Global Voices Online

Original post by Paris Marashi on ride the wave
6:28 pm | Categorized: ITP 2007 | Comments Off

Global Voices Online recently featured my thesis proof of concept:

hello spring

Original post by Angela Pablo on scruffy days
3:11 pm | Categorized: ITP 2007 | Comments Off

hooray! my geranium bloomed!

A solo show of my new work opens April 12 in NYC:

Mark Napier
at
bitforms gallery
529 W 20 St, NYC

show dates: April 12 - May 19, 2007

reception: April 12 6:30-8:30 PM

Large Lambda prints created with custom software, and generative computer work.


Smoke (3 stills from computer artwork)

A solo show of my new work opens April 12 in NYC:

Mark Napier
at
bitforms gallery
529 W 20 St, NYC

show dates: April 12 - May 19, 2007

reception: April 12 6:30-8:30 PM

Large Lambda prints created with custom software, and generative computer work.


Smoke (3 stills from computer artwork)

This past Sunday, Natalie Jeremijenko deployed a raft composed of plastic 2-liter bottles on the East River to hold her Environmental Health Clinic meetings. According to Natalie, the EHC’s purpose is to hold meetings with individuals about environmental concerns and to deliver specific “prescriptions” about how that individual can actively engage with her community. [...]

Jonathan Harris

Original post by ilteris on Explorations through ITP
3:09 pm | Categorized: Uncategorized | Comments Off

Jonathan Harris gave us a brief presentation at ITP about his latest works. He means a lot to me in terms of introducing me to the world of parsing and visualizing data. I still remember his 10by10 that he did back in 2004. Here are some notes that I took from the presentation:

I consider [...]

qt test

Original post by Mushon Zer-Aviv on Mushon - Outfoxed
10:54 am | Categorized: ITP 2007, video | Comments Off


if you love me…

Original post by Dedi Hubbard on wabbitt tricks
8:54 am | Categorized: ITP 2005, tv, veronica mars | Comments Off

you’ll vote for veronica mars in this save our show poll. and if you hate me you’ll vote as well to ensure I don’t catch up to you in some dark corner of Neptune trying to be the next big bad on VM in the afterlife.

http://www.eonline.com/polls/full_page_poll.jsp?pollID=6084

Seriously, it takes 3 seconds and it means a lot to me. The winning show gets much needed promotion and attention. I’d owe you one. VM fans feel free to spread the love…

View original post with proper formatting, etc… // Or grab my RSS Feed

The crowd at Mohawk. Photo by Coté.

Note: You can download the tracks I performed at the official DXM webpage. Enjoy!

(Written: 4pm, Sunday, March 11th. I’ll say more about the SXSW panels in a different post.)

I’m sitting outside of room 9AB, waiting for a panel called “Sex and Computational Machinery” to begin. It’ll be only the fifth panel I’ve been to this year, so far — after Kathy Sierra’s opening remarks about creating passionate users, a short panel called “Beautiful Algorithms,” and “Mapping: Where the Fuck Are We Now?” yesterday. And Phil Torrone’s and Limor Fried’s keynote earlier this afternoon about open source object hacking. I’ve been exposed to many of the projects and ideas that have been presented about so far, which is a bit disappointing, but there have been some good moments. I had not been familiar with Fried’s “x0xb0x” open source TB-303 synth project before — and it looks cool. (Maybe if I get ambitious this summer I’ll order a kit.)

Speaking of synths: One of the more surprising events of the weekend so far took place last night at the AMODA Laptop Battle. Executive Director Todd Simmons invited me to participate. Last year I had been a last-minute alternate and got knocked out in the second round. (About what I expected.) This year, though, the stars aligned just right and I managed to actually — gwwrk — win the damned thing. Erm. Whoa.

For those who don’t know, a laptop battle works like this: 16 people are invited to compete in a single-elimination tournament. They are grouped in random pairs. The first person plays for the three minutes. The second person plays for three minutes. The audience cheers. The five judges decide who wins and who gets eliminated. This goes on until there’s a single winner. Okay.

So here’s what happened.

Scoreboard at DJ. Photo by Coté.

In the first round I won against a guy from Dallas who goes by “Kidko.” He seemed newish (no one I asked knew who he was) and he rocked it — did a good job — but came off a bit novice. I’d prepared to dump the brunt of my creativity into that first round (since I could’ve lost and not had another chance). So I blasted out my masterpiece, or whatever, and won the round. Poor Hilary (aka “Majora”), my friend and another competitor, got paired with “Cygnus,” the guy who represented Dallas at the national laptop battle last year, and got knocked out after just the first round. Sadly. So Kidko and I played our three minutes apiece. The crowd cheered. And the five judges selected me to advance. Awesome.

