Archive for the ‘New York’ Category

4 de noviembre de 2008: elecciones presidenciales

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

El demócrata Barack Obama fue elegido ayer el presidente número 44 de los Estados Unidos de América en una jornada histórica. Las encuestas anunciaban que iba a vencer al candidato republicano por un amplio margen, pero nunca puedes fiarte de las encuestas al 100%. Aunque no puedo votar, por la mañana me acerqué a un colegio electoral, y por la noche fui a una fiesta en un centro cultural en el que la gente se congregó para seguir los resultados. Fue un día muy emotivo y hoy parece una especie de día de Año Nuevo…
Espoleados por la agitada campaña electoral, la crisis económica y en entusiasmo despertado por el candidato democráta Barack Obama, los americanos acudieron en masa a votar. En un colegio electoral de Prospect Heights en Brooklyn, un barrio originalmente afroamericano, pero donde desde hace años reside bastante población caucásica y asiática, la cola era de dos horas a media mañana. Paciencia, buenas caras, buen ánimo y numerosos broches y camisetas en apoyo al candidato demócrata que había que quitarse o tapar al acercarse al colegio, ya que la ley electoral americana no permite hacer campaña a menos de 30 metros de las urnas.

Ya dentro del colegio, los votantes debían comprobar que su nombre aparecía en el censo. En el caso de que sí, pasaban a otra cola para votar en la cabina correspondiente a su zona. En caso de no figurar en la lista, los ciudadanos debían rellenar un formulario que sirve de voto provisional y que sólo cuenta en caso de que se haya podido comprobar la identidad y residencia del ciudadano en cuestión.
Cada estado tiene diferentes métodos para registrar el voto: kioskos digitales, formularios, punch cards… Los neoyorquinos votan en una especie de armarios de metal con palanquitas al lado de cada candidato, marcando con una X la lista de su candidato preferido girando los botones al lado de los nombres correspondientes. Una vez definida su elección, el votante debe accionar una palanca en la parte inferior de la máquina que registra de manera mecánica cada voto. Varios ciudadanos satisfechos de haber ejercido su derecho democrático se hacían fotos frentes a las cabinas de votación, conscientes de lo histórico de la jornada.
Al salir del colegio electoral, a mediodía, la cola se había agilizado considerablemente, pero aún con una espera de unos 45 minutos. Dos voluntarios de avanzada edad que han trabajado en muchas elecciones nunca habían visto tanta gente votando en ese colegio como en este día.

Lines at the polls, Nov 4 2008

Voting machine in NY, Nov 4 2008

Por la noche tocaba concentrarse delante de la televisión para seguir en directo los resultados de las votaciones. En un local de downtown Manhattan se reunió un numeroso grupo congregado por The Tank y Democracy Now, pero que resultó también parte del acto de cierre de la campaña de un joven candidato a senador en Nueva York del partido demócrata. Huelga decir que todo el mundo en el local quería que ganara Obama…

La noche fue pasando entre gran expectación y confianza en que la victoria iba a ser para el partido demócrata, pero la sala estalló cuando Obama superó los 270 votos electorales necesarios para proclamarse presidente. Saltaban de las sillas, se abrazaban, aplaudían y vitoreaban al nuevo presidente.

Al rato John McCain felicitaba a Barack Obama en un caballeroso discurso, y poco después, el demócrata se presentó ante la multitud que le esperaba en Chicago. Llamó a la unidad del país y volvió a repetir su compromiso con el sueño americano y su voluntad de sacar a los Estados Unidos de la crisis y de reinstaurar el liderazgo del país en el mundo. Es muy buen orador, así que la gente se emocionó.

En las calles los coches pitaban y se organizaron celebraciones impromptu en varios puntos de la ciudad. Parecía como si un equipo local hubiera ganado algún campeonato deportivo… No se había visto nada igual en ningunas otras elecciones pasadas.
La gente estaba verdaderamente emocionada, y llena de la esperanza de un futuro mejor tras los desastrosos ocho años de la administración de George W. Bush. Obama ha despertado pasiones en una campaña brillantemente organizada en todos los estratos de la sociedad, ha despertado a los jóvenes de su supuesta apatía política, y a los afroamericanos, que se sienten ahora especialmente representados. Es una victoria que representa la madurez democrática de los Estados Unidos.
Obama tendrá que remontar la aguda crisis económica como condición indispensable para poder llevar a cabo los otros puntos de su programa. Va a ser un camino largo y empinado, y habrá que tener esperanza, que es, a fin de cuentas, lo que vendió en su campaña.

