User:Riviera/Draft project proposal/v2
How do you plan to make it?
During October 2024 I set up a variety of services on the Klankschool Server. This included a FTP server, federated audio sharing platform, federated public calendar, Gitea instance and a live coding environment. The artwork which Rosa and I create will be publicised on the Calendar. Code we produce for the piece will be shared on the Gitea. Audio recordings may appear on the Funkwhale. Other files, such as photo and video documentation, can be uploaded via FTP. The server thus plays an integral role in supporting our creative endeavours. I have an interest in ensuring the services remain up and running, both for myself and for the wider community.
Why do you want to make it?
- To publicise and support sonic practices
- To cultivate inter- and infra-community relationships as a way of gaining insight into what free software based server does in social contexts.
- To build knowledge around server maintenance through collaborative practice
- To advance my understanding of what server maintenance consists of in a production environment whilst supporting cultural expression.
Who can help you and how?
In alphabetical order:
Alex Olloman - Wants to organise events
decentral1se - Boosting Klankschool events on the Fediverse
joak - Technical support
knoflook - Sharing events on radar
log - Co-sysadmin
vitrinekast - Collaborator
Relation to a larger context
Live Coding
Live Coding is a performance practice in which, with code, music or graphics are generated in real time before an audience (Ledesma, 2015, p. 112–117). I set up Flok, a collaborative live coding environment, on a subdomain of the klank.school website. Flok allows for networked performances which reiterate and re-imagine the social dimensions of free software. I hope that hosting such an environment may strengthen community relations between the Klankschool and Live Coders in the Netherlands. Flok was essential to the piece which Vitrinekast and I developed for the public moment on November 4th.
References
Ledesma, E. (2015) ‘The Poetics and Politics of Computer Code in Latin America: Codework, Code Art, and Live Coding’, Revista de Estudios Hispánicos, Washington University in St. Louis, vol. 49, no. 1, pp. 91–120 [Online]. DOI: 10.1353/rvs.2015.0016 (Accessed 13 September 2022).