For the second round I was matched with “The Mysterious H,” a dude I know from back in the Austin days when he was part of a duo awesomely titled “Disco is a Dry Hump” — they played sets at one or two of my Oscillate Night shows. He rocked a wireless keyboard, beating out the gritty synthro jams while dancing and jumping around in the audience. I had a bit of a misfire when I played — the mix sounded awful from the stage, though it can sometimes be hard to tell what the audience hears. I don’t own speakers at the moment, so I did all of my prep on headphones. Which can be dangerous. Because what sounds complex and interesting with headphones on often sounds muddy and cluttered in the much less aurally-forgiving club setting. And that’s kind of what happened. Sounded muddy. Cluttered. Anyway, The Mysterious H clearly had crowd support and I felt fairly certain that my battle adventure would end there. But the judges threw it to me and caused what felt like a riot of boos. Holy shit. I have not been booed on stage before and it’s, uh, shocking! But the judges’ decision stood, so I advanced. H was a bit disappointed, so I bought him a shot and congratulated him. Dude’s awesome. I still think he should’ve won that round…

Coté and me. Photo by Coté.

(Written: 6pm, Sunday, March 18th.)

Now I’m at Austin Java Company, downing Dr. Peppers and kind of unwinding my brain after all of this by engaging in some awesomely unproductive web surfing and a bit of work here and there. Here’s the rest of the story of that magical battle night:

The third round was interesting. My competitor, “The Wild Bull” (I don’t know anyone’s real names…), lost his first round — but the girl who whipped him pulled out of the competition, so he passed through. Had I gone with my original fatalistic plan of only putting together three tracks with the assumption that I would lose by then, then I would’ve had to back out, as well, allowing him into the final round having lost twice! This did not happen, though… The night before the event I put together one final track. Which would come in useful. So the Wild Bull did his piece — a bit more dub-like than the beatz-go-crazy of his first two sets — but kind of misfired. He lost much of the energy he had during his first two sets. I think he might’ve front-loaded his performances and ran out of juice by rounds three. I, on the other hand, hadn’t. I did the “Hello Moto” remix I worked up for Christian’s and Andrew’s Generative Social Networking project and bounced the crowd around with some ringtone-themed beats. And won. (With much less booing than before.)

So finally, the fourth round. DXM (me) versus Cygnus, who had won the Dallas competition last year and had gone to Seattle for the nationals. This also got weird. I had the luxury of performing second at almost every stage of the competition, having been given the #14 slot (out of 16). I think this gave me a bit of an advantage because I could respond a bit to the guy before me (though because I had a fairly playback-heavy set-up, there were limits). After Kidko, for example, I felt confident that I would win the round, and I could take that confidence to the stage. In this final round, Cygnus went on to do his standard variety glitch-the-fuck-outta-yer-beats-dance-around-knob-twiddling thing — but his sound kept cutting out. Todd had to go up to the stage and physically hold the audio cable securely in the jack and I think it put Cygnus off a bit and the set just didn’t seem to go very well. I nervously paced back and forth off to the side of the stage and realized that — barring my own technical glitch — I had it made. I really liked “Hydrogen Eyeliner,” the fourth track I had set up, and just felt really good about everything. It all kind of clicked perfectly together. So I did my final bit, got people dancing. (I remember vividly looking up from the screen and seeing the ITP contingent — Rebecca and Christian, especially — dancing around in a small group. I wish I could’ve photographed that. Fortunately Christian captured that exact moment as a video on his cellphone.) I played and did well and then we came up for the vote and — confusion. My brain was on overload, so I may have mixed up what actually happened, but I think Cygnus complained to Todd and the MC (Phranchyse, I think) about the equipment failure, and the MC called for a tie-breaker. Which the crowd wanted. But I couldn’t — I prepared exactly four pieces and, whatever, the rules said that was the competition. Having nailed it, I didn’t really see what the benefit of doing another round would be. The judges kind of wanted it, it seemed, but I stepped aside and told Todd that I just couldn’t do anything else. So the judges went in my favor, Cygnus kind of acted like a dick about it (understandably, maybe), and that was that. The MC held my hand up and I got crowned (or whatever) winner. Everything after that was kind of a rush of people congratulating me and me trying to get my head together enough to corral a group of ITPers safely back to the car and then to a Taco Cabana for some food.

So. A few thoughts, now that I’m the big-shot.