Mi artículo en Yo, periodista, de El País

Participación record en las elecciones estadounidenses

Punch Bluegrass

Sunday, July 27th, 2008

This week I saw The Punch Brothers featuring Chris Thile at one of the numerous free outdoors events happening in New York City in the summer. First introduced to them by a friend, it was a great concert of what I would call classical bluegrass or American folk. Super talented musicians, banjo, mandolin, classic guitar, violin and bass, that totally won their audience, even though they never followed their clapping…

From the teaser of the show at the River To River NYC Festival

After Nickel Creek disbanded, mandolin virtuoso Chris Thile assembled the all-star quintet Punch Brothers. The new group issued a debut album, “Punch”, in 2008, which was anchored by Thile’s ambitious 40-minute, four-part suite “The Blind Leaving the Blind.” In February, 2008, The Punch Brothers performed a sold-out concert for Lincoln Center’s American Songbook series.

A snippet of the show, good for the music, not so much for the visuals (I was far from the stage and taping with my mobile phone, a Nokia N80, all zoomed in).

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And on our way back home, fireworks on the Hudson River sponsored by some company throwing a party in an office building right by the water, and a quick trip to Olafur Eliasson’s summer “Waterfalls” on the other side of the lower end of Manhattan, at the Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges.

Machines and Souls. Digital Art and New Media

Monday, July 21st, 2008

If I was in Madrid before October 13th 2008 I would definitely check out this exhibit at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía.

MÁQUINAS & ALMAS. Arte digital y nuevos medios

Dearest congrats to Chico McMurtrie for his inflatable robots and Danny Rozin for his mechanical mirrors, both of them part of my New York memories…

From the website:

A comienzos del siglo XXI, arte y ciencia discurren por caminos paralelos a través del trabajo de un grupo de artistas que aúnan arte, tecnología, creatividad, misterio, emoción y belleza.

La exposición “Máquinas & Almas. Arte digital y nuevos medios”, que explora la convergencia ciencia-arte-tecnología, no es histórica, lineal y totalizadora, sino que refleja la historia de las transformaciones que subyacen bajo las prácticas de los artistas que forman parte de esta muestra.

Incluye el trabajo de 17 artistas que tienen en común una larga y reconocida carrera artística, madurez creativa, y el uso de la tecnología digital como herramienta. Les distingue la edad, su formación, los materiales que utilizan, y los métodos de trabajo.

Sin la creatividad y sensibilidad de los autores, el arte digital no es nada, por lo que esta tecnología es un vehículo, que se usa de forma diversa: como soporte, como elemento desarrollador o como método de investigación en la búsqueda de sensaciones nuevas, ya que los ordenadores por sí mismos no crean.

El resultado final es un recorrido de tremenda diversidad, muy representativo de este tipo de arte. Se puede contemplar los retratos interactivos de Rozin, al robot antropomórfico de McMurtrie, la video instalación de Farocky, las esculturas de luz de Friedlander, la instalación/denuncia de Muntadas, los ferrofluidos de Sachico Kodama, los colectivos marginados en Internet de Abad, el “Software Art” de Maeda, la instalación interactiva de Lozano-Hemmer, las pinturas digitales de Evru, las instalaciones de Daniel Canogar, las “bestias de la playa” de Jansen o el arte inclasificable de Byrne, Rubin, Hansa, Cosic, Hyghe y Jeremijenko.

More details.

Sustainable Interactions

Monday, July 21st, 2008

A little bit late, but here are some of the thoughts from the ‘Sustainable Interactions’ talk organized by IXDA last January in New York. Robert Fabricant, from Frog Design, moderated a panel formed by a mix of new and friendly faces.

Allan Chochinov, Core 77
Jennifer Van de Meer, O2NYC
Sean White, Columbia University
Tom Igoe, New York University Interactive Telecommunications Program

The event was a very stimulating discussion that attempted to encourage designers to take a pro-active role in front of clients and consumers in coming up with products that will have the least environmental impact possible and will be the most socially responsible.

