Showing posts with label computer programs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label computer programs. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Daniel Everett
here.
"Contained within the operating system of Mac computers is a rudimentary electronic psychotherapist program. Meant to simulate a Rogerian therapist, it engages the participant in a cyclical conversation by taking his or her statements and roughly reconfiguring them into questions. I met with this program three times a week for a month in order to discuss my fear that I was disappearing completely. These are three stills from our conversations."
Find out how to access emacs doctor to help solve total frustration here.
Posted by
Robert Kulisek
at
11:11 AM
Labels: 2000s, Chicago, computer programs, daniel everett, digitalness
Monday, July 6, 2009
lisa oppenheim
lisa oppenheim's 100 photographs that changed the world. as she explains "source images were found in a time/life book, 100 photographs that changed the world. i am plugging the time, place and date of each photograph into a computer program that makes a map of the stars from any place at any time. i am printing out the star maps and drawing the stars by hand onto acetate and printing them, photographically." see more here.
[all lisa oppenheim. from the series 100 photographs that changed the world.]
Posted by
laurel
at
9:55 AM
Labels: 2000s, abstraction, b+w, computer programs, digitalness, drawing, lisa oppenheim, maps, north america, usa
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