{"id":2602,"date":"2008-11-01T05:31:56","date_gmt":"2008-11-01T09:31:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.nearfuturelaboratory.com\/?p=2602"},"modified":"2017-08-18T18:06:20","modified_gmt":"2017-08-18T18:06:20","slug":"stifosandberg-conference","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blog.nearfuturelaboratory.com\/2008\/11\/01\/stifosandberg-conference\/","title":{"rendered":"Stifo@Sandberg Moving Movie Industry"},"content":{"rendered":"
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<\/p>\n <\/p>\n I participated with a talk at this conference called Moving Movie Industry<\/a> for the Sandberg Institute<\/a> at the lovely new Amsterdam Central Library<\/a> was a one day series of lectures related to this notion that the movie industry is “moving” onto some new and interesting territory. There were several very intriguing talks, which you can probably glean from the list below.<\/p>\n The people participating at the conference were some heroes already, and some new people who i finally get to meet face-to-face so I can knot them into my network without feeling like a stalker. For example Geert Lovink the well-known media theorist and activist who just introduced Video Vortex<\/a> a new publication from the Institute of Network Cultures (available for free) and Ton Roosendaal, who is head of the Blender Foundation<\/a> and showed some of the amazing films created with free, open-source 3D rendering software. It was also nice to hear from Floris Kaayk<\/a>, who is the creator of the effective documentary Metalosis Maligna, about what happens when metal implants begin to take over your body. He also showed another documentary called The Order Electrus<\/a> about an species of insects made entirely of electronics components. It’s a nice piece of Design Fiction, in my mind \u2014 an imaginative and visually evocative story about a possible future in a world of discarded industrial wastelands. Anne Helmond<\/a> gave a funny and insightful talk about people and their relationship to their blogs, with some curious examples of people apologizing to their blog (not the audience who reads, but the blog itself \u2014 the software or something.) Bruce Sterling gave a talk about the future and ways we imagine it, which had my rapt attention as it helped me think through some of the early Design Fiction material, particularly on this topic of models by which we schematize possible futures worlds. I also enjoyed the talk by the Guerrilla Games guy Jan-Bart van Beek who talked about some of the production techniques and issues for their visceral, carnal hyper violent Kill Zone game. He showed one video of this Hummer commercial by Joseph Kosinski called “Selector” which used video game visual idioms to present the Hummer \u2014 a hideous vehicle for knot-headed buffoons with 8th grade mentality \u2014 as if it were a configurable vehicle from a video game. Which is about the only thing that piece of crap should be, ever. If even that. But, this selection along with a few others were intriguing as they were described for the way cinema and video game visual idioms cross back and forth (swap properties) perhaps on their way to establishing new visual languages.<\/p>\n The talk I gave changed from the title I originally submitted, which was to be something more related to real-world-analytics-meets-mobile-contexts, but when I looked more closely at the original conference description, I realize how badly I had misinterpreted the “moving” aspect as “mobile”, and I certainly wasn’t going to talk about movies on mobiles, which I think is pretty much the most uninteresting thing in the world. So, I did the third draft of Design Fiction (after Design Engaged at the beginning of the month, and SHiFT 2008 a week or so ago) which hopefully I’ll finish writing this weekend.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Where:<\/strong> Theater van \u2019t Woord Time:<\/strong> 9.30 hours \u2013 17.00 hours<\/p>\n Entreance:<\/strong> Free<\/p>\n Reservations via conference@sandberg.nl Program:<\/strong> 10.00 \u2013 Bruce Sterling (USA ) – Science fiction writer Keynote 11.20 \u2013 Short coffee break<\/p>\n 11.30 \u2013 Jan-Bart van Beek (NL) \u2013 Guerrilla Games 1 Million Manhours : Making Killzone 2 12.50 \u2013 Lunch break<\/p>\n 13.30 \u2013 Matt Hanson (UK) \u2013 Film Futurist Swarm of Angels 15.05 \u2013 Short coffee break<\/p>\n 15.15 \u2013 Luna Maurer \/ Roel Wouters (NL) – Designers Jubilator Moderator Koert van Mensvoort<\/p>\n <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" I participated with a talk at this conference called Moving Movie Industry for the Sandberg Institute at the lovely new Amsterdam Central Library was a one day series of lectures related to this notion that the movie industry is “moving” onto some new and interesting territory. There were several very intriguing talks, which you can … Continue reading Stifo@Sandberg Moving Movie Industry<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[39,136,176,186],"tags":[241,1188,500,516,674],"yoast_head":"\n<\/a><\/p>\n
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\nOpenbare Bibliotheek Amsterdam
\nOosterdokskade 143
\n1011 DL Amsterdam<\/p>\n
\n(obligated due to limited amount of seats)<\/p>\n
\n09.30 \u2013 Registration & coffee
\n09.50 \u2013 Welcome by Mieke Gerritzen & Hans Maarten van den Brink<\/p>\n
\n10.40 \u2013 Julian Bleecker (USA) – Near Future Laboratory Mobile Means Mobile<\/p>\n
\n12.10 \u2013 Steffen Pauws (NL) – Philips Research Laboratories Eindhoven How TV Watching Will Become An Experience<\/p>\n
\n14.10 \u2013 Ton Roosendaal (NL) \u2013 Blender Free and Open Content media production with Open Source, presentation of a successful case study
\n14.50 \u2013 Floris Kaayk (NL) – Film director \/ artist Metalosis Maligna<\/p>\n
\n15.30 \u2013 Geert Lovink (NL) – Institute for Network Cultures VideoVortex: The Politics and Aesthetics of Online Video Platforms
\n16.10 \u2013 Anne Helmond (NL) – Blogger Blogging, Software Standards and Template Culture
\n16.40 \u2013 Drinks & snacks<\/p>\n