Some of the principles to design sustainably they mentioned:

1. Linking intervention and disposal
2. Promoting renewal and reuse
3. Promoting quality and equality
4. Achieving longevity of use
5. Decoupling ownership and identity
6. Using natural models and reflection

A few resources to check out:

“Design Is The Problem” by Nathan Shedroff
Design is a big part of the sustainability problems in the world. Design has been focused on creating meaningless
(often), disposable (though not responsibly so), trend-laden fashion items—all design. Graphic design is particularly bad,
though paper materials, at least, have a huge potential to fix this problem. [...]
http://www.nathan.com/thoughts/DesignIsTheProblem.pdf

The History of Stuff with Annie Leonard
“The History of Stuff” is a 20-minute, fast-paced, fact-filled look at the underside of our production and consumption patterns. “The History of Stuff” exposes the connections between a huge number of environmental and social issues, and calls us together to create a more sustainable and just world.
http://www.storyofstuff.com/index.html

A book: “Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things” by William McDonough and Michael Braungart

Sustainable Everyday Project
The Sustainable Everyday Project (SEP) proposes an open web platform to stimulate social conversation on possible sustainable futures: scenarios, cases and public events.
http://www.sustainable-everyday.net/

Reveal Labeling Initiative
The Reveal rating system creates a trusted, easy-to-use rating for consumers to reward companies with excellent social and environmental performance. Reveal partners with manufacturers, retailers, and NGOs to accurately provide a comprehensive, standardized, and customizable rating that helps people easily and confidently purchase products and services according to their social and environmental values.
http://www.revealinfo.com/

Green maps around the world
Green Map ® System promotes inclusive participation in sustainable community development around the world, using mapmaking as our medium.
GMS supports local Green Mapmakers as they create perspective-changing community ‘portraits’ which act as comprehensive inventories for decision-making and as practical guides for residents and tourists.Mapmaking teams pair our adaptable tools and universal iconography with local knowledge and leadership to chart green living, ecological, social and cultural resources.
http://www.greenmap.org/greenhouse/

Interface Inc, and its carpet tiles made out of petrochemicals
[...] Interface would no longer use virgin nylon yarn to stitch its fabrics. Interface’s factories and offices would use power from renewable sources only. Interface would produce zero waste; indeed, it would reclaim its own products and use them as raw material for new textiles. And Interface would pull its suppliers and customers into its sustainability orbit, insisting that the products it bought be recyclable and nontoxic, pushing clients to think differently about carpeting – and about their own businesses. “I want to pioneer the company of the next industrial revolution,” says Ray Anderson. [...]
http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/14/sustaing.html

@Murakami at the Brooklyn Museum

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

We just came back from the @Murakami exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum.

©2008 Takashi Murakami/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

One of the most internationally well-known contemporary Japanese artists, Takashi Murakami drinks of the popular and otaku culture to create his works of art in various media and non-negligible merchandising.

Murakami goes from the very childish universe of colorful smiling flowers, and the anime world of Kaikai Kiki (in the picture) or three-eyed Tan Tan Bo, to very adult and sexually explicit pieces like Miss Ko2, a long-legged waitress who has become one of the artist’s signature characters, Hiropon, a Japanese girl jumping a rope created by milk spurting from her gargantuan breasts, or her nude male counterpart whipping his sperm spurt. Also noticeable were his female Japanese girl transformers that greet you into the exhibit. Quite impressive.

Aside from his own merchandising, Murakami partnered with Louis Vuitton to create an exclusive line of bags. As part of the exhibit, one walks through a LV store, where one can actually purchase one of those bags or wallets. $2040 for a mid-size bag.
I found his Marcel Duchamp inspired ‘Box in a Valise’ series of miniaturized pieces, like a portable museum, very cute.

Watching his anime cartoons of Kakai Kiki traveling in the outer space and film stints (including a weird alien happy to be alive because he is turned on by a teenage girl) I had flashes of the Japanese series we watched on TV3: Capita Harlock, Dr. Slump, Candy Candy, Dragon Ball

Japanese culture is so fascinating and so bizarre to me at the same time…

The Magnetic Fields at the Town Hall

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

A few days ago I went to see The Magnetic Fields at the Town Hall, a concert hall close to Times Square, in the heart of the theater district.

