Difference between revisions of "System.hack()"

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Creative assistance: [[Vuk Ćosić]] and [[What, How and For Whom]].
 
Creative assistance: [[Vuk Ćosić]] and [[What, How and For Whom]].
  
 
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http://web.archive.org/web/20080908003648/http://systemhack.org/
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* http://web.archive.org/web/20080908003648/http://systemhack.org/

Latest revision as of 10:00, 9 July 2018

System.hack() was an exhibition project and a book by Multimedia Institute realized through the collaborative platform Zagreb – Cultural Kapital of Europe 3000.

A moment of excellence in programming is called a hack. A perfect hack is surprising, mediagenic, innovative in employing technology, funny and non-violent. System.hack() is every hack that opens up a closed system or makes an open system dynamic.

System.hack() exhibition seeks to find connections between moments of excellence in different fields of human production. This exploration always has to provide answers to the following two questions: What system is being hacked?, and How this system is being hacked, or what is a specific hack in an individual work?

The exhibition environment is not a gallery, but the interior of a hotel room. The hotel room is supposed to function as the lowest common denominator of living environments users/viewers/visitors/readers inhabit. The hotel room also functions as a Table of Contents for the System.hack() book. Museum labels found on exhibited objects link individual hacks to the essays dealing with issues they raise and social context they intervene in.

Hacks exhibited: Orson Welles – War of the Worlds; Captain Crunch – whistle; Richard Stallman – GNU GPL; Heath Bunting – Superweed Kit 1.0; Michael Steil – Xbox Linux project; CD Protection Kit

Original concept and production: Multimedia Institute (mama), Zagreb.
Creative assistance: Vuk Ćosić and What, How and For Whom.

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