Tuesday, March 30, 2010

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Check-in: Archive Bomb

Archive Bomb met Tactical Media, whose manifesto shares some desired qualities with the concept:
  • involved parties manipulate media "in a continual process of questioning the premises of the channels they work with"
  • activism characterized by mobility and flexible response (hit-and-run). The ability to move through different entities of "vast media landscape without betraying their original motivations"
  • results are "temporary reversals in the flow of power"
  • "an aesthetic of poaching, tricking, reading, speaking... Clever tricks, the hunter's cunning, maneuvers, polymorphic situations, joyful discoveries, poetic as well as warlike."
This match revisits the concept of artists being new archivists. Beeld & Geluid (B&G) can be the supplier for material for such interventions, and can facilitate participation on three levels:
  1. insider
    B&G can allow the broadcast system to be hacked. In a context where A/V will already be setup, for example an event in a public square during museum night, B&G can ensure the "back door" through which underminers can participate.
  2. hacker
    A team of archivists, dedicated to showing multiple perspectives can use the system themselves, as they are most familiar with the state of the collection. They could assume an anonymous identity, with a hidden link to B&G (Kounter Beeld en Geluid?).
  3. mentor
    B&G can encourage or participate in interventionist workshops, with specialized knowledge of broadcasting and A/V archives. Cooperation with historians could also be possible. (Hooray multi-disciplinary collaboration!)

Amalgamated Concept #1: historic re-enactments tying into current events
B&G can set up a platform that works with activists for the purpose of exposing patterns in media or social commentary, such as with the methods listed above. Through a combination of performance and A/V bombs, the public can be confronted with past events:
  • Purely analog (ex: performance troupe that translates a hate crime into a staged conflict on the train)
  • Augmented flashmob (ex: streaming old broadcast on the speaker system in addition to participants with previous instructions)
  • Techie dream (a disposable projection grenade: looks like a soda can, but it releases smoke onto which a one-time projection is displayed). While the "grenade" is still a few steps away (compact portable projectors are available, but definitely not disposable), a "landmine" could also be implemented: the material and structure are there, but detonation is triggered by a coincidence.

Amalgamated Concept #2: puzzlehunt
B&G can expose its archive through a pervasive game, such as an urban puzzlehunt. Teams of gamers sign up to solve rounds of puzzles - in this case media riddles could be featured, but in a public space context. Drawing from of the texts in "Space Time Play," this could be an ideal set-up:
  • Pervasive games mix everyday tangible space with closed information spaces. The rules and information network (game space) intertwine with the city space (play space).
  • "Temporary autonomous zones" are created by roleplay. In these zones willing players create a new set of rules, when imposed onto innocent bystanders, question implicit social interactions.
  • Because the real environment is used, there are real consequences. This removes the safety bubble of traditional play (where one can safely explore "what if" and what one cannot do in real life), but it also offers elements of psychogeography to come into play. The city itself can be enhanced by the game by encouraging players to see it through new eyes or to uncover stories to drive us.
B&G would curate the material used for puzzles, and gather data as done currently through web-based games. Material costs (if mobile-projection gadgets are to be used) would be more safely covered. The element of surprise still strikes non-participating passerbys, and they can also be used as part of the game. An element that could be interesting from the MIT Mystery Hunt is that the winning team wins the right to organize the following year's competition (rules, hints, everything).

An interesting part about creating these puzzles is to make it such that a Google search does not solve it. A good team could solve all puzzles to the end in about 48 hours (or that is a target). This is an example in which one deliberately tries to make the information not available, for a reasonable purpose.


Points for moving on:
  • Does the theoretical framework need more work?
  • Could storyboards of potential puzzles be a starting point, then see what happens when this game context is removed?
  • Is B&G's role clear enough such that the concepts are appropriate for them in particular? (Does it make an "appropriate" use of the content of their archive?)

