Sunday, January 30, 2011

JOURNAL: Cell Phone Coordination of Open Source Protests - Global Guerrillas

potential uses in other locals should be obvious

Here's a cool little phone app called Sukey to help people navigate during a protest/riot.  Very useful in avoiding kettling (a slang term for police crowd containment).  Check out the tutorial

Sukey
(click to enlarge)

Elements: 

  • Mashup (Google map mode) and SMS mode.
  • Identification of dangerzones.  Voting on colors (danger level).
  • Directional danger indications (compass rose).
  • News ticker - combo of standard news and SMS/Twitter (verified) user generated news

NOTE:  A slight variant of this could be used to direct open source protests by select routes and targets/takedowns (using a reddit style upvote process for each)

JOURNAL: Cell Phone Coordination of Open Source Protests - Global Guerrillas

Saturday, January 22, 2011

The Boston Festival of Films from Iran | Museum of Fine Arts, Boston


The Boston Festival of Films from Iran

The January 21 and 22 screenings of Salve are canceled. The screenings will be replaced by Please Do Not Disturb. Please purchase tickets at any MFA ticket desk.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Design From Italy to the World

Design From Italy to the World: "


Graphic Design Worlds is an exhibition opening this month at the Triennale Design Museum in Milan. Curated by Giorgio Camuffo, the exhibition is devoted to the “multifarious worlds of graphic design” by featuring the work, ideas, and stories of some significant international designers and critics. Covering the event in real time for the duration of the exhibit is “A Diary of an Exhibition” edited by Camuffo, Benedetta Crippa and Maddalena Dalla Mura. It will feature a range of videos, photos and commentary.


Say the organizers:



The truth is that graphics may not be dealt with simply as a collection of posters, logos, fonts and communication products. Rather, it is a complex and integrated world leading to and implementing a strategy, a plan, possibly a theory of aesthetics or even a philosophy of communication.


In other words, it is not limited to managing the “page layout”, by accurately using fonts, sizes, spaces and paces. Rather, it is a communicative conduct immediately leading to social, political and economic implications.


In 2007, thanks to The New Italian Design exhibition, we endeavoured to illustrate the strategic role played by graphics in the research projects and experiments conducted by the latest generation of Italian designers. Then, in 2009, the Spaghetti Grafica exhibition conducted a long-due and exhaustive survey of the Italian graphics in the new millennium by tracing its unexpected creative and communicative approaches.


Now the Graphic Design Worlds exhibition, which will open in January 2011, has the ambitious goal of drawing a balance of the state of the art at international level by discovering and enhancing avant-garde experiences in the modern communication environment. Hence, the Exhibition will open and a blog will be updated every day thanks to the passionate and well-planned contributions of Giorgio Camuffo, in order to illustrate the constant evolution and growth of this project and contribute to the debates on the themes dealt with in the exhibition.


Find links for interviews (sampled below) and articles here.








"

How to Build a Universe That Doesn't Fall Apart Two Days Later

by Philip K. Dick, 1978

First, before I begin to bore you with the usual sort of things science fiction writers say in speeches, let me bring you official greetings from Disneyland. I consider myself a spokesperson for Disneyland because I live just a few miles from it—and, as if that were not enough, I once had the honor of being interviewed there by Paris TV.

For several weeks after the interview, I was really ill and confined to bed. I think it was the whirling teacups that did it. Elizabeth Antebi, who was the producer of the film, wanted to have me whirling around in one of the giant teacups while discussing the rise of fascism with Norman Spinrad... an old friend of mine who writes excellent science fiction. We also discussed Watergate, but we did that on the deck of Captain Hook's pirate ship. Little children wearing Mickey Mouse hats—those black hats with the ears—kept running up and bumping against us as the cameras whirred away, and Elizabeth asked unexpected questions. Norman and I, being preoccupied with tossing little children about, said some extraordinarly stupid things that day. Today, however, I will have to accept full blame for what I tell you, since none of you are wearing Mickey Mouse hats and trying to climb up on me under the impression that I am part of the rigging of a pirate ship.

Science fiction writers, I am sorry to say, really do not know anything. We can't talk about science, because our knowledge of it is limited and unofficial, and usually our fiction is dreadful. A few years ago, no college or university would ever have considered inviting one of us to speak. We were mercifully confined to lurid pulp magazines, impressing no one. In those days, friends would say me, "But are you writing anything serious?" meaning "Are you writing anything other than science fiction?" We longed to be accepted. We yearned to be noticed. Then, suddenly, the academic world noticed us, we were invited to give speeches and appear on panels—and immediately we made idiots of ourselves. The problem is simply this: What does a science fiction writer know about? On what topic is he an authority?

It reminds me of a headline that appeared in a California newspaper just before I flew here. SCIENTISTS SAY THAT MICE CANNOT BE MADE TO LOOK LIKE HUMAN BEINGS. It was a federally funded research program, I suppose. Just think: Someone in this world is an authority on the topic of whether mice can or cannot put on two-tone shoes, derby hats, pinstriped shirts, and Dacron pants, and pass as humans.

Well, I will tell you what interests me, what I consider important. I can't claim to be an authority on anything, but I can honestly say that certain matters absolutely fascinate me, and that I write about them all the time. The two basic topics which fascinate me are "What is reality?" and "What constitutes the authentic human being?" Over the twenty-seven years in which I have published novels and stories I have investigated these two interrelated topics over and over again. I consider them important topics. What are we? What is it which surrounds us, that we call the not-me, or the empirical or phenomenal world?

Read more on: How to Build a Universe That Doesn't Fall Apart Two Days Later

Saturday, January 8, 2011

lille3000 >> La route de la soie - Saatchi Gallery

 

silk1

silk4

silk3

silk4[4]

www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk

CATALOGUE "THE SILK ROAD"
Beaux-Arts Magazine
Special edition 100 color pages
Texts in french and english

Price : 12 €

On sale at the Tripostal bookshop
(Wed > Sun, 20 Oct.2010 > 23 Jan.2011)
and by Flammarion (more than 1500 bookshops).

AND ALSO

SHI XINNING

CAISSE D'ÉPARGNE NORD FRANCE EUROPE, LILLE

SHI XINNING
A Holiday in Venice - At the Balcony of Ms. Guggenheim

MON > FRI : 8:00 > 19:00

SAT 8:00 > 15:00

FREE ACCESS

From 1st December at Siège de la Caisse d’Epargne Nord France Europe

135 Pont de Flandres, Euralille.

SUBOD GUPTA

EGLISE STE MARIE-MADELEINE, LILLE

SUBODH GUPTA
GOD HUNGRY

22 OCT.2010 > 23 JAN.2011
FRI > SUN : 14:00 > 18:00
FREE ACCESS

For Bombaysers de Lille (2006), lille invited Subodh Gupta, one of the most popular contemporary artists, to create a monumental cascade of kitchen crockery which will occupy the centre of the Sainte Marie-Madeleine church. This wave of objects is a reference to the tsunami which ravaged India in December 2004.

Purchased recently by the City of Lille with de support of AG2R La Mondiale and La Mondiale Foundation.

lille3000 >> La route de la soie - Saatchi Gallery