Reality: Transcending Life in the Matrix Douglas Rushkoff - New York University 7:30 - 8:00 Performance Moderator - [TBA] Media Ecology Unplugged John McDaid - New York University William Bly - Fordham University 8:00 Convention Adjourns - ---------------------------- Media Ecology Association <http://www.media-ecology.org> - ---------------------------- ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 May 2001 17:42:32 +0100 From: Cornelia Sollfrank <cornelia@snafu.de> Subject: non*Symposium non* nonSymposium nonCorporate nonCulture nonComputing nonArchitecture nonSpace nonCity nonTheory nonEconomy nonDesign nonArt non* cross-disciplinary debate about complexity in contemporary living - investigating new areas of practice which have arisen through the convergence and hybridisation of established disciplines. addressing the ungraspable spaces in-between disciplines and concept boundaries the non* is what emerges as the consequence of convergent and expanded networks - networks of transactions, communications, accidental meetings, business lunches, data packets, radiowaves, flirtations - beyond the economy of information lies the economy of connectivity - networks of networks - in the excess of connectivity, where links are constructed between previously discrete practices, nonPractices establish the possibilities of what could be - nonPractices expose a critical and hypothetical working, doing, acting and thinking through of established practices - developing a confidence about the unknown - a knowing undoing non* - nonSymposium connects popular and institutional discourses, the tv talk show and the intellectual debate. Panelists from backgrounds in the corporate world, new media and urban theory, hacking and product design, will explore the possible nonPractices which emerge from the connectivity between and beyond their disciplines. Curated by Simon Yuill and Gerald Straub Panel: Susanne Clausen (Germany), Contemporary Art, Szuper Gallery Terhi Rantanen (Finland), Global Media, London School of Economics Nick Rengger (U.K.), International Relations, Univ. St. Andrews Pedro Sepulveda-Sandoval (Mexico), Computer related Design, Royal College Paul Taylor (U.K.), Hackerism, Sociology, Univ. of Salford Friday 15th of June 2001 10 am - 6pm Visual Research Centre (Univ.of Dundee) at Dundee Contemporary Arts 152 the Nethergate Dundee DD1 4DY Scotland - UK tickets: £30 full price £10 for full-time students and concessions booking: 00 44 (0) 1382 606 220 email: symposium@thezeroes.co.uk tel: 00 44 (0) 1382 348 060 fax: 00 44(0) 1382 348 105 The symposium addresses professionals in economy, law, art, computing, politics, architecture, sociology and related disciplines, as well as to those who are interested in the current situation and future of contemporary society. for more information: www.livingzeroes.org non* is part of Living Zeroes, an initiative of the School of TV and Imaging, Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design, a faculty of the University of Dundee. It is supported by the Scottish Arts Council, Scottish Screen, Scottish Enterprise Tayside, Dundee Contemporary Arts, New Media Scotland and the University of Dundee's Visual Research Centre. ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::"A smart artist makes the machine do the work":::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::: [net.art generator]: http://www.obn.org/generator : ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :Cornelia Sollfrank | Rutschbahn 37 | 20146 Hamburg | Germany ::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::0173-6173348: ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 May 2001 18:00:05 +1000 From: "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: B.E.C.O.M.I.N.G. From: "Cargoweb" <cargoweb@pandora.be> Sent: Saturday, May 19, 2001 2:23 AM Subject: B.E.C.O.M.I.N.G. B.E.C.O.M.I.N.G. is a project developing media technology into a tool for people researching themselves. Concept The project sets out to let ‘become’ human presences* into three different media of presentation and production : on the Web, in exhibitions (installation+performance) and in film. The project will set-up a group of young adolescents and engage them in an extended script development phase on the Web and in the physical world. They will be given the opportunity and the means to develop a ‘second’ character on the Web, on a specially programmed stream platform called ‘Becoming TV’ with (live) streams (of their own), moderated chat and personal blog, allowing each of them to keep a Net based personal diary. Now and then some participants will perform during special ‘installation’ events, sharing their experience with a larger public. Some of them will also engage in travels abroad, deepening and charging their