Andreas Broeckmann on Fri, 4 Jun 1999 10:07:22 +0100 |
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Syndicate: (fwd) RHIZOME launches new STARRYNIGHT interfa |
Date: Thu, 3 Jun 1999 21:01:38 -0400 To: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] From: BOUNCE syndicate: Non-member submission from [alex galloway <[email protected]>] FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 3, 1999 RHIZOME LAUNCHES "STARRYNIGHT" New interface allows for visual browsing. URL: http://www.rhizome.org/starrynight Contact: Mark Tribe <mailto:[email protected]> (212) 625-3191 Alex Galloway <mailto:[email protected]> Each time someone reads an article on the RHIZOME web site <www.rhizome.org>, a dim star appears on a black web page. When an article gets read again, the corresponding star gets a bit brighter. Over time, the web page comes to resemble a starry night sky, with bright stars and dim stars corresponding to more popular and less popular articles. STARRYNIGHT links each star to the article it represents, and connects related stars into visible constellations. "STARRYNIGHT represents a totally new way of visualizing and browsing databased information," said RHIZOME Founder and Creative Director Mark Tribe. STARRYNIGHT currently has over 750 stars, and is growing quickly. Thousands of web surfers have helped calibrate the intensities of these stars simply by reading texts at RHIZOME and clicking on stars on STARRYNIGHT. You can create a new star by sending a text to <[email protected]>. And by using STARRYNIGHT, you increase the brightness of the stars corresponding to the texts you read, leaving a visible trace of your activity (intensities are updated daily, so results are not immediate). STARRYNIGHT depends on two pieces of original software: a set of Perl scripts that sort texts by keyword and record their individual hits, and a Java applet that filters this information to draw stars and constellations. "The STARRYNIGHT browser is the beginning of a new, community-oriented software innitiative at RHIZOME," says RHIZOME Technical Director Alex Galloway. "We sent out a call for Java programmers, and several RHIZOME subscribers agreed to collaborate on the project. This represents a move to remain on the edge of new technology, while staying true to our community focus." STARRYNIGHT is both a mirror and a map. On the one hand, it offers a reflection of the RHIZOME community's reading habits. It is up to you to decide whether to click on a bright, popular star, or a dim one that fewer people have read. On the other hand, it acts as a navigational interface by connecting similar stars/texts into constellations regardless of their brightness. "Finally, a map that can rightfully be mistaken for the territory!" writes David A. Ross, SFMOMA Director, on the new STARRYNIGHT interface. STARRYNIGHT is also an artifact and an agent of global networking. It is produced by the contributions and activities of an online community, and it enables members of the community to see the results in abstract and metaphorical terms: as you surf the site, your click-trail helps illuminate the night sky. As interface art, STARRYNIGHT explores several new possibilities offered by the internet: global artistic collaboration, real-time collection and filtering of information using automated software, the integration of user-generated data such as web site hits, and the dissolution of authorial control. + + + For more about STARRYNIGHT, please visit <www.rhizome.org/starrynight>. RHIZOME COMMUNICATIONS is a non-profit organization dedicated to advancing the public interest in and understanding of new media art. RHIZOME's email lists and web site serve as an online platform where members of this community exchange ideas and information. ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/syndicate to unsubscribe, write to <[email protected]> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe [email protected]