Nine (@b99dr) • Hey
Forget your troubles and just get happy.
Publications
- Don't be greedy for meaningless people or things. How can you free up the hands that are carrying garbage to receive gifts? On the new journey, the past will return to zero, and love and hate will be free. Don’t look back on the past, and don’t settle for the future.
- Lens-Native Spaces should be on Lens-Native Apps
@lens/buttrfly @lens/bonsai @lens/p00ls
- I found a light…
- High calorie intake tonight 😂
Gm fam ..happy Wednesday 😍🙌
- Good morning!!! ✨💛
- 💥 @Scroll_ZKP Markes dashboard live
🔗scroll.io/sessions
✅Just connect wallet & check your marks
✅More ETH for long = More marks
✅This is season zero
📆Soon season 1
🪙I got 917 in one of my wallet
🤔What about u? Post📸 in comments
😂Did u pass?
💙Like
🔁RT
- Make your own “what is Lens” mini video and I’ll create a community mash up video with them all.
- Thank you for inviting me to #Galverse Lens @Kay_DF_ 🌠
Posting this from Firefly on @realmasknetwork, too cool~
Next, we should use the .galverse domain! https://scarlett.galverse/ 😍
- Recommend people Σ੧(❛□❛✿)
@lens/kipto @lens/aoifeodwyer @lens/galverse @lens/jacqs @lens/kayakiko @lens/benoit_tokyo @lens/wailoaloa @lens/mooncath @lens/darkshadow
- Luz de Thamires
My music always starts with a sketch. Before sitting down at the piano, I envision how I want a new piece to sound. I think about the gestures, mode, and feeling before I get the exact notes. I like imagining the music first before writing it down. This initial idea turns into a whole new piece!
- 📍**Oman** 🇴🇲
Traveling to Oman: basic information👇🏽
CURRENCY: The currency is the Omani rial, one of the strongest currencies in the world, with 1 OMR equaling approximately 2.5 €. Most places accept card payments, so you don't need much cash.
RENTING A CAR: It's the best way to get around Oman. Fuel is very cheap, around 0.6 € per liter, and the roads are excellent. The daily rental price for a car is around 30+ € (we rented a 4x4 for about 60€ per day). They took a deposit of around 100 €, and the insurance works in a way that if you cause damage, you pay a maximum of 400 € (the rest is covered by the insurance company). Depending on the agency, there may be a daily mileage limit; for us, it was 200 km (anything over is charged extra), but we stayed within that limit. There are many rental car agencies; we went with the first one we found in Muscat (called Mouj Muscat rent a car).
TAXIS: We only used them in Muscat. Long distances can be covered in a short time because the city is spacious. We paid around 12-13 € for a 20-25 km ride. The taxi app is OTaxi, but we couldn't install it, so we looked for vehicles with that sign.
PUBLIC TRANSPORT: We didn't use it, but I saw that there are plenty of buses, and Google Maps show the routes well.
HOTELS: There are many hotels, and they are quite cheap. You can find decent hotels for 2 people for around 50 € per night in all locations. I'll share our hotels in separate posts because we stayed in several cities.
Oman is a very safe country, one of the safest in the world, both for locals and tourists. Although it's a Muslim country, they are very open-minded, so there aren't any specific dress rules, except in religious institutions.
If you've been to Oman, share your experience and add any useful information. I'm here for any additional questions ❤️
- 📍**Muscat, Oman** 🇴🇲
The capital of Oman is Muscat. Muscat is completely different from the capitals of neighboring countries. It's a city that expands outward rather than upward. You won't find skyscrapers, bright city lights, and the like in Muscat. It maintains its oriental charm, even in its newest parts.
About one and a half million people live here, including a percentage of people from our region. Oman offers good employment opportunities for foreigners, although it's uncertain how long that will last due to the "Omanization" policy, aiming to have more locals working in all positions, from the lowest to the highest. Therefore, you'll see many locals working in various jobs alongside Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, Filipinos, and others.
Parts of Oman experience extreme heat, starting from May and lasting until the end of September. However, Oman also has mountains where the climate is different. Thanks to these mountains, the heat is more bearable. It doesn't feel like stepping into a sauna compared to neighboring countries.
For our first day in Muscat, we chose to explore the Muttrah Souq, then visit the Royal Opera House, and ended the day with a European/Oriental vibe in Al Mouj, a part of the city that reminded me of Porto Montenegro. In Al Mouj, we met with Anja and Igor, a couple from Serbia, who helped us plan our upcoming days, and their plan seems fantastic for visiting all the worthwhile locations.
When we told Anja that we extended our stay in Kuwait because we liked it, and that's why we were late coming to Oman, she just smiled and said she's waiting to see how much longer we'll extend our stay in Oman, or if we'll even return home... I quickly began to understand her remark...
