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== Reflection on your practice 15.04.15 ==
== Reflection on your practice 15.04.15 ==
/style></head><body dir="ltr" style="max-width:8.2681in;margin-top:0.7874in; margin-bottom:0.7874in; margin-left:0.7874in; margin-right:0.7874in; writing-mode:lr-tb; "><p class="P26"><span class="T5">C</span><span class="T1">ultural techniques of </span><span class="T6">ephemeral </span><span class="T1">optimization</span></p><p class="Qouat_borderStart">"Marshall McLuhan once suggested that ‘art was a distant early warning system that can always tell the old culture what is beginning to happen to it’." (Gere, 2002, Page 116) </p><p class="P4">If people ask me about what my practice is, I cant really say.. either <span class="T31">it can be</span> define is a <span class="T31">multidisciplinary </span> practices. For me the content will always dictated the result. As someone with a mix background and experiences its hard to nail down. </p><p class="Qouat">"According to Derrida, any memory system can be called a form of writing, since it records information for the purpose of future transmissions" Page 5 </p><p class="P5">My recent work is <span class="T25">a digital</span> photo book made in the e-<span class="T31">book format, e-books are di</span><span class="T33">gital books that are shown on a screen that use magnerts and not backlight....</span></p><p class="P6"><span class="T26">I </span>use<span class="T31">d</span> of new and <span class="T31">old archive </span>images of <span class="T25">an abandon</span> <span class="T25">paper-mill to show the decline of the paper-mill. People often forget the hidden infrastructure behind media. Both paper and digital media have an  physical infrastructure and if the media dies the will be physical remains  </span></p><p class="P30">The images roll inn and out of the pages as if there are on a conveyor belt, this mimics how paper is made and also is a reference to off-sett litho printing that prints one colour at the time with an overlay.</p><p class="P7">Since the start of the computer age, it have been said <span class="T26">that </span>we are getting a ‘paperless office’ <span class="T26">or that we need one. </span>The ‘paperless office’ have yet to materialism, the term was first used in the article “The Office of the Future”, published in Business Week in June 1975.  Paper is still being used for print and even with the increased usage of the computers and the internet <span class="T36">we still have not stopped using paper.</span></p><p class="Qouat_borderEnd"><span class="T8">Xerox was becoming alarmed at the idea of the ‘paperless office’, the revolution in business life that computers were, apparently, about to bring about. To meet this challenge Xerox decided to become part of the computer revolution itself. To this end it set up Xerox PARC on the West Coast of the United States." (Gere, 2002, Page 134) Gere, Charlie (2002) Digital Culture, London, Reaktion Books</span> </p><h2 class="P27"><a id="a__Relation_to_previous_practice"><span/></a><span class="T1">Relation to previous practice</span> </h2><p class="Qouat_borderStart"><span class="T21">"It matters because we live i media, as fish live in water. ( Neslon, </span>Page 306 <span class="T21">)</span></p><p class="P9">From the age of 14 when I made my first computer magazine using a copy of <span class="T37">the publishing tool </span>MS Publisher 97, the topic of sharing knowledge and information <span class="T37">with the </span>use of <span class="T37">visual </span>design <span class="T37">have been a thing.  </span>Time <span class="T37">did</span> lead me to different jobs in <span class="T37">a few </span>newspaper as a graphic designer, photographer and part time editor <span class="T37">at one point.</span> Later a shift was need that lead me to the UK and a <span class="T37">G</span>raphic <span class="T37">D</span>esign BA. </p><p class="P8">One of my projects there was “The <span class="T22">Library</span> of Bable”  <span class="T11">The project was a response to a brief set by The International Society of Typographic Designers to create a typographic project on the theme of “everything about one thing.” My response to this brief discussed the theme of “Bit-Rot” aka Data Decay with the starting point focussing on the </span><span class="T13">obsolescence</span><span class="T11"> of floppy disks.</span></p><p class="P9"><span class="T11">Bit-Rot is something most people aren't aware of, but in a digital age this is a really interesting topic, as most people don't realise the how unstable digital media is as a format for storing information. “You can read a book that's </span><span class="T16">3</span><span class="T11">00 years old, but you can't read a computer file that was created 5 years ago”  </span></p><p class="P9"><span class="T11">The format </span><span class="T16">of the book </span><span class="T11"> is based on the dimensions of the 8-inch floppy disk with the main body copy from the short story “The Library of Babel” by Jorge Luís Borges; a short story about a library which contains every story ever written and that ever will be written and how this is stored.<br/>I illustrated the book by corrupting it and its based on research of how corrupted files appea</span><span class="T12">r. </span></p><p class="P14"><span class="T12">This blend of typographic design, graphic design and </span><span class="T13">research</span><span class="T12"> got me </span><span class="T13">highly</span><span class="T12"> </span><span class="T13">interested</span><span class="T12"> and gave me my goal for my future MA, </span><span class="T13">how to inform people about the dangers of Bit-Rot. How it looks like we all are heading for digital dark-age. </span></p><p class="Qouat"><span class="T10">“ </span><span class="T2">If we loss the past, we will live in </span><span class="T3">an Orwellian</span><span class="T2"> world of the </span><span class="T38">presuppose</span><span class="T2"> present,” - </span>Brewster Kahle </p><p class="P14"><span class="T12">The topic </span><span class="T16">is not just in a xxxxx area, it exist </span><span class="T12">in design </span><span class="T13">field</span><span class="T12"> </span><span class="T13">after</span><span class="T12"> a talk at TYPO in London in the fall of 2013 with the designer Hamis Muir from </span><span class="T16">design studio </span><span class="T12">8VO </span><span class="T13">talked about their old </span><span class="T14">magazine</span><span class="T13"> </span><span class="T14">project</span><span class="T13"> of Octavo 92 and they made their last </span><span class="T14">issue</span><span class="T13"> as </span><span class="T15">an interactive</span><span class="T13"> cd-rom </span></p><p class="Qouat"><span class="T9">“</span><span class="T2">Octavo 92.8 was designed to run on a minimum specified Mac </span><span class="T4">[...]