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October 12, 2005

Locative Space: Situated and Interconnected

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From my NetPublics blog

While traditionally maps may have been a a form of visual knowledge generated by and for Imperial ideology, new practices of information technology begin to open up the practice of mapping to civic society.

My tracklog and my social network amount to a marketer's dream. To know where I am, is to know how to sell [to] me. This has led critics like Holmes and Crandall, to accuse locative media of being, in Andreas Broekman's terms , the avant garde of the Control Society.

Yet, as Deleuze states, "there is no need to fear or hope, but only to look for new weapons".

October 9, 2005

Wireless Futures and Aura

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Hosted at the Science Museum’s Dana Centre in London on October 4th, the Cybersalon's Wireless Futures event was a day of presentation, demonstration, and debate into the nature, impact and potential of the wireless technologies Internet and mobile telecommunications. I was invited to present the wireless blimp project I'm working on for ISEA 2006, as well as to join a public panel debate exploring social, cultural and political aspects of a wireless future along with Dooeun Choi (curator Art Center Nabi, Seoul, Korea), Peter Cochrane (Co-founder Concept Labs and former CTO of British Telecom, Bob Horwitz (Co-ordinator Open Spectrum International, Prague), Tapio Mäkelä (a researcher and media artist from Helsinki), Adam Hyde (a new media artist from New Zealand) and Francis McKee (Head of Digital Arts and New Media at the Centre for Contemporary Art in Glasgow). The event was webstreamed and it will be archived later this week, at which piont I'll add a link to this post.

In addition to the discourse, I had the chance to play with some mobile art projects like Steve Symons' Aura, "a sonic multi-user augmented reality that allows users to effect a personal audio landscape through their actions within a defined space". I'd played with Aura back in March 04 at Futuresonic, (which actually featured one of the first and most exciting of our Locative Media Workshops). Steve also wrote about the project in this text of locative-type projects that I edited last year as well.

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October 5, 2005

Hive Networks and Emergence

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At the World Summit on Free Information Infrastructures, Community wireless network activist, Julian Priest (of informal.org, and author of the seminal State of Wireless Networking in London) speaks here (in the attached Quicktime movie) about Alexi Blinov's project Hive Network in which he has modified an off-the-shelf ASUS, Linux access point to become a stand alone streaming media device, capable of organizing with other sich devices into authomous ad-hoc networks.

As Jo-Anne Green from Networked Performance mentioned in a recent blog entry on this very project, "[this] group of indpendent programmers, artists and electronics specialists imagine swarms of intelligent network devices which all collaborate, facilitate media applications such as audio and video streaming and create clouds of free bandwidth using ad-hoc networking protocols."

This social potential of self organizing ad-hoc networks (as discussed in Stephen Johnson's book 'Emergence') sets my imagination adrift. Some years ago I worked with a 3D artist on an unrealized biomimetic locative media project, that was to have been inspired by the concept of chemotaxsis (by which ants map space through random emergent behavour, so as to find their way toward a source of food). The ideas were expressed in a talk, that I've just discovered, was blogged on the October 17th entry of Andreapolli's Weblog.

Alexi's Hive Network appeals to some anarcho-libertarian faith some media activists share in adhocracy, according to which social order could somehow emerges from chaos. My (sometime) almost mystical belief in this concept seems to emerge through what I've experienced in my own creative process, which works very much like this. But, I suppose, I have much less experience of this kind of thing at the level of complex social systems (with the glaring exception of Burning Man)

1.4 meg Quicktime movie: Download file

Schuyler Earle on the Global Free Map

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At this year's World Summit on Free Information Infrastructures event in London U.K., Schuyler Earle, co-author of Mapping Hacks, speaks in this one minute video clip on the Global Free Map Movement. Using the metaphor of Wikipedia, he describes how (self/community appointed?) experts in a given field would theoretically manage geodata for given regions of space.

1 Meg Quicktime movie: Download file