Did you imagine the capital of Oman like this? 🇴🇲🌴✨
- A short self-narrated video I made for my artist fellowship with @lens/refraction X @lens/lens a few months ago 💚
**Sound on!** 🔊✨
- GM! From here…
- GN Lens ✨
Many nights I dream awake with many gigs that are about to come
- I used to play music in the streets for many years...
Nowadays my streets may seem more digital, but music keeps playing
GM $Bonsai fam ✨
- Lost to find
- Little slices of New York for the Orbers
- Web3 builders, when you support dozens of wallets, does it positively impact sign-up conversions?
Serious question. I’m skeptical, so many edge cases, and poor UX’s out of your control.
I may consider supporting the Coke and Pepsi wallets, and abstraction using traditional sign up methods.
- There’s always room for more diverse content on Lens because Lens frens know that diversity is the key 🤓🔑
What kind of content do you want to see more of on @lens/lens ?
Drop the emoji for the type of content you want to see more of in the comments! 👇
- Chinese beauty
- gm, summer is coming! ☀️ what are your weekend plans?
i’m heading to an art show this afternoon.
((testing cross-post with phaver))
- Happening in 3 hours, at 5 pm CET
The Ultimate test of "Who could lie best" , aka Among US.
@lens/ruthless @lens/asamisscream @lens/chaoticmonk @lens/kontak @lens/ruyriver @lens/pyroxx @lens/b0gie @lens/rathod
Join any pov
https://bloomers.tv/b0gie
https://bloomers.tv/chaoticmonk
https://bloomers.tv/asamisscream
https://bloomers.tv/pyroxx
https://bloomers.tv/kontak
- My First $ 00 Token Mint 🙌
" Emergence "
Wish you a good evening y'all 💙
2000 $ 00 token
2/2
@lens/lens @lens/orb @lens/hey @lens/creators @lens/photographers @lens/buttrfly @lens/pinsta @lens/ornaart
- gm friends 🌅
NYC Vibes
1/1
36x48" in. acrylic on canvas + NFT pairing
(available)
#alimo #nft #fineart #painting
- Seeing this picture makes me sad.
- Maybe one day there will be a way to restore original vision without any side effects.
- It would be better if I wasn't nearsighted
- “Smoke Bomb”
Experimenting with a 99% referral reward for reposting this stinker.
- Long time no see!
I'm currently working on a new nft collection and want to share the creation process 🌱
- Explore Our Guitar Solos: Which One Strikes a Chord?
Hey music lovers! 🎸 We’ve just released a new video featuring some guitar solos from our recent performance at Arlene’s Grocery. We’re proud of how it turned out and would love to hear your thoughts.
Check out the riffs and let us know in the comments which solo caught your ear. Was it the vibe, the technique, or the energy that resonated with you? We’d really like to know what you think!
- 🔥😮💨 This text might just be the clearest explanation yet of where my curatorial partner Vienna and I stand in our Technostalgia research and curatorial project.
Coming from an academic background, we’ve tried to provide a balanced narrative: not too scholarly, yet still substantial. 🧠
We’ve only just begun, with plenty of exciting developments already in the pipeline. 🚀
A huge thank you to ONBD, SuperRare, Zora, Massage Magazine, and Outland for the support and assistance they’ve provided so far. TYSM to all the artists we’ve curated and those we will in the future — <3
🔥 Visuals: Nicole Ruggiero x Inès Alpha, Emi Kusano, Raquel Meyers, Kyt, and polygon1993.
Please read and collect if you want to help Vienna and me to have a website for this project. Merci x 1000 🙏
🖤 @lens/lens @lens/orb @lens/mariapaula
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♡ ༘ ⋆ CURATING TECHNOSTALGIA BEYOND AESTHETICS ♡ ༘ ⋆
Vienna Kim & me, April 2024 ( •ॢᴗ•ॢ⋈)
We e-met during the bull run of 2022 while freelancing for SuperRare. Very quickly, we found we had a shared interest for early web aesthetics, Animal Crossing memes, Y2K subcultures, and translucent collectible electronics. We wanted to investigate what it was, exactly, that made such content so appealing to us, working off a hunch that we surely weren’t the only ones to feel this way, and realized that the common denominator in the media and culture we loved was that each of them exuded the hazy yet somehow comforting allure of technostalgia. These observations and passions eventually fueled the creation of LAN Party, our collaborative curatorial project that, in its first arc, aims to critically explore the concept of technostalgia within the Web3 space.
Whilst we love the sentimentality and the aesthetics of artworks that explore technostalgia, we’re not just here for the vibes. We aim for this focus to serve as a unique lens through which we examine the pulse of contemporary digital culture, drawing on our personal observations, existing research, and what artists are currently producing. Our goal is to shed light on the newly found adoration for technostalgia in Web3, delineating its complexities and measuring its influence on the present and future cultural landscape.
