René's URL Explorer Experiment


Title: esoteric.codes interviews

Open Graph Title: esoteric.codes

X Title: esoteric.codes

Description: Languages, platforms, and systems that break from the norms of computing

Open Graph Description: Languages, platforms, and systems that break from the norms of computing

X Description: Languages, platforms, and systems that break from the norms of computing

Mail addresses
//contact@esoteric.codes

Opengraph URL: https://esoteric.codes/

X: @EsotericCodes

direct link

Domain: esoteric.codes

apple-mobile-web-app-capableyes
apple-mobile-web-app-status-bar-styleblack
application-nameesoteric.codes
msapplication-TileColor#FFFFFF
msapplication-TileImage/mstile-144x144.png
msapplication-square70x70logo/mstile-70x70.png
msapplication-square150x150logo/mstile-150x150.png
msapplication-wide310x150logo/mstile-310x150.png
msapplication-square310x310logo/mstile-310x310.png
copyrightesoteric.codes
languageen-US
og:localeen_US
og:typewebsite
og:site_nameesoteric.codes
og:imagehttps://esoteric.codes/images/EsotericCodes_logo.png
og:image:width1024
og:image:height1024
twitter:imagehttps://esoteric.codes/images/EsotericCodes_logo.png

Links:

https://esoteric.codes/rss
https://esoteric.codes/
ESOTERIC.CODEShttps://esoteric.codes/
About esoteric.codes...https://esoteric.codes/about/
INTERVIEWShttps://esoteric.codes/interviews
See all interviews here.https://esoteric.codes/interviews
https://esoteric.codes/blog/100-rabbits
100 Rabbitshttps://esoteric.codes/blog/100-rabbits
Perhaps best known for their esoteric livecoding language ORCΛ, 100 Rabbits (Rekka and Devine) have a creative practice that seamlessly crosses from the esoteric to the practical. Living on a boat and relying primarily on solar energy, they create their own tools to avoid the impracticalities and wastefulness of commercial software. Their work has a rare coherence of thought and design that bridges art, code, and life. https://esoteric.codes/blog/100-rabbits
ais523 (2011 Interview)https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-ais523
As the creator of languages like Underload, and an administrator of the esolangs.org wiki, ais523 talks through what makes esolangs interesting and challenging vs thematic and gimmicky. https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-ais523
https://esoteric.codes/blog/ais523-interview-2017
ais523 (2017 Interview)https://esoteric.codes/blog/ais523-interview-2017
In this second interview with ais523, we discuss his experiments at finding 'the essence of programming,' using analog computing, extreme minimalism, and a deletionist model of computation https://esoteric.codes/blog/ais523-interview-2017
Alex McLeanhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-alex-mclean
Alex was a key developer of live coding as a musical practice, and, with Nick Collins, created the Algorave concept. Alex has developed software for coding-as-performance, including TidalCycles. https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-alex-mclean
Allison Parrishhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-allison-parrish
Allison Parrish is a poet and programmer who researches and makes art about language, often in the context of computation and the Internet. She is the creator of the everyword Twitterbot and the author most recently of Articulations, a book of generative poems from an algorithm which extracts linguistic features from over two million lines of public domain poetry, then traces fluid paths between the lines based on their similarities. https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-allison-parrish
https://esoteric.codes/blog/a-look-at-algorithmic-theatre-with-yesterday
Annie Dorsenhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/a-look-at-algorithmic-theatre-with-yesterday
Annie's work brings engagement with code to theatre, with experimental works where performers (human and non-) act on generated music or texts. https://esoteric.codes/blog/a-look-at-algorithmic-theatre-with-yesterday
Ben Olmsteadhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-ben-olmstead
Ben is an early esolanger, whose Malbolge, a language created in a single afternoon, is still considered the most challenging to code; he gives insight into the early days of esolangs. https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-ben-olmstead
Chris Presseyhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-chris-pressey
Chris has been making esolangs before they had a name; he helped foster the community through the mailing list where much of the early discussion took place, and is responsible for the enormously influential Befunge language, among many others. https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-chris-pressey
https://esoteric.codes/blog/david-madore
David Madorehttps://esoteric.codes/blog/david-madore
David Madore is responsible for Unlambda, one of the best-known and most-confounding esolangs of all time. An accomplished mathematician, Madore also produced languages that cross from natural numbers into infinity, but may be incompatible with our Universe https://esoteric.codes/blog/david-madore
David Morgan-Marhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/david-morgan-mar
David has created some of the best-known esolangs, including Chef and Piet, which exress code within other rule-based systems, and Whenever, a language that overturns a key element of how code is controlled. https://esoteric.codes/blog/david-morgan-mar