</span><span class="T2"> The irony is that the pace of change of technology has left Octavo 92.8 largely inaccessible. Muir,(2005) Page 386. </span></p><p class="P3_borderEnd">How does your current work connect to previous projects you have done? (resource: here you can use a) the descriptions of older work b) extracts from your interview.) </p><h2 class="P28"><a id="a__Relation_to_a_larger_context"><span/></a><span class="T44">Relation to a larger context</span><span class="T43"> </span></h2><p class="P32_borderStart">Digital Obserlessions and amensia </p><p class="P16">(resource: here you can draw on the texts from the interviews and from the session using Jstor and the sessions in which you examined a media, art object and a text.) </p><p class="P16"><span class="T34">1.</span><span class="T32">Outline practices or ideas that go beyond the scope of your personal work.</span> </p><p class="Qouat"><span class="T2">" When we document something in the real world, we make fixed, permanent, immutable records of it. But computer documents are volatile, ephemeral constellations of data” (Stephenson, 1999, Page 63)</span> </p><p class="P17">For me visual communication exist for transmit information xxxx to the reviver,  </p><p class="Qouat_borderEnd">“Design can critically engage the mechanics of representation, exposing and revising its ideological biases; design also can remake the grammar of communication by discovering structures and patterns within the material media of visual and verbal writing" (Miller, (1999)  Page 23) </p><p class="P19">What the need for preservation of you information or data? Archives <span class="T46">exist</span> as a xxxx reord, <span class="T46">archives</span> can be big <span class="T46">institutions</span> or your own <span class="T46">personal</span> <span class="T46">photo-album</span>, but what happens if we loos our images to digital obeserlessions? Or if we loss or written communication for the future?</p><p class="Qouat">“The family photograph functions primarily as a record as visible evidence t<span class="T20">h</span>at this family exist” Page (Joanne, (2011) p35 )</p><p class="P19">A lot of we know about the past society comes not from xxxx records, but from small personal collections of newspapers, postcards and diary’s, but how will future generations look in the millennial if there is no record? Are we heading in the way of the anglo saxons or mayas? </p><p class="Qouat"><span class="T2">"Digital culture brings with it a great paradox whereby it contributes as much to amnesia and collective forgetting as to remembering” (Joanne, (2011) p70 )</span> </p><p class="P19">People thing that everything is the in the cloud, <span class="T46">and </span>that you can just google the <span class="T40">answerers</span>, Physical library’s are getting optimization away by economics <span class="T46">away.</span></p><p class="Qouat">Embarrassing failures of prophecy had been erased from the collective memory. Instead of re-examining their credibility, the key predictions of the 1964 New York World’s Fair were reworked many times to ensure that these old futures always looked like the latest thing. (Barbrook, 2007 page 202 )</p><p class="P24">POST PRINT</p><p class="P25_borderStart">Phycialty of media </p><p class="Qouat_borderEnd">“digital is built for speed, while print ensures stability” (Ludovico, Page 7) </p><p class="P20">The irony in the world of <span class="T45">digitization</span> and the …... print is that print is  getting more <span class="T45">valuable.</span> If something is printed then the <span class="T45">information</span> is taken more <span class="T45">highly</span> in regard then on the web. <span class="T32">Digital is easy to copy, print is  not so but it </span><span class="T35">seems</span><span class="T32"> </span></p><p class="Qouat">“All forms of knowledge achieved stability and permanence, not because paper was more durable than papyrus but simply because there were many copies.”James Gleick, The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood, 2011258 Page 118 </p><p class="P21"><span class="T27">The more copy tha</span><span class="T28">t</span><span class="T27"> </span><span class="T28">exists</span><span class="T27">, the less of </span><span class="T28">valuable</span><span class="T27"> it is, Art book are for </span><span class="T29">examples</span><span class="T27"> </span><span class="T28">highly</span><span class="T27"> sor</span><span class="T29">t</span><span class="T27"> after now and exist in few numbers, but a book as </span><span class="T17">Twentysix Gasoline Stations </span><span class="T18">by artist Ed Ruscha</span><span class="T41"> that got printed in  ex in 1963 still exist in a high number, but a newspaper from yesterday or the flyer from last week club event is quick to the thrown away and may</span><span class="T40">be got not existing copy left.