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  • ...rs and designers to engage in plausible discussions that could reshape our world-views. The prototype presented here provides a tiny contribution to this to ...activity we are all familiar with in our data-driven society), the virtual world that gets executed behind the visual representation of a loading bar, consi
    5 KB (710 words) - 18:10, 19 April 2016
  • ...rgest free online encyclopedia and one of the most popular websites in the world. After identifying somebody, you are required to take action and modify thi *Her exhibited work "Hello Zombies" from 2014
    10 KB (1,430 words) - 08:53, 12 October 2017
  • ...ENCYCLOPAEDIA - a complete index of all elements leading to the end of the world! == ...oblem, or millennium or Y2K bug, as it was dubbed primarily in the Western world. Since the early days of computation it had been a routine to indicate year
    5 KB (740 words) - 08:09, 28 April 2016
  • * Decolonization, which sets out to change the order of the world, is, obviously, a program of complete disorder. - -Franz Fanon, The Wretche ...er Colonialism in order to elevate a certain culture and way of seeing the world above others. Today we know and are able to challenge the dominant narrativ
    9 KB (1,425 words) - 13:12, 30 April 2016
  • ...erent encodings, a problem which became apparent as people from across the world started exchanging text documents on the web. A document using a Greek enco ...s are often a way to make tangible what can not be changed in the physical world. But should we see the addition of the modifiers as an example of successfu
    10 KB (1,501 words) - 12:24, 17 March 2016
  • ...leted — especially to a computer that is a “ girl. ” For computers, during World War II, were in fact young women with some background in mathematics. Not o
    4 KB (592 words) - 08:28, 27 February 2016
  • ...live in a world with so many things in it. So, within her own constructed world, she had eliminated all the things she could. There were no brushes with ma ...single detail about the world that she experienced or was exposed to. The world to her was like a roiling madhouse of of stimuli and simulacrum that made w
    21 KB (3,771 words) - 15:11, 12 January 2016
  • ...ther with her colleagues over a duration of twenty-four hours observed the world making the transition from the 31st of December 1999 to the 1st of January ...called Y2K problem, or Y2K bug, as it was dubbed primarily in the Western world. Since the early days of computation it had been a routine to indicate year
    15 KB (2,444 words) - 14:56, 12 January 2016
  • ...-unintelligence Artificial Unintelligence: How Computers Misunderstand the World] by Meredith Broussard *[http://www.memo.tv/learning-to-see-hello-world/ Learning to see: Hello, World!] (2017) by Memo Akten. More [http://www.memo.tv/category/work/by-type/ her
    17 KB (2,156 words) - 17:35, 12 January 2020
  • ...t explores programming as cultural phenomenon, as a way of thinking in the world, and understanding the complex procedures that underwrite our experiences a '''Hello World! - an introduction to software studies'''
    24 KB (3,347 words) - 14:10, 12 January 2016
  • ...ths, even years in wait of a single blood meal. Charged. Alert. Questing a world of its particular accord. <blockquote>"And now something miraculous happens. . . From the enormous world surrounding the tick, three stimuli glow like signal lights in the darkness
    26 KB (4,014 words) - 07:56, 5 August 2016
  • ...ocessuality, connectedness and openness of relationships and forces in the world, rather than embedding, continuity, stability or security of a subject’ ( ...to construct the self (individuation) and a way to present the self to the world as a formed subject (subjectivation). In effect it is proposed here as a te
    25 KB (3,718 words) - 15:20, 12 January 2016
  • ...sthetic potential, expose how machines sense, make artificial sense of the world and entail the implications of machine learning in wider computational cult
    8 KB (1,036 words) - 16:14, 19 August 2019
  • ...ffective, embodied, performative, programmed processes of execution in the world today? By gathering together researchers working with diverse theoretical a ...mobile devices and the web. Aiming to include all languages written in the world, Unicode does not prescribe particular fonts or specific renderings of char
    17 KB (2,575 words) - 14:56, 17 May 2016
  • ...ffective, embodied, performative, programmed processes of execution in the world today? By gathering together researchers working with diverse artistic prac
    9 KB (1,211 words) - 14:55, 12 January 2016
  • *Westfall, Ralph. “Technical Opinion: Hello, World considered harmful” Communications of the ACM. (44:10) 2001. 129-130 *Wall, Larry. “Perl, the first postmodern computer language.” Linux World. March 3, 1999.
    17 KB (2,248 words) - 13:29, 1 August 2017
  • compression in new media art and the kinds of Islamic world-making practices characteristic of Persian carpets. Laura U. Marks, ''Enfol
    9 KB (1,302 words) - 09:09, 18 March 2016
  • ...t sensitize us to the visions of the machine and its interpretation of our world.
    10 KB (1,500 words) - 09:17, 27 April 2016
  • The world of Houellebecq’s François in bears fairly close resemblance to modern-da ...s in tandem with functional code (at a ratio of about three to one). In a world saturated by software and its accompanying bugs and errors, a tremendous am
    28 KB (4,599 words) - 20:48, 27 April 2016
  • ...re obsessed with reaching the end, and finding authenticity in a simulated world. According to Berardi and Cramer, time and imagination are keywords to deco
    13 KB (2,022 words) - 15:18, 12 January 2016

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