********************************
New Readings since last time:
  1. Gregory Sholette - Dark Matter
    Raises discussion on the creative realm unrecognized by the institutionalized art world (and its importance), why it may not be accepted, and its connection to political art.
    • "What stabilizes the borders of the elite art market is the routine production of relatively minor differences."
    • Importance of connecting "'unblocked' moments of working class fantasy with the history, or histories of actual resistance to capital, patriarchy racism and nationalism. Rather than a smooth, linear narrative," it assembles "a montage of 'historical fissures -- crises, war, capitulation, revolution, counterrevolution."
    • Describes interventionist art groups that design objects of intervention as well as workshops that encourage this behavior.
  2. David Garcia & Geert Lovink - The ABC of Tactical Media
  3. Rui Guerra(!) - It's Not That Kind, guerilla projections & other projects that empower individuals to intervene with public spaces

To Read (mostly from INTK):
  1. Gregory Sholette - The Interventionists: User's Manual for the Creative Disruption of Everyday Life
  2. Krzystof Wodiczko
    Nowadays public space is occupied with the displaced, members of a nomadic culture. These spaces should be reclaimed as agoras for statements and discussion.
  3. Claire Bishop
    Participation in socially engaged art
  4. Markus Miessen - The Violence of Participation
  5. Chantal Mouffe - Artistic Activism and Agnostic Spaces
    Urge "for radical democracy of agnostic pluralism where all antagonisms could be expressed. In their opinion, ‘...there is no possibility of society without antagonism’; indeed, without the forces that articulate a vision of society, it could not exist."
  6. Michael Naimark - Arts Lab
    Proposal for a hybrid arts center and research lab

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Thursday, March 25, 2010

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Round 03 : Collectibles

Research organized

I made a powerpoint presentation where the most important information is placed.There are still some stuff I need to fill in but that will come.



Most recent research is about emotions and personality traits. I did this research for inspiration to make some kind of game play system.


Game Play System

Theme is making a (godlike) avatar from fragmented behaviors which represent personality traits.
Before playing, the players "draw" their goal. The first to complete the goal has won.
Emotional Status has a starting point. This starting point is created out of the average from the collected fragments (deck).
Personality traits or/and actions "cards" have influances on the emotional status of the avatar.


Testing

Playing the game system with self made cards.

Plan for an experiment where I discover how people feel about a the fragment and how they would react to it. Going to implement it for next week.
1 .

Round 03: Chance Interruptions

The approach being taken to bring the archive closer to its audience:
Interrupt daily routine to bring a higher awareness of the current situation and the archive.
To varying degrees, concepts in this direction impose archive fragments on a random audience. There are those who look to the past to learn, or to reminisce, and there are those who do not. As the present is a result of the past, this approach gives more power to the archive: it does not wait to be initiated by an interested user.

background principles
  • An archive is a collection of fragments. Digitization of its content aids fluidity of presentation and makes interaction with the archive more dynamic, and allows for new connections and interpretations to be made.

  • The technology that we have developed seemingly independent of the Supernatural now makes qualities of it even closer. (E.g. invisible forces, quickness, mutability)

  • Changes in one's routine, whether or not by chance, create a higher awareness of the current/"normal" situation.

  • Over text, audiovisual material is already communicating closer to the people. Sound and moving images were what we perceived before written literacy. Outside its original context, AV material can trick us into thinking it is current.

Three initial concepts are defined to explore these principles. They all take place off-site, but differ on who is curating the information. Beeld & Geluid is used as an impartial provider of content.

archive bomb
  • Guerilla warfare model: quick, temporary, anonymous broadcasting in public spaces that may produce chaotic results.
  • Archive fragment bombs are detonated without explanation: less information forces the audience to lay their own interpretations.
  • This is a one-time event. The effects are imposed on the memories and interpretations of the surrounding people.
  • Can comment on current situation using historic locations and political/cultural/religious events. Can be used as a way to take back broadcasting.
  • Curation by the people? If it were Beeld & Geluid, does it have an obligation to remain neutral?

shadecast
  • Visual podcasts are broadcast on public train sunshades.
  • Geyser model: known location, but when it is triggered is not explicitly expressed. Spurts are short, appropriate for commuters of varying periods.
  • Can provide more information on the places passed on the train, but it could expand to have a visual radio feel.
  • Competition over broadcasting space filters out different parties who are interested enough to make a coherent podcast.

connect the dots
  • Running chicken model: finding meaning amongst randomness. Letting chickens (or people) run freely, the results of which reveal a new meaning.
  • Input locational data to be interpreted by the tag system of B&G. The system functions as a Supernatural power, giving a different meaning and overview that people cannot see as clearly.
  • Results of this are displayed in public locations; while the location is static, the information fed to it is now dependent on the surrounding people.

