Approaching closing time, so here’s thanking all of my PIRT colleagues, all of our guests visiting us in our booth, and you for reading! Another day of experiences are now in the (virtual) books. Join us here tomorrow for LiveBlog coverage from the AIDS Quilt Touch Experience booth, the final day of SIGGRAPH 2015. Take care and good night!
Now that we are in our fifth day, we are having new experiences related to being here for an extended period of time. For example, with our guests, we have been looking at the Touch Table a lot, and it is possible to identify the most popular symbols within the digitized quilt blocks: red ribbons, pink triangles, trees and birds are among the favorites. We also saw so many beautiful panels and blocks made with the most diverse materials, like paper, buttons, clothing, and teddy bears. It feels to me that there is always something new and unexpected to discover in the Quilt Touch Table. We also have now some visitors that come back everyday, sometimes more than once a day, to chat, take another look at the Quilt Touch, tell a story or just to hang out with us. We are very glad to have met these amazing people and to get to spend some time with them. It enriches the experience of being at SIGGRAPH.
Wednesday, August 12th – 6:05 pm PDT
We were very fortunate to be visited by a guest who was interested in allowing us to document their specific impressions of our booth and of our technology. They shared some wonderfully insightful information about how our digital presentation worked for them in conjunction with the physical quilts. We were really appreciative that they took the time to share an in-depth account of how our booth affected them. Prior to that, I was visited by a guest who is not from this country and, as I was talking to them, let me know that they did not speak much English. I found myself doing my best to describe how and why the Quilt came into being, and how the Quilt situates itself in a particular time in American history. My guest was drawn deeper into our booth by the Touch Table Browser presentation, then for a closer look at the Quilts, examining each more closely as I shared more details about them in the best way I could. We stood together with the Quilts for a little bit of time, after which they asked to take pictures of them. One of the goals of the AIDS Quilt Touch project is to communicate to the international community who were not of age to remember the initial appearance of the disease in the early 1980’s.
Wednesday, August 12th – 12:30 pm PDT
A continued steady stream of guests into our booth this morning. We’ll be open until 7pm tonight which is the longest day of the conference. Earlier Anne and Angela continued with their audio/video walkthrough of the Quilt panels we have on display with Sean. I’m really excited to see that footage, and will be posting as it becomes available. Dale (one of the principal investigators on the project) is in the booth keeping an eye on the software side of the Touch Table presentation, as well as taking guests on tours of Quilt blocks represented in the browser. Earlier, as I was walking though Hall G, I saw what I think was the conference’s first telepresence visitor. In the spirit of inclusion, it was encouraging to see a guest have that opportunity to experience what is going on here.
Wednesday, August 12th – 10:10 am PDT
A good morning to you from SIGGRAPH 2015! Welcome back to our continuing coverage from the AIDS Quilt Touch Project booth. I’m your LiveBlog moderator David Wilson, research assistant with the Public Interactives Research Team at The New School for Public Engagement, School of Media Studies. We’ve had an amazing time at the show so far. To lead things off for today, a video post from research assistant Sean featuring School of Media Studies Dean and principal researcher Anne Balsamo along with our research faculty Angela Ferriolo, describing the first of the Quilt blocks we are featuring in our booth.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HR2caiDdNLQ]
Another great day at SIGGRAPH 2015 is coming to a close. This is David signing off, bye for now!
Tuesday, August 11th – 4:25 pm PDT
A report from PIRT research faculty member Angela:
Slow interaction! One thing I notice about visitors to the quilt, they demonstrate a way of interacting that’s usually hard to facilitate. Rather than going fast and overloading their senses, they move through the interface slowly, as slowly as possible. Nearly all users slow down to what I would call a walking pace, then wander through the quilt in a way that feels very tactile, human. People seem to want a slow experience. They are looking and reading hard. For those who have a more personal connection to the Quilt, memories come back slowly also in continual waves. Learned a lot today, good day.
Part of our mission with the AIDS Quilt Touch is to create increased visibility and awareness of the AIDS Quilt. SIGGRAPH 2015 has given us an excellent opportunity to put the mission into practice. Fairly frequently, people attracted by who-knows-what — the red ribbon, or the really remarkable quilt panels, or just an impulse of ‘what-the-heck-is-this-and-what-is-it-doing-here’ — drift to our booth and request — sometimes timidly, sometimes boldly — “so… tell me about this?”
