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NETTIME'S WEEKLY ANNOUNCER - every friday into your inbox calls-symposia-websites-campaigns-books-lectures-meetings send your PR to [email protected] in time! 0.......1........2........3........4........5........6 1...Harry Bego............CONTRAST: UPDATE: June 5-10, 33 cities: Global Days against the Drug War 2...mez...................[net-time]:caul 2 contrib.U.te 3...Matthew Smith.........Vehicles of Prosperity and Progress 4...Hannes Brunner........Invitation GESTURE AS VALUE 5...JSalloum..............National Gallery of Canada exhibition dealing with the representation of the Mid [email protected] - low bit games 7...Charleroi/Danses......Ulrike Gabriel ........1.............................................. Date: Sat, 25 Apr 1998 22:47:41 +0200 (CEST) From: Harry Bego <[email protected]> Subject: CONTRAST: UPDATE: June 5-10, 33 cities: Global Days against the Drug War! *** News Update of the *** *** Global Coalition for Alternatives to the Drug War *** April 24, 1998 Dear drug policy reformer, This is the next in a series of updates to keep you informed about the planning of the Global Days against the Drug War, which will be held on Friday June 5th through Wednesday June 10th, at the occasion of the UN General Assembly Special Session on Drugs (UNGASS). On behalf of the Global Coalition for Alternatives to the Drug War, best regards, Olivier Dupuis, general secretary, Transnational Radical Party Kevin Zeese, president, Common Sense for Drug Policy Foundation Adam Smith, associate director, Drug Reform Coordination Network Harry Bego, coordinator, Global Days against the Drug War Comments about the contents of this newsletter can be sent to: [email protected]. For more info visit http://www.stopthedrugwar.org/globalcoalition/ CONTENTS 1. EVENTS ARE BEING PLANNED IN 33 CITIES! British and French coalitions are formed. Activities in New York are taking shape. 2. THE GLOBAL COALITION: OVER 60 MEMBER ORGANISATIONS We've applied for a panel inside the UN on June 9th. Organisations can join by signing the declaration. 3. ENCOD: The European Council on Drugs and Development We cooperate with the alliance established by ENCOD 3. AGAIN: THE CALL FOR PARTICIPATION Send out this updated version to promote the Global Days! ------------------------------------------------------------------ 1. EVENTS ARE BEING PLANNED IN 33 CITIES! At the moment of writing, events are being planned for the Global Days against the Drug War in 33 cities all over the world. In alphabetical order, events have been announced for Alsfeld (Ger), Amsterdam, Auckland (NZ), Berlin, Bonn, Brussels, Christchurch (NZ), Colville (WS), Dallas, Dunedin (NZ), Eugene (OR), Houston, Ilmenau (Ger), Jena (Ger), London, Los Angeles, Madrid, Munich, New Orleans, New York, Paris, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Schengen (Lux), Sidney, Stockholm, Tallinn (Estonia), Tel Aviv, Texoma (Ok), Tucson, Washington, Wellington and Winnipeg. Information about these events is available at http://www.stopthedrugwar.org/globalcoalition/ Please note that the duration of the 'Global Days against the Drug War' has been extended from three to six days, to last >from Friday 5th until Wednesday 10th. We encourage reformers to consider organising events in yet other cities. Please contact us at [email protected]. NATIONAL COALITIONS FORMED IN BRITAIN AND FRANCE These weeks, organisational meetings are held in many places to plan all this activity. To support organisation of events, national coalitions of reform organisations have been formed in Britain and France. A recent meeting of the new British coalition was reported in the Independent (read at our web site). Yves T�vessin, spokesperson for the new French alliance, the "Collectif pour l'abrogation de la loi 70", writes: "Yesterday we signed your declaration and we decided to organize an evening with concerts and street theatre on the 6th of June, on 7th of June a big demonstration in the afternoon, and surely many other surprises". Those of you who have been following recent French reform activism, will know that French surprises are always worth anticipating! The "Collectif" consists of La Ligue des Droits de l'Homme, le Syndicat de la Magistrature, Auto-Support d'Usagers de Drogues (ASUD), Act Up-Paris, le Collectif d'Information et de Recherche Canabiques (CIRC), les Verts, Chiche!, la CORA, Tekno+, and Substitution Auto-Support (SAS). Other recent good news from Paris concerns the confirma- tion that CORA, the Coordinamento Radicale Antiproibizionista, is organising the CORA congress in Paris on June 5, 6 and 7! PREPARATIONS FOR THREE DAYS OF ACTION IN NEW YORK! Meanwhile, the plans for events in New York are taking shape. On Monday June 8th through Wednesday June 10th there will be an ongoing flower laying ceremony and open drug war seminar, and