Re: nettime Notes on the Politics of Software Culture

2003-09-06 Thread John Hopkins
This is great openning for discussion for both N5M and AE
participants who deal with this topic as thay share some
commonalities but tend to take further more political (N5M) or economical
...snip
websites...avoiding to dig deeper into the messy and fuzzy work of geeks
and nerds who lack sence of selfpromotion.

Few projects like CCC¥s Blinkenlights manage to get the idea of creative
use of IT across, but still somehow miss on being a subject of new media
theorists/critics.

How can this situation be changed or inverted? Can computer/media art
community stop being self-referential and emerge itself in the already
established IT community/media platforms, rather than being ecstatic
(with years of delay) with phenomenas like open source, p2p, wirelles?

Hej Zeljko

There are always, thank god, significant activities that don't make 
the (Mac)spotLight -- don't forget that by actual choice, or by the 
simple human idiosyncracy of individuals who don't run along with the 
highly socialized trends of the culture spectacle (of which all the 
organs you mentioned are really collected -- some more conscious than 
others) -- there are many people who will never surface in the PR 
realm.  Like one of the concepts around the TAZ, avoid that surficial 
social visibility (because the western culture is fundamentally 
obsessed with surfaces and objects (materialism) -- being in its 
view, under observation, literally, will CHANGE THE OUTCOME OF THAT 
WHICH IS OBSERVED!)  Basic quantum. Why not create movements 
(experiments) on the premise that they run without that intervention, 
so, out of that Sight.  With only the lively participants engaged 
with each other.

Always, the most humane-ly productive critical engagement occurs at 
the granular level of human-to-human, regardless of the surrounding 
social flow (festival or at home in a bar or at academic conference 
or bunkered down in the squat).

Many of the 'trends' that are happening 'now' like wi-fi, etc are 
re-deployments of the rising Surveillance Society anyway.  Capturing 
the surfaces that it is so attracted to -- meanwhile, lives go on, 
deeper than that surface view can ever deconvolve.

Maybe it's better to not invert an old, tired equation, but to simply 
make a new descriptive system, a new way.

Cheers
John
-- 
-~
tech-no-mad : hypnostatic
domain: http://neoscenes.net
mobile: +1 303 859 0689
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Re: nettime Notes on the Politics of Software Culture

2003-09-05 Thread Zeljko Blace
This is great openning for discussion for both N5M and AE
participants who deal with this topic as thay share some
commonalities but tend to take further more political (N5M) or economical
(AE) argumentation.

Additionaly it would be interesting to reflect on the impact of new media
Art/Cultural practices on software industry, media and software
communities (like gloabal free software community or more introvert
ones like demo scene).
Personally I got interested in idea after seeing Linux Journal #107
cover (first art installation on the cover) and than reading inside a
review of FrequencyClock of r a d i o q u a l i a.

Frequency of media/tech art projects getting to the ICT news portals like
Slashdot is still very low (Free Radio Linux, Feral Robotic Dogs,
Blinkenlights, Illegal Art project... any others recently?).
In the same time while Runme.org lists more than 150 projects
(http://runme.org/news/read/+10/) Freshmeat lists 82 projects in Art
category (with 2/3 of it being CSound frontends, midi and fractall
applets http://freshmeat.net/browse/901/?topic_id=901).

Media art festivals/galleries tend to go easy way buy looking for (or
commisioning) work in known outposts like established media-labs (MIT and
V2_lab being the popular choices for AE), art mailing lists and
websites...avoiding to dig deeper into the messy and fuzzy work of geeks
and nerds who lack sence of selfpromotion.

Few projects like CCC´s Blinkenlights manage to get the idea of creative
use of IT across, but still somehow miss on being a subject of new media
theorists/critics.

How can this situation be changed or inverted? Can computer/media art
community stop being self-referential and emerge itself in the already
established IT community/media platforms, rather than being ecstatic
(with years of delay) with phenomenas like open source, p2p, wirelles?

CU @ { AE | N5M }

On Thu, 4 Sep 2003, Andreas Broeckmann wrote:

 [the essay below was written for the upcoming Next5Minutes4 reader;
 as it scans the field that will also be the topic of the ars
 electronica starting on saturday, i thought it might be timely to
 post it here; -ab]


 Notes on the Politics of Software Culture

 Andreas Broeckmann

 Software has, over the last few years, increasingly come into view as
 a cultural technique whose social and political impact ought to be
 studied carefully. To the extent that social processes rely on
 software for their execution - from systems of e-government and
 net-based education, online banking and shopping, to the organisation
 of social groups and movements -, it is necessary to understand the
 procedural specificities of the computer programmes employed, and the
 cultural and political 'rules' coded into them. The 'killer apps' of
 tomorrow may, as Howard Rheingold claims, not be 'hardware devices or
 software programs but social practices'. Yet, these social practices
 will increasingly be determined by software configurations of the
 available infrastructure and the degrees and types of latitude that
 they offer.

 Aspects of software culture - a terrain that encompasses software
 development as well as the wide and multi-facetted field of software
 application - are being articulated by speculative and artistic
 software projects which this text will try to cover in a necessarily
 cursory, introductory fashion.

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