1. Martino Gamper and PlatformTwo – quick re-invigoration for websites

    One for Martino Gamper website based on a custom wordpress, and the blog of PlatformTwo at RCA design department.

    The first re-invigoration for GamperMartino.com is about clearing the access to project based categories and archives, and adding a third column on the right to display more common things he can come accross. The column auto adjust automatically in height, is simple but yet effective, and allow one huge screens to display more projects at once.

    gampermartinocompicture-1.png

    The PlatformTwo re-invigoration is based on a some organisational and educational changes inside the platform, the catch pharse not being anymore ‘design activism’, but ‘design communalism’ which aim is now to focus on design practices which involve or take place within communities. Therefore the platform needed a re-arrangement of the original design to bring on top a few new projects they are working on.
    Yesterday, I was at the RCA Design department ‘work in progress show’ – and the results are already quite interesting.

    platformtwo.png



  2. Defragmentation: quick visualisation and visual trends

    Defragmentation’s process aims at reducing the fragmentation of data by concatenating parts stored in separate locations: a (partially) new visualisation interface made its apparition on R-Echos; its url is: http://r-echos.net/defragmentation/

    It’s quite simple, and it shows the last 500 posts, each post represented by a clickable color coded square (a color is equivalent to a post’s category). The most recent articles are on the top left, while the older are at the bottom right. When hovering on a square, title and first image of the post are displayed. It allows for a quick visual browse, a single click brings up the article. It is a rework based on the former interface of R-Echos which was using lines of colors.
    This visualisation was inspired by a re-post a little while ago in Pierre’s reblog (about blogs); the original post coming from Social Fictions, whose ideas was much more about the software way of processing with a limited amount of memory, mimicking palimpsest: a manuscript or piece of writing material on which the original writing has been effaced to make room for later writing but of which traces remain.

    This blog/blogject is a Janus head, 2 faced web0.0 monster sharing a memory-system styled on a palimpsest. When the limited memory it has is filled to maximum capacity it needs to reorganise it to make space otherwise it can’t store any more new blog entries. In doing this it has to try not to forget the old ones, but this is not always done with much success as memories confabulated over time become increasingly unrecognisable. This making space is done by the blogject and its functioning is modelled on how our brains interleave our memories: by dreaming. The resulting dreams are what the blogject publishes online.

    The relationship between blog (and someone using it) and the blog-ejects rendered from/within this input is symbiotic. The blogject only starts functioning when memory reached a tipping point (being full), the blog can continue to accept new entries for as long as the blogject succeeds in freeing space, to which again there is an upper limit.

    As an experiment in writing by a selfless-self (adjacent to automatic writing and the cut-up) there are two angles to this system: the blogject’s output and the stuff stored in the blog as its increasingly looses its integrity, are both written by a non-self. The purpose or meaning of this writing is not in the writing itself but in the interpretation of it by the ones submitting writing to its memory. This property too it shares with dreams.

    (…)

    A blogject, not to be confused with a slog (a sensor log), is the bot rephrased in the language of the blogosphere. Unlike bots, software-based attempts at making computers speak with us in our own language, that only have to respond on user input, blogjects in theory are pro-active and possess their own threshold function to decide when to produce something. Obviously, systems possessing artificial consciousness are non-existent, and bots and blogjects cannot but interpret/generate input of which is the meaning is always relative to templates in its database not relative to the outside world as you would suspect a true AI would.

    most_recent.png
    Each cube represents a segment of a colour-coded memory. Each black dot represents a free segment. While the palimpsest has free segments entries are added from left to right and from top to bottom. When filled, dreaming commences (and the blogject will eject-text) to make space. This results in chains sharing a segment and releasing one in the process. The neat crystalline order inside the memory that exists in the beginning will slowly become chaotic.

    The ideas behind the BlogJect are really interesting; it would be interesting to see such behaviour enacted on the R-Echos project, like evasive or digressive memory – it would never give the correct answer, but an almost correct one, though creating a sort of dérive inside the archive of the magazine.
    It is also quite exciting to consider web software and web design aiming at the apparition and growth of a certain kind of new intelligent entities limited in some ways – a form of software reification, somehow.



