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Walker Tufts, as member of spurse & head chef, 2006
The Public Table was a provisional restaurant traveling from New Haven, CT to Bellows Falls, VT and ending in Cambridge, MA. The materials, both for the installations and meals, were gleaned. The number of dishes, size of the dishes, number of ingredients, type of ingredients and amounts of each were determined by an algorithm driven by a walk taken earllier in the day.
Here you can see folks arriving for dinner. Bellows Falls is a former mill town and a great deal of the gleaned construction materials were collected from the rocks around the dry side of the town's dam.
People gathering together to figure out some sort of a march. Slow sync flash from top angle gave this photo some interesting energy.
3:00 pm - 3:50 pm
Koch Tent
Seth Berkley, Lizzie Dorfman, Jay Komarneni
Moderator: Alan Weil
Property of the Aspen Institute / Photo Credit: Riccardo Savi
Complex polynomial iteration based on the Sombrero Function: www.flickr.com/photos/photonatic/519321368/
Photos of Euroblast 2011, aka one of the greatest festivals this continent has to offer.
Photos strictly copyright © Patrick Häberli @ ProgHippie.com.
Do Algorithms Care? is a collaboration between artist Amanda Bennetts and data scientist Johanna Einsiedler. The project is realized in an installation that mimics a tech store, turning a critical lens on the commercialization of bio-data. Using the duo's open-source DIY smartwatches and interactive data interface, they explore the predictive potential of personal data and machine learning for well-being, inviting viewers to reconsider their relationship with data control and privacy.
Photo: flap
ACV (Algorithmic Cultural Vandalism) by Pietro Lugaro (IT), Alessandro Mac-Nelly (DE) (MA Design & Computation, Technical University Berlin (DE)) received The Grand Prize at Campus Award Ceremony 2024
Photo showing: Pietro Lugaro, Alessandro Mac-Nelly
Photo: flap
Pour éclairer ces questions, France Stratégie organise avec l’EHESS et Inria un cycle de débats mensuels Mutations technologiques, mutations sociales. La séance « Algorithmes, libertés et responsabilités », a été introduite par Daniel Le Métayer, directeur de recherche Inria, et Antoinette Rouvroy, chercheuse qualifiée du FNRS au Centre de recherche en information, droit et société (CRIDS), à l’Université de Namur.
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drawing on canvas with trear physics tendrils using texones creative computing framework which is based on processing
This is another atempt of creating my own dynamic range increasing algorithm using Python and PIL.
This time I tried to generate some kind of a map out of the 3 input images to mark which region and how much of this I want to have in my final image.
My script needs 3 parameters a Limit for black, a limit for white and a region of middletones.
With these values it creates such a map. Then the map gets blurred and the 3 input images get merged together exactly the way the map specifies.
I think there is still a lot to do, but this is probably the best idea I had so far and I think the results aren't that bad!
The script will be realesed under GNU/GPL on the-engine.at
Do Algorithms Care? is a collaboration between artist Amanda Bennetts and data scientist Johanna Einsiedler. The project is realized in an installation that mimics a tech store, turning a critical lens on the commercialization of bio-data. Using the duo's open-source DIY smartwatches and interactive data interface, they explore the predictive potential of personal data and machine learning for well-being, inviting viewers to reconsider their relationship with data control and privacy.
Photo: flap