Web-character with hard reality, inviting others to join. The participating adolescents will be guided by a professional team of script producers and advisors. Psychological support and expertise will be available at any moment. Visualization A special prototype webcam-lounge will be constructed where the participating adolescents will be offered the possibility of constructing telepresences of their own bodies live on the Net. The webcam-lounges will consist of transparencies the adolescents will inhabit and surround with video- and dataprojectors. Kind of body-sized mult-media space shuttles, where the adolescents will work out and show their latest persona. Being embodied vision machines* they will observe and incorporate realities that give best form to the telebody of their chosen character. On-line scripting These experiences and second existences, on-the-Web, will be the basis for the final scripting of CRIMES OF BECOMING. – the science fiction movie part of the project. Ultimately the project wants to develop a new kind of working procedure for writing filmscripts. Instead of being written (as is the case in traditional scripting), the realities as well as the themes of the script will be developed out of the tele-existing characters embodying these themes. On the Web and inside the webcam-lounges, the adolescents will temporarily not only experience their tele-characters (as is the case in traditional acting and rehearsing), but construct and live them. They will charge their Web-persona with specific realities from the Net and the physical world. They will let their new existence be known and communicate it with other beings traditionally more human. They will exchange their experiences with other members of the group and morph, mix and melt experimentally with each other. And during the whole process chats will be recorded, as an essential part of the on-line scripting, parallel to the project : experiential content construction. The project so far Testing together with students scripting and architecture of the St Joost Academy in Breda and students of the Rits Filmschool in Brussels between February and May this year has resulted in initial visual presentation material of the project. A special streaming platform on the web is under construction and is partly operational since beginning of May 2001. * For further information : go to www.cargoweb.org : groupinfo CARGO B.E.C.O.M.I.N.G. (for texts) and to the files for visuals, made available as they are being produced. go to www.cargoweb.org/becoming for the alpha version of what will become the streaming platform of the project. For contact : mail to cargoweb@pandora.be. The B.E.C.O.M.I.N.G. TEST has been made possible by Luuk Bouwman and thanks to the participation of the RITS students : Gunther Robeets, Griet Tempelaere, Nick Kaldunski, Anneleen Huysman. Teacher : Paul Pourveur (Cel Schrijven). Coordination : Driel Moreels (Vrij Atelier). The SINT-JOOST AKADEMIE students : Marijke de Bie, Frederik Durinck, Helena Kuiken, Sergio Van Pul, Stijn Van Eekelen, Tobias Nieveld, Ton Zandvoort (av). Daniël de Jong, Maikel Kox, Paula Teterissa, Etienne Reijnders (architectonisch). Coördinators : René Bosma (coördinator av), René Pijnenburg (coördinator architectonische vormgeving). Teacher : Anne Van de Putte (scenario docent av). The EXTERNAL ADVISORS : Bart Leroy (psychiater), Mark Van Tongele (writer), Johan Blaeke (installation-artist), Mark Thelosen (financial). The WEB MASTER : Dominique Callewaert. Project : Stefaan Decostere. Production : vzw CARGO asbl. ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 May 2001 08:47:40 +0100 From: matthew fuller <matt@axia.demon.co.uk> Subject: position available: Visual & Digital Arts: Head of Department & Programming Visual & Digital Arts: Head of Department & Programming A key artistic and management post at one of the UK's leading centres for the contemporary arts Salary: £20,967 (pay award pending) Further details available from Judi Newton Chapter, Market Road, Cardiff, CF5 1QE. (Send SAE 39p A5 /A4) Tel 029 2031 1064 (direct line) or jobdetails@talk21.com Closing date is 4th June 2001 www.chapter.org Registered Charity 500813 - An equal opportunities employer With the support of the Arts Council of Wales ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 May 2001 11:33:33 +0100 From: honor <honor@va.com.au> Subject: Webcast of Conference: A Figure for Europe - now on! - -- NOW ON - WEBCAST OF A FIGURE FOR EUROPE? - LIVE FROM TATE MODERN A FIGURE FOR EUROPE? Saturday 19 May: A conference CAPITAL SEMINAR 2: ECONOMY Sunday 20 May: The second in a three part series of seminars http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/programmes/live.htm < sincere apologies to anyone who receives this twice or receives