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Again, pdtam is applied to the result before to get the next picture: this convergence takes a little longer than the previous one but is rather abrupt for the odd-numbered variant of the pair. Picture pairs following the last one are very similar.

 

Experiments with repulsive and attractive entities

Algorithmic Missile Ensemble

Complex polynomial reflection symmetry x4 - 3D effect

Experiments with repulsive and attractive entities

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.

drawing on canvas with trear physics tendrils using texones creative computing framework which is based on processing

Euroblast 2017

Day 1 // 29th Oktober

Essigfabrik // Cologne, Germany

After Facebook's Algorithm Change Devastated Organic Reach, How Are Publishers Coping

www.biphoo.com/bipnews/technology/facebooks-algorithm-cha...

www.biphoo.com/bipnews/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/faceboo...

#AfterFacebook'SAlgorithmChangeDevastatedOrganicReachHowArePublishersCoping, #LatestTechnologyNews, #TechNewsWorld, #TechnologyNewsHeadlines, #TechnologyNewsToday, #TechnologyNewsUSA

After Facebook’s Algorithm Change Devastated Organic Reach, How Are Publishers Coping

When Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced in January that the site’s News Feed algorithm would further emphasize posts from friends and family, publishers that hadn’t diversified across many platforms fa...

Initial pattern folded four times.

Complex iterated polynomial, etc. gives 3-D effect and negative space.

drawing on canvas with trear physics tendrils using texones creative computing framework which is based on processing

Experiments with repulsive and attractive entities

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

Artificialisation de la pensée ... #intelligence #artificielle #chatGPT #ordinateur #éduquer #enfant #apprendre #algorithme #collage #visualyon

Audio visualization, image read and written on a Hilbert curve, processed in GlitchSort with FFT, quantization, median filter. Further processing with coloring algorithms.

Do Algorithms Care? is a collaboration between artist Amanda Bennetts and data scientist Johanna Einsiedler. The project, realized in an interactive installation that resembles a pristine tech store, offers a critical perspective on the commercialization of personal bio data harvested by devices such as smartwatches and in healthcare industries. Through the use of the duo’s DIY smartwatches and interactive data interface, they delve into the predictive potential of personal data and machine learning for well-being, inviting viewers to reconsider their relationship with data control and privacy.

 

Photo showing: Amanda Bennetts and Johanna Einsiedler (from left to right)

 

Photo: martin doersch

Yesterday / Image generated by MatLab

drawing on canvas with trear physics tendrils using texones creative computing framework which is based on processing

Do Algorithms Care? is a collaboration between artist Amanda Bennetts and data scientist Johanna Einsiedler. The project, realized in an interactive installation that resembles a pristine tech store, offers a critical perspective on the commercialization of personal bio data harvested by devices such as smartwatches and in healthcare industries. Through the use of the duo’s DIY smartwatches and interactive data interface, they delve into 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

drawing on canvas with trear physics tendrils using texones creative computing framework which is based on processing

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