  3. R-Echos – Today’s Favorites, 20082201

    20082201-r-echos-favorites.png

    What if Africa was Europe’s power plant? This articles reminded of the first african satellite launch.
    Pruned is an amazing place for all things related to landscape and architecture, article might be a bit long to read in an overbooked day – but it’s always a pleasure to take the necessary time.
    Kashiwa Sato: What caught my attention on this one is the visual proximity of these colour bars and my electronic presence identity (the small bits of colour on top that web visitors like you modify when they visit). I’m wondering at the color and if there is a code behind… or if it (‘just’) colors taken from the images of each projects. It would be nice to know a bit more. On his website, all the colors are animated which might be a bit disturbing for a long reading but which create a very nice and entertaining interface. In any case, color and hue classification of projects is quite nice.

    The Magic Roundabout is nothing new (back from the 70’s), and I remember talking about it with Amandine a little while ago. It seems so complex – but all what I’ve read so far is saying the system is pretty much functionnal (once you’re not scared anymore to use it! I guess!)


    The Autonomous Architecture picture of the buildings, outlined and superimposed to real life image, even if quite a simple visualisation, stroke me; it made me think to the Soda Constructor web thingies a little while ago; it remembered also my own attempt at constructing webtoys… It would be nice to see a more parametric real architecture that could adapt itself to parameters, like these sculpture from Michael Wihart: Soft Architectural Machines

    Bouroullec Brothers, steelwood chair
    I can’t help but see this one being quite related to the Martino Gamper’s 100 chairs (whose work process proximity I wrote about earlier). I know there’s no such thing as copying or anything – no: just a mental connection I am making; maybe it is coming from the way of assembling the legs to the seat, I like it. And I’m left wondering how both would fit (in my flat) next to each other.

    Copywronged Google Map
    I like the collection of found objects. I like even more their presentation on a map. It’s a bit like those Point of Interrest one can insert on a GPS. It could let you create urban walks made of collection of fragments and memory. One could also curate these bits of emotions form others, and deliver them, the same way as for a podcast – apart that you would have to walk to discover them.

    Eee PC with all the hacks, but can it ever learn to love?
    This is another kind of way for assembling disparate things together, compared to the chairs above, I quite like the picture especially once compared with the MacBook Air super thin design. I like both machine for diverse reasons. What I especially like with this sum of hardware hacks is its freshness and spontaneity along with the weird, surreal and Frankensteinesque feeling.

    And those researchers crafting new testing device to detect early Alzheimer’s are just heroes. Some sci-fi authors like Gibson or Dantec already and a while ago wondered about the irruptive use and inclusion of technology into mental disorder studies and treatments. I’m amazed by what technology and medicine are able to perform to transform live and soften tragedies, even more since I’m now personnaly concerned.



  4. Live Networked Typographic Performance

    http://textasplayground.net/assembling/

    A little while ago, Electronest has been invited in Bruxels for the opening of the Furniture Fair by Studio Jerzey Seymour for webjying on the Dynamo Dreesen live set. We developped a visual set based on typography using essentially a home made software which was grabbing news headlines and dispalying/reacting in realtime to the Dreesen live set.

    http://www.myspace.com/dynamodreesen
    http://acido-records.com/



  5. Mine, Drugs and Video Game

    Matthew Smith Interview Manic Miner ZX Spectrum – the weird destiny of a video game genius. I can’t help but feel sad for this pioneer of the ZX spectrum.



  6. The Way Things Go: art, zen & hardware crash

    Yesterday, I was wondering about Process in my early morning readings, today I’m looking at cause & consequences…

    IMG_8226_450_TheWayThingsGo.jpg
    The magic number: 7.01 and how to get prepared for the worst…

    Yesterday, I was wondering about Process in my early morning readings – in the flow I came to speak about Fischli & Weiss, 2 swiss artists who did the ‘How To Work Better’ a kind of process manifesto.
    They also did a film most of you have certainly heard about: ‘Der Lauf Der Dinge’ (aka The Way Things Go). The video – which I loved so much since I first saw it in the Marc Bretillot’s course back in the days when I was in fine art in ESAD in Reims – is described as follow:

    fischliwaythingswent_waythingsgo3.jpg
    Film stills from Peter Fischli and David Weiss’s The Way Things Go (1987); on Youtube there’s a short extract and a link where to buy your own copy.

