1. Some notes on experimenting with the economics

    November 09, 2008

    A few weeks ago, we launched the &AMP, Ampersand Make Production, a project in which people are supporting the production of cultural products.
    This is an experiment in the economics of production. Our first issue is a poster and a text: AMP001. The content is clearly influenced by the practice we developped to maintain and develop R-Echos (http://r-echos.net) and we called the issue “R-Echos issue 1”.

    * Recently Charlotte from Manystuff asked us to give more details about the ideas around &AMP - below I’m translating in english our answer to her request:

    Financing and the notion of Crowd Sourcing
    Instead of using a single source of finance, grant or sponsoring -we are seeking to establish a principle of distributed funding, like a p2p network. This principle is applied as well to the distribution since each share-holder/participant own a certain percentage of the real thing produced, and each of them is able to decide individually or collectivelly of the future of his or her share of the production.
    A series of economic experiments
    This project is for us a laboratory. The poster and the text of AMP001 (the first issue) are a first test tube. We are just starting to be able to draw early conclusions, it is for us a little bit like a reduced scale LHC: we are launching something and looking at the results depending on the parameters of the launch.
    An extension of R-echos (http://r-echos.net)
    R-Echos is a website, a selection of whatever we find, see, read and collect online, it is our daily best picks; it is a reblog that we have been maintaining for some years now. The poster of this first issue shows tangible objects that belongs to our every day life ans surround us: things on our desks, books in the shelves, visuals references that inspired us for some reasons - we consider those objects as being the sources of the project we develop and realise (like in programmation); we really consider R-Echos like being one of the source-code of Electronest.

    french version:
    le financement et la notion de crowd sourcing
    au lieu de s’en remettre à une seule source de financement, ou à un principe de sponsoring - nous cherchons à mettre en place un financement distribuée comme un réseau p2p. Ce principe s’applique également à la distribution, puisque chaque Share Holder possede un certain pourcentage de notre production et est en mesure de decider individuellement (ou cellectiveemnt) du futur de sa part de la production.
    une serie d’expériences économiques
    ce projet est un laboratoire pour nous. Le poster et le texte de AMP001, c’est une première éprouvette. On commence tout juste à pouvoir tirer des conclusions. c’est un peu comme un micro-LHC pour nous: on lance un truc, et on regarde ce que ça produit en fonction des paramètres de lancement
    une extension de R-Echos — http://r-echos.net
    R-Echos est un site internet, une sélection de ce que l’on lis/trouve online, nos “best picks” quotidien; c’est un reblog que l’on fait depuis quelques années déjà. Ce poster contient les objets qui nos entourent et nous inspirent — c’est un peu comme un code-source des choses que l’on fait, on considère le site de R-Echos comme étant un des codes-source de Electronest.

    * Here is also a short text I put on the facebook group a little while ago, it links the ideas of &AMP and the ones of etoy.SHARE:

    obviously, there’s some sort of inspiration taken from etoy.SHARE.
    In the & Make Production project, shares are project based and they determine if the project is interesting enough to make it to the production step. if not shareholders will be able to decide how they want the money to be used: refund, re-investment in the next publication or in the structure itself, etc.
    Shareholders are sharing the destiny of the project which we don’t control anymore.



  2. A couple of notes on the last interesting things i saw…

    November 08, 2008

    - went to Photographers’ Gallery (Soho archives, and Dryden Goodwin who remided me a lot of facial recognition graphs) and the Saatchi Exhibition (Revolution Continues - a very figurative selection of chinese artists - the piece in the “cellar” was the most exciting). Later in the day: went to the opening of the Royal Academy exhibition; saw (mainly and amongst other things) agrifashionista.tv and Urbania’s installation: a red room reporting on their various experiments about communal life and projects.

    - went to the Friday’s DotDotDot lecture at Somerset House; link: DDD17 / talk.

      some quick notes:

    • William James ‘Pragmatism’ published in 1907
    • Naive Set of Theory DDD15 - “passing books with notes” (made me think about dogeared books; read below; I will probably add it later to the DBooks website)
    • the notions of Rationalism (w), Empirism (w), Pragmatism (w)
    • Gödel ‘On Formally Undecidable Propositions of Principia ’ published in 1931 in Vienna(google books)
    • Einstein said that “one of the most interesting thing of working in the university of (Berkeley?) was the discussion with Gödel on the way back home” - or something like this.
    • the notion of Naive, Intuition
    • Paul R Halmos ‘Naive Set Theory’

    - thought about making a website which like Dog Eared Books would list the films i like, quoting them; a sort of personnal memory. It comes from the fact that this year we have been increasingly watching more and more films every week (Amandine being back at university, we have access to the LCC’s library and their DVDs - just great!)

