mateja on Sat, 22 Sep 2001 06:47:39 +0200 (CEST)


[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> Announcements [20x]




Announcer wrote:

> Table of Contents:
>
>    Call - CPSR/DIAC02 - Patterns for Participation, Action, and Change
>      Andreas Broeckmann <abroeck@transmediale.de>
>
>    call - 'very CYBERFEMINIST INTERNATIONAL'
>      Cornelia Sollfrank <cornelia@snafu.de>
>
>    "Interpassivitaet"-Vortrag
>      Nina =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Tempor=E4r?= <nina-temp@gmx.de>
>
>    [Hacker Art News] formail -zx: Subject:
>      "Tommaso Tozzi" <t.tozzi@ecn.org>
>
>    open submission competition details
>      "Sue Jones" <sue@e-2.org>
>
>    ny: global studies conference 9/21-22/01
>      "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl>
>
>    Electrofringe 2001
>      "shannon o'neill" <alias@aliasfrequencies.org>
>
>    open submission competition details
>      "Sue Jones" <sue@e-2.org>
>
>    Ausstellung im =?iso-8859-1?Q?Edith=2DRu=DF=2DHaus=20f=FCr?= Medienkunst
>      Kulturamt der Stadt Oldenburg <info@kulturamt.oldenburg.de>
>
>    Vote in the UTOPIAN W.C. 2001!
>      "SOC.Stockholm" <info@soc.nu>
>
>    Boris Groys / The Art Judgement Show
>      "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl>
>
>    position announcement.
>      Wendy Hui Kyong Chun <Wendy_Hui_Kyong_Chun@Brown.edu>
>
>    MAAP MAIL
>      "MAAP" <info@maap.org.au>
>
>     process the information!
>      molly hankwitz <mollybh@netspace.net.au>
>
>    //TWISTER 1.0//
>      "platoforma"<platoforma@wanadoo.es>
>
>    Temporary address for Wigged.net
>      Wigged/Seth Thompson <wigged@seththompson.com>
>
>    (Fwd) New York vigil at the Union square - TONIGHT - Friday 15
>      "Ivo Skoric" <ivo@reporters.net>
>
>    a note on the changed circumstances in New York and the USA
>      SCP-New York <notbored@panix.com>
>
>    Towards Cusco - Debate at Videobrasil
>      "=?iso-8859-1?B?TmlscyBS9mxsZXI=?=" <rfnr@hotmail.com>
>
>    posters for peace online now!
>      Aliza Dichter <liza@mediachannel.org>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 14:42:52 +0200
> From: Andreas Broeckmann <abroeck@transmediale.de>
> Subject: Call - CPSR/DIAC02 - Patterns for Participation, Action, and Change
>
> Date: Sat, 8 Sep 2001 13:04:11 -0700 (PDT)
> From: Lorraine Pozzi <femme2@scn.org>
>
> Hi,
>
> I'm working with Doug Schuler on the upcoming DIAC-02 symposium (Seattle,
> May 16-19, 2002) sponsored by Computer Professionals for Social
> Responsibility and the National Communication Association Task Force on
> the Digital Divide.
>
> Doug gave me your address and suggested that I send you this call for
> submissions.
>
> In conjunction with the symposium we are also developing an extensive,
> collective online resource which represents the wisdom and creativity of
> groups like yours. For that reason we're trying to open up this discussion
> up as much as possible.  This project cannot succeed without a wide
> variety of voices.
>
> Please take a look at the "Call for Submissions" included below and send
> it out to any appropriate colleagues or lists.
>
> Thanks very much for your time and consideration. Feel free to write me or
> Doug Schuler (douglas@cpsr.org) if you have any questions or comments.
>
> We hope you can participate in some way!
>
> Lorraine Pozzi
> femme2@scn.org
> Organizational Liaison
> Shaping the Network Society Symposium
> May 16-19, 2002, Seattle
> - -----------------------------------------------------------
>
> First CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
>
> Please forward to interested people, lists, newsgroups. Thank you!
>
> Shaping the Network Society:
> Patterns for Participation, Action, and Change
> http://www.cpsr.org/conferences/diac02/
>
> May 16-19, 2002
> Seattle, Washington, USA
>
> Tomorrow's information and communication infrastructure is being shaped
> today.
>
>       But by whom and to what ends?
>
> Researchers, community workers, social activists, educators and
> students, journalists, artists, policymakers, and citizens are all
> concerned about the shape that this new infrastructure will take.
>
>    Will it meet the needs of all people?
>    Will it help the citizenry address current and future issues?
>    Will it promote democracy, social justice, sustainability?
>    Will the appropriate research be conducted?
>    Will equitable policies be enacted?
>
> Symposium Aims
>
> A "public sphere" where people learn about, discuss, and deliberate
> on important issues, such as increasing economic disparity,
> militarization, environmental degradation, racism or sexism, is
> critical to our future.
>
> Clearly, information and communication technology--and the uses to
> which it is put--is central to any effort that helps empower people to
> effectively look at and resolve our collective concerns.
>
> At the same time, giant media conglomerates and computer companies are
> rapidly increasing their control of the information and communication
> infrastructure upon which this public sphere depends.  Governments,
> too, are often part of this problem;  instead of promoting access and
> two-way access to this infrastructure, they actively or passively
> discourage civic sector uses.
>
> Civil society is responding in a million ways.  The opportunities and
> challenges offered by a global "network society" are too great to be
> ignored.
>
> The Shaping the Network Society symposium is designed to aid in these
> efforts by providing a forum and a platform for these critical issues.
> And, through the use of "patterns," we hope that this conference will
> help inject organization, motivation, and inspiration into the
> evolution of an information and communication infrastructure that
> truly meets today's -- and tomorrow's -- urgent needs.
>
> Please join us in Seattle (and beyond) in May 2002 for this exciting
> and important event!
>
> DIAC-02
>
> This event will be the eighth biannual Directions and Implications of
> Advanced Computing (DIAC) symposium.  A variety of events are planned
> ranging from invited speakers, panel discussions, and pattern
> presentations to numerous opportunities for informal working sessions
> - -- both planned and spontaneous -- on various topics.  Also, as with
> previous DIAC symposia, we will do our best to provide a few surprises ...
>
> Pattern Orientation
>
> To promote bridge-building, we are soliciting "patterns," instead of
> abstracts, that will be developed into full papers for this symposium.
> A "pattern" is a careful description of a solution or suggestion for
> remedying an identified problem in a given context that can be used
> to help develop and harness communication and information technology
> in ways that affirm human values.
>
> The information contained in patterns is similar to that in
> traditional abstracts or papers, but it is arranged in a common
> structure in order to inspire scholars and practitioners to think
> about their work in terms of social implications and actual social
> engagement; build networks that include research, practice, and
> advocacy; and facilitate the integration of all submitted patterns
> into a coherent network of patterns, or "pattern language," that will
> form a useful and compelling knowledge structure which can help spur
> additional research, solutions, and activism. As a result, individual
> patterns are exciting because each is, in essence, a small theory
> about some part of the communication and information universe.  In
> addition, since the individual patterns will be stored in an online
> database, the overall strategy opens myriad possibilities that will
> allow us as a community to synthesize the patterns into a collectively
> constructed body that creates new opportunities for collaboration and
> deliberation.
>
> We believe that the "pattern" orientation will be beneficial and
> thought-provoking for all participants.  If you are tempted to submit
> a pattern, we encourage you to do so.  Although this approach may
> require different thinking, we believe that it will be worth the
> effort.
>
> Patterns can be submitted for consideration for presentation at the
> Shaping the Network Society conference, or simply to be published on
> the web site and as a contribution to the knowledge structure.
>
> Developing and Submitting Patterns
>
>      Patterns are SOLUTIONS to PROBLEMS in a given CONTEXT.
>
>      Patterns can be observable actions, empirical findings,
>      hypotheses, theories, social or media critiques, case studies,
>      or "best practices";  indeed, any template or crystallized or
>      distilled knowledge in some area that will help people in the
>      field--researchers, practitioners, journalists, policymakers,
>      artists, citizens.
>
>      Patterns can address problems, such as the digital divide, that
>      arise in a range of contexts--social, cultural, educational,
>      economic, community, political, and/or technological.
>
>      Patterns exist at all levels; they can be "global" as well as
>        "local," theoretical as well as practical.
>
>      Patterns are the springboard for discussion, research, and
>         activism.
>
> The primary elements needed to develop a pattern for submission are:
>
> - - The name or TITLE of the pattern (brief, one-ten words).
> - - A succinct statement of the essence of the PROBLEM in one or two
>   sentences.
> - - A DISCUSSION section (300-600 words) that describes the background
>   of the problem, evidence for its proposed solution, and the range of
>   ways that the solution can be applied.
> - - The SOLUTION to the problem is presented in a summary form that
>   describes the field of physical and social relationships which are
>   required to solve the stated problem, in the stated context.
