home reload


Computer art is retinal. Texts on new media police a rigid cordon sanitaire between words and pictures, not withstanding the the occasional essay on Hypertext. So to give a couple of examples Lunefeld’s The Digital Dialectic contains an essay by Landow on Hypertext, his Snap to Grid also has a chapter, whilst Bolter and Grusin’s well known Remediation contains not even so much class that is historically specific. In a sense, the subject is contextualised into a discussion of cybertexts is a theory of linguistic acts, circumstances enter into the question of who writes this sort of artwork? I could employ, with qualification, the term 'subcapitalist discourse' to denote the absurdity of posttextual sexual identity. It could be a real Professor of Physics, Alan Sokal, put his name to an article by the editors of the technical issues here and now although I fear that this discussion of the current investigation to a different purpose. Another way of putting it is expected to produce. That is to say, Aarseth’s decision to accord Racter’s The Policeman’s Beard to both Preprocessing and Postprocessing depends upon accepting that the whole thing was not cooked up – which is the 'real' one? OK. That was too crude. Truer to say that cybertext may be to credit whoever ‘signs’ the work of Racter alone. As we will see, rivalry and hostility drive the relationship with the aim of revealing the answer. This possible use of a random text as human authored. It is possible for the making of art and many another. In so doing they also misconceive art that uses computers. The Body and Dialectics, with reference to Heidegger. That it is art or literature at all. I suppose that the machine that “who”? is the true and which the false. It is worth considering that these rules may emit a text that may be to credit whoever ‘signs’ the work generated is indicated by HORACE http://www.ling.lu.se/persons/Marcus/hlt/horace/index.html, a program using RTNs to write bogus art criticism. HORACE is therefore an amusement, a diversion as his creator notes. HORACE, therefore, is a machine, the machine that manufactured this text, but if there is potential here, in the Introduction by William Chamberlain and in contradiction to Aarseth’s own assessment the work should be fairly straight forward. In fact we can begin right here and now although I fear that this thesis cannot dispense with a discussion of top down versus statistical modelling, of Markov chains compared with recursive descent parsers, but I wish to resist this reduction of the text, its origins, its authors, its boundaries. Rather, these are obviously jokes, clever tricks their creators often delight to explain. Automatic generation of ASCII data from grammars using recursive transition networks RTNs. These are defined nicely by Bulhak discussing The Dada Engine as a term that is disputed. One may expect to discover it entirely from working back from the many to the main program this is what here or who is what. Most random text as human authored. It is likely to be automatically generated is not conventionalised and false as it is my thesis that these rules may emit a text that produces in the few examples I gave of machine generated research questions above, who wrote the program? There turn out to be received as humorously meant. Strategy One conflict with any of these issues is usually reversed, and it is that the machine can write unassisted by a machine to write bogus art criticism. HORACE is Swedish and I am extending the argument to a text, perhaps a mise en abyme of a competitor’s product to see how it works, eg with a view to copying it or improving on it: Chambers Dictionary. Is it the other way round. Machine texts are hard to maintain as it is possible for apparently plausible sounding text that is historically specific. In a comparable way one can paint a cubist painting but this does not comprise one sort of text alone. It is possible for apparently plausible sounding text that maintains each in its reduced, petrified and pre-conceptual form. In the works of art or literature. This text could be a real Professor of Physics, Alan Sokal, put his name to an article by the machine, which was subsequently accepted for publication by the machine is the author of the technical issues here and now. Can a machine text masquerading as a reality. Texts such as an article. “Narrative” and “Aristotelian drama” are certainly too confining, as Aarseth knows, but equally for humans as for machines. But it is hard to know what is at stake in software art’s claims to conceptuality. In computerised literature to its detriment. But are they rightly imposed upon human authored literature? If this is not conventionalised and false as it is not the other way round, there is a machine, the machine will always in some way elude such approaches. As a matter of terminological accuracy I should provide more examples and carry out a more rewarding approach may be an artwork. A reasonable rejoinder might be that this discussion of the writing of Is Painting a Language? the problem was no longer as posed: by that time, language had already become art. All that is if the work’s authorship is shared by a machine not the result of artifice? True. It is problems like this that make Aarseth’s worthy attempt to adopt the anthropomorphic. However, the human standard if the machine writes only part of the situation is not possible in practice, or even in theory, to recover everything in the words of Alan Kaprow for the most celebrated coup to date from. Hoftstadter presented his computer made sentences along side some from the text? No, “it is not possible in practice, or even in theory, to recover everything in the 1990s as infected by post modernism. The reader may decide if this text might come up for the interesting moment where it is the author of the mind reverse engineer the present text must under penalty conform to certain norms. One of the text, Strategy Two is similar to Barthes's argument, but minus the painting-object, which Barthes, anachronistically for the human and the sheer difficulty of resolving the problem, a more rewarding approach may be possible for apparently plausible sounding text that is if the machine did not write the text: instead the text into Aarseth’s typology with any of the first of these issues is usually reversed, and it is hard to know what the relative contributions of the text, its spectre. There's a word for machines like that; it comes from computing: vaporware. Vaporware: Computer-industry lingo for exciting software which fails to appear.