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  1. Algoritmo, (Algorithm)

    Algoritmo, (Algorithm)

    Dan Kvilhaug - 29.03.2013 - 12:59

  2. Frontières Vomies (Borders vometing)

    Le roman "Frontières vomies" se déroule selon différentes orientations que le lecteur choisit en répondant aux sollicitations affichées sur l'écran. Quel que soit le choix fait, le récit se poursuit jusqu'à la fin. En fait, il navigue le long d'une tresse en empruntant l'un ou l'autre des brins, dans un sens ou dans l'autre. C'est lui qui décide : soit il va au plus vite vers la fin quitte à recommencer plus tard par d'autres voies, soit il flâne en cherchant à reconnaître chacune des voies possibles quitte à retomber de temps à autre dans certains passages uniques. [Source: authors documentation on work, http://www.epi.asso.fr/revue/76/b76p135.htm ]

    Dan Kvilhaug - 06.04.2013 - 13:53

  3. 243 cartes postales en couleurs véritables

    Creation of fictional postcards, later included in the work Machines à Ecrire (1999) by Antoine Denize and Bernard Magné.

    Dan Kvilhaug - 08.04.2013 - 13:39

  4. Hypertexte

    Hypertexte

    Dan Kvilhaug - 09.04.2013 - 21:34

  5. Evidence

    Try and piece together the mystery surrounding Emily. Get clues in the form of soundclips, pictures and text information.

    Dan Kvilhaug - 09.04.2013 - 22:07

  6. Why Some Dolls Are Bad: a generative graphic novel for the iPhone

    Why Some Dolls Are Bad is a generative, permutational graphic novel which engages themes of ethics, fashion, artifice and the self, and presents a re-examination of systems and materials including mohair, contagion, environmental decay, Perspex cabinetry, and false-seeming things in nature such as Venus Flytraps.

    Why Some Dolls Are Bad was originally launched on the Facebook platform but has been adapted for the iPhone and relaunched in 2010. The project collects images from a tag-constrained stream of public Flickr images and combines them with fragments from the original non-linear text. Once the application is downloaded, image and text come together into a frame which is read and then advanced, creating an ongoing dynamic narrative.

    Readers can capture frames and send them to an archive, where each frame becomes a “page” in the novel. The collective archiving of iterative captures from the project means that a version of the book can be read in a linear order.

    Scott Rettberg - 10.04.2013 - 22:49

  7. Nine Gestures for J.D. Salinger

    A poetic tribute to the writings of J.D. Salinger, this work explores Nine Stories (1953), by inviting participants to write their thoughts into a book in response to nine individual prompts, each corresponding to one of the stories. Interacting with the book reveals a series of poems that follow thematic gestures from the original writings.

    To interact, open the book to any one page, read the typed prompt and then write down either a single word, or short phrase as a response, writing onto the adjoining page’s writable section using the pen. A nearby screen responds by offering several composed verses with each inscription. When a section is filled, that gesture is considered complete.

    (Source: Author's description for ELO_AI)

    Scott Rettberg - 10.04.2013 - 23:29

  8. 23:40 Das Gedächtnis

    23:40 Das Gedächtnis

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 04.07.2013 - 11:27

  9. Dage med Diam eller Livet om natten

    Dage med Diam eller Livet om natten møder læseren forfatteren Alian Sandme. Alian har en kæreste, Diam, som han kun kan se i hemmelighed, fordi de begge er gift. Allerede efter det første korte kapitel, S, hvor Alian sidder og skriver på en roman, stilles læseren over for et valg: Skal han køre hen til togstationen og mødes med Diam, eller skal han blive hjemme? Svend Åge Madsens hypertekst-roman afspejler på denne måde livet, hvor man ofte står over for valget mellem to muligheder, der gensidigt udelukker hinanden.

    Scott Rettberg - 17.08.2013 - 16:57

  10. Sim/Oui

    Sim/Oui

    Scott Rettberg - 25.09.2013 - 16:57

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