weblogart@yahoo.com


 

ZONE*INTERDITE

ZONE*INTERDITE is an art project, which stays open as a test arrangement for ones own exploration and detections.

We are not free in our perception of the world, as different preceptions and interdictions are pointing us always the right view of the things. They define our line of vision. Our individual lust in vision and the joy at exploring are restricted by complex forms of censorship and self-censorship.

The individual self-censorship, the blindness of ones own impulses, is undermined by new axes of view and the expansion of the horizon.

ZONE*INTERDITE is an artproject by
Christoph Wachter, Berlin, Germany
in collaboration with
Mathias Jud, Switzerland

http://www.zone-interdite.net

pleix

Pleix is a virtual community of digital artists based in Paris. Some of us are 3D artists, some others are musicians or graphic designers. This website is the perfect place to share our latest creations.

new work BIRDS Produced by Pleix / Blink. Music: Vitalic. PIAS. 2006
http://pleix.net

gallery2006


This project born from an idea of a group of web-workers and a cultural no-profit association that operate between Turin, Milan and Venice. The intention is to give a different way of reality interpretation in our IT society trought art in his main sense of espression.
Every art worker can partecipate no age or nationality restriction.All support and media are allowed, are accepted photos, papers,articles, short poems, flash and graphic works or websites.
Send pictures of your work with a description and a short bio to submit@

http://www.bestonweb.net/wett.htm

o'reilly emerging technology conference 2006

Speakers

Tom Armitage
Tom Armitage is Online Production Editor for the New Statesman magazine. When not doing that, he is a writer and journalist, and spends far too much of his spare time tinkering with web-related technologies. He is, of course, a very keen videogamer.

* Session: From Paddles to Pads: Is Controller Design Killing Creativity in Videogames?

Charles Armstrong
Charles Armstrong is a social anthropologist turned technology entrepreneur. He studied Social and Political Science at St. John's College Cambridge, is a Fellow of the School for Social Entrepreneurs and was mentored by the late great sociologist Lord Young of Dartington. After living on an a small Atlantic island for a year Charles invented a new social filtering technique and formed Trampoline Systems; whose clients now include Channel 4 Television and the UK Government.

* Session: How a Small Island Held the Key to Better Collaborative Filtering

Maribeth Back
Maribeth Back is a technology researcher, designer, and inventor. As a senior research scientist at Xerox PARC, she built research probes for new technologies. Her work in ubiquitous computing has included experimental devices for assisted and general reading; multimodal information displays; and collaborative instruments for collection and interpretation of very large data sets. Back completed her doctorate on the semantics of audio design in media at Harvard's Graduate School of Design in May 1996.

* Session: Reading Rooms: The Design of Immersive Social Media Spaces

Kris Barton
Kris Barton is the Product Unit Manager of Live.com and gadget development. Prior to this role, Kris played key roles in several other teams at Microsoft including the MSN Portals team responsible for MSN’s worldwide entry points (msn.com, my.msn.com, MSN Today and Hotmail Login) and the Macintosh Business Unit working on Mac Office. Prior to Microsoft, Kris was a veteran of the technology industry including web start ups and established firms like, Novell. .

* Session: Remixing the Web with the Windows Live™Platform

Scott Berkun
Scott Berkun is a product design consultant. He worked at Microsoft from 1994–2003, with stints as usability engineer, UI program manager for Internet Explorer, design evangelist for Microsoft's engineering excellence group, and lead UI program manager for Windows and MSN. He created the Interactionary Design competition, seen at CHI 2000, 2001, and 2003. Berkun writes about design and usability at scottberkun.com, and is the author of the bestselling The Art of Project Management (O'Reilly 2005).

* Session: Data vs. Design: The Future of UI in a Web 2.0 World

Julian Bleecker
Julian Bleecker is a professor at USC's Interactive Media Division. He is director of the Mobile and Pervasive Lab, a near-future think tank and research and development lab where he is working on new architectures for disconnected, motility, and proximity-based networks.http://research.techkwondo.com/

* Panel: Pervasive Electronic Games

Eric Bonabeau, Ph.D.
Eric Bonabeau is the founder and chief scientist of Icosystem Corporation, a Boston-based “idea incubator” that uses computational evolution to invent novel business models, design new products and create new strategies. Before Icosystem he was the CEO of Eurobios and has been a research director for France Telecom R&D, an R&D engineer at Cadence Design Systems, and the Interval Research Fellow at the Santa Fe Institute. He is the author of three books, over one hundred science articles, and is co-editor-in-chief of Advances in Complex Systems and of ACM Transactions in Adaptive Autonomous Systems. A graduate of Ecole Polytechnique and of Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Télécommunications in Paris, he earned a Ph.D. in theoretical physics from the University of Paris at Orsay.

* Session: Hunch Engine

Carsten Bormann
Carsten Bormann, Honorarprofessor for Internet technology at the Universität Bremen and Visiting Professor at the Design department of the Universität der Künste in Berlin (Institute of Electronic Business), is a protocol designer by heart, a standardization geek by necessity, and an author of the first German-language book on AJAX.

* Session: Panic-mode: A Disconnection-tolerant AJAX Library

Danah Boyd
Danah Boyd is a Ph.D. student in the School of Information at Berkeley and a social researcher at Yahoo! Research Berkeley where she studies how people negotiate presentations of self in mediated social contexts to unknown audiences. Buzzwords include: identity, culture, social networks, Friendster, blogging, performance, Web 2.0, interactive visualization, tagging.

* Session: G/localization: When Global Information and Local Interaction Collide

Hans Peter Brøndmo
Hans Peter has spent his career at the intersection of technology innovation and empowering consumers. He is a successful serial entrepreneur who is at it again. Plum, his latest company, has ambitious plans to make the web more read-writable by making it one-click easy for people to collect, share and connect the things that matter to them. Hans Peter’s last venture was Post Communications, a pioneering email marketing company he founded in 1996, acquired by Netcentives in 2000. Before that he co-founded DiVA, an award winning developer of consumer video editing software, acquired by Avid Technology in 1993. In the mid 80's Brøndmo was a co-founder of an expert systems firm funded by Apple. He has also worked at Apple Computer, McKinsey and Company and at CERN (the center for European Nuclear Research).

* Session: First You Google, But Then What?

Paul Bragiel
Paul Bragiel is the co-founder and chief executive of Meetroduction, the company behind the location based instant messenger Meetro. In addition to his duties as CEO, he's the owner of Paragon Five, a game development studio specializing in console and mobile content. His interests include projects that involve travel, fashion, entertainment, and technologies that encourage communication and networking. He lectures semi-regularly at gaming conferences and universities, has had television exposure in at least five countries and is the author of a chapter in Game Programming Gems 4.

Outside of work, he has toured Russia by train (starting in Siberia) and the United States by bicycle (riding over 5,000 km). He likes to surround himself with people from various backgrounds especially those with a "jack of all trades" streak in them. Besides that, he aspires to drive a taxi and work at a hot dog stand in New York when retired.

* Session: Rich Local and Social Experiences

Tim Bray
Tim Bray managed the Oxford English Dictionary project at the University of Waterloo in , co-founded Open Text Corporation (Nasdaq:OTEX), launched one of the first public web search engines in 1995, co-invented XML 1.0 and co-edited "Namespaces in XML", founded Antarctica Systems (antarctica.net), and served as a Tim Berners-Lee appointee on the W3C Technical Architecture Group (http://www.w3.org/2001/tag) in . Currently, he serves as Director of Web Technologies at Sun Microsystems, publishes a popular weblog tbray.org, and co-chairs the IETF AtomPub Working Group.

