back

The Internet of rubbish things and bodies

A review of the best art & tech projects from 2019. With a focus on e-waste

If you suspend your transcription on amara.org, please add a timestamp below to indicate how far you progressed! This will help others to resume your work!

Please do not press “publish” on amara.org to save your progress, use “save draft” instead. Only press “publish” when you're done with quality control.

Video duration
00:52:04
Language
English
Abstract
Once you start looking at electronic trash you see it everywhere: in laptops of course but also increasingly in cars, fridges, even inside the bodies of humans and other animals. The talk will look at how artists have been exploring the e-junk invasion.

Régine Debatty is a curator, critic and founder of http://we-make-money-not-art.com/, a blog which has received numerous distinctions over the years, including two Webby awards and an honorary mention at the STARTS Prize, a competition launched by the European Commission to acknowledge "innovative projects at the interface of science, technology and art".
Régine writes and lectures internationally about the way artists, hackers, and designers use science and technology as a medium for critical discussion. She also created A.I.L. (Artists in Laboratories), a weekly radio program about the connections between art and science for Resonance104.4fm in London (2012–14), is the co-author of the “sprint book” New Art/Science Affinities, published by Carnegie Mellon University (2011) and is currently co-writing a book about culture and artificial intelligence.

Talk ID
11236
Event:
36c3
Day
1
Room
Clarke
Start
6:50 p.m.
Duration
01:00:00
Track
Art & Culture
Type of
lecture
Speaker
Régine Débatty
Talk Slug & media link
36c3-11236-the_internet_of_rubbish_things_and_bodies

Talk & Speaker speed statistics

Very rough underestimation:
128.9 wpm
700.1 spm
135.3 wpm
737.1 spm
100.0% Checking done100.0%
0.0% Syncing done0.0%
0.0% Transcribing done0.0%
0.0% Nothing done yet0.0%
  

Work on this video on Amara!

Talk & Speaker speed statistics with word clouds

Whole talk:
128.9 wpm
700.1 spm
Régine Débatty:
135.3 wpm
737.1 spm