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  1. @Darius_at_GDC

    This bot is a stand-in for Kazemi at the Game Developer’s Conference happening at the time of this posting in San Francisco, because he will not be able to attend for the first time in 10 years. So instead of pining away on Twitter as #GDC tweets flood his stream, he created a bot so his friends could have the pleasure of his company in their own streams, which as we know, is almost as good as his being there. (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 07.05.2013 - 18:33

  2. @tonightiate

    This bot generate short template based sentences and publish them on Twitter every 10 minutes. With them Schneider demonstrates some of the versatility of the same kind of device when applied to different topics. The bot “@tonightiate,” uses a relatively simple template that produces an obsessive litany of consumption. (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 07.05.2013 - 18:57

  3. @MassageMcLuhan

    Schneider’s artist’s statement, offers the source code in addition to this description. I created @massagemcluhan, a bot that would “massage” McLuhan’s quotes—work them over completely, as McLuhan would say. I’ve noticed McLuhan’s penchant for reworking and revisiting phrases (“the medium is the message” and “the medium is the massage” being the most famous), and thought it would be interesting to rework some of these phrases by substituting various nouns into them. (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 07.05.2013 - 19:01

  4. Tweet Haikus

    This bot data mines a 1% sample of the public Twitter stream to identify tweets that could be considered haiku. It then republishes the result, formatting it as can be seen above, and retweets the original in its Twitter account. The page the haikus are published in uses random background images of nature, a nod towards the seasonal reference so valued in this poetic tradition. (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 09.05.2013 - 21:04

  5. Sootfall

    This literary work created on Twitter could be labelled in different ways— twitfic (or twiction), alternate reality game, netprov, e-lit, e-poetry, or performance— and each label would contribute to an understanding of what this is without wholly capturing what it is. Launched on February 4, 2013, this month-long creative event is now complete. From what I can reconstruct, Gaines, Gass, and the rest of the development team conceptualized the setting, plotted out a timeline, created Twitter accounts for its main characters and launched “Sootfall.” As people found out about the event through social networks, they were able to follow its characters or read the stories as they unfolded around the #sootfall hashtag, a means to identify tweets used in many, but not all entries, because one of the challenges was to make the characters seem real— and why would someone randomly tag their Twitter entries without a plausible reason? Eventually the tag became a tacitly agreed upon way for the characters to refer to the event which was to change their lives so substantially.

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 09.05.2013 - 21:36

  6. Walt FML Whitman

    This poetic mashup Twitter bot places Walt Whitman in conversation with contemporary people expressing their frustrations in social networks. To be precise, he repurposes Darius Kazemi’s “Latour Swag” code to remix two different Twitter sources: @TweetsOfGrass and original tweets with the #fml hashtag. (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 09.05.2013 - 23:13

  7. DNA: A Digital Novel

    Taking the concept of identity theft to its logical conclusion, DNA is an interactive, Web-based novel set in the year 2075, in a future where genetic clones are commonplace and the unique identity of any individual is protected only by tacit consent. Detailing a year in the life of a clone who begins plotting to take on the identity of one of his "code partners," the novel includes a series of hyperlinks to real and fictional Wikipedia entries that provide a peek into the dystopic future of economic, agricultural, cultural, social, and political systems. Influenced by a range of electronic and experimental literary works published over the last fifteen years, DNA presents a non-linear narrative that allows each reader to select his or her own narrative path though the novel and to explore the text's connection to other fictional and non-fictional texts published on the Web. The networked architecture of the project enables the reader to not only construct and engage with the narrative world of the novel itself but with other narrative worlds that exist outside of the novel.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 12.06.2013 - 13:38

  8. FLUX RSS

    written in java this applet gets a lot of rss feeds (in the french zone) in real time and composes, in real time also and as a work in progress, with them visual poems; each of the results are exported to my local computer in order to finally get, at the end of the 2013 year, some kind of archive of the "news" by which we are invaded each day---- and that we very often forget the day after! - it 's a kind of work about our "media-collective-memory". The words are treated in relationship with frequency in the news: the biggest are the most frequents. But not allways the most importants...

    Philippe Castellin - 25.06.2013 - 16:50

  9. FLUX RSS

    Ecrit en java cet applet récupère en temps réel dans la zone française un ensemble de flux RSS liés à l'actualité politique et sociale A partir de ce matériau et en temps réel il en génère des "poèmes visuels"; chacun des résultats est en même temps téléchargé sous forme d'image sur un site local en sorte qu'une archive se constitue progressivement une archive des "nouvelles" par lesquelles nous sommes chaque jour submergés. Et que nous nous empressons d'oublier le lendemain...! C'est donc une sorte de travail à propos de la "mémoire des medias". Les mots sont traités en fonction de leur fréquence: la taille est proportionnelle à celle-ci. Bien qu'en vérité les mots les plus fréquents ne soient pas toujours les plus importants.

    Philippe Castellin - 25.06.2013 - 16:55

  10. FLUX RSS

    Ecrit en java cet applet récupère en temps réel dans la zone française un ensemble de flux RSS liés à l'actualité politique et sociale A partir de ce matériau et en temps réel il en génère des "poèmes visuels"; chacun des résultats est en même temps téléchargé sous forme d'image sur un site local en sorte qu'une archive se constitue progressivement une archive des "nouvelles" par lesquelles nous sommes chaque jour submergés. Et que nous nous empressons d'oublier le lendemain...! C'est donc une sorte de travail à propos de la "mémoire des medias". Les mots sont traités en fonction de leur fréquence: la taille est proportionnelle à celle-ci. Bien qu'en vérité les mots les plus fréquents ne soient pas toujours les plus importants.

    Philippe Castellin - 25.06.2013 - 16:55

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