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« Prenez une page Web, mettez-y une image vide de 1000 x 1000 pixels, et proposez à qui le souhaite d'acheter chaque pixel disponible au prix unitaire de 1$. Bravo, vous venez de créer un business susceptible de vous rapporter un million de dollars, qui s'appellera, en toute logique, "The Million Dollar Homepage". » Alex TEW The Million Dollar Homepage
ThimothyGaewsky: « ErasedJPEG Image Found on Google Image Search of Robert Rauschenberg'sErased Willem de Kooning Drawing (PS-CS3) », 2009 “Using the erase tool in Adobe Photoshop CS3, I erased a jpeg image of Robert Rauschenberg's erased Willem de Kooning drawing, which I found doing a Google image search.” ErasedWillem de Kooning Drawing by Robert Rauschenberg, 1953
“You might look at this and think "What's the point?" or "how does this relate to my business?" Think of this as an example of how to quickly, easily, and inexpensively get 10,000 people to do something for you. Today it is sheep, but it could just as easily be choices of color combinations for car interiors, evaluation of some logos for your business, selection of most important features when choosing a vacation spot, and so forth.” Aaron Koblin : The Sheep Market (2007)
Approximate collection rate :11 sheep/hour Collection period :40 days Rejected sheep: 662 Average Wage : $.69/hour Time spent drawing (average/sheep) : 105 seconds Unique IP addresses : 7599 Aaron Koblin : The Sheep Market (2007)
« The artwork will take an impossibly long time to complete. Exhausting the possibilities of the first 32-pixel row takes over a year on most computers. Extending that to the second row will take 6 billion years on a PC with a Pentium processor (a few billion less on a Pentium III).» John F. Simon : Every Icon (1997)
John F. Simon : Every Icon (1997) – édition limitée « I'm the 63rd person to buy the artwork. Simon compiled the purchase date into the applet, so mine displays how far the class has gotten since it was created on May 15, 2000. I enjoy the piece for its glimpse of the infinite. I love the idea that a Java class could run for my lifetime and beyond, displaying a unique image each moment it is viewed that represents the passage of time since it began, iterating towards the end of a loop it will never reach. At some point, I'd like to move this class to a solar-powered PDA, tablet PC, or another self-sustaining device so it can run forever and be inflicted on my heirs. »