Another question arises: what is the effect of these ways of (re)broadcasting?

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

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Linkdump on data visualization

As I lost myself browsing for ways of visualizing the archive as a network, i got to some very interesting data visualization websites that i'd like to share. Since I don't have time to explain each one right now, i'll just dump the links so you can see for yourself!

Data visualization overview blogpost
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/the_best_tools_for_visualization.php

Infosthetics
http://infosthetics.com/
Subsites especially concerning the archive:
http://infosthetics.com/archives/2009/09/the_visible_archive.html
http://infosthetics.com/archives/2009/09/mapping_the_archive_30_years_of_ars_electronica.html
http://infosthetics.com/archives/2008/02/cultural_broadcasting_archive.html

Some nice examples
http://www.fidgt.com/visualize
http://audiomap.tuneglue.net/
http://www.liveplasma.com/
http://getpivot.com/

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

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ICT Delta Event

PROJECT CLOSER | Round-table Discussion | March 18th, 14.00-15.00

Audiovisual cultural heritage collections nowadays are becoming accessible on a large scale through digital networks. Innovative ways of presentation and interaction can create an added value in disclosing these archives to the audience. CLOSER is a multidisciplinary research project, initiated by V2_ and the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision.

There is a gap between the use and the potential in the archive. As more archives move towards digitalization, questions for archivists surround increased accessibility and the meaning of future archival practice. Simultaneously artists are using the archive to critique systems of power, history, memory, and identity. In CLOSER we are exploring the territory between these two perspectives in hopes of making archival use a more meaningful experience. In this round-table discussion we start a dialogue between artists, theoreticians, archivists, and ICT practitioners about:

Building a bridge between the concerns of institutional archives and artistic critique in a way that empowers the individual.

The discussion will take place on 18 March, 2010 at ICT Delta conference in Rotterdam, from 14.00 to 15.00. Registration is free on the website. http://www.ictdelta2010.nl/

Information on our discussion table can be found at: http://www.ictdelta2010.nl/ICTD/Discussietafel-V2_Beeld-en-Geluid-.html

The CLOS(AR) project blog: http://closar.blogspot.com/

Please respond to closar@v2.nl if you are able to join the discussion. Thanks and we look forward to talking with you!

All the best,
CLOS(AR) team

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Project Update

We have gone trough the essence of our concepts. Then we shuffled and merged different ideas together. The results were reorganized in different directions or areas. We did this process to find new combination's, directions and overlaps within the concepts.

The next step we took was researching the old and new areas. For each area we made short presentation to give an impression on what we have found.

We have looked at:
Archives and Audiovisual Archives
Power
Perspective
Chance and Rituals
Traces / Trails









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preserving process

NYT article on the issues of preserving digital archival data @ Emory University. One interesting thing to me was that they recreate what an author saw on a screen (a draft, including applications that would allow annotation).

The first digital forensics lab also opened last summer at Stanford's library:
Michael Olson, the digital collections project manager at Stanford University, said that the only people who really had experience with excavating digital information were in law enforcement. “There aren’t a lot of archives out there capturing born-digital material,” he said, referring to the process of extracting all data accurately from a device.
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Conflux City


Conflux City is an art & tech festival in NYC organized by glowlabs, featuring many projects centering on psychogeography (the heightened awareness/experience of the space around you). Lots of projects, including robot poetry, surveillance camera footage remixing, traffic cone tours and haptic navigation devices.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

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Robot Poetry




ROBO POEMS TELLS THE THOUGHTS AND STORIES OF A DISENCHANTED TECHNO-BEING - A ROBOT LOSING HIMSELF IN THE SPACE AND PEOPLE OF LOWER MANHATTAN, NYC.