Some of our visitors are too young to remember the initial impact of the AIDS crisis, and the exhibit gives us a chance to share and discuss the context in which the Quilt was initially created and the role it has continued to serve. Others are visitors from afar who, while they are aware of the AIDS crisis, have never heard of the AIDS Quilt. Some of our visitors, of course, are people who are very aware of the AIDS Quilt and, never having had an opportunity to see it in person, are grateful for an opportunity to be in its presence. Some, arriving on a lark, search our database out of curiosity (“I wonder if so-and-so is here”) and find themselves revisiting the memory of one who has passed.
It has been really wonderful to meet folks who have never heard of the Quilt, and fill them in on the history & context of the quilt. Likewise, it feels like an honor to be able to connect people with the names and memories of their loved ones. In this regard, SIGGRAPH has not only given us a chance to share our really neat suite of apps with the SIGGRAPH community, but also — perhaps just as or more importantly — created new opportunities to spread awareness and fulfill our mission.
Tuesday, August 11th – 12:30 pm PDT
Over the course of the past few days the team is noticing that the 30 Year History of AIDS ChronoZoom presentation doesn’t seem to have the same gravitational pull as the Touch Table Browser. Each are situated on opposite ends of our rather large space. We have many theories as to why our guests don’t seem to be drawn as much to the ChronoZoom presentation presented on our horizontal touch screen, among them is that the interface is not immediately identifiable as a touchscreen. We feel that because in other booths near to ours, a horizontal display usually functions as a video screen showing looped or live video. Our guests, at a first glance, may be perceiving a static video presentation, even though we have a conference sign describing that the horizontal screen is in fact touch receptive. Another theory is that the color template of our presentation may not be as inviting as the aesthetic presentation of the Quilts via the touch table. Here in the booth we’re going to try to tweak the ChronoZoom presentation slightly in order to drive more people towards information given in the presentation.
Tuesday, August 11th – 11:20 am PDT
Pleased to share our first video post by research assistant Sean, a recap of our arrival at the show:
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r24vwo8IU90]
One of the things that has amazed me the most in this experience is the relation people have with the touch table. When they find a Quilt Block they are looking for, most people want to take pictures of it, sometimes in different angles or zoom levels, even being able to access these images in the AIDSQuiltTouch.org website. I think it is so interesting how powerful the Table is, how it is perceived as the “official” digital medium of the Quilt, as the digital materialization of the Quilt; it IS the Quilt, in some way. If it was perceived just as another way to reproduce the Quilt, perhaps people wouldn’t take pictures of it. It’s “worth” taking pictures of because it is official, it represents a powerful material instance. It is fascinating.
Tuesday, August 11th – 10:10 am PDT
Good morning and welcome back to our LiveBlog coverage from SIGGRAPH 2015! The rest of the conference floor opens today so as we walked through the convention hall towards our booth we’re definitely seeing an even larger spike in attendance compared to yesterday. During today’s coverage I plan to focus a little bit on our ChronoZoom presentation, as well as taking a little bit of time to wander around the entire conference while posting my impressions. Last night during the SIGGRAPH reception we had an opportunity to spend a few moments with Greg Panos where we chatted about ways of propelling the digital avatar into the real world. My experience so far has been completely enriching, if not a little bit emotionally exhausting. I value deeply being able to connect with our guests who want to know more about our project, or to discuss a personal connection with the AIDS Memorial Quilt. We are hearing incredible stories from our guests and there have been a few tears shed in the booth. Leticia and Angela are now with one of our first guests of the morning looking over the AIDS Quilt Touch Table Browser, they’ve just found a Quilt block they were looking for after some time searching for it without any specific identifying information. It feels good to be standing up here and representing this project.
A steady stream of visitor traffic into our booth this afternoon (including a surprise visit from my MOM!). We are meeting guests who are learning about the Quilt for the first time, and we’re noticing guests are particularly drawn towards the AIDS Quilt Touch Table Browser, fascinated by the ability to look at the Quilt in its entirety (macro level), or at a panel on an individual (micro) level. We’re hearing more amazing, touching, heartbreaking, and inspiring stories. Getting ready to wrap things up for today in our booth, but we’ll be back shortly for the SIGGRAPH Reception. Keep an eye out for tweets from our team from the SIGGRAPH Reception event around 8pm PDT.
