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  1. Truthology

    Truthology is a digital poem, created by Yohanna Joseph Waliya. He uses HTML 5 as a platform to showcase his work where animation is a key feature to his poem.

    Yohanna Joseph Waliya - 10.04.2019 - 05:15

  2. ZeroDeath

    ZeroDeath is a digital poetry created by Yohanna Joseph Waliya, He uses HTML as his platform to potrai his poetry. Floating animations of binary code and colours are to be seen in the background.  

    Yohanna Joseph Waliya - 10.04.2019 - 05:18

  3. Eververse

    Eververse is a project which synthesises perspectives from disciplines in the humanities and sciences to develop critical and creative explorations of poetry and poetic identity in the digital age. Eververse sends biometric data from a fitness tracking device worn by the poet to its custom-built poetry generator. This generator utilises NLG techniques to output poetic text published in real time, and 24/7, on the Eververse website.

    Justin Tonra - 12.06.2019 - 12:59

  4. Gladiator Simulator

    The gladiator Spiculus enters the arena one last time in this text-based simulator. Armed with a sword and shield, he fights gladiator after gladiator until he is killed. The character Spiculus is inspired by one of the most famous gladiators of the 1st century AD Rome. Spiculus won many great battles and was well-known by audiences. He was particularly admired by the emperor Nero who rewarded him with palaces and riches for his heroics.
    (Source: Author's description)

    Filip Falk - 18.07.2019 - 21:22

  5. Hologram Will

    "Hologram Will" is an interactive science fiction game. Businessman and millionaire David Mann has passed away, but before his death he recorded a hologram that acts as his will and testament. The hologram has been given to one of his heirs who has become the will's executor. The player can choose between three different heirs who each has their own unique message recorded for them. The inheritance consists of several rare and valuable items collected by Mann, in addition to company shares. As the executor, the player can also increase their inheritance by claiming the other heir's shares. However, legal and other fees will be incurred during this process and can exceed the net benefits of the will, making this a costly affair. 
    (Source: Author's description)

    Filip Falk - 18.07.2019 - 21:50

  6. The Machine Learning Breakfast Club (netprov)

    Machine Learning Breakfast Club

    Summer School for Troubled Algorithms

    A Netprov (Aug 5-12, 2019)

    The Premise:

    When machine-learning AI are not performing up to expectations, there’s only one remedy: summer school! In this netprov, you will ask for help and offer solutions in the virtual teachers’ lounge for a motley crew of teachers in a summer school for recalcitrant underperforming artificial intelligence.

    A netprov in 3 turns.

    Netprov is online collaborative narrative or the voluntary healing of necessary relationships.

    Mark Marino - 06.08.2019 - 06:21

  7. Yuefu

    Yuefu is a poetry generation system using OpenAI’s GPT, a Generative Pre-Trained natural language model pretrained on Chinese newspapers, that is fine-tuned with classical Chinese poetry. The developers write in their paper describing the system that it does not use "human crafted rules or features," or "any additional neural components". The system can generate poems in various formal, classical styles.  

    The example shown is translated by Ru-Ping Cheng and Jeff Ding for the ChinAI newsletter. It is an example of Cang Tou Shi, a Chinese version of acrostic poems. "In this case," the translator explains, "the first words of each line form the title of the poem: 神经网络 (neural networks)." Some other examples of the system's output are shown in a preprint published by the system's creators, and a translation of a Chinese newspaper article (entered into ELMCIP) provides translations of more examples.  

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 18.09.2019 - 12:40

  8. Sometimes I am ...

    “Sometimes I am ...” is an interactive text/audio poetic that explores how language shapes our identity, how it can bring us together, and how it can set us on the periphery. How language and can make people and events visible and not visible. It asks the viewer/reader to consider both “What is invisible?” and “Who is invisible?”
    A beta version of “Sometimes I am …” was built in the summer of 2019 and was presented at the Media Festival and Conference of Electronic Literature in Cork, Ireland. The beta version can be viewed at http://bit.ly/iamyouare. The work was conceived of by Leanne Johnson (leannej) in collaboration with artist My Name Is Scot (audio) and Kevin MacMillan (developer).

    Leanne Johnson - 27.09.2019 - 00:19

  9. Afterwords(s): Take a Book/Leave a Book

    Afterwords(s): Take a Book/Leave a Book is a found poem series by Richard Holeton. As Holeton explained in his ELO 2019 presentation, the series was inspired by Joan Retallack's poem "Not a Cage" (1990), in which she recycled lines of text from books that she was discarding. Instead of using books from his personal library, Holeton sourced the texts from his local "take a book/leave a book" book sharing box. Each line of the poem is taken from the final passage of a different book. He completed the work over ten days, swapping out a new book each day, to create the finished 10-line poem.

    The print version of Afterword(s) appeared in print form in Forklift, Ohio #37 and the multimedia version was exhibited at the &Now 2018 Festival of Innovative Writing.

    Chelsea Miya - 27.10.2019 - 00:03

  10. Ring™ Log

    Ring™ Log is an experiment in speculative surveillance.

    Amazon's Ring™ doorbells are motion-activated high definition surveillance cameras. Once triggered, Ring™ cameras transmit video to the Ring™ app and Ring™ servers, where the video footage is preserved for future viewing.

    What happens when Amazon begins using AI object detection to identify, categorize, and report what the Ring™ camera sees?

    Imagine a year from now, Halloween night, October 31, 2020. What would Ring™ see? What would Ring™ report? And what happens when the program fails, as programs always do?

    Mark Sample - 28.10.2019 - 15:29

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