> - - An optional descriptive image can be used to provide a visual
>   representation of your pattern and/or an optional summary image can
>   show a pictorial representation (diagram) of the solution.  Although
>   these IMAGES are an optional element, we encourage you to include
>   them to supply useful information that is difficult to provide in
>   words and to make your pattern page more attractive and consistent
>   with other patterns.
>
> Complete details on pattern submission, including example patterns,
> are available for further clarification at the symposium web site:
> http://www.cpsr.org/conferences/diac02/
>
> The preferred way to submit patterns is through the pattern intake
> site, which can be accessed from the symposium site or directly at:
> http://www.cpsr.org/conferences/diac02/pattern.cgi.  If you cannot
> access the intake site, please send your pattern as email text (no
> attachments) to docrod99@hotmail.com.  Please consult the help page,
> http://www.cpsr.org/conferences/diac02/patterns/help.html, for
> guidance on an e-mail submission.
>
> Important Dates
>
>   December 1, 2001  Deadline for pattern submission for conference
>                       consideration
>   January 15, 2002  Feedback to conference pattern submitters
>                       (accept/reject decision)
>   March 15, 2002    Full papers (based on accepted patterns) due
>   April 15, 2002    Last day to submit patterns for database inclusion
>                       only
>   May 16-19, 2002   Shaping the Network Society Symposium
>
> Sponsors
>
> Public Sphere Project of Computer Professionals for
>   Social Responsibility (CPSR)
>
> National Communication Association Task Force on the Digital Divide
>
> Program committee
>
> Abdul Alkalimet (US), Alain Ambrosi (Canada), Ann Bishop (US),
> Kwasi Boakye-Akyeampong (Ghana), Rod Carveth (US), Andrew Clement
> (Canada), Fiorella de Cindio (Italy), Peter Day (UK), Susana
> Finquelievich (Argentina), Mike Gurstein (Canada), Harry Hochheiser
> (US), Toru Ishida (Japan), Susan Kretchmer (US), Brian Loader (UK),
> Geert Lovink (Netherlands, Australia), Richard Lowenberg (US), Peter
> Mambrey (Germany), Peter Miller (US), Kenneth Pigg (US), Scott
> Robinson (Mexico), Partha Pratim Sarker (Bangladesh), Doug Schuler
> (US), David Silver (US), Sergei Stafeev (Russia), Erik Stolterman
> (Sweden) and Peter Van den Besselaar (Netherlands).
>
> Other invaluable assistance
>
> Christopher Alexander (inspiration and advice), Steve Berczuk
> (patterns), Susan Kretchmer and Rod Carveth (NCA liaisons), Noriko
> Okazaki (graphics), Robin Oppenheimer (advisor), Scott Rose (web
> technology). Nancy White (advisor).
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 22:23:57 +0100
> From: Cornelia Sollfrank <cornelia@snafu.de>
> Subject: call - 'very CYBERFEMINIST INTERNATIONAL'
>
> Call for Proposals/Abstracts
>
> 'very CYBERFEMINIST INTERNATIONAL', hamburg 2001
>
> organizer: old boys network
> (Verena Kuni, Helene von Oldenburg, Claudia Reiche, Cornelia Sollfrank)
> date: december 13-16, 2001
> location: lichtmess-kino
>
> This will be a three-day conference addressing different themes each day, and including evening programs.
>
> 01. opening reception
> [evening, december 13, 2001, thursday]
> At the opening reception OBN introduces itself in a performative way. All speakers of the conference as well as other additionally invited CYBERFEMINISTs present their personal approach to CYBERFEMINISM during a poster presentation. 20-30 presenters are standing in front of their individual posters and explain
> it to the audience. The single presentations do not exceed 10 minutes and will be 'looped'. Everybody will be talking, playing and performing at the same time.
>
> 02: CYBERFEMINIST networking - knot working - not working?
> [day, december 14, 2001, friday]
> Due to the underlying dynamics of networks there is a permanent need to clarify the changing organizational structure and the way that individual members see the network and their roles within it. It is important that members express their divergent ideas of structure and networking and develop them into a common structure which only can be the basis for networked action and reality. Using an open format, the past, the present, and the future goals of obn will be discussed, and all kinds ot utopian visions for obn's future will be aired. A next step will be to go beyond our own network, and to look at the condition and the potential of self-organized structures as an alternative to institutional forms within the art system, academia and politics, and discuss their relations and interdependencies.
>
> 03: function of (start) function of (shut) function of (stop) function of (open) = new border concepts
> [day, december 14 & 15 2001, friday & saturday]
>
> Mathematical functions are the core of algorithms that operate computers. Temporal and spatial borders can be written as interacting functions. Closings and beginnings, endings and openings combine and cross, thus modeling the experiences of borders we enjoy or suffer. Breakthrough, shelter, prison, invasion or escape are not neutral in terms of control. For: who is able to manipulate those functions? They are always political.
> Liberation was another word for a hack in the system's functions in operation, inserting the border of the real into the reality of the operating system. New border concepts perform the relations of power as well as the dynamics of variable temporal and spatial functions.
>
> CYBERFEMINISM is no game without borders, but a playing with borders that takes them seriously, a work at the boundaries of that 'contested zone' in which the so-called real and virtual diverge, and which mines utopias of transgression, understanding them as a potential for transformation. If CYBERFEMINISM is also a utopia, then its utopian designs can be fictions as well as specific political options. In the field of CYBERFEMINISM utopias offer differentiated models for discussion which can invent new forms of communication, open up new articulations of space and time which do not only function in cyberspace, or suggest models based on genetic technologies, operating new life or gender models.
>
> The borders between political utopia, science fiction, and technological innovations have always been fluid - beyond judgment as to value. CYBERFEMINISTs take an inventive, tactical part in furthering a perforation, diffusion, conversion, transgression, subversion etc. of cultural forms with new
> technological possibilities. Some points of critical and creative attitudes towards fluid borders and special concern are:
>
> - - new forms of global control and subversion through the electronic networking technology: how to obtain and secure privacy? how to react to the globalized economy and to the growing influence of global trusts on national governments?
>
> - - realities and utopian fantasies of leaving the limitations and rules of the known world behind, in outer space as in cyberspace
>
> - - manipulations of human consciousness with drugs/ pharmaceutials, psychological control, or media-related brainwashing
>
> - - incorporation of technology into the human body and genetic engineering, how to understand and invert, use and misuse the possibilities?
>
> - - new imaginations of gender with and without medical creations and redefinitions of sexual organs etc.
>
> 04: very TRANSGRESSIVE
> On the last evening of the conference there will be party, including concerts, DJs and VJs -- an evening when everybody will be crossing borders!
>
> The live acts within 'very TRANSGRESSIVE' give an insight into technical, cultural, political and economic inventions of electronic music and sound production. They present working methods, with a special focus on the underrepresentation of women in this field. What does "feminist" mean for a female commitment in electronic music? It is a question of "technique" - a
> possible musical, theoretical and political "technique" in discussion with the level of media technological development.
>
> 05: brunch
> [morning/noon, december 16, 2001, sunday]
> A casual get together to think over the results of the conference, strengthen our bodies for the trip back home with good food, and say good-bye to old and new friends.
>
> [06: live media presence]
>
> In addition to changing possibilities of production we find a complete
> restructuring of distribution, which opens up via Internet and new methods
> of data compression. New relations between producer and receiver have been
> introduced, and provide new possibilities for individual and collective
> production.
>
> Every contribution to the conference will be broadcast via live stream
> simultaneously through the Internet, and partly through the local radio
> station FSK in Hamburg.
>
> "very CYBERFEMINIST International" hopes to address many of the issues
> introduced above. We invite intense conversations, controversies,
> speculations, papers, projects, presentations in many forms. We invite
> paradoxical approaches and diverse interpretations of CYBERFEMINIST theory
> and practice. Our hope is to expand our connections and our horizon, to
> include an even greater mixture of CYBERFEMINISTs than participated in the
> 'first' and 'next' CYBERFEMINIST International, and to work out an
> operational structure for obn which will allow a smoothly running program
> called 'CYBERFEMINIST future'.
>
> Call for proposals/abstracts: by october 15, 2001
>
> Please send in proposals and abstracts for posters, presentations,
> lectures, DJing, and music performances.