Monday, August 10th – 11:20 am PDT
Definitely a spike in attendance today inside Hall G, which includes more new visitors to our booth. We’re pleased to see some familiar faces from yesterday who’ve stopped by to say hello and share more stories with us. It feels very communal here. We’re showing our guests around the Quilts and also assisting where needed with our guest’s experiencing our technologies. The AIDS Quilt Touch Table Browser looks stunning.
Monday, August 10th – 10:30 am PDT
A post from research assistant Letícia about some of our research methods:
Before coming to SIGGRAPH, the team had a whole plan about how we could use this opportunity to get feedback on the AIDS Quilt Touch Digital Experience interface, and to also measure in some way our guest’s awareness about AIDS and the associated emotional impacts. We prepared some user tests and were ready to use them yesterday. However, after a day of talking to people who have deep emotional connections with the Quilt, some tests looked inappropriate, almost senseless. We are now working on better approach to get feedback, that are consistent with our visitors and their experiences. That is one of the most interesting parts of the research process: being able to plan, experience the situation and modify the approach to be more consistent with your project’s purpose. Grateful for this experience, hope more changes and insights come by the next days!
Monday, August 10th – 9:50 am PDT
Good morning from SIGGRAPH! We are pleased to be joined in the booth by School of Media Studies Dean Anne Balsamo who is one of the principal investigators for our team along with Dale MacDonald. We’re excited to begin our second day of exhibiting, and we’re looking forward to meeting and sharing more stories with those interested in the Aids Memorial Quilt.
Wrapping up things in our booth now. It’s been a great opening day for us. Looking forward to meeting more people tomorrow.
Sunday, August 9th – 3:20 pm PDT
Spending time with conference goers in our booth who have a personal connection with someone commemorated within the Quilt. For me, it’s an extremely powerful experience to listen to their stories. The Quilt elicits strong emotions, and through our initial interactions with people I’m beginning to understand how our technologies enhance the Quilt beyond the communal act of being together bonded by a common cause. Our mobile app has been an interesting source of engagement with those who come into our booth. In addition to those who are looking for someone specific, it’s served as a launching point of discussion. People want to know how it works and are interested in what software is supporting the meta-data that is available within the digital representation of the Quilt. Many of our visitors want to know about the entire process of how a physical Quilt block comes to be represented in a digital form. Some want to talk about the social aspects of the Quilt and how it came into being within the political climate of United States in the 1980’s. In that context, one visitor described the Quilt as strongly oppositional but somehow also soft at the same time.
One of our first visitors was someone who had a relative who worked with AIDS in a different country. This person FaceTimed with the relative, to show the Quilts and tell about our project! Best thing is the relative can check it out by themselves by accessing the AIDS Quilt Touch website. It is so exciting to have visitors that can relate to the Quilt in a personal way.
Sunday, August 9th – 12:05 pm PDT:
And we’re live! SIGGRAPH 2015 is officially underway! Conference goers are streaming into Hall G. We are situated in a pretty high traffic area near the entrance of the hall allowing those who are coming in to stop by to check out the quilts and chat with us. We fielded a very interesting question early on from a conference goer, that being “Is there another project that is similar to the AIDS Quilt Touch Digital Experience as a whole”? For me, it’s hard to find something that compares to AQTDE because of the fact that the actual, physical size of the textile quilt is so large it’s hard to compare it to something else in the physical world. The question is something to ponder going forward, what can we compare this project to…. I feel my initial answer would be a map or live document that allows for community contribution. But these are difficult comparisons given the socio-cultural content of the Quilt itself.
Sunday, August 9th – 9:10 am PDT:
Good morning. SIGGRAPH 2015 kicks off today! We’re pretty excited after all of our preparation to finally get underway. The team will be heading down to the convention center shortly to open our booth and check out the show. Stay tuned here for first impressions.
Making @ SIGGRAPH Chair Jean Kaneko just stopped by our booth, dropping off our exhibit sign, and chatting about our installation. Made us feel very welcome. And with that the team is going to head out for the night. Looking forward to an early start tomorrow when SIGGRAPH 2015 gets underway.