this in error > TIMES AND DATES Saturday 19 May 1000 - 1730 [ GMT ] 1100 - 1830 [ British Summer Time ] 1200 - 1930 [ Central European Time ] 0700 - 1500 [ US Eastern Standard Time ] 1630 - 2200 [ Indian Standard Time ] 1900 - 0330 [ Australian Eastern Standard Time ] 2200 - 0530 [ New Zealand Time ] Sunday 20 May 1330 - 1630 [ GMT ] 1430 - 1730 [ British Summer Time ] 1530 - 1830 [ Central European Time ] 1030 - 1330 [ US Eastern Standard Time ] 1800 - 2100 [ Indian Standard Time ] 2330 - 0230 [ Australian Eastern Standard Time ] 0130 - 0430 [ New Zealand Time - 20 May ] LOCATION Tate Modern, London, UK ABOUT THE WEBCASTS As part of Tate Modern's Webcasting Programme, several events will be presented on the Tate website this weekend. To find out more, visit: <http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/programmes/live.htm>. Please email questions to speakers at: honor.harger@tate.org.uk ABOUT THE EVENTS 1. A FIGURE FOR EUROPE? Saturday 19 May As Europe's common economic apparatus continues to establish itself, many questions concerning European cultural identity need to be addressed. Is there a European symbolic, a European imaginary? In what ways are the categories of 'the European mind' fissured? Does Europe have an 'imagined community', or must we move beyond this notion? This one-day conference brings together cultural theorists and filmmakers to consider how, if at all, contemporary Europe might be figured in theory, politics and cinema. PROGRAMME: (Times in BST: London Local Time) 11.00: Introduction and Welcome: Dominic Willsdon, Tate Modern Public Programmes 11.10-11.40: Stuart Hall, Theorist -> SPEAKING NOW 11.40-12.10: Tariq Ramadan, theorist 12:10-13.00: Open Discussion, with Stuart Hall and Tariq Ramadan, chaired by Francoise Verges 14.00-14.30: Susan Buck-Morss, theorist 14:30-15.00: Stephen Barber, theorist 15:00 -16:00: Open Discussion, with Susan Buck-Mors and Stephen Barber, chaired by Scott Lash 16:30 - 17:15: Kutlug Ataman, filmmaker - includes 20 mins screening 17:15 - 18:00: Fred Kelemen, filmmaker - includes 20 mins screening 18:00 - 18:30: Open Discussion ,with Kutlug Ataman and Fred Kelemen chaired by Dominic Willsdon - - 2. CAPITAL SEMINAR 2: ECONOMY Sunday 20 May Capital <http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/capital.htm> is a collaborative project for Tate Modern by artists, Neil Cummings and Marysia Lewandowska. It unfolds as a series of encounters between two iconic institutions, Tate and the Bank of England, and the economies they animate. The project includes a series of seminars. The second seminar looks at the concept of economy. The financial economy is taken to be the most real thing we have. It is often seen as the measure and test of reality: 'it's the economy, stupid'. But what of symbolic economies? Speakers: Jean Joseph Goux (French Studies, Rice University, USA); Scott Wilson (Institute for Culture Research, Lancaster University). Chaired by Paul Hirst (Academic Director, London Consortium). More information: <http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/programmes/live.htm> TECHNICAL DETAILS To experience these webcasts, you will need access to a computer with a sound card, a connection to the internet and the Real Player installed. This can be downloaded for free at the Real Networks website <http://www.real.com/player/index.html>. If you haven't experienced webcasting online before, please visit our technical help page: <http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/programmes/help.htm> Until the webcasts begin there will be no audio or video available. FEEDBACK If you would like to ask the speakers questions, please email them to the Webcasting Curator <honor.harger@tate.org.uk>, who will endevour to deliver them during Question Time. As these webcasts are part of a pilot process, qualitative feedback that will help shape the character of live webcasts from Tate Modern in the future, is always appreciated. MORE INFORMATION: For more on webcasting, and a programme of future webcasts contact: Honor Harger, Webcasting Curator, Interpretation & Education, Tate Modern Email: honor.harger@tate.org.uk PH: (44) 020 7401 5066 URL: <http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/programmes/webcasting.htm> For more information about Tate or getting tickets for events: Tate Ticketing Email: boxoffice@tate.org.uk PH: (44) 020 7887 8888 URL: <http://www.tate.org.uk> ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 May 2001 10:22:35 -0400 From: diane ludin <duras@thing.net> Subject: Harvesting the Net :: MemoryFlesh Reflective Performance System: The act of behaving in a purposefully reduced and itemized manner. Conceptual performance frames the behavior of Artist as Research Engine. Performing the acts of programming