Kendall Grady
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17 October 2011, 1:21 am
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tags: affect, affect and mobile technology, cell phones, embodiment, Geert Lovink, hip-hop, Hyperreality, Janet Murray, Lev Manovich, local-narrative, Matthew Fuller, meta-narrative, mobile phone, mobile screens, music, musicvideo, rap music, relationships, rhizome music
Attraction: Mobile tools
R. Kelly ft. Nas
“Did You Ever Think” (1998)

The access point of your curiosity is the body, an exciting, new gadget. J. Macgregor Wise describes one perspective of human-technology relations as a received view in which mutually external parties can act upon one another, indulging an oscillation between technological and social determinism…
In this post I would like to continue on the subject of augmented reality implemented in our daily lives that is brought up bij Kesh.
John Mayer is the first artist that has made an augmented reality videoclip. To start the video you have to download a symbol on your mobile phone which you have…
The whole video is created with one and the same skype video recording; its basically a selfportrait of me jumping around.
Creating this video made me think about a couple of things. First of all, the research I am doing is not about destroying the pixel. If we subscribe to wikipedia and agree that the pixel (or…
Rosa Menkman
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17 November 2008, 2:57 am
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tags: bug, Cimatics, error, festival, glitch, glitch art, hardderive, harddrive, jodi, musicvideo, porn, r00s, vj
I made this video with the help of a collection of failing hard drive sounds, while the video is a combination of failed pdf screengrap videos (by me).
It is the first time I made a (kind of) music video-thing all on my own.…
Last Eastern me and Goto80 made a new ‘music’video. The sound is produced by the new tracker software for the c64 (Defmon) that Goto80 uses, unfortunately glitched [hehehe]. look at Youtube! Goto80 described it as “I hugged bugs to compose”.
The tv signal is also glitched, analogue-ous-ly. You can see the final result here, but be warned, there…

The video-images are constructed out of nothing but the image that feedback created [I focused a high end camera to my screen that showed, in real time, what I was filming, which created a feedback loop]. Then I glitched the video by changing its format and subsequently I exported the video into animated gifs. I [minimalistically] edited the video…