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  1. Norangsdalen

    Norangsdalen

    Scott Rettberg - 03.11.2012 - 12:57

  2. Kliniken

    Kliniken

    Scott Rettberg - 03.11.2012 - 13:04

  3. Skogen

    Skogen

    Scott Rettberg - 03.11.2012 - 17:50

  4. The Dead

    An animated poem version of Billy Collins' "The Dead".

    Jeneen Naji - 08.01.2013 - 15:20

  5. Croatian Tales of Long Ago

    Croatian Tales of Long Ago

    Scott Rettberg - 08.01.2013 - 21:21

  6. Opuscula

    "Opuscula" is a different interactive electronic poem which you may explore in several ways. Inside the poem you will find four different poems with various nodes of connections to each other: An interactive poem, a ParaPoem, and two poems to be read in linear form. The interactive Poem is an animated sequence of moving and floating words illustrated by graphical effects on the screen. You as the reader will interact with the poem, by clicking on words as they appear on the screen through your reading. When you click these words and lines, random text lines conceptually connected to the word/line you clicked will be sent to create your own poem, the ParaPoem, in a transparent field at the bottom of the screen. These lines are also links which (dependent on the meaning of the line) randomly may take you to a stanza belonging to one of the two linear poems (behind the interactive and the ParaPoem's interface), to a quote, or to a word definition which all will give new meaning to the link you clicked and the poems you read. The Parapoem will be different each time you create it and can be read alone, or as a part of the other poems.

    (Source: DAC 1999 Author's abstract)

    Scott Rettberg - 19.01.2013 - 13:38

  7. Snow Queen

    Snow Queen, a debut videopoem by Machine Libertine, is a combination of masculine poetry «Poison Tree» by William Blake contrasted to mechanic female MacOS voice and Sever group remix of Souzfilm animation «Snow Queen» (1957). The cubist imagery of the Snow Queen's realm evokes parallels with the realm of the digital that is as unstable as the icicles that Key composes the word "eternity" from.

    Natalia Fedorova - 26.01.2013 - 15:08

  8. Merz-i

    For E-Poetry 2007, i explore the multiple understandings of the PiM's (Personal Investigation Material). The PiM's as Merz-i / Merz-i or as factor i+) is an interactive visual art film, made from "letters & signs",  called i+D/ signs (information + definition / sign). Merz-i or factor i+), associated with a internet engine, allow a  ®≠Make, a re/reading(s) to make in a clash, as a surging opposition ? (http://www.epoetry2007.net/artists/oeuvres/veyrat/merzi.html)

    Scott Rettberg - 30.01.2013 - 01:54

  9. Sphiros

    Sphiros presents the fictional tale of what happens when a timequake creates a world that really is open source. It is staged in a modified version of the WithinSpace interface (created by net artist Jason Nelson) for the Adobe Flash platform.

    This is an exercise in arrangement -- most of its elements are ripped and remixed from a variety of sources both print and web; some are original.

    Each layer of Sphiros can be populated by any content -- text, image, video, sound, Flash animation, webpage, etc. These layers are then stacked on top of each other. A combination of scaling and transparency allows the user to move through the piece.

    Initially, Sphiros was presented in a web-distributed, mouse-driven format. For the installation at AI.ELO, the piece makes use of low-cost headtracking techniques. Users don a pair of infrared LED glasses and stand in front of a screen where a Nintendo WiiMote acts as an infrared camera. A combination of open-source and custom software translates the position of a user in realspace into a position inside of Sphiros.

    This version of Sphiros is set to 'Se Izst' by Icelandic wunderband, Sigur Rós.

    Scott Rettberg - 11.04.2013 - 12:30

  10. Magic-Tree

    magic-tree is an interactive online narrative first published on the web in 2001, commissioned by Paul Bonaventura of the Laboratory at the Ruskin School, Oxford.

    The website uses animation, video, audio and printed text and was designed for the fastest internet connection of the time - 56K. At launch, a limited edition of boxes containing physical components of the story we offered free. The boxes were perfumed and contained a crystal ‘magic-tree’ kit, several mint/chocolate twigs, a bag of soil and some cherry pips.

    In its story, as well as its form, magic-tree addresses questions about how we interact with web fiction.

    The site only works with Internet Explorer and requires Quicktime. It takes a few hours to complete the four chapters.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 29.06.2013 - 23:54

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