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Complex polynomial reflection symmetry - braided pattern

Algorithms: Design And Analysis, Part 2, Coursera & Stanford University

Experiments with repulsive and attractive entities

Are the algorithms of living matter also useful for digital arts? Could they for instance be used in live visual performances? And how? Mediamatic and the Live Performers Meeting invite you for this nerd Biotalk with Federico Corradi, Gianluca Del Gobbo and Timo Dufner. They will give us a glimpse of the potential of nature’s algorithms for digital art and illustrate this with a live audio visual experimental act.

 

www.mediamatic.net/en/algorithms-from-nature

 

Photographer: Chiara Barraco

●The procedure takes hard work.

●But it’s not complicated.

●And it’s one of the fastest ways we’ve discovered to rapidly build a portfolio of algorithmic trading strategies

  

thetradingmasterclass.com/successful-algorithmic-trading-...

A landscape in North Dakota, comparing components in GBR order.

The last major algorithm update Google had was Caffiene. This fundamentally changed how Google crawls and indexes the web, making it faster and able to update in almost realtime. Much has been written about the recently announced Google algorithm update called Hummingbird. This update was announced during Google’s 15 Birthday celebrations by Amit Singhal.

To know more visit www.dharne.com/2013/10/important-google-updates-businesse...

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: martin doersch

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: martin doersch

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

Algorithmic composition. A zoomable image can be found here.

 

Algorithmic worlds

Blog

Experiments with the Baker's Algorithm (stretch, fold, turn).

Boston Hollow Road, Yale-Myers Forest, Ashford, CT

file: test290_000

Flood fill algorithm used on pixel patterns generated by mapping an audio signal to a space-filling curve.

file: test290_000

New series, 2024

Flood fill algorithm used on pixel patterns generated by mapping an audio signal to a space-filling curve.

Are the algorithms of living matter also useful for digital arts? Could they for instance be used in live visual performances? And how? Mediamatic and the Live Performers Meeting invite you for this nerd Biotalk with Federico Corradi, Gianluca Del Gobbo and Timo Dufner. They will give us a glimpse of the potential of nature’s algorithms for digital art and illustrate this with a live audio visual experimental act.

 

www.mediamatic.net/en/algorithms-from-nature

 

Photographer: Chiara Barraco

first trials with juxtaposition

[not working properly]

  

technology

 

Xcode Environment

OpenFraweworks

with OpenCV

The Algorithm in the Room

MDP Design Dialogues Symposium + Exhibition with Tim Durfee, Ben Hooker, and Mimi Zeiger

 

The Algorithm in the Room: An Evening of the Post-Geographic brings together an interdisciplinary group of designers and thinkers to discuss relationships between algorithmic and spatial practices. The algorithm in the room is the unspoken technological subject that reorients our understanding of design outcomes, ethics/politics, and authorship. Yet to concretize the algorithm, to try to peg down its functional uses within design is to misunderstand its potentially slippery (and productive) role as a bad collaborator. Feral and unpredictable, it provokes human, systemic, and urbanistic response. Via conversations and through digital, video, and screen-based works, this symposium and exhibition looks to raise difficult questions regarding the politics of predictive/automatized software, its architectural and urban impacts, and the aftereffects of recalibrated design agency. Speakers include: Jeff Maki, urban strategist and Joanne McNeil, writer. Videos exhibited by John Szot Studio, Tim Durfee + Ben Hooker, Jenny Rodenhouse.

Revisiting an algorithm of a few years ago...

 

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