* Session: Atom as a Case Study

Lee Bryant
Lee Bryant has been playing with words and computers since the age of ten. Since 1996, he has run consultancies specializing in online communities and social software. He is a co-founder of Headshift, and board member of several social enterprises in the UK specializing in public participation.

* Session: Humanizing the Enterprise Using Ambient Social Knowledge

L. F. (Felipe) Cabrera, Ph.D.
Felipe Cabrera is the Vice President of Software Development for Amazon Web Services. He draws on more than 20 years of experience in the software industry to help Amazon identify and expose technology and data that enables external software and Web developers to innovate and build businesses on their own.

* Session: Artificial, Artificial Intelligence: What It Is and What It Means for the Web

Jay Campbell
Jay Campbell is Director of Santa Cruz Tech, a technology incubator that has spawned projects like RSS-to-SMS gateway FeedBeep, distributed workforce division von Kempelen, and data mining experiment/blogging game BlogShares. Jay is also publisher/technologist of online newspapers The Agonist and Bayosphere, and founder/president of Got.net, Santa Cruz County's largest business services ISP.

* Session: Making Online Communities Productive

Shawn Carnell
Shawn Carnell is a System Architect at AOL, where he designs web technology solutions. Shawn is coauthor of AOL's ModuleT Microformat and a leader in promoting microformats and web standards for making AOL products open and reusable. His work includes massively scaled systems and open web services. Shawn has a MS in Computer Science from the University of Virginia. Before AOL, Shawn worked at Visix on both the Galaxy cross platform toolkit and the Vibe Java IDE.

* Session: An Open Microformat for Syndicating Mashups, Web Content and Ajax Applications

Ben Cerveny
Ben Cerveny is a director of the Playground Foundation, a European framework for experimental new media design research. Previously, he was founder of the Experience Design Lab at frogdesign, an international product design company. He was also a lead game designer and platform development strategist at Ludicorp.

* Session: playsh, the Playful Shell

Mike Chambers
Mike Chambers is Macromedia's Flash Community Manager and an experienced application developer integrating Macromedia Flash with server side technologies. He has worked extensively with ASP, JSP, PHP, Java and ColdFusion. Recently, Mike has been focusing on server integration with Macromedia Flash and Macromedia Flash Remoting, as well as developing Macromedia Flash applications for devices. Mike is co-author of "Flash Enabled: Flash Design and Development for Devices" and "Generator and Flash Demystified".

* Tutorial: Next Generation Flash Development with Flex

Matt Cottam
Speaker biography currently unavailable.

* Session: Sketching in Hardware

Ross Dargahi
Ross is co-founder of and VP of Engineering at Zimbra. Previously, Ross was Director of Engineering and Director of Product Management with the Messaging Products Group at Openwave Systems. At Openwave, Ross built and led the engineering team that designed and architected large-scale messaging subsystems, and was responsible for unified messaging, multimedia messaging (MMS), and voicemail.

* Session: How to Write a Zimlet (Enterprise Mashup)

Brian Dear
Brian Dear is founder and CEO of EVDB, Inc. in San Diego, CA. Prior to EVDB, he was founding director of eBay Design Labs at eBay, Inc. Other engagements include work at Eazel, MP3.com, FlatWorks, RealNetworks, and Coconut Computing. He also runs a personal blog at brianstorms.com.

* Session: When Do We Get the Events We Want

Regine Debatty
Régine Debatty is a journalist, blogger, and consultant specialized in the connections between art and technology.

* Session: The Digital Avant-garde Paving the Way for New Developments of Technology

Bart Decrem
Bart Decrem is founder and CEO of Flock, the social web browsing company. He headed marketing and business affairs for Mozilla through the Firefox 1.0 launch. An open source leader, Decrem coordinated the creation of the GNOME Foundation and has worked at several Linux companies in the U.S. and abroad.

* Session: The Social Browser

George Dyson
George Dyson is a boat designer, writer, and historian of technology whose interests have ranged from the development and redevelopment of the Aleut kayak (Baidarka, 1986) to the evolution of digital computing and telecommunications (Darwin Among the Machines, 1997) and, most recently, nuclear bomb-propelled space exploration (Project Orion, 2002).

* Keynote: Turing's Cathedral

Peter Ferne
Peter is an eclectic and restless software developer and social entrepreneur with a keen interest in the social aspects of technology.

He agrees with Alfred North Whitehead who said: "Operations of thought are like cavalry charges in battle; they are strictly limited in number, they require fresh horses, and must only be made at decisive moments."

He is currently resting his horses in Bristol.

* Session: Hanzo:web, Social Web Archiving

Steve Gillmor
Steve Gillmor is a ZDNet contributing editor, a Release 1.0 contributing writer, and host of the weekly web radio program The Gillmor Gang. He is also the president of the non-profit Attention Trust.

* Session: Inverting the Search Pyramid: The Gesture Economy

Michael H. Goldhaber
Michael H. Goldhaber is a (recovering?) world-class procrastinator, who has been working on and off on abook on the Attention Economy since the early 90’s. He is a theoretical physicist by training, author of Reinventing Technology, occasional university teacher (“The World Of The Visual In Science And Art,” “The Nature Of The Self,” “The Social Construction of Reality vs. Scientific Realism” ) consultant, writer (recent articles include “The Mentality of homo interneticus” and “Maps and Modern War”, columnist (telepolis), abstract painter, etc.

* Keynote: The Real Nature of the Emerging Attention Economy

Seth Goldstein
Seth invents visionary businesses. In 1995, Seth founded SiteSpecific, one of the first Internet advertising agencies; in 2002, Seth founded Majestic Research, the leading independent research firm on Wall Street. Seth was also the first Entrepreneur in Residence at Flatiron Partners, a New York-based technology venture capital firm. Since 1999, Seth has been a Director and member of the Audit Committee for Valassis (NYSE:VCI), a $2 billion marketing services firm. Seth is an active investor and advisor to early-stage companies, including social bookmarking site del.icio.us, and recently completed a blog series on Media Futures – at majestic.typepad.com.

* Session: Root Markets: Applications for the New Attention Economy
* Session: Work with the Community to Develop Attention Applications

Michael Gough
Michael Gough is Adobe's Vice President, Experience Design. He is also the leader of Macromedia's Experience Design Team (XD), an internal design practice focusing on the next generation of digitally enabled experiences. A longtime advocate for quality in all digital experiences, Michael has been pushing the digital envelope for years.

* Session: Expressive Applications

Yoz Grahame
Yoz Grahame is the Developer Advocate for Ning, a role that combines writing, coding, developer relations, and excited squeaking. In the past he's been involved in several renegade e-democracy services in the UK such as FaxYourMP.com and TheyWorkForYou.com, as well as commercial projects related to the works of Douglas Adams.

* Session: The Ning Playground: A Springboard for New Social Software

Joe Gregorio
Joe Gregorio is a software engineer, member of the AtomPub Workgroup and editor of the Atom Publishing Protocol. He has a deep interest in web technologies, writing "The RESTFul Web" column for the online O'Reilly publication XML.com, writing the first desktop aggregator written in C#, and publishing various Python modules to help in putting together RESTful web services.

