Marcos is Currently...
- @s9i これは見てないでしょ: http://snurl.com/62ibe | 20 hours ago
- About to present at fitc unconference at max | Yesterday
- @ Max, keynote is rocking. Our demo is about to go live. | 3 days ago
- Setting up our demos backstage of MAX. Whole setup and logistics for this event are quite impressive. | 5 days ago
- lovin' ajax. hacked up a dojo livesearch widget in no time. will post source soon. | 4 weeks ago
shared items in Google Reader
- John Oliver and John King’s Magic Wall | Yesterday
- Google Hosts 10 Million Historic Time-Life Photos [Google] | 2 days ago
- Emergence Project: Representing a Textual Discourse | 2 days ago
- fLux Binary Waves: Urban Visualization Installation | 2 days ago
- Let the computer figure out your cutlist | 3 days ago
recent photos on flickr
recent trips
- Returned from a trip to Seoul. | last month
- Started a trip to Seoul. | last month
- Finished a trip to Toronto. | April 2008
- Started a trip to Toronto. | April 2008
- Finished a trip to Montevideo. | March 2008
news / Habitat Perspectives
October 29, 2003
Habitat Perspectives
Habitat perspectives is an online instalation that atempts to visualize spatio-temporaly the places we inhabit. Through GPS-capable mobile phones, participants will be posting geocoded images to an online shared space which starts as a black canvas. As participants post more and more content, a map of the city, and the map of each of the participants "places" will slowly start emerging.
One of ther reasons why Tokyo is such a mess as a city is that it is a tangled mess of intertwining main streets intersected and crisscrossed by back alleys and side streets.
Specially when you don't own a car, and you mainly travel by subway as most other citizens, one of the biggest problems you get in such a place is that you never get to mentally visualize the relationship among all the places you usually hang out at. You only know about "islands" in the city; you get in the subway in Shinjuku island, you pop-up in Shibuya island. The more you move around those spaces you'll slowly start turning them into neighborhoods, along with your own personal networks of places. If you asked a group of people to draw you a map of the city, you'll notice that all of them will be inevitably different - each of them will have their own particular perspective of their habitat.
This is currently work in progress, so as time allows, I'll be adding more functionality to it. Also, I'm currently looking for participants, so if you are interested in popping up in there, please don't hesitate to drop me a line: [ mail at marcosweskamp.com ]
visit the instalation



