Micro-radio poetry embedded around NYC.
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Computer-Brain Interfaces

I was at the UNMA (Utrechtse Nieuwe Media Avond) yesterday. The theme was "computer-brain-interfaces", which was quite interesting and scary at the same time. Besides the mostly medical possibilites (for example: deep brain stimulation, or mind controlled wheelchairs), there was also a Belgian artist, Chritoph De Boeck, who made a huge interactive sound installation. The steel pins that hammer on steel plates respond to your (EEG) brain activity, which is measured by the quite small and lightweight device on your head. The sounds eventually construct a rythem if you focus your attention on certain things, for example by constantly doing small mathematical calculations in your head. I tested the device myself after the presentation, unfortunately not in the installation, but i saw my brain activity on a screen, which was kind of weird too.



As you can see in the video, De Boeck uses the headset by IMEC Holst Centre. There's another company that created one especially for games: the Emotiv Epoc. Maybe this could be an interesting way to access an archive???
1 .

From Alex Adriaansens

An archival project by Art+Com conceptualized in the mid nineties. It has only ben realized partly.
The project relates VR and archives, and something that is more common now, web2.0 concepts, like video and image contributions of the audience to the archive.

http://www.artcom.de/index.php?option=com_acprojects&page=6&id=26&Itemid=115&details=0&lang=en

There is a nice video on the website that explains the project more clearly.
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Reading: Ritual

Update from my end on the research. Some notes from Erik Davis's "TechGnosis" that apply to the Ritual category:
  • The speed & mutability of current technoscience times evokes supernatural qualities.
  • Technology has "demystified" the world, but this mysticism is actually hiding in cultural, psychological, and mythological areas. It comes back as well, perhaps without our knowing (ex: how Christian myths have framed technological/economic growth)
  • ICT shapes the human self by encoding thought & experience. Partially reconstructing this self and world leads to new interpretation. These constructions of our reality consist of (1) form (medium, crafted/constructed) and (2) content (transmission of mind & meaning). This content can be further divided into two parts: soul and spirit. Soul is analog, continuous, and entrenched in social context. Spirit is characterized by clarity and discrete signals (digital).
  • People are now cut off from their analog souls by science & technology, and try to recreate it with these digital versions - technology is not a mere tool.
The "Great Divide" from Latour's "We Have Never Been Modern" is also mentioned: nature and culture were once interwoven and indistinguishable (ex: how an Inuit experiences his dreams and hunting the following day), but the Modern Wall has wedged itself in between. Now culture is struggling to develop independently of nature, through new technologies, even though these spiritual needs are re-manifesting themselves.

Also starting to read up on Debord's "Society of the Spectacle," and the Situationists, don't know exactly where this will lead.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

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Reading: Archive and Aspiration

Yesterday our clustering session yielded several research directions that we will dig deeper into this week. The topic I will address is power and the archive. The IT revolution has changed the way we think about information and accordingly, the archive. The result has been a shift in power from traditional, controlled archives towards information created, curated/edited and distributed through a participatory culture, in a sense democratizing these processes.

I started by looking into the V2_/NAi publication, Information is Alive: Art and Theory on Archiving and Retrieving Data, for some insight. The book is a collection of essays, projects, and interviews from different art/design disciplines. The most inspiring article I read was Archive and Aspiration, by Arjun Appadurai. I over simplify and paraphrase below.

Appadurai discusses how the digitalization of the archive has led to a return to the archive's traditional role as a deliberate site for recording anticipated memories for collectives, freeing the archive from the exclusive realm of state control, policing or from the tomb of the trace. The IT revolution has had the effect of increasing the accessibility and extended the function and possibilities for the archive. The digital archive becomes the site for the deliberate production of anticipated memories by communities. Appadurai gives the example of the digital migrant archive; the archive for disposessed people whose histories do not correspond with "official" memory. This intensified form of archive acts as a highly interactive forum giving voice, agency and debate, as a site for creating/negotiating collective memory and aspiration, mediating between the past and present locations.
"Rather, the migrant archive is a continuous and conscious work of the imagination, seeking in collective memory an ethical basis for the sustainable reproduction of cultural identities in the new society."
The archive is the map of how to interact within uncertainty and a tool to link between memory, desire and hope. For me, the notion of archive lending agency and location to grassroots, subversive or other groups confronting, breaking down or transforming the powers that be, is very fascinating...the tools of the oppressors become the tools of the suppressed.