technology (Internet software) bots, spiders and other automatic search functions - I can gather and assemble evidence that collects the social drama being staged between science, computer technology and economy with its premiere project - the human genome. -Diane Ludin http://memoryflesh.walkerart.org project description, interview and essay: http://www.walkerart.org/gallery9/ludin/ ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 May 2001 15:03:27 -0400 From: Lisa Hutton <hutton@research.umbc.edu> Subject: to former 7-11 participants dears, i am writing a paper for the baltimore based critical arts journal "link" about vuk's 7-11 project. as a 7-11 participant, i wax nostalgic every time i think how much fun we had. i am interested in including the observations of some other participants. so if you could take a minute and mail me your observation i would be very grateful. i would like to know your thoughts about: the creation of characters (such as keiko suzuki) during 7-11. how the interface allowed more than one person to play the role of keiko suzuki. the atmosphere of 7-11. how the interface of 7-11 promoted community. the relationship between participants and audience--or if these can be seperated. cheers, lisa ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 May 2001 15:47:40 -0400 From: "George(s) Lessard" <media@web.net> Subject: UK Design Council Slide Collection Archives,On-line collection Includes Basic Design Collection: Bretton Hall Design Council Archive: University of Brighton Design Council Slide Collection: Manchester Metropolitan University Halliwell Collection: Bretton Hall Imperial War Museum: Concise Art Collection London College of Fashion: College Archive and links to: Documentary Photography: Jacob Riis Computer Aided Learning Package Millais Gallery, Southampton Institute, Archive: 1996-1999 Other Educated Persons: Art & Art Organisations in the East End of London 1972-1999 POSSE Preserve Our Student Shows for Eternity Glasgow School of Art Student Shows Surrey Institute of Art & Design, University College Student Shows University of Portsmouth, Illustration Department Student Shows - ------- Forwarded message follows ------- Date sent: Thu, 17 May 2001 18:55:41 +0800 To: recode@autonomous.org From: derek kreckler <d.kreckler@cowan.edu.au> Subject: :::recode::: Archives,On-line collection Send reply to: derek kreckler <d.kreckler@cowan.edu.au> Hi All, Apologies if this is cross posted - some of you may be interested or already use Padi-forum. Derek K 1. [Posted to Padiforum-l by Brenda Brinkley] The Visual Arts Data Service (VADS) is delighted to announce that the Design Council Slide Collection is now searchable on-line via the VADS website (http://vads.ahds.ac.uk/search.html). VADS delivers the Design Council Slide Collection via its Internet catalogue as part of its archiving of high quality digital resources for use in research, learning and teaching. VADS is a part of the Arts and Humanities Data Service (AHDS), funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Board (AHRB) and the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC). Brenda Brinkley Information Officer Visual Arts Data Service Surrey Institute of Art & Design, University College Falkner Road Farnham Surrey GU9 7DS Tel: 01252 892723 Fax: 01252 892725 email: brenda@vads.ahds.ac.uk *** Via / From / Thanks to the following : - - # distributed via :::recode::: no commercial use without permission # :::recode::: a mailing list for digital interrogation. # more info: majordomo@autonomous.org & "info recode" in the msg body # URL: http://systemx.autonomous.org/recode/ # contact: owner-recode@autonomous.org - ------- End of forwarded message ------- :-) :-) Message Ends; Signature File Begins (-: (-: CAUTIONS, Disclaimers, NOTES TO EDITORS and copyright information may be found @ http://members.tripod.com/~media002/disclaimer.htm Because of the nature of email please check ALL sources & subjects. Moderates the following public lists and Keyword Searchable Archives: MediaMentor http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mediamentor Creative-Radio http://groups.yahoo.com/group/creative-radio Haa Ai http://groups.yahoo.com/group/haa-ai - 30 - ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 May 2001 23:50 -0700 From: n30mural@speakeasy.net Subject: Calling all outlaw artists: phenomANON seeks entries for our anonymous guerrilla art show ***************************************************************************** CALL TO ARTISTS - --------------- CALLING ALL OUTLAW GUERRILLA ARTISTS, STICKER BOMBERS, AGITPROP POSTER MAKERS, STENCIL HEADZ, SUBVERTISERS, BILLBOARD LIBERATORS, AND GRAF ARTISTS! phenomANON WANTS YOUR SUBMISSIONS FOR OUR ANONYMOUS SUMMER ART INSTALLATIONS. WHAT WE'RE LOOKING FOR: * STICKERS OF ALL SIZES * AGITPROP POSTERS * STENCIL TEMPLATES * BILLBOARD ALTERATION PICS STREET ARCHIVES (PHOTOS, COLLECTIONS, SCRAPS) OUR JUNE/JULY INSTALLATION AT THE SEATTLE INDEPENDENT MEDIA CENTER WILL FEATURE: * OPEN STICKER WALL ARRANGED BY ERA AND GEOGRAPHICAL REGION * ON SITE SPONTANEOUS STENCIL SURFACE * PHOTOGRAPHY DISPLAY * ZINE/PROPAGANDA LIBRARY * "FREE STICKER" TABLE (SUBMIT A STACK OF STICKERS FOR RANDOM MASS DISTRIBUTION TO THE PUBLIC ON OPENING NIGHT OF SHOW. IMAGINE A TABLE STOCKED WITH THOUSANDS!) * FREE FLY ZONE SHOW OPENS SATURDAY, JUNE 9 AT THE INDEPENDENT MEDIA CENTERAND RUNS THROUGH JULY 31. OPENING NIGHT WILL FEATURE LIVE BANDS, MC, AND DJS T.B.A. DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS: WEDNESDAY JUNE 6 2OO1 PLEASE SEND YOUR SUBMISSIONS AS SOON AS POSSIBLE TO: PHENOMANON C/O THE INDEPENDENT MEDIA CENTER 1415 3RD AVE SEATTLE WA 98101 EMAIL ALL INQUIRIES TO phenomANON AT n30mural@speakeasy.net. ***************************************************************************** ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 May 2001 22:36:29 +0930 From: "megan rainey" <megan@va.com.au> Subject: FW: UT > THIS MESSAGE IS IN MIME FORMAT. Since your mail reader does not understand this format, some or all of this message may not be legible. .. this should be of interest .. mjr - ---------- From: cacsa <cacsa@camtech.net.au> To: dialogue <cacsa@camtech.net.au> Subject: UT Date: Mon, 21 May 2001 12:23 PM p e r f o r m a n c e w e b s e r i e s a n d n e w d i a l o g u e t h r e a d UT - domus 3 Stevie Wishart + Joan Grounds [Australia + UK] 11 May - 3 June The Ut project is a sound installation which explores three spaces - the medieval, the contemporary and the virtual. At the Contemporary Art Centre of South Australia, we are presenting v2. This piece concentrates on the virtual and contemporary spaces using video and sound which become the focus of a series of different performances. Image and sound in video and embodied image and sound in performance effect each other, the performer, and the audience. When the gallery is closed, the installation becomes our studio, a site from which we continue to build new work and change the content of the sound and image. Live Sound Installations 2:30pm Sunday 20 May 6:30pm Thursday 24 May 4pm Sunday 27 May Stevie and Joan will regularly post new web pieces on the CACSA website in addition to changes in the physical installation. http://www.cacsa.org.au/cacsa/program/index_frames2.html and scroll down. Also linked from the CACSA site are artist statements 'PREVIEW' as published in Broadsheet -- 'A Commentary' by Linda Marie Walker, and a RealTime interview with Stevie Wishart 'Working the Globe' A new thread on the CACSA dialogue board is innitated with the following queries ... - - What is a sound installation ? - - What are the effects or in what way do sound and image effect each other ? - - What do sound and image offer an embodied experience ? - - How can we translate art that we create for a specific physical space into a virtual space ... beyond documentation ? http://www.cacsa.org.au/cacsa/dialogue/index_frames.html engage via above link ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 20 May 2001 18:08:30 +0900 From: hidenori watanave <derin@lovelink.co.jp> Subject: ThankU4YourMailsAbout[photongraph] I appreciate having obtained many private mails from you to my "photongraph." i'm trying more attractive and multi-dimensional version, yesterday,I discovered the method of being that I combine java, or flash and QTVR,and making more attractive and mysterious space -- I also have a friend's java programmer and web designer cooperate, and think that I can build more attractive and multi-dimensional web-version. and it should extend man's consciousness and the body, should take them in on a monitor, and should induce corporal loss. Now I have a method of light-oriented-QTVR,and light-oriented-java. http://member.nifty.ne.jp/derin/qtvr/harajuku/index.html http://member.nifty.ne.jp/derin/qtvr/jav/change.html http://member.nifty.ne.jp/derin/qtvr/jav/t.html Expectation which it asks.:) yours, - -- ++ hidenori watanave (26) A) 3d-graffitist @ Lovelink B) Kyoto Univ.of Art'n Design C) Asagaya college of Art'n Design ++ http://member.nifty.ne.jp/derin/ 09098352695 ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 May 2001 19:12:45 +0200 From: cast01@netzspannung.org Subject: cast01: Living in Mixed Realities / Submission Deadline May 31, 2001 CALL FOR ENTRIES / deadline for submission: May 31, 2001 We invite you to participate in the cast01 conference on intersections of artistic, cultural, technological and scientific issues of: LIVING IN MIXED REALITIES cast01 Conference on Communication of Art, Science and Technology September 21-22, 2001 / GMD - Schloss Birlinghoven, Sankt Augustin / Bonn, Germany cast01 invites submissions of innovative research, media art practise and theory. We are looking for ground breaking media art and inspiring research projects on topics like: Semantic Web, Mixed Reality, Advanced Interfaces and Future Media Spaces that symbolise the influence of information technology on patterns of life and work in a networked society. Proposed contributions (english or german) may be in the form of research papers or artistic presentations as well as blueprints and posters of developing concepts. Researchers, artists, theorists, practitioners and entrepreneurs are encouraged to submit interdisciplinary projects and critical reflections on the merging of the virtual and the real. Topics: * Agents and Narrative Intelligence * Artistic Productions / Mixed Reality Architecture * Awareness, Memory Space and Knowledge Discovery * Cultural Archives * Distributed Systems and Parallel Architectures for the Web * Hypermedia Formats (XML, VRML, MPEG-4, MPEG-7) * Interactive TV * Mixed Reality Environments * Performative Interfaces * Tracking, Tracing, Vision Systems DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS: May 31, 2001 Notification of acceptance: June 30, 2001 Camera-ready papers: July 15, 2001 Early registration deadline: July 31, 2001 (reduced price) PROCEEDINGS: Accepted papers and blueprints will be published in the Conference proceedings. A special issue of netzspannung.org journal of Art, Design and Innovation Research will be published with cast01 conference best papers. BEST PAPER AWARD: The best paper, artistic presentation, blueprint / poster and student presentation will be honored with the cast01 award. http://netzspannung.org/cast01 e-mail: cast01@netzspannung.org cast01 is organised by netzspannung.org and by the GMD - German National Research Center for Information Technology. It is supported by the German Federal Ministry for Education and Research (bmb+f) and by the European Commission. It is hosted by MARS Exploratory Media Lab: http://imk.gmd.de/mars ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 May 2001 13:02:43 +1000 From: "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: DOODS Audio Collage From: "David Cox" <d.cox@mailbox.gu.edu.au> Sent: Saturday, May 19, 2001 3:12 PM Subject: DOODS Audio Collage Dept. of Ongoing Digital Situtations PRESS OFFICE Release The Department of Ongoing Digital Situations (DOODS) identifies the city as the basis for new experiments in electronically mediated playfulness. First released as a limited edition cassette, Secret City was comprised of the pre-eminent DOODS audio works, Alberto Tsara's Legends to Maps of Freedom, and Ion Van Gemsy's Unheard History of Cyberspace. Tsara and Van Gemsy are joined on Secret City by Justin Time, a close confidant of the DOODS,researcher and time keeper. Time's disturbing violin carves through the audible space much like a school of sharks in attack frenzy. Van Gemsy's hidden history is a map of sonic activity occurring in parallel with significant social and personal markers identifying the public advance onto the Internet. The Unheard History of Cyberspace is dedicated to the social activists who shaped and extended the net across Asia from the late 80s to the early 90s. Tsara's provocative collage is comprised of sound fragments with media art luminaries such as Greil Marcus, Bruce Sterling, Natalie Jereminjenko and Craig Baldwin. The Tsara collage is an assembly of sound fragments which taken as a whole paint a picture of the strangeness of technologically mediated everyday life. DOODS' Secret City is more than window, it's a map that can be read and heard, reinterpreted and judged, itemised and accounted for. What the 20th Century began, the 21st can only re-begin... Alberto Tsara and Ion Van Gemsy, 2001. SECRET CITY WEB SITE: http://www.toysatellite.org/secession/releases/sr004.php David Cox B.Ed, Grad Dip (Hons) Lecturer in Digital Screen Production, School of Film, Media and Cultural Studies Nathan Campus Griffith University Brisbane Queensland 4111 Australia Telephone: ph: +61 7 38755165 Mobile: 0438 050863 Fax: +61 7 38757730 Email: d.cox@mailbox.gu.edu.au personal web site: http://www.netspace.net.au/~dcox/dcox.html ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 18 May 2001 11:21:15 -0500 From: "Nicholas Hermann" <NHerman@hga.com> Subject: Blowing smoke up your ass From: fluffysingler@prodigy.net To: <Genius2000Conference2000@yahoogroups.com> Date: 5/18/01 10:10AM Subject: G2000Conf2000 Rolling Blackouts for the Summer Solstice Got this yesterday and it seems like a great idea. Here in Minneapolis I'm going to try to put together a show with poets, pagans and greens at a gallery--all by candlelight or flashlight . . . ROLL YOUR OWN BLACKOUT FIRST DAY OF SUMMER JUNE 21, 2001 7-10pm worldwide, all time zones As an alternative to George W. Bush's energy policies and lack of emphasis on efficiency, conservation and alternative fuels, there will be a voluntary rolling blackout on the first day of summer, June 21 at 7pm - 10pm in any time zone (this will roll it across the planet). Its a simple protest and a symbolic act. Turn out your lights from 7pm-10pm on June 21. Unplug whatever you can unplug in your house. Light a candle to the Sungoddess, kiss and tell or not, take a stroll in the dark, invent ghost stories, anything that's not electronic - have fun in the dark. Read the 1999 book "Natural Capitalism" by Hawken and Lovins to learn that conservation/high efficiency technologies already ARE on-the- shelf. If implemented these revolutionary ideas would pay themselves off within five years, after which we'd be pumping far less greenhouse gas into the atmosphere and saving bucks to boot. Forward this email as widely as possible, to your government representatives and environmental contacts. Let them know we want global education, participation and funding in conservation, efficiency and alternative fuel efforts -- and an end to over-exploitation and misuse of the earth's resources. Anyone knows that the Cheney-Bush team is blowing smoke when they tell us that "... conservation can't help, it'll just be too expensive to implement those technologies..." Mary Lehmann 110 East 37th St. # 210, Austin TX 78705 . 512 478-9812 tel 478-2052 fax ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 May 2001 17:46:25 +1000 From: "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: Eduardo Kac: Time Capsule, Genesis, Teleporting An Unknown State From: "JFA" <info@juliafriedman.com> Sent: Friday, May 18, 2001 11:59 PM Subject: Time Capsule, Genesis, Teleporting An Unknown State EDUARDO KAC Time Capsule Genesis Teleporting An Unknown State TIME CAPSULE Opens as part of the inaugural exhibition for "ELECTRONIC MAPLE: Human Language and Digital Culture in Contemporary Art," May 19th, 2001, 5-9 PM at New York Center for Media Arts, 45-12 Davis Street, Long Island City, NY This new "Time Capsule" video installation is comprised of video of the artist's 1997 live microchip implant (shown on a flat LCD panel mounted with a needle and a microchip) surrounded by seven sepia-toned photographs. "Time Capsule" confronts the internalization of memory through the absorption of analogue imagery (the sepia-toned photographs) with the notion of memory in the digital age (the live microchip implant). While in the former it is precisely the historical context of the images that enables the gradual development of narratives of identity, in the latter the internalization of memory is abrupt, traumatic, and decontextualized. The photographs and the microchip are also linked symbolically. The seven sepia-toned photographs were taken in Poland in the '30s and represent a part of the artist's family that was killed in the Second World War. The content of the microchip is a nine-digit number, a digital tatoo that serves as much as an instrument of surveillance and identification as it serves to depersonalize the human. The work suggests that, in the future, the human body might become a site of both moist and digital memories. For more information about the exhibition, please see: http://www.nycmediaarts.org/upcoming_x.html. For more information on "Time Capsule", please see: http://www.ekac.org/timec.html GENESIS Live from Julia Friedman Gallery, Chicago, through June 2, 2001 http://genesis.juliafriedman.com/ "Genesis" is a transgenic net installation that explores the intricate relationship between biology, belief systems, information technology, dialogical interaction, ethics, and the Internet. The key element of Genesis is an "artist's gene," a synthetic gene created by translating a sentence from the biblical book of Genesis into Morse Code, and converting the Morse Code into DNA base pairs. The sentence reads: "Let man have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every living thing that moves upon the earth." This sentence was chosen for what it implies about the dubious notion--divinely sanctioned-of supremacy over nature. Morse code was chosen because, as the first example of the use of radiotelegraphy, it represents the dawn of the information age--the genesis of global communication. The "Genesis gene," which is incorporated into glowing bacteria is projected as live video in the gallery and streams over the Internet, where the public is encouraged to intervene and monitor the evolution of the work. Original Genesis DNA music, by composer Peter Gena accompanies the installation. The "Genesis" net installation has been exhibited at Exit Art, New York, Wood Street Gallery, Pittsburgh, O.K. Center for Contemporary Art, Linz, and Centro Cultural Itaú, São Paulo. It will travel to Yokohama Triennale, Yokohama, Japan, September 2 to November 11, 2001; Fundación Telefónica, Madrid, Spain, September 12 to November 18, 2001; and Henry Art Gallery, Seattle, February 9 to May 18, 2002. "Genesis" at Julia Friedman Gallery is Kac's first major solo exhibition and is comprised of several new artworks, seen for the first time. For more information, please see: http://www.juliafriedman.com/exhib_kac.html TELEPORTING AN UNKNOWN STATE Live from Art Center College of Design, Pasadena, California, through July 1, 2001 http://telematics.walkerart.org:28080/TP/servlet/TeleportServlet/index.html "Teleporting an Unknown State," 94/2001 is a biotelematic net installation that allows online participants to send light from eight areas of the world to a single seed planted in a physical gallery. The plant depends on light sent by Web participants to be able to do photosynthesis and grow in a completely dark room. This work uses the notion of teleportation of particles (photons) to create the metaphor of the Internet as a life-supporting system. "Teleporting an Unknown State" will travel for two years as part of the exhibition "Telematic Connections: The Virtual Embrace," curated by Steve Dietz for Independent Curators International (ICI), New York. Previous versions of "Teleporting an Unknown State" are documented here : http://www.ekac.org/teleporting.html For more information, please contact Julia Friedman at <info@juliafriedman.com> or 312.455.0755. ___________________________________________ Julia Friedman Julia Friedman Gallery 118 N Peoria Chicago, IL 60607 Phone: (312) 455 0755 Fax: (312) 455 0765 E-mail: info@juliafriedman.com http://www.juliafriedman.com ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 May 2001 22:52:16 -0700 From: Amy Alexander <plagiari@plagiarist.org> Subject: Interview Yourself + Plagiarist Traveling Road Show http://plagiarist.org/iy Plagiarist.org is pleased to announce these latest additions to to the Interview Yourself Literary Archive: mmarshall1 - as interviewed by mmarshall1 cyril - as interviewed by cyril trashconnection - as interviewed by trashconnection Join the Web Celebs at Interview Yourself... Celebrity interviews just like Warhol used to do 'em.... only cheaper. *** Also, catch the Plagiarist Traveling Road Show at digital_is_not_analog.01 in Bologna May 24th - 26th http://www.salara.net/info/comunicati/dina_01_eng.html With live multimedia Net Art performances featuring the fabulous Uebergeek: B0timati0n (sneak preview available at http://botimation.org) and Netaesthesia (sorry, no sneak preview available.) - -plagiarist - -plagiarist - -plagiarist ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 May 2001 15:30:57 -0700 From: Tiffany Lee Brown <magdalen@magdalen.com> Subject: Call for Contributions: "That's Retrotainment!" Written & visual contributions are sought for "That's Retrotainment!", a special theme issue of Signum. Signum encompasses a monthly webzine at http://www.signumpress.com/ and a print anthology. As used by Signum, the word "retrotainment" covers lots of stuff: burlesque, vaudeville, anarchist fire-eaters, various theatrical forms and traditions, seedy roadside carnivals, musical subgenres that transmute into kitsch & are then reborn in modern music, tiki bars, buskers, circuses, Jesus Christ Superstar, and any spectacle involving tap dancers. *Desperately seeking someone to write intelligently about German cabaret and/or Kabarett, hopefully covering last year's 100th anniversary of Berlin cabaret.* The tone of writing should be thoughtful and reasonably accessible (though we sometimes veer off into insider-speak or let academics and theorists off their leashes for a romp in the green fields of fifty-cent words and neo-post-hyper-lengthy sentences). English language -- all accessible/readable flavours are accepted. All writers/artists must have online access for editing/correspondence of their work. Articles can take many forms & lengths: reviews of theme-related books, CDs, or websites (200-500 words); in-depth articles and interviews (3000-3500 words); artist/phenomenon profiles (1500 words); and personal essays (1500 words). For an idea of how Signum's theme issues work, look at the double-issue theme "What Ever Happened to the Cyber Revolution?" before querying further. The issues may be accessed through the Catacombs archive at http://www.signumpress.com/catacombs. Please direct all inquiries, before 15 June 2001, to: Tiffany Lee Brown, Editrix Signum 3439 NE Sandy Blvd. #513 Portland, Oregon USA 97232 http://www.signumpress.com editrix@signumpress.com # # # ------------------------------ # 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