Archive for the ‘community’ Category

Artist talk: Jessica Rylan

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

I saw Jessica Rylan’s talk at the MIT Center for Advanced Visual Studies a few months ago, and it was an interesting experience. It’s been awhile since I went to one of these things, and I think my break has given me a bit of healthy perspective. Here are some things I wrote down or thought about during the talk—per usual, my mind wanders during events of this nature.

Jessica’s talk had some very interesting AV components. At one point, she played a great series of audio samples with accompanying waveplots. I was a little underwhelmed by her engagement with the technical side of her work—maybe she was nervous, but it seemed at times as though she was deliberately trying to sound “technical,” something that makes me immediately suspicious.

Much of Jessica’s talk was about the change in technology from the 1960’s to the present: transistors are smaller, memory is bigger, and the like. It didn’t relate much to anything else, except that it was an interest of hers, which I suppose we did all show up to listen to…at a couple points she used the strange example of cars to compare to the progress that computers have made: cars still do the same thing, cost about the same, run on gas, etc. More than a few people in the (mostly MIT-student) audience looked as confused as I that we were making this comparison.

I’m aware that I’m not saying much that’s positive about Jessica, even though I admire what she’s doing and how she got here. I’m a little puzzled myself as to why I’m dwelling on the negative aspects, and I think the distinction is dawning on me: Jessica Rylan is a good maker of things, and is firmly interested in the dialog surrounding her work. She has a rich relationship to the equipment she uses and the sound she makes (her website is very well-spoken), and is admirably open and involved in helping others have the same experience. Of course, the other side of all of this is that I really don’t care for her actual music—it appears as though she has taken to describing herself as a “noise band” because of the current cachet surrounding this genre, since her music rarely shares the qualities of other groups in that genre.

Altogether, the presentation didn’t go very well. Ms. Rylan’s prepared notes weren’t thorough or focused, and her remarks didn’t really get at the ideas behind her process and her music. Perhaps the entire audience would have been better served if he had made a clear decision either to discuss her artistic intent and motivation or to delve into the technical aspects of her hardware fabrication and setup, rather than paying lip-service to both. I’ve seen from this talk how someone who is otherwise in control of her direction and practice can make the mistake of showing work that is either poorly contextualized or, worse, attempting to capitalize on an audience’s lack of understanding rather than add to such an understanding.

I’ve held off on releasing this post for several months for a couple of reasons, and I’m glad to revisit it, especially since the project I’m working on now has put me in much the same situation: several times in the recent past, I’ve been compelled to “tech it up” when discussing my project with sponsors, press, or visitors. It’s amazing the kind of hyperbolic bullshit one can concoct when watching a sponsor’s interest in your professor’s opera flag before your eyes.

However, these experiences have only strengthened my resolve to be more open when discussing my own work, which hopefully will be soon (Sponsor Week is at the end of October, and I expect to have one or two projects of my own ready to show by then).

An Unlikely Set of Constraints

Monday, February 25th, 2008

Because of some recent financial blunders and a lack of roommates in my residence, I find myself with far less cash than I usually have available. Coupled with the recent computer troubles necessitating a new laptop, this prompts me to take drastic steps to increase my liquidity.

I will therefore live the month of March with some elective constraints, listed below:

  • I will eat out only three times this month, and not spend over $100 total on this. When at home, I will eat inexpensively and I will try to consume all my leftovers.
  • I will drink one beer per day, perhaps two on the weekend. This does not count a beer that someone might purchase for me.
  • I will visit the gym every other day, with the option to skip a weekend visit if I exercise at home. (This will ensure I get value from my gym membership)
  • I will sell my two ham radios at a reasonable price.
  • I will make and sell at least two t-shirts…getting them in a store on consignment is okay for this.
  • I will find freelance work and execute it at a rate more than $20/hr.
  • I am interested in the degree to which you think I will be successful here. I have listed more constraints than I intend to follow, and I’d love to hear in the comments which ones you think I will be able to meet.

    If I had a lot of time on my hands, in fact, I’d love to take odds on these and make this an ongoing market—I think it would be interesting and motivational if a community helped itself improve by posting resolutions and paying out when they’re broken (and vice versa - if you bet me I won’t make it to the gym and I do, you lose the bet). This encourages people to push their limits and propose something that gets better odds, and discourages them from lowballing and going the comfortable route. Sasha would probably have a better system to implement this, so if you read this, Sasha, chime in!

    In other news, I have snuck some fun into my workday by assigning myself the task of designing better visualizations for the tech support staff’s telephone data. Right now, I’m adapting Ben Fry’s excellent zipdecode applet to accept timestamped call data.

    FLORA MORTIS - OPENING NIGHT

    Wednesday, October 31st, 2007



    DORKBOT HALLOWEEN07

    Originally uploaded by AKA MEDIA SYSTEM

    The opening tonight went well—many thanks to all who attended!

    Pictured here is the final product. I think the form turned out well, and I certainly learned many lessons in different media. The flower initially deployed flawlessly and worked for over an hour with no intervention from me. I’ll detail in a later update the means by which I ensured that the auto-destruct feature of previous flower incarnations was successfully deprecated.

    After I had been away from the flower for awhile, I came back and noticed it was stuck in the “on” position—not good for anyone! After twenty minutes of frustrating, in-public debugging I discovered that the 9v battery had more or less drained completely; tomorrow I’ll need to deliver a 9v AC power supply, and perhaps once I post the schematic and/or breadboard photos someone can point out the error in my circuit that causes the excessive drain.

    Watching strangers interact with the flower was pretty enlightening. I certainly regret that I had to compromise on the original interaction design in order to complete the schematic on time. In the final hours of Googling for an answer (peep my del.icio.us to see the link density/time relationship change as we approach opening night) I realized I should have had the circuit ready way sooner than the physical proto…so now I know.

    One significant upside to this project is that it’s eliminated the inertia that I felt was keeping me from making acceptable progress on the Cameroon project. The flower circuit is my first foray from hardware hacking into the realm of microcontroller/logic projects, and I feel much more comfortable delving into a non-555 project with this under my belt.

    Go see KING CORN!

    Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

    My very good friend’s first feature-length movie, King Corn, has opened to great acclaim in New York. This weekend (October 19th), it’ll open in Boston at the historic Coolidge Corner Theater. I’ll definitely be there, possibly in costume. Join me!

    Hit up the King Corn blog
    King Corn - promo image

    Fatal Flower Garden update

    Saturday, October 13th, 2007

    Friend, I’m making progress on this project. You can always check the flickr set here for the latest images.

    Progress-wise, here’s what I’ve got left to do:

    • Decide on the actual material to use for the final flower
    • Figure out how the muscle wire will connect on either end, and where this will be - it seems now that molding my own silicone petals will not be feasible in my timeframe.
    • Design the circuit - I have a photoresistor that would be easy to hook up to a small transistor circuit, but I’m not sure this’ll yield consistent results. Also, there’s a latching problem that I might want to try and solve with a timer.

    A look at my startpage

    Saturday, October 13th, 2007

    I’ve been using Netvibes as my start page and loving it - I have three tabs, a main one with volatile/important feeds, weather, and email, a secondary tab for my del.icio.us network and some less-volatile/noncritical feeds, and a last one called AUDIO that I go to when I’ve got time to download new stuff or get lost in some good music/theory writing. I’ve shared each tab below - let me know if you like them, or you think I’m missing anything!

    Add to NetvibesMAIN TAB

    Add to NetvibesSECONDARY TAB

    Add to NetvibesAUDIO TAB