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[milano] RELOAD - reality hacking - 14 set 2003
by reload Monday, Sep. 08, 2003 at 5:58 PM mail: reload@autistici.org

RELOAD - reality hacking - 14 set 2003 - h 12.00 in via garigliano 10 a milano uno spazio si trasforma uno spazio nasce

Anni mesi giorni che reti e comunita' di individui intercambiano saperi,
progettano mondi, sperimentano giocattoli e dispositivi.
Veniamo da mille pensieri diversi, migranti della metropoli e della rete,
siamo in cerca di un luogo in cui, attraverso pratiche affini, creare uno spazio-tempo divergente.
Per riassemblare la realta', c'e' bisogno di un laboratorio che ne ricombini gli elementi. Vogliamo costruire, in una metropoli
fatta di false sicurezze e vere paure, un luogo di immaginario e sogni e carne e metallo e bit.

Il nostro profano cosciente ci racconta di tecnologia, infocomunicazione, condivisione, memi, partecipazione e molto molto altro.
4 punti cardinali non ci bastano piu'.

Con Marte mai cosi' vicino alla Terra, non c'e' un tempo migliore per una nuova
costellazione reticolare, per ricompilare un bioware entropico, per stupirci e
stupirvi con nuovi vivissimi effetti speciali.

14 settembre 2003
sui vostri schermi, nelle vostre vite, nelle vostre teste, nei vostri cuori
RELOAD - reality hacking
meeting point per chi vuole metterci cellule e sogni
Via Garigliano 10 - milano - ore 