Saturday, August 8th – 4:00 pm PDT:
Happy to see PIRT Research Faculty member Angela has made it to Los Angeles and has joined us in the booth! More and more people are beginning to fill Hall G, the place is beginning to look like a show is about to happen. Participant registration has opened and there’s a long line forming. For PIRT, just a couple more touches to put on and our exhibit is ready for the show. For me, it’s amazing to see the blocks of the AIDS Memorial Quilt in person. After talking about them so much within the group, then seeing them here, the blocks are much bigger than I envisioned them. I am particularly drawn to the Emma Goldman Brigade panel…. Leticia just gave me a red ribbon to wear. Getting closer to showtime…
Saturday, August 8th – 11:45 am PDT:
WELCOME back to Public Interactives Research Team’s LiveBlog from SIGGRAPH 2015. David here, joining you as your LiveBlog moderator. I’m very excited to finally have put rubber to the road, arriving here along with PIRT members Sean and Leticia. We’ve joined Principal Investigator Dale in our booth putting the final touches in place for the show, which begins tomorrow. Already, the (MASSIVE) LA Convention Center is abuzz, lots of people around preparing their installations. In front of our booth, there’s some projection mapping already happening on a giant skull…….
Hi everyone and WELCOME to Public Interactives Research Team’s LiveBlog from SIGGRAPH 2015. I’m David, research assistant for PIRT and your LiveBlog moderator. The team has wrapped up its preparations in New York City and is looking forward to a great week. Most of us will be making our way west tomorrow, but our Dale MacDonald is already on site at the Los Angeles Convention Center making preparations to our booth. We are looking forward to sharing our experiences over the course of SIGGRAPH 2015 with you.
The Public Interactives Research Team (PIRT) from The New School will present the AIDS Quilt Touch Project at SIGGRAPH 2015 whose graphic theme is the interplay between two ideas: Quilts and Xroads of Discovery. PIRT will showcase a suite of technologies designed to enhance and expand viewers’ experiences of the AIDS Memorial Quilt in an installation which includes 6 of the 5914 12’ by 12’ sections of the Quilt. As the largest living memorial of its kind in the world, the AIDS Memorial Quilt is composed of 48,000 individual panels made by more than 33,000 people that commemorate more than 93,000 names. If laid out in its entirety, the physical Quilt would cover 1.2 million square feet. Our research team has created the first virtual Quilt that is composed of more than 5900 individual digital images of Quilt blocks that include nearly 48,000 Quilt panels. We have created several applications that enable members of the public to interact with this digital representation of an important work of cultural heritage.
The AIDS Quilt Touch project serves the following objectives:
to enable members of the public to experience the scale, history, and importance of the Quilt;
to enable viewers to explore the stories embedded within the Quilt as told by families, communities, and activists;
to clarify and augment information describing those honored on the Quilt, the makers of the Quilt, and the history of the Quilt over the past 30 years;
to elicit new stories of the Quilt and those honored in it;
to create a research platform for scholars of the Quilt who are interested in investigating the histories of the development of the AIDS pandemic and of AIDS activism, as well of the histories of folk art, textile art, activist art, and quilt crafts.
The suite of technologies we will present include the following:
The Interactive Tangible Browser for the AIDS Memorial Quilt utilizes an 55” multitouch table which enables viewers to search for a name on a Quilt panel, browse the virtual Quilt, and zoom among different viewing distances: from a bird’s eye view to a view of an individual Quilt panel.
The Timeline for the History of AIDS and the AIDS Memorial Quilt utilizes a Microsoft PPI 55” touchscreen that displays an interactive timeline recounting key episodes in the 30-year history of the AIDS pandemic and the 25-year history of the creation of the Quilt.
The AIDS Quilt Touch Mobile Web App enables a web-user to search for a name on the Quilt, view Quilt Blocks, comment on a specific panel or on the Quilt itself. Visit: www.aidsquilttouch.org
This project has been supported by funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Microsoft Research, and a consortium of University research partners. Beta versions of this digital project was initially presented during the 2012 Smithsonian Folklife Festival in Washington, DC. Even in beta form, the digital applications generated positive press coverage from TechCrunch and other technology media outlets; it was featured on the top page of the Bing site, and widely promoted by Microsoft Research including through a personal tweet from Bill Gates. The digital applications have been updated for SIGGRAPH 2015 with hardware and software enhancements.
The AIDS Memorial Quilt is a unique work of international ARTS ACTIVISM that reflects the worldwide scope and personal impact of the AIDS pandemic.
The textile Quilt is composed of 48,000 individual PANELS that commemorate more than 93,000 NAMES.
The size of the physical Quilt measures more than 1.3 million square feet. If laid out in its entirety, it would cover more than 29 acres of land.
It would take a visitor more than 33 days to view every panel—spending only 1 minute at each panel.
It is the largest LIVING MEMORIAL of its kind in the world.
