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TIAT offers an Algorithmic Trading course with Python, Java or C# .net for improving basics & advance programming skills, data science, data analytics, artificial intelligence to set your own algorithmic trading desk
Colorized by Artificial Intelligence Algorithm Tool from originally scanned hi-res photo from the respective source.
Credit disclaimer: I do not own the original scanned image and believe that it is in the public domain. These images have been collected from Flickr's search results and/or collected from various internet sources. If you know the link to the original image, please kindly put it into comment section as I will update the description to give full credit to the respective owner.
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Colorized by Artificial Intelligence Algorithm Tool from originally scanned hi-res photo from the respective source.
Credit disclaimer: I do not own the original scanned image and believe that it is in the public domain. These images have been collected from Flickr's search results and/or collected from various internet sources. If you know the link to the original image, please kindly put it into comment section as I will update the description to give full credit to the respective owner.
Please follow, like and leave a comment for more exiting future notifications.
My websites:
Visit my portfolio sites:
www.saatchiart.com/celestialart
www.redbubble.com/people/Motionage/shop
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www.youtube.com/channel/UC8JtcV_EejccsUNXSK_ejcw Springs of Eden
The Algorithm (synthwave, France) en concert aux Docks de Lausanne, le 9 octobre 2019.
Photo: Stéphane Gallay, sous licence Creative Commons (CC-BY)
Algorithmic Expression in Computer Science class today! Students had to follow their friends' algorithm exactly to make a paper plane... lift, drag, thrust and gravity.
Colorized by Artificial Intelligence Algorithm Tool from originally scanned hi-res photo from the respective source.
Credit disclaimer: I do not own the original scanned image and believe that it is in the public domain. These images have been collected from Flickr's search results and/or collected from various internet sources. If you know the link to the original image, please kindly put it into comment section as I will update the description to give full credit to the respective owner.
Please follow, like and leave a comment for more exiting future notifications.
My websites:
Visit my portfolio sites:
www.saatchiart.com/celestialart
FOLLOW ME:
www.youtube.com/channel/UC8JtcV_EejccsUNXSK_ejcw Springs of Eden
Bent Rainbow
Experiment with mapping additive color to a Hilbert curve instead of writing RGB channels directly.
This little kitty turned out to be Moby, I think. Isn't he a doll? He was at the humane society, but I think he did get adopted. I hope so. (151catathumanesocietyabitlikemontana)
Our son Adam Florin gave a fascinating talk about generative music at Algorithmic Art Assembly, hosted by Gray Area Art + Technology. He started with a quick demo of Patter, his music composition software, then took us on an illuminating journey through the many people and ideas which inspired him to create his cool freeform generative sequencer.
Brian Eno, who coined the phrase “generative music”, recently likened it to gardening -- but the material practice is just as much rooted in centuries of formal aesthetics, predictive statistics and industrial automation. How can we negotiate the tension between organic and and the mechanical in the algorithmic arts?
Adam has created some amazing digital tools and art exhibits in that space. It was great to hear what he's learned in this fascinating field, exploring the intersection of human and machine creativity. And to top it off, he gave this talk on his birthday, which was the best present of all!
Watch video highlights:
View more photos:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157677379327027
Learn about Patter:
adamflorin.work/projects/patter/
Learn about Algorithmic Arts:
#AlgorithmicArtAssembly #GrayArea
Colorized by Artificial Intelligence Algorithm Tool from originally scanned hi-res photo from the respective source.
Credit disclaimer: I do not own the original scanned image and believe that it is in the public domain. These images have been collected from Flickr's search results and/or collected from various internet sources. If you know the link to the original image, please kindly put it into comment section as I will update the description to give full credit to the respective owner.
Please follow, like and leave a comment for more exiting future notifications.
My websites:
Visit my portfolio sites:
www.saatchiart.com/celestialart
www.redbubble.com/people/Motionage/shop
FOLLOW ME:
www.youtube.com/channel/UC8JtcV_EejccsUNXSK_ejcw Springs of Eden
Algorithmic Expression in Computer Science class today! Students had to follow their friends' algorithm exactly to make a paper plane... lift, drag, thrust and gravity.
I came up with an algorithm that scans the pixels of an image, and creates this nice 'paint' effect.
Helena Nikonole is a new media artist, independent curator and educator living in Moscow. Her field of interests embraces hybrid art, the new aesthetics, the Internet of Things, and Artificial Intelligence. In her works she explores technology’s potential opportunities, but also potential risks and dangers which techno-evangelists and scientists are not able to realize.
