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- From: benedikt@vitruvius.ar.utexas.edu (Michael Benedikt)
- Newsgroups: misc.handicap
- Subject: Third Conference on Cyberspace
- Message-ID: <25555@handicap.news>
- Date: 12 Nov 92 02:47:08 GMT
- Sender: news@bunker.shel.isc-br.com
- Reply-To: benedikt@vitruvius.ar.utexas.edu (Michael Benedikt)
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- Index Number: 25555
-
- ******************* A n n o u n c e m e n t ***************
-
- a n d
-
- -------- CALL FOR PROPOSALS, ABSTRACTS, AND PAPERS ---------
-
- 3 C Y B E R C O N F
- THE THIRD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CYBERSPACE
- MAY 14 and 15, 1993
-
- AT
- THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN
- **********************************************************************
-
- The Third Conference on Cyberspace will be held May 14 and 15, 1993 at
- The University of Texas at Austin. This is a call for proposals for
- performances and demonstrations as well as for extended abstracts and
- papers, approximately twenty four of which will be selected by the
- Program Committee for development and presentation at the Conference.
- Selected papers, abstracts, and proposal documents will be published
- as The Collected Papers of the Third Conference on Cyberspace and
- available at the Conference. Arrangements are being made to broadcast
- parts of the Conference on National Community Cable Television.
-
- Papers should be around 6,000 words. Abstracts and proposals for
- performances and demonstrations should be between 800 and 1000 words,
- with illustrations and photographs where necessary. All are due in
- hard copy and digital form at the address below by January 1, 1993.
- Videotapes and recordings are also encouraged. Selectees will be
- notified by February 15, 1993.
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
- In the interests of vigorous participation by all, attendance at the
- Conference is limited. Priority will be given in the following order.
-
- ----Category 1: Participants who have been selected and invited to
- present their papers, perform, or demonstrate their work.
-
- ----Category 2: Participants not selected to present but who have
- submitted papers, abstracts, and proposals judged by the Program
- Committee to be serious and of particular interest to the Conference.
-
- ----Category 3: Participants with creative and clearly stated
- interests, experience, and expertise in the Topics listed below, as
- submitted in writing in advance of the registration deadline.
-
- ----Category 4: Visitors & Observers who are not actively working in
- the field at this time but who have expressed interest in the subject
- in writing in advance of the registration deadline.
-
- Like the First Conference at Austin in 1990, and the Second Inter-
- national Conference in Santa Cruz in 1991, the Third Conference on
- Cyberspace is not only about the enabling technology of virtual
- reality, 3-D user interfaces, networking, data visualization, high
- speed computer graphics, and so on, but also the nature of cyberspace
- as such, conceived of as an independent realm, a shared virtual
- environment whose inhabitants, objects, and spaces are data,
- visualized, heard and (perhaps) touched. It seeks to reach an
- understanding of how the components of cyberspace already "under
- construction" in the development and design of graphic user inter-
- faces, scientific visualization techniques, video games, CAD, abstract
- architecture and architectural design theory, knowledge navigation,
- "cyberpunk" discourse, cultural studies, film and narrative theory,
- virtual and artificial reality systems, MU*s, INTERNET, USENET and
- other networks, groupware, and hypermedia might someday function
- together to create a true, public cyberspace, as well as private,
- special-purpose cyberspaces: viable, 3-dimensional, alternate
- realities providing the maximum number of individuals with the means
- of communication, creativity, productivity, mobility, and control over
- the shapes of their lives within the new information and media
- environment.
-
- The Third Conference on Cyberspace is scheduled to take place over two
- days and two nights, two sessions held concurrently. In addition,
- there will be an evening ROUND TABLE on the night of the 14th and a
- DINNER on the night of the 15th. The attempt will be made to match
- Topics to Sessions, but the number, nature, and quality of submissions
- will be the deciding factor in scheduling.
-
- The following is a representative list of the general topics of
- interest to the Conference. OTHER, is also an option. The organizers
- ask only that rampant speculation be accompanied by "concrete"
- accomplishment.
-
- I. COMMUNICATIONS, MEDIA, AND THE CITY
- Papers are invited that discuss and/or report on the proliferation and
- diversification of the media-- from TV to telephones, from movies to
- magazines, from alternative radio to ATMs--and all other computer-
- mediated communication systems. What are the impacts of these on the
- physical city, its social structure, its human experience? Surveil-
- lance, privacy, and the law. Is cyberspace to be in the city, or the
- city in cyberspace?
-
- II. VIRTUAL WORLD AND WORK/PLAYSPACE DESIGN
- Artists as well as engineers and programmers are invited to submit
- papers that discuss, demonstrate or report on work done in the design
- of single or multi-user computer-generated environments, in parti-
- cular, environments--for whatever use, research, entertainment, or
- business--that create three (and higher) dimensional space sensorially
- and/or cognitively. How does "multimedia" become the new "unimedium"
- of cyberspace? The focus is less on technology than design, less on
- hardware than software.