The AIDS Memorial Quilt Digital Experiences were created in collaboration with Dale MacDonald from Onomy Labs, Julie Rhoad and Roddy Williams from the NAMES Project Foundation, Jon Winet and his team from the University of Iowa’s Digital Studio for Public Humanities (DSPH), and Andy VanDam and his LADS team at Brown University.
The aim of this project was to design a digital memorial using appropriate technologies that would augment the experience of viewing the AIDS Memorial Quilt. Created by the Public Interactives Research Team (PIRT) at USC, the work was supported by grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities Digital Humanities Office, Microsoft Research, and the USC Fund for Interdisciplinary Research. The experiences were exhibited as part of the 2012 Smithsonian Folklife Festival in Washington, DC.
Digital Experience #1
TheInteractive Tangible Browser for the AIDS Memorial Quilt enables viewers to SEARCH for a NAME that is commemorated on a Quilt panel, VIEW Quilt blocks, BROWSE a virtual “Quilt” that is composed of 5800 individual digital images, and ZOOM among different viewing distances: from a bird’s eye view to a view of an individual Quilt panel.
This digital experience was created in collaboration with Microsoft Research, under the guidance of Donald Brinkman, and Andy VanDam and his LADS team at Brown University.
Digital Experience #2
The Interactive TIMELINE for the History of AIDS and the AIDS Memorial Quilt recounts key events and episodes in the 30-year history of the AIDS pandemic and the 25-year history of the creation of the Quilt.
This experience was created by Lauren Fenton and Rosemary Comella at USC in collaboration with Microsoft Research, under the guidance of Donald Brinkman, and Roland Saekow and Madison Allen from the University of California Berkeley (of the ChronoZoom project).
Many scholars and activists contest these “official histories” for the homophobic bias that sneaks into descriptions and accounts. For example, these official histories often refer to people who are infected with HIV as “AIDS patients” or even “AIDS victims.” These labels do not represent the identity of those who are living with HIV. The identity of “patient” is meaningful only from the point of view of a medical system. The term “victim” implies a state of powerlessness.The AIDS Quilt Touch Timeline enabled USC docents during the Smithsonian Folklife Festival to talk with visitors about the broader social, political, and bio-medical events that are part of the multi-faceted history of AIDS and the Quilt in the United States. There, the docents were especially interested in taking into account the critiques of the way in which AIDS/HIV have been “narrativized” in the “official histories” of the epidemic.
In effect, the team created counter-narratives that displaced the figure of the “hero scientist” and the process of “science as discovery.” While we noted the specific medical researchers who were involved in identifying HIV, we contextualized these accounts by including key episodes that highlighted critical acts of intervention — when activists confronted government officials and protested official policies. The story about the history of AIDS/HIV that is not told enough, we believe, is the account of how the practice of medical science was actually transformed by the work of activists during the early days of the epidemic. Remember that it was the work of an activist, not a government official or medical researcher, that prompted the RED CROSS to finally understand that its ENTIRE national blood supply needed to be screened in order to prevent transmission of HIV.
Digital Experience #3
The mobile web app AIDS QUILT TOUCH enables a web-user to SEARCH for a NAME on the AIDS Memorial Quilt, VIEW Quilt Blocks, COMMENT on a specific panel or on the Quilt, and LOCATE the display of a specific panel during the Quilt 2012 events. visit: www.aidsquilttouch.org
The AIDS Quilt Touch mobile web app was created by a team at the Digital Studio for Public Humanities at the University of Iowa under the direction of Jon Winet and Mark NeuCollins.
Each of these experiences illustrates the important role of collaboration among humanists and technologies in projects that take culture seriously for the purposes of technological innovation.
During the Quilt 2012 events, the USC docents often served as “digital quilt archaeologists” using the applications to find specific quilt panels, or in some cases to identify panels based on imprecise or incomplete information. Verbal feedback from visitors provided informal evidence that we had succeeded in meeting the basic objectives established for the Start-Up project: the interactives indeed “augmented” people’s experience of the textile quilt.
CREDITS
Anne Balsamo: Principle Investigator for grants from NEH, Microsoft Research, and USC. Currently Dean, School of Media Studies, New School for Public Engagement, New York. Formerly Director of Research in Public Interactives Team at University of Southern California. Balsamo has been involved in the project since 2002 when it was first conceptualized as a Project by Onomy Labs. Served as project coordinator and lead experience designer for Quilt Digital Experiences.
