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  1. Caden Lovelace

    Caden Lovelace is a net artist, performer, writer and developer based in Falmouth, Cornwall. His recent works include the curatorial new-culture project ƒAULT, and the never-ending video-art site GIFDRIFT.BIZ. His interests include alt lit, internet culture, and non-literary digital text. He is emphatically not interested in high-technology nor in the techno-spectacular, preferring instead to focus on the understated, the one-off, the simple, and the secret.

    (Source: http://chercherletexte.org/fr/performance/the_fetch/)

    Scott Rettberg - 25.09.2013 - 11:59

  2. Gwen Le Cor

    Gwen Le Cor

    Arngeir Enåsen - 04.10.2013 - 11:39

  3. Aravind Enrique Adyanthaya

    Aravind Enrique Adyanthaya is a Puerto Rican writer, performer, and theater director. He is the founding artistic director of Casa Cruz de la Luna, an experimental theater company and cultural center based in an old house in the historical district of San Germán, Puerto Rico. He holds a PhD in theatre historiography from the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and an MD from the Mayo Medical School.

    (Source: Wikipedia)

    Scott Rettberg - 15.10.2013 - 14:29

  4. Nick Fulton

    Student-participant and researcher in CultureNet's Associate of Arts Degree in Culture and Technology. Author of reviews on works of electronic literature published on CultureNet's course-blog.

    Patricia Tomaszek - 06.02.2014 - 14:29

  5. Tan Lin

    Poet, novelist, filmmaker, and new media artist Tan Lin was born in Seattle to Chinese American parents from Shanghai. He earned a BA from Carleton College and an MA and a PhD from Columbia University. Lin’s work is tied to cultural and media studies in a mode of literature he defines as “ambient” literature, which draws on and samples source material from popular culture and the Internet to address issues involving copyright, plagiarism, and technology.

    (Source: The Poetry Foundation Tan Lin bio page)

    Scott Rettberg - 23.08.2014 - 09:42

  6. ALAMO

    ALAMO

    Jonathan Baillehache - 09.09.2014 - 00:47

  7. Flash

    Adobe Flash can find its origins back in some original software named FutureSplash Animator released in 1995. This project combined animated media with vector graphics to create an alternative for Java developers on the web.

    In 1996 this software was purchased by Macromedia. The words “Future” and “Splash” were combined to create the more familiar “Flash”. The whole software suite was devoted towards creating animations and dynamic content which could be published on the Internet. There wasn’t a whole lot of exciting possibilities until the ActionScript language was paired with the software.

    The released of Flash 4 in 1999 included an overhaul of the scripting language. Developers could target graphics on the screen and call functions to animate them throughout different frames. It’s arguable that ActionScript was one of the defining programming languages which eventually pushed Flash technology further into the mainstream. By now Flash Player was already somewhat popular and growing very quickly.

    Alvaro Seica - 23.03.2015 - 11:30

  8. Facebook

    The world's most popular social networking web site, Facebook enables users to connect with friends and family by sharing status updates, personal photos and other items of interest. Founder Mark Zuckerberg created Facebook in 2004 while a student at Harvard, designing the site as a means for other university students to communicate and to socialize online. The idea quickly spread from there and has become a global phenomenon, with more than 160 million users in the United States alone. (Source: Houston Cronicle)

    Elias Mikkelsen - 09.04.2015 - 14:57

  9. D. V. Lyubich

    D. V. Lyubich

    Alvaro Seica - 15.04.2015 - 16:58

  10. NEAT

    NEAT

    Alvaro Seica - 17.04.2015 - 16:16

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