</span></p><p class="P22">As print is still the most easy way and still most <span class="T42">stable</span> way xxxx to makes <span class="T42">copy’s</span> it still exist with <span class="T42">highly</span> valued <span class="T46">even the time of the “paperless office”</span></p><p class="Qouat">Starting in the early 1980s (the beginning of the age of personal information) this ‘paperless’ research-and-development mantra would increasingly become a propaganda buzzword aimed at creating a large target market for selling information technology (IT). (Ludovico, Page 26)</p><p class="P22">–--. </p><p class="P14_borderStart"><span class="T19">C</span>ontent will <span class="T19">dictate</span> the <span class="T19">visualisation, my personal taste is not the main focus </span> </p><p class="P29">“ The growing use of symbols such as roadsigns and trademarks on a worldwide scale demands absolute clarity of expression. Its no longer possible to confine oneself to local tastes.” Munari (1966) </p><p class="P31_borderEnd">Digital is the new kid in town, but paper have lasted but the digital have not</p><p class="P18">the <span class="T19">positives</span> of digital information is that is <span class="T19">infinite</span> <span class="T19">copyable</span>, Like the <span class="T19">Gutenberg</span> press <span class="T19">invented the mechanical</span> <span class="T19">reproduction</span>, now with digital the access and easy of replation something is no longer in the hand of crafts men or experts. </p><p class="P18">Digital was said to be the death of print, but the death of print is not new. </p><p class="P33">Before if you wanted to use digital technology you need to an expert, but now everyone uses a computer, but also the use of camera are.. we take more photos now then ever before.. what happens with the images...</p><p class="Quotations"> </p><p class="Qouat_borderStart">‘I live right inside radio when I listen. I more easily lose myself in radio than in a book,’ said a voice from a radio poll.” (Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media, 1964) </p><p class="Qouat">“Born between 1977 and 1996 inclusive, this generation is bigger than the baby boomers itself, and through sheer demographic muscle they will dominate the twenty-first century. While it is smaller in some countries (particularly those in the Western Europe), internationally the Net Generation is huge, numbering over two billion people. This is the first generation to grow up in a digital age.(Tapscoot, 2008, p46,47) </p><p class="Qouat">Digital technologies are disposable, and data is transient. (Gabrys, 2007 page 17</p><p class="Qouat"/><p class="P3">fetishizing—cultural techniques of optimization. </p><p class="Qouat">"There is no sin in the lack of permanence, its not a bad thing that thing move on" – Jason Scott</p><p class="P16"><span class="T39">2. </span>Write briefly about other projects or theoretical material which share an affinity with your project. It is simply about showing an awareness of a broader context, which you will later build upon in your project proposal and writing component in the second year</p><p class="P10_borderEnd"><span class="T1">General note on mode of address</span>. Write as if to someone not familiar with your work. </p><h2 class="P28"><a id="a__Research_strands"><span/></a><span class="T1">Research strands</span> </h2><p class="P15">Keywords</p><p class="P1">Me<span class="T30">dia</span></p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Information</p><p class="P1"/><p class="P1">Ignorance</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Digital</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Print</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Contrast</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Decay</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Physical</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Shock</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Books</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Publisheing</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">DIY</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Ephemral</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Memory</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Transmissino</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Formats</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Standards</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Protocols</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Remake</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Technology</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Formats</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Objects</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P1">Defend / Battle</p><p class="P1"> </p><p class="P2">News</p><p class="P2"> </p><p class="Qouat_borderStart">"The technological realities of today are already obsolete and the future of technology is bound only by the limits of our dreams" <span class="T7">(Nelson,</span> Page 307<span class="T23">)</span></p><p class="P11">Post Digital Print – The future of print in a digital worldwide →  print can get a new lease as archive format ? People still books, highly , more advanced books.?</p><p class="P11">The personal archive- How can we prevent / stop digital decay  → inform people </p><p class="P12">How can design inform people <span class="T24">abou the subject</span></p><p class="Qouat">"The computer is as inhuman as we make it. The computer is no more "cold and "inhuman" than a toaster, bathtub or automobile" Page 310</p><p class="P3"/><p class="Qouat">Our understanding of personal and public histories is structure through what Joese van Dijck has termed 'mediated mermories' (Joanne, (2011) p7 )</p><p class="Qouat">"Guardianship of the computer can no longer be left to a priesthood" <span class="T7">(Nelson. </span>Page 304 <span class="T7">)</span></p><p class="Qouat">“trash is always our premier cultural export to the future.” Gabrys, 2007 page 111</p><p class="P23"/><p class="Qouat">‘the machine is always social before it is technical” - Gilles Deleuze (Gere, 2002, Page 19)  </p><p class="P3"/><p class="P3"/><p class="P3">Consider the possibilities open to you and where you would take your work in the near future (resource: here you can draw on the texts from the interviews and from the session using Jstor) </p><p class="P10"><span class="T1">General note on mode of address</span>. Write as if to someone not familiar with your work. </p><p class="P3"><span class="T1">Conclusion</span> </p><p class="P13">Consider the possibilities open to you and where you would take your work in the near future (resource: here you can draw on the texts from the interviews and from the session using Jstor) </p><p class="P3_borderEnd"/></body></html>
Cultural techniques of ephemeral optimization.
 
