Search

Search content of the knowledge base.

The search found 5 results in 0.012 seconds.

Search results

  1. New Media Writing Forum

    A UK-based bulletin board designed to serve as a "hub for digital writers to share ideas, resources, and discussion."

    Established by Dreaming Methods in association with Bournemouth University, the New Media Writing Prize and Crissxross (award-winning digital writer Christine Wilks), the forum encourages the sharing of ideas, techniques and resources as well as general networking and discussion.

    (Source: New Media Writing Forum)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 04.04.2012 - 10:25

  2. ELMCIP Anthology of European Electronic Literature

    The ELMCIP Anthology of European Electronic Literature is an output from the ELMCIP researchers based at Blekinge Tekniska Högskola (Blekinge Institute of Technology) in Sweden. The anthology is intended to provide educators, students and the general public with a free curricular resource of electronic literary works produced in Europe. The works were selected, after an open call, based on four main criteria:

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 16.05.2012 - 11:06

  3. Writing the Web with RiTa and Javascript

    This workshop presented a hands-on introduction to the RiTa.js toolkit
    It is a toolkit for digital literature designed to work natively
    in web browsers.

    RiTa.js is an easy-to-use natural language library that provides simple
    procedural tools for experimenting with digital literature. The philosophy behind
    the toolkit is to be as simple and intuitive as possible, while still providing
    adequate flexibility for more advanced users. RiTa.js is written in 100%
    JavaScript and runs natively in popular web browsers. It is both free and opensource.

    (Source: Author's abstract, 2012 ELO Conference site)

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 14.06.2012 - 14:32

  4. Why ‘But is it e-lit?’ Is a Ridiculous Question: The Case for Online Journals as Organic, Evolving Works of Digital Literature

    Cordite Poetry Review, an Australian journal of poetry and poetics, was founded in 1997 as a print journal but since 2001 has appeared only online. Over the last ten years, as the magazine has grown in size and reach, the question of Cordite’s status as a journal has become more vexed. Can it be regarded as a ‘proper’ literary journal, in the way that other, offline journals are? Is it truly electronic, given the relative absence of works on the site that explore the possibilities of the online space? Or are these merely ridiculous questions, the posing of which reflects a pre-online hierarchy of prestige?

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 22.06.2012 - 16:37

  5. Contributos para uma Teoria Quântica do Cibertexto

    A number of epistemological assumptions of quantum theory in its approach to the natural world (virtuality/actuality, interaction observer/observed, unpredictability and statistical causality, wave-particle duality, the notion of information, etc.) are surprisingly close to the properties shown by the new digital textualities born with the computer age, and here generically referred to as «cybertext». The purpose of this paper is to explore a connection between the quantum model and the semiotic model, not so much to reveal a simple homology, but rather to suggest a unified vision underlying the approach to the various levels of reality (material, biological, mental, cultural and spiritual). This connection between the quantum view of matter and cybertext is terminally focused on unifying the triadic concepts of matter/energy/information with the key concepts of the semiotic triangle signifier/signified/meaning (or, in the domain of aesthetics, TAC: technology/art/consciousness).

    (Source: Author's abstract)

    Alvaro Seica - 10.10.2013 - 11:57