Thu, 14 Apr 2005
The north, oh the north.
Not much on these pages in the last month. After losing my job, freaking
out, getting another job which is far more interesting and preparing to take my
first trip to Europe, I've been more than distracted.
When I was 16 years old I discovered the music of Aphex Twin. At the time I
hadn't heard anything like it, nor did a lot of other people I knew. It
totally changed the way I started listening to music, and consequently making
it. Being an urban kid stuck between suburban parents one of my wild fantasies
was when I got older I would go to England on tour with my own music, befriend
Mr. Twin and everything would live happily ever after. I would only go to
Europe under these conditions. Any other way would be terribly boring since I
would just be a tourist.
It's been 11 years since then. I'm writing this in a hotel room in Helsinki,
Finland at five in the morning because the time travel has made me sleepless
at opposite hours. I'm participating in a electronic arts festival called
Pixel Ache, at the contemporary art museum in Helsinki called Kiasma. A sub
genre of the festival is a workshop group operating under the title
Particle/Wave, and is a group of about 30 of us who are working with Hybrid
Radio, which is any way to transmit or broadcast audio to a location, not only
via popular ways like FM. This obviously involves The Internet, which is what
interested me.
This is the first place I will present Auppix to others and put it into
practice. In order to do this right, I have to have the language down. How is
Auppix different than the three other big LiveCD distributions? There's
Dynabolic, Knoppix and a lesser known project called DiMuDi, which actually
got government funding.
Auppix is different because in addition to a set of tools to produce art, it
also
is art itself. The group we have working on it are more
interested in audio and visual art than hacking. The graphical interface is
just as important as the software tools on the disc. The writing on theory of
transmission art provides information of equal value as the documentation
to how to create a stream.
My vision for Auppix is that it will be the first Linux distribution which is
generic enough to be used by others to express their individual voice yet is
specific enough that it can be identified as a work in it's self. Apple has
successfully done this with OS X to a point. Their goals are obviously
different than ours but the comitment to having one's digital tools be
aesthetically pleasing are the same.
Unfortunately, because my the jetlag, I slept through all of the activities
and performances on the first day except for the orientation, which was fine.
I'll have more to write about as the week goes on. Here's a photo from the
flight across the Atlantic ocean

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