We have already explored the aesthetic practices and the tradition of collecting and curating within Web3, positioning it as an extension of the historical and widespread human pursuit of gathering. We’ve also observed that the influence of rapid technological progress has resulted in a resurgence of technostalgic visuals and art forms, such as ASCII, pixel or low-poly art, signaling a shift away from powerful AI-generated or CGI creations. Through these reflections, we aim to explore how technostalgia is shaping our future, especially as Web3 underscores its pivotal role in today’s digital cultural landscape.
Here are some of our thoughts:
UNDERSTANDING TECHNOSTALGIA ☆゚.*・。゚
Technostalgia is an emotional reaction–often sentimental, close to a longing–that is most commonly associated with technology from the 1980s - 2000s. It pines for the machines and the internet we fell for beautiful yet flawed, with a broken design that felt at once frustrating and serendipitous. This specific strain of nostalgia has the power to act as a retro-tech time machine, whisking us back to the era of chunky pixels, ‘90s web interfaces, and low-poly graphics.
In the Web3 space, this blast from the past is particularly relevant. On top of the allure of the aesthetic layer, technostalgia in Web3 also reflects a yearning for the original values of the Internet: decentralization, transparency, and democratization. This sentiment influences the development and perception of the Web3 ecosystem, driving a desire to recapture the possibilities and freedom associated with the ‘Wild West’ days of the internet, the read-only web, or Web 1.0.
Technostalgia has taken on new prominence in response to the dizzying pace of technological advancement, especially with the palpable tension and anxiety society has developed around surveillance capitalism, data protection, and AI proliferation. As new technologies and systems quickly replace old ones, we often find ourselves missing the tech we used to play with in the '90s or '00s. This could be anything from the sound of a dial-up modem connecting to the network, the feel of a GameBoy or Tamagotchi in our hands, the Uh Oh! of ICQ or the sight of the Windows 95 startup screen. While these memories evoke an attraction for the simplicity and beauty of past technologies, they also present a paradox: whilst our society seems all-in on the advancements of the present, we grapple with the allure of the less efficient, clunky, buggy, and yet emotionally resonant tech of yesteryears, highlighting the slippery (and very human) state of alternating between progress and sentimentality.
TECHNOSTALGIA IN WEB3 ☆゚.*・。゚
Web3 is a new phase of the internet that is built on blockchains. It represents a shift from the current centralized model controlled by a handful of corporations to a decentralized model where use and access are controlled by community-run networks. The evolution of the internet can be described in three stages. Web1 was the first draft of the internet which proliferated in the 1990s and early 2000s, where people mostly used the internet to read web pages and chat. Web2 came about in the mid-2000s, with the emergence of social media platforms like Myspace, Facebook, and Twitter, empowering users to create their own content.
Web3 is the next phase, where users not only read and write content but also own it.
In the context of Web3, technostalgia takes on new significance, as it allows us to appreciate the journey of the internet from its inception to its current state, and now towards Web3 in full effect. Understanding the evolution of the internet from its origin to the present day is crucial because it provides us with a roadmap of previous innovations and challenges, informing our decisions and strategies as we build a more decentralized, transparent, and user-empowered digital world. This historical perspective is key to ensuring that Web3 not only replicates the successes of previous iterations but also learns from their shortcomings, notably utilizing the blockchain to enable a more thoughtful and inclusive future for the internet. The result: forging a path that honors the past while boldly innovating for tomorrow.
TECHNOSTALGIA AND DIGITAL ART ☆゚.*・。゚
In the context of digital art, technostalgia acts as a theme, sentiment, and lens for critique. This can take the form of adopting retro tech aesthetics such as pixel art or low-poly 3D renders, to reappropriating and/or making use of obsolete technologies. We can divide these approaches largely into two categories: The Sentimental and The Critical.
_1. The Sentimental_
Artists and artworks that adopt The Sentimental approach to technostalgia often reappropriate the aesthetics of retro, 90s, or Y2K technologies and present them in a way that evokes a strong emotional reaction in the viewer as they relate what they see in the work with their own experiences and memories of these technologies. Our first online exhibition on SuperRare, The Crypto Pawnshop, explored the sentimental approach to technostalgia in depth, developing the visual imaginary of a fictional ‘crypto pawnshop’ that stocked a series of gadgets and gizmos that upon first view appeared to be reminiscent of the real-life objects we used to own, and yet they are purely speculative, often exhibiting a broken or non-functional design. The dissociation of these imaginary objects from that which existed concretely demonstrates the anesthetizing effect of technostalgia; our flawed memories often over-apply sentimental or aesthetic value to these objects which, in reality, would often glitch or fail. By leaning into this dissociation, these artworks dive wholly into the purely ‘sentimental’ value of Technostalgia, favoring emotional reminiscences over factual verity.