Monday, March 8, 2010

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reading day


As Spring Cleaning happened last week, the closAR team borrowed some books from the V2_Library to read on Mono Monday.

As I was reading "space time play," one point I found interesting with pervasive gaming was the loss of the safety zone. Real consequences ensue in this real space, taking away some of this free exploration that happens in virtual gaming space. It reminds me of Apter's reversal theory regarding anxiety and excitement and also on safety zones based on their fears. The rules of engagement of a game help make up the boundaries of this world in which it is safe to explore (or play) these alternate realities.

Perhaps play theory will be more useful at a later stage of concept development (and perhaps we can use it to assess the play quality of other B&G game initiatives). Will bring in some resources if it is of interest.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

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closAR does Beeld & Geluid


Last Wednesday, the team paid a visit to the Beeld & Geluid (B&G) Institute to taste the kid's menu (the Experience) and perused the kitchen pantry (the Archive).

It was an interesting dichotomy of activity. The above-ground level was swarmed with little children, while the layers underneath were deserted.


the Experience in a glance

We were given RFID rings to collect and "interact" with the exhibitions upstairs. The most engrossing exhibitions were ones in which you could put yourself into them. Hopeful, starry glints in the eyes of a child broadcaster reading off the teleprompter. Touch screens were out the wazoo. Nostalgic artifacts (record players, tvs) were also displayed in glass cases. (The eternal torment of look, but no touch.)

the Archive in a glance

Johan also showed us part of the way down the canyon. Because material automatically comes from the broadcasting companies (with metadata!), the archive is actually quite dynamic. If something is shown in the morning, the archive will be accessed in the afternoon to use the same clip. However this access is electronic - they have direct taps into the B&G system. This means that only rare material will prompt someone to physically go to the archive. As program makers are the majority of the archive's users, a comparatively empty vault is the result.

A quick search for a Sven Kramer clip returned an extensive transcript and also the possibility to search the video by thumbnails. When there is just one voice, software can reliably convert speech into text, and guess the topic. An interesting study they performed was to compare a person's initial search with what s/he eventually left with, helping B&G to revise relevant information for an entry.

A few issues include figuring out what is the "most valuable" to digitize, managing the industry standards that may not be the best for preservation, and thinking ahead to the future of the archival services when video has become YouTube-able.

Interesting fact: the digital is quite fragile. B&W film can last to 400 years, while CDs fade in 15.
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Round 2: Shamanism & Sacrifice (Connie)

The Shamanic Ritual concept examines the ritual of accessing information beyond one's immediate grasp. Requesting answers in the past was a significant ordeal: an invoking sacrifice, fasting or hallucinogens to attain visions, or significant group effort facilitated by the "chosen." With information today so easily at one's hand (or pocket), the humbling restriction of not knowing or remembering is lost.

While enlightenment will always be phenomenological, what AR can bring to this new interpretation is a uniform "vision" to be interpreted by a group.



The direction is to induce an immersive, storytelling and role-playing experience for group access of the archive. A signature interaction from the past would be carried through, perhaps a "modern sacrifice." The initial vision is for this to take place either on-site at Beeld & Geluid, or at a special event.



Instead of forcing this interaction on all queries, perhaps it would be an interesting exercise to come up with questions that would merit this modern sacrifice. A fun idea a friend and I did once was to ask only other people for answers that would typically be asked of Google, and on the flip side, to ask Google fuzzy, ambiguous questions (ex: "What do you think of my love life?").
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Round 2: Archive Bomb (Connie)


A la "War of the Worlds" broadcast fiasco, the Archive Bomb concept aims to raise awareness of
  1. broadcasting and its power over people's perception of the truth
  2. Beeld & Geluid and its archive materials
Archive material is imposed on everyday life in public spaces in a guerrilla warfare style. The effect should be explosive: surprising, disorienting, unexplained, and temporary. A bit of chaos stimulates reaction.

