It would be nice if some Indian FLOSS-ventures could consider taking part
in this contest. FN
---------- Forwarded message ----------
We would like to invite you to participate in this year's Prix Ars
Electronica, the foremost international prize for computer-based art. To
mark Ars Electronica's twenty-fifth anniversary in 2004, the Prix Ars
Electronica has expanded its international competition for cyberarts to
include a new "Digital Communities" category singling out for recognition
projects of great sociopolitical relevance.
This new category encompasses the social consequences of the Internet as
well as the latest developments in the domain of mobile communications
and wireless networks. For a detailed description of the category and
about Prix Ars Electronica in general, please see the attached PDF file
or our website http://prixars.aec.at.
Prizes
Two Golden Nicas will be awarded with 10,000 Euro each and
4 Awards of Distinction with 5,000 Euro each and up to 14 Honorary Mentions.
The closing deadline for the entries is March 26th 2004 .
If you need any further information, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Looking forward to your positive reply!
Sincerely yours,
Clara Picot
Clara Picot
AEC Ars Electronica Center Linz
Museumsgesellschaft mbH
Hauptstrasse 2
A-4040 Linz / Austria
Tel: +43-732-7272-74
Fax: +43-732-7272-676
Email: communities(a)prixars.aec.at
http://prixars.aec.at/
<<prix_folder_DC.pdf>>
Prix Ars Electronica 2004
Prix Ars Electronica 2004 is the 18th editition of the foremost
international competition for computer-based art. To mark Ars
Electronica's 25th anniversary in 2004, it is being expanded to include a
"Digital Communities" domain dedicated to social developments of great
current relevance. Deadline for submissions is March 26th 2004 .
Prix Ars Electronica 2004 will be awarded in the following categories:
"Computer Animation / Visual Effects", "Digital Musics", "Interactive
Art", "Net Vision" and "Digital Communities".
Computer Animation / Visual Effects
The "Computer Animation / Visual Effects" category has been part of the
Prix Ars Electronica since its very inception. It recognizes excellence
in independent work in the arts and sciences as well as in high-end
commercial productions in the film, advertising and entertainment
industries. In this category, artistic originality counts just as much as
masterful technical achievement.
Digital Musics
Contemporary digital sound productions from the broad spectrum of
"electronica" come in for consideration in the "Digital Musics" category,
as do works combining sound and media, computer compositions ranging from
electro-acoustic to experimental music, or sound installations. This
category's programmatic agenda is to expand horizons beyond the confines
of individual genres and artistic currents.
Interactive Art
The "Interactive Art" category is dedicated to interactive works in all
forms and formats, from installations to performances. Here, particular
consideration is given to the realization of apowerful artistic concept
through the especially appropriate use of technologies, the
innovativeness of the interaction design, and the work's inherent potential to expand the human radius of action.
Net Vision
The "Net Vision" category singles out for recognition artistic projects
in the Internet that display brilliance in how they have been engineered,
designed and- especially-conceived, works that are outstanding with
respect to innovation, interface design and the originality of their
content. The way in which a work of net-based art deals with the online
medium is essential in this category.
Digital Communities
"Digital Communities" encompasses the wide-ranging social consequences of
the Internet as well as the latest developments in the domain of mobile
communications and wireless networks. "Digital Communities" will
spotlight bold and inspired innovations impacting human coexistence,
bridging the digital divide regarding gender as well as geography, or
creating outstanding social software and enhancing accessibility of
technological-social infrastructure. This new category will showcase the
political potential of digital and networked systems and is thus designed
as a forum for a broad spectrum of projects, programs, initiatives and
phenomenain which social innovation is taking place, as itwere, in real
time.
u19-freestyle computing
Competition for young people under 19 in Austria
Prix Ars Electronica u19-freestyle computing is an open category for all
works that have been designed with or executed by the computer-from
websites to software to robots. "freestyle computing" stands for freedom
from the restrictions associated with the use of different tools and for
a competition that pays just as much attention to innovation and
creativity as it does to the age of the individual submitting it.