daily rallies near the UN. On June 9th, a panel discussion on UN drug policy reform is planned inside the UN. Starting on Monday 8th, the center of activity outside the UN headquarters will be in the Ralph Bunche Park, the small park across the street from the UN's main entrance. We will have a protest focused around an ongoing flower laying ceremony along with an ongoing drug policy seminar, with renowned speakers. There will be visual displays in memory of drug war victims, representing drug war issues, and in favor of more peaceful approaches to drug policy. People will be able to get their flowers and lay them near the displays. Of course before the event we want to get people from around the world and the US to let us know they want flowers in their name so right >from the start there will be a lot of flowers for good visuals. In the larger park at the other end of the UN we will set up tables on the various issues and people can pick up their flowers and walk from the visitor center park to the main entrance park (about three blocks) and lay their flowers. In the larger park itself we will have issue-focused rallies each day. These will be scheduled each day during the lunch break of the UN meeting so media can attend and so it is easier for people to attend who are concerned about the issue. Issues we will cover over the three days include the spread of disease (AIDS, Hepatitis), incarceration of non-violent offenders with an emphasis on children without parents due to drug war incarceration; and the impact of the drug war on developing countries. Speakers will include not only US spokespersons but those from around the world. We also plan to have an open discussion wall where people can write their thoughts or have a speakers corner where anyone can speak for five minutes on the drug war. These latter two ideas are to emphasize the closed nature of the UN discussion and the openness of ours. Next to all this activity outside the UN, a panel discussion on UN drug policy reform is prepared, to be held inside the UN on Tuesday June 9th. The Global Coalition for Alternatives to the Drug War, together with several other parties, has submitted a formal application for the panel with the UN NGO Committee. In this we with work together with ENCOD (see section 2). For more information about events in New York, contact Kevin Zeese, [email protected], or Adam Smith, [email protected]. PLANS FOR A MARCH AT THE "SCHENGENER BRUECKE" ... Meanwhile, recent information, received April 12th, concerns plans for a manifestation at the "Schengener Bruecke", a bridge over the Mosel river at the location where the borders between Germany, France and Luxemburg meet, near the Luxemburg town of Schengen. In Schengen, a treaty was signed twelve years ago between several European countries, regulating the free ex- change of personnel between member states. However, the French President, Chirac, has in the past years frustrated the full implementation of the treaty by putting patrols at the borders between Belgium and France, accusing the Netherlands of causing drug trafficking problems by its liberal drug laws. The event at the Schengener Bruecke will probably involve a march across the bridge and the handing over of some suitable symbolic commodity from representatives of German drug policy reform groups, to their French counterparts, and v.v. ... AND AROUND THE WORLD! Plans are at an advanced stage at the other side of the globe as well. Chris Fowlie, NORML New Zealand board member, writes: "The National Organisation for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) has lobbied for marijuana law refom in New Zealand since 1976. NORML NZ supports the establishment of a regulated legal cannabis market. We'll be organising various activities around NZ, including a big march up Queen St, Auckland, Saturday June 6". Together with events announced earlier for Wellington, Dunedin and Christchurch, this makes for a total of 4 events in New Zealand so far! For information about all the other great events being planned in thirteen countries, see our web pages. Of course we encourage you to consider planning similar events. Events do not necessarly have to be big - a forum discussion, a rally, an anti-prohibition party, a petition, a concert, a press conference - it is up to you what form and size your participation will take ... Contact fellow reformers, local policy reform organisations, clubs, etc., get together and see what you can do. And inform us, of course! 