User:Simon/Special Issue 8/summary second half trim
Visualising network topologies
network of possibilities
I began the second half of the trimester by determining a networked methodology for producing outcomes. The aim was to develop a heuristic technique which would help me understand networks better through a looped system of ideas, actions and outcomes.
GPS walking
One of the actions I included in my network of possibilities was to begin walking between different points in our network (our homeservers, and also the PZI building where we gathered to have classes and work on Special Issue 08).
I used a hiking app called "Trails", which would record my walk over GPS, from which I could export the .gpx file generated after walking, and then load it into a program for geospatial information called QGIS. An interesting feature of this software is in how it represents the line created by walking - you can upload it as trackpoints (snapshots of your location determined by satellite trilateration), and also as straight lines between the trackpoints. I started to realise how abstraction was a large part of mapping, which reminded me of the map/territory problem.
I began to make drawings, which, by being devoid of text that would explain them, could act as illustrations of how this map was being made:
During each walk I would take photos and write notes on thoughts that came up. I began noticing other networks around me.
Flight paths that produced contrails (or chemtrails):
Bicycle networks:
Each walk became an act of drawing (using GPS) and also a meditation.
networked research
I also began to write down my thoughts on various topics that came up.
https://pad.xpub.nl/p/networked_research
As I wanted a fairly horizontal structure to my research, I decided to base the content for each page of my website on a walk.
Drawing visualisations
Drawing (by hand and using vectors) became a large part of the outcomes I produced as part of my research. The drawings often shifted between "hand-drawn" and "computer-drawn", for example, I would use a .svg file made from one of my GPS walks in a vector graphics program, then print it and hand-draw with pencil over the top.
Abstraction became a key interest, and I started to think more about how these different ways of visualising all employed some level of abstraction in order to communicate. This brought me back to the typical idea of displaying network topology, as nodes and straight lines:
When I imported the lines I made by GPS walking into .svg format, I tried to unravel some of the knots I made while walking, and then drew several snapshots of this process.