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  1. Paintbrush

    Paintbrush

    Alvaro Seica - 17.04.2015 - 17:11

  2. Photoshop

    Photoshop

    Alvaro Seica - 17.04.2015 - 17:12

  3. Sheldon Klein

    Sheldon Klein

    Alvaro Seica - 28.04.2015 - 21:12

  4. Hologram (Multicolor WL transmission)

    Holography is the science and practice of making holograms, which are normally encodings of light fields rather than of images formed by a lens. Holograms are usually intended for displaying three-dimensional images. The holographic recording itself is not an image; it consists of an apparently random structure of varying intensity, density or surface profile. When it is suitably lit, the original light field is recreated and the view of the objects that used to be in it changes as the position and orientation of the viewer changes, as if the objects were still there.

    Alvaro Seica - 04.05.2015 - 15:07

  5. LED Display

    An LED display is a flat panel display, which uses an array of light-emitting diodes as pixels for a video display. Their brightness allows them to be used outdoors in store signs and billboards, and in recent years they have also become commonly used in destination signs on public transport vehicles.

    Alvaro Seica - 04.05.2015 - 16:29

  6. DIASTEXT

    Hartman's DIASTEXT appears to have been written in C and distributed as a DOS executable file (versions of which can be found online as of this writing).

    (Source: John Vincler, ELD, 2010: http://directory.eliterature.org/node/320)

    Alvaro Seica - 08.05.2015 - 19:19

  7. Hannah Ackermans

    Hannah Ackermans is a PhD candidate in Digital Culture at the University of Bergen in Norway. Ackermans researches the social and technological aspects of academic digital practices in the field of electronic literature, in order to provide insights into digital tools as theory-building methodologies in the humanities. In addition to their research and teaching record in electronic literature and digital humanities, Ackermans was co-director of the Digital Humanities Network at the University of Bergen throughout 2019 and is a member of the ELMCIP Knowledge Base editorial board.

    Hannah Ackermans - 04.08.2015 - 10:55

  8. Zenon Fajfer

    Zenon Fajfer (1970), a Polish poet, playwright, one of the best know representatives of avant-garde in contemporary Polish literature. He is a creator and theoretician of liberature, a new literary genre he proposed to describe the kind of work which unites the word with the deliberately shaped space of the book, as well as a new poetic form called “the emanational poem,” in which he creates invisible, multidimensional, simultaneous texts. His books often take unconventional shapes, and his poems frequently utilise non-verbal gestures and material metaphors. He also uses the new media, especially in his kinetic poems and poetic hypertexts. He is the author of works initiating the phenomenon of liberature: a triptych Oka-leczenie (Mute-I-Late, 2000, 2009) and (O)patrzenie (Ga(u)ze, 2003), written jointly with Katarzyna Bazarnik; the poem-in-a-bottle Spoglądając Przez Ozonową Dziurę (Detect Ozone Whole Nearby, 2004), a bilingual multimedia poetry volume dwadzieścia jeden liter/ten letters (2010), Liberature or Total Literature.

    Hannah Ackermans - 21.09.2015 - 12:24

  9. Animated GIF

    Basic animation was added to the GIF89a spec via the Graphics Control Extension (GCE), which allows various images (frames) in the file to be painted with time delays. An animated GIF file comprises a number of frames that are displayed in succession, each introduced by its own GCE, which gives the time delay to wait after the frame is drawn. Global information at the start of the file applies by default to all frames. The data is stream-oriented, so the file-offset of the start of each GCE depends on the length of preceding data. Within each frame the LZW-coded image data is arranged in sub-blocks of up to 255 bytes; the size of each sub-block is declared by the byte that precedes it.

    Scott Rettberg - 21.10.2015 - 13:55

  10. Email

    Electronic mail, most commonly called email or e-mail since around 1993, is a method of exchanging digital messages from an author to one or more recipients. Email operates across the Internet or other computer networks.

    Some early email systems required the author and the recipient to both be online at the same time, in common with instant messaging. Today's email systems are based on a store-and-forward model. Email servers accept, forward, deliver, and store messages. Neither the users nor their computers are required to be online simultaneously; they need connect only briefly, typically to a mail server, for as long as it takes to send or receive messages.

    Historically, the term electronic mail was used generically for any electronic document transmission. For example, several writers in the early 1970s used the term to describe fax document transmission. As a result, it is difficult to find the first citation for the use of the term with the more specific meaning it has today.

    Scott Rettberg - 21.10.2015 - 14:07

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