== Cultural techniques of ephemeral optimization ==


"Marshall McLuhan once suggested that ‘art was a distant early warning system that can always tell the old culture what is beginning to happen to it’." (Gere, 2002, Page 116)  
"Marshall McLuhan once suggested that ‘art was a distant early warning system that can always tell the old culture what is beginning to happen to it’." (Gere, 2002, Page 116)  
If people ask me about what my practice is, I cant really say.. either it can be define is a multidisciplinary  practices. For me the content will always dictated the result. As someone with a mix background and experiences its hard to nail down.  
If people ask me about what my practice is, I cant really say.. either it can be define is a multidisciplinary  practices. For me the content will always dictated the result. As someone with a mix background and experiences its hard to nail down.  
"According to Derrida, any memory system can be called a form of writing, since it records information for the purpose of future transmissions" Page 5  
"According to Derrida, any memory system can be called a form of writing, since it records information for the purpose of future transmissions" Page 5  
My recent work is a digital photo book made in the e-book format, e-books are digital books that are shown on a screen that use magnerts and not backlight....
My recent work is a digital photo book made in the e-book format, e-books are digital books that are shown on a screen that use magnerts and not backlight....
I used of new and old archive images of an abandon paper-mill to show the decline of the paper-mill. People often forget the hidden infrastructure behind media. Both paper and digital media have an  physical infrastructure and if the media dies the will be physical remains   
I used of new and old archive images of an abandon paper-mill to show the decline of the paper-mill. People often forget the hidden infrastructure behind media. Both paper and digital media have an  physical infrastructure and if the media dies the will be physical remains   
Line 15: Line 12:
Since the start of the computer age, it have been said that we are getting a ‘paperless office’ or that we need one. The ‘paperless office’ have yet to materialism, the term was first used in the article “The Office of the Future”, published in Business Week in June 1975.  Paper is still being used for print and even with the increased usage of the computers and the internet we still have not stopped using paper.
Since the start of the computer age, it have been said that we are getting a ‘paperless office’ or that we need one. The ‘paperless office’ have yet to materialism, the term was first used in the article “The Office of the Future”, published in Business Week in June 1975.  Paper is still being used for print and even with the increased usage of the computers and the internet we still have not stopped using paper.
Xerox was becoming alarmed at the idea of the ‘paperless office’, the revolution in business life that computers were, apparently, about to bring about. To meet this challenge Xerox decided to become part of the computer revolution itself. To this end it set up Xerox PARC on the West Coast of the United States." (Gere, 2002, Page 134) Gere, Charlie (2002) Digital Culture, London, Reaktion Books  
Xerox was becoming alarmed at the idea of the ‘paperless office’, the revolution in business life that computers were, apparently, about to bring about. To meet this challenge Xerox decided to become part of the computer revolution itself. To this end it set up Xerox PARC on the West Coast of the United States." (Gere, 2002, Page 134) Gere, Charlie (2002) Digital Culture, London, Reaktion Books  
Relation to previous practice  
 
=== Relation to previous practice''' ===
"It matters because we live i media, as fish live in water. ( Neslon, Page 306 )
"It matters because we live i media, as fish live in water. ( Neslon, Page 306 )
From the age of 14 when I made my first computer magazine using a copy of the publishing tool MS Publisher 97, the topic of sharing knowledge and information with the use of visual design have been a thing.  Time did lead me to different jobs in a few newspaper as a graphic designer, photographer and part time editor at one point. Later a shift was need that lead me to the UK and a Graphic Design BA.  
From the age of 14 when I made my first computer magazine using a copy of the publishing tool MS Publisher 97, the topic of sharing knowledge and information with the use of visual design have been a thing.  Time did lead me to different jobs in a few newspaper as a graphic designer, photographer and part time editor at one point. Later a shift was need that lead me to the UK and a Graphic Design BA.  
Line 26: Line 24:
The topic is not just in a xxxxx area, it exist in design field after a talk at TYPO in London in the fall of 2013 with the designer Hamis Muir from design studio 8VO talked about their old magazine project of Octavo 92 and they made their last issue as an interactive cd-rom  
The topic is not just in a xxxxx area, it exist in design field after a talk at TYPO in London in the fall of 2013 with the designer Hamis Muir from design studio 8VO talked about their old magazine project of Octavo 92 and they made their last issue as an interactive cd-rom  
“Octavo 92.8 was designed to run on a minimum specified Mac [...] The irony is that the pace of change of technology has left Octavo 92.8 largely inaccessible. Muir,(2005) Page 386.  
“Octavo 92.8 was designed to run on a minimum specified Mac [...] The irony is that the pace of change of technology has left Octavo 92.8 largely inaccessible. Muir,(2005) Page 386.  
How does your current work connect to previous projects you have done? (resource: here you can use a) the descriptions of older work b) extracts from your interview.)  
How does your current work connect to previous projects you have done? (resource: here you can use a) the descriptions of older work b) extracts from your interview.)
Relation to a larger context  
 
