
01:57
www.dnanovel.com

02:33
Agenda and Instructions for today’s session:https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ZHv-g6OVus5orDeQ5s9bi4zYQABYElVD9KfdLMJuMnk/edit?usp=sharing

07:18
Agenda and Instructions for today’s session:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ZHv-g6OVus5orDeQ5s9bi4zYQABYElVD9KfdLMJuMnk/edit?usp=sharing

13:28
DNA is a networked fiction and digital literacies project set in the year 2075, in a dystopic future where genetic clones are commonplace and the unique identity of any individual is protected only by tacit consent. Made up of five separate but interconnected storyworlds, DNA’s main narrative depicts a year in the life of a clone who begins plotting to take on the identity of one of his "code partners" and includes a series of hyperlinks to real and fictional Wikipedia entries that provide a peek into the dystopic future of economic, agricultural, cultural, social, and political systems. Introduced by a frame narrative explaining how the messages were discovered, DNA asks readers to construct their own unique reading path through digital artifacts both inside and outside of the project and through that process raises numerous questions about the relationships between real and fictional constructions of reality and the boundaries between fact(s) and fiction(s).

19:40
ONe minor usability twitch--the boxes have numbers, but you can only access the link in the box from the upper, unmarked portion of the box.

25:14
https://digital.sciencehistory.org/collections/6w924c45h is absolutely gorgeous. I think that if we had been explsed to elements in a spiral, all of our thinking would be in a spiral as well...

26:42
A contemporary fo the 1972 Data Act privacy is an environmental impact statement that wanted to place a football field size, 10 story building to hold the computers needed for control towers.

38:30
I made a copy of the Google docs template for us to edit: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1XsRsvD__wz4PWtWFpNnug1DJ4p6dnchKhvYbZMB68uI/edit?usp=sharing

38:39
Thanks, Lyle!

45:44
On it Lyle, thanks!

01:16:27
Joannes Truyens

01:16:52
https://www.gamasutra.com/blogs/JoannesTruyens/896128/

01:17:12
Hi there! I'm a writer and narrative designer working on Neurocracy, a sci-fi interactive/hypertext fiction. It's a near-future story told entirely through the Wikipedia of that future, making use of all the narrative avenues afforded by the format of a web-based encyclopedia

01:17:43
Typing this in chat so I don’t forget. What if we combined this idea with your Fundamentals renewal? A wiki that introduces people to elit in this fun and creative way, and links to existing works and collections.

01:17:51
(Your = Deena)

01:18:12
Oh that would be fun! I still need to get on that!!

01:19:37
Johannah, you should actually write this as a serious paper for the next ELO conference!!

01:27:46
Memrister

01:28:03
A memristor (named as a portmanteau of memory and resistor) is a non-volatile electronic memory device that was first theorized by Leon Ong Chua in 1971 as the fourth fundamental two-terminal circuit element following the resistor, the capacitor, and the inductor (IEEE Transactions on Circuit Theory, "Memristor-The ...

01:28:14
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memristor

01:30:22
curprev 10:41, 15 January 2020 Steelpillow talk contribs 96,242 bytes +456 undo PoV edit undocurprev 06:50, 15 January 2020 2601:646:9301:d460:21a8:df14:fd2:cb5b talk 95,786 bytes -1 →Memristive Devices: A memristive circuit would falsely imply other circuit elements are to be used in modelling these devices. undo Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web editcurprev 06:49, 15 January 2020 2601:646:9301:d460:21a8:df14:fd2:cb5b talk 95,787 bytes -9 →Superconducting memristors: Changed subtitle to match title of peer-reviewed journal article. undo Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web editcurprev 06:46, 15 January 2020 2601:646:9301:d460:21a8:df14:fd2:cb5b talk 95,796 bytes -446 Removed incorrect information about the lack of a physical memristor (see ideal memristance in superconductors, memristive DEVICES such as discharge tubes and thermistors). undo Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web editcurprev 18:17, 6 January 2020 User-duck talk contribs 96,242 bytes -500 Fix garbled cite. Fix report cite. undo

01:32:18
December 8th ELO archives with Dene at 11 am EST

01:35:45
speaking of writing about fictional works: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Perfect_Vacuum

01:36:50
Stanislaw Lem’s “Fictitious criticism of nonexisting books”

01:36:59
Fantastic