    - watched (amongst other DVDs) ‘A Pervert Guide to Cinema’ - an interresting documentary on perversion trough a couple of selected movies; more specially: this documentary is a very nice Republishing piece along with commentaries: trying to organise the Tlktlk discussion on the topic of republishing and to set a list of guests.

    - discovered about Edgser Dijkstra self re publication and Piet Schreuders’ Furore via Pierre.

    - went yesterday to the Social Pasta: Maki, Kajsa, Alex (the rich one), Bearen and Momoko were cooking while we watched 2 films: one 20 minutes documentary by les Blanks ‘Werner Herzog eats his shoes’ (YouTube 1, 2) and Errol Morris’ film: Gates of Heaven. Amazing combination and the food as usual was incredible!. And they all had really nice shoes…
    * the documentary is a beautiful support and encouragement at self initiated projects.

    - Werner Herzog: “I am more and more convinced that the only alternative to film making is cooking. Maybe there’s another alternative which is walking”.
    He also said “I don’t believe you have the guts (to make your film), but if you do it, I come to brooklyn eat my shoes when you show the film”.



  3. The mini versions

    October 07, 2008

    This morning discussing with Amandine and Anna we came across a couple of buildings which had a mini version of them beforhand their construction - either trough a natural research process or simply because investors were too scared of the novelty the building could represent and the consequent impact on the landscape…


    The Barbican, by suburbanslice

    the Golden Lane estate, by stevecadman

    Barbican & the Golden Lane estate
    Barbican is a well known huge and massive architecture programme in the center of London; after World War 2, a large bombed area has been converted into this utopian project which was reconsidering the needs of modern humans in a urban environnement. Both Barbican and Golden Lane Estate were designed by architects Chamberlin, Powell and Bon, with obvious Corbusian influences. Golden Lane is of course the mini version (somehow) of the Barbican and came earlier (1957, 1969).


    Trevelyan by Jamie Barras


    Keeling house by joseph beuys hat

    Keeling House & Trevelyan House
    Denys Lasdun designed both of them; they were built between 1957 and 1959. Keeling house is a 4 blocks of maisonettes arranged around a central service tower. In 1952, a rougher similar construction has been built, apparently more dedicated to the working class.


    Balfron Tower, by Richard Parmiter


    Trellick Tower, by Cristiano Betta

    Trellick Tower & Balfron Tower
    I’ve been introduced to those two by Ryan Gander trough his amazing loose association lectures series. When confronted with the volume of the tower designed by Ernõ Goldfinger, investors were scared this would be like a scar in the landscape (London does not have a lot of skyscraper, especially atthat time). They managed to get a smaller version built in East London, to get an impression of how it would be build.

    * Process wise:
    This pre production makes me think that for each of the website i am delivering there would be one, officially working, to test case the pertinence of the design and concpets as well as the solidity of the code.

    * More information on the building:
    Balfron Tower
    Trelick Tower
    Keeling House
    Golden Lane Estate
    Barbican Estate



  4. The hackable invisible structures

    October 07, 2008

    This post is made of a few short connection in between 3 things; all of them are linked to notions like future proof, open source and hackability.

    hackable-structures.jpg
    (center picture: Nicolas Nova; left: Assembling, right: Miltos Manetas )

    * This morning i’ve read a very nice post by Nicolas (Pasta & Vinegar); titled buildings as flows and process, it shows a couple of pipes in the streets of North America which are depicting the infrastructure of the building itself.

    * Somehow it reminded me of that post i wrote on Assembling about ‘The beauty of designing the underlying structure’ which somehow linked a large biro drawing by Amandine, a carpet by Britta Boehne, a series of paintings by Milto Manetas and my reflections on my own practice.

    * This morning i was also dwelving in R-Echos archives and came across this post (original post is here): Social Networks Evil Twin Attacks which depicts an attack made on an individual using the social networks in vogue with the web 2.0, Markus the other day was speaking about this kind of concerns and issues with services like Facebook.



