ecopolis

life in transformation

Archive for the ‘Research’ tag

Frozen: Sound as space

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Frozen: Sound as space
5 Days Off MEDIA
2-26 july 2008 Amsterdam
Over the past years, there has been an enormous development in the field of live-presented audio-visual performance art. Owing to digital techniques, image and sound are connected in a way that was previously unthinkable. Frozen is headed in the opposite direction. Frozen pulls the plug and presents audio art, prints, and sculptures as independent, but interconnected works of art.

In the Mediaroom at the Melkweg multi-channel sound pieces can be experienced over an advanced speaker setup, accompanied by sound in a “frozen” form: Images and sculptural objects made using sound as input. These artworks use audio analysis and custom software processes to extract meaningful data from the sound signal, creating a mapping between audio and other media. Frozen will feature digital prints as well as four “sound sculptures” created using digital fabrication technology such as rapid prototyping, CNC and laser cutting, which allow for the direct translation of a digital model into physical form.

Frozen arose in collaboration with the Norwegian artist and curator Marius Watz, whose Generator.x project investigates the implications of generative systems and computational models of creation. The recent exhibition Generator.x 2.0: Beyond the Screen brought together artists and architects to explore the potential of this new mode of creation.

‘Audio sculptures’ will be on display by Andreas Nicolas Fischer (DE) & Benjamin Maus (DE), Leander Herzog (CH), Marius Watz (NO) and Daniel Widrig & Shajay Booshan (UK). These sculptures are based on audioworks by Freiband (Nl, Frans de Waard), and Alexander Rishaug (No).

Written by Luca

July 25th, 2008 at 9:48 am

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2008 Marshall McLuhan Award

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The Media Ecology Association (MEA) has selected Richard Barbrook’s ‘Imaginary Futures: from thinking machines to the global village‘ as the winner of the 2008 Marshall McLuhan Award for Outstanding Book in the Field of Media Ecology.

The official presentation of the award will at the MEA’s annual convention which is being held at Santa Clara University in Silicon Valley, California, USA on 19th-22nd June 2008.

Dr. Richard Barbrook will be attending the awards ceremony on Friday 20th June and will give a lecture about his book.

Further details can be obtained from the MEA website:
http://www.media-ecology.org

Written by Luca

June 4th, 2008 at 9:16 am

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Beyond the screen

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Generator.x in collaboration with Club Transmediale and [DAM] presents Generator.x 2.0: Beyond the screen, a workshop and exhibition about digital fabrication and generative systems.

Digital fabrication (also known as “fabbing”) represents the next step in the digital revolution. After years of virtualization, with machines and atoms being replaced by bits and software, we are coming full circle. Digital technologies like rapid prototyping, laser cutting and CNC milling now produce atoms from bits, eliminating many of the limitations of industrial production processes. Once prohibitively expensive, such technologies are becoming increasingly accessible, pointing to a future where mass customization and manufacturing-on-demand may be real alternatives to mass production.

For artists and designers working with generative systems, digital fabrication opens the door to a range of new expressions beyond the limits of virtual space. Parametric models apply computational strategies to the analysis and synthesis of space, producing structures and surfaces of great complexity. Through fabbing these forms may be rendered tangible, even tactile.

“Beyond the screen” explores these new types of spatial constructs in a hands-on workshop, bringing together artists and designers working with code-based strategies for producing physical form. The workshop will feature public presentations bringing the topics of the workshop to a broader audience, culminating in an exhibition of fabbing works at the [DAM] gallery. In a continuation of the Generator.x concert tour, “Beyond the Screen” will also include an evening of concerts, showing the use of generative systems in audiovisual performance.

Written by Luca

January 17th, 2008 at 8:09 pm

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D.I.Y. Organisms

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The BioBricks Foundation (BBF) is a not-for-profit organization founded by engineers and scientists from MIT, Harvard, and UCSF with significant experience in both non-profit and commercial biotechnology research. BBF encourages the development and responsible use of technologies based on BioBrick™ standard DNA parts that encode basic biological functions.

Using BioBrick™ standard biological parts, a synthetic biologist or biological engineer can already, to some extent, program living organisms in the same way a computer scientist can program a computer. The DNA sequence information and other characteristics of BioBrick™ standard biological parts are made available to the public free of charge currently via MIT’s Registry of Standard Biological Parts.

Any individual or organization is welcome to design, improve, and contribute BioBrick™ standard biological parts to the Registry. For example, in the summer of 2007, over 600 students and instructors at 60+ universities around the world are making, sharing, and using BioBrick™ standard biological parts as part of the International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition.

Currently, The BioBricks Foundation’s goals are:

* to develop and implement legal strategies to ensure that BioBrick™ standard biological parts remain freely available to the public;
* to encourage the development of codes of standard practice for the use of BioBrick™ standard biological parts; and
* to develop and provide educational and scientific materials to allow the public to use and improve existing BioBrick™ standard biological parts, and contribute new BioBrick™ standard biological parts.

Written by Luca

December 14th, 2007 at 6:25 pm

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Looking for Informations into Mines…

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Alessandro Zanasi

I interviewed Alessandro Zanasi, expert of text-mining, a brach of data mining, focused on the extraction of high quality information from text. Alessandro Zanasi is among many engagements advisor of European governments and companies, member of ESRAB (European Security Research Advisory Board) and ESRIF (European Security Research and Innovation Forum), charged of advising European Commission on security matters. Scientific Director of Intelligence and Security Study Center. Professor at Bologna and Malta (in Rome). In 2000 he co-founded Temis SA (Text mining SW developer) and in 2005 he founded his own Security Research advising and consulting company.

LB: can you describe the difference between information and meta-information?
AZ: the first one reports and describes a fact, an event, an entity. the second one reports and describes links, connections and trends of information itself.