* Session: Secure Syndication

Adam Gross
Adam Gross is a Vice President of Developer Marketing at salesforce.com, where he focuses on helping businesses and ISVs create new on demand applications for the company's AppExchange platform and directory. Before salesforce.com, Adam led product marketing for Grand Central, where he helped create one of the first companies in the Web services space. Adam also co-founded Personify, a San Francisco-based CRM software company, which focused on analytics and personalization, and served as a technology analyst in Stanford Research Institute's Media Futures Program. Adam holds a B.S. in New Media Systems and Policy from Carnegie Mellon University.

* Session: Building Apps for the Business Web

Dick Hardt
A pioneer in the internet sector and open source software community, Dick Hardt has been active in software development for nearly two decades. His most recent venture, Sxip Identity, provides enterprise identity management solutions for on-demand applications that leverage the power of Identity 2.0.

* Keynote: Who Is the Dick on My Site?

Eric Hayes
Eric is a software pioneer with 20 years experience in software architecture, design, engineering and technical team leadership. His innovative work in RSS networks, clustered server architecture, user experience, AttentionStreams and scaled analytics is at the foundation of new standards and technologies developed by Attensa.

* Session: AttentionStreams vs. the Firehose

Cal Henderson
Cal Henderson has been a web applications developer for far too long and should really start looking for a serious job. Originally from London, he currently works at Yahoo! Inc as the architect and development lead for Flickr. He formed part of the original Flickr team at Ludicorp in Vancouver, Canada. Before Flickr, he was the technical director of Special Web Projects at Emap, a UK media company. Outside of Flickr, he contributes to several open source projects and writes occasional articles about web application development and security.

* Tutorial: SOLD OUTScaling Fast and Cheap - How We Built Flickr

David Hornik
Hornik joined August Capital in 2000. He invests broadly in information technology companies, with a focus on enterprise application and infrastructure software and consumer facing software and services. Prior to joining August Capital, Hornik was an intellectual property and corporate attorney at Venture Law Group, Cravath Swaine & Moore, and Perkins Coie LLP. In his legal practice, Hornik represented high tech startups in all aspects of their formation, financing and operations, including Yahoo!, When.com (AOL), Sonique (Terra Lycos), Pure Payments (Excite@Home), BuyDirect (Beyond.com) and Ofoto (Kodak).

* Session: The Data Dump: Fun with Graphs and Charts

Bradley Horowitz
Bradley Horowitz, head of technology development, is responsible for leading Yahoo!’s efforts in building innovative search technologies. Bradley’s expertise helps drive initiatives that enable the company to provide comprehensive and compelling offerings to customers. Previously he managed a portfolio of products for Yahoo!, including media search, desktop search and the Yahoo! Toolbar.

* Session: Social Media at Yahoo!

Mark Hurst
Widely credited for popularizing "customer experience" online, Mark Hurst has worked since the birth of the Web to make Internet technology easier to use. In 2002, Hurst was named "one of the 1,000 most creative individuals in the U.S." in Richard Saul Wurman's book 1,000. InfoWorld magazine named Hurst Netrepreneur of the Year in 1999.

Mark Hurst is the founder of the Gel conference (Good Experience Live), Creative Good, thisisbroken.com, unclemark.org, addyourown.com, Good Experience Games, goovite.com, gootodo.com, and for writing the e-mail management report that has been read by over 100,000 Internet users.

Previously, Hurst was director of product development at Yoyodyne, an early internet marketing firm founded by Seth Godin and later Yahoo!. Hurst began his internet career as a graduate researcher at the MIT Media Lab. He holds bachelor's and master's degrees in computer science from MIT.

* Session: Bit Literacy: A New Strategy for Productivity in Your Bit-drenched Life

Scott Isaacs
Scott Isaacs is an Architect on Windows Live™responsible for the web-client architecture and frameworks used across MSN and Windows Live properties as well as Windows Live DHTML Gadgets. Scott is an internet veteran and during the mid to late 90’s authored the original DHTML specification and has been a key part of Microsoft’s participation in W3C helping to define and drive many Internet standards.

* Session: Remixing the Web with the Windows Live™Platform

Michael Jefferson
Michael Jefferson is a designer and producer of interactive and traditional media. He has a bachelor's degree in communications from the University of Massachusetts and is pursuing his masters at NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program (ITP). His current area of interest is the exploration of alternate, multisensory interfaces for mobile devices. Michael's Site

* Session: Auditory Interfaces for Small Screen Data Representation

Denise Kalos
Denise Kalos is the Vice President of Human Resources and Learning Solutions, and a member of the Executive Team for O’Reilly Media, Inc. Previously, she sold HR outsourcing solutions to mid and large size organizations, was the Chief HR Officer and OD Practice Leader for C-Change, Inc. and was part of the executive team that brought AMB Properties Corporation “public” in 1997.

* Session: Learning 2.0 for the Technical Professional

Tae-Jin (TJ) Kang
TJ Kang, ThinkFree CEO, worked throughout his life toward alternatives to the dominant status quo, providing solutions that reframe how we work and offer freedom to choose. PC World's top pick for web work sites, ThinkFree Office was developed from TJ's vision of creating an office productivity suite available to everyone at anytime, anywhere. With degrees in Cognitive Psychology and Computer Science from University of Toronto, TJ was profiled in Fortune Magazine, May 2000, and has published numerous books, essays, and articles on a variety of topics.

* Session: The Online Office: A Paradigm Shift

Dan Kashman
Speaker biography currently unavailable. Rohit Khare
Rohit Khare is the Director of CommerceNet Labs, which is investigating decentralized electronic commerce. Dr. Rohit Khare is an award-winning researcher in the fields of Internet protocols and decentralized systems. He founded KnowNow in 2000 and previously worked on Internet standards development at MCI's Internet Architecture Group and the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). He founded 4K Associates and edited the World Wide Web Journal (W3J) for O'Reilly & Associates. He received his Ph.D. in Software Engineering from U.C. Irvine in 2003.

* Session: Microformats

Amy Jo Kim
Amy Jo "AJ" Kim is an internationally known designer of networked games and gaming communities. Her clients include Electronic Arts, eBay, Limelife, Digital Chocolate, MTV, Square/Enix, and Yahoo! She's also the author of Community Building on the Web, a design handbook for networked communities.

* Session: Putting the Fun in Functional: Applying Game Design to Mobile Services

Spencer Kiser
Spencer Kiser has a background in sound design and developing interactive audio devices and applications. He is currently working on his Master's degree at the Interactive Telecommunications Program at NYU, where he is concentrating on location-based audio and sound maps.

* Session: Auditory Interfaces for Small Screen Data Representation

Michael Kuniavsky
Michael Kuniavsky was a founding partner of Adaptive Path, and has been making commercial web sites since 1994. His specialty is in-depth user experience research and his accomplishments include interface designs for the first successful ecommerce site and the award-winning HotBot search engine. He created the Wired User Experience Laboratory and served as its chief investigator for two years.

* Session: Sketching in Hardware

Julie Larson-Green
As manager of the Office User Experience team, Julie Larson-Green is responsible for the redesigned Microsoft® Office “12” user interface. She leads a multidisciplinary team in the development of the overall user model for the Office family of applications.

* Session: Moving Beyond Menus and Toolbars in Microsoft Office

Vincent Lauria
Vincent Lauria recently joined the Meetro team to assist with product management of their location aware IM client. Prior to joining Meetro, Vincent was a consultant in IBM's Business Consulting Services, where he had the fortune to help shape how IBM was approaching social networking as an emerging and in some cases, disruptive technology. He spends much of his time following the trend of social software and its cultural impact on society. Outside of work, he has taken on a number of adventures, including live webcamming a tour of the southern United States, backpacking a summer across Europe, and taking the helm of an open cockpit biplane.