>
> Mail to: boys@obn.org
>
> :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
> :::::"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: Mon, 10 Sep 2001 18:58:03 +0200 (MEST)
> From: Nina =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Tempor=E4r?= <nina-temp@gmx.de>
> Subject: "Interpassivitaet"-Vortrag
>
> Im Rahmen der Vortragsreihe <I>digital happy hour</I>:
>
> Robert Pfaller:
> "Interpassivität - Studien über delegiertes Geniessen"
>
> Mittwoch, 26. September 2001, 20.00 Uhr
> Literaturhaus / Bibliothek, München, Salvatorplatz 1
>
> Vortrag und Buchpräsentation in Kooperation mit dem Literaturhaus München
>
> "Interaktivität" heisst das neue Zauberwort im Medienzeitalter - ein
> andauernder Trend, der neue Möglichkeiten zur Mitgestaltung am Produktions- und
> Rezeptionsprozess eines (Kunst-)Werks verspricht und dessen Anhänger
> nicht-interaktive Medien als langweilig oder gar "didaktisch" einstufen. Der
> Medientheoretiker Robert Pfaller dagegen entlarvt einen Großteil des heutigen Gebrauchs
> Neuer Medien in Kunst und Alltagskultur als Phänomene delegierten Geniessens:
> sollte man angesichts der vielen Videofreaks, die ihre Recorder fernsehen
> lassen, Fernsehkomödien, die für die Zuschauer lachen, und Akademiker, für die
> der Kopierer das Lesen erledigt, nicht vielmehr von "interpassiven" Akten
> sprechen? Zu dieser provokativen These hat Pfaller einen Reader herausgegeben,
> Beiträge u.a. von Slavoj Zizek, Stella Rollig und Wolfgang Pauser.
>
> - --
> GMX - Die Kommunikationsplattform im Internet.
> http://www.gmx.net
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 12:22:10 +0200
> From: "Tommaso Tozzi" <t.tozzi@ecn.org>
> Subject: [Hacker Art News] formail -zx: Subject:
>
> HelpConferenze a cura di Strano Network:
>
>  Museo Pecci, Prato
> 11 settembre ore 15
> "MuSE - come crearsi la propria radio in internet"
> di Jaromil.
> (VEDI SCHEDA DI SEGUITO)
>
> Le Rampe, Porta San Niccolo', Firenze
> 11 settembre ore 21
> "No copyright e MP3"
> di Raf Valvola Scelsi.
> (VEDI SCHEDA DI SEGUITO)
>
> Le conferenze si tengono all'interno del ciclo di eventi organizzati per
>
> MP3 CONTEST 2001
> - ----------------------------
> l'alternativa interattiva e orizzontale al Festival di Sanremo
> www.mp3contest.org
>
>  a cura di
> STRANO NETWORK
>
> con la collaborazione di
> Le Nozze di Figaro, Controradio, Museo Pecci di Prato, Il Cappellaio Matto,
> Teatro Studio di Scandicci
>
> SCHEDA CONFERENZA JAROMIL AL MUSEO PECCI
> - --------------------------------------------------------------
>
> "MuSE - come crearsi la propria radio in internet"
> Conferenza di Jaromil
>
> 11 settembre ore 15
> Museo Pecci di Prato
>
> Durante questo seminario verranno illustrate piu' in dettaglio dal suo
> autore
> le caratteristiche, le possibilita' offerte e le modalita' di utilizzo di
> MuSE
> allo scopo di chiarire quali siano le tecnologie necessarie a fare streaming
> in rete e come esso funzioni, per dare ai partecipanti la conoscenza
> necessaria a creare la propria radio online, ascoltabile da chiunque su
> internet, a costo 0.
>
> Jaromil e' il programmatore di MuSE con august black.
>
> - --------------------------------------------
> MuSE Team :
> :: jaromil      ++ programmatore e mantainer
> :: august black ++ autore dell'interfaccia
> - --------------------------------------------
>
> MuSE == riconoscimenti presenze e performances:
>
> NET.Congestion - International Streaming Festival - Amsterdam [oct00]
> :: [ http://net.congestion.org/html/archive.html ]
> ** il team di MuSE e' stato invitato a presentare il progetto e ad
> intervenire
>     all'interno del panel "Protocol Alternatives"
>
> LOA hacklab - MuSE & HasciiCam: streaming 4 the masses! - Milano [nov00]
> :: [ http://www.ecn.org/loa ]
> ** seminario sull'utilizzo e sulla manipolazione dei due progetti di
>     dyne.org per lo streaming in rete: MuSE e HasciiCam
>
> Atlantic Transfer Jam - network jam session - Chicago/Linz/NewYork [dec00]
> :: [ http://atj.dyne.org ]
> ** una jam session musicale performata contemporaneamente da piu' musicisti
>     attraverso due continenti, remixando i suoni provenienti dalla rete e
>     creando 3 eventi differenti ma una sola performance
>
> Best of Linux Award - Linux DaveCentral - linux.davecentral.com [jun01]
> :: [ http://linux.davecentral.com/bol_20010604.html ]
> ** linux.davecentral, storico sito di distribuzione di software per linux,
> ha
>     voluto confermare il valore di MuSE onorando dyne.org di questo Award e
> di
>     una lusinghiera recensione
>
>      :: D Y N E . O R G ::
>
> MuSE - Multiple Streaming Engine
>     [ http://muse.dyne.org ]
>
> MuSE e' un Software Libero che ha ricevuto finora supporto hardware e
> piccoli finanziamenti da associazioni culturali, hacklab e privati.
> Qualsiasi organizzazione o individuo puo' aiutare in modo significativo il
> progetto MuSE contribuendo finanziariamente con donazioni per lo sviluppo,
> fornendo bandwidth tramite dei mirror, donando hardware o libri per la
> ricerca, presentando MuSE su stampa e altri media ed organizzando seminari
> e iniziative nei quali illustrare MuSE e le sue potenzialita'. Lo staff di
> dyne.org e' inoltre disponibile per la realizzazione di corsi di
> formazione all'uso di MuSE, personalizzazione del software a seconda di
> particolari esigenze, allestimento ad/hoc di stazioni di streaming e piu'
> in generale a fornire garanzie e supporto perche' MuSE risolva le esigenze
> di chiunque voglia fare streaming audio in rete. E' disponibile una
> mailing-list che permette agli utenti di scambiarsi domande e consigli in
> presenza degli stessi autori, all'indirizzo: <muse@dyne.org> per
> iscriversi basta una mail a <muse-subscribe@dyne.org>. Per contattare
> direttamente il team di sviluppo di MuSE scrivere a: <muse-team@dyne.org>.
>
> MuSE e' un'applicazione Linux che permette di mixare, comprimere e
> trasmettere suoni in rete tramite l'utilizzo delle tecnologie mp3 e
> ogg-vorbis. MuSE puo' mixare simultaneamente fino a 6 canali - ognuno dei
> quali puo' essere un file .mp3 o .ogg o anche un'altro stream proveniente
> dalla rete - e su di essi aggiungere un input proveniente dalla scheda
> sonora (line-in o microfono); il mix risultante puo' essere ascoltato in
> locale o essere a sua volta reinviato in rete (ad un server
> icecast/shoutcast) e reso ascoltabile tramite l'utilizzo di svariati
> programmi liberamente disponibili per ogni sistema operativo. Per il suo
> utilizzo MuSE offre un'interfaccia intuitiva, nonche' la possibilita' di
> ripetere operazioni programmabili o di essere controllata da remoto via
> rete. MuSE, il suo codice sorgente e tutta la documentazione disponibile
> costituiscono un Software Libero rilasciato sotto Licenza Pubblica GNU.
> MuSE viene sviluppata dai suoi autori nella speranza di fornire alla
> comunita' del Software Libero uno strumento che sia di facile utilizzo per
> lo streaming audio in rete, rendendo la vita piu' facile alle radio
> indipendenti e moltiplicando le possibilita' di liberta' d'espressione in
> rete.
>
> - ---
>
> SCHEDA CONFERENZA RAF "VALVOLA" SCELSI ALLE RAMPE
> - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> - - Le Rampe, Porta San Niccolo', Firenze Firenze, 11 settembre ore 21:
> "No copyright e MP3", di Raf Valvola Scelsi.
>
> Raffaele "Valvola" Scelsi è il curatore insieme a Ermanno "Gomma" Guarneri
> della collana di libri Interzone della casa editrice Feltrinelli. La
> collana Interzone opera una riflessione ad ampio raggio sui mutamenti
> sociali messi in atto dall'avvento delle nuove tecnologie della
> comunicazione. Scelsi è anche uno dei fondatori della rivista
> internazionale Decoder, la prima rivista underground in Italia ad
> occuparsi del movimento culturale "cyberpunk", promuovendo già dalla
> seconda metà degli anni ottanta un punto di vista critico sui nuovi media.
> Scelsi è inoltre uno degli editori della Shake Edizioni Underground, casa
> editrice decollata grazie al grande successo della prima antologia di
> saggi "Cyberpunk" uscita in Italia nel 1990 e curata da Raffaele Scelsi
> stesso. Sempre per la Shake Ed. Scelsi ha realizzato il libro "No
> Copyright", un' antologia di testi che fornisce un'esauriente ricognizione
> sulle tematiche connesse ai diritti nel nuovo millennio. La conferenza "No
> copyright e mp3" descriverà quali siano le complesse e contraddittorie
> conseguenze sociali che l'avvento di una nuova tecnologia creata per far
> circolare la musica in Internet, la tecnologia "mp3" appunto, ha messo in
> moto, toccando sia gli aspetti dell'economia che quelli del diritto e
> della libera espressione.
