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  1. Kati London

    For her work in both real world games and the early Internet of Things, Kati was named one of the “Top 35 Innovators Under 35” by MIT's Technology Review Magazine (2010), “Top 100 Most Creative People in Business” by Fast Company Magazine (2011), and awarded the World Technology Network award in Entertainment (2011). She teaches the graduate course “Persuasive Technology: Designing the Human" at NYU's ITP, and frequently speaks on online and offline engagement, economies, games, and sensors.

    Her work has been covered by Businessweek, the New York Times, Wired, National Geographic, and Glamour Magazine, among others. She has worked with clients including the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Foursquare, the United Kingdom's Department for Transport, the BBC, Channel 4, the Carnegie Institute, Disney Imagineering, Nike, Discovery Channel, CBS, MTV, and the Peter G. Peterson Foundation. Her work is represented in the permanent collection of MOMA and has been exhibited at the Design Museum of London and Museum of Science & Industry.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 05.07.2013 - 20:21

  2. Laila El-Haddad

    Laila El-Haddad

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 05.07.2013 - 20:23

  3. Thomas Duc

    Thomas Duc is an artist living in New York. His work focuses on current media and their poetics. He has exhibited in the United States, Brazil and France. Looking for the political in the technical, the global in the political, he fosters meaningful spaces of play in reality. Seeing no border between engineering and art, he worked for atualidade (a brazilian newspaper) both as caricaturist and information architect until 2003, for the French national center of Research (CNRS,brain development department) until 2005, for a circus as a performer, and is nowadays part of the Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics. (Source: http://www.youarenothere.org/about)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 05.07.2013 - 20:24

  4. Franz Thalmair

    Franz Thalmair is an independent art critic and curator working primarily in the field of contemporary and media art. He studied Romance Philology and Linguistics at the Universities of Salzburg, Paris and Barcelona and holds a Ph.D. in Textlinguistics/Semiotics from the University of Salzburg. His work focuses on the intersections between language, art and technology, electronic literature, conceptual Internet-based art, site-specific art as well as visual arts practice in the public realm. Ultimately he explores the transfer of Internet-based art from the virtual to the real space. Currently based in Vienna/Austria, he co-founded CONT3XT.NET in 2006 with Michael Kargl (aka carlos katastrofsky) and Sabine Hochrieser. Run as a collaborative platform for the discussion and presentation of issues related to media art, projects include the book "Circulating Contexts: CURATING MEDIA/NET/ART" and exhibition.

    Source: CRUMB

    Scott Rettberg - 08.07.2013 - 20:44

  5. Stig Andreassen

    Affiliated to University of Bergen, a graduate student in the Digital Culture program per 2013. 

    Natalia Fedorova - 14.08.2013 - 13:36

  6. R. Luke DuBois

    R. Luke DuBois is a composer, artist, and performer who explores the temporal, verbal, and visual structures of cultural and personal ephemera. He holds a doctorate in music composition from Columbia University, and has lectured and taught worldwide on interactive sound and video performance. He has collaborated on interactive performance, installation, and music production work with many artists and organizations including Toni Dove, Todd Reynolds, Jamie Jewett, Bora Yoon, Michael Joaquin Grey, Matthew Ritchie, Elliott Sharp, Michael Gordon, Maya Lin, Bang on a Can, Engine 27, Harvestworks, and LEMUR, and was the director of the Princeton Laptop Orchestra for its 2007 season.

    Alvaro Seica - 16.08.2013 - 09:16

  7. Anastasia Salter

    Booting up Rise of the Dragon for the first time, my parents and I huddled around our tiny new computer and spent hours just trying to get out of the first screen: a static, comic book-style image of an apartment room where our avatar “Blade Hunter” was preparing himself for his task of saving the world from horrible death by mutation. Most of all, I remember the death scenes—comic sequences where we took a drink from the water fountain and ended up mutated and dead or shot in an alley or otherwise eliminated, over and over again. Now I log on to World of Warcraft—still cartoon graphics, but now 3-D, beautifully realized, huge worlds where my avatar is no longer alone, and thanks to the Web, we have whole communities of elves and trolls and gnomes running around killing each other.

    Anastasia Salter - 20.08.2013 - 16:29

  8. Agnieszka Przybyszewska

    Works at the Department of Theory of Literature at the University of Lodz in Poland, where she specialises in the theory and history of literature, electronic literature and the history and theory of flamenco.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 23.08.2013 - 10:23

  9. Kyle Rimkus

    Kyle Rimkus is the Preservation Librarian and an Assistant Professor of Library Administration at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC), where he is responsible for articulating and leading the implementation of a comprehensive library-wide strategy for preserving digital collections. Before joining the UIUC Library in 2012, he was Head of Digital Scholarship and Programs at the University of Miami Libraries and Project Coordinator for the Digital Library of the Caribbean at Florida International University. Kyle has an M.S. in Library and Information Science and an M.A. in French Studies from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and a B.A. in Germanic Studies from the University of Illinois at Chicago.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 23.08.2013 - 10:31

  10. Belén Gache

    Belén Gache (Buenos Aires, 1960) is a Spanish-Argentinian novelist and experimental writer.[1] Of Spanish and Gibraltarian descent, she was born in Buenos Aires. She lives in Madrid. She graduated from the University of Buenos Aires were she was professor in narratology and literary theory. Her work has diversified into different literary forms. Departing from narrative, she became a pioneer of electronic literature producing since 1996 various forms of expanded and hypertextual writings. (Source: Wikipedia)

    Maya Zalbidea - 23.08.2013 - 11:30

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