* Session: Rich Local and Social Experiences

Robert M. Lefkowitz
r0ml is an software architect and systems designer with over thirty years of experience. For two decades, r0ml worked on Wall Street, developing market data, trading, risk management, and quantitative analysis systems. More recently, as chief technical architect at AT&T Wireless, he drove the improvement of their CRM, ERP, commission, and data warehousing systems. Over the last several years, r0ml has become increasingly interested in open source software strategy at large enterprises, and is a frequent speaker on the topic.

* Session: Work with the Community to Develop Attention Applications

Kevin Lynch
As senior vice president and chief software architect, Kevin Lynch leads Adobe's Platform Business Unit, which is focused on advancing the company's software platform for the creation and delivery of engaging applications and content to any desktop or device. Lynch is responsible for the company's ubiquitous Portable Document Format (PDF), Adobe Reader, and Macromedia Flash Player, as well as alignment of Adobe's servers and tools with the company's technology platform.

* Keynote: Rich Internet Applications and the Service Oriented Client

Kevin Marks
Speaker biography currently unavailable. Paul J. Martino
Paul is the CEO and CTO of Aggregate Knowledge, providers of a behaviorally based content recommendation web service. His new company leverages user attention and the resulting wisdom of crowds to produce high quality recommendations for a variety of content types. Paul is a serial entrepreneur who was the founding CTO of Tribe.net and founding CEO of Ahpah Software, a Java security company.

* Session: Integrating Attention Data with Your Web Site

Jane McGonigal
Jane McGonigal is an award-winning pervasive game designer for 42 Entertainment and a pioneer of the alternate reality genre. She is best known for her work as a lead designer for I Love Bees, recipient of 2004 awards from the International Game Developers Association, the International Academy for Digital Arts and Sciences, and a New York Times' Year in Review notable. She is also a games researcher at UC Berkeley, where her work focuses on systems for massively collaborative play.

* Event: Werewolf

Jeffrey McManus
Jeffrey McManus leads the Yahoo! Developer Network, which helps third-party developers integrate their Web sites and software applications with Yahoo!. Before that he managed developer community and Web services evangelism at a number of companies, including eBay. He spent more than 15 years as a software developer and mentor to software development teams around the world, and is the author or co-author of six books on software development. He resides in San Francisco.

* Session: Building a Participation Platform: Yahoo! Web Services Past, Present, and Future

John Merrells
John Merrells is responsible for SXIP 2.0 development, standardization and adoption. Prior to joining Sxip, John founded Parthenon Computing Ltd and Embrace Mobile Ltd in Oxford, England. Previously he founded the Berkeley DB XML open source project within Sleepycat Software. Prior to Sleepycat, John was an architect of the Netscape Directory Server, which has subsequently been adopted by Sun, AOL, RedHat, and HP as the foundation for their identity management systems. John holds a B.A. in Computer Science from Hertfordshire University.

* Session: SXIP 2.0: Authentic Internet Identities

Mark Middleton
Mark is a software entrepreneur who, recognising the declining relevance and undeserved influence of mass media and public institutions on the web, founded Hanzo to provide the means to preserve it ourselves, archiving for the true participants.

He has previously been CTO of a number of tech companies and most recently lead the British Library Web Archiving Programme, including archiving operations in the UK, standards and reference implementations for advanced web archiving systems. He was a member of the programme committee of the International Web Archiving Workshop 2005.

* Session: Hanzo:web, Social Web Archiving

Michal Migurski
Michal Migurski is the technology lead of Stamen Design, a boutique design and application development firm in San Francisco. With Stamen, Migurski has helped create a body of data visualization and interactive work for clients such as MoveOn, BMW, the University of Southern California, and others. Stamen is actively engaged in visual exploration of web services, and is responsible for experimental projects such as Mappr and In The News. Migurski has been working with maps in interactive web-based applications since 2001. He is a graduate of UC Berkeley's Cognitive Science program.

* Session: reBlog: Attention Multiplexer for Semi-Structured Content

Felix Miller
Felix is co-founder and CEO of Last.fm. Felix has a background in thinking about and building online music platforms. With fellow Last.fm co-founder Martin Stiksel he founded insine.net in 2000 a netlabel for unsigned electronic artists. This led to the inception of Last.fm in 2002 and the firm belief that no one should ever have to listen to the wrong music again and all artists should have the same chance to be heard. In 2003 Last.fm joined forces with Richard Jones and his Audioscrobbler completing the current management team.

* Session: The Musical myware

Peter Morville
Peter Morville is widely recognized as a founding father of information architecture. He co-authored the bestselling book Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, and has consulted with such organizations as Harvard, IBM, Microsoft, and Yahoo!.

Morville is president of Semantic Studios, co-founder of the Information Architecture Institute, and a faculty member at the University of Michigan. His work has been featured in many publications including Business Week, The Economist, Fortune, and The Wall Street Journal. Morville's new book, Ambient Findability, was published by O'Reilly in 2005.

He blogs at findability.org.

* Session: Ambient Findability

Cory Ondrejka
As VP of product development, Cory Ondrejka leads the team developing "Second Life," Linden Lab's award-winning, user-created digital world. His team has created the revolutionary technologies required to enable collaborative, atomistic creation, including distributed physical simulation, 3D streaming, completely customizable avatars, and real-time, in-world editors.

* Session: Web 3.0

Ray Ozzie
Ray Ozzie, the creator of IBM's Lotus Notes, is an industry visionary and pioneer in computer-supported cooperative work. As a chief technical officer of Microsoft Corp., Ozzie reports to Microsoft chairman and chief software architect Bill Gates. In this role, Ozzie has responsibility for influencing corporate communications and collaboration strategy, applications, and platform infrastructure.

* Keynote: Simple Bridge-building

Meredith Patterson
Meredith L. Patterson is a Ph.D. student in computer science at the University of Iowa. Her research focuses on the area where data mining and database engines intersect, though she also works with database security, bioinformatics, and formal language theory. She contributes to a variety of open source projects, including libdejector and KML. Her most recent project, developed as part of Google's Summer of Code, is Query by Example, an add-on for PostgreSQL which enables example-driven similarity searches.

* Session: Some of These Things are Just Like the Others

Christopher Payne
Christopher Payne is corporate vice president of MSN Search at Microsoft Corp., focusing on delivering the best search experience for its customers and helping them find the information that is important to them whether it is online or on their PC. His previous role was vice president of MSN.com, where his team consisted of MSN Search, the MSN.com home page, MSN Autos, MSN Entertainment, MSNBC, Slate, and the MSN Channels properties.

* Keynote: Search and the Network Effect

Antony Pegg
Speaker biography currently unavailable.

* Session: Building More Useful Mashups: Integrated Routing and Geocoding

Mark Pilgrim
Mark Pilgrim is an accessibility architect by day. By night, he is a husband and father who lives in North Carolina with his wife, his two sons, and his dog. He is the author of Dive Into Python and Greasemonkey Hacks. He spends his copious free time sunbathing, skydiving, and reading Immanuel Kant's The Critique of Pure Reason in the original Klingon.

* Session: Greasemonkey: Remixing the Web
* Session: Microformats

Rufus Pollock
Rufus Pollock is director and co-founder of the Open Knowledge Foundation as well as being a member of Creative Commons UK and a country coordinator for the Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure.

When he can find time outside of this he is studying for a Ph.D. in economics at Cambridge University focusing on innovation and intellectual property policy.