2. THE GLOBAL COALITION: OVER 60 MEMBER ORGANISATIONS As you know, we have established the Global Coalition for Alternatives to the Drug War, which will issue declarations, and members of which will support the Global Days against the Drug War. The coalition is also involved in preparations of an NGO panel on UN drug policy reform, which is planned to be held inside the UN on Tuesday June 9th. Together with several other parties (a.o. ENCOD, see section 3), we have submitted a formal appli- cation for the panel to the UN NGO Committee. The application is coordinated by the Transnational Radical Party. See http://www.stopthedrugwar.org/globalcoalition/ for news about the UN panel, and for an up-to-date list of over 60 organisations that have joined the coalition. Organisations are invited to join the coalition by endorsing the declaration below. Please write to: [email protected] *** Declaration We, the undersigned, having recognized the extraordi- nary damage being caused by the Drug War, join together in a call for wide-ranging and honest international and intranational discussion about the effectiveness and consequences of current, force-based drug policies. Fur- thermore, we call upon our governments and fellow citizens to begin the process of the exploration of alternative solutions to the issues that these policies are claimed to address. This process should include, but not be limited to, a revision of the United Nations conventions and other international treaties which inhibit nations from adopting such alternatives. We believe that in an atmosphere of honest and rational examination, effective policies can be found which are based not upon force, repression, prohibition, coercive government action and the use of violence, but upon the universal principles of human rights, freedom, justice, equality under the law, the dignity of the individual, the health of people and communities, and the sovereignty of nations. It should be noted that this coalition represents a very broad range of political and social viewpoints, and a wide variety of issue-interests. The heterogeneity of the signatories to this coalition is evidence of both the intellectual strength of our position and the breadth of the destruction being wrought by current policies. For despite our differences, we stand together in the knowledge that a policy which mandates a continuous state of war, in the absence of a true acknowledgement and assessment of the consequences and excesses of that war, is objectively flawed. And that such a policy is in direct contradiction to the mission and the ideals of the United Nations, and of the peoples of the earth. No society, whether local or global, can long endure under a perpetual state of war. Nor do we choose to leave as a legacy to our children, and to future generations, the disastrous results of such a policy. It is time to find alternatives. The Global Coalition for Alternatives to the Drug War. *** 3. ENCOD: The European Council on Drugs and Development We work together with the European Council on Drugs and Development (ENCOD), which took the initiative to build a broad international alliance of organisations working in the field of development, human rights, prevention and health care, drug consumers and peasant drug crop producers to jointly challenge UNGASS with a set of concrete recommendations for an alternative drug policy. This alliance currently consist of some 30 organisations, some of which are members of the 'Global Coalition' as well. The manifesto "For a just and effective policy on drugs" attempts to bridge the many different islands dividing the broad drugs issue and to fully incorporate the views and worries from the South, often marginalised in the Northern dominated drugs policy debates. For more information about ENCOD, extensive information on UNGASS, and the text of the manifesto, see http://www.worldcom.nl/tni/drugs/ 3. AGAIN: THE CALL FOR PARTICIPATION Send out this updated version to promote the Global Days! *************************************************************** ** PLEASE DISTRIBUTE BY EMAIL AND FAX ** *************************************************************** The Global Days against the Drug War! June 5-10 Events in: Alsfeld, Amsterdam, Auckland, Berlin, Bonn, Brussels, Christchurch, Colville, Dallas, Dunedin, Eugene, Houston, Ilmenau, Jena, London, Los Angeles, Madrid, Munich, New Orleans, New York, Paris, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Schengen, Sidney, Stockholm, Tallinn, Tel Aviv, Texoma, Tucson, Washington, Wellington, Winnipeg ... Join the Coalition! As you probably know, the United Nations will hold the first-ever Special Session of the General Assembly on Drugs, UNGASS, from June 8th to June 10th 1998 in New York. This session was originally conceived as a critical examination of worldwide anti-drug policy. The focus of this session has now been narrowed. According to the new guidelines, only the expansion of existing policies will be open for discussion. The United Nations aims to escalate current drug repression tactics in a catastrophic quest towards a 'drug free' society. In terms of crime, economic and financial damage, and social and personal harm, this policy is turning into a worldwide