>
>  ----
>
> Tommaso Tozzi
> Docente di Teoria e Metodo dei Mass Media, Accademia di Belle Arti di
> Carrara
> Docente di  Teoria e Metodo di Sceneggiatura Multimediale, Master in
> Multimedialita', RAI e Universita' di Firenze
> Via XXIV Maggio 14, 50129, Firenze, Italia
> Tel. 055-485996
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2001 11:31:03 +0100
> From: "Sue Jones" <sue@e-2.org>
> Subject: open submission competition details
>
> e-2 invites submissions to Minus20, an open submission project for =
> web-based artworks.=20
> Minus20 focuses upon works of powerful immediacy with a fast download =
> time and accordingly works must be less than 20k. e-2 invites =
> submissions from a wide a range of entrants, both those whose practice =
> is new media based and artists who wish to extend their practice to make =
> a digital work.
>
> Selected works may well range from extremely simple, low-tech pieces to =
> those employing advanced technology. These might include java scripting, =
> Flash animation, sound files, text based work or simply a single 20k =
> image. Work will be selected less for its technological innovation and =
> more for being engaging pieces of art.
>
> Work will be selected by critic Sacha Craddock, artist Jon Thomson (of =
> artist duo Thomson and Craighead) and John Wyver from Illuminations, =
> along with e-2.
>
> For details and submission visit:
>
> http://www.e-2.org/home.html
>
> - ------=_NextPart_000_0051_01C13AB5.3D4F8E00
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Wed, 12 Sep 2001 08:40:19 +1000
> From: "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl>
> Subject: ny: global studies conference 9/21-22/01
>
> From: "Bruce Simon" <simon@fredonia.edu>
> Sent: Wednesday, September 12, 2001 1:38 AM
> Subject: global studies conference 9/21-22/01
>
> Subject:  Global Studies Roundtable Conference
> Date: Fri, 7 Sep 2001 16:31:18 -0400
> From: Robert Marzec <marzec@fredonia.edu>
>
> All:  Please pass the word along to your colleagues and students.
> Members from the departments of English, History, and Political Science
> at SUNY Fredonia have put together a non-traditional conference based on
> roundtables that will include a number of
> important scholars from the U.S. and Canada, in addition to our own
> faculty.  It will be a rare opportunity to have all these people
> presenting together.  For further details, contact Bob Marzec
> (marzec@fredonia.edu) or Bruce Simon (simon@fredonia.edu).
>
> MINICONFERENCE IN WESTERN NEW YORK:
>              Globalization:  The Stakes of Global Studies in the
> twenty-first century
> DATES: FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21-22, 2001
> LOCATION: STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK COLLEGE AT FREDONIA, FREDONIA NY,
> USA.
>
> "Globalization: The Stakes of Global Studies" takes as its point of
> departure the subject of "Global Studies"-a field of intellectual
> inquiry in the university system that ostensibly speaks directly to
> international relations and corporate control in the past and present.
> It is a series of roundtables designed to spark conversations across the
> disciplines about the
> phenomenon of globalization.  The conference is planned in such a way as
> to resist the traditional format of an academic conference.  There will
> only be one roundtable panel per time slot.  Presenters have been asked
> to frame a question, a problem, or an argument briefly, at which time
> the focus will then turn to a dialogue among the presenters, and with
> the audience.  The conference will thus be a two-day long conversation
> on the subject of globalization and global studies.
>
> Roundtable Presenters Include:
>
> ·       Eric Clarke (University of Pittsburgh, advisory editor for
> boundary 2, author of Virtuous Vice: Homoeroticism and the Public
> Sphere).
> ·       Lennard J. Davis (University of Illinois, Chicago, author of
> Enforcing Normalcy: Disability, Deafness, and the Body, coeditor of Left
> Politics and the Literary Profession).
> ·       Richard Eaton (University of Arizona, author of The Rise of
> Islam and the Bengal Frontier, 1204-1760; Islamic History as Global
> History).
> ·       Ranjana Khanna (Duke University, author of Dark Continents:
> Feminism, Psychoanalysis, and the Postcolonial Condition).
> ·       Peter Linebaugh (University of Toledo, author of The Many-Headed
> Hydra).
> ·       Deborah Rosenfelt (University of Maryland, Director of Women's
> Studies, Area, and International Studies Project entitled "Women and
> Gender in an Era of Global Change: Internationalizing and 'Engendering'
> the Curriculum," author of Sex, Class, and Race in Literature and
> Culture).
> ·       William Spanos (Binghamton University, founding editor of
> boundary 2, author of America's Shadow; The Errant Art of Moby-Dick: The
> Canon, the Cold War, and the Struggle for American Studies).
> ·       Rinaldo Walcott (York University, author of Black Like Who?).
>
> Fields of inquiry such as "Global Studies," "Transcultural Studies,"
> "International Studies," and others have come to transform the
> disciplines of Anthropology, Economics, English, Geography, History,
> Political Science, and Sociology, but in a manner different from that of
> "Cultural Studies," or even "Postcolonial Studies."  Though widely
> acknowledged, global studies has not been adequately thought, especially
> in relation to the stakes of intellectual inquiry in the contemporary
> occasion of the economic, political, and cultural circulation of
> knowledge on a planetary level.  One concern of the conference is to
> consider the stakes of developing a global studies curriculum in
> academia, at both the undergraduate and graduate levels-and to hazard
> for question the rationale for any such curriculum.  Participants will
> be concentrating on the relation between epistemology, pedagogy,
> citizenship, and power in a global order.
>
> These are some of the questions that guided us in the planning of the
> conference: What do the different disciplines mean by "Global Studies"?
> What role might a global studies program play?  What would be the
> intellectual responsibility of the University in this new capacity?
> What are the ontological shifts involved in the development of a global
> order, and the consequences of those changes?  How do questions of
> ethnicity, gender, race and class change in relation to a global order?
> What would be the structure of a "global politics of gender," for
> instance?  What are the consequences in shifting concepts such as
> "global sisterhood" and "transnational feminism"?  Moreover, what kind
> of human subjectivity is made available in this order? What are the
> potentials for forming coalitions with labor unions locally and globally
> when it comes to dealing with the effects of globalization?   In the
> wake of organic, national identities and filiations, what is to become
> of "citizenry"? How does the Global change the status of the Local, and
> the nature of "local resistance"? In general, what positions are made
> available for subjects and communities in a global order, and what are
> the potentials for alterity and freedom?
>
> This event is sponsored in part by a grant from the Carnahan-Jackson
> Humanities Fund of the SUNY Fredonia College Foundation.
>
> - --Bruce
> bruce.simon@fredonia.edu
> www.fredonia.edu/department/english/simon/
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Wed, 12 Sep 2001 21:36:10 +1000
> From: "shannon o'neill" <alias@aliasfrequencies.org>
> Subject: Electrofringe 2001
>
> ELECTROFRINGE FESTIVAL 2001
> September 27 - October 1
> Newcastle, New South Wales
> Australia
> http://electrofringe.org
>
> Electrofringe 2001 will once again bring together hundreds of
> local and international media makers, audio-visual creators,
> electronic musicians, gamers and just plain digital trouble
> makers. Following on from the last three years, Electrofringe
> 2001 will focus on issues of copyright and intellectual property.
>
> Electrofringe is the electronic media contingent of the larger
> This Is Not Art festival <http://thisisnotart.org> which includes
> Sound Summit, The National Young Writers Festival and The
> National Student Media Conference.
>
> INTERNATIONAL GUESTS
>
> Electrofringe has expanded this year to include several
> international participants:
>
> Mark Gunderson (USA). Founder of The Evolution Control
> Committee and an experimental musician and arts organizer,
> focusing on recycled/assemblage audio and arts and technologies.
> The ECC is infamous for all sorts of pranks, including utilising
> Napster for hilarious results.
> http://evolution-control.com
>
> Vicki Bennet from People Like Us (UK) blurs audio and video
> to make a surrealistic and humorous blend of monotonous yet
> strangely captivating brain durge.
> http://peoplelikeus.org
>
> Andy Cox (UK) is a founding member of Together We Can Defeat
> Capitalism. An environmental engineer, he uses his skills to annoy
> large corporations. He also perplexed many an art goer with his
> fake Whitney Biennial website. At Electrofringe, he will relaunch
> his Citybank site, currently down for legal reasons.
> http://TWCDC.com
>
> Scientifically Speaking with Irene Moon (USA) blurs the lines
> between science, music and performance art.
> http://www.eyedrum.org/MOON/i-moon.html
>
> Steev Hise (USA) is a cultural worker based in San Francisco
> who chews up old media and spits out new art. He founded
> Detritus.net, probably the most well known web source about
> recycled culture.
> http://detritus.net
>
> Other international guests at This Is Not Art this year include
> Hrvatski (USA), Mad Professor (UK), David Shea (Belgium),
> Fat Cat Records (UK), Anticon (USA), The Wire magazine (UK),
> DJ Mr King (UK), Jimi Chen, DJ TY and Vince Chung (Taiwan).
>
> PERFORMANCES
>
> Each night, Newcastle will erupt with sounds and visuals you
> won't catch anywhere else. Over 180 performers will make this
> Australia's largest ever electronica and hip hop event.