* Session: Hack Your Own Conference: the World Summit on Free Information Infrastructures

Derek Powazek
Derek Powazek has worked the Web since 1995. He's the author of Design for Community: The Art of Connecting Real People in Virtual Places, designed the Blogger "B", and is currently senior designer for Technorati. Powazek lives in San Francisco with his wife and a house full of plants named Fred.

* Session: The New Community

CJ Rayhill
CJ Rayhill is the Chief Information Officer for O'Reilly Media. CJ spent the majority of her career doing software development and technology management in the financial services and healthcare industries prior to joining O'Reilly in 2000. She has worked for Electronic Data Systems (EDS), Citibank, Travelers Insurance Company, Zenith Insurance and a Workers' Compensation Clinic start-up company called U.S. Healthworks, so she is familiar with the technology challenges and issues facing small, medium and large-scale companies. She is a graduate of the United States Naval Academy, having attended Annapolis with the first-ever class of women. She also holds an MBA degree from the University of South Florida.

* Session: Learning 2.0 for the Technical Professional

Wade W. Ren
Wade W. Ren, Ph.D., is the chairman and founder of Diigo, Inc., and a managing partner at Adaptive Capital Management, LLC. He has also been active as an angel investor in a number of high-tech startups in US and China, indulging in his passion of uncovering great investment opportunities and his interests in fostering innovative projects that create value and have positive societal impacts. In his previous life, he was on the faculty of the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, UC Berkeley.

* Session: Diigo: Turning the Entire Web into a Writable and Participatory Media

Sam Ruby
Sam Ruby is a senior technical staff member in the Emerging Technologies group at IBM and is involved in a host of open source initiatives. He is a member of the board of directors and vice president of the Apache Software Foundation and a developer on the Apache Soap project. He is also the chairman of the Jakarta project.

* Session: Neurotransmitters

Alex Russell
Speaker biography currently unavailable.

* Session: After AJAX: Low-latency Data to (and from) the Browser
* Tutorial: Introduction to AJAX

Sean Savage

Sean Savage founded PlaceSite, Inc. (PlaceSite.com), a digital community service by, for and about people who use Internet access together in the same physical place. This month Sean was quoted in the New York Times, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and the International Herald Tribune regarding the PlaceSite team's wi-fi cafe research.

He's the inventor of the term "flash mob," which is now listed in the Oxford English Dictionary and first appeared on his web site cheesebikini.com.

Sean also invented the term "zombie effect," which describes feelings of alienation that occur when people in a semipublic place like a cafe or pub tune out the people and activities around them as they focus on laptops, mobile phones or televisions. The zombie effect, and possibilities for countering it, is a driving force behind PlaceSite, Inc.

Last month Sean graduated with a Masters degree from Berkeley's School of Information Management & Systems. For the past two years he studied and designed location-based technology at U.C. Berkeley and, during the summer of 2004, at Intel Research Seattle. Sean has ten years of professional experience building online products as a project manager, interaction designer and strategist for a wide range of clients including four Fortune 500 corporations.

* Session: Rich Local and Social Experiences

Frederick Savoye
Speaker biography currently unavailable.

* Keynote: Search and the Network Effect

Jason Schultz
Jason Schultz is a staff attorney specializing in intellectual property and reverse engineering. He currently leads EFF's Patent Busting Project. Prior to joining EFF, Schultz worked at the law firm of Fish & Richardson P.C., where he spent most of his time invalidating software patents and defending open source developers in law suits. He maintains a personal blog at lawgeek.net.

* Session: America's Next Top Tech Lawsuits

Bill Scott
Bill Scott is the Yahoo! Ajax Evangelist (part of the Yahoo! Ajax Evangelism Team) and a Design Manager for Yahoo!'s Design Pattern Library (part of User Experience). Bill works closely with teams throughout Yahoo! to spread the goodness of "rich and sane" design for Ajax solutions.

Before joining Yahoo! Bill co-founded Rico (openrico.org), an opensource Ajax framework while also founding a User Experience Team, architecting a JSP/Struts Web framework and a Java Swing framework for Sabre.

* Session: The Language of Attention: A Pattern Approach

Clay Shirky
Clay Shirky teaches at NYU's graduate Interactive Telecommunications Program. He writes and consults on the social and economic effects of the Internet, concentrating particularly on the decentralization of applications (peer-to-peer architectures and programmatic interfaces) and on the current explosion in social software.

* Session: Shut Up! No, *You* Shut Up: A Pattern Language for Moderation Strategies

Kathy Sierra
Kathy Sierra is the author of Creating Passionate Users, and has been interested in the brain and artificial intelligence since her days as a game developer (Virgin, Amblin', MGM). She is the co-creator of the bestselling brain-friendly Head First series (winner of the Jolt Software Development award in 2004).

* Tutorial: Creating Passionate Users 2.0

David Sklar
David Sklar is a software architect at Ning and the author of Learning PHP 5 (O'Reilly), Essential PHP Tools (Apress), and PHP Cookbook (O'Reilly).

* Session: The Ning Playground: A Springboard for New Social Software

Rod Smith
Rod Smith is an IBM fellow and vice president of Internet Emerging Technology, Software Group. He is a recognized technical leader, both within IBM's software business, as well as across the industry. His team's technological innovations and cross-industry collaborations have enabled the rapid adoption of technologies such as web services, XML, Linux, J2EE, next generation rich user collaboration technology, and wireless applications.

* Keynote: Do-it-yourself IT: Sponsored by IBM
* Session: Do-it-yourself IT: Sponsored by IBM

Tom Snyder
Tom Snyder is President and Founder of iNetOffice, Inc., makers of iNetWord. Tom spent the first ten years of his career at Microsoft as a Software Design Engineer. There he worked on Internet Explorer, Publisher, Windows NT, Windows Help, and way back in 1987 designed and wrote the global register allocator for their C 6.0 compiler. That compiler targeted the 286 (egad!) which quickly imbued Tom with an appreciation for code efficiency. Tom holds a B.S. in Computer Science from the University of Washington.

* Session: Unconventional Thoughts About AJAX

Joel Spolsky
Joel Spolsky, of Joel on Software blog fame, founded Fog Creek Software, a New York City-based software company that develops software tools for programmers. They make FogBugz, a Jolt-Award winning project tracking application, and Fog Creek Copilot, the easiest way to provide remote assistance over the internet.

* Session: Blue Chip Products: 2006 Report Card
* Session: Usability Testing

Bruce Sterling
Bruce Sterling is the author of several science fiction novels including Involution Ocean, The Artificial Kid, Schismatrix, Islands in the Net, and Heavy Weather. He edited the collection Mirrorshades, the definitive document of the cyberpunk movement, and co-authored the novel The Difference Engine with William Gibson. He also writes a critical column for Science Fiction Eye and a popular-science column for The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction.

His non-fiction book, The Hacker Crackdown, describes the law enforcement and computer-crime activities that led to the start of the Electronic Frontier Foundation in 1990.

* Event: The Internet of Things

Linda Stone
Linda Stone is passionate about the role technology can play in enhancing our lives. In 1986 she was persuaded to join Apple Computer to help "change the world." In her 7 years at Apple she had the opportunity to do pioneering work in multimedia hardware, software, and publishing, and to work on special projects with Chairman and CEO, John Sculley.