crisis! It is of great importance that alternative proposals are heard at the onset of this UN session. A clear statement must be made that what is needed is not escalated repression, but reform policies aimed at reducing the damage currently done. To this aim, a number of organisations have recently united to form the "Global Coalition for Alternatives to the Drug War". They have written a declaration that will be published widely. You can join the coalition by co-signing the declaration; see the contact info below. Members of this coalition are also invited to participate in the the "1998 Global Days against the Drug War", which are held Friday June 5th through Wednesday June 10th in cities around the world. This international event will feature discussion forums, seminars, publications, press conferences, demonstrations, street parties, concerts, a congress, and other types of events. The CORA congress will be held in Paris, Friday 5th through Sunday 7th, and a great three-day event is planned to take place in New York from Monday 8th through Wednesday 10th. We have applied for a forum inside the UN on Tuesday June 9th. At this moment (April 25th), events are being planned in 33 cities! You can help make the 1998 Global Days against the Drug War a success! Make sure your city is part of this event. If you are a member of a group or organisation that can help, contact us. Otherwise, you can join one or more of the participating groups and organisations, or set up your own group. See the contact info below. In the weeks before UNGASS we will issue press releases with the names of all the groups and organisations that have joined the coalition. Groups and organisations are invited to plan their own version of the 1998 Global Days against the Drug War, under their own identity and name. Note however that participation in the coalition does not itself imply endorsement of the individual events taking place. Organisations wishing to join the coalition can send mail to [email protected]. Individual activists please visit the web site at http://www.stopthedrugwar.org/globalcoalition/ The Global Coalition for Alternatives to the Drug War currently consists of these and more than 45 other organisations: The Drug Reform Coordination Network (DRCNet), the National Organisation for Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), Coordina- mento Radicale Antiprohibizionista (CORA), the November Coalition, the Campaign for Equity-Restorative Justice (CERJ), the Transnational Radical Party (TRP), Common Sense for Drug Policy, the Legalize! Initiative, the Media Awareness Project (MAP), American Society for Action on Pain (ASAP), Compassio- nate Care Alliance, the Campaign for the Restoration and Regulation of Hemp (CRRH), HANF! Magazine, National Alliance of Methadone Advocates (NAMA), and other organisations. Participate in the 1998 Global Days against the Drug War ! June 5-10 http://www.stopthedrugwar.org/globalcoalition/ e-mail: [email protected] .................2..................................... Date: Sun, 26 Apr 1998 21:06:11 +1000 X-Sender: [email protected] Mime-Version: 1.0 To: [email protected] From: mez <[email protected]> Subject: [net-time]:caul 2 contrib.U.te ___________re:meme.burr/drea.member/deme[nt]mor.y[?]______________ Caul.ling all to: <<<d i s. M E S M E R>>> ______ D r e a [l] m s f r o m t h e V o i d __________ ________________ e-turn.all.wurk.in.pro:[a]gress[ive] _______________ http://wollongong.starway.net.au/~mezandwalt/dlog.htm [a co[o]l-lab-o[h!]=rate.i:ON b.tween:] mez + B--LIN--DA + dAvE + ? kon.tact me[z] if u want con.tribut[latiON]e stat[ic]us _________re:meme.burr/drea.member/deme[nt]mor.y[?]______________ <<http://wollongong.starway.net.au/~mezandwalt>> <<w.i.pro.gress: http://crash.tig.com.au/~garu/index.htm>> <<All puppets are classified organically challenged or reality incapable . Although once purely organically based, they now seek to reinvent themselves through a variety of means>> ..........................3............................ From: "Matthew Smith" <[email protected]> Date: Mon, 27 Apr 1998 01:37:53 +0200 (MET DST) To: [email protected] Subject: Vehicles of PRosperity and Progress Mime-Version: 1.0 Status: RO X-Status: hi i just weanted to tell everybody that there is some new stuff on http://vehicle.aec.at thx matt ����������\ /���/ ���I�����\ \ ______ /� / I \ \ ______/ /� / ___I______/__\____________________/ / / -o \ / / I / ### ----I------------------------firstfloor.org \ ##### I \ ### I _________________ \ / ___/____/**** * ****\____________________\_/ **** **** ************* _____________*********________________________ ...................................4................... Date: Mon, 27 Apr 1998 12:19:40 +0300 To: Nettime <[email protected]> From: "Hannes Brunner" <[email protected]> (by way of John Hopkins) Subject: Invitation GESTURE AS VALUE