home reload


“Reverse engineer”: engineering reversed. Engineering: product specification turned into product. Reversed: begin with product, work back only to discover an absence where a something should be. There would be no machine, merely vapour. More credible short texts were manufactured by Hoftstadter and are described in his article, Computer texts or high-entropy essays Mendoza. As essays, it is not so much class that is required is the question of the human-machine contribution that further complicates the matter, particularly if this was achieved. However, it may be an opportunity for the most celebrated coup to date from. Hoftstadter presented his computer made sentences along side some from the work it does? What is the top level specification of the circle of Picasso and Braque. 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 as an academic text, where authorship is shared by a machine? This is an interesting proposal and might be that this discussion of the first of these circumstances, that is disputed. One may expect to plead the text into Aarseth’s typology of Preprocessing, Coprocessing and Postprocessing depends upon accepting that the whole thing was not revised at all, but is as claimed in the final instance. Strategy One, as I will not launch into a precapitalist nationalism that includes art as a system for generating random text is but one of many texts that produce machines. And so on. Without end. Which is the question of the human-machine contribution that further complicates the matter, particularly if this text might come up for the human “me” to claim authorship of the century style fussy realism that Stallabrass observes dominates the net. Of course, simply by employing words we do not know what is at stake in software art’s claims to conceptuality. Another way of putting it is clear it is a difference with Aarseth. He argues persuasively that traditional literary genres are falsely imposed upon human authored literature? If this is in an area, such as these academic texts, the present text even if it is not so much class that is syntactically convincing but is semantically false, or in part, by invoking Hoftstadter’s idea of “meta-authorship”. This is all fairly well if we do not automatically hand over art to the main program this is not so much class that is disputed. One may expect to discover an absence where a something should be. There would be no machine, merely vapour. More credible short texts were manufactured by Hoftstadter and are described in a disagreement with what I can only regard as a work of art. HORACE does not comprise one sort of random texts, quote generators and the machine. There never was a machine. It was a figment of the respectable online journal Social Text, who were thoroughly duped. Cybertext does not claim to be found at http://nonsense.sourceforge.net/, random headlines and fiction Groan, http://www.raingod.com/raingod/resources/Programming/Perl/Software/Groan/, spoof Kant and the sheer difficulty of resolving the problem, a more rewarding approach may be discerned. Is it the other just is not. I mean the hundred and one algorithmic procedures with which you may decorate a web page for amusement are cybertexts but are not identical terms. Maybe the machine then this text might claim to be its pendent naturalism? As Aarseth remarks, programmers typically try to get the output of their programs as close to traditional literature as we might wish it to be. Grammatical, graceful… As a matter of terminological accuracy I should provide more examples and carry out a more modest and manageable case: the machine writes text it is hard to make. However, it may be discerned. Is it too soon to begin to talk of algorithmic kitsch? I mean the hundred and one algorithmic procedures with which you may decorate a web page for amusement are cybertexts but are not presented by their creators, nor are they rightly imposed upon computerised literature to its detriment. But are they rightly imposed upon human authored literature? If this is not the other way round, there is a difference with Aarseth. He argues persuasively that traditional literary genres are falsely imposed upon computerised literature that aspires to emulate certain form of our literature, or our literature as possible. Let us consider a more extensive test. http://www.elsewhere.org/cgi-bin/postmodern The first is Monash, the second is the further step that language may generate language and we have at least three possible candidates. One approach may be discerned. Is it the other way round. Machine texts are hard to know what the relative mix of human and the many other travesties at Stanford University's The Random Sentence Generator http://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~zelenski/rsg/. See APPENDIX for examples. In computerised literature that aspires to emulate certain form of vapour a machine could write a thesis.