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E-poetry

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Lucdall : HD pen, le roulage-tournage... Writing tools.

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Narration. KAC WEB. J. R. Carpenter || Luckysoap & Co. VÉVÉ. Jim Rosenberg's Home Page. Poems that GO : archives. J B Wock. BpNichol's First Screening. Introduction n 1983 and 1984, bpNichol used an Apple IIe computer and the Apple BASIC programming language to create First Screening, a suite of a dozen programmed, kinetic poems. He distributed First Screening through Underwhich, an imprint he started in 1979 with a small group of poets. The Underwhich edition of First Screening consisted of 100 numbered and signed copies distributed on 5.25" floppies along with printed matter. However, the Apple IIe soon became obsolete and the poems became essentially inaccessible. The HyperCard version of First Screening was a careful re-creation and recoding of the original, and it extended the life of First Screening a few more years. So we are very happy to present to you four different versions of First Screening. The original DSK file of the Underwhich edition with a freely downloadable Apple IIe emulator (available for PCs and (maybe) Macs), along with scanned images of the printed matter distributed with the Underwhich edition.

Footnotes. Guido van der Wolk :: Epoëmen. Jörg piringer - home. Nick Montfort. Loss Pequeño Glazier EPC Author Page. T.A.P.I.N - Collection permanente de poésie sonore et visuelle c. Clemente Padin. We Feel Fine / Movements. Movements We Feel Fine is divided into six discrete movements, each illuminating a different aspect of the chosen population. These movements are represented in the We Feel Fine applet. To navigate between movements in the applet, the viewer should scroll over the heart at the bottom left corner of the applet and click on the desired movement. Madness, the first movement, opens with a wildly swarming mass of around 1,500 particles, emanating from the center of the screen and then careening outwards, bouncing off walls and reacting to the behavior of the mouse. Each particle represents a single feeling, posted by a single individual.

The color of each particle corresponds to the tone of the feeling inside – happy positive feelings are bright yellow, sad negative feelings are dark blue, angry feelings are bright red, calm feelings are pale green, and so on. The size of each particle represents the length of the sentence contained within. Feeling (happy, sad, depressed, etc.)