  5. Homepage

    October 05, 2008

    * after much trials, hesitations, and changes, i decided to radically simplify http://jeromerigaud.com - it now acts mainly as a contact hub which dispatch then links and information.



  6. Nice reading this morning

    October 04, 2008

    ● I quite like the final take on this matter; it emphasize a side of the  often criticised web2.0 not that often underlined: the recommandation principle where you trust your friend.

    Do we get the blogs we deserve? We vote by click, after all. Perhaps we shouldnt look at all those top 10 lists and Britney Spears photos. Successful blogs, such as Zen Habits, tend to balance the more fast-food type posts with longer, more complex ideas that will presumably keep readers coming back—although there are plenty of people who make a living posting dubious crap. Perhaps the escape route out of a hit-driven blogosphere is all of our newfound “friends.” The Internet has always been very good at counting page views but not so great at assigning value to whats actually in those pages. Facebook, FriendFeed, StumbleUpon, and the sharing feature of Google Reader have their annoying, nudgy aspects, but they allow us to rely on one another to sort out what is interesting and worthy. Put it on a T-shirt: Friends Dont Let Friends Read Bad Content.
    How do bloggers make money? - By Michael Agger - Slate Magazine

    (Via Design Notes)



  7. Twitter & the information layers (you could peel)

    October 03, 2008

    this morning i received the newsletter of Twitter:

    Hacking The Debate

    Tonight we expect the most activity Twitter has ever seen as
    vice presidential hopefuls Sarah Palin and Joe Biden debate live
    from Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri. The folks at
    Current TV are making history by broadcasting Twitter updates on
    live television during this debate. Will you see your updates on
    television? Be sure to tune in or watch the streaming version of
    Current TV’s “Hack The Debate II” at http://current.com/debate

    * it is really nice to see a web service based on short and unobstrusive discussions enabling the realtime comments on a Tv show (streamed) - it would be nice to see this happening on a larger TV show - could it be the rebirth of TV? You could select if you want to see BBC with or without comments… I wonder what it would be like.

    ** i also found (via a pingbacktracking) a link to a nice archive of McLuhan broadcasted speech and interview on CBC (via Art Writing / Gemma Parse)

    *** that’s another kind of Electronic Presence



  8. The bizarre feeling of autodeletion…

    October 01, 2008

    i knew it…
    i shouldn’t have tested this code live…

    basically it is a mini ftp manager written in PHP
    This morning i was working on the account deletion scripts

    and tested…
    and deleted…

    when i realised what i did i had the very bizarre impression of the end of a world… something not really painful (i have backup) but annoying
    Somehow: the code deleted itself, a bit like a suicide.

    * I’m in front of the computer chatting with Pierre about that feeling of autodeltion because of my lack of adequate skills.



  9. Electronest Aggregated & Electronic Presence

    September 16, 2008

    Today we published 2 new pages on the Electronest website:
    Electronest Aggregated and Electronic Presence.
    Both are resulting from frustration; Electronest Aggregated allow visitors to have a more global perception of our different website (there’s still tons of work to be done to make the experience smoother). Electronic Presence will be used as a ressource page on the concept of Electronic Presence.



  10. World Wide Web, Sharing and the Internet

    September 10, 2008

    lhc2.jpg

    A very interresting set of radio show on BBC about the creation of CERN; CERN happens to be also the place where World Wide Web has been invented, incidentally when one of the laboratory needed to access informations dispatched on many different computers - from then Gopher quickly got replaced. History will ever remember Sir Tim Berners Lee. It quickly has been legally declared Public Domain - CERN could then not claim ownership but nobody else either.
    There’s a very nice part of it which summarize quite perfectly the generosity behind the open source, and its root one can still find in the Science community.

    I quite love this quote: Francis Farley

    This [the Internet] usefull thing was a totally unexpected byproduct; you cannot plan the usefull part of science. What you can only do is to support the right guys let them do what they think is important - and out of that will come usefull applications

    * thanks to Dodeckahedron for pointing out to me that today (10th september 2008) was the frist beam at CERN.

    ** picture: The Globe of Innovation in the morning. The wooden globe is a structure originally built for Switzerland’s national exhibition, Expo’02, and is 40 meters wide, 27 meters tall. (Maximilien Brice; Claudia Marcelloni, © CERN) via BostonGlobe.