These are my links for June 17th through June 24th:
- The more oil spills change, the more they stay the same. [VIDEO] – can this be true?RT @kk There was a spill in the Gulf 30 years ago, handled in the EXACT manner as Deepwater: http://bit.ly/dfkUmh #oilspill
- Cultural Domestic Probes –
- CBC News – Ottawa – Quake shakes Quebec, Ontario – yesterday a 5.0 earthquake hit the Ottawa Valley, Canada, where grew up. http://bit.ly/bykqnC
- Dirty New Media: Art Activism and Computer Counter Cultures (Jake Elliott) –
- Virgin America Offers Free Flights to Twitter Influencers – RT @jkrums: Virgin America Offers Free Flights to Twitter Influencers http://jkrums.it/de8Dmo
- Twitter Mood Light – The World's Mood in a Box –
- WattzOn: Energy Consumption –
- Following the Lines: Jeremy Wood's Mowing the Lawn at Tenderpixel: Rhizome –
- send/receive satellite network 1977 –
- Digital Arts and Culture 2009 proceedings –
- Learning Processing: A Beginner's Guide to Programming Images, Animation, and Interaction: Daniel Shiffman – 'This book tells a story. It’s a story of liberation, of taking the first steps towards understanding the foundations of computing, writing your own code, and creating your own media without the bonds of existing software tools. This story is not reserved for computer scientists and engineers. This story is for you.'
- Twetches – Where Twitter Meets Sketching –
- Iran's Protests: Why Twitter Is the Medium of the Movement – TIME – Lev Grossman
- #CNNfail: Twitter Blasts CNN Over Iran Election –
- PROFESSIONAL SURFER exhibition – 'Professional Surfer is a group exhibition that considers web browsing (aka 'surfing') as an art form.<br /><br />It brings together websites run by individuals and collectives who re-publish found digital material next to remixed graphics, video, performance and commentary. Framed as individual artworks, the websites employ appropriation in ways that are reminiscent of Pop, video or conceptual art, yet set apart by a deep immersion in their surrounding digital environment. Presented in blog posts, or across a series of interlinked web pages, their projects transform the anarchic territory of the Internet into an aesthetic that could only be borne out of a territory in which commerce and creativity, amateurs and professionals, as well as divergent cultures and styles are in constant flux and uncomfortable proximity.'