    Inside a warehouse, a precarious structure 70-100 feet long was constructed from various items. If this is set in motion, a chain reaction ensues fire, water, gravity and chemistry determine the life-cycle of objects and things. So begins a story about cause and effect, mechanism and art, improbability and precision.

    Well … yesterday, my beloved MacBook suddenly died. I mean it freezed, and then refused to boot, displaying a folder with a question mark. That seems to be a very well known issue with a certain type of Seagate hard drive with a firmware revision 7.01 – if you are the happy owner of a MacBook, I encourage you to check your serial numbers.

    instruction_harddrive.png
    3 screenshots on how to retrieve your serial number. In the background a nice trick from lifehacker: Keep A Scratch Pad Of The Day, I am also a moleskine-geek which I think is a good way of envisionning vital data backup

    Myself, I have been lucky enough to see the early reports about this Seagate harddrive issue and I had luckily time to backup the faulty drive. I nonetheless lost a few files and a few precious hours of rest, I also stressed a bit but I can’t help but think there‘s definitely some sort of zen to practice: learn to (better) let go and let’s things go the way things go… but as I deeply appreciate the precepts from the chinese tactician Sun Tzu (see KD01k The Art Of war), I also like to keep things ready for the worst: all I have to do now is to replace the dead and faulty seagate harddrive (there’s a PDF from Apple documenting the procedure to remove and replace a hard drive from a macbook – nothing too scary once you know how it used to be in the recent past) by a spare new Samsung, taken from a mini Porsche LaCie drive I bought in November (just in case) and re install everything back in its order.

    KD01k – ‘The Art Of War’ the original text written in 3000 BC by Sun Tzu and his disciples is designed according to its own structure; a generative design principle is applied with a set of rules based on statistics and ponctuation.

    * Marc Bretillot website Cullinaire Design et autres façons.



  7. How to work better – Design and process lookup

    <img src=”http://textasplayground.net/assembling/wp-content/uploads/how-to-work-better-picture-collection.png” />

    Richard Ziade at basement.org has a very nice article with an interresting quote about the software development teamwork and workflow. I read this article after the memo Pierre send to me via email for the (future) organisation of our company, Electronest. They are echoing each other in my mind: it’s nice to see Electronest is already able to do things quite differently.

    And along my morning’s reading – there are more echoes, memories and thoughts:

    Maki gave me a little piece of paper once – we were working on the Never Odd or Even website for the Serpentine Gallery with Patrick at that time. It never leaved me: first in my moleskine, and then it finally made its way to my desktop.

    This is a piece by Fischli & Weiss, and the title is ‘How to work better’, below is a couple of images from my collection.

    How to work better

    1. Do one thing at a time

    2. Know the problem

    3. Learn to listen

    4. Learn to ask questions

    5. Distinguish sense from nonsense

    6. Accept change as inevitable

    7. Admit mistakes

    8. Say it simple

    9. Be calm

    10. Smile

    Ryan Gander who amongst other thing makes lectures he calls ‘Loose Association’, wrote a wonderful book ‘Appendix’ (where Stuart Baileys is a bit more than involved) and created a word: the Mitim, which I spoke upside down. Ryan Gander wrote an exquisite short article about the ‘How To Work Better’ in ‘Working it out’ – where he speaks also about the artists’ process:

    Taped to the wall of my studio is an A4 photocopy of a short ten-point manifesto by Fischli/Weiss entitled “How to work better”. I don’t know who put it there, but it has been in place for at least three years. It’s a tongue-in-cheek work using a motivational statement, which is a piece of found text they subsequently enlarged and had painted on the exterior of a building as part of a public commission. I sometimes show it to students at the beginning of slide lectures, and always point it out to assistants who come to the studio.

    (Maybe Maki put it here… )

    There are a couple more links to follow the ongoing reflections:
    - In computing, lookup usually refers to searching the internal and specially crafted database for an item that satisfies some specified property.
    - ‘Appendix’ by Ryan Gander, designed by Stuart Bailey is findable at Amazon – the ISBN is 90-75380-60-7
    Stuart Bailey & Ryan Gander: Appendix Appendix (Christoph Keller Editions)

    - Here’s is the my re-interpretation/citation of ‘How to work better’ as a desktop background – GTD, efficiency, design and process always in mind; you can download and use, the picture size is for a (black) macbook screen (1280×800) but should be easy to crop/expand with the black zone all around.
    - On the 14th of January there will be a simultaneous launch of DOT DOT DOT #15 and F.R. DAVID #2 in London and New York. Both publications will be available and accompanied by a live lecture transmitted from the other location. According to the international dateline, Cubitt Gallery in London will launch at 7pm GMT with a live talk by Stuart Bailey, DDD editor, from New York, while Dexter Sinister in New York will also launch at 7pm (12pm GMT-5hrs) with a live talk by Will Holder, FRD editor, from London.

