Technoculture⎪Grid⎪Corporate Landscape⎪Cyberspace⎪Virtual Horizons⎪Hyperdimension⎪Home Page⎪Hu⎪En | ||
Alexei Shulgin, Form, 1997 >>> | ||
We once saw the flow of events as linear, and
we tried to explain the relationships by causal logic. Ferenc Kömlődi, 1999 |
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Tamás Komoróczky, OCD – Brain, 2001, video, 1'13 >>> | ||
Computers
have opened up to each other to form an almost ungraspable system on today's web. >>> Ferenc Kömlődi, 1999 |
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Balázs Beöthy, Beta Tours, 1996 >>> | ||
www | ||
The information revolution has accelerated everyday life at
an astonishing rate. Geographical distances have disappeared, and our ideas of space have been enriched by
previously unknown elements. New social spaces have emerged – communication in these spaces is equivalent to
traditional forms of contact. Ferenc Kömlődi, 1999 |
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The World Wide Web has ended the stone age of online existence:
it transforms the Internet from a text space – previously based on typed, interactive reading – into a visual
space, a cyberspace based on the principle of synaesthesia. Ferenc Kömlődi, 1999 |
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Gyula Várnai, Untitled, 1996 >>> | ||
HYPERTEXT + MULTIMEDIA Educational material, published in the series of Artpool Booklets (Artpool, Budapest, 1996, Second revised edition in 1998) Selection by János Sugár |
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↦ ↦ ↦ Link here! ↤ ↤ ↤ | ||
(Different publications by Artpool) | ||
János Kass, Computer Design, 1988, stamp issued by the Hungarian Post | ||
Hajnalka Németh, Ten Commandments, 1996 >>> | ||
Real bodies in real images, only the space in between is
virtual. Ferenc Kömlődi, 1999 |
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Metaverse >>> | ||
Mark Fridvalszki, Grid I, 2009, pen on paper, 21×29,7 cm | ||
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