 
=== Relation to a larger context ===
Digital Obserlessions and amensia  
Digital Obserlessions and amensia  
(resource: here you can draw on the texts from the interviews and from the session using Jstor and the sessions in which you examined a media, art object and a text.)  
(resource: here you can draw on the texts from the interviews and from the session using Jstor and the sessions in which you examined a media, art object and a text.)  
Line 63: Line 63:
"There is no sin in the lack of permanence, its not a bad thing that thing move on" – Jason Scott
"There is no sin in the lack of permanence, its not a bad thing that thing move on" – Jason Scott
2. Write briefly about other projects or theoretical material which share an affinity with your project. It is simply about showing an awareness of a broader context, which you will later build upon in your project proposal and writing component in the second year
2. Write briefly about other projects or theoretical material which share an affinity with your project. It is simply about showing an awareness of a broader context, which you will later build upon in your project proposal and writing component in the second year
General note on mode of address. Write as if to someone not familiar with your work.  
General note on mode of address. Write as if to someone not familiar with your work.   
Research strands
Keywords
Media
 
Information
 
Ignorance
 
Digital
 
Print
 
Contrast
 
Decay
 
Physical
 
Shock
 
Books
 
Publisheing
 
DIY
 
Ephemral
 
Memory
 
Transmissino
 
Formats
 
Standards
 
Protocols
 
Remake
 
Technology
 
Formats
 
Objects
 
Defend / Battle
 
News
 
"The technological realities of today are already obsolete and the future of technology is bound only by the limits of our dreams" (Nelson, Page 307)
Post Digital Print – The future of print in a digital worldwide → print can get a new lease as archive format ? People still books, highly , more advanced books.?
The personal archive- How can we prevent / stop digital decay  → inform people
How can design inform people abou the subject
"The computer is as inhuman as we make it. The computer is no more "cold and "inhuman" than a toaster, bathtub or automobile" Page 310


Our understanding of personal and public histories is structure through what Joese van Dijck has termed 'mediated mermories' (Joanne, (2011) p7 )
=== Research strands ===
"Guardianship of the computer can no longer be left to a priesthood" (Nelson. Page 304 )
“trash is always our premier cultural export to the future.” Gabrys, 2007 page 111


‘the machine is always social before it is technical” - Gilles Deleuze (Gere, 2002, Page 19) 


=== Conclusion ===


Consider the possibilities open to you and where you would take your work in the near future (resource: here you can draw on the texts from the interviews and from the session using Jstor)
General note on mode of address. Write as if to someone not familiar with your work.
Conclusion
Consider the possibilities open to you and where you would take your work in the near future (resource: here you can draw on the texts from the interviews and from the session using Jstor)





Revision as of 23:33, 21 April 2015

DogOnComputer.jpg

Reflection on your practice 15.04.15

Cultural techniques of ephemeral optimization.

"Marshall McLuhan once suggested that ‘art was a distant early warning system that can always tell the old culture what is beginning to happen to it’." (Gere, 2002, Page 116) If people ask me about what my practice is, I cant really say.. either it can be define is a multidisciplinary practices. For me the content will always dictated the result. As someone with a mix background and experiences its hard to nail down. "According to Derrida, any memory system can be called a form of writing, since it records information for the purpose of future transmissions" Page 5 My recent work is a digital photo book made in the e-book format, e-books are digital books that are shown on a screen that use magnerts and not backlight.... I used of new and old archive images of an abandon paper-mill to show the decline of the paper-mill. People often forget the hidden infrastructure behind media. Both paper and digital media have an physical infrastructure and if the media dies the will be physical remains The images roll inn and out of the pages as if there are on a conveyor belt, this mimics how paper is made and also is a reference to off-sett litho printing that prints one colour at the time with an overlay. Since the start of the computer age, it have been said that we are getting a ‘paperless office’ or that we need one. The ‘paperless office’ have yet to materialism, the term was first used in the article “The Office of the Future”, published in Business Week in June 1975. Paper is still being used for print and even with the increased usage of the computers and the internet we still have not stopped using paper. Xerox was becoming alarmed at the idea of the ‘paperless office’, the revolution in business life that computers were, apparently, about to bring about. To meet this challenge Xerox decided to become part of the computer revolution itself. To this end it set up Xerox PARC on the West Coast of the United States." (Gere, 2002, Page 134) Gere, Charlie (2002) Digital Culture, London, Reaktion Books