A troupe opened performing Edgar Allan Poe’s ‘The Tell-Tale Heart‘ in an old radio serial fashion, and this choice I thought was pretty revealing of the character of the band.

It was a nice acoustic concert, very casual. Stephin Merritt and Claudia Gonson consistently picked on each other between songs, and so cheering up the sourness and broken hearts in their lyrics, while staying in the sarcastic, playful and humorous line that is also a constant in Merritt’s work.

The concert introduced their last album, ‘Distorsion’. The song ‘I Hate California Girls’ particularly made me chuckle…

Babylove: Bumping Teacups

Saturday, December 2nd, 2006

Last night I attended the opening of the exhibit ‘Babylove ‘ at the Chelsea Art Museum. Sponsored by Taiwanese cultural institutions, artist Shu Lea Cheang and programmer Olaf Matthes explore “our contemporary obsessive immersion in the virtual life of the internet and its impact on cultural practices. It is an installation which mixes nostalgia for a seemingly simpler age with the technically boggling interactive technology of the connections on the net, Cheang seems to be asking where will the ever new frontiers of the web take us? Will it lead to an expanded universe of knowledge or to a frightening scenario of dehumanization, where even the emotions of a baby can be programmed at will?

Baby Love is a wifi mobile installation that consists of 6 large autonomously mobile teacups (67 inches in diameter) with 6 clone babies (each 28 inches tall). The teacups are modeled after spinning carnival rides, except that the soundtrack of love songs can be uploaded by public via the web at http://babylove.biz and directly to the teacups, where they are coded as ME (memory and emotion) data for the clone babies. When the museum visitor takes a teacup ride with the babies, the ME data is retrieved, jumbled and eventually crashes. Baby Love situates human and baby clone riders in a perpetual spin which fuses the familiar fairground iconography with contemporary “remix” pop culture.”

It was actually a lot of fun. The ‘mobile’ part got me confused because I thought cellphones were going to be part of the piece, but it’s actually a ‘mobile’ installation because it literally ‘moves’. It’s been a while since I went to an art exhibit where I actually enjoyed it and the art ‘spoke’ to me.

Babylove at the Chelsea Art Museum
http://www.chelseaartmuseum.org/exhibits/2006/babylove/index.html

This video was shot with a Nokia 7610.

Mobile Monday October 2006: Innovative Mobile Content

Tuesday, November 7th, 2006

Last week I attended the latest Mobile Monday New York event at the Samsung Experience Center in the Time Warner Building on Columbus Circle. The Mobile Mondays are monthly gatherings of professionals working in the field of mobile technologies, where different companies, services or products are presented followed by discussion and casual mingling.

It is great to see how Mobile Mondays expand to more and more cities, including Barcelona, my hometown, configuring an international network of knowledge and exchange.

Mobile Mondays remind me of those First Tuesday outings, back in the dot com days, when I was working at ICTnet in the Catalan Institute of Technology (Institut Catala de Tecnologia, in Catalan). First Tuesdays are still today a networking forum for technology entrepreneurs and venture capitalists, and were precursors of Mobile Mondays and other professional gatherings that exist these days.

I’ve been wanting to start blogging for a while now, so I have a lot to catch up with, but I’ll stay on topic for this one and I’ll go back to ICTnet in a later post.

The event last week was very interesting. The panelists were the following:

