My Books

what is the cheapest deal really?

I’ve tried to calculate which mobile phone service would really be cheapest for me, based on my usage patterns, but I gave up in utter disgust at the complexity of it all. Next time I try and figure this out (which should […]

imperfektum.net

Imperfektum.net is the new portal to Norwegian weblogs. As the title suggests, this portal will include blogs that are not perfect renditions of perfect lives, and it isn’t limited to diaries either, as is the previously only such portal, nettdagbok.no. Imperfektum.net is […]

massage

Heh. Jilltxt is having a massage. (Uh, OK, so it’s only funny if you use Flickr…)

faulty attributions?

Don’t you hate it when you can’t track down a citation? Amazon’s full text search of books shows that William Gibson’s Neuromancer certainly doesn’t contain the words “the street finds its own use for things” or any sentence, in fact, with the […]

banksy in new york

Hanna told me about Banksy a few weeks ago, when I was all fascinated by the stencil artists in Bergen. Last Saturday I narrowly missed seeing his work in the New York Metropolitan Museum. Unfortunately we were happy with looking at the […]

early web hypertext fiction

I want to write a paragraph about electronic literature in the early days of the web. Michael Shumate’s Hyperizons is a good place to start, given it hasn’t been updated since July 97, but even so it lists over 60 hypertext fictions. […]

tower in muted march colours

Brigantine in March is muted colours and flat stretches of sand and grass and sky as far as you can think.

bolter and joyce on interactive fiction

I’m reading Bolter and Joyce’s 1987 paper describing Storyspace and arguing for the possibility of electronic literature and hypertext fiction, situating this in relation to interactive fiction and to dadaism, Borges and other twentieth century experimental literature.

whisper

People don’t whisper in the library here. I wonder if that’s a Stockton thing or an American thing? I looked (not sternly even) at the guy yakking on to the woman at the desk behind me and he instantly went “sorry, am […]

learning with hypertext in the seventies

I’m reading old hypertext papers and found Andries van Dam’s keynote for the first ACM Hypertext conference in 1987 (or ACM library). van Dam created the first working hypertext system at Brown University in 1967 in collaboration with several other scientists, including […]