Dale MacDonald: Currently serves as the Director of Creative Technologies at the School of Media Studies, New School for Public Engagement, New York. Formerly Chief Technology Officer, Annenberg Innovation Lab, University of Southern California. Co-director of the creation of the digital experiences for QUILT 2012 events. MacDonald has been involved in the project since 2002; serves as LEAD researcher for all digital experiences and project coordinator for all the tech teams.
Jon Winet: Director of the Digital Studio for Public Humanities (DSPH), at the University of Iowa that provided the design and tech team that built the mobile web app AIDS QUILT TOUCH.
Mark NeuCollins: Technical Director at the DSPH and for the mobile web app.
Andy van Dam: Thomas J. Watson Jr. University Professor of Technology and Education; Professor of Computer Science. He is the director of the Brown University Graphics Group and of the Large Art Displays on the Surface (LADS) project sponsored by Microsoft Research.
Alex Hills: Principle developer of the Interactive Quilt Browser on the LADS platform.
Donald Brinkman: In his position as Digital Humanities liaison at Microsoft Research, he served as project “wrangler” for the Microsoft Research and Development Team.
James Wren: Senior Consultant, Microsoft Consulting services; responsible for all the visual processing of quilt images to create the database for the deep zoom experience.
Lei Yu: Senior Consultant, Microsoft Consulting services; responsible for creating a prototype using PIVOT that allows for parameter searching of the Quilt image database
Julie Rhoad: President and Executive Director, The NAMES Project Foundation, Atlanta, Georgia. Provided the invitation and opportunity to participate in Quilt 2012 events, and serves as domain expert for all digital experiences.
Roddy Williams: Chief Operations Officer, The NAMES Project Foundation, Atlanta Georgia; responsible for provision of NAMES data and Quilt history context, and serves as domain expert for all digital experiences.
Brett Bobley: Director and Chief Information Officer, Office of the Digital Humanities, National Endowment of the Humanities; provided expert guidance in the creation of the first iteration of the project and serves as development advisor for the broader Digital Experience Project.
Sherry Moore: Photographer at the Smithsonian Folklife Festival and logistics coordinator.
We learned alot about our Let’s SEE the Trash project by entertaining many visitors in our booth at the Ideas City Festival this past weekend. In total, approximately 50 people visited us, who took roughly 30 of our bookmark business cards with QR code, designed by SMS graphic designer Chad Phillips.
From those visitors, our embedded video site received approximately 20 unique visits. Of those visitors, we did not receive any repeat visits to our booth.
We found it very useful being able to situate the project in public to discuss with visitors their impressions of what they thought our work would be based on how we described it. The process of our attempting to explain what the piece was, how it worked, and what the goal was in the greater context of the festival was very useful on our fine-tuning how we described the piece. Our description drifted away from mobile augmented-reality app towards location based documentary. Several visitors inquired as to whether we were able to physically track garbage across a large distance, or if we were able to obtain any data about the phenomenon we were attempting to depict. We were fortunate to be visited by a Department of Sanitation worker attending the festival, who provided us useful insight towards who to contact and how the department handles producing media pieces about their work. He stressed that the public should be made more aware about the process that garbage goes through after its initial disposal.
After our experience at Ideas City, the team feels that this was more a first iteration of the project rather than a finished product. That being said, we’re definitely proud of the technology we were able to develop for this first iteration of the piece that included: GPS detection and real time updating in a web based app using Google Maps API , applying custom map styling, geo-fencing points of interest, reactive points of interest icons, and custom video playback using YouTube API. We plan to reach out to our new contact in the Department of Sanitation in an effort to involve them. Additionally, we think it would be beneficial to rework our description of the piece to that of a location based documentary. This describes more the intention of our piece given it’s current technological approach. In describing the project as documentary, the footage currently employed would need to be reconceived and reshot, most likely with the help of Red Dog Productions. Finally, we found that if we were to include a URL in our promotional material, that the URL be shortened by goo.gl or bitly.
The Public Interactives Research Team recently learned that we were selected to participate in SIGGRAPH 2015 – The 42nd International Conference and Exhibition on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques. We’re very excited and honored for the opportunity to present the AIDS Quilt Touch Digital Experience during the conference in Los Angeles in August. We’ll post more information about our participation as details become available.
We will certainly need some help greeting and helping visitors to our exhibits. If you or any SMS-friendly people you know will be in LA 8/9-13 we would love to hear from you. Let David (wilsd575 at newschool.edu) or Tracy (veritest at newschool.edu) know!