  • Jae Jong Kwak from PartyStrands. I was particularly curious about PartyStrands, an initiative that has taken off in Spain and it’s currently being marketed in the US. PartyStrands is a collaborative jukebox that receives audience petitions via SMS, which are also posted to a billboard in the venue the action is taking place. The screen actually registers, not only votes and music on cue, but also user logins, messages sent to the crowd or images. Everything that the screen is displaying on the bar is being registered on the site, so people who are not on the venue can check online what has been going on, who is at the bar, or what music is playing. Apart from the idea of being able to influence the music that I listen to when I am in a bar, the concept that I find really interesting is the digital overlay to the physical interactions in the bar. I am fascinated by the communication layers that this kind of experience generates, and the behaviors that could arise in the confluence of verbal communication, body language and SMS postings on the venue screen among partygoers in the bar, and also remote intervention in the space via the web by other users. It could be fun, but users could also totally ignore it once the excitement of the novelty is over… Apparently the initiative is working very well in Spain (at least that’s what they say), and MyStrands is trying to offer their services in New York too. I will try to go to one of their pilots. The founder is from Spain…
  • Larry Gardner from CyberExtruder. The company offers a specific software to create 3D avatars from user’s photographs. The demo was pretty neat. Given a front headshot, the software was capable of extruding a 3D model in a glimpse. When incorporating voice capabilities to it, users could create ringtones and so on… The company is still studying their mobile business model, but they were pretty confident that mobile avatars would be very successful to identify users in calls. I think this would vary per market, and as much as Asian users could embrace these avatars, I can’t see them getting so popular in Europe or the US, for example. We’ll see.
  • Sanji Fernando from Widsets. Having tried myself to make Widsets work in two Nokia phones (7610 and N80) with no success, I was particularly curious to see how Widsets work. Widsets is a new project from Nokia Entrepreneur Business Unit, who, inspired by applications like the Mac Dashboard, pretend to offer quick access to Web 2.0 applications from mobile devices. Blogs feeds, weather information, Flickr streams… any information can be apparently ‘Widsetized’. Nokia seems pretty open to incorporate more and more widgets. Nokia has no particular business model for this venture, and they are trying to reach partnerships with the ‘let’s do it’ approach. Sanji was not able to demo the application on stage, but I finally saw it working on his phone, and I was pretty neat. I loved the flow of the widsets, but the user interface was substantially less sexy when reading the feeds. However, it is really inspiring to see what type of interfaces can be done with J2ME. This is something I will also comment on in a future post.
  • Jason Cirillo from Robotube Games – These guys make games for cellphones. The company started in Japan a few years ago, and moved to the US with one of its founders. Rubugames makes games for mobile devices. Some of them are their own invention, and others are custom made, like a memory game they created for Getty Images with images from their own stock. I think that is a really cool branding idea. Getty images is showcasing part of their stock, animals, particularly, while delivering an application that enhances the user experience and increases the ‘coolness’ factor of the brand. Robotube Games also explained the audience how they are actually bridging between the web and the handsets in the billing process. Users purchase the game online, introducing their credit card or PayPal number. Once the transaction has been approved, the user gets an email with a specific code and a link to the WAP site for them to browse and download the game. Even though we are going to go more and more in the direction of doing transactions from the phones themselves, this is a less cost solution for a small company to implement. I do think, though, that it would make more sense to get an SMS with the WAP address for the user to click from the message and launch the browser from there…

The casual mingling was very entertainig. I chatted with Dennis, founder of Dodgeball, Dan and Mike, co-founders of Socialight, Maria from Kargo, who remembered I had interviewed there a while back! Lubna, from Stratemerge… and it was very flattering to have people approach me to tell me that they remembered my talk about the 22@, the technological innovation district under development in Barcelona, in a previous MoMo-NY session.

All in all, very nice evening. I would like to check out the MoMo Barcelona sessions too, if I coincide with any of them in a trip back home.

I raised quite many issues in this post that need to be properly addressed, so more specific posts will follow.

Hello world!

Sunday, July 30th, 2006

A “hello world” program is a software program that prints out “Hello world!” on a display device. It is used in many introductory tutorials for teaching a programming language and many students use it as their first programming experience in a language.

Such a program is typically one of the simplest programs possible in a computer language. Some, however, are surprisingly complex, especially in some graphical user interface (GUI) contexts; but most are very simple, especially those which rely heavily on a particular command line interpreter (“shell”) to perform the actual output. In many embedded systems, the text may be sent to a one or two-line liquid crystal display (LCD) (and in yet other systems, a simple LED being turned on may substitute for “Hello world!”). [...]

From Wikipedia

After having pursued a masters degree at the Interactive Telecommunications Program (ITP) at NYU the expression ‘Hello World!’ acquired this whole new dimension to me.

On this blog, I plan on talking about my experiences with technology, with what I have called “patio” technology, where patio for me conveys the idea of a playground, of communal experience and sometimes low key or limited resources development. I will also comment on other random interests or life in New York City.