-
- III. PERSONHOOD, COMMUNITY, AND AGENCY
- Contributions that discuss or report on BBS and Net life. Who/what
- are you on the Net? And where? How do cyberspace communities differ
- from realspace ones; how might they in the future? What are the
- effects of non-face to face communications on identity? What are the
- effects of increases in bandwidth and/or realspace mobility that come
- with ubiquitous computing? Telephonics. Redefining work and play.
- Procrastination space. Money and time; access and denial; methods and
- modes of electronic communication. Informed discussions of the
- history of technology and consciousness are welcomed.
-
- IV. COMPUTATION: SPEED, SYNCHRONY, AND OTHER PROBLEMS
- Papers are invited that deal with techniques (1) for handling latency
- in graphics processing and display and (2) handling traffic, routing,
- and transmission delays in high speed, long distance networks in the
- service of achieving co-presence. How are objects in cyberspace to
- be realspace- distributed (updated, rendered, displayed, sounded,
- etc.)? Progress reports on distributed processing vs. massively
- parallel hosts; network topologies, routing strategies, optical
- methods, multimodal operation, graceful degradation, etc. Space
- requires local simultaneity: is there special or general relativity in
- cyberspace?
-
- V. INTERFACES: IMMERSION, INTIMACY, IMMENSITY
- Papers are invited that report on work underway or achieved in the
- area of innovative human-computer interfaces. Plausible and specific
- hardware and software design proposals are acceptable. Stereopsis;
- binaural, "convolved" and multitracked sound; eye-, head-, hand-,
- body-tracking; contact/touch feedback; inertial motion simulators;
- motion control software, etc. are all of interest to the extent that
- they promise or deliver spatial immersion at different scales and
- subjective distances. Demonstrations are especially welcomed, as are
- relevant studies in psychoacoustics and "pscyhospatiality."
-
- VI. POETICS AND PERFORMANCE
- Papers and performances are invited that make use of networked
- interactive computers, robotics, virtual worlds and/or artificial
- realities to extend human expression and communication. Graphic or
- sonic works of chiefly artistic merit that (also) create
- (cyber)spaces are welcomed, as are discussions and demonstrations of
- powerful on-line literary works. One or Many Authors? What
- Audience? Autonomous Artworks? Telepresence? Teleperformance?
- Creation by Agent? Immersive Aesthetics? Navigable Music? Liquid
- Architecture? Synaesthesia and Multisensory Correlation? Ephemery and
- Permanence? Global Art? The Political Dimension?
-
- VII. THE NATURE OF INFORMATION
- Discussions of the theory of information and theories of meaning as
- extended from the purely cybernetic realm to the realm of human
- perception and communication are invited; as are reports on, and
- demonstrations of, work in scientific or business data visualization
- software and theory, the logic of data navigation, search, discovery,
- manipulation, sharing, etc. Are cyberspaces themselves self-
- organizing systems? How are we to measure their complexity,
- organization, and value as structures in themselves as well as
- container/purveyors of "information?"
-
- VIII. THE QUESTION OF ECONOMICS
- >From education, entertainment, news, law, "intelligence," and science,
- to advertising, brokerage, credit histories, prices, and schedules...
- the information-for-sale business is distinct from the communications-
- tools business (i.e. computing, telephony, printing, etc.). Submis-
- sions are invited that throw light the economics of both, especially
- with regard to on-line information services such as Compuserve and
- Amix, and computer network management services such as EDS. Are these
- operations the economic basis for cyberspace? Or is it to be the
- providers of the channels and machines? Can cyberspace be decen-
- tralized, individualized? Is cyberspace access to be free? What is
- the link to imminent interactive (HD)TV-based information services?
- Does hacking pay? Of what specifically economic value are 3-D and VR
- interfaces?
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
- LOCATION AND ACCOMMODATIONS
-
- Austin is a beautiful and friendly city of 400,000 people in the
- heart of the Texas Hill country. It is the home of the legislature of
- Texas, of Barton Springs, and of thriving electronics, computer,
- publishing, music, education, and research industries. The campus of
- The University of Texas is on 350 tree-covered acres, with promenades,
- and distinguished limestone buildings. Usually sunny, temperatures
- during May range between 62 degrees Fahrenheit at night to 78 degrees
- Fahrenheit during the day. Arrangements are currently being made with
- two hotels: one downtown and adjacent Austin's renowned 6th Street
- night life, the other a short walking distance to campus. These
- arrangements will be finalized in February. Austin's airport is 10
- minutes from the campus and downtown. Cabs are inexpensive.
-
- RULES FOR SUBMISSIONS
-
- Papers, abstracts and proposals should be printed on 8.5" x 11" paper,
- single spaced, with one inch margins and in Times 12-point font,
- unless there is specific artistic purpose to breaking these conven-
- tions. Do not number the pages. Provide six copies, and a floppy
- disk with both ASCII and Word versions. Head the first page in the
- following way (centered):
-
- TITLE
- (Proposed Session)
-
- Your Name
- Your Affiliation
-
- Body of paper or abstract.