In 1993, Stone joined Microsoft Research under Nathan Myhrvold. She co-founded and directed the Virtual Worlds Group/Social Computing Group, and with her team, researched online social life and virtual communities. In 2000, CEO Steve Ballmer tapped Stone to take on a VP role, reporting to him. She initiated and worked with acquisitions, the World Economic Forum, and started the Microsoft Visiting Speaker Series. Stone retired from Microsoft in 2002, to work on a variety of writing and creative projects. "Continuous partial attention" is a phrase she coined in 1998.

* Keynote: Attention: The *Real* Aphrodisiac

David Temkin
David Temkin is Chief Technology Officer of Laszlo Systems. In this role, he has positioned the company to become the next technology standard for rich Internet applications. Under his direction, Laszlo developed its patent-pending open-source product suite and extended operations to both coasts of the United States. Before founding Laszlo, Temkin was senior director of Engineering at Excite@Home where he led a team of 55 engineers, designers and technical writers responsible for developing the company's consumer software. Prior to Excite@Home, Temkin was an engineering manager in the Newton division at Apple Computer and developed enterprise software at EDS. He graduated from Brown University with a double major in Computer Science and History, and is named on four software patents.

* Session: Laszlo Sneak Peek: "Look Ma, No Flash"

Adam Trachtenberg
Adam Trachtenberg is the Senior Manager of Platform Evangelism at eBay, where he preaches the gospel of the eBay platform to developers and businessmen around the globe. Before eBay, Trachtenberg co-founded and served as vice president for development at two companies, Student.Com and TVGrid.Com. At both firms, he led the front- and middle-end web site design and development. Trachtenberg began using PHP in 1997, and is the author of Upgrading to PHP 5 and coauthor of PHP Cookbook, both published by O'Reilly Media. He lives in San Francisco, California, and has a B.A. and M.B.A. from Columbia University.

* Session: eBay Web Services: A Marketplace Platform for Fun and Profit

You Mon Tsang
You Mon Tsang is a 14-year veteran in the software industry. He is the CEO and Founder of Boxxet and Chairman and Founder of Biz360.

His latest startup, Boxxet, is his fourth and the third that he started. Prior to Boxxet, You Mon founded Biz360, a market intelligence and analytics that was first in automated the compilation and analysis of media content for large Fortune 500 companies (including Our clients include AstraZeneca, Harley-Davidson Motor Company, PacifiCare Health Systems, Sun Microsystems, Verizon Services Group and Xerox). You Mon raised $20M in venture funding as Biz360's CEO.

* Session: Bionic Systems: We Can Make Participants Faster...Stronger...Better

Liz Turner
Liz Turner is an information designer and illustrator specializing in graphical interfaces for web-based applications. Her clients include W3C's SWAD-Europe project, and her illustrations and info-graphics have appeared in Mute magazine. Her lifelong fascination with art and technology culminated with the completion in 2005 of an MA in European Media at the Utrecht School of the Arts.

* Session: Making Connections: A Study in New Forms of Semantic Browsing

Jon Udell
Jon Udell is an author, information architect, software developer, and groupware evangelist. He has been an independent consultant, was BYTE magazine's editor-at-large, executive editor, and web maven, and once upon a time was a developer at Lotus. In June 2002 he joined InfoWorld as lead analyst, author of the weekly Strategic Developer column, and blogger-in-chief. He also writes a monthly column for the O'Reilly Network.

* Keynote: Attention Focusing Strategies

Jo Walsh
Jo Walsh is a software artist often living in London. She builds different open source software projects helping to augment the semantic web and machine-readable metadata in general. She is the co-author of Mapping Hacks and a self-appointed organizer of the World Summit on Free Information Infrastructures.

* Session: Hack Your Own Conference: the World Summit on Free Information Infrastructures

Matt Webb
Matt Webb is co-author of Mind Hacks, cognitive psychology for a general audience. He has worked in R&D at BBC Radio & Music Interactive, and spoken about polite social software and small groups in the shape of Glancing at the ETech 2004. At Schulze & Webb, he engineers, designs, and hacks technology and physical things. Webb is based in London, and has a homepage.

* Session: playsh, the Playful Shell

Betsy Weber
Betsy Weber is Chief Evangelist at Okemos-based TechSmith Corporation. With nearly a decade of experience in corporate training and product management, she has worked on both the development and customer service side of delivering business applications. In her current role, Betsy heads up the company’s highly acclaimed evangelism program where she collaborates with customers, industry experts, and technologists all over the world.

* Session: Usability Testing

Chris White
Chris White wants to sell you a car—in about 10 years. As communications director of the California Fuel Cell Partnership, she educates thousands of people about a transportation future. Once an IBM spokesperson for new technology, Chris’ passion for “what’s next” is contagious. She sees a bright future for vehicles that can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and our dependency on oil—and have plenty of power for all the latest electronics. Simon Willison
Speaker biography currently unavailable.

* Tutorial: A (Re-)Introduction to JavaScript

Steve Yen
Steve Yen is a serial entrepreneur and tech jockey whose career includes co-founding Escalate Software (enterprise software for huge retailers) and co-founding KIVA Software (one of the first web app servers). His recent hobby of hacking browser-side code has led to his latest venture, a new open source "weboffice" service at TrimPath (trimpath.com).

* Session: Web Apps Without the Web

Mimi Yin
Mimi Yin is the interaction designer on the Chandler project, an inter-personal information manager being developed by the Open Source Applications Foundation OSAF.

* Session: Personal Information Architecture and Chandler

website http://conferences.oreillynet.com/

Adla Isanovic

Adla Isanovic
http://www.nmedia.ch/sam/adla.html

Nine Dragon Heads

Nine Dragon Heads makes an attempt and stimulation to leave

better heritage in the future from the environmental and spiritual viewpoint.

Human beings have repeated development with enormous domination and control about environment.

There is no doubt that human beings are superior in every respect.

Thinking back to the past history, many species on the earth were

exterminated because for some reason the friendly environment which

helped their birth changed into hostile attitude.

While mankind, the first species that had the ability of operating on

surroundings, have got out of innumerable change of nature to some degree

But human has regarded the nature as the target of challenge

and conquest, that is to say, as the subject of testing mankind's ability in

the process of transforming and possessing the nature. Ultimately if we

are asked a question when the mankind will disappear, we may answer

"the day will not be far distant."


http://www.9dragonheads.com/main.htm

East Art Map

What is the East Art Map (EAM)?
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East Art Map Online is a tool that will lead you through the last 50 years of the history of visual arts in Eastern Europe.
You will get to know 250 artists/events/projects that are considered of major importance by the 24 invited art critics, curators and artists from the different ex-socialist Central, Eastern and South-Eastern countries invited to make an initial selection for the EAM.
East Art Map Online is now open for contributions by its users.
You are invited to participate in the selection of the ten most important artworks or crucial art projects from every country of Eastern Europe since 1945.
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How to participate?
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We invite anyone who wishes to, and who thinks s/he has a better idea than the initial selectors, to propose a replacement for any project or artwork included in the EAM.
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Send your proposal - complete with a) a written page of text presenting your suggested replacement and the reasons why it should be included, and b) written references confirming the reliability of the date of the work you are proposing for inclusion - to editor@eastartmap.org or submit it directly at this website on the information page of the artist you wish to replace.
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All the proposals - provided they contain the requested materials - will be displayed on the website and kept for public discussion until the final decision of the international committee. A feedback area will be installed.
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Every two to three months an international committee of six experts will decide whether or not to include any of the proposals submitted.

website http://www.eastartmap.org/

Indiana International Video Art & Architecture Festival

Indiana International Video Art & Architecture Festival - Video Art & Architecture event at the Indiana University Art Gallery (USA). Two nights of videos from around the world (March 24 and 25, 2006, 6 to 9 PM).

