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  1. Erlend O. Nødtvedt

    Erlend O. Nødtvedt

    Scott Rettberg - 03.11.2012 - 12:53

  2. Norangsdalen

    Norangsdalen

    Scott Rettberg - 03.11.2012 - 12:57

  3. Annelie Axén

    Annelie Axén

    Scott Rettberg - 03.11.2012 - 12:59

  4. Kliniken

    Kliniken

    Scott Rettberg - 03.11.2012 - 13:04

  5. American Psycho, 2010

    Google reads our emails, garners information from our personal messages and uses that profiling strategy to select “relevant” ads. It then displays those ads on the screen next to the very emails from which the information was initially taken.

    American Psycho was created by sending the entirety of Bret Easton Ellis’ violent, masochistic and gratuitous novel American Psycho through GMail, one page at a time. We collected the ads that appeared next to each email and used them to annotate the original text, page by page. In printing it as a perfect bound book, we erased the body of Ellis’ text and left only chapter titles and constellations of our added footnotes. What remains is American Psycho, told through its chapter titles and annotated relational Google ads.

    Eric Dean Rasmussen - 03.11.2012 - 15:37

  6. Hapax Phenomenon

    Hapax Phaenomena is a collection of historically unique images discovered by Google image search from collaborators Clement Valla and John Cayley. The fragile and tenuous Phaenomena are organized into subcategories within the five folders; 1_discordant_wonderfulness; 2_nondurable_megabyte; 3_inventive_monetarism; 4_patriotic_leaseback; and 5_diatomic_roach. Each Phaenomena is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity, a screenshot of its moment of global and historical singularity taken by one of the artists.

    (Source: Rhizome project description at The Download)

    Scott Rettberg - 03.11.2012 - 15:57

  7. Aina Villanger

    Aina Villanger

    Scott Rettberg - 03.11.2012 - 17:47

  8. Skogen

    Skogen

    Scott Rettberg - 03.11.2012 - 17:50

  9. Machine Enhanced (Re)minding: the Development of Storyspace

    This article traces the history of Storyspace, the world’s first program for creating, editing and reading hypertext fiction. Storyspace is crucial to the history of hypertext as well as the history of interactive fiction. It argues that Storyspace was built around a topographic metaphor and that it attempts to model human associative memory. The article is based on interviews with key hypertext pioneers as well as documents created at the time.

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 04.11.2012 - 09:43

  10. STORYSPACE: a Tool for Interaction, Report to the Markle Foundation Regarding G85105,

    STORYSPACE: a Tool for Interaction, Report to the Markle Foundation Regarding G85105,

    Jill Walker Rettberg - 04.11.2012 - 09:54

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