View allAll Photos Tagged algorithm

"Algorithm" by Wilkinson Eyre, around Canary Wharf.

 

Egg from the London Egg Hunt. Over 200 Easter eggs are hidden across the city. Enjoy the hunt!

 

www.thebigegghunt.co.uk/home

Brooklyn, NY

 

First attempts at an abstract library similar to work related to first year. I hope to make it more concrete and program more like a library!

 

*Abstract Concept currently

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

Proceso de masillado, antes de la pintura

Still playing around with my first work, Process_01. Either you take to it or not. I kind of like the forms it's making.

 

It was working well with listening to Minamo's 'When Unwelt Melts'

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

Experiments with repulsive and attractive entities

Experiments with repulsive and attractive entities

It's moments like this that I love being in the game industry

Taken at The Hope, Brighton on 16/07/14

From a suite of 128 transforms of a concentric circle pattern, following a space-filling curve (Hilbert curve).

Textiles in three colors (red, dark blue, white) woven by Paula del Cerro using Theo Moorman’s inlay technique to create geometric shapes with horizontal and vertical edges. The square napkins measure about sixteen inches on a side. The designs were generated with software written by Paul Hertz. Each of the designs represents a moment in a cyclic transform along a space-filling curve.

 

Photographed in natural light in my studio space "La Nave" in Spain.

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

1 2 ••• 68 69 71 73 74 ••• 79 80