To display the most relevant entries to you in priority,
vote for the stories you are interested in
(  )
and reject those that you are not interested in
(  )
Unreal.fr -
1 days and 3 hours ago
Hellkeeper propose DM-Honored pour UT(99). - Télécharger. Swanky propose DM-Maris 1.1
pour UT(99). - Télécharger. Myth propose DM-SunsetArena pour UT(...
|
Hackint0sh - iPod Touch -
1 days and 15 hours ago
via MacNN:
Macgamestore on Friday released Book of Legends, a puzzle-based adeventure game. The program,
developed by Banzai and published by Goggi Games, allows players to follow the main characters --
Charleston Black and Zoe -- as they travel through five different countries to solve puzzles and
find hidden objects. The goal is solve a mystery involving Excalibur, the magical sword from
Arthurian myth....
More...
|
MacNN | The Macintosh News Network -
1 days and 15 hours ago
Macgamestore on Friday released Book of Legends, a puzzle-based adeventure game. The program,
developed by Banzai and published by Goggi Games, allows players to follow the main characters --
Charleston Black and Zoe -- as they travel through five different countries to solve puzzles and
find hidden objects. The goal is solve a mystery involving Excalibur, the magical sword from
Arthurian myth.... 
|
Rhizome Inclusive: News, Blog, and reBlog -
1 days and 20 hours ago
centerimg id="image1627" src="http://rhizome.org/imagebase/article/2119/Picture-1.jpg"
alt="Picture-1.jpg" //centerbr / pDonna Haraway once wrote, in her infamous a
href="http://www.stanford.edu/dept/HPS/Haraway/CyborgManifesto.html""Cyborg Manifesto,"/a of the
idea that there were no separations between bodies and objects. Our life force flows through us and
out into the objects we make, she reasoned; thus there ought to be no distinction between the
so-called real or natural organisms that nature produces and the artificial machines that humans
make. Her conclusion: We are all cyborgs. While this theory was developed prior to the internet's
big boom (in 1991, presumably before the word "cyborg" took on the stale whiff it has now), and
explicitly as a means of wresting feminism from the binary system in which she saw it entrenched,
it turns out that it applies very well to the work of a net art boys club that calls themselves
"Neenstars." In 2000 the group was so determined to set themselves apart from the existing paradigm
of media art discourse that they hired a Silicon Valley branding firm to a
href="http://www.wired.com/culture/lifestyle/news/2000/06/36562"invent a new name/a for them and
what they do. The resulting word, "Neen" has been used by the boys (and a few girls along the way)
to refer to their work and practice, which revolves around replication and the exploration of an
ever-upgraded series of machines. It's all spelled out in their a
href="http://www.neen.org/neenmanifesto/index.htm"manifesto/a, in which they say, "Our official
theories about reality--quantum physics, etc.--prove that the taste of our life is the taste of a
simulation. Machines help us feel comfortable with this condition: they simulate the simulation we
call Nature." Open now at Brussels' a href="http://www.think21gallery.com/"think.21 Contemporary
Gallery/a is a show of the work of Neen godfathers Andreas Angelidakis, Miltos Manetas, and Angelo
Plessas. It won't surprise you that their work moves fluidly through media that includes paintings,
web animations, photos, and architectural structures. More importantly, the artists situate their
output in relation to the fluidity with which they move in and out of real and virtual spaces,
jumping online and offline constantly and seamlessly. Their effort is to downplay the oft-hyped
distinction between the real and the digital, arguing that the experience of both is all part of
the same larger consciousness. With the title of the show, a
href="http://www.think21gallery.com/exhibitions/chapter6.html""Everyday Utopia,"/a they at once
dispel the myth of the digital utopia and make clear to those older generation critics still
clinging to the false horizon of virtuality that the future is already here. - Marisa Olson/p
piImage credit: Miltos Manetas, /iiDogs and Cables/i, oil on canvas, 2006/p p class="more"a
href="http://www.think21gallery.com/exhibitions/chapter6.html"Link raquo;/a/pimg
src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/rhizome-fp/~4/461027869" height="1" width="1"/

|
Techdirt -
1 days and 22 hours ago
We've been pointing out for a while that the supposed "threat" of online sexual predators has been
blown a href="http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20071109/020921.shtml"way out of proportion/a,
thanks to the press and politicians' desire to create a
href="http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20080711/0218421649.shtml"moral panics/a that allow
politicians to make themselves look good while passing useless laws. The Berkman Center, at
Harvard, is about to come out with a new study that shows just how big a myth this has been. As the
internet and things like social networks became more popular, a
href="http://www.hyperorg.com/blogger/2008/11/16/is-the-net-dangerous-for-kids-the-research-shows/"
target="_new"the number of incidents of sexual offenses against children has dropped/a. Of course,
if you only listen to politicians or read the sensationalistic press on these things, you'd think
that was impossible. This isn't to say that there aren't sexual predators out there, or that kids
shouldn't be taught to be careful, but just to make it clear that the actual risk is pretty
remote.br /br /a href="http://techdirt.com/articles/20081117/0107182845.shtml"Permalink/a | a
href="http://techdirt.com/articles/20081117/0107182845.shtml#comments"Comments/a | a
href="http://techdirt.com/article.php?sid=20081117/0107182845op=sharethis"Email This Story/abr / br
style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=6fb32ab1b1611a4913affa4a57e62dacp=1"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=6fb32ab1b1611a4913affa4a57e62dacp=1"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=6fb32ab1b1611a4913affa4a57e62dac" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/div class="feedflare" a
href="http://feeds.techdirt.com/~f/techdirt/feed?a=4Wx2n"img
src="http://feeds.techdirt.com/~f/techdirt/feed?i=4Wx2n" border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feeds.techdirt.com/~r/techdirt/feed/~4/460881698" height="1" width="1"/

|
|
What is Matoumba?
A website that sorts everyday the most relevant information to you.
Vote for the news and Matoumba will learn your tastes and the information that you like the most.
It is all FREE!
|