User:Manetta/i-could-have-written-that
i-could-have-written-that
from: Charles Petzold's book 'Code', Chapter 11: Wiring Relays - AND OR NAND NOR
documentation pages
wiki page for catalog + website
i-could-have-written-that research material collection
*
For in those realms machines are made to behave in wondrous ways, often sufficient to dazzle even the most experienced observer. But once a particular program is unmasked, once its inner workings are explained in language sufficiently plain to induice understanding, its magic crumbles away; it stands revealed as a mere collection of procedures, each quite comprehensible. The observer says to himself "I could have written that". With that thought he moves the program in question from the shelf marked "intelligent" to that reserved for curious, fit to be discussed only with people less enlightened than he. (Joseph Weizenbaum, 1966)
* static HTML webpage; filesystem interface for research related material (+ about the workflow)
* collective archive ?
* historical context (of information-processing-systems/communication-systems/code-systems/...?) (list?)
* little glossary
editions
(on division of labour between humans & machines) → as publication next to the H.I.T. performance @ V2_ (Feb. 12th, 2016)
#0.2: algorithmic agreeability
on the systems of information creation in the field of text mining
hypothesis: The results of data-mining software are not mined, results are created.
currently working on
* terminology: data 'mining'
* Knowledge Discovery in Data (KDD) in the wild, problem formulations
* KDD, applications
* KDD, workflow
* text-processing: simplification
* list of data mining parties
#0.2 - NLP elements
(concequenses of?) naturalization of algortihmic & mining results
→ (too) easily regarded as objective 'truth' makers
* automatic reading machines; from encoding-decoding to constructed-truths (video/slideshow?)
* Antoinette Rouvroy; All Watched Over by Algorithms, Transmediale 2015 (transcription)
* •laughter•, it's embarrassing but these are the words
* EUR PhD presentation 'Sentiment Analysis of Text Guided by Semantics and Structure' (13-11-2015)
* what about text-mining? (readinglist sorted on points of 'algorithm' critique)
'knowledge bases'
→ taxonomies & vocabularies; linked data
→ aim for universal 'ontology' to represent the 'real'
* WordNet case-studies
* index of Roget's thesaurus (1805)
heteromation
→ 'heteromation': division of labor between humans and computer systems (more here)
→ aim for a syntactical perspective on computer processes or results
→ ways of relating to computers systems
* call for a syntactic view; Florian Cramer & Benjamin Bratton (text)
* anthropomorphic qualities of a computer (?)
* the photographic apparatus → the data apparatus (voice-over?)
* Computer Power and Human Reason, Joseph Weizenbaum (1976) (annotations)
object-predicate relation
* Matthew Fuller on 'the red haired man' (poem)
semantic math
* semantic averaging polarity rates in Pattern
* counting tokens for Friendly Flickr Tags
publishing
design of information processes
* html recipes
* WN nested structure proto? (catalog? (similar to i-will-tell-you-everything))
* information processes design proto's?
publishing references
* publication examples (current and former) (list)
* publishing frameworks (list)
notes
how to understand pattern recognition → in the wild → Algopop by Matthew Plummer-Fernandez
this language poem is a practise of using language, in stead of reffering to the real world — Matthew Fuller, about 'the red-haired man' (Mons, Okt. 2015)
'information processing machines' vs. 'computer operating systems', Neal Stephenson
*design*: from 'designing information' to 'designing information processes'
gallery
project (recent)
project (ongoing)
* looking closer into WordNet
* Metaphors of the Internet (with Julie)
* #!PATTERN+ (with Femke, & other Relearn'ers)
* the Friendly Flickr Bot (with Max Dovey) → H.I.T. classification challenge @ V2_ (Feb. 12, 2016)