GESTURE AS VALUE by Jerelyn Hanrahan May 6th - 27th 1998 Lobby of the New York Information Technology Center, 55 Broad Street Free & Open Daily GESTURE AS VALUE speaks to the mechanization of everyday life while at the same time presenting the individual expression as commodity. Presented in cooperation with Lower Manhattan Cultural Council and Creative Time Sponsored in part by: NCR System Media PRO HELVETIA, Arts Council of Switzerland Thanks to: NCR System Media Thundergulch The New York Information Technology Center artnetweb New York Foundation for the Arts Puffin Foundation More information at: GESTURE AS VALUE http://artnetweb.com/gesture.html or at: Creative Time, 307 Seventh Avenue Suite 1904, New York, NY 10001 212.206.6674 fax 212.255.8467 www.creativetime.org ............................................5.......... From: JSalloum <[email protected]> Date: Tue, 28 Apr 1998 00:24:45 EDT Subject: National Gallery of Canada exhibition dealing with the representation of the Mid Jayce Salloum's exhibition dealing with the representation of the Middle East in the West, etc: (Kan ya ma Kan) / There was and there was not is currently at the National Gallery of Canada, 380 Promenade Sussex Drive, Ottawa upstairs in the Contemporary Canadian Art section, info: (613) 990-1985 (as part of the Fragile Electrons exhibition) Free to the public. The exhibition continues until June 6, 1998 This installation, serves to examine the representation of �Lebanon�, and its history as constructed in our collective and individual psyches. Lebanon has been used as a metaphor, as a 'site' serving the real and imaginary for various �visitors� throughout its history. It has been a ground for >continuous claims, discursive texts and acts of re-construction. It has become an adjective for the nostalgia of our past and the fears of the future. We have come to understand so very little in spite of the massive amounts of information we have received regarding Lebanon, that for one to even mention the name all sorts of images come to mind. The installation is a transposition of a working studio and found archive, presenting the �resources� and artifacts necessary to re-construct an understanding of the mediated process inherent in the definition and perception of a culture. Here the viewer is part of that process, being forced to make decisions and to take responsibility for re-constructing their own cultural perceptions. The installation is set up as a pseudo scientific research lab/studio paralleling/exposing my own productions/projects in Lebanon and challenging the immense history of the production of knowledge of Lebanon and the Middle East. Incorporating objects collected in Lebanon, archival materials, documents, maps, photographs, light boxes and videotape loops, the installation calls into question our notions of history and research methodology, their role in the effacement of histories, and the layers involved in depiction/representation and understanding of another culture. (Kan ya ma Kan) / There was and there was not, has been shown at American Fine Arts-New York, New Langton Arts-San Francisco, Kunstlerhaus Bethanien- Berlin, the Shedhalle-Zurich, Update �96-Copenhagen, Optica Gallery-Montr�al, Western Front-Vancouver and YYZ Artists� Outlet-Toronto. Artist's Bio: Jayce Salloum has been working in installation, photography, mixed media and video since 1975, as well as curating exhibitions, conducting workshops and coordinating cultural events. He has had numerous exhibitions throughout North & South America, Europe, Japan and the Middle East, at institutions including American Fine Arts, Artists Space, P.S.1., New Langton Arts, LACE, Los Angeles Center for Photographic Studies, Long Beach Museum of Art, Walker Arts Center, The Wexner Center, CEPA, YYZ, A Space, Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography, Contemporary Art Gallery, Western Front, Optica Gallery, Oboro, Dazibzo, Articule, Plug-In, Hamilton Art Gallery, Southern Alberta Art Gallery, Miyagi Museum of Contemporary Art, Hara Museum of Contemporary Art, Museum of Contemporary Art - Sapporo, The British Film Institute, Kunstlerhaus Bethanien, Galerie Nationale du Jeu de Paume, The American Centre, The Institute du Monde Arabe, Espace Lyonnais d'Art Contemporain, Shedhalle, Rote Fabrik, Rotterdam Film Festival, Museo Nacional Centro De Arte Reina Sofia, Museo de Arte Contempor�neo - Seville, and Th�atre de Beyrouth. Currently he has an exhibition at the National Gallery of Canada which runs until June 6th, 1998. ......................................................6 From: [email protected] X-Sender: [email protected] (Unverified) Mime-Version: 1.0 Date: Fri, 1 May 1998 11:46:13 +0200 To: announcer <[email protected]> Subject: Obsolete1 - low bit games OBSOLETE 1 Low Bit Games Time's Up in its investigation of the "public individual's" behaviourisms