
Down With Everything (by Alice Taylor)
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This and many more amazing photos via n0t.nu who explains:
Dutch photographer Martin Roemers spent ten years compiling an incredible collection of images that expose the clandestine…
Martin Roemers’ “Relics of the Cold War”
Read more "Martin Roemers’ “Relics of the Cold War”"(((Really interesting point among many in this interesting interview. I don’t think it’s “cyborg culture” that has proliferated. It’s digital metamedia that’s proliferated, so that people who might have once been futurists or NASA theorists can enter the previously unknown technosocial niches of “design blogger” and “technology evangelist.”)))
(((This is an interview about a project with an extremely heavy science-fictional tinge that is in fact quite remote from science fiction. It lacks the look, feel, extrapolative techniques and sense of wonder payoff of science fiction. There’s no fiction in it, and it has scarcely a whiff of science. Basically, it’s a large clique of obviously intelligent and creative people who all more or less know each other through the Internet, and are all loosely riffing about cyborgs, and what-cyborg-means-to-them. A cultural artifact of this kind could not have existed without collapsed barriers-to-entry in publishing.)))
(((And it’s not even dull, fannish, or self-indulgent. It’s a little overwhelming in its volume and its focussed erudition, but it’s a very readable and illuminating “project” (whatever a “project” is). Certainly it’s far more interesting and gets much more to the core of the matter than, say, a comm
Bruce Sterling’s excellent meta-commentary about #50Cyborgs
Cyborg Prospecting: an interview with Tim Maly | Beyond The Beyond
Pattern Recognition – Chapter 23: Dickheads The rain has stopped but drops still fall from ledges and awnings, beading on the nylon of her new Rickson’s. Absently she reaches to touch the place where the tape should be, but it isn’t there. No hole. History erased via substitution of an identical object. Pattern Recognition – […]
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This a 1600’s era print, but this guy looks like he could be living in Hackney, Bushwick, or the Mission in 2008.
PS He stole a duck.
Hipster time travel (by Joshua Heller)
Read moreCPU’s: Cayce Pollard Units by transceiverfrequency featuring black tops Pattern Recognition – Chapter 2: Bitch CPUs for the meeting, reflected in the window of a Soho specialist in mod paraphernalia, are a fresh Fruit T-shirt, her black Buzz Rickson’s MA-1, anonymous black skirt from a Tulsa thrift, the black leggings she’d worn for Pilates, black […]
Read more "The Uniform"Quote from Pattern Recogniton – Chapter 6: The Match Factory: “Of course,” he [Bigend] says, “we have no idea, now, of who or what the inhabitants of our future might be. In that sense, we have no future. Not in the sense that our grandparnts had a future, or thought they did. Fully imagined cultural […]
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