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  1. Ubermatic

    Ubermatic

    Scott Rettberg - 19.05.2012 - 19:49

  2. Animalamina

    Created by babel and 391.org, Animalamina, a collaboratively constructed work of multimedia poetry for children, consists of 26 pages of flash-based poetry organized around the letters of the alphabet.  The key aim of this project is to introduce a younger audience (5 - 11) to a variety of styles of digital poetry, animation and interaction, through the familiar format of an animal A-Z.  As the project’s “background” page notes, this work is situated within a tradition alphabet primers that stretches back over 500 years.  This background is noteworthy precisely because of the tradition’s combination of pedagogy and play, instructing new generations in the mechanics of emerging techniques and technologies.  Specific innovations introduced in this recent ABC are animation, audio, interactive content, non-linearity and chance.  

    Scott Rettberg - 16.06.2012 - 12:01

  3. 1999

    1999

    Scott Rettberg - 16.06.2012 - 14:31

  4. noth'rs

    "noth'rs" is composed from transliteral morphs & based on: - Marcel Proust 'Du Coté de chez Swann' & the English translation by Montcrieff & Kilmartin - Jean Genet 'Miracle de la rose' & the English of Bernard Frechtman, - with additional texts from Virginia Woolf 'To the Lighthouse,' and Li Ruzhen 'Flowers in the Mirror' ('Jinghua Yuan' translated by Lin Tai-yi). - plus 'Sixteen Flowers' by Caroline Bergvall.

    Scott Rettberg - 19.01.2013 - 12:47

  5. Newspoetry

    Begun by William Gillespie as a solo printed broadside, newspoetry.com was launched in 1999, accepted contributions from myriad authors, and published a poem a day about events in the news through the end of 2002. This archive collects the ongoing newspoetry of William Gillespie.

    (Source: Newspoetry.com)

    Note: the current newspoetry.com archives the poems written by William Gillespie. The poems by other contributors can be found on the internet archive capture of the site from 2002

    Scott Rettberg - 27.01.2013 - 21:39

  6. parlør

    "Til hvert ord leverer bidragyderne en "ordforklaring" i en blanding af tekst, billede, lyd, video, animation og interaktivitet. (...) Sprogkurset strækker sig indholdsmæssigt fra det dybsindige til det revyagtige. (...) Det er er vores håb, at Afsnit Ps nye Parlør kan medvirke til at nuancere den efter vores opfattelse noget monotone kulturelle hjemlige debat, som virker fastlåst i en mediebestemt og merkantil diskurs, og levere et reelt og intelligent modspil til den udbredte forskrækkelse over for det poetiske, kunstneriske og intellektuelle udtryk, for ikke at sige over for alt ukendt og anderledes." -Afsnit P beskrivelse.

    Sissel Hegvik - 07.03.2013 - 16:02

  7. Księga Słów Wszystkich - The Book of All Words

    Piwkowski's work is an algorithm that generates (and prints) pages of an infinite book. The inexhaustible book is a collection of all possible combinations of 26 letters of Latin alphabet. User can only see the on-demand page that is a result of his own word query. [Taken from Electronic Literature Publishing and Distribution in Europe, 2012]

    Dan Kvilhaug - 13.03.2013 - 16:16

  8. Le Récit de 3 Espaces

    Le Récit des 3 Espaces est un récit variable, un récit caméléon, qui change avec chaque lecteur, à chaque lecture, avec chaque média à chaque usage. Un récit à lire et un récit à écrire.

    (Source: Author's description on the project site)

    Scott Rettberg - 28.06.2013 - 13:34

  9. Mola

    Mola

    Scott Rettberg - 02.07.2013 - 14:33

  10. Gateway to the World

    Gateway to the World is a mobile application designed to run on an iPad2 / iPad mini or later models. This work was created specifically for the SILT exhibition, hosted in Hamburg, Germany in June 2014. I took this exhibition as an opportunity to research the city of Hamburg and discovered that it had one of the largest ports in the world; its name Gateway to the World (GttW) seemed like a great title for the app. The vast and busy port served as a metaphor for the immensity of the Internet, the flow of information and its meaning of openness and outreach to the World Wide Web. The aim of the app was to use open data from the maritime databases to visualize the routes of the vessels arriving to and from the Port of Hamburg, as well as have the vessels’ names mapped to Wikipedia entries. As the vessels move they act as writing tools to reveal a string of text creating calligramatic forms of information pulled from Wikipedia entries about the name of the vessels.

    Hannah Ackermans - 05.09.2015 - 11:15

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