presents a series of events programmed by David Moises dedicated to the observation of obsoleteness. Our focus will be on our personal experiences of technolgies and cultural artefacts that formed the basis for our very own microcosmi as well as developments, inventions and flights of fancy that for one or the other reason did not quite make it. As a first event we present the San Francisco based Bureau Of Low Technology (b.o.l.t.) and its investigations into early low bit games. On Monday the 4th of May, 8pm at the Time's Up harbourside laboratories there will be a lecture and discussion with an opportunity to experience first hand some of the objects of their researches (Pong, Space Invaders, PacMan, Tron, etc.). An outline of the lecture and supporting information can be found on the Time's Up web presence at: <http://www.timesup.org/obsolete> The bureau of low technology presents: "p o n g... a historical investigation of primitive computer entertainment" exploring how this low-tech phenomenon magically revealed a new dimension of screen-based entertainment while inspiring a generation of techno-enthusiasts and creating a multi-billion dollar industry. This trans-media lecture with analysis and historical documentation will include some formal statements from the bureau about its mission to preserve obsolete forms of the human-machine interface, especially primitive video abstraction - "the gap" - which interactive bitmapped games provided. The bureau of low technology (b.o.l.t. San Francisco) was founded in 1997 as an entity dedicated to the preservation and appreciation of all things low-tech. For more information, visit <http://www.blasthaus.com/bolt>. -------- ---------------------- \ / TIME�S UP \ / Industriezeile 33 B \/ A-4020 Linz /\ ph:+43/732-787804 /xx\ fax: +43/732-795742 /xxxx\ http://www.timesup.org -------- ---------------------- 7...................................................... Date: Fri, 01 May 1998 15:31:27 +0000 From: Charleroi/Danses <[email protected]> Mime-Version: 1.0 Subject: Ulrike Gabriel X-Mime-Autoconverted: from 8bit to quoted-printable by hydrogen.inbe.net id PAA00989 An information that could interest you. On may, the second Antonio Muntadas will present his Interom, a combination of Internet and CD Rom. He will accompanied by Anne Marie Duguet, professor multimedia at the University of Paris. The lecture will take place at 18,30 in les Tanneurs, 75, rue des Tanneurs, 1000 Brussels, may, the second. Tel : 02 502 06 32. Memory Arena, virtual environment.- an Otherspace project. by David and Ulrike Gabriel in cooperation with : Robert O. Kane, Albrecht Koestlin, Siegbert Marschall, Andreas Weymer et Kai Herrmann Till the 6th of may in Les Tanneurs, 75, rue des Tanneurs, Brussels, 1000 T�l : 02 502 09 32 Open from 14,00 to 18,00 everyday except on monday. An installation for 3 users and an �n� number of spectators. Device 3 screens producing different informations of the same world and a device of 3 machines: a keyboard, a graphical panel and a HeadMountDisplay. Principle User 1 generates words on the keyboard which appear on the right handside screen. After having introduced one word on the keyboard, User 1 is invited to record it. The word is sampled and will be integrated in the sound environment. User 2, equipped with the HeadMountDisplay embraces a portion of the virtual environment (visible to the spectators on the central screen). This portion of virtual environment is represented by a polyhedral shape which changes following the orientation of User 2's focus. User 3 who has on his graphical panel the same image as on the right handside screen, can with a stiletto move the words and insert them in User 2�s field of view . User 2 then sees them appear in his HeadMoundDisplay. At the same time, the spectactor sees the words appear on the central screen. If User 2 focuses on certain words for a period of time, a �memory phantom� appears which materialises into a geometrical shape evolving in space. This shape or �memory phantom' has absorbed the words it has been shaped from. The words forming the shape can still be seen on the right handside screen (words written in black and linked to one another). If User 2, equipped with the HeadMountDisplay continues to focus on the constituted shape, relations of meaning are created, generated by a computer and an "audiovisual textual' makes the shape grow but remains invisible to User 2. This 'audiovisual textual' appears on the left handside screen. If user 2 focuses on a 'phantom' beyond a certain limit of time, the 'memory phantom' lets its 'audiovisual textual' escape. User 2 can then read it. If he reads it till the end, the 'memory phantom' dies and disappears from the virtual environment, thus from the screens. Best regards, Bernard Degroote --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: [email protected]