[NetBehaviour] trAce, LOST project
Tamar Schori - Doflash
tamar at doflash.com
Mon Sep 4 14:54:52 CEST 2017
Hi,
I believe that we have lost the ability to get lost, and to loose stuff,
and to be unseen, and to be unchecked and unattended, unavailable,
unattainable... With it we are loosing diversity and the right not to be
understood or to be forgotten. Is it still possible to be unique? I'm sure
we gain other things that transcend the boundaries of privacy.
I myself, have recently completed my MA thesis in design defining a new UX
method that deals with the way mixed reality puncture the mere notion of a
constant reality. Anyone who remembers mondo 2000 and the way the cyborg
was perceived as a threat, would notice the current numbness and
indifferent reaction toward amazing changes and technological advancements.
Do you see that too?
Tamar Schori
0544-560136
On Mon, Sep 4, 2017 at 12:59 PM, ruth catlow <ruth.catlow at furtherfield.org>
wrote:
> Thanks for posting this Tamar.
>
> This makes me reflect on the pathology of the hype surrounding the
> Internet of Things that suggests that life can be improved by knowing where
> every "thing" is at every moment, and then making it "do" something for us.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On 03/09/17 11:27, Tamar Schori - Doflash wrote:
>
> I love the "lost" filter
> many years ago, in the ancient times before social software I created this
> project:
> See http://tamar-schori.net/oodlala/ from 2002, a social network for
> memory objects.
>
> some of the stories are really touching...
> take a look
>
> Tamar Schori
>
>
>
> Tamar Schori
> 0544-560136
>
> On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 12:25 AM, Alan Sondheim <sondheim at panix.com>
> wrote:
>
>>
>> (From Sue Thomas on Facebook; she headed trAce at Nottingham-Trent;
>> I was the 2nd virtual writer-in-residence. Think this might be of
>> interest here because of the networking involved, which was also a
>> metaphor for lost packets, lost archives, disappearances, ruptures,
>> etc. in online worlds.)
>>
>>
>> Sue Thomas
>> August 26 at 12:26pm
>>
>> My favourite trAce project ever - Lost, by Alan Sondheim . It no longer
>> judders on the page as it was designed to do but the entries are as
>> haunting as ever. Users were invited to fill in the form and write about
>> things they have lost. Many entries very sad, some very funny!
>> L*O*S*T
>>
>> http://web.archive.org//20/http://trace.ntu.ac.uk:80/lost/
>> (From Sue Thomas, and trAce) -
>> L*O*S*T
>> web.archive.org
>>
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>
>
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