"obscurant"
sorry I meant obscure.
K.
2013/1/19 Konstantinos Vasilakos <k.vasilakos_at_keele.ac.uk>:
> Hello, following up my recent thread, I gave yesterday an insight of the
> work I am doing these days. Students seem to be interested nowadays more and
> more on this characteristic of the laptop performance (the only concern for
> them is the learning of the language). Which might look as a threat for them
> on stage. From educative side I think live coding is growing more and more.
>
> A (good) sign of the times.
>
> Regardless of their knowledge they stare at the screen, and try to decode
> (might just by curiosity) what they see, nevertheless, they seem to be
> interested to look at it even not having the slightest idea of what is going
> on. Instead of the "obscurant" codes for them, I think they (audience) enjoy
> more than just seeing someone with glowing face and turn knobs on stage (
> which this might carry other qualities) without having any connection of
> what he is doing. This is already a step for the audience to grasp with even
> not understanding it.
>
> Thanks
> K.
>
>
>
>
--
konstantinosvasilakos.co.nr
Received on Sat Jan 19 2013 - 12:48:23 GMT