Bob,

As James points out, all's fine as long as technology works the way
it's supposed to. Then you don't need to understand how it works.
Glitch art breaks technology.

On Tue, Mar 6, 2012 at 5:01 AM,  <ja...@jwm-art.net> wrote:
> Haha but you might want to engage when for whatever reason your water supply 
> ceases! We had a power cut yesterday and were reminded just how much we do 
> that requires electric that we take for granted. Without the computer the 
> obvious thing to do was to read a book but that's a little difficult in the 
> dark!
> James
>
> Sent using BlackBerry® from Orange
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: bob catchpole <bobcatchp...@yahoo.co.uk>
> Sender: netbehaviour-boun...@netbehaviour.org
> Date: Tue, 6 Mar 2012 08:27:03
> To: NetBehaviour for networked distributed 
> creativity<netbehaviour@netbehaviour.org>
> Reply-To: bob catchpole <bobcatchp...@yahoo.co.uk>,
>        NetBehaviour for networked distributed creativity
>        <netbehaviour@netbehaviour.org>
> Subject: Re: [NetBehaviour] Can glitch art go public?
>
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-- 
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Pall Thayer
artist
http://pallthayer.dyndns.org
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