The bomb doesn't wait for people to discover the archive. If one is fooled by mis-information, meta-thoughts on broadcasting may occur (Who is projecting what message, for what reason, and to what end? What is truth?). The experience is short and less immersive: the consumption metaphor here would be snacking on a pretzel that was thrown at you.

An anonymous group of B&G bombers would be ideal, either akin to the fictional members of Gorillaz or to flash mob organizers. The ethics of hacking or pranking could be investigated to avoid terrorism. Constructing a bomb requires exploration of the archives.

Further elaboration and investigation are needed in several areas:
  1. Motivation (Can it survive outside a game context, or the safety of an event?)
  2. Current possibilities of implementation (mobile projection, multi-sensory expression, disposable?)
  3. Material to be exposed. A suggestion was that a commentary on current events could be made by exposing material from other times with similar conditions. It would be great to be more dynamic than projecting old buildings or reliving old stories, a la Tijdmachine project in Rotterdam.
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Round 02 - Shauna

Yesterday I presented two first concepts with illustrative examples within the domains of physical browsing and ritual, what I call library2.0 and mixed slow rituals, respectively. The starting points were again the group vision we developed as a team and the criteria I developed last week. In addition, I was very interested in nostalgia for physical space and interaction induced by historical or knowledge artifacts.
5 Criteria from Round 1
1. Continuity of experience (spatial and temporal)
2. Flexible interaction
3. Interfacing the best of the digital and actual world
4. Durable/sustainable
5. Accommodates sociality
Library2.0
Physical/tangible browsing is much more satisfying and potentially more powerful than WIMP browsing. Computer search lacks the spatial and serendipitous qualities that are offered by physically located information. Additionally, the accessibility/visibility of this information can be improved.

On the other hand information mapped in physical space is limited, for example in a library, information is mapped 1:1 in terms of data and organizational system.


Earlier in this project, we talked about the Art of Memory by Frances Yates. In her book, she explains the memory technique of embedding information (words or thoughts) onto imagined objects housed in imagined architectural spaces in the mind. I was intrigued by the notion that the same mental places could be used again and again to house new thoughts and words:
"The same set of loci can be used again and again for remembering different material...the loci are like wax tablets" - The Art of Memory, Frances Yates
The digital revolution created new paradigms for thinking about data and its organization. I take Yate's statement to a literal level and propose that digital information can be projected on physical artifacts. In the figure below, I extend the analogy of books organized on bookshelves. Not only can different data sets be organized in the same space (not simultaneously), but also the organization/classification systems used to present this data.

For example, the archive video content could be organized by arbitrary classification like amount of red content in the videos, by keywords, it could be smart...utilizing neural networks to learn how users want to search.

Johan from Sound and Vision mentioned that the archive was created through a merger of 5 separate archives with different information classification systems. Could a physical-digital archive be a solution to the problem of unifying information?

Continuing with the library analogy, I thought about what a physical-digital archive could look like. With infinity on my mind, I thought of a rolodex going forward and backwards in information space. Perhaps the physical-digital archive could be made of circular shelves, housing blank physical artifacts and the digital information could be projected on the spines. Moving forward and backwards in information space would require turning the shelves forwards or backwards. The physical relationship between bits of information could reintroduce serendipity or chance into the search process...The information set projected on the shelves can be changed to fit the query and information demands of the users with a blink of the eye, and the desired information can be physically collected.

For an A/V archive, it is also important to be able to visualize or understand the continuum of information. Maybe when examining a program pulled from the shelf, people can scroll through key points or access further information or metadata about that program.

