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Hotel Asterisk, my home for a week in Amsterdam. It was on a Den Texstraat, across the canal from the Heineken Experience. The street was an interesting combination of Heineken offices, a couple small hotels in former row houses, and mostly residential, not touristy at all. A couple small Dutch kids were playing in the street most days when I was wandering in and out, and eventually they noticed that I didn't speak Dutch and took to practicing their English on me. I'm pretty happy I ended up here rather than in the more tourist oriented areas. It was a nice experience, although it would have been nice to at least have a bathroom on the same floor as my room.

 

They served breakfast every morning, lunchmeat, breads, cereal, eggs, etc. The first day I was a bit confused by the box of Hagelslag on every table. For those unfamiliar with Hagelslag, like I was, it's a box of chocolate sprinkles, with the photo on the box showing them on a piece of bread. Having never seen a box of chocolate candy sprinkles as a condiment on my breakfast table, I was a bit confused. So, I followed the picture and tried them on bread... not bad. By the end of my vacation, I was putting them on bread, in my cereal, basically everything I could find to put them on. Chocolate sprinkles: an important component of a balanced breakfast!

Al fondo uno de los proyectores de demo y la pantalla con votaciones en tiempo real

NTT Networks staff demonstrate Xorcom equipment to interested crowds at the event.

Made for Louise for Christmas

Ariel Mapelman, Xorcom Sales Manager for LATAM, Spain and Portugal, poses next to Xorcom IP-PBX equipment in the Desarrollos Enlinea booth at Technology Day 2011.

Los hermanos... Uno es la telefonia, el otro (el de abajo) corre con Xen y virtualiza todos nuestros servidores...

This is the comm room I took over to get this thing up and running. After they configured it I was able to browse the web using Cox's DNS server (209.242.128.107) plugged into Windows' advanced TCP/IP settings. That Dell box is running Asterisk (trixbox) which runs all of our Polycom 601 phones, voicemail, etc.

Every day, we casually seek wisdom and advice at a shrine called Google.

Google's mission is to “organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful.” AI Google possesses information all over the world and has major influence over people’s behavior. What the AI can’t search is “*”. The asterisk (*) – an often-used typographic character, especially on the Internet – symbolizes, for example, “born”, or indicates mandatory fields in online forms, and it acts as a placeholder for encrypted notes. Google should return the most relevant and proper answers to all questions. Why does it not answer to "*"? This project is an artistic research into this mystery, and for envisioning the future of humans and AI. “AIs” have been deployed, by Google and others, as a convenient service in our daily lives. What are the human needs, the things, that “they” are incapable of supporting? How can we coexist with all-seeing and all-knowing “others?”

Painting with light.

Lighting art installation situated behind the National Gallery of Canada in downtown Ottawa.

The Asterisk Project performs on

12 foot ladders for the Burien Art Walk. Improvisational dance by Nicole Sasala,Bridgett Gunning, and Monica Mata-Gillium, with musical accompaniment by the Diminished Men.

 

Sent from my BlackBerry® by Boost Mobile

glyph from the Skyscraperfont font workshop with AIGA Chicago.

Erick Guillen of Desarrollos Enlinea, a certified Xorcom partner in Costa Rica, participates in Technology Day 2011.

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Amisha's wanted gray, purple and red.

A design reminiscent of mid-century modern pendant lamps, but actually consisting of two different asterisks (*) overlapping each other. A great addition to any contemporary or modern style decor.

www.cafepress.com/spikemandesigns/5845535

 

Xorcom conducted a raffle for Pleo, a robotic dinosaur, during the AstriCon event. John Valley (right) of Xorcom US congratulates the lucky new owner: Richard Pettitt, a Senior Software Engineer at Startel.

Note the Xorcom carton on the left, which holds a stand-alone IP-PBX appliance for a lucky raffle winner at the event.

Dexter Sinister submitted this image for Stickball to print as a limited edition silkscreen for our fall fundraiser.

 

The asterisk graphic is taken from a poster originally printed at the Visible Language Workshop at MIT in 1976 by Muriel Cooper.

 

The edition size is 35 and was printed on Arches 88 archival paper.

Mei, Pauline, Yew & Vanita (left to right) from JCMEX.

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