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Paul's Journal

paul
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01/27/2005 23:11 #31614

Another Job Turned Away
Another job offer came, it seems like the fifteen millionth this semester. I keep having to turn them down because of the whole Canisius Professor thing. It better work out. If I am not a full-time progfessor in the Fall, I am officially leaving Buffalo forever.

This time it was Second Life . Who would have thought? It seems like only yesterday I was teaching a class called temp:real about Linden Lab's Second Life. This job was for a online community admin and social networking person at Linden Labs.

The best part is they also asked if I could recommend someone and of course, I recomemended (e:twisted) , the best community admin I ever have worked with ever! And she lives right in San Francisco. What a perfect opportunity for her to realizie her career goals in online community.

On another note, Stephanie Rothenberg decided to use an estip node for her class. The more classes that use estrip node, the quicker I can realize my place in the academic software hall of fame.

I also pitched the site to a bunch of students. Maybe we will see some more new faces shortly!

01/27/2005 17:56 #31613

On Collecting
Okay I haven't actually typed it in yet but here is my newest digital poem in its most primitive form. Sometimes I wonder what is the actual poem, the final product - or the code that wrote it. Here you can see that my handwriting has deteriorated in my late 20s. I used to be able to write clearly. Now that I almost never write I have this illegible scrawl. At least it got the job done in the keyboard free emergency state I was in.

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01/27/2005 13:24 #31612

At least there is sun
Wow, it is really icey cold out. I wish I could teleport to estripwest
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01/27/2005 04:10 #31611

This is why people hate modern art
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For my electronics class I had to respond to a reading about early robotic art and telepresence art. One of the pieces involved two human being able to arm wrestle over a network using a robotic arm that they each wrestled independently and which sent data about angle, arm strength etc over the network to the othe player. Sometimes it did not work and it would report both people as winning. The really came up the lamest pseudo-inetellecttual theory for this.

Here is my response with an excerpt below.

I find it hard to believe that the issue of agency raised by telephonic Arm Wrestling, upon it technological failure, were but mere afterthoughts to fill the intellectual void surrounding the project. Especially this quote, "under certain circumstances, both sides could win simultaneously, fundamentally undermining the bipolar competitive model of win-lose . . . a telling commentary on the arms race and the opposition of capitalism and communism."

01/27/2005 02:46 #31610

In 1996 the telegarden sprouted
I was talking with (e:twisted) about an online garden that was an art piece in ars electronica 1996 called telegarden . I realized that in 1995 I was a senior in high school and we didn't even have the internet at home or in school. That was only 10 years ago. I think the first time I saw the internet in action was in 1996 in Flensburg, Germany. I remember I didn't quite understand how it even worked. I thought netscape was the internet at that point. It's funny now looking back on my ignorance. It's amazing how much has changed since then in such a short period of time. It's so weird to think without the net I probably wouldn't have ever even met her.

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In response to (e:metalpeter) 's collection question[inlink]metalpeter,251[/inlink]l, (e:twisted) wrote me an IM saying

lwist: now you can say you collect internet friends.