[iDC] Shelf Life and the turbulence site
Helen Thorington
newradio at turbulence.org
Thu Nov 15 21:59:53 UTC 2007
Shelf life. I sigh just hearing the words. Turbulence did well in
maintaining early work – for awhile. From ’96 to ’05, we “lost” only
a few of our works – The first was a work called “Not Walls” which
made use of Apple's QuickDraw 3D and a 3dmf plug-in like Whurlplug to
create 3-D constructions. Quick Draw 3 D and the plug-in are no
longer available. And if you do happen to have them (I do), they will
not work with newer browsers or on newer operating systems. “Not
Walls” was made for Netscape Navigator 3.0.
One of my very favorite works, “Radio Stare” (’97) became inactive
soon thereafter. “Radio Stare” was designed to receive and play a
MIDI file and a RealAudio stream at the same time, along with a Flash
animation. When the piece was created this was possible. New
generations of the various media players handle only the one media
type they are intended to play and ignore others. The main culprit
here was RealPlayer which grabbed the computers' audio card to play
its stream, and locked out other players from playing MIDI. Without
all three streams/loops running, “Radio Stare” is not the piece the
artist intended.
But it has been recently that the truth of survival has come home.
Turbulence has a new server. And of course we’ve upgraded … MySQL,
Tomcat, and so on, all new versions.
Transitioning the older work has been hell, with only a few of the
artists so far agreeing to update their work. And yet the price of
leaving it on the old server is costly. A recent air-conditioning
failure at our host site set the fan in our old server working at
unaccustomed intensity. It died and with it went our media disk. You
can no longer hear the RealAudio files on Turbulence, which means our
multi-location performances (as well as an archive of New American
Radio works) are no longer available online… unless I can find the
original recordings and transfer them to another format. Real no
longer offers a 15 stream server for free as they did in '96. What
they do offer (with the exception of a 5-stream server) is much too
costly.
As an exhibition (as well as a commissioning) site, we have run into
other problems as well. Chief among them: the absence of funding for
equipment or administration. If you’re trying to maintain a site with
many works on it and are not “institution-affiliated”, the outlook is
not good.
I wish I had better news to give on the subject of shelf-life.
PS. Some organizations have the resources to think about preservation
(here’s an excellent review of the New Media and Social Memory
symposium and associated project meetings at the Berkeley Art Museum/
Pacific Film Archive--sponsored by the NEA-funded Archiving the Avant-
Garde project, part of the Variable Media Network—by Matt
Kirschenbaum: ( http://turbulence.org/blog/2007/02/02/shall-these-
bits-live/); for us, it would mean no longer commissioning work
because we can’t manage to do both. We’ve opted for the latter.
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