LB: do you think that has more value meta-information than information today?
AZ: if you have too much information to read and digest you need meta-information to design a knowledge map for yourself. anyway you always need the basic information that started the metainformation.

LB: what do you think about this equation: text mining : infoecology = natural sciences : ecology?
AZ: infoecology takes into account also sound, video, speech, colours, smells….
so it is probably more correct to write
info mining : infoecology = natural sciences : ecology

LB: the most important sectors of military intellingence works on text mining with an approach that conjugates mathematiccs and linguistic, so the two cultures, that m.p. snow defined in conflict, with digital text are converging?
AZ: nice question! i admit that i arrived to text mining after studies on system theory (on bertalanffy, bateson, laszlo, forrester, luhmann, kalman… writings) and thermodynamics (which put me in contact with the ideas of prigogine and stengers as expressed in their best seller “the new alliance”).
i think that we can say that now also topics that seemed so distant and different in their nature (to be defined “two cultures in conflict”), thanks to text mining may be studied as they really are, that is as the product of the same human mind and of the same culture.

LB: as it is for every technology, do you think that in the future the text mining solutions promoted by temis, for example, will be available for every user, with easy-to-use interface and a cute design?
AZ: already now text mining solutions are available for every user when they use advanced search engine technologies or per solutions!

LB: what do you think about text mining solutions for journalists? it can be a really useuful tools with all the datas produced today…
AZ: sure! one of our first customers was just the Bertelsmann group for the journalists of their group.

LB: you come back from the Information Technology and National Security Conference in Riyadh, which impression did you have about the threats that cyberwar can bring to national security? Just in the last year there was many massive net attacks to pentagon, to governement and bank websites of Ucraina, to italian mail servers….

AZ: in the last years several papers were written about the risks of a terrorist cyberattack. In the reality nothing of that appeared and I don’t think that will appear something of that type soon. I think that such attacks may come more easily from criminals charged to do that by a nation state or directly by a nation state. The Information Technology is currently used by terrorists in their activities against National Security just as a tool to organize themselves, to recruit, to exchange communication or resources, to publicize their activities.

Written by Luca

December 13th, 2007 at 7:59 pm

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In Space Happens Strange Things

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Quasars

A quasar (contraction of QUASi-stellAR radio source) is an extremely bright and distant active galactic nucleus. They were first identified as being high redshift sources of electromagnetic energy, including radio waves and visible light that were point-like, similar to stars, rather than extended sources similar to galaxies. There is now a scientific consensus that a quasar is a compact halo of matter surrounding the central supermassive black hole of a young galaxy.

Vacuum

Vacuum energy is an underlying background energy that exists in space even when devoid of matter (known as free space). The vacuum energy results in the existence of most (if not all) of the fundamental forces – and thus in all effects involving these forces, too. It is thought (but not yet demonstrated) to have consequences for the behavior of the Universe on cosmological scales.

antimatter

In particle physics and quantum chemistry, antimatter extends the concept of the antiparticle to matter, whereby antimatter is composed of antiparticles in the same way that normal matter is composed of particles. Antimatter sounds like the stuff of science fiction, and it is. But it’s also very real. Antimatter is created and annihilated in stars every day. Here on Earth it’s harnessed for medical brain scans.

black hole

A micro black hole, also called a quantum mechanical black hole and inevitably a mini black hole, is simply a tiny black hole for which quantum mechanical effects play an important role.

cosmic

In cosmology, the cosmic microwave background radiation is a form of electromagnetic radiation discovered in 1965 that fills the entire universe [1]. It has a thermal 2.725 kelvin black body spectrum which peaks in the microwave range at a frequency of 160.2 GHz, corresponding to a wavelength of 1.9 mm. Most cosmologists consider this radiation to be the best evidence for the Big Bang model of the universe.

dark matter

In astrophysics and cosmology, dark matter is matter of unknown composition that does not emit or reflect enough electromagnetic radiation to be observed directly, but whose presence can be inferred from gravitational effects on visible matter. According to present observations of structures larger than galaxy-sized as well as Big Bang cosmology, dark matter accounts for the vast majority of mass in the observable universe.

exoplanet

An extrasolar planet, or exoplanet, is a planet beyond the Solar System. As of October 2007, the count of known exoplanet candidates stands at 257.[1] The vast majority have been detected through various indirect methods rather than actual imaging.[1] Most of them are massive giant planets likely to resemble Jupiter.

gravity waves

In physics, a gravitational wave is a fluctuation in the curvature of spacetime which propagates as a wave, traveling outward from a moving object or system of objects. Gravitational radiation is the energy transported by these waves. Important examples of systems which emit gravitational waves are binary star systems, where the two stars in the binary are white dwarfs, neutron stars, or black holes.

Galctic cannibalism

Galactic cannibalism refers to the process by which a large galaxy, through tidal gravitational interactions with a companion, merges with that companion, resulting in a larger, often irregular galaxy. The image above is from a simulation of Andromeda and our galaxy colliding, an event that will take place in about 3 billion years. The most common result of the gravitational merger of two or more galaxies is an irregular galaxy of one form or another, although elliptical galaxies may also result. It has been suggested that galactic cannibalism is currently occurring between the Milky Way and the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds. Streams of gravitationally-attracted hydrogen arcing from these dwarf galaxies to the Milky Way is taken as evidence for this theory.

Neutrinos

Neutrinos are elementary particles that travel close to the speed of light, lack an electric charge, are able to pass through ordinary matter almost undisturbed, and are thus extremely difficult to detect. Neutrinos have a minuscule, but non-zero, mass too small to be measured as of 2007.

Written by Luca

October 25th, 2007 at 12:34 pm

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