Relation to previous practice

"It matters because we live i media, as fish live in water. ( Neslon, Page 306 ) From the age of 14 when I made my first computer magazine using a copy of the publishing tool MS Publisher 97, the topic of sharing knowledge and information with the use of visual design have been a thing. Time did lead me to different jobs in a few newspaper as a graphic designer, photographer and part time editor at one point. Later a shift was need that lead me to the UK and a Graphic Design BA. One of my projects there was “The Library of Bable” The project was a response to a brief set by The International Society of Typographic Designers to create a typographic project on the theme of “everything about one thing.” My response to this brief discussed the theme of “Bit-Rot” aka Data Decay with the starting point focussing on the obsolescence of floppy disks. Bit-Rot is something most people aren't aware of, but in a digital age this is a really interesting topic, as most people don't realise the how unstable digital media is as a format for storing information. “You can read a book that's 300 years old, but you can't read a computer file that was created 5 years ago” The format of the book is based on the dimensions of the 8-inch floppy disk with the main body copy from the short story “The Library of Babel” by Jorge Luís Borges; a short story about a library which contains every story ever written and that ever will be written and how this is stored. I illustrated the book by corrupting it and its based on research of how corrupted files appear. This blend of typographic design, graphic design and research got me highly interested and gave me my goal for my future MA, how to inform people about the dangers of Bit-Rot. How it looks like we all are heading for digital dark-age. “ If we loss the past, we will live in an Orwellian world of the presuppose present,” - Brewster Kahle The topic is not just in a xxxxx area, it exist in design field after a talk at TYPO in London in the fall of 2013 with the designer Hamis Muir from design studio 8VO talked about their old magazine project of Octavo 92 and they made their last issue as an interactive cd-rom “Octavo 92.8 was designed to run on a minimum specified Mac [...] The irony is that the pace of change of technology has left Octavo 92.8 largely inaccessible. Muir,(2005) Page 386. How does your current work connect to previous projects you have done? (resource: here you can use a) the descriptions of older work b) extracts from your interview.)


Relation to a larger context

Digital Obserlessions and amensia (resource: here you can draw on the texts from the interviews and from the session using Jstor and the sessions in which you examined a media, art object and a text.) 1.Outline practices or ideas that go beyond the scope of your personal work. " When we document something in the real world, we make fixed, permanent, immutable records of it. But computer documents are volatile, ephemeral constellations of data” (Stephenson, 1999, Page 63) For me visual communication exist for transmit information xxxx to the reviver, “Design can critically engage the mechanics of representation, exposing and revising its ideological biases; design also can remake the grammar of communication by discovering structures and patterns within the material media of visual and verbal writing" (Miller, (1999) Page 23) What the need for preservation of you information or data? Archives exist as a xxxx reord, archives can be big institutions or your own personal photo-album, but what happens if we loos our images to digital obeserlessions? Or if we loss or written communication for the future? “The family photograph functions primarily as a record as visible evidence that this family exist” Page (Joanne, (2011) p35 ) A lot of we know about the past society comes not from xxxx records, but from small personal collections of newspapers, postcards and diary’s, but how will future generations look in the millennial if there is no record? Are we heading in the way of the anglo saxons or mayas? "Digital culture brings with it a great paradox whereby it contributes as much to amnesia and collective forgetting as to remembering” (Joanne, (2011) p70 ) People thing that everything is the in the cloud, and that you can just google the answerers, Physical library’s are getting optimization away by economics away. Embarrassing failures of prophecy had been erased from the collective memory. Instead of re-examining their credibility, the key predictions of the 1964 New York World’s Fair were reworked many times to ensure that these old futures always looked like the latest thing. (Barbrook, 2007 page 202 ) POST PRINT Phycialty of media “digital is built for speed, while print ensures stability” (Ludovico, Page 7) The irony in the world of digitization and the …... print is that print is getting more valuable. If something is printed then the information is taken more highly in regard then on the web. Digital is easy to copy, print is not so but it seems “All forms of knowledge achieved stability and permanence, not because paper was more durable than papyrus but simply because there were many copies.”James Gleick, The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood, 2011258 Page 118 The more copy that exists, the less of valuable it is, Art book are for examples highly sort after now and exist in few numbers, but a book as Twentysix Gasoline Stations by artist Ed Ruscha that got printed in ex in 1963 still exist in a high number, but a newspaper from yesterday or the flyer from last week club event is quick to the thrown away and maybe got not existing copy left. As print is still the most easy way and still most stable way xxxx to makes copy’s it still exist with highly valued even the time of the “paperless office” Starting in the early 1980s (the beginning of the age of personal information) this ‘paperless’ research-and-development mantra would increasingly become a propaganda buzzword aimed at creating a large target market for selling information technology (IT). (Ludovico, Page 26) –--. Content will dictate the visualisation, my personal taste is not the main focus “ The growing use of symbols such as roadsigns and trademarks on a worldwide scale demands absolute clarity of expression. Its no longer possible to confine oneself to local tastes.” Munari (1966) Digital is the new kid in town, but paper have lasted but the digital have not the positives of digital information is that is infinite copyable, Like the Gutenberg press invented the mechanical reproduction, now with digital the access and easy of replation something is no longer in the hand of crafts men or experts. Digital was said to be the death of print, but the death of print is not new. Before if you wanted to use digital technology you need to an expert, but now everyone uses a computer, but also the use of camera are.. we take more photos now then ever before.. what happens with the images...

