tizz, science, foodMarch 19, 2008 1:33 pm

…and we’ve got plenty of mushrooms! It’s a saga that has gone on for years. About a leaky roof in a rented house and supremely recalcitrant real estate property managers. Have a look at this darling video my intrepid flatmates made…

the crazy 15 year old* leak in our house

hmm, living on borrowed time anyone?

*When a roof repairs person comes round to your house to inspect a leak, and says “Hmm, I remember fixing a leak in this roof…15 years ago”, what springs to mind? Hope eternal? Granted, it may be a different leak in the roof, but still…

tizz, art, science, new media, interactiveMarch 10, 2008 5:38 pm

is lonely and terrifying. and silly. why do i have to run around this confusing campus with a pink form for recalcitrant heads of schools to sign, on the first day, where the admin people all sign in exasperation, or look at me funny when i ask for room locations? Important people whose names I can’t remember correctly, directions i forget as soon as i’m told, I don’t think I’ve felt this out of water ever. It’s a very new feeling. I’m feeling it very keenly.

I’m reeling a bit at today’s intro lecture to interactive multimedia. It’s a deep end with a stack of returning 2nd and 3rd years all seemingly fluent in actionscript and flash, and boy am i scared of asking a silly question! However, the lecturer seems well versed in dry computer humour and dad jokes, which is heartwarming, and i think this will be an interesting subject.

Now I’m going to get all industrious and mature-age on yo asses, and post some things I’ve found from homework links, like this artwork using generative grammar software:

Echelon

This work was made in response to a call by Metamute (London) for Jam Echelon Day 2001. It simply employs all the words stored in the Echelon system in a program that automatically generates texts using whatever dictionary it has available.

Whenever a user moves their mouse over a text it will automatically re-write itself as a new text. It will then e-mail that text to a random e-mail address (this last e-mailing component of the work is currently disabled, but will be enabled by the artist at the appropriate time - the effect will be to flood the net with echelon sensitive messages at the rate of hundreds per minute, depending on user interaction).

Echelon is the worldwide signals intelligence network run by the US National Security Agency and the UK Government Communications Headquarters in collaboration with Canada, Australia and New Zealand. Echelon uses large ground-based radio antennae in the United States, Italy, the UK, Turkey, New Zealand, Canada, Australia, and several other countries to intercept satellite transmissions and some surface traffic, as well as employing satellites to tap transmissions between cities.

Echelon is reportedly capable of interecepting large portions of the world’s communications, including phone conversations, email and SMS. It uses dictionaries to search for keywords that various security services consider to be of interest. Under the ECHELON system, a particular station’s dictionary computer contains not only its parent agency’s chosen keywords, but also a list for each of the other four agencies. Each station collects all the telephone calls, faxes, telexes, emails, internet traffic and other communications that pass through it and compares them against this list of keywords.
- Simon Biggs, artist’s statement

and this one too!

Mitozoos: Mitozoos is an interactive artificial life model created with the objective that through experimentation and play participants will understand tgohe relationship between genetic code and life. The work presents an interface that allows participants to create virtual organisms, called ‘mitozoos’, essentially encoding their DNA, and then witness the evolution of those organisms in a simulated, biological universe.

tizz, history, scienceFebruary 11, 2008 11:01 am

From Cabinet magazine, via 3 quarks daily:

In their external characteristics and mode of life, whales are basically fish (if by that you mean, as people did, “a creature living exclusively in the water”), but in their internal anatomy they are pretty much indistinguishable from a big carnivore. And it was in moving the cetaceans out of the category of fish and into the emergent category of “mammals” that comparative anatomy had its triumph in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Did whales and fish all have fins? Sure. But when you got out your scalpel, you discovered that the whale’s “fin” secreted the bones of a human hand!


(A comparative anatomy of the hand from The Natural History of the Ordinary Cetacea, or Whales (1837), by Robert Hamilton. Diagrams C and D show the bony structures in the flippers of a dugong and a bowhead whale, respectively. Diagram E shows a human arm for comparison.)

This wobbled the old certainties of natural order and implied new and troubling kinships. We don’t any longer hear the word “breast” (mamelle in French) in “mammal,” but people very much did hear that in the beginning of the nineteenth century, and it raised eyebrows. Much resistance to the non-fish whale hailed from anxiety about this newfangled taxonomy: lots of folks agreed that there was something louche about organizing God’s creation according to these intimate, bedroom details. Sexual organs? What was wrong with nice, clean external characteristics?

ps: charles linneaus created the category of mammals specifically to draw attention to the fact that humans, like a number of animals - cows, pigs, dogs, goats, sheep, cats, bats, whales etc suckle their young. and he was concerned that not enough women were doing their own breastfeeding. i think he was alarmed at changes to the relationship between humans and technology with industrialisation. and relationships between humans.

scienceJanuary 17, 2008 8:47 am

It could be the weirdest and most embarrassing prediction in the history of cosmology, if not science.

If true, it would mean that you yourself reading this article are more likely to be some momentary fluctuation in a field of matter and energy out in space than a person with a real past born through billions of years of evolution in an orderly star-spangled cosmos. Your memories and the world you think you see around you are illusions.
From Dennis Overbye

via 3 quarks daily