netprov

By Milosz Waskiewicz, 27 May, 2021
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Abstract (in English)

This talk shares collaboration strategies and “funnest practices” for using netprov — networked improvisation, online roleplay literature — in the classroom. In sequences of “jump right in” creative games, students explore such topics as character development and character voice in a real-time laboratory of quick creative exchanges (accompanied by mutual encouragement and laughter). By building a bridge between students’ own social media writing practices and learning about historic literature, their creative strategies are expanded and critical connections between canonical texts and contemporary, everyday writing are made. What students may not realize is that netprov also can help break through their own creative blockages and freezes.

Short description

In this workshop we will bounce about in the egg carton of zoom and experiment with ways to dissolve the 6th wall (the camera) (the other 5 being: the 3 walls of the room and the 2 side walls of the image frame) through collaborative story and through dance and physical performance. Building on the practice of netprov — internet improv, online roleplay narrative — we will use words and movement to explore those zones of video meeting practice that have yet to coalesce into social norms: awkward beginnings, sudden disappearances, background guests, dropped connections, mis-timings, garbles, and lags. Each of these can lead to narrative. We also will build on art history and comics to experiment with ways to make the platform’s grid echo and expand shared visual traditions, or, comically, to play against them. We will share and co-create methods and moments you can apply in art and education.

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Description (in English)

This netprov was an assignment in the course on Digital Genres (DIKULT103, University of bergen) during the spring of 2020. The netprov premise and structure was inspired by The Machine Learning Breakfast Club (Marino and Wittig 2019)

The PremiseAfter decades of development, works of electronic literature are fed-up with the way they are treated. At once lauded and despised, ignored and overanalyzed, it is time we finally hear from the e-lit works themselves. In this netprov, you are each the personification of a creative work sharing your troubles and asking other works for advice.

On the forum, you are invited to share your issues, whether you are a remixed combinatory poem with a limited sense of self, a 3rd generation work with an inferiority complex, or a classic hypertext novel with abandonment issues.

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Shy? No worries! This week’s special online event guarantees you have 3 cells to dance with at the big party Saturday Nov 5, 2016! We’ll help you step outside your temperature zone! Meet quality cells during the icebreakers! Then let our Mesos Make Great Matches! We’ll be with all four of you every step of the way!

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Chicago Soul Exchange (CSE) was a weeklong collaborative web fiction, including a multi-character blog and fictional online store. Prompted by the claim that there are more humans alive now than the sum total of humans who have lived before, Chicago Soul Exchange imagines an e-commerce site that re-sells past lives, in high demand. ‘Yes, you can have a better past! At competitive prices!’

Rob Wittig devised the project, structured the narrative, and was team leader of the collaborative cast of writers. I provided digital collage images and designed elements for the fictional store and past-life catalog. I also participated as online characters who shopped and posted to the fictional Soul Exchange online shopping network

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On the Internet, it’s not how you feel, but how you look that counts. We create perfect lives full of perfect friends hanging out on perfect vaycays (think Fyre festival). At the same time, the internet is full of people ready to give you advice on how to fix what’s broken in your life: your car, your computer, your hair, et cetera.

In #fixurl8tionship, we imagine a fictional world of influencers who give you superficial advice on how to fix the appearance of your broken relationships.  As with most people giving advice, the person who gives it is generally the person who needs it the most. Still, hypocrisy needs no URL, just a hashtag.  In this netprov, you will join the community to give and get advice on how to fix your relationships [for the camera].

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A Tumblr-based netprov

Rebuilding our lost past on epic at a time

Mem-Eraze is a support group for those who lost their online social scrapbooks in the Mem-or-Eaze Inc. server fire and bankruptcy

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Machine Learning Breakfast Club

Summer School for Troubled Algorithms

A Netprov (Aug 5-12, 2019)

The Premise:

When machine-learning AI are not performing up to expectations, there’s only one remedy: summer school! In this netprov, you will ask for help and offer solutions in the virtual teachers’ lounge for a motley crew of teachers in a summer school for recalcitrant underperforming artificial intelligence.

A netprov in 3 turns.

Netprov is online collaborative narrative or the voluntary healing of necessary relationships.

MLBC was a week long netprov running (roughly) Aug 5-12 on a Google Group, which had its trial run in the 2019 DHSI taught by Astrid Ensslin and Davin Heckman.

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/machine-learning-breakfast-club-netprov 

This was a lite summer netprov that you could play in about three turns. 

Contributors note

The contributors listed on this records as the people who participated in playing this netprov

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“How To Rob A Bank” is a love story in five parts. The story focuses on the misadventures of a young and inexperienced bank robber and his female accomplice. The entire work is revealed through the main characters’ use of their iPhones and the searches, texts, apps, imagery, animations, audio, and functions that appear on their iPhones. 

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It's Just 1 Week. 

You know you should cut down — even quit — your dependence on technology, right? But it’s hard. Too hard to do by yourself! 

That’s why we’ve created the #1WkNoTech community to take a stand from Nov 10-16.  

We’ll support each other in 1,000 ways so we can all step back from the madness, take a breath and get real!  

Join our active and supportive community! We’ll keep you company throughout your own personal version of #1WkNoTech.  

(Source: Website)