Some other concerns:
- How can information be placed in space so that there is a visible hierarchy? Should certain information be "featured." Should more obsolete information be placed farther away?
- How can the social context of being in a physical space with other people be reintroduced...like awareness of other people as they pass by on the other side of the bookshelf?
- Can viewing artifacts (e.g. glasses, monocles) be used to delve deeper into the information space? Is it satisfying?
- How can the heaviness/age/etc. of content be visualized?


Mixing Slow Rituals
The second concept is about recombining what I call "slow" rituals, such as going to the museum, library, bookstore, cafe, or archive, in new relationships. I am nostalgic for the hours and days spent in the library or bookstore, browsing, reading, and lounging around for free, not spending a cent. Alas, the physical aspect of libraries is slowly disappearing or changing forever.

What will happen to the sexy librarians (or archivists) when libraries/archives go totally digital? I already miss the cute record shop guys and I wonder if students of the future will study in the same cavernous beux arts study rooms I spent so much time in.


New relationships already exist between these places housing the slow experience.

The question is how can archives recombine into the same kind of relationships? I see an opportunity in the archive and, i.e. cafes promoting each other through their recombination. One very literal example I already see is at the Urban Espresso Bar in Rotterdam. There they have a downstairs space with video exhibitions running all the time.

To think further on:
- Who curates the content?
- Can archive services be offered in these places (i.e. dling or requesting clips)

Monday, March 1, 2010

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Presentation 01-03-2010



Our presentation on monday 01-03-2010
1 .

Round 02: Bas

CAVE (Collaborative AudioVisual Experience)

Based on current intuitive and gestural interface development, such as the sixth sense devices at MIT Medialab or Microsoft's Project Natal, and our general mission statement about creating a physical experience that addresses the accessability of the archive, I developed a vision on how to browse the archive in an immersive, intuitive way. I want to enhance accessing, using and searching the archive and make it more interesting and attractive to use. The working title is (AR) CAVE: Collaborative AudioVisual Experience (with, of course, a wink to the original VR CAVE).


These pictures indicate a general idea of what the CAVE could look like

Basically, it all comes down to a space, the size of a squash court, where several people can simultaneously interact with the archive. The navigation is based on intuitive gestures and body movements, just like the way people normally interact with physical objects. The archive (a selection) will be visualized in 3D in the middle of the space. The archive will be browable/searchable with different variables, such as keywords, picture recognition, speech recognition and video concept recognition. The participants will be able to physically grab a fragment out of the archive and store it somewhere in the space (floating digital material) or on one of the walls (more screen-like). The user can create connections between the fragments, but should also be able to see previously made connections (suggestions) by archivists or other users. Users should be able to make an overview (visualized network) of their research history or results, so that, instead of having 27 tabs with 16 pdf documents and 6 youtube movies opened in firefox, there is an immediate overview of the connections/relations between the found items. One of the walls can be used as a video/audio editor to remix the found material. While researching the users in the CAVE can work together (in different roles or by doing the same thing) and discuss their findings and search methods face to face.

Some examples of using the CAVE in a collaborative way are
- Group research or education (networked overview and discussions about the content and its connections)
- Teambuilding activities: e.g. create a 3 minute news report within 20 minutes (you have to work together, probably in different roles to make it)
- Games: race against time with cryptic description to find a certain archive file, archive karaoke/roulette where you have to explain the fragments and relate them somehow.
- Political discussion using news archives
- Commercial use: inspiration for new advertisements by browsing the archive
- Archivist training: user perspective, filtering newly made connections, archivist education
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Round 02 Collectibles - Aeshta

Collectibles

The archive is mainly used for research and source material. Trying to think outside these goals I came a cross the the idea of a collection game.
To take the game away from the computers the game play should have the world itself as the playing field.
These 2 elements stimulates a community around the archive which in return keeps the archive more alive.

The game is about collecting fragments of the archive. These fragments are collected on a mobile interactive device, iPhone app, siftable and such.

The fragments can be sold, bought, stolen, traded and found. For example a way to "find" a archive fragment is done by using the Mobile Device and poles. These poles can be found in public spaces like libraries, theater, museums and concerts.

The game play can be either more like a card game or a treasure hunt. Both creating a situation where people need to work whit each other to get an social experience.