Don Woodshttps://esoteric.codes/blog/don-woods
Before brainfuck and Befunge, there was INTERCAL. Don Woods discusses the creation of this pioneering esolang and how he looks at geek culture today. https://esoteric.codes/blog/don-woods
Eric S. Raymondhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-eric-s-raymond
Eric, best known for his work in the free software / open source movement, is also responsible for developing C-INTERCAL in 1990, a critical moment for esolangs, from the 70s language INTERCAL, perhaps the very first esolang https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-eric-s-raymond
https://esoteric.codes/blog/evan-buswell
Evan Buswellhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/evan-buswell
Evan Buswell sees the history of computer science as completely suffused with the anxiety about the possibility of code changing state. Here he explores alternatives that embrace this anxiety and see where it leads https://esoteric.codes/blog/evan-buswell
https://esoteric.codes/blog/jon-corbett
Jon Corbetthttps://esoteric.codes/blog/jon-corbett
Corbett discusses how Cree#, which began as a "Processing for Indigenous Languages," grew into a suite of tools: a full-fledged Cree-based programming language, associated keyboard, and a toolkit to bring other Indigenous languages into computation https://esoteric.codes/blog/jon-corbett
Keymakerhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/keymaker
Keymaker created one of my favorite languages, Unnecessary. In this, the very first interview for esoteric.codes (from January 2011), Keymaker discusses his work in esolanging and in brainfuck programming https://esoteric.codes/blog/keymaker
https://esoteric.codes/blog/martin-ender
Martin Enderhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/martin-ender
Martin Ender creates 2D languages of unusual topologies, with code arranged in hexagons, triangles, or using registers arranged in icosohedral structures. We discuss the aesthetics of Funges and golfing languages, and how to both make a complex esolang clear enough for programmers to be able to engage with its central premise. https://esoteric.codes/blog/martin-ender
https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-martin-kleppe
Martin Kleppehttps://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-martin-kleppe
Martin created (or, in a sense, discovered) JSFuck, an esoteric approach to JavaScript. His other work similarly deals with code as a self-referential medium. https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-martin-kleppe
Ramsey Nasser https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-ramsey-nasser
Ramsey explores alternate computer histories and examines the biases of code through his languages and environments https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-ramsey-nasser
Scott Feeneyhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-scott-feeney
Scott founded esolangs.org, the indispensable depository of esolang knowledge. Here he talks about the history of the form and the key role esoprogrammers play. https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-scott-feeney
https://esoteric.codes/blog/winnie-soon
Winnie Soonhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/winnie-soon
Winnie's academic research and artistic practice, is at the forefront of critical code studies. Her thesis centers on the animated throbber, the marker of code liveness. She has been awarded the Top-Ranked LABS Abstracts 2017 by Leonardo and the Winner of The 2018 Aarhus University Research Foundation PhD award, as well as the Expanded Media Award for Network Culture at Stuttgarter Filmwinter among many others. Currently, she is Assistant Professor at the Department of Digital Design and Information Studies, teaching Aesthetic Programming and Digital Culture. https://esoteric.codes/blog/winnie-soon
https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-wouter-van-oortmerssen
Wouter van Oortmerssenhttps://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-wouter-van-oortmerssen
Wouter created FALSE, the language which inspired Befunge and brainfuck, launching esolangs as we know them today. He also created the once-enormously-popular (non-esoteric) Amiga E language. https://esoteric.codes/blog/interview-with-wouter-van-oortmerssen
https://esoteric.codes/blog/yayimhere-interview
yayimherehttps://esoteric.codes/blog/yayimhere-interview
yayimhere's dream-inspired work uncovers subtle anomalies and contradictions in the strict logic of minimalist systems. Discusses self modification, string rewriting, functional programming, counter machines, and languages like Karvity, Utral, and many others. https://esoteric.codes/blog/yayimhere-interview
https://esoteric.codes/blog/zzo38
Zzo38https://esoteric.codes/blog/zzo38
See the full list of interviews here.https://esoteric.codes/interviews
https://zkm.de/en/person/daniel-temkin
http://www.artswriters.org/grant/grantees/grantee/daniel_temkin
http://www.artswriters.org/grant/grantees/grantee/daniel_temkin
http://signalculture.org/dtemkin.html#.WybiXKdKjD4
https://esoteric.codes/rss
Daniel Temkinhttp://danieltemkin.com
CC Attribution 4.0 International licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
More about the sitehttps://esoteric.codes/about/

Viewport: width=device-width, initial-scale=1, shrink-to-fit=no


URLs of crawlers that visited me.