First and foremost: I’m not sure what happened with Cygnus, but having working equipment is the baseline for being a good laptop performer. (Not to single him out — he wasn’t the only one with problems at this event and it’s bound to happen at these sorts of things with so much equipment-chaos.) You just can’t call “redo!” when something goes technically amiss. If the glitch came about because of AMODA’s gear, though, I feel bad for the guy.

Second: I’m a bit tired or the hyper-drum-and-bass beat-mangling crap. It’s easy. You get some beats, and you twist the bejeezus out of them with a controller of some sort. Sometimes the crowd loves it, because it is a good way to get some great energy out on the stage. But I think it’s getting a bit tired. I’d rather see some people go in new directions with it and for performers to express a different kind of control over their sounds. We can’t all be Richard Devine. Todd claims the beat-mangling stuff goes over very well at the national battle in Seattle. We’ll see. I’m going to continue to develop the trancey-electro sound I used for this show.

Third: Stage presence is a difficult one for laptop-based performers. Do you stand there and look like you’re checking your e-mail or dance around like a cracked-out monkey? Last week at AMODA’s event, the performers seemed to polarize either far on one side or the other (I tend towards the “checking e-mail” look). There’s a middle ground, I think, or — at least — a way to look interesting on the stage, but without looking like an goofball. And I’m not at all dissing people like The Mysterious H who are building upon the physical performance angle. I’m talking about people who are essentially twisting knobs with really exaggerated movements. I’d rather the live performance element come out directly in the music itself — that’s what this is all about, anyway.

But what do I know.

End.

Tom expressing himself. Photo by Coté.

Professional Important News

Original post by Dan Phiffer on Dan Phiffer
6:24 pm | Categorized: Uncategorized | Comments Off

The Daily Show on Viacom v. Google

New Orleans

One video clip [5:45] and four hyperlinks

Maemo Mapper is a map browsing and GPS navigation application for the Nokia Internet Tablets. So far this useful application has been in the legal grey area by relying on providers like Google Maps and Microsoft Virtual Earth for its map tiles. This pr…

Tag robot at work

Original post by Steve Bull on Steve Bull
10:33 pm | Categorized: ITP 1997 | Comments Off

From the Graffiti Research Lab http://graffitiresearchlab.com/ show at Eyebeam http://www.eyebeam.org/A tagging robot on display from the show.

New Orleans

Original post by Dan Phiffer on Dan Phiffer
10:01 pm | Categorized: Uncategorized | Comments Off

Spring Break in New Orleans with some other ITPers.

New Orleans

Forty eight photographs and one song [Louis Armstrong]

To Do: (to maintain sanity?)

Original post by Katie Bauer on
7:50 pm | Categorized: ITP 2007 | Comments Off

1. Contact the following people:
- Vincent, to work with on MySQL, PHP & Bluetooth
- Jeungah Kim, regarding thermistor temp translations
- Ob/Gyn, for background info on fertility tracking
2. Play with Arduino & BlueSMiRF:
- make it smaller (aka: wearable)
- research anti-microbacterial fabric
3. Build mobile app to send readings to phone
4. Web UI for inputting data
5. PHP for [...]

Persian New Year 1386 :)

Original post by Paris Marashi on ride the wave
6:10 pm | Categorized: ITP 2007 | Comments Off

Click to Play
here is a better video

At the moment of the spring equinox is when the Persian New Year begins Here I describe the Hafsin, or the seven S’s, everything on the table signifying somethingApple/Seeb: Health and BeautySamanu: Sweet, for sweetness in life
Lotus tree fruit/Senjed: Love
Greens/Sabzi: Green, life
Garlic/Seer: Medicine
Vinegar/Serkeh: Patience and old age
Somagh: [...]

Childhood Reflections

Original post by Paris Marashi on ride the wave
10:37 pm | Categorized: ITP 2007 | Comments Off

We all have memories from childhood that we love. Maybe a toy, a thought, a memory.
Take a picture with your phone and send it in to mail@childhoodreflections.net
or write an email with your thoughts and memories!
mail@childhoodreflections.net
 
http://childhoodreflections.net 

Texas and some other stuff

Original post by Summer Bedard on Mostly True
8:16 pm | Categorized: ITP 2007 | Comments Off


Re: its the little girl?s b-day!

Original post by xinroman on I hate robots
4:21 pm | Categorized: ITP 2007 | Comments Off

Hey sis -
Thank you for this! I’ve been sitting around the coffee shop, recovering from SXSW, and thinking about thesis stuff all day, to which this letter is actually quite relevant. (I also had one of the most amazing dinners of my life last night, on the birthday tip, but I’ll tell you about that [...]

For the solar assignment, I worked with Rob Faludi to augment a project that we already have been working on for quite a while. Our decided task was to use solar cells both as a light sensor and as a power source.