‘I live right inside radio when I listen. I more easily lose myself in radio than in a book,’ said a voice from a radio poll.” (Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media, 1964) “Born between 1977 and 1996 inclusive, this generation is bigger than the baby boomers itself, and through sheer demographic muscle they will dominate the twenty-first century. While it is smaller in some countries (particularly those in the Western Europe), internationally the Net Generation is huge, numbering over two billion people. This is the first generation to grow up in a digital age.(Tapscoot, 2008, p46,47) Digital technologies are disposable, and data is transient. (Gabrys, 2007 page 17

fetishizing—cultural techniques of optimization. "There is no sin in the lack of permanence, its not a bad thing that thing move on" – Jason Scott 2. Write briefly about other projects or theoretical material which share an affinity with your project. It is simply about showing an awareness of a broader context, which you will later build upon in your project proposal and writing component in the second year General note on mode of address. Write as if to someone not familiar with your work.

Research strands

Conclusion

Reflection on your practice 09.04.15

Cultural techniques of ephemeral optimization.

General note on mode of address. Write as if to someone not familiar with your work. Introduction Current Practice (resource: here you can use the descriptions of recent work) "Marshall McLuhan once suggested that ‘art was a distant early warning system that can always tell the old culture what is beginning to happen to it’." (Gere, 2002, Page 116)

If people ask me about what my practice is, I cant really say.. either I can define is a multiple practices or a hybrid. For me the content will always dictated the result. As someone with a mix background and experiences its hard to nail down. From coming from a Graphic Design and Photography background / pratics and now more more into a digital realm ++++ "According to Derrida, any memory system can be called a form of writing, since it records information for the purpose of future transmissions" Page 5

My recent work is a digital photo book made in the e-ink format “”what is e-ink” I have the use of new and archive images of an abandon paper-mill to show the decline of the paper-mill. People forget the infrastructurer.. Both paper and digital media have physical infrastructure r and if the media dies the will be remains The images roll inn and out of the pages as if there are on a conveyor belt, this mimics how paper is made and also is a reference to off-sett litho printing that prints one colour at the time. Since the start of the computer age, it have been said that we are getting a ‘paperless office’ or need it. The ‘paperless office’ have yet to materialism, the term was first used in the article “The Office of the Future”, published in Business Week in June 1975. Paper is still being used for print and even with the increased usage of the computers and the internet. Since the start of the computer age, it have been said we are getting a ‘paperless office’.

Xerox was becoming alarmed at the idea of the ‘paperless office’, the revolution in business life that computers were, apparently, about to bring about. To meet this challenge Xerox decided to become part of the computer revolution itself. To this end it set up Xerox PARC on the West Coast of the United States." (Gere, 2002, Page 134) Gere, Charlie (2002) Digital Culture, London, Reaktion Books

Relation to previous practice

General note on mode of address. Write as if to someone not familiar with your work.

"It matters because we live i media, as fish live in water. ( Neslon, Page 306 ) From the age of 14 when I made my first computer magazine using a copy of MS Publisher 97, that the topic of sharing knowledge and information and the use of design and visual media was the thing I wanted to do in the future with my life. Time it lead me to different jobs in newspaper as a graphic designer, photographer and part time editor. Later a shift was need that lead me to the UK and a graphic design BA. One of my projects there was “The Library of Bable” The project was a response to a brief set by The International Society of Typographic Designers to create a typographic project on the theme of “everything about one thing.” My response to this brief discussed the theme of “Bit-Rot” aka Data Decay with the starting point focussing on the obsolescence of floppy disks.

Bit-Rot is something most people aren't aware of, but in a digital age this is a really interesting topic, as most people don't realise the how unstable digital media is as a format for storing information. “You can read a book that's 200 years old, but you can't read a computer file that was created 5 years ago” The format is based on the dimensions of the 8-inch floppy disk with the main body copy from the short story “The Library of Babel” by Jorge Luís Borges; a short story about a library which contains every story ever written and that ever will be written and how this is stored.

I illustrated the book by corrupting it and its based on research of how corrupted files appear. This blend of typographic design, graphic design and research got me highly interested and gave me my goal for my future MA, how to inform people about the dangers of Bit-Rot. How it looks like we all are heading for digital dark-age.

“ If we loss the past, we will live in an Orwellian world of the presuppose present,” - Brewster Kahle

The topic came back and the urgency even in design field after a talk at TYPO in London in the fall of 2013 with the designer Hamis Muir from 8VO talked about their old magazine project of Octavo 92 and they made their last issue as an interactive cd-rom

“Octavo 92.8 was designed to run on a minimum specified Mac [...] The irony is that the pace of change of technology has left Octavo 92.8 largely inaccessible. Muir,(2005) Page 386

How does your current work connect to previous projects you have done? (resource: here you can use a) the descriptions of older work b) extracts from your interview.) General note on mode of address. Write as if to someone not familiar with your work.

Relation to a larger context

Outline practices or ideas that go beyond the scope of your personal work. Write briefly about other projects or theoretical material which share an affinity with your project. It is simply about showing an awareness of a broader context, which you will later build upon in your project proposal and writing component in the second year (resource: here you can draw on the texts from the interviews and from the session using Jstor and the sessions in which you examined a media, art object and a text.)