>
> WEDNESDAY NIGHT (September 26)
>
> Opening night launch party.
> 8pm: Mission Theatre: (Free!)
> Featuring mellow sounds from DJ Mr. King (UK), Betaville
> Orchestra, I/O, and Sub Bass Snarl amongst others.
>
> Audio Visual Exhibition
> A/V Warehouse: (Entry By Donation)
> oniKa, Dj Bleak, iOnic, Goku, Craig G, Psychenaut, Throbgoblin,
> Phat Ali, Anomaly, Phreaddee & Anthony Russell.
>
> THURSDAY NIGHT (September 27)
>
> ROTOR
> 8 - 11pm: Mission Theatre: ($6 at the door):
> Perimetric Halo with Minit, Magmafinder & Pimmon.
> Kazumichi Grime, Lalila, Coklacoma, Julian Knowles, Snawklor,
> Lux Mammoth, Hydatid, Pi, A,B'n'C, Bruce Mowson, Seo,
> Valley of Death.
>
> Clan Analogue, Surgery, Couchblip Labels Showcase:
> 10pm-5am: Cambridge Hotel: ($6 at the door):
> Prop, B(if)tek, Pretty Boy Crossover, Deepchild, Sobriquet, Thug,
> Disco Stu, Gordon Finlayson, Nerve Agent, Telemetry Orchestra,
> 5000 Fingers of Dr T, Superscience, Modula, Bloq, Robokoneko,
> Disjunction Reunion.
>
> Art Wars: Hip Hop Strikes Back
> CBD Hotel: ($8 at the door)
> Terminal Illness, Terra Firma, Cannibal Tribe, Blades of Hades,
> Brad Strutt and Solemon Kleptoe, DJ Mathematics, Robotech
> vs. Stawn Break Crew, DJ skooby and Scottie B, Bric A Brac,
> MC Andre, DJ Armee, DJ Maniak.
>
> Audio Visual Exhibition
> A/V Warehouse: (Entry By Donation)
> Scoobie, Scotty B, Peter Hall, Gordon Smith.
>
> FRIDAY NIGHT (September 28)
>
> (C)(R)(TM)
> 8pm - 11:30pm: Mission Theatre: ($15 or PASS):
> People Like Us (UK), Evolution Control Committee (USA),
> Steev Hise (USA), Scientifically Speaking with Irene Moon (USA),
> Wake Up And Listen, Antediluvian Rocking Horse, Spanky,
> Sweden, JG.
>
> Hip Hop Jam and Electro/Breaks/Drum n Bass
> 10pm - 5am: Cambridge Hotel: ($10 or PASS)
> Massive Oz-Wide Hip-Hop-Electro jam, Elefant Traks showcase.
> Two Dogs, DJ Soup, The Bird, Explanetary, MC Brad Strut,
> Jonny Phive, Crazy Baldheads, Reference Point, Upshot, pH,
> Mark Pollard, Phonkubot, Cindii, Sonik Professor, Patrick HAF,
> Bleepin J Squawkins, Pylonz (NZ), Vtek, Sulo, Monkfly, Maladroit,
> Fangle, The Herd, 8-bit, The Alphatown Collective, MC Ozi Batla,
> DASE Team 5000, The A.L.F., Groovy D.
>
> All-Ages Hip-Hop
> Palais Royal Youth Venue
> 7 - 11pm: ($7 - All Ages)
> Terminal Illness, Terra Firma, Clear Opinions, Bric a Brac, FUN Q,
> Phonetic Experiments, DJ Mathematics,  Bladez of Hadez
>
> Ballistic
> 10PM - 3AM: Hunter on Hunter Hotel: ($2 Entry or PASS)
> Syndicate, Aftermath, Memetic, Hedonist + Epsilon, DJ Mark N
>
> Audio Visual Exhibition
> A/V Warehouse: (Entry By Donation)
> base electro(n), cybernetik, dark organics, decoder, deprogram,
> dumk and goony, onika, pharmaceutical essentials, sawtooth,
> Sound Wave Generator, throbgoblin, Z Pyramid
>
> SATURDAY NIGHT (September 29)
>
> Anticon
> 8 - 11:30pm: Mission Theatre: ($15 or PASS)
> Anticon (Dose One, Sole and Jel - USA), Curse Ov Dialekt, TZU,
> Music Vs Physics, Celcius, 13th Son of December, Macros Matrix,
> Jade Nemesis, Dr Phibes, Blaze, DJ Armee, Mako, Speed, Frost.
>
> Vitalbeat 2001
> 10 - 5am: Cambridge Hotel: ($15 or PASS)
> DJ Patsan & Electrofunk, Nubreed, Richy valenz, Chris calm,
> Auxilary, Dj janak, Skooby + Bred, Tom obrien, Clone, Meem,
> Dj Gary Bynon + Brownie, Luscious Lorna, Outpost Uncorporated.
>
> Audio Visual Exhibition
> A/V Warehouse: (Entry By Donation)
> DJ Supermarket, Soon, Tonsil Cheesecake, The Torture Table,
> The Dreamtime Brothers, Transcendental Headache, Mighty Mac,
> DJ Mad, DJ Fallout
>
> SUNDAY NIGHT (September 30)
>
> Urban poets jam + Undercurrents (Taiwan)
> 7 - 11pm: Mission Theatre (Free!):
> urban poets jam, Undercurrents (Taiwan), SIZE (last ever show!)
>
> Internationals Gig
> 10pm - 5am: Cambridge Hotel ($25 or PASS):
> Mad Professor (UK), HRVATSKI (USA), David Shea (Belgium),
> Stinky Jim (NZ), DJ Mr. King (UK), Jimi Chen & DJ TY (Taiwan),
> Fat Cat Records Sound System (UK), Kog Transmissions (NZ),
> Nasenbluten (last ever show!), Ubin, Blastcorp, Sub Bass Snarl,
> DASE team 5000, Downtown Brown, Pivot, DJ smallcock, Sugar,
> Paul Abad, philasophigas, Ollie Olsen, Ganga Giri, Organarchy,
> Andrew Till, Raven, DJ Krusty, House of Pagan Christians.
>
> Audio Visual Exhibition
> A/V Warehouse: (Entry By Donation)
> base electo(n), deprogram, phreaddee, The Dr., Throbgoblin,
> Z Pyramid
>
> MONDAY (October 1)
>
> All Day Chill
> 8am - all day ... : Mission Theatre: (Free!)
> Nod, Quark Kent, Purdy, Betaville Orchestra, Phunkenbubble,
> Echelon, DJ Trip, Wagga Space Programme, Chindogu,
> Pseudo Sound Project, Magnus Music, Kundalini.
>
> There is a weekend gig pass set at $45 that will get you into all
> of the gigs on the Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
>
> This bargain ticket is strictly limited to 500 tickets (due to venue
> size limits). And these tickets are already selling fast. There are
> less than 250 for sale online and the rest will be distributed to
> some stores later in the week (stay tuned for details). Don't miss out!
>
> They are now available online for $49 (incl $4 booking fee) from:
>
> http://www.octapod.org.au/thisisnotart/2001/gigs.shtm#buytickets
>
> AUDIOVISUAL PRESENTATIONS
>
> 2001: Then and Now
> A look at how our present was imagined 34 years ago. Archimedia
> presents the future as seen by the corporate imagination, using
> examples from the late '60s and early '70s, particularly in terms of
> the techno/rave subculture and the anti-globalisation movement.
>
> Undercurrents
> Toy Satellite (Melbourne) and Eyedrink Collective(Taiwan) present
> Undercurrents: an audiovisual techno spectacular. Originally produced
> for the Taipei International Arts Festival.
>
> Hip hop on Film
> Wave Twisters (music by Q bert) & Scratch, the story of Hip Hop.
> Plus La Prochaine Fois by Neotropic.
>
> Media.teck
> Works chosen for their subversive approach and playful tactics in
> challenging notions of art, censorship and copyright. Includes several
> leading installation, net and media artists - see <http://electrofringe.org>
> for details.
>
> Plus all night Anime Screenings, LDTV, Experimental Short Films,
> Mu Meson Archives Film Extravaganza, and more.
>
> OTHER SESSIONS
>
> This Is Not Art also includes more than 200 workshops, panels,
> talks, and masterclasses. Electrofringe is providing over 50 of these,
> with such alluring titles as:
>
> Patcher Paradigms
> The Political and the Absurd: Humour in Sampling
> My Darling, My Centrifuge
> Music Video Production Workshop & Screenings
> AutoMatic Documentary
> Dr Sonique Presentation
> Anne-Marie Schleiner presentation
> Money for New Media Artists
> Fluid Transmissions
> Celine Bernardeau Presentation
> Wet Dreams Made Solid
> The Intellectual Property Wars
> Audio Interactives
> Copyright Showdown
> Introduction to jMAX
> Video feedback
> VJ tools for the PC
> VR - utopian futures or just another game?