[The next idea]
Art and Technology Grant
Discovering ideas for tomorrow in young minds today is the aim of this
spin-off the highly successful u19 competition. Artists age 19-27 are
invited to submit ideas and proposals for works not yet realized. The
winner receives a stipend in the amount of 7,500 Euro and will be invited
to spend a term as Artist in Residence at the Ars Electronica Futurelab-a
great opportunity to bring project ideas to fruition and subsequently to
present them to a large international audience at the Ars Electronica
Festival.
Smith S.Raj said on Sat, Mar 06, 2004 at 08:57:59AM -0800,:
> my name is Smith and i'm doing my 2nd year MCA inNoorul Islam
> College, thuckalay,Tamil Nadu...
Hi!!!
> I was doing many projects in VB../but now i decided to turn to
> Linux...as common man can afford it...
Welcome to the world of freedom, and GNU/linux.
> i would like to design same type of application that i used to
develop in Vb in Linux...Pls advice....
What is the distro you are using?? Most distros come with default IDEs
including IDES for QT and GNOME. For GNOME, we have Glade, which is
developed by Naba Kumar, and Indian ...
But `point and click' is a very very *bad* way of learning to write
programmes ... better learn it the ha[nr]d way.
--
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+
Mahesh T. Pai, LL.M.,
'NANDINI', S. R. M. Road,
Ernakulam, Cochin-682018,
Kerala, India.
http://paivakil.port5.com
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+
On Sat, Mar 06, 2004 at 08:57:59AM -0800, Smith S.Raj wrote:
> my name is Smith and i'm doing my 2nd year MCA inNoorul Islam College, thuckalay,Tamil Nadu...I was doing many projects in VB../but now i decided to turn to Linux...as common man can afford it...i would like to design same type of application that i used to develop in Vb in Linux...Pls advice....
>
> heard there is QT designer Similar to VB designer...
>
Try Gambas from http://gambas.sourceforge.net
This is an inplementation of BASIC interpreter and will replace
weebee
KDE3 and QT3 will be needed for compiling the source
This is still in the evolving stage
suresh p
The judgement goes like this
"....
I. SCO
Plaintiff/Counterclaim-Defendant is hereby ORDERED:
1. To fully comply within 45 days of the entry of this order with the corut's previous order dated December 12, 2003. This is to include those items that SCO had difficulty in obtaining prior to the Court's previously ordered deadline of January 12, 2004.
2. As previously ordered, SCO is to provide and identify all specific lines of code that IBM is alleged to have contributed to Linux from either AIX or Dynix. This is to include all lines of code that SCO can identify at this time.
3. SCO is to provide and identify all specific lines of code from Unix System V from which IBM's contributions from AIX and Dynix are alleged to be derived.
4. SCO is to provide and identify with specificity all lines of code in Linux that it claims rights to.
5. SCO is to provide and identify with specificity the lines of code that SCO distributed to other parties. This is to include where appplicable the conditions of release, to whom the code was released, the date and under what circumstances such code was released."
More on the story at
http://www.groklaw.net/article.php?story=20040303195948664
CK Raju
Thrissur
Halloween #10 is up.
See http://www.opensource.org/halloween/halloween10.html
I have not gone through the contents yet.
--
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+
Mahesh T. Pai, LL.M.,
'NANDINI', S. R. M. Road,
Ernakulam, Cochin-682018,
Kerala, India.
http://paivakil.port5.com
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+
Alex,
The malayalam latex is a welcome thing for typesetting in our malayalam
language.The "rachana" fonts used for this is also very good as it is a
nice font package and now "rachana" fonts are released under GPL.(I am not
sure about the licensing terms of "keli" fonts).But I feel that some glyphs
for 'koottaksharam's(conjunts) in the "rachana" fonts aren't used at all.
But I am vary about the "mm" preprocessor( from Malayalam-tex 1.6 by
Jeroen Hellingman) used by you. Its source is not permitted to distribute
in the modified form without the consent from the author(see the "README"
of Malayalam-tex 1.6).You could have used the "indica" preprocessor included
with Sinhala_tex.2.1.1 which is licensed under GPL.
I have also made some modifications to the metafont files of the Malayalam-tex
to add some veriety to the fonts.But I am unable to distribute the same because
of the abovementioned clause.Now I have started to create some metafonts which
provides different shapes by changing some parameters.
We should collectively make an attempt to make the Malayalam-tex released
under GPL.
suresh p