hat tips stage and other dumpers
Shoutback
Thanks to Matthew Zuras at Switched for covering the "taking animated GIFs offline" discussion.
Off topic, but several people have noted that Moot thinks Zuckerberg is wrong about unitary identity. Great, that would mean something if Moot announced his Canv.as startup was no longer using Facebook Connect for sign-in.
"Grave Wobble"
"Grave Wobble" [mp3 removed -- remixed version can be heard on bandcamp]
Aleatoric basslines demand to be heard within the club infrastructure. Or something. Still thinking about this.
Rewrite that script: give us more keywords
IMDb plot keywords for the films Jack Frost (1997 serial killer comedy) and Dr. Zhivago.
Examples of folksonomy or collective intelligence, Idiocracy-style. (The keywords attempt to retell a film in one-word bullet points, reducing it to a series of cliches and peak moments. Am guessing Christian fundies are all over this service to highlight where Satan had a hand in the movie.)
Bonus: Idiocracy plot keywords.
Update: There is something seriously off the rails with computer-augmented discourse when it is possible to search movies based solely on whether they feature someone hit with a baseball bat.
early-ish net art
Have been browsing through old Rhizome.org links and am using my blog to take some notes:
1. Netartgenerator (1999). Rhizome ArtBase lists Cornelia Sollfrank as the artist but it seems she mainly commissioned other artists (and/or programmers) to make "generators." Of the five generators only two still work. The image above was made with the image generator and the other one is the Dada generator (haven't tried it yet). To make my image I put in the word "random" and a search engine looked for some pics with the word "random" associated with them (a la Google Images) and used them to assemble the image algorithmically. For example, I think that meandering line was someone's walks traced via GPS. Looks like the NAG is still pretty active--lots of other new images from today on the Stats page.
2. Heath Bunting, _readme. This page from 1998 takes a UK press article about Bunting and turns every word into a hyperlink. So "digital" clicks through to digital.com, "interesting" to interesting.com, "the" to "the.com," etc. As you can imagine, this is an ever-changing encyclopedia of parked domain pages, search pages, corporate advertising pages, and plain old spam pages (with some "legit" sites mixed in). I like the hand-coded-seeming simplicity of this, and its relative timelessness even as the web constantly turns over site ownership. (Certain words aren't linkified--am sure each one has a story.)
awwk - posted prematurely - some ranting removed - have to work on it more