General Information.
The Indiana University Kokomo Art Gallery has become the premier visual arts center for Howard and surrounding counties. The gallery features continually changing exhibits with 7-9 exhibitions a year. At the IU Kokomo Art Gallery, you can see exhibitions of work by local, regional, national, and international artists, as well as by young artists from area schools. Attend lectures, workshops, demonstrations, and special events.

For more info about artists click here.

digital abstract

Digital Abstract was started in June 2002 to provide a free, open forum for Artists of all mediums.
Much of the work originally displayed was in the genre of Digital Abstract. However, Many had a traditional foundation. They were traditional pieces remixed.
Today, most mediums are represented within this site.
The site has expanded as a forum for all artists, writers, poets, thought provokers.

http://www.digitalabstract.com


DTV - Digital Television

Digital Television (DTV) is a new type of broadcasting that will transform your television viewing experience. Images and sound are captured using digital technology, delivering a movie-quality experience, multicasting and interactive capabilities. That means better quality, more choices, and more control over your television.

http://www.dtv.gov/whatisdtv.html

free radio LINUX

Free Radio Linux is an online and on-air radio station. The sound transmission consists of a computerized reading of the code used to create the operating system, Linux.

http://radioqualia.va.com.au/freeradiolinux/

about STANZA

About Stanza.

Stanza is a London based British artist who specialises in net art, multimedia, and electronic sounds. His award winning online projects have been invited for exhibition in digital festivals around the world, and Stanza also travels extensively to present his net art, lecturing and giving performances of his audiovisual interactions. His works explore artistic and technical opportunities to enable new aesthetic perspectives, experiences and perceptions within context of architecture, data spaces and online environments.

Awards.

Videoformes Multimedia First prize France 2005, Art In Motion V.First prize USA 2004, Vidalife 6.0 first prize 2003, Fififestival Grand Prize France 2003, New Forms Net Art Prize Canada 2003, Fluxus Online first prize Brasil 2002, SeNef Online Grand Prix Korea 2002, Links first prize Porto 2001, Videobrasil Sao Paulo 2001 first prize, Cynet art 2000 first prize, Dresden.

Stanza's work crosses borders between artistic, technological and scientific sectors. Stanza creates participatory digital artworks that invite viewers to guide data flows or to simply observe self-generating compositions. His digital paintings shift through abstract and iconic patterns, which people can explore akin to virtual environments. Interactive and visually appealing, his style also maintains the substantive power through multi-facetted content. This artist has won international praise and awards for his new media works that invite collaboration.

The Clark Digital bursary (2004/2005) is allowing him to work with the Watershed Media Centre in Bristol and research sensors and the impact of live data in the architectural and urban environment. Stanza was awarded a NESTA dreamtime award in 2004. This prestigious award provided incoming investment, allowing allowing experiments using new displays, sensors, and live data to make responsive spaces and interactive installation. Dreamtime enables Stanza to find new arts and technology collaborators worldwide while also leading to new aesthetic perspectives, experiences and perceptions.

In development are multi robots performances, wireless sensor networks and investigations into interactive spaces. The main themes include the nature of surveillance equipment and data in the public domain in this age of live networked data.

Work has centered on the idea of the building as a new display system and various projects have been made using live data, the use of live data in architectural space, and how it can be made into meaningful representations. see 'publicity', 'robotica', 'sensity', as well as a whole series of work manipulating real time CCTV data to making artworks with them: See, 'velocity', 'authenticity', 'urban generation'. These works reform the data, work with the idea of bringing data from outside into the inside, and then present it back out again in open ended systems where the public is often engaged in or directly embedded in the artwork.

Overview of projects .

Stanza's own DNA is now an open source code project. (chromosome 17 released for download)

The Central City online art project was also recently updated, now its at version 5.0. This online net art project includes biocities, photocities, softcities, it has has over fifty exhibitons of this works and won numerous awards..

Also online is CCITYV which captures thousands on webcams and live cctv from around the world and re-appropriates the images in real time into a software platform for a worldwide audience.

Overall the last few years have been busy with trips to China, Japan, Canada, Norway, Ireland, Croatia, Holland, Belgium, USA, Mexico . Stanza also finished the music project Soundcities, which uses found sound from thirty world cities into an open source sounds database.

Performances have also been more frequent. I perform the music and VJ'd my coded visuals using custom made software. Other performances included the central city in Toronto and Genomixer in Amsterdam. And now I am using multiple touch screens to make these live events.

Just released are editions of Stanza works that have been re-made as applications for a touch screen plasma box. These look are available for sale as limited editions. An exhibition of the whole series was in LA, USA in 2004.

Genomixer the Future Physical funded project made serious progress and uses stanza dna data fused into online generating artworks and soundscapes. DNA code represented by code sampled from blood. www.genomixer.com

Amorphoscapes I , Amorphoscapes II, and now Amorphoscapes II, are whole sites dedicated to new digital interactive paintings, to be enjoyed online.

The Soundtoys site is the webs premiere artists audio visual resource is another of my projects and being redeveloped in 2005. It features over 250 artists in an online community.

all information on stanza.co.uk

CIAC's Electronic Magazine

CIAC's Electronic Magazine
No 24 - Winter 2006


253, by Geoff RYMAN (United Kingdom), 1996 http://www.ryman-novel.com/

Ad Verbum, by Nick MONTFORT (USA), 2000 and
JABBER: The Jabberwoky Engine, by Neil HENNESSY (Canada), 2001
http://pbfb.ca/jabber/

After Tokyo,
by Éric SADIN (France), 2004
(partner / technical production: Gaspard Bébié-Valérian)


La disparition du Général Proust,
by Jean-Pierre BALPE (France), 2005-2006


Tentative d'épuisement de
Tentative d'épuisement d'un lieu parisien de Georges Perec,
by Philippe de JONCKHEERE (France), 2000


http://www.ciac.ca/magazine/en/index.html

Prix Ars Electronica

Prix Ars Electronica entries can be submitted from January 10 to March 17, 2006. Jury members are already looking forward to receiving interesting and innovative works.

http://www.aec.at/en/prix/

NET VISION category

The "Net Vision" category singles out for recognition artistic projects in the Internet that display brilliance in how they have been engineered, designed and-especially-conceived, works that are outstanding with respect to innovation, interface design and the originality of their content. The way in which a work of net-based art deals with the online medium is essential in this category.

Nica Winners
Idea Futures
Etoy (the Hijack Project)
Sensorium
IO_dencies
LINUX operating system
Neal Stephenson
Joshua Davis
Team cHmAn
Radical Software Group (RSG)
Josh On/Futurefarmers |
Yury Gitman/Carlos J. Gomez de Llarena
Creative Commons.org
Benjamin Fry, Casey Reas, processing community

COMPUTER ANIMATION / VISUAL EFFECTS

The "Computer Animation / Visual Effects" category has been part of the Prix Ars Electronica since its very inception. It recognizes excellence in independent work in the arts and sciences as well as in high-end commercial productions in the film, advertising and entertainment industries. In this category, artistic originality counts just as much as masterful technical achievement.

