Wiicon > E306: Hots And Nots
[dddc] I know I didn’t offer any sage advice to any of my fellow freelancers or showgoers before E3, but write this one down for next year. For $3 you can make it to the LACC in just under an hour via the highly underutilized subway/rail line.
Some related posts from Technorati and Google.
[Resourceshelf.com] ResourceShelf: * The Rural Development Publication Digitizing Project, providing access to publications produced since the 1800s and chosen as being the most relevant titles on rural development. These include the entire series of Rural Development Research Reports, Rural Development Perspectives, Agricultural Economic Reports, and Agriculture Information Bulletins, as well as selected Economic Research Staff Reports and the first 300 volumes of Agriculture Handbooks.
[Turbulence.org] networked_performance: From David Em's pioneering experimental artworks created at historical places such as Xerox PARC and JPL to EZTV's development of a desktop video and microcinema tradition to ECI's experiments in telecommunication arts to the work of the Digilantes, a term coined by artist/educator Michael Wright, who along with Victor Acevedo staged many guerilla style exhibitions and became a local force for Los Angeles digital art. Their concept of Digilantism, which they not only apply to themselves but also to the efforts of places such as EZTV and other artists/activists worldwide, best describes an art movement as genuine as Futurism, the Arts & Crafts Movement or Hip-Hop." Michael Masucci, 2006
[Resourceshelf.freepint.com] ResourceShelf: * The Rural Development Publication Digitizing Project, providing access to publications produced since the 1800s and chosen as being the most relevant titles on rural development. These include the entire series of Rural Development Research Reports, Rural Development Perspectives, Agricultural Economic Reports, and Agriculture Information Bulletins, as well as selected Economic Research Staff Reports and the first 300 volumes of Agriculture Handbooks.
[Ladlass.com] Internet Changes Everything: December 2003 Archives: An off-beat description by Julian Dibbell, in We've Got Blog, compares weblogs to the Wunderkammer, "a random collection of strange, compelling objects, typically compiled and owned by a learned, well-off gentleman that reflect[ed] European civilization's dazed and wondering attempts to assimilate the glut of physical data that science and exploration [unleashed] during the Renaissance." Rebecca Blood, the author of The Weblog Handbook and creator of the Weblog "Rebecca's Pocket," (www.rebeccablood.net) sees these creations as a personal vision, with a "focus on whatever is of interest to its maintainer." The appeal of each Weblog, she writes, is "grounded thoroughly in the personality of its writer: his interests, his opinions, and his personal mix of links and commentary."
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, Nintendo Revolution, Wiicon