Tools to Fight Boredom: FLOSS and GNU/Linux for Artists Working in the
Field of Generative Music and Software Art.
New Article by Marloes de Valk.

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Keywords: software art, generative music, Free/Libre/Open Source
Software, artistic practice, artistic toolkit, GNU/Linux

This article takes a look at the impact the operating system,
programming languages and software, as a whole, have on the practice of
artists working in the field of generative music and software art.
Proprietary operating systems lack the openness needed to create an
environment that fulfills the specific needs of artists and musicians
who program and programmers who produce art and music. “Hackability”,
the possibility to take things apart, modify, adjust, and improve, is an
ever more important aspect that software artists and electronic
musicians seek to include in their production environment. GNU/Linux and
Free/Libre/Open Source Software (FLOSS) possess this feature, and many
more, providing artists with a truly creative and open environment, free
of unnecessary technical limitations, predetermined interaction, lack of
control over the work environment and dependence on software companies.

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The article has been published in Volume 28, Issue 1, 2009 of the
Contemporary Music Review journal. This issue, “Generative Music”, has
been edited by Nick Collins and Andrew R. Brown. It features other
articles from Karen Collins, Andrew R. Brown, Andrew Sorensen, Robert
Rowe, Palle Dahlstedt, Margaret Schedel, Alison Rootberg , Paul Berg and
Nick Collins.

You can purchase the journal here:
http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=g909058006~db=arts
or preview the article online on Marloes’ website:
http://no.systmz.goto10.org/tools-to-fight-boredom.html

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