Nica Winners

John Lasseter (1987, 1988, 1996)
Joan Staveley
Mario Sasso/Nicola Sani
Karl Sims (1991, 1992)
Pascal Roulin
Dennis Muren/Mark Dippé, ILM
Bob Sabiston/David Atherton |
Scott Squires, ILM
Rob Legato, Digital Domain
Liang-Yuan Wang
Chris Wedge, Blue Sky Studios
Mass Illusions/POP/Digital Domain
Christian Volckman
Jakub Pistecky
Xavier de l'Hermuzière/Philippe Grammaticopolous
Pete Docter, Pixar
Romain Segaud/Christel Pougeoise
Chris Landreth
Tomek Baginski

DIGITAL MUSICS

Contemporary digital sound productions from the broad spectrum of "electronica" come in for
consideration in the "Digital Musics" category, as do works combining sound and media, computer compositions ranging from electro-acoustic to experimental music, or sound installations. This category's programmatic agenda is to expand horizons beyond the confines of individual genres and artistic currents.

Nica Winners

Peter Gabriel/Jean Claude Risset
Denis Smalley
Kaija Saariaho
Alejandro Viñao
Bernard Parmegiani
Ludger Brümmer
Trevor Wishart
Robert Normandeau
Matt Heckert
Peter Bosch/Simone Simons
Aphex Twin (Richard D. James)/Chris Cunningham
Carsten Nicolai
Ryoji Ikeda
Yasunao Tone
Ami Yoshida/Sachiko M/Utah Kawasaki
Thomas Köner
Maryanne Amacher

INTERACTIVE ART

The "Interactive Art" category is dedicated to interactive works in all forms and formats, from installations to performances. Here, particular consideration is given to the realization of a powerful artistic concept through the especially appropriate use of technologies, the
innovativeness of the interaction design, and the work's inherent potential to expand the human radius of action.

Nica Winners 1990 - 2005
Myron Krueger
Paul Sermon
Monika Fleischmann/Wolfgang Strauss
Knowbotic Research
Christa Sommerer/Laurent Mignonneau
Tim Berners-Lee
Masaki Fujihata
Toshio Iwai/Ryuichi Sakamoto
Maurice Benayoun/Jean-Baptiste Barrière
Lynn Hershman/Construct Internet Design
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer/Will Bauer
Carsten Nicolai/Marko Peljhan
David Rokeby
Blast Theory in collaboration with Mixed Reality Lab, University of Nottingham
Mark Hansen/Ben Rubin
Esther Polak, Ieva Auzina und RIXC - Riga Center for New Media Culture


DIGITAL COMMUNITIES

For the second time in 2005, Prix Ars Electronica will honor important achievements by digital communities. This category focuses attention on the wide-ranging social impact of the Internet as well as on the latest developments in the fields of social software, mobile communications and wireless networks. "Digital Communities" spotlights bold and inspired innovations impacting human coexistence, bridging the geographical as well as gender-based digital divide, or creating outstanding social software and enhancing accessibility of technological-social infrastructure. This category showcases the political potential of digital and networked systems and is thus designed as a forum for the consideration of a broad spectrum of projects, programs, initiatives and phenomena in which social innovation is taking place, as it were, in real time. A Golden Nica, two Awards of Distinction and up to 12 Honorary Mentions will be awarded in the Digital Communities category in 2005.

last year winners for digital communities

Golden Nica
AKSHAYA (India):
www.akshaya.net

"Akshaya" is one of the most ambitious development programs that has ever been launched to take advantage of information and communication technologies. Within a period of three years, "Akshaya" has established 6,000 Internet centers in the Indian State of Kerala, set up infrastructure for the local population and, in doing so, simultaneously created 50,000 new jobs.

The aim of the overall project is to impart basic knowledge about the Internet and computer technology to broad segments of the populace.

A fundamental precept in this category is that the prize money is to be used to finance the ongoing development of the project itself or of a successor project. The directors of "Akshaya" intend to use their € 10,000 cash award to expand their Internet platform in the areas of agricultural consulting, health and education.


Distinctions

Free Software Foundation (USA):
www.fsf.org
www.gnu.org

The Free Software Foundation was established in 1985 as a means of organizing the worldwide community for free software. Behind this abstract description stand millions of people working on free software projects on a voluntary basis. The top item on the organization’s agenda is the effort to promote “free” software—not “gratis” but rather in the sense of the free expression of opinion, since the group regards freely available software—programs that can also be enhanced and upgraded by groups of developers working jointly—as an important pillar supporting freedom of opinion today. Patents and copyrights are the central areas of the FSF’s activities. Furthermore, the Free Software Foundation is the chief patron of the GNU project. The GNU operating system is widely used today in conjunction with the Linux kernel.


NewGlobalVision/Telestreet (Italy):
www.ngvision.org
www.telestreet.it

NewGlobalVision and Telestreet are initiatives that are taking concerted public action against the monopoly position of the major TV stations. Citizens can create their own TV shows. Through reciprocal linkups and cooperative efforts, the two projects have jointly achieved an optimal mix of television-based and Internet-based media technologies.

Telestreet has come up with a way to establish so-called “street TV stations” on a relatively limited budget. In Italy, 250 mini-stations have already been set up in this way, each of which is operated by a staff of 10-15 persons. With the help of antennas mounted on private homes, each station can broadcast to a transmission area with a radius of about 300 meters. If several antennas are linked up into a network, the transmission area expands accordingly.

Telestreet is the first such initiative to provide easy access to the medium of television. Anyone can create, produce and broadcast program content; a video camera and a PC are the only equipment necessary.

NewGlobalVision is Italy’s first freely accessible archive to make available independent video material beyond the realm of the giant TV stations and media conglomerates. It was created by a community of artists, Web designers, video artists, technicians and hackers who contributed their expertise and experience to this joint venture. The project was organized immediately after the events in Genoa in 2001. A large amount of video material about the demonstrators was available, but most of it was ignored by the mass media, and many independent political groups felt themselves to be victims of censorship. Thus, there was a growing need for a platform from which to make independent video material available to the general public. NewGlobalVision now offers amateur filmmakers the opportunity to quickly get their material seen by large audiences.


Special Prize of the Jury

www.bittorrent.com
www.bittorrent.com

Many artists make their works available online for users to download free of charge. Nevertheless, anyone who offers such creative products—music, computer games and the like—in this way pays fees to do so to his/her Internet service provider. And the more popular the product is and, thus, the more people who download it, the more expensive this becomes for the producer. Ultimately, if the product turns into a smash success that attracts enormous user interest, the inundation of hits on the site has even been known to cause the server to crash.

"BitTorrent" is a file-sharing protocol that enables creative artists to make their works available online in an economical way. The way it works is that anyone who has downloaded a file free of charge from "BitTorrent" subsequently makes it available on his/her own computer for other users to download. Thus, the data transfer costs are shared, and the more popular a work is, the more computers there are to download it from. This is an ingeniously simple principle that yields a collaborative way to help artists continue to make their works available in the true spirit of the “free software” idea.

Honorary Mentions

Upmystreet (UK)
www.upmystreet.com

E-Democracy.Org (US)
www.e-democracy.org

Wikimedia Commons (US)
commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Main_Page

The Sout-East Asian Earthquake and Tsunami Blog (IN)
tsunamihelp.blogspot.com

Kubatana (ZW)
www.kubatana.net

Sistema de Información Agraria vía Internet para Agricultores del Valle de Huaral, Perú (PE)
www.huaral.org

Borneo Project: Mapping Their Future: Digital Communities, Indigenous Lands (US / MY)
www.borneoproject.org

Catalytic Communities (CatComm) (BR)
www.comcat.org

microRevolt (US)
www.microRevolt.org

TXTmob (US)
www.txtmob.com

CouchSurfing Project (US)
www.couchsurfing.com