> Boxes With Knobs
> Websound... the state of the arts
> People Like Us - Audiovisual Masterclass
> NOT Culture Jamming
> Culture jamming: Art or Activism?
> Flash for Visuals
> Spookyville Presentation
> VR - 12 Months On
> Computer Game Music: past, present and future
> Mark Dery Web Linkup
> Lumiere Concrete
> VJ tools for the Mac
> An introduction to 5.1 audio for musicians and sound designers
> Anime and Visual Culture
> Online pranks
> Codecs, Compression, And Video Discs For Live Visuals
> Napster Nuggets
> Impact of technologies on mental health
> Copyright And The Image
> Social Disorientation
> Andy Cox Citibank Launch
> Girls and Gaming
> Innovative Curating
> Is The Global Village Growing?
> net.wurk.construc][tion][k
>
> For the full programme check out
> http://electrofringe.org
>
> or
>
> http://thisisnotart.org
>
> For all media enquiries, interviews, bios etc, contact
> Joni Taylor
> Electrofringe coordinator
> joni@octapod.org
>
> For all other enquiries, contact
> Shannon O'Neill
> Electrofringe coordinator
> alias@aliasfrequencies.org
>
> Phone/Fax +61 2 4927 0470
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Wed, 12 Sep 2001 18:57:11 +0100
> From: "Sue Jones" <sue@e-2.org>
> Subject: open submission competition details
>
> e-2 invites submissions to Minus20, an open submission project for web-based artworks.
> Minus20 focuses upon works of powerful immediacy with a fast download time and accordingly works must be less than 20k. e-2 invites submissions from a wide a range of entrants, both those whose practice is new media based and artists who wish to extend their practice to make a digital work.
>
> Selected works may well range from extremely simple, low-tech pieces to those employing advanced technology. These might include java scripting, Flash animation, sound files, text based work or simply a single 20k image. Work will be selected less for its technological innovation and more for being engaging pieces of art.
>
> Work will be selected by critic Sacha Craddock, Jon Thomson (of artist duo Thomson and Craighead) and John Wyver from Illuminations, along with e-2.
>
> For details and submission visit:
>
> http://www.e-2.org/home.html
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Thu, 13 Sep 2001 10:22:16 +0200
> From: Kulturamt der Stadt Oldenburg <info@kulturamt.oldenburg.de>
> Subject: Ausstellung im =?iso-8859-1?Q?Edith=2DRu=DF=2DHaus=20f=FCr?= Medienkunst
>
>   [English see below]
>
> AVATARE UND ANDERE
> Edith-Ruß-Haus für Medienkunst
>
> DAN GRAHAM, LYNN HERSHMAN, MARKUS HUEMER, KRISTIN LUCAS, VICTORIA VESNA
>
> Eröffnung: 14. September 2001, 19 Uhr
> Performance mit Victoria Vesna, 20 Uhr
> Die Performance von Victoria Vesna findet statt, ist aber aus gegebenem
> Anlass modifiziert worden, um darauf zu reagieren.
>
> EDITH RUß HAUS FÜR MEDIENKUNST
> KATHARINENSTRAßE 23
> 26121 OLDENBURG
> DEUTSCHLAND
>
> tel     +49 (0) 441 235 3208
> fax    +49 (0) 441 235 2161
>
> AVATARS AND OTHERS
> Edith Russ Site for Media Art
>
> DAN GRAHAM, LYNN HERSHMAN, MARKUS HUEMER, KRISTIN LUCAS, VICTORIA VESNA
>
> Opening: 14 September, 2001 7pm
> Performance by Victoria Vesna, 8pm
> The performance by Victoria Vesna will take place but has been modified
> to respond to the circumstances.
>
> EDITH RUß SITE FOR MEDIA ART
> KATHARINENSTRAßE 23
> 26121 OLDENBURG
> GERMANY
>
> t. +49 (0) 441 235 3208
> f. +49 (0) 441 235 2161
>
> - --
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Thu, 13 Sep 2001 15:09:22 +0200
> From: "SOC.Stockholm" <info@soc.nu>
> Subject: Vote in the UTOPIAN W.C. 2001!
>
> - --============_-1211735924==_ma============
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
>
> VOTE IN THE FIRST UTOPIAN WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2001 !
>
> The Utopian World Championship is a worldwide competition in utopian
> thinking that has been going on since the 18:th of january 2001. All the
> people of the world were then invited to take part in this unique
> competition. During this summer the competitors have been working on their
> proposals wich can be viewed today on our the web site
> http://www.soc.nu/utopian/.
>
> We now invite the public to help us to elect seven finalists. The voting
> process will be held online at the web site http://www.soc.nu/utopian/ and
> will continue until the 31:st of October. Among the contributions that will
> not be elected by the public, SOC.Stockholm vill choose three contributions
> that will qualify for the final.
>
> All voters that submit an valid e-mail address will take part in the
> lottery of a masterpiece in utopian theory, the book "The principle of
> hope" by Ernst Bloch.
>
> In december, a jury composed of six idea historicians, political analysts,
> philosophers and artists will choose a winner among the ten finalists who
> will recieve 1000 US Dollar and whose contribution will be presented to
> governments and other poweful institutions around the world.
>
> Welcome to vote at http://www.soc.nu/utopist/ !
>
> Contact SOC.Stockholm at:
> - ---------------------------------
> E-mail: info@soc.nu
> Tel: +46 8 640 89 07
>
> Address:
> SOC.Stockholm
> Bondegatan 64
> SE-116 41 Stockholm
> Sweden
>
> The Utopian World Championship 2001 is arranged by SOC. Stockholm, an
> artistic, socio-cultural, experimental forum run Jon Brunberg, Pernilla
> Carlsson Sj=F6din, Annika Drougge, Anna-Lena Lundmark, Johan Malmstr=F6m,
> Tobias Sj=F6din and Karin Will=E9n.
> - --============_-1211735924==_ma============
> Content-Type: text/enriched; charset="iso-8859-1"
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
>
> <fixed>VOTE IN THE FIRST UTOPIAN WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP 2001 !
>
> The Utopian World Championship is a worldwide competition in utopian
> thinking that has been going on since the 18:th of january 2001. All
> the people of the world were then invited to take part in this unique
> competition. During this summer the competitors have been working on
> their proposals wich can be viewed today on our the web site
> http://www.soc.nu/utopian/.
>
> We now invite the public to help us to elect seven finalists. The
> voting process will be held online at the web site
> http://www.soc.nu/utopian/ and will continue until the 31:st of
> October. Among the contributions that will not be elected by the
> public, SOC.Stockholm vill choose three contributions that will qualify
> for the final.=20
>
> All voters that submit an valid e-mail address will take part in the
> lottery of a masterpiece in utopian theory, the book "The principle of
> hope" by Ernst Bloch.=20
>
> In december, a jury composed of six idea historicians, political
> analysts, philosophers and artists will choose a winner among the ten
> finalists who will recieve 1000 US Dollar and whose contribution will
> be presented to governments and other poweful institutions around the
> world.=20
>
> Welcome to vote at http://www.soc.nu/utopist/ !
>
> Contact SOC.Stockholm at:
>
> - ---------------------------------
>
> E-mail: info@soc.nu
>
> Tel: +46 8 640 89 07
>
> Address:=20
>
> SOC.Stockholm
>
> Bondegatan 64
>
> SE-116 41 Stockholm
>
> Sweden
>
> The Utopian World Championship 2001 is arranged by SOC. Stockholm, an
> artistic, socio-cultural, experimental forum run Jon Brunberg, Pernilla
> Carlsson Sj=F6din, Annika Drougge, Anna-Lena Lundmark, Johan Malmstr=F6m,
> Tobias Sj=F6din and Karin Will=E9n.</fixed>
>
> - --============_-1211735924==_ma============--
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Thu, 13 Sep 2001 22:04:13 +1000
> From: "geert lovink" <geert@xs4all.nl>
> Subject: Boris Groys / The Art Judgement Show
>
> From: "roomade" <office@roomade.org>
> Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2001 9:36 PM
> Subject: Boris Groys / The Art Judgement Show
>
> ROOMADE PRESENTS
>
> BORIS GROYS
> THE ART JUDGEMENT SHOW
> OORDELEN OVER KUNST
> COMMENT JUGER L'ART
>
> 21.09-01 ­  20.10.01
>
> ROOMADE, KOOPLIEDENSTRAAT 60-62, B 1000 BRUSSELS
>
> WEDNESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY, FROM 2PM THROUGH 7PM
>
> The Art Judgement Show is a television talk show that asks the question,
> 'How does one judge art?' Modelling himself on chat-show hosts such as
> Arabella and Oprah, the distinguished art historian and philosopher Boris
> Groys discusses with a group of students whether today, 'art' still has any
> relevance, whether it is significantly different from commercial pursuits
> such as advertising, design and popular music, and what criteria should be
> used in order to evaluate it.
