http://bit.ly/q8o3Tl Sculpture: Google Yellow Pages by Michael Mandiberg / Eyebeam Art + Technology Center Open Studios: Fall 2009 / 20091023.10D.55412.P1.L1 / SML

eyebeam.org/events/open-studios-fall-2009

Eyebeam is pleased to host Open Studios for its 2009 Senior Fellows, Resident Artists, and Student Residents at Eyebeam’s state-of-the-art design, research, and fabrication studio; showcasing video performance, wearable technologies, code and humor, party technology, and sustainablity design.

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Eyebeam is the leading not-for-profit art and technology center in the United States.

Founded in 1996 and incorporated in 1997, Eyebeam was conceived as a non-profit art and technology center dedicated to exposing broad and diverse audiences to new technologies and media arts, while simultaneously establishing and demonstrating new media as a significant genre of cultural production.

Since then, Eyebeam has supported more than 130 fellowships and residencies for artists and creative technologists; we've run an active education program for youth, artists' professional development and community outreach; and have mounted an extensive series of public programs, over recent years approximately 4 exhibitions and 40 workshops, performances and events annually.

Today, Eyebeam offers residencies and fellowships for artists and technologists working in a wide range of media. At any given time, there are up to 20 resident artists and fellows onsite at Eyebeam's 15,000-square foot Chelsea offices and Labs, developing new projects and creating work for open dissemination through online, primarily open-source, publication as well as a robust calendar of public programming that includes free exhibitions, lectures and panels, participatory workshops, live performances and educational series.

eyebeam.org

One of the unending qualities of the human being is the obsession with making lists. We care passionately about the rank our sports teams achieve, even if it means nothing. We chatter about magazine power lists as if they have an impact on reality.
The writer Nick Hornby even elevated the top 10 list to an almost religious level in his book High Fidelity, which essentially chronicles a middle-aged man’s internal struggle between his drive to make lists and his desire to make love.
Now British startup Top10.com hopes it can harness our nerdiest tendencies for fun and profit with a list-making service that has just gone live.
“We think when people are trying to discover and find new products, they want to see what other people have recommended,” said co-founder Tom Leathes when I spoke to him earlier. “Top tens are already ingrained in popular culture, so we’re starting with lists of things people are passionate about.”
The site has a simple premise: Users organize things into lists, which are then made public and shared with other users. Here, for example, is my list of top 10 pizza toppings and my top 10 technology blogs.
If enough users create lists that are similar to each other, the site can aggregated the rankings and provide a top 10 across all users. In the future, it plans to add filters so that users can see (for example) what their friends’ top songs are right now, or what other people in their city think are the best restaurants. It’s effectively taking the model used by review sites and loading it up with a heavy dose of human psychology.
Overall, it’s simple and intuitive, and pretty fun — for a while at least. The way you construct lists on the fly, adding images and text, reminds me a bit of Nextstop, a travel website that was bought by Facebook last year.

Fun is only part of it, though. Leathes doesn’t shy away from what his real objective is: to profit from recommending products to people.
“We want it to be about social recommendations,” he explained. “People love to talk about music, films, restaurants and so on. The challenging thing is that we want to monetize it in a way that’s seamless — so that it’s an end-to-end thing where you can recommend something, discover something and then go and buy it.”
The founding team — including Leathes and his co-founders Harry Jones and Alex Buttle — already have a good track record, building and selling three startups in the last few years. Their last, a broadband comparison site (also called Top10, they clearly kept the name as part of the deal), hit more than $ 10 million in revenues before it was sold to larger rival uSwitch earlier this year.
But while they have lots of experience as a team building web services, Top10 is their first foray into the social arena. So can it work?
Leathes admitted to me that the team deliberately reached out to investors with a good track record in the social web so that they could get help where they needed it. Those include Accel, Founder Collective and Bill Gross’s IdeaLab, who collectively saw fit to give the company a $ 3.5 million series A round.
So can they do it? The site certainly has a neat gimmick to draw people in, but until we see how many people sign up it’s too early to say.
The real problem may be that Top10?s success lies outside of its control.
The truth is that the social recommendations business is turning into a very crowded market. You have companies in all sorts of areas — generalists like Hunch and specialists such as GetGlue. And then there are trendy new startups like Berlin’s Amen, which has a different spin on list-making — you simply praise what you love or hate — but does it for much the same reason.
As if that wasn’t enough, beyond all of these startups there is also another little site that’s proven very successful at mining sentiment data for advertisers and retailers. You may have heard of it.
In fact, Facebook’s ability to gather data from its gazillion users and push new features out en masse could prove the biggest threat to any company trying to claw some market share in this space. Numbers released today by e-commerce site The Find suggest that the “Like” button — which reports suggest is set to expand in scope this week — is a powerful tool for making retailers more successful.
If the numbers are true, then the danger for all these social recommendation sites must be straightforward: Facebook could flip the switch and take out huge segment of the social recommendation business with a single, well-targeted strike.
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