- kaleidoscope : optical device consisting of mirrors that reflect images of bits of coloured … glass…
ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA
- Finally the journey leads to the city of Tamara. You penetrate it along streets thick with…
CALVINO, ITALO
- They don’t say, ‘What do I have to say? What is worthy of being offered, of being passed on to the…
DAMASIO, ALAIN
-
BIOY CASARES, ADOLFO
- The information they get when sitting in their rooms in front of their screens is the basis of all…
UNKNOWN
- If the Real is disappearing, it is not because of a lack of it—on the contrary, there is too much…
BBAUDRILLARD, JEAN
- Beyond the end, beyond all finality, we enter a paradoxical state—the state of too much reality…
BAUDRILLARD, JEAN
-
CABANEL, ALEXANDRE
- Suppose within every book there is another book, and within every letter on every page another…
MANTEL, HILARY
- The Wikipedians consider themselves as the Great Library’s heirs, their mission the gathering of…
GLEICK, JAMES
- Infinite I have just written. I have not interpolated this adjective merely from rhetorical habit.
BORGES, JORGE LUIS
- Then today we have entered into a new form of schizophrenia - with the emergence of an immanent…
BAUDRILLARD, JEAN
-
PORCHET, CYRIL
-
HARRISON, CHRIS
- Apophenia : the tendency to mistakenly perceive connections and meaning between unrelated things.
WIKIPEDIA
-
SERLIO, SEBASTIANO
-
STRUTH, THOMAS
-
WARBUNG, ABY
-
BLENDER, GRETCHEN
-
Johann Sebastian Bach
-
UNKNOWN
- When data of any sort are placed in storage, they are filed alphabetically or numerically, and…
BUSH, VANEVAR
-
UNKNOWN
-
KOOLHAAS, REM
-
NASA
- Who says what? That in a world where everyone thinks they have to express themselves, there is no…
DAMASIO, ALAIN
-
TROOTMAN, STANLEY
- The geometry of Tlön has two somewhat distinct systems, a visual one and a tactile one. The latter…
BORGES, JORSE LUIS
-
NASA
- How much does it compute? How fast? How big is its total information capacity, its memory space?
GLEICK, JAMES
-
UNKNOWN
-
YAMASHITA, MICHAEL
- BIT, noun : a unit of information in a computer that must be either 0 or 1
CAMBRIDGE DICTIONARY
-
BARDOU, BENJAMIN
-
YAMASHITA, MICHAEL
-
COPPOLA, SOFIA
-
BRUEGEL, PIETER
-
RUBENS, PETER PAUL
- When it was announced that the Library contained all books, the first reaction was unbounded joy.
BORGES, JORGE LUIS
-
ARONOFSKY, DARREN
-
UNKNOWN
- Et sans rien formuler nettement, je comprenais que j’avais trouvé la clef de l’Existence, la clef…
SARTE, JEAN-PAUL
-
MCLUHAN, MARSHALL
- After “information theory” came to be, so did “information overload,” “information glut,”…
GLEICK, JAMES
-
MUNCH, EDVARD
-
DELSAUX, CÉDRIC
-
GRAHAM, DAN
- Deluge became a common metaphor for people describing information surfeit. There is a sensation of…
GLEICK, JAMES
-
MCLUHAN, MARSHALL
-
COLE, THOMAS
- Et maintenant, dites-moi, Muses, habitantes de l’Olympe - car vous êtes, vous, des déesses :
HOMERE
- Proteus, in Greek mythology, the prophetic old man of the sea and shepherd of the sea’s flocks…
ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA
- There then is the origin. Noise and nausea, noise and nautical, noise and navy have the same…
SERRES, MICHEL
- noise, noun … [uncountable] information that is not wanted and that can make it difficult for the…
OXFORD LEARNERS DICTIONARY
-
WIKIPEDIA
- (latin) nausea, ae f. : seasickness, nausea, need to vomit, disgust … (greek) nausea f. :
ONLINE ETYMOLOGY DICTIONARIES
- In the view of Claude Shannon, noise is anything that interferes with the transmission of a signal.
SHANNON, CLAUDE
- Noise destroys and horrifies. But order and flat repetition are in the vicinity of death. Noise…
SERRES, MICHEL
- Our chance is on the crest. Our living and inventive path follows the fringed, capricious curve…
SERRES, MICHEL
- It is worth noting that if a virus were to attain a state of wholly benign equilibrium with its…
WILLIAM S. BURROUGHS
-
ECKERT, FRITZ
-
Ikeda, ryioji
- The absence of myth is also a myth: the coldest, the purest, the only true myth
George Bataille
- The quarries and the cities are like negative and positive images of a single photograph.
Naoya Hatekayama
-
GURSKY, ANDREAS
- It became a test case for ideas of crowd intelligence: users endlessly debated the reliability—in…
GLEICK, JAMES
-
WIKIPEDIA
-
RUFF, THOMAS
-
WARBURG, ABY
-
UNKOWN
-
Francisci, Erasmus
-
Darwin, Charles
-
Ruscha, Edward
-
Moser, Claudio
-
Speed in variables
-
Fables of another time, Atlas of Places
-
Charles Emma
- “la flânerie” is the art of tactile perception, is letting one’s look glide on the passers-by, the…
Benjamin, walter
- The most complete flânerie, and thus the happiest, leads here again to the book, and in the book.
Benjamin, walter
- The bricoleur is, on the contrary, at the undistinct (and archaic) border between nature and…
Levi Strauss, claude
-
Andrei Tarkovsky
-
rem koolhaas
-
John Horton Conway
-
PETER PAUL RUBENS
-
JOHN SNOW
-
DAVID WOJNAROWICZ
-
David S. Goodsell
-
Virus in Variables
-
Virus in Variables
- It may seem that Ulysses violates the techniques of the novel beyond all limit, but Finnegans Wake…
Eco, Umberto
-
Virus in Variables
-
Unknown
-
Virus in Variables
-
UNKNOWN
-
Unknown
-
Virus in Variables
-
Morell, Abelardo
-
QUONIAM (PUPIL OF M. REDON)
-
PERCIER, C. & FONTAINE, P.F.L.
-
FRENCH ONLINE DICTIONARY