Glitch: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
* [http://www.hellocatfood.com/ Antonio Robberts (hellocatfood)] [http://www.hellocatfood.com/2012/12/27/glitch-webcam/ Glitched Webcam Recipe] | * [http://www.hellocatfood.com/ Antonio Robberts (hellocatfood)] [http://www.hellocatfood.com/2012/12/27/glitch-webcam/ Glitched Webcam Recipe] | ||
* http://ucnv.github.io/pnglitch/ |
Latest revision as of 23:45, 15 September 2015
This term is usually identified as jargon, used in electronic industries and services, among programmers, circuit-bending practitioners, gamers, media artists, and designers. In electrical systems, a glitch is a short-lived error in a system or machine. A glitch appears as a defect (a voltage-change or signal of the wrong duration—a change of input) in an electrical circuit. Thus, a glitch is a short-term deviation from a correct value and as such the term can also de- scribe hardware malfunctions. The outcome of a glitch is not predictable.
When applied to software, the meaning of glitch is slightly altered. A glitch is an unpredictable change in the system’s behavior, when something obviously goes wrong.
— Alexei Shulgin & Olga Goriunova Software Studies, p. 110
A glitch is a singular dysfunctional event that allows insight beyond the customary, omnipresent, and alien computer aesthetics. A glitch is a mess that is a moment, a possibility to glance at software’s inner structure, whether it is a mechanism of data compression or HTML code. Although a glitch does not reveal the true functionality of the computer, it shows the ghostly convention- ality of the forms by which digital spaces are organized. (p.114)