Thanks for these links Jim - much appreciated - I will explore plus
the Leipzig show. Cris Cheek got me onto Mark Greenwood's work
(http://www.bbc.co.uk/devon/content/articles/2009/03/06/parallel_plymouth_feature.shtml)
- basically a randomiser based on sensor readings very nice.
Any more for anymore?
On Wed, Apr 22, 2009 at 9:52 AM, Jim Andrews <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>> Jim - I salute your genius! This is exactly what my life has been
>> missing. I have probably compromised my whole system installing
>> ActiveX but it seems worth it.
>
> ha. thanks, bridget.
>
>> I am doing a talk tomorrow night on online publishing for writers and
>> you have just provided a whole new category single-handed...
>
> well that's an interesting topic, isn't it. there are a few others who take
> much the same approach as i do. such as andy campbell at
> http://dreamingmethods.com . same approach in that the emphasis is on a
> site. and a site that explores literary interactivity. and some sort of
> synthesis of arts and media.
>
> we both also publish on other web sites. for instance, both campbell and
> myself have work in
> http://www.terminalapsu.org/exhibitions/digitalliterature/projects.html , a
> project curated/edited by alan bigelow. the thing is online but also there
> was a show, an offline event.
>
> i also publish in print. i haven't published any books yet, but i do publish
> a few things per year, generally, in magazines or anthological collections
> of one sort or another.
>
> it's fairly fluid, actually, between arts and media. others will have
> different intermedial experiences. writing for film and writing for print,
> say. but, in any case, it seems like there's a lot of fluidity, these days,
> between arts and media in writing. and in publishing.
>
> ja
>
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