The project is called Botanicalls and it is a system where plants are [...]

Powerful (maybe even too powerful) use of infographics in political videos:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-4101597497633477094
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NAx-6nHEWbE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJTLL1UjvfU

ArtThrob

Original post by Nathaniel Stern on nathaniel stern
5:48 pm | Categorized: press | Comments Off

Nathaniel Stern at Art on Paper Gallery
“More than a little tongue-in-cheek in reference to the grandeur which history of art confers through its ‘isms’, Stern took to calling his creative process ‘Compressionism’…. The references that radiate from this term are numerous, and are backed up in Stern’s work….”
“To call Stern’s images ‘painterly’ on the strength [...]

SLAM! WHAM! (pause)

Original post by Kate Hartman on KATE HARTMAN
2:20 pm | Categorized: ITP 2007 | Comments Off

A script for performance is usually a static entity - something that is written, printed, memorized and performed. But what if it were somewhat more dynamic? What if it were pieced together live from disparate sources? For my midterm, I explored the idea of generating a script through the process of crawling the web. In [...]

Getcha Info!

Original post by Dan Kantor on Streampad blog
10:51 am | Categorized: ITP 2005, Links, streampad | Comments Off

Ethan Bauman has recently started a new blog called Getcha Info! which has quickly become a great resource for emerging music tech and interviews. I recently met Ethan in NYC where we chatted about the new music tech scene over some ridiculously huge sandwiches at Carnegie Deli. Ethan was at Microsoft for a few years [...]

Help Save Internet Radio

Original post by Dan Kantor on Streampad blog
5:42 pm | Categorized: ITP 2005, radio | Comments Off

As you may have heard, the new copyright rates for internet radio were just announced and they are ridiculously high. So high in fact, that most webcasters will not be able to stay in business. That means you can say goodbye to last.fm, pandora, and pretty much every other radio site besides AOL and Yahoo. [...]

MAE

Original post by Santiago Echeverry on Santiago Echeverry
10:51 am | Categorized: ITP 1997 | Comments Off

This is my friend MAE with Laura Bush! I just found the pic in the news :-)

It’s a beautiful late Saturday afternoon in Ann Arbor, MI - home of the massive University of Michigan campus and all-around college town. Mike and I are sitting in a coffee shop near campus. And Mike has just asked a…

Williamsburg walk

Original post by Dan Phiffer on Dan Phiffer
3:45 pm | Categorized: Uncategorized | Comments Off

After a fine brunch with some fine ITP folks.

Williamsburg walk

Four photographs and one song [Calexico]

I am slowly re-doing the site, section by section, figuring out how to rely less on mySQL and more on S3.
Last week I tackled the “Now Playing” section. The old way relied on sending the song ID to mySQL and returning all the data such as: artist, album, album review, album art, embed code, etc. [...]

Studio day

Original post by Dan Phiffer on Dan Phiffer
4:40 pm | Categorized: Uncategorized | Comments Off

At work in Ellie’s studio.

Studio day

Five photographs and one song [The Velvet Underground]

* a shortened version of this review was written for and published in Rhizome.

“Social Networking, we’ve all heard of it, we all hate it… but now you can let your contacts work for you!”
Generative Social Networking (GSN®) is a brand developed by artists Christian Croft and Andrew Schneider. It is a software and performance piece [...]

Kim’s birthday

Original post by Dan Phiffer on Dan Phiffer
1:52 pm | Categorized: Uncategorized | Comments Off

Merrymaking in the East Village.

Kim's birthday

Four photographs and one song [DeVotchKa]

Planting the sweet potato

Original post by Dan Phiffer on Dan Phiffer
10:42 am | Categorized: Uncategorized | Comments Off

Putting a tuber into soil.

Planting the sweet potato

One video clip [1:24] and sixty words

100 drawings

Original post by Dan Phiffer on Dan Phiffer
10:41 am | Categorized: Uncategorized | Comments Off

Documentation of Ellie’s assignment to make 100 drawings in two weeks.

100 drawings

One photograph and one song [Calexico]

Everyone Loves The Telephone

Original post by Summer Bedard on Mostly True
1:25 am | Categorized: ITP 2007 | Comments Off


( One response from Markets @ http://itp.nyu.edu/urbancomputing/spring2007/blog/?p=12 )
Back in 2003, I was forced through a pretty traumatic realization of the new dislocated nature of digital marketplaces. I had come upon a Powerbook that I didn’t need, and unfortunately put it on Ebay. Now there are certain items in the marketplace, apparently, that immediately attract [...]

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