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  1. Karen

    Karen's your new personal adviser, and she's more than happy to help you work through a few things in your life. Communicate with her through the app and she can call you any time, day or night. Over the course of a week or so, she asks you some questions about your outlook on the world to get an understanding of you. In fact, her questions are drawn from psychological profiling questionnaires. She – and the software – are profiling you and she gives you advice based on your answers. (Source: artist description)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 24.05.2022 - 21:04

  2. Sunspring

    In the wake of Google's AI Go victory, filmmaker Oscar Sharp turned to his technologist collaborator Ross Goodwin to build a machine that could write screenplays. They created "Jetson" and fueled him with hundreds of sci-fi TV and movie scripts. Building a team including Thomas Middleditch, star of HBO's Silicon Valley, they gave themselves 48 hours to shoot and edit whatever Jetson decided to write.  (Source: YouTube video description)

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 24.05.2022 - 21:18

  3. A 2020 Computer-Generated Text as a Posthuman Mode of Literature Production

    A central idea of posthumanism in a technological society is the actual transition of the human towards a post-human entity, the cyborg. This entanglement between humanity and technology can not only be found in – actual and fictional – cyborgs, but also in computer-generated textproduction. Through the close collaboration between human creativity and artificial intelligence, algorithmically facilitated writing is emerging as anart form that is proving promising for literary analysis in a posthuman context. This article will examine computer-generated fiction as a new,posthuman mode of text production and use poststructuralist and related theory – mainly Roland Barthes, Michel Foucault, and Susan Sontag – toexplore the implications that such forms hold for the roles of authors, readers, and that of literary critics and scholars.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 24.05.2022 - 21:21

  4. Just This Once

    An early computer-generated romance novel written in the style of author Jaqueline Susann.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 24.05.2022 - 21:30

  5. Botnik

    Botnik is a machine entertainment company run by comedy writers, using computers to remix text.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 24.05.2022 - 21:33

  6. Harry Potter and the Portrait of what Looked Like a Large Pile of Ash

    A three-page computer-generated story trained on the seven Harry Potter books., 

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 24.05.2022 - 21:34

  7. Progress

    A non-interactive HTML work based on progress bars and world number systems.

    Nick Montfort - 26.05.2022 - 08:19

  8. All-Singing

    A booklet about the beginning of the universe generated by a 256-character Perl script. It's a part of publisher Paper View Books' Pluriversalis collection.

    Nick Montfort - 26.05.2022 - 08:26

  9. Cloud Poems

    Rosenblatt, a Dutch-American writer, designer, and artist, devises a creation of cloud-gazing intensity. Through an interwoven quilt of poetry and sky, Ella accomplishes, in our view, two opposing goals at the same exact moment. Gorgeously constructed and written, this project offers the reader a period of respite and calm. In today’s world of screen time and hyper-connectedness, where attention has become a commodity and our lives are spent stressfully indoors, this is no small feat. And yet, like any good poem, these “Cloud Poems” are calls to action. Mesmerizing in their quiet energy, they ask us to take responsibility for what we give our attention to. As Thomas Merton writes, “I myself am part of the weather and part of the climate and part of the place, and a day in which I have not shared truly in all this is no day at all.” Ella Rosenblatt’s “Cloud Poems” tell us, in essence, to look up. 

    [Source: Kira Homsher and John Darcy's Fall 2020 Editors' Note of The New River.]

    Amanda Hodes - 07.06.2022 - 20:20

  10. Infinite Worries Bash

    Infinite Worries Bash is a participatory experience consisting of recorded worries collected from hundreds of people and presented as part of a continuous audio portrait emanating from a virtual piñata-inspired sculpture.

    Tapping the screen or clicking the mouse will make a virtual stick smack a 3D rendered sculpture on screen. A direct hit triggers the playback of worries collected from the American public since the 2016 election.

    [Source: The New River, edited by contributor.]

    Amanda Hodes - 07.06.2022 - 20:34

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