In this way she also conceived her first ever solo exhibition, titled "Contagious Algorithms", presenting her works that use cracks in the system of IP cameras and the Internet of Things.
Using these cracks, Helena Nikonole employs algorithms to generate new meanings and functions of hacked systems, pointing out their shortcomings and revealing how they operate, especially in terms of the amount of data collected by digital devices about their users. These data may be just some digital trash, or maybe have a purpose beyond the usual narrative of the political and marketing manipulation, to us incomprehensible, or perhaps understandable only with the help of divine intervention.
Be sure to visit the exhibition which allows algorithms to show a range of their abilities, from reading and interpreting data to generating new meanings in the form of musical compositions and sacred books.
EXHIBITED WORKS
deus X mchn (media-installation, 2017)
f0rma.suprema (media-installation, 2017 – 2018)
The Other View (media-installation, 2018)
Faces2Voices (Online interactive installation, 2020)
More: drugo-more.hr/en/helena-nikonole/
Photos: Tanja Kanazir / Drugo more
Helena Nikonole is a new media artist, independent curator and educator living in Moscow. Her field of interests embraces hybrid art, the new aesthetics, the Internet of Things, and Artificial Intelligence. In her works she explores technology’s potential opportunities, but also potential risks and dangers which techno-evangelists and scientists are not able to realize.
In this way she also conceived her first ever solo exhibition, titled "Contagious Algorithms", presenting her works that use cracks in the system of IP cameras and the Internet of Things.
Using these cracks, Helena Nikonole employs algorithms to generate new meanings and functions of hacked systems, pointing out their shortcomings and revealing how they operate, especially in terms of the amount of data collected by digital devices about their users. These data may be just some digital trash, or maybe have a purpose beyond the usual narrative of the political and marketing manipulation, to us incomprehensible, or perhaps understandable only with the help of divine intervention.
Be sure to visit the exhibition which allows algorithms to show a range of their abilities, from reading and interpreting data to generating new meanings in the form of musical compositions and sacred books.
EXHIBITED WORKS
deus X mchn (media-installation, 2017)
f0rma.suprema (media-installation, 2017 – 2018)
The Other View (media-installation, 2018)
Faces2Voices (Online interactive installation, 2020)
More: drugo-more.hr/en/helena-nikonole/
Photos: Tanja Kanazir / Drugo more
Our son Adam Florin gave a fascinating talk about generative music at Algorithmic Art Assembly, hosted by Gray Area Art + Technology. He started with a quick demo of Patter, his music composition software, then took us on an illuminating journey through the many people and ideas which inspired him to create his cool freeform generative sequencer.
Brian Eno, who coined the phrase “generative music”, recently likened it to gardening -- but the material practice is just as much rooted in centuries of formal aesthetics, predictive statistics and industrial automation. How can we negotiate the tension between organic and and the mechanical in the algorithmic arts?
Adam has created some amazing digital tools and art exhibits in that space. It was great to hear what he's learned in this fascinating field, exploring the intersection of human and machine creativity. And to top it off, he gave this talk on his birthday, which was the best present of all!
Watch video highlights:
View more photos:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157677379327027
Learn about Patter:
adamflorin.work/projects/patter/
Learn about Algorithmic Arts:
#AlgorithmicArtAssembly #GrayArea
BIAS: BUILT THIS WAY is an interactive, thought-provoking exploration of preferences, prejudices and digital equity.
This new season by Science Gallery Dublin interrogates how prejudice can move quickly from human to machine as algorithms and artificial intelligence systems are encoded by humans with very human values, preferences and predispositions.
For more information, visit dublin.sciencegallery.com/bias.
This is a clear plastic cup, with a heavily faceted surface, sitting open end down on the scanner, with a CD-ROM balanced on top of it, shiny side down. The elliptical distortion is an artifact of the scanner; the further from the bed, the more horizontally compressed the image is. The scan has been smoothed to remove dust specks, and had the contrast adaptively increased.
drawing on canvas with trear physics tendrils using texones creative computing framework which is based on processing
More playing around with refraction and reflection on the flatbed scanner. This is a high-res scan of couple of clear plastic forks for the refraction, with CD-Rs behind them to provide reflections and diffraction. The image has been converted to HSV space and fiddled with there to maximize saturation and alter the hues.