> Although the issues this raises, relating to language, taste, art discourse
> and philosophy, are often relegated to a purely academic field, TV lends
> itself well to such culturally relevant questions. Most initiatives to adapt
> philosophy to the television format, however, end with trivial chats in
> front of an electronic fire. In The Art Judgement Show, Groys follows the
> opposite path, bringing fascinating philosophical conversation in an
> accessible form to the general public ­ just as Socrates found his
> interlocutors in the market square.
>
> Boris Groys is Professor of Aesthetics and Media Theory at the Zentrum für
> Kunst und Medientechnologie (Center for Art and Media) in Karlsruhe and
> since 2000 Rector of the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. He is one of the
> most influential theoreticians in the fields of contemporary art and
> culture. He has published widely on modernism and the avant-garde and is the
> author of many books, including The Total Art of Stalinism (1988), On the
> New: Essay on Cultural Economy (1992), and Logic of the Collection (1997),
> he is a frequent contributor to Parkett, Artforum, Art in America and has
> written on such contemporary artists as Ilya Kabakov, Peter Fischil & David
> Weiss, Douglas Gordon, Rodney Graham, and Richard Prince.
>
> - -----------------------------------------------
>
> Boris Groys
> The Art Judgement Show
> Barbara Vanderlinden (Ed.), Zdenka Badovinac and Boris Groys
> 240 x 200 mm
> 160 pages, 132 colour and b/w images
> ISBN 90-71122-01-8
>
> Available through:
>
> Benelux
> Roomade
> Koopliedenstraat 60-62
> B-1000 Brussels
> T: +32-2-223 26 73
> F: +32-2-219 12 79
> E: office@roomade.org
>
> Worldwide
> D.A.P. / Distributed Art Publishers
> 155 Sixth Avenue NY
> USA - 10013 NY
> T: +1-212-627 1999
> F: +1-212-627 9484
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Thu, 13 Sep 2001 21:51:24 -0400
> From: Wendy Hui Kyong Chun <Wendy_Hui_Kyong_Chun@Brown.edu>
> Subject: position announcement.
>
> Brenda Silver from Dartmouth asked me to forward this position announcement...
>
> - ---
>
> Material Textuality and Digital Media Position
>
> Assistant Professor,  English Department, Dartmouth College (Hanover, NH, USA)
>
> We invite applications from candidates who study the history, theory
> and rhetoric of information technologies and new media.  We seek a
> colleague to develop and teach courses among the following areas:
> past and present technologies of writing and dissemination; the
> cultures and aesthetics of digital media; hypertext literature; and
> virtual cultural production.  This tenure-track position will begin
> Fall, 2002.  Phd in hand, or pending. Send letter of application, CV,
> dossier, and writing sample (25 pages maximum) plus any relevant URL
> or digital files (by diskette, Zip disk, or CD-Rom) to Professor
> Brenda Silver, Search Committee Chair, English Department, Dartmouth
> College, 6032 Sanborn House, Hanover, NH  03755.  Also: send letter
> of application and CV via email to: English.Department@Dartmouth.EDU.
> Both postmarked no later than Friday, November 2, 2001. Dartmouth
> College is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. With an
> even distribution of male and female students and over a quarter of
> the undergraduate student population members of minority groups, the
> College is committed to diversity and encourages applications from
> women and minorities.
>
> - --
> Wendy Hui Kyong Chun
> Department of Modern Culture and Media
> Brown University
> http://www.modcult.brown.edu/people/chun
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Fri, 14 Sep 2001 13:14:15 +1000
> From: "MAAP" <info@maap.org.au>
> Subject: MAAP MAIL
>
> This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
>
> - ------=_NextPart_000_0078_01C13D1F.275A62C0
> Content-Type: text/plain;
>         charset="Windows-1252"
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
>
>  =20
> MAAP01 Festival of EXCESS - 12-14 October 2001 - www.maap.org.au
>
> EXCESSive CONGRATULATIONS=85 EXCESSive SCREENINGS=85 EXCESSive WEBSITE!
>
> CONGRATULATIONS to=85
> Young-hae Chang (www.yhchang.com) who recently won the SFMOMA Webby =
> Awards for Art! Young-hae Chang was an artist in MAAP=92s 1999 festival, =
> where she participated in net:works/ as artist in residence. Her website =
> =93Heavy Industries=94 will form part of MAAP=92s Missile Web Launch for =
> MAAP01 =96 www.maap.org.au.
> Also=85 to Mary Anne Breeze (Mez) who has been announced as one of three =
> net artists to win at the Java Artist of the Year awards! Java Museum =
> honours new media artists who combine artistic expression and statements =
> with substantial power, technological activity, and excellence in =
> sustained work. Mez=92s award winning work can be viewed at =
> www.javamuseum.org.
>
> Just some of the artists involved in MAAP01 Festival of EXCESS include:
> Installations - Gongxin Wang, Candy Factory, Oh Sang Gil, Melinda =
> Rackham, Ruark Lewis, Tim Plaisted - Audio works - FM3, Wang Wei, Feng =
> Jiangzhou - Video - Qiu Zhijie,Liu Wei, Wu Ershan, Zhao Liang, Yang =
> Fudong, Zhang Peili, Emil Goh - Web - Toy Satellite/Kit, 8gg , Wang =
> Peng, doll yoko, sfod, Jeremy Yuille, Jo Law, Mary-anne Breeze [MEZ] - =
> Live performances - Toy Satellite, 2LOOPS and Eyedrink Collective: =
> Andrew Garton, Kim Bounds, John Power, Jimi Chen, Vince Chung , and =
> Analogic!
>
> EXCESSive screening program - Saturday 13 October 9 =96 6pm & Sunday 14 =
> October 11.30 =96 6pm
> Rooftop Terrace, Brisbane Powerhouse  FREE ADMISSION
>
> HIGHlights from the EXCESSive screening program include:
> Post Sensibility:SPREE includes documentation of a wild underground =
> multimedia event held in Beijing that includes leading Chinese =
> contemporary artists. Qiu Zhijie edits the event for amazing glimpse at =
> extreme expressions that provide a glimpse into the radical Beijing art =
> scene.
> 21 works around the idea of EXCESS, including 18 single monitor video =
> works and 3 documentaries have been curated by Wu Meichun from China. =
> They a mix of video installation, sound installation and performance =
> art.=20
> On the local front=85 we are excited to screen d=92Lux Media Arts annual =
> compile of selected digital video and film, and =91Digital Degrees=92 a =
> compilation of student works from leading RMIT, Nee Ann Polytechnic =
> Singapore, Griffith University, and Queensland University of Technology =
> (QUT) students.
>
> NEW SCHMICK WEBSITE LAUNCHED NEXT WEEK!!!
> Don=92t forget to log onto www.maap.org.au for all the latest =
> information about who=92s there, what=92s happening, where to go and how =
> to get there!!
> MAAP MAIL CODE: If you are collecting the MAAP mail codes to go into the =
> draw to win Macromedia software then hit the website to find this weeks =
> code!
>
> www.maap.org.au
>
> MAAP is a not for profit organisation that promotes excellence in art =
> and technology in Australia/Asia Pacific regions.=20
>
> Major Sponsors: Platinum - Macromedia, Gold - CITEC, Silver - Apple =
> Computers
> Government Sponsors: Australia Council, Arts Queensland, Brisbane City =
> Council, Brisbane Powerhouse Centre for the Live Arts, Cinemedia, =
> Australian Film Commission
> supported by: QUT-Communication Design, Art Asia Pacific Magazine, IdN =
> Magazine, Malaysian Video Awards Festival - Kualar Lumper, Artworkers =
> Alliance - Brisbane, Videotage - Hong Kong, Art Center Nabi - Seoul, The =
> Loft New Media Art Space - Beijing, Digital Media Festival - Manilla, =
> Experimenta - Melbourne, dLux - Sydney , Inst. of Modern Art - Brisbane, =
> Art Space - Sydney, Metro Arts - Brisbane, Griffith University,- =
> Brisbane, fineArtforum - ezine.
>
> - ------=_NextPart_000_0078_01C13D1F.275A62C0
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Fri, 14 Sep 2001 17:46:58 +1100
> From: molly hankwitz <mollybh@netspace.net.au>
> Subject:  process the information!
>
> audio file enthusiasts, samplers take note...
>
> feel free to send us your archives ,
> we will help to distribute the disintegrating disinfo thru some new fair
> use document .
> please accompany them w/ material source notes if possible.
>
> Remix Project
> 2050 Bryant St.
> San Francisco, Ca. 94110
>
> all formats welcome:
> mini-disc,cassette,cd,dat,dvd
> e-mails to:
> sound@cellspace.org
>
> and did anyone happen to record
> the congress' version of
> God Bless America?
>
> looking for this...