Some artists that have adopted the sentimental approach to technostalgia include Emi Kusano, Kyt, POLYGON1993, and Nicole Ruggiero, to name a few.
_2. The Critical_
The Critical approach to exploring technostalgia takes on radically different methodologies to that of The Sentimental. Often, these artists directly employ obsolete technological tools (for example, older models of computers such as the Commodore 64), to analyze our society’s current relationship with outdated tech. These artists often emphasize the importance of retaining a critical stance when considering our relationship with technology and the speed at which it is developing, and often also treat environmental concerns, such as what happens to all the technological waste that accumulates once these machines are at their term’s end.
Notably, artist Dev Harlan stakes his claim within the ‘Critical’ camp in his essay “Notes on Retrofuturism” for Right Click Save magazine, declaring: “Nostalgia is a longing for an imagined past which allows one to gloss over unpleasant or undesirable histories to cope with the present. In this way, technostalgia privileges an imagined history of technology and an anesthetized view of that history. But sentimentalism is the opposite of criticality.” He goes on to describe his fascination with collecting discarded electronics, with an impulse that was initially motivated by technostalgia but quickly evolved into critiquing the wastefulness of the tech sector. He gathered and reappropriated hundreds of outdated models of computers, motivated by the motto “obsolescence is a lack of imagination”, to create gaming lounges or digital art installations to prolong the life of these machines that had been discarded for newer, shinier models.
Raquel Meyers is another artist who uses obsolete technologies, such as a Commodore 64 computer, to create her digital artworks. The use of older models circumscribes the artist’s visual output in the style of computer artworks from the 1980s, automatically transcribing onto them a technostalgic aesthetic. And yet, the artist does not pander to sentimentality in her work, instead opting to make use of obsolete technologies to highlight urgent contemporary concerns. For example, in her work Cuando la casa se quema, la obsolescencia es resistencia [When the House Burns Down, Obsolescence is Resistance], which we curated in our second exhibition on Zora, TEXTSCAPE: ASCII Art, Textmode & its Derivatives, the artist creates a scrolling narrative of a house burning down, and the ecological and societal effects this has upon its surrounding community. The work is, of course, a metaphor for our current climate crisis, but the work is also self-reflexive in that it uses an object of obsolescence as an act of resistance (against technocapitalism? The effects of e-waste on climate change?), a concept that is also reflected in the title of the work.
CURATING TECHNOSTALGIA ☆゚.*・。゚
These two distinct poles of technostalgic approaches in digital art inform the way we can curate such artworks. Indeed, curating technostalgia in 2024 can be a double-edged sword in a couple of ways. For example, presenting works of art that fall into ‘The Sentimental’ camp may appear diametrically opposed to those in ‘The Critical’ camp, and yet both are crucial as a means of holding up a mirror to how cultures online, and more specifically Web3, respond to the phenomenon of technostalgia. Both camps co-exist, and so we aim for the works that we curate to also demonstrate this without favoring one approach over the other.
In addition, whilst curating technostalgia may serve as a digital conservation effort by capturing the essence of technological evolution, it also risks idealizing outdated technologies, potentially hindering innovation. There’s a delicate balance between valuing our digital heritage and fostering a forward-looking mindset in the ever-evolving tech landscape. After all, very little good comes from dwelling on the past.
Moreover, the role of curation in shaping the future of technostalgia cannot be overstated. As our lives become ever more digitized, our experiences and memories are ever more encapsulated in digital formats. Curating these digital artifacts is akin to creating a time capsule that allows future generations to access and understand the digital trends of our era. It’s a way of preserving the ‘digital DNA’ of our society, which includes not only the technologies themselves but also the cultural and emotional contexts in which they exist.
It has been well-documented that the concept of curation has transcended the confines of trad museum spaces (for better or for worse). When it comes to digital artworks and artifacts, curatorial practices become a social process that encompasses the selection, interpretation, and negotiation of a wide array of embodied knowledge. This shift is particularly pronounced in the Web3 space, where the zones between consumer, creator, and curator are increasingly fluid. Within this nuanced landscape, curation plays a crucial role in developing the narrative of technostalgia. It’s about constructing a story that is linked with collective memory while opening a dialogue about the way tech runs through our society.
We, as curators in the Web3 space, have the unique opportunity to influence how technostalgia is perceived and understood, ensuring that it remains a relevant and insightful aspect of our cultural discourse.
v&b
- Anime + web3 + AI = a new way to experience the culture of art and anime as a whole
- I’ve stated from the beginning my goal is to get EVERYONE I KNOW on @lens/lens. Even if it takes fomo 😈 I’d of course rather use the allure of efficient systems but I’ll take what i can get
- Tried painting the northern lights today. 🏔🌌Hopefully, someday will have the chance to witness the spectacle of the Northern Lights in person.