If people ask me if I am a designer or artist, I will always say designer before an artist for

“Design can critically engage the mechanics of representation, exposing and revising its ideological biases; design also can remake the grammar of communication by discovering structures and patterns within the material media of visual and verbal writing" (Miller, (1999) Page 23)

Content will dictate the visualisation, my personal taste is not the main focus

“ The growing use of symbols such as roadsigns and trademarks on a worldwide scale demands absolute clarity of expression. Its no longer possible to confine oneself to local tastes.” Munari (1966)

The topic of digital information and bit-rot is a growing topic, we store more and more information digitally but the longevity of it is not that long compared to paper.

"Yet digital culture brings with it a great paradox whereby it contributes as much to amnesia and collective forgetting as to remembering” (Joanne, (2011) p70 )

Digital is the new kid in town, but paper have lasted but the digital have not. " When we document something in the real world, we make fixed, permanent, immutable records of it. But computer documents are volatile, ephemeral constellations of data” (Stephenson, 1999, Page 63) the positives of digital information is that is infinite copyable, Like the Gutenberg press invented the mechanical reproduction, now with digital the access and easy of replation something is no longer in the hand of crafts men or experts.

“All forms of knowledge achieved stability and permanence, not because paper was more durable than papyrus but simply because there were many copies.”James Gleick, The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood, 2011258 Page 118

Digital was said to be the death of print, but the death of print is not new.

“digital is built for speed, while print ensures stability” (Ludovico, Page 7)

We can trace the actual expression ‘paperless office’ back to an article titled The Office of the Future, published in Business Week in June 1975. (Ludovico, Page 25)

“Even the embarrassing failures of prophecy had been erased from the collective memory. Instead of re-examining their credibility, the key predictions of the 1964 New York World’s Fair were reworked many times to ensure that these old futures always looked like the latest thing. (Barbrook, 2007 page 202 )

Starting in the early 1980s (the beginning of the age of personal information) this ‘paperless’ research-and-development mantra would increasingly become a propaganda buzzword aimed at creating a large target market for selling information technology (IT). Marketing departments actively promoted a vision of massive magnetic archiving systems, destined to replace the huge amounts of messy paper, effectively de-cluttering the desktop once and for all. This meant a definitive shift towards systems of digital documents, existing only in windows on computer screens. (Ludovico, Page 26)

Before if you wanted to use digital technology you need to an expert, but now everyone uses a computer, but also the use of camera are.. we take more photos now then ever before.. what happens with the images...

“The family photograph functions primarily as a record as visible evidence that this family exist” Page (Joanne, (2011) p35 )

‘I live right inside radio when I listen. I more easily lose myself in radio than in a book,’ said a voice from a radio poll.” (Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media, 1964)

“Born between 1977 and 1996 inclusive, this generation is bigger than the baby boomers itself, and through sheer demographic muscle they will dominate the twenty-first century. While it is smaller in some countries (particularly those in the Western Europe), internationally the Net Generation is huge, numbering over two billion people. This is the first generation to grow up in a digital age.(Tapscoot, 2008, p46,47)

Digital technologies are disposable, and data is transient. (Gabrys, 2007 page 17

fetishizing—cultural techniques of optimization. "There is no sin in the lack of permanence, its not a bad thing that thing move on" – Jason Scott Even the embarrassing failures of prophecy had been erased from the collective memory. Instead of re-examining their credibility, the key predictions of the 1964 New York World’s Fair were reworked many times to ensure that these old futures always looked like the latest thing. Barbrook, 2007 page 202 General note on mode of address. Write as if to someone not familiar with your work.

Research strands

Keywords Media

Information

Ignorance

Digital

Print

Contrast

Decay

Physical

Shock

Books

Publisheing

DIY

Ephemral

Memory

Transmissino

Formats

Standards

Protocols

Remake

Technology

Formats

Objects

Defend / Battle

News

"The technological realities of today are already obsolete and the future of technology is bound only by the limits of our dreams" (Nelson, Page 307)

Post Digital Print – The future of print in a digital worldwide → print can get a new lease as archive format ? People still books, highly , more advanced books.? The personal archive- How can we prevent / stop digital decay → inform people How can design inform people abou the subject

"The computer is as inhuman as we make it. The computer is no more "cold and "inhuman" than a toaster, bathtub or automobile" Page 310

Our understanding of personal and public histories is structure through what Joese van Dijck has termed 'mediated mermories' (Joanne, (2011) p7 ) "Guardianship of the computer can no longer be left to a priesthood" (Nelson. Page 304 ) “trash is always our premier cultural export to the future.” Gabrys, 2007 page 111

‘the machine is always social before it is technical” - Gilles Deleuze (Gere, 2002, Page 19)


Consider the possibilities open to you and where you would take your work in the near future (resource: here you can draw on the texts from the interviews and from the session using Jstor) General note on mode of address. Write as if to someone not familiar with your work.

Conclusion

Consider the possibilities open to you and where you would take your work in the near future (resource: here you can draw on the texts from the interviews and from the session using Jstor)