Storage in Collaborative Networked Art

"Jason Freeman is an Associate Professor of Music in the College of Architecture at Georgia Tech. This chapter explores the role of storage in media art and, more specifically, its role in collaborative creativity within the field of networked music. Through a series of paired analyses of works that differentially emphasize transmission and storage or which employ different approaches to storage, the chapter discusses different opportunities, challenges, and issues related to storage in collaborative, networked art. Music by the Rova Saxophone Quartet and by Nick Collins frames a discussion of composition and improvisation; two works by The Hub initiate an analysis of the influence of technology on network design and on collaborative models of shared material and shared control; broadcast works by Max Neuhaus introduce the concept of active storage systems; the online sites WebDrum and Jamglue raise questions about network latency and the persistency of storage; and Bicycle Built for 2,000 and Graph Theory manipulate the level of awareness of storage mechanisms by various participants." -- From Turbulence

1 COPY IN THE NEXT

Turbulence

An unpublished copy.

One of the chapters of "Networked: a (networked_book) about (networked_art)." This copy was given to the Electronic Literature Lab by Jo-Anne Green and Helen Thorington in Spring of 2016.

COPY MEDIA FORMAT

Web

ORIGINAL URL

https://turbulence.org/project/storage-in-collaborative-networked-art/