...PERFECT...!.../TEXT AND LINK/...MANIK...MARCH...2011...
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: dave miller 
  To: NetBehaviour for networked distributed creativity 
  Sent: Monday, March 28, 2011 4:39 PM
  Subject: Re: [NetBehaviour] designer's abject revenge (and message reposting)


  and so here's a drawing I've just done:


  http://davemiller.org/drawings/nuclear/100000_times_normal.png


  dave


  On 28 March 2011 14:55, dave miller <[email protected]> wrote:

    I agree - Alan your posts are an absolute pleasure and I understand the 
importance of posting often to the list, to show your ideas, work in progress, 
to get feedback and appreciation, and hopefully trigger ideas in other people, 
amongst other reasons.


    I see this place as a community which shares interests and work, and helps 
each other to go forward creatively, and you are hugely important to this 
community.


    I know how it feels when I post something and I get no response. It's not 
that I want praise particularly, I just want to share things when I've made 
them. But the nature of the list is that often people dont see the work, they 
miss it, or it doesn't make an impression. It doesn't matter I think.


    Anyway, I look forward to your posts, so please keep them coming!


    dave





    On 27 March 2011 22:06, Michael Szpakowski <[email protected]> wrote:

            Alan - please don't concern yourself one jot about how much you 
post. The more the better It's not as if the list can only sustain a certain 
number of posts!
            warmest wishes
            michael

            --- On Sun, 3/27/11, Alan Sondheim <[email protected]> wrote:


              From: Alan Sondheim <[email protected]>
              Subject: [NetBehaviour] designer's abject revenge (and message re 
posting)
              To: [email protected]
              Date: Sunday, March 27, 2011, 10:00 PM





              designer's abject revenge

              http://www.alansondheim.org/libya.mov (takes a minute to load)

              first it appeared wounded or blown apart,
              then almost cartoon-like but sutured together
              or trying to re-establish itself as life,
              whatever that might be, covering up the mesh,
              or skeins, or even nodes, it was hard to tell,
              there had to be something to it, something
              that had the scent of permanency or perhaps
              a permanent odor, as blood and bruises
              tend to go the spectral length, running from
              one liquid color to another


              (I've been clearly posting too much and will cut back to at most 
one a day - 
              apologies. My work has been mainly online of course, but I feel 
I've gotten a 
              bit out of control. It's been a hard past few months (but that's 
no excuse 
              etc.).)
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