-
- Email submissions are not accepted in lieu of hard copy, but are
- encouraged in addition to hard copy for availability via FTP.
- Send email submissions to 3cyberconf@bongo.cc.utexas.edu Supplemen-
- tary film, videotape, optical disc, and magnetic recordings are
- encouraged. These will be returned on request. At the submitter's
- option, biographical information can accompany submissions on a
- single, separate page.
-
- DEADLINES: <<Deadline>> for submission of papers, abstracts and
- proposals for inclusion in the Conference: Postmarked on before
- January 1, 1993. Notification date of selection for presentation:
- February 15, 1993. <<Deadline>> for Category 3 applications: March
- 3, 1993. <<Deadline>> for registration for the Conference: March 15,
- 1993 (Late registration will be available as space permits and at an
- extra charge). <<Deadline>> for submission of final papers (if
- abstract was accepted) and for all arrangement-documentation for
- demonstrations and performances: May 1, 1993.
-
- NOTE: Submission of an abstract or proposal indicates the submitter's
- intention, obligation, and capability to write/present/perform/demon-
- strate the corresponding, full length work if chosen.
-
- All materials should be sent to:
-
- |3CYBERCONF
- |THE THIRD International CONFERENCE ON CYBERSPACE
- |Submissions
- |School of Architecture
- |The University of Texas at Austin
- |Austin, Texas, 78712
-
- |email: 3cyberconf@bongo.cc.utexas.edu
- |PHONE: 512-471-6619
- |FAX: 512-471-0716
-
- REGISTRATION.
-
- All registrations cover: admission to all sessions, a copy of the
- Collected Papers, various printed materials, and two lunches.
-
- Registration for presenting participants (Category 1) is US$75.00; for
- non-presenting participants (Category 2) it is US$200.00. These
- amounts also cover preferred seating and the final Dinner.
-
- Registration for "participants with expertise" (Category 3) is
- US$250.00, and includes the final Dinner.
-
- Registration for visitors and observers (Category 4) is US$200.00.
-
- Make checks payable to 3CYBERCONF at the above address, envelope
- marked "Registration"
-
- SCHOLARSHIPS.
-
- A limited number of registrations and accommodations will be made
- available at reduced rate to students and others demonstrating
- financial need.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- 1993 PROGRAM COMMITTEE
-
- L O C A L:
-
- > Michael Benedikt
- Professor,
- School of Architecture
- The University of Texas at Austin
- Director, Graduate Interdisciplinary Studies
- CEO, Mental Technology Inc.
- email: benedikt@vitruvius.ar.utexas.edu
-
- > Richard Cutler,
- Researcher, School of Communications
- Department of Radio, TV and Film
- The University of Texas at Austin
- email: dcutler@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu
-
- > Don Fussell
- Director, Advanced Technology Group
- Applied Research Laboratories (ARL), and
- Professor of Computer Sciences
- The University of Texas at Austin
- email: fussell@cs.utexas.edu
-
- > Erik Josowitz
- Partner, ZERO-G Design
- erik@vitruvius.ar.utexas.edu
-
- > Marcos Novak
- Professor,
- The School of Architecture
- The University of Texas at Austin
- Director, Graduate Advanced Design Studies
- email: novak@vitruvius.ar.utexas.edu
-
- > Bruce Sterling,
- Writer, Austin.
- email: bruces@well.sf.ca.us
-
- > Allucquere Roseanne Stone
- Director, Center for the Study of Virtual Systems, and
- Professor, School of Communications
- The University of Texas at Austin,
- (recently of The University of California at San Diego)
- email: success@emx.cc.utexas.edu
-
- (I N T E R) N A T I O N A L:
-
- > Akira Asada
- Professor
- Kyoto Institute for Economic Research
- Kyoto University, Japan
- (Curator, The Museum Inside The Telephone Network,
- InterCommunication '91)
-
- > John Perry Barlow
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Wyoming, San Francisco
-
- > Michael Century
- Director of Program Development
- Banff Centre For The Arts,
- Alberta, Canada
-
- > David Gelernter
- Professor of Computer Science
- Yale University
-
- > Robert Jacobson
- CEO, Worldesign
- Seattle, Wa.
- (Formerly of HITLab)
-
- > Brenda Laurel
- Researcher,
- Interval Research Group
- Palo Alto, Ca.
- (Formerly: Telepresence Research, Inc.)
-
- > William Mitchell
- Dean, School of Architecture and Planning
- MIT, Cambridge, Ma.
-
- > J. Wesley Regian
- Senior Scientist
- Armstrong Laboratory
- Brooks AFB, Texas
-
- > Warren Robinett,
- Director, Head-Mounted Display Project
- Dept. of Computer Science
- University of North Carolina.
-
- > Martin Tuori
- Keyword Office Technologies
- Calgary, Alberta
- (Formerly: Director of Strategic Research
- Alias Research Inc. Toronto.)
-
- > Alan Wexelblatt,
- Advanced Human Interface Group
- MIT Media Lab, Ma.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-