>
> all the best,
> molly
>
> mollyhankwitz
> lecturer in video art and new media
> griffith university - gold coast
> contemporary art
> - ------
> queensland university of technology
> creative industries - visual arts
> brisbane
> m.hankwitz@qut.edu.au
>
> : ' )
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Fri, 14 Sep 2001 13:44:08 +0200
> From: "platoforma"<platoforma@wanadoo.es>
> Subject: //TWISTER 1.0//
>
>  Experiències- Barcelona art report 2001
>  Made in Hangar. W-7
>
>  NODA organiza
>
>  ////////////////SESIONES INTERACTIVAS///////////
>  experiencias que combinan la tecnología y la cultura interactiva con la
>  organización de eventos públicos.
>
>  =====================================================
>  Viernes 14 de septiembre 19,30
>  =====================================================
>  »» twister 1.0 , nuevas posiciones interactivas «
>  Debate sobre las nuevas formas de organización, producción cutural y
>  artística, ligados a los conceptos de evento y espacio social
>  interactivo.
>
>  Participarán además de los miembros de noda  :
>
>  Frederikke Hansen
>  (Comisaria de la Shedhalle, centro alternativo de arte en Zürich),
>
>  Martí Peran
>  (Director de la Quam 2001, comisario y profesor de Teoría del Arte
>  de la UB)
>
>  Gérard Couty
>  (Artista multimedia, miembro de club automatique)
>
>  http://noda.multimania.com/twisterweb/txt/twistertxt.html
>
>  =====================================================
>  Viernes 14 de septiembre 21,30 (después del debate)
>  =====================================================
>
>  Noda y Club automatique presentan:
>  »» Automatic Club Session / Prototipo 1
>  Espacio lúdico interactivo con música y visuales.
>  Presentación pública de las conclusiones del workshop.
>  Utilización por parte del público asistente de las  interfícies físicas
>  que controlan imágenes 3D y sonidos.
>
>  .
>  .
>  .
>
>
>  "Sesiones interactivas"  es un taller organizado por NODA en el marco
>  de Made in Hangar. W-7. Experiències- Barcelona art report 2001
>
>  =====================================================
>  .
>  .
>  .
>  Se puede consultar el resumen en video de cada jornada de trabajo en
>  http://noda.multimania.com/twisterweb
>  .
>  .
>  .
>
>  NODA, Tecnología y cultura interactiva
>  http://noda.multimania.com/
>
>  Hangar__Centre de Producció d'Arts visuals i Multimèdia
>  Passatge Marqués de Sta. Isabel , 40, BCN
>  http://www.hangar.org
>  http://www..bcn.es/BarcelonaArtReport
>
>
>
> _____________________________________________________________________
> La crisis en Occidente podría conducirnos a un conflicto internacional,
> ¿Es la solución una ofensiva contra los terroristas islámicos?.
> Opina en http://www.wanadoo.es/foros/mainNivel2.jsp?dir=/foros/foros/subject_new.jsp?theme=5435722%26subject=5435723%26begin=-1
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Fri, 14 Sep 2001 22:09:29 +0800
> From: Wigged/Seth Thompson <wigged@seththompson.com>
> Subject: Temporary address for Wigged.net
>
> Due to uncontrollable problems with our server in New York City,
> Wigged.net's website address has been temporarily changed to
> http://www.seththompson.com/wigged/index.html.
>
> Wigged.net (http://www.wigged.net) is a digital magazine focused on
> bringing innovative short videos, animations and interactive works
> over the Internet.  Our mission is to be a showcase, distribution and
> promotion center for media artists via the World Wide Web. Wigged.net
> is for audiences seeking innovative alternatives to traditional forms
> of entertainment.
>
> ******************************************
>
> Please Note: To remove your e-mail address from my list simply reply
> to this message and type the word "unsubscribe" in the Subject field
> at the top of your reply.  If you have more than one e-mail address
> through which you might be receiving this, please be sure to list
> them all.
>
> - --
> Seth Thompson
> Wigged.net
> wigged@seththompson.com (temporary)
> http://www.seththompson.com/wigged/index.html (temporary)
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Fri, 14 Sep 2001 15:06:10 -0400
> From: "Ivo Skoric" <ivo@reporters.net>
> Subject: (Fwd) New York vigil at the Union square - TONIGHT - Friday 15
>
> This is kind of a short notice and it is raining in the city - but then
> today is the day when New York is going to be yet again an open
> city - police removed barricades on 14th street and downtown is
> open up to Canal street now.
> ivo
> - ------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
>
> Dear,
>
> There is a vigil tonight organized
> by the War Resisters League at the Union Square (14th
> street and University Place) from 6-8 pm.
> Please see women in black, London statment
>
> sent a word out about this vigil tonight
>
> In Loving peace,
> indira
>
> =====
> indira@balkansnet.org
> (718) 784-9121
>
> __________________________________________________
> Terrorist Attacks on U.S. - How can you help?
> Donate cash, emergency relief information
> http://dailynews.yahoo.com/fc/US/Emergency_Information/
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Fri, 14 Sep 2001 22:25:30 -0500
> From: SCP-New York <notbored@panix.com>
> Subject: a note on the changed circumstances in New York and the USA
>
> Comrades:
>
> Unlike other groups -- such as the Ruckus Society, the Sierra Club and
> others, especially in the American environmental and anti-globalization
> movements -- the New York SCP will *not* be scaling back its actions
> against surveillance cameras and face recognition software, its vocal
> opposition to the policies of George W Bush, or its very visible public
> (and Internet) presence, in response to the "attack on America" and the
> calls for unity and "war" against terrorism.
>
> At a time like this -- when the FBI's Carnivore sniffer programs are being
> let loose on the Internet without probable cause or proper search warrants,
> when the media and the American government speak of increasing America's
> use of spies and global surveillance, when others are afraid to speak up
> against jingoism, war-mongering and racial/religious hatred -- it is
> encumbent upon us to remain active, even if it is inconvenient or
> "dangerous" to do so.
>
> Our walking tours will go on as scheduled, as will our plans to make use of
> the growing international network of activists that we all have worked so
> hard to create, because what is truly "dangerous" at such a time is to back
> down or soften our demands upon this increasingly totalitarian society.
>
> Bill and Susan
> for the NY SCP
>
> http://www.surveillancecameraplayers.org
> notbored@panix.com
> 212 561-0106
>
> PS
>
> Note recent updates to http://www.notbored.org/7s01-reports.html
>
> Post PS
>
> When we feel better (suffering from flu and inhalation of dioxins and
> asbestos particles), we will make a lengthy report of 7s01 actions in NYC
> at http://www.notbored.org/7sept01.html Perhaps by Monday the 16 Sept 2001
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Sat, 15 Sep 2001 16:38:24 +0000
> From: "=?iso-8859-1?B?TmlscyBS9mxsZXI=?=" <rfnr@hotmail.com>
> Subject: Towards Cusco - Debate at Videobrasil
>
> Debate at Videobrasil
> September 23
> 2001
> Participants: Gianni Toti, José-Carlos Mariátegui Marcello Tas, Nils Röller
> The debate will be held in English and Spanish.
>
> Towards Cusco
>
> Ideas to realize a center for art, science and media technology in Cusco
>
> Cusco is a symbol for a dream that may become reality. The southamerican
> city stands for ancient media networks and it will become a monitor for
> future media networks. In the debate Jose-Carlos Mariategui will propose his
> initial idea to build a media center in Cusco.
> Gianni Toti will describe new media centres in Europe and explain why he
> thinks electronic castles (as centres for resistance) are fundamental
> Weapons (tools) in today's world, as well as the importance of the creation
> of a media center in Cusco.
> Marcello Tas is asked to remember the historical attempts of Europeans to
> change their point of view by visiting the jungle.
> Nils Röller will outline how we may overcome historical misunderstandings by
> building Cusco.  Cusco may become through internet-technology an human
> interface between ideas from Europe and Southamerica will meet.
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> Downloaden Sie MSN Explorer kostenlos unter http://explorer.msn.de/intl.asp
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Date: Sun, 16 Sep 2001 10:19:51 -0400
> From: Aliza Dichter <liza@mediachannel.org>
> Subject: posters for peace online now!
>
> APOLOGIES FOR CROSS-POSTING
>
> ***please forward and repost widely***
>
> posters are now avalible for easy download in PDF format at
>
> http://reclaimthestreetsnyc.tao.ca/posters/
>
> slogans include:
>
> "Honor them with Peace"
>
> "Islam is not the enemy -- War is not the answer"
>
> "If McVeigh bombed the WTC, would we bomb Michigan?"
>
> "War is also terrorism"
>
> more to follow.....your suggestions for slogans and submissions
> of poster designs are welcome!
>
> happy postering!
>
> andrew & jon.
>
> - --
> Andrew Boyd (Phil T. Rich)
> andrew@wanderbody.com
> 212/353-9236 h/o
> 646/391-1055 cell
> http://www.wanderbody.com
> http://www.billionairesforbushorgore.com
> - --
>
> >From: Jonathan A Weiss <jaw241@nyu.edu>
> >Subject: posters for peace online now!
> >Date: Fri, Sep 14, 2001, 6:31 PM
>
> ------------------------------
>
> #  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


_______________________________________________
Nettime-bold mailing list
Nettime-bold@nettime.org
http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold