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NETTIME'S WEEKLY ANNOUNCER - every friday into your inbox calls-symposia-websites-campaigns-books-lectures-meetings send your PR to sandra.fauconnier@rug.ac.be in time! 0.......1........2........3........4........5........6 1...changy................New York University Press Prize for Hyperfiction 2...Ken Goldberg..........The ShadowServer 3...Sean Healy............Online University 4...feb:98................Call for Web Designer/ Artist. 5...Steve Dietz...........exhibition call for "Beyond Interface" 6...Henry Kautz...........AAAI-98 Workshop on RECOMMENDER SYSTEMS 7...joe blow..............volunteer to get involved 8...Dmytri Kleiner........Re: <nettime> Blast the Bots 9...Teo Spiller...........direct democracy 10..GRAMMATRON............GRAMMATRON UPDATE 11..Stephen Pusey.........OMNIZONE ........1.............................................. Date: Fri, 27 Feb 1998 14:45:53 -0500 From: changy <changy@elmer5.bobst.nyu.edu> Subject: New York University Press Prize for Hyperfiction To: nettime-owner@is.in-berlin.de Reply-To: changy@elmer5.bobst.nyu.edu Mime-Version: 1.0 Sender: pit@mserv.rug.ac.be Status: RO New York University Press Prize for Hyperfiction - extended submission date! Continuing NYU Press's tradition of publishing work on the cutting edge, we established the New York University Press Prize for Hyperfiction for Fall 1998. This prize will recognize an outstanding work of electronic hypertext literature which we will publish on our web site. Hypertext is an experimental form of writing which is transforming traditional concepts of linear text as well as the role of readers and writers through new technology. Our jurors are Adrianne Wortzel and Stuart Moulthrop, both creative and well-known hypertext authors and artists. Due date for submission has been extended to June 1, 1998. Author(s) of the winning entry will have their work published for at least one year on the NYU Press web site as of October 15, 1998, will receive a $1,000 honorarium, and will be honored in person at New York University. For more information please go to http://www.nyupress.nyu.edu/e_edit.html Thank you for your support. Sincerely, Suzanne Kemperman Electronic Publishing Manager, NYU Press .................2..................................... X-Authentication-Warning: tinguely.ieor.berkeley.edu: goldberg owned process doing -bs Date: Fri, 27 Feb 1998 12:10:46 -0800 (PST) From: Ken Goldberg <goldberg@ieor.berkeley.edu> X-Sender: goldberg@tinguely To: sandra.fauconnier@rug.ac.be Subject: announcement for nettime? Mime-Version: 1.0 Status: RO The ShadowServer "The electric light escapes attention as a communication medium precisely because it has no `content'." - M. McLuhan, Understanding Media The ShadowServer is a WWW-based art installation that creates retinal impressions and attempts to provoke responses from viewers. The apparatus is housed in a lightproof box that contains physical objects, some of which move of their own accord within the apparatus. Viewers can interact with these objects via buttons. Viewers can select any combination of five buttons and then Cast a Shadow, which activates a combination of lighting devices and returns a digital snapshot of the resulting shadow. Each combinations of buttons produce different lighting conditions. Certain random combinations will provide clues which lead to a mysterious Sixth button. The Sixth button illuminates hidden secrets in an alcove of the apparatus. To experiment with this camera obscura, please visit: http://taylor.ieor.berkeley.edu/shadowserver/ ..........................3............................ Date: Fri, 27 Feb 1998 12:00:07 +1000 From: sean healy <evolver@loud.org.au> Reply-To: evolver@loud.org.au Organization: the pod X-Mailer: Mozilla 4.04 (Macintosh; I; PPC) MIME-Version: 1.0 To: nettime-l@Desk.nl Subject: Online University References: <199802260708.IAA03665@basis.Desk.nl> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; x-mac-type="54455854"; x-mac-creator="4D4F5353" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Hello, My name is Alfredo Lopez. I'm a Partner at People-Link, the progressive Internet access provider and administrator of People Link's New World Village (http://www.people-link.com). We have your name because you visit Znet (http://www.lbbs.org), our partners in the unprecedented project I'm writing you about. I hope you won't consider it an intrusion for Znet's Administrator Michael Albert and myself to send you news about a new, progressive, On Line School, the Learning On Line University, in hopes you will want to participate in the undertaking. Starting April 1, 1998, this new project, LOLU for short, will bring high quality courses sponsored by diverse progressive organizations all working together and sharing resources and revenues and taught by prominent academics and activists to people throughout the world. To provide some incentive to read on, let me just note at the outset that the courses to be offered this semester are: ORGANIZING: THE LOST ART Organizational Sponsor: -- Faculty: Leslie Cagan PARENTING FOR PROGRESSIVES IN THE LATE 20th CENTURY Organizational Sponsor: South End Press -- Faculty: Cynthia Peters MEDIA ANALYSIS: CHALLENGING ROUTINE PROPAGANDA Organizational Sponsor: FAIR -- Faculty: Norman Solomon CONCEPTUALIZING A BETTER ECONOMY Organizational Sponsor: Z Magazine -- Faculty: Michael Albert RADICAL THEORY, VISION, AND STRATEGY Organizational Sponsor: Z Magazine -- Faculty: Michael Albert LINE. COLOR, AND SHAPE: A REINTRODUCTION TO THE VISUAL ARTS Organizational Sponsor -- Faculty: Anita Karsau U.S. CAPITALISM IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY Organizational Sponsor: -- Faculty: Peter Bohmer INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL ECONOMY Organizational Sponsor: -- Faculty: Robin Hahnel CHALLENGE AND CHANGE: ORGANIZED LABOR IN THE NEXT MILLENNIUM Organizational Sponsor: Communication Workers of America -- Faculty: William Henning To find out more about these courses and the outstanding faculty teaching them please point your web browser at the LOLU web site (www.lolu.org) where you will find course descriptions, staff biographies, and registration information and forms. ...................................4................... Date: Sat, 28 Feb 1998 12:53:35 -0600 To: nettime-l@desk.nl From: "feb:98" <feb98@irational.org> Subject: Call for Web Designer/ Artist. Call for Web Designer/ Artist. Submission deadline: March 16, 1998. The Banff Centre for the Arts is looking for a web designer/ artist for it's new Multimedia Institute series of programmes. Final design to be on-line and functionable by April 1, 1998. Although the design must be functional, we view this as good opportunity to showcase innovative web design/ arts. (Design work would become the property of the Banff Centre). The current site is viewable at: http://www.banff.org/programs/mmi98/HTM/98desc.html Remuneration for completion of this work includes: - 3 week self directed artistic residency with studio, technical support, and full room and board at the Banff Centre. http://www.banffcentre.ab.ca/ - Free attendance to the think tank symposium 'Avatar! Avatar! Wherefore Art Thou ? Art, Software Design and the Science of Identity': http://www.banff.org/programs/mmi98/HTM/98bmi19.htm - Free attendance as a Senior Artist and a presentation opportunity of work at 'Interactive Screen': http://www.banff.org/programs/mmi98/HTM/98bmi20.htm - Return airfare to town of Banff, July 24 - Aug 28 (approximate). http://www.banffgondola.com/cam/bestphoto.htm For further information or submission of design ideas: mailto:susan@banff.org Media Visual Arts Department, The Banff Centre for the Arts, Banff, Alberta, Canada. 28/2/98 ............................................5.......... ----- Forwarded message from RHIZOME INTERNET ----- from RHIZOME DIGEST: February 27, 1998 Date: 2.21.98 From: Steve Dietz (stevedietz@yproductions.com) Subject: exhibition call for "Beyond Interface" Call for submissions: "Beyond Interface: net art and Art on the Net" For many institutions, "art on the net" is putting images of works in their collections on the Web. For many practitioners, digital media are a tool that allow the recreation of familiar strategies of traditional art practices or the Web is little more than another venue, a delivery mechanism. "Beyond Interface" is an online exhibition of juried and curated net art projects for which the Net is both a sufficient and necessary condition of viewing/experiencing/participating. Submit URLs of specific projects for consideration to beyondinterface@yproductions.com by March 9, 1998. Organizing Curator Steve Dietz, Walker Art Center Jury/Steering Committee Remo Campopiano, artnetweb Craig Harris, Leonardo Electronic Almanac Susan Hazan, The Israel Museum Greg Lam Niemeyer, Stanford University Digital Art Center Chris Locke, University College, London Pedro Meyer, ZoneZero Randall Packer, San Jose Museum of Art Laura Trippi, independent curator Paul Vanouse, Studio for Creative Inquiry, Carnegie Mellon University Martha Wilson, Franklin Furnace ......................................................6 Date: Thu, 26 Feb 1998 17:19:54 -0500 (EST) From: Henry Kautz <kautz@research.att.com> Subject: AAAI-98 Workshop on RECOMMENDER SYSTEMS CALL FOR PARTICIPATION: AAAI-98 Workshop on RECOMMENDER SYSTEMS July 26 or 27 (to be determined) Madison, Wisconson Part of the 15th National Conference on Artificial Intelligence http://robotics.stanford.edu/people/marko/rec98/ Over the past few years a new kind of application, the "recommender system", has appeared, based on a synthesis of ideas from artificial intelligence, human-computer interaction, sociology, information retrieval, and the technology of the WWW. Recommender systems assist and augment the natural process of relying on friends, colleagues, publications, and other sources to make the choices that arise in everyday life. Examples of the kinds of questions that could be answered by a recommender system include: What kind of car should I buy? What web-pages would I find most interesting? What people in my company would be best assigned to a particular project team? Some of the issues we will explore in this workshop are: 1. Identifying different types of recommendations. Techniques for generating recommendations and learning user profiles. Personalized versus non-personalized recommendations. 2. When does collaborative filtering work, and when does it fail? Can we trust the recommendations received from remote, anonymous users to be trustworthy and representative? 3. What happens when recommender systems meet the "real world" -- how do you get a business model and a user base. What is the current state of the art. 4. Social implications of recommendation systems, and how the technology relates to traditional publishers and editors. 5. Visualizing recommendation spaces. * Format The workshop will include moderated discussions, panels, and breakout sessions. We will identify 3 to 4 major common themes based on the position statements we receive (see below), and will invite people to make brief presentations on the themes as part of the discussions. The working notes will contain only position statements and selected supplementary materials. Demonstrations of working systems will be given during breaks and/or a special session of the workshop. * Attendance and Submission Requirements Participate will be by invitation only, and will be limited to approximately 30 people. If you wish to participate, submit a position statement (1 to 2 pages) addressing an important issue or describing an interesting lesson you have learned, with a short summary of your relevant research activities. You may optionally include a copy of a paper (published or unpublished) that you have written in the area. Please indicate on your statement if you may want to present a demo, and your expected system requirements. * Submission deadline: March 11, 1998 * Notification date: April 1, 1998 * Final date for camera-ready materials for working notes: April 22, 1998 * Send electronic submissions (preferred) to: kautz@research.att.com (Required) position statement should be plain ascii text. Optional paper may be in text, postscript, or MS word (.doc) formats. * Send hardcopy submissions (2 copies) to: Henry Kautz AT&T Labs, Room A-257 180 Park Avenue Florham Park, NJ 07932 Phone: (973) 360-8310 Fax: (973) 360-8970 Email: kautz@research.att.com * Workshop Chair Henry Kautz (AT&T Labs) * Organizing Committee Marko Balabanovic (Stanford), marko@cs.stanford.edu Joseph Konstan (Minnesota), konstan@cs.umn.edu Kristian J. Hammond (Chicago), hammond@cs.uchicago.edu Haym Hirsh (Rutgers), hirsh@cs.rutgers.edu Alexandros Moukas (MIT), moux@media.mit.edu Loren Terveen (AT&T Labs), terveen@research.att.com 7...................................................... Date: Sun, 01 Mar 1998 10:08:55 PST From: joe blow <wesleytoy@hotmail.com> To: owner-nettime-l@basis.Desk.nl Subject: volunteer to get involved I am a word processor and a sociologist. I would be very interested in volunteering my services to your organization. I live in Oklahoma, USA. I am especially interested in the drug movement. The anti and pro prohibition. But would be interested in most anything, just want to help get the info. stored for future generations. Contact me via email if you could use my skills. ........8.............................................. From: dmytrik@syntac.net (Dmytri Kleiner) To: nettime-l@Desk.nl Subject: Re: <nettime> Blast the Bots - Praise the Databases (5URLs) Date: Sun, 01 Mar 1998 20:28:24 GMT On Fri, 27 Feb 1998 17:19:26 +0100 (MET), you wrote: + Blast the Bots - Praise the Databases + Five URLs from Geert Lovink Hey, since we're giving out URLs, try these on for size: http://www.happyclown.com http://www.syntac.net/idio-audio/ http://www.syntac.net/hoax/ http://www.vrx.net/idiosyntactix/ It's all still in progress but worth you time. + 3. http://www.tao.ca/ Good choice. Tao Communications, the Media Collective, Happyclown, Inc and Idiosyntactix (and many other manifestations) are many heads of the same hydra here in Toronto. And for a sneak peak check out this site in progress, to be incorporated into happyclown on completion: http://www.syntac.net/~rkanee/AVIC/ Did you ever hear of our Plunderpalooza Festival? http://www.vrx.net/idio-audio/plunderpalooza/ Or look at some of the photographs: http://www.partypix.net/images/live/plunder/palooza97.html ................9...................................... Date: Mon, 02 Mar 1998 13:59:48 +0100 From: Teo Spiller <teo.spiller@rzs-hm.si> Subject: direct democracy CALL FOR PARTICIPATION D3M (democracy for the third millenium) is an international forum to unite all active political subjects round the world, fighting for the direct democracy. Please go to http://www.teo-spiller.org/d3m/ and contact us! ..........................10........................... Date: Mon, 2 Mar 1998 12:56:53 -0700 To: GRAMMATRON <golam@grammatron.com> From: golam@grammatron.com (GRAMMATRON) Subject: GRAMMATRON UPDATE Sender: pit@mserv.rug.ac.be March 1, 1998 GRAMMATRON UPDATE The second leg of the GRAMMATRON World Tour is moving into the home-stretch. After successful presentations at many prestigious events in the Fall of 1997 including the Ars Electronica Festival in Linz, the International Symposium of Electronic Art at the Art Institute of Chicago, and the International Biennial of Film and Architecture in Graz, the GTRON program is about to take off for Australia. On Sunday, March 8th, at the Ngapartji Multimedia Centre in Adelaide (South Australia), the Australian Network of Art and Technology (ANAT), in association with the Telstra Adelaide Arts Festival, will be presenting FOLDBACK, a day long forum on media, techno-sound and screen culture celebrating the tenth anniversary of ANAT's existence as Australia's peak network agency for artists working with technology. The Telstra Adelaide Arts Festival is considered Australia's Foremost event in contemporary art. As one of the few events Profiling technology-based art, FOLDBACK is an integral aspect of the Adelaide Festival. The event takes place on a Sunday, forming a bridge between the themes explored during both Writers' Week and Artists' Week. According to a recent press release from ANAT, "[d]rawing connections between the often divergent cultures of art, writing and sound, FOLDBACK seeks to dispel the assumption that media art belongs only in a visual arts context." Forming a living biography of ANAT's past and present, the event will feature many of Australia's most exciting transdisciplinary artists and Alt-X's Mark Amerika has been invited to deliver the keynote address. Amerika's keynote address and appearance at the Telstra Adelaide Arts Festival will be followed by a lecture/performance tour Throughout Australia where he will be presenting both the Alt-X and GRAMMMATRON projects to audiences in Perth (March 18th at the Perth Institute for Contemporary Art), Sydney (The Performance Space, date TBA), and Brisbane (March 24th at the Institute for Modern Art). For updates on all FOLDBACK events, including the tour, go to: http://www.anat.org.au/ For information on the Telstra Adelaide Arts Festival go to: http://adfest98.telstra.com.au/ For information on Mark Amerika, The Alt-X Online Network or GRAMMATRON go to: http://www.altx.com ...................................11.................. Date: Sun, 01 Mar 1998 23:09:21 -0500 To: nettime-l@Desk.nl From: Stephen Pusey <scp@plexus.org> Subject: OMNIZONE Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Call for submissions: "OMNIZONE, Mapping Perspectives of Digital Culture" OMNIZONE, a project organized by Yu Yeon Kim and Stephen Pusey of PLEXUS (http://plexus.org), has the ambition of mapping digital culture through the work of artists, writers, curators, critics, programmers, research scientists, and other cultural practicioners who are invited to supply texts and digital works that substantiate a critical view of digital culture and its dynamics, and function (however obtusely) as maps of digital space and culture. OMNIZONE will be manifested both as a permanent development area on PLEXUS (to be launched in May 1998), and as an interactive, networked installation at EXIT Art, New York City, opening on September 19th, 1998. The show at Exit Art will run for eight weeks, and will also include physical installations, robotics, etc. Participants include: Stephen Pusey Yu Yeon Kim Christiane Paul Morgan Garwood Adrianne Wortzel Sawad Brooks Beth Stryker Sabine Bitter Helmut Weber Eve Andree Laramee Robert C. Morgan Matthew Drutt Maciej Wisneiwski Noah Wardrup Fruin Marie Sester Marek Walczak Kathy Rae Huffman Tapio Makela Eva Wohlgemuth Susanna Paasonen Olu Oguibe Pit Shultz Shu Lea Cheang Lawrence Chua Osvaldo Romberg Timothy Druckery Iair Rosenkranz Jouke Kleerebezem Andrea Wollensack and many more ... Please send your URL's, texts, for consideration, to: OMNIZONE@plexus.org PLEXUS Art and Communication "only connect ..." http://plexus.org oracle@plexus.org --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de