    London, 7pm CUBITT Gallery and Studios 8 Angel Mews London N1 9HH

    New York, 7pm Dexter Sinister 38 Ludlow Street (Basement South) New York, New York 10002



  8. The footies



  9. Digitalism Idealistic – the design story

    Geodesic dome design for Digitalism Idealistic Lp cover design is where i draw connections between the various elements of the design and the story behind it. You will also find a selection of links to build your own and look further into Buckminster Fuller.

    Idealistic Digitalism



  10. My new plane

    I went to meet Shane Bradford at his studio today – and look what I took back with me…

    Shane’s website: http://shanebradford.com/



  11. Mass Media Diving unit – demonstration

    The Mass Media Diving unit is a tangible interactive design experiment: fluxes of information on the internet as poetic element; it used tactile, audio and visual activation of the user along with NO2 gaz (laughing gaz) to make one feel the ongoing information’s flow poetics.



  12. Electricity, design, new technology, responsability and death

    tazer-man-no_innocent_design.jpg

    It might be a while ago but I have been quite deeply shocked this morning when I heard about what happened last November in Vancouver Airport, Canada. This video below is just another way to speak about what happened there:

    [youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ppjFalU7ZpI 450 300]
    Megaman helps a lost and confused Polish immigrant at Vancouver International Airport; RCMP-style.By using tazer, police killed a man – there was no real tentative of communication whatsoever. They just fired him.Sometimes Electricity is a good thing: technology saves life and change destiny; but sometimes – especially when technology is to be put in the wrong hands – it is the worst ever case scenario that takes place. In this matter it’s not even wrong hands, it’s just a matter of stupidity and shame if not total and absurd irresponsibility, cruelty : Lethal means sufficient to cause death. Tazer is dangerous, it is a lethal weapon – same effect as a bullet in the flesh: it kills. It is maybe just made worse by the fact that politics, policers and anyone in charge of this kind of business is not yet ready to acknowledge that tazer are effectively LETHAL weapons.

    These tazer weapons and the people using them just completely scares me.

    New tools with innovative and efficient design doesn’t always mean that there are good people behind it. I feel so sorry for this man who was seeking a better life, and so ashamed of what technology might bring; I can only hope it will remember us that there is no innocent design, never.

    update: Wired ran an article about this video 4 days ago where the creator of this video Mike Greenway is reported to have told Canada.com that the video is ‘really more of a statement on police Taser use than anything.’ – I do think that those who get shocked by this video should rather get shocked by the very behaviour of those people supposed to protect and defend humans’ lives, rights and liberties.



  13. INFRA-RADIO

    INFRA-RADIO
    Video sent by cesarharada

    I really like the way cesar speaks about his projects. It’s fresh and easy going.
    The idea behind this project experimentation reminds me in some way of the Mass Media Diving Unit I worked on a little while ago…

    INFRA-RADIO is a physical low frequency radio that synchronizes or influences the dynamic of the heart rate providing an interactive sleep experiment for a single or a group of simultaneous users.



  14. Fashion Design, Rock the Casbah and Ecosonic Ensemble.

    The picture of Barbara’s trousers has been taken on the way back from the concert ‘Ecosonic ensemble with Ouija Board’ where she invited us on Saturday – it was a the Union Chapel, in Islington, an amazing place:

    UNIONCHAPEL-stage-tryptch.jpg
    We were at the Union Chapel, a beautiful and old church – http://www.unionchapel.org.uk/ they are using the rent of concert space to refurbish the architecture.

    Ecosonic Ensemble with Ouija Board
    Baroque Flutes: Stephen Preston, Eva Caballero
    Ouija Board: Peter Coyte, Matt Cargill
    Cellos: Thomas Gardner, Laura Reid

    After the concert, walking to a pub to get some food for our thoughts, Amandine was saying to Barbara she really liked her trousers: short legs but huge top part which reminded us of some trousers one can see in Egypt – since it was a Tartan we spoke about the Clash’s cover of ‘Rock the Casba’ by the algerian rocker Rachid Taha:

    [youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DbFYsi9iSg 350 300]

    I like also form him the ‘Voilà voilà que ça recommence’As a strange reminiscence, Barbara’s trousers made me think about what I felt during the concert, however neither the Tartan pattern or Rachid Taha has anything to do with the concert we just saw (at least not that I know) – it’s nice to have different kind of music suddenly related trough a bit of fashion design:

    It’s a kind of trousers one could define as being a closed long skirt. With a minimum use of means, the Tartan fabric is enclosing the leg just above the ankle. The fabric then moves in a somehow nice transfixing movement: and you suddenly find yourself thinking what is this that she wears: a skirt? a trousers?

    reduced-15122007(006).jpg
    The ‘Rock The Casba’ trousers has been bought at Comme des Garçons, and it has been designed by Rei Kawakubo.

    In a way, like for the trousers, the stage design used a minimum of means (if not, none at all) – something a bit like a DorkBot in a disaffected London east end warehouse.
    On stage there was 4 chairs and an orange structure with 4 vertical legs partially covered with a white piece of fabric, with 3 metal boxes on the side, one with a computer on top of it; there was also the microphone of the performers, and a few instruments: 2 violoncellos and 2 flutes, a bright light was on top of the stage, a couple of cables were lying on the floor, 6 performers catched our attention and hears for the next hours or so.
    So far, it looks quite familliar to me: ‘you plug, you hack, it works’ is my moto since a few years now.

    There was 4 improvised acts; the first one saw all the 4 instruments playing together and 2 guys in the back moving their hands over the white piece of fabrics, triggering noisy loops from the computer. the remaining acts were based on couple of instruments. Those couple were articulating in the manner of a discussion like in a lot of improvisation performance. Those instrumental discussions allowed the public to be maybe a bit more aware of how the classical instruments were interacting with the ‘table’ and the mesmerising flow of hands on top of it: the instruments were recorded live on the stage and the records were then used as sample or loops, played by the hands like on an invisible keyboard. The performance was all made of recorded loops, a re-temporisation of the music just performed on stage.

    On the stage design side: instrumentalists are facing the audience, they play in front of. In the background, the table with one or two performers focusing on the table top. When an instrumentalists finished to play its bit she or he looked at the table – in a manner of saying: ‘it’s your turn now’ – and maybe this was a bit too demonstrative of the process: to show how the ‘things’ were actually working was clearly didactic.

    hand-shadow-C010-5.jpg
    image via: Project Gutenberg’s Hand Shadows To Be Thrown Upon The Wall, by Henry Bursill

    The electro acoustique performance was relying heavily on the Reacting Table Top – the ‘Ouija Board’. The light on top of the stage was projecting shadow of the hands on the top of the table: a piece of white fabric hang by a structure of 4 feet. Underneath: a camera, filming the shadows. The shadows are then transcripted into music trough the use of the computer which is recording the music. The computer use MaxMSP to translate the hand position into a ‘push a button action’

    enfants-du-paradis.jpg

    The movement of the hands over the table top reminded me of this film I recently watched Les Enfants du Paradis written by Jacques Prévert and filmed by Marcel Carmé – which narrates the love affairs of Baptiste a pantomime (a theater mime) in Paris back in the 1820s or 1830s.
    Those handled performance were implicating both performative and demonstrative aspects. Performative in its relationship with the dancer, Demonstrative in its relationship with actor (transmitting a meaning like a pantomime)

    This ‘Ouija Board’ made me think of an instrument made of a hollowed instrument – here but not here, made of its own absence.
    My e65 camera phone is really bad at taking any kind fo picture; nonetheless the over exposed zone (the aura on the picture) is actually the place where the hollowed and somehow magical instrument was situated

    electroconcert_15122007(004).jpg

    After discussing with the composer at the end of the performance i had the confirmation that nothing on stage was in anyway designed – which it happens I quite like – much more than if it would have been.

    I like this design principle: designing something without designing it actually, letting things happen and reacting upon discussions and new discoveries – it is a little bit the same process Åbäke and us used to work on the Kitsuné website or on the Digitalism’s ‘Idealistic’ cover – but I keep the Dome story for a bit later…