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Images
Images from Scott Beale

time:
7:30pm Wednesday
14 September 2005

place:
rxGallery
132 Eddy
San Francisco, CA

FREE ADMISSION but donations for our host very much appreciated!


rxGallery
speakers:

Dale Dougherty and the Make Crew (Shawn Connally, Kirk Von Rohr, David Pescovitz) - The Making of MAKE

What are you making? And what do you make of MAKE, the new magazine chock-full of DIY technology projects. MAKE magazine would like to know. Join several members of the Make team as they talk about the making of MAKE and its website, makezine.com. Just six months old, MAKE has created quite a lot of buzz while breaking some of the rules of magazine publishing. We'll talk about how MAKE got its start, the popularity of magazines like Popular Mechanics of the 1950s and where we think MAKE can go in the future. We'd also like to discuss your ideas for projects in future issues.

Dale Dougherty is editor and publisher of MAKE Magazine; he's been with O'Reilly Media for over twenty years. He'll be joined by Managing Editor, Shawn Connally, Special Projects Editor, David Pescovitz, and Art Director, Kirk Von Rohr.
http://makezine.com QuickTopic free message boards
Discuss Dale Dougherty & Make Crew - The Making of MAKE

Spot Draves - The Latest With Electric Sheep

Spot will show the latest, as yet unreleased developments of the Electric Sheep project. Electric Sheep is a free, open source screen saver run by thousands of people all over the world. When their computers "sleep", the screen saver comes on and the computers communicate with each other by the internet to share the work of creating morphing abstract animations known as "sheep". The result is a collective "android dream", an homage to Philip K. Dick's novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep.

Anyone watching one of these computers may vote for their favorite animations using the keyboard. The more popular sheep live longer and reproduce according to a genetic algorithm with mutation and cross-over. Hence the flock evolves to please its global audience

Scott Draves a.k.a. Spot is a visualist and programmer residing in San Francisco. He is the creator of the Fractal Flame algorithm, the Bomb visual-musical instrument, and the Electric Sheep distributed screen-saver. All of Draves' software artworks are released as open source and distributed for free on the internet. His award-winning work has appeared in Wired Magazine, the Prix Ars Electronica, the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference, and on the dance-floor at the Sonar festival in Barcelona. In 1997 Spot received a PhD in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University for a thesis on metaprogramming for media processing. Today he regularly projects live video for underground parties and at clubs, and self-publishes SPOTWORKS, a DVD of abstract animation synchronized with electronic music.


http://scottdraves.com/
http://electricsheep.org/
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Discuss Spot Draves - The Latest With Electric Sheep

Jon Phillips - How To Build an Online Development Community

How does one go about utilizing the collective efforts of countless individuals spread around the world with a minimal amount of energy? This talk will show how to build an online community that is to accomplish some goal. Really, this talk should more specifically be titled, "HOWTO build an Open Source Development Community with under 20 people," however, the principles discussed may be applied to many different types of online communities. Various applications and aphorisms of common Free and Open Source software development will be laced throughout the talk with particular emphasis on non-software based uses of this evolved strategy for community-building. Examples will be taken from collaborative development on Inkscape (www.inkscape.org), an Open Source Vector drawing tool, and the Open Clip Art Library (www.openclipart.org).

Jon Phillips is an open source developer, artist, writer, educator, lecturer, and curator with 12+ years of experience creating communities and working within computing culture. His involvements with mixing culture and software development have been shown internationally at San Francisco Art Institute (2005), SFMoMA (2004), University of Tokyo (2004), Korea Advanced Institute for Science and Technology (2004), UCLA Hammer Museum's Digital Storytelling Conference, UC-Berkeley's 040404 Conference (2004), USC Aim Festival IV (2003), and the ICA London (2002). He is an open source advocate and developer on Inkscape (http://www.inkscape.org), a scalable vector graphics editor and on the Open Clip Art Library (http://openclipart.org). Currently, he is writing/producing a book, "CVS: Concurrency, Versioning and Systems," and produces the "local" journal SCALE.
http://www.rejon.org QuickTopic free message boards
Discuss Jon Phillips - How to Build An Online Development Community

open dork Stephen Dunifer - FM and TV transmitters build and designed by Radio Free Berkeley
Mike Estee - Surface Mount boards
Eddie Codel - Webzine
Mark Pesce - Swarm Tech / VRML / Playful World
Erik Davis - Techgnosis

Many thanks to rxGallery for hosting this month's dorkbot.

If you would like to speak at a future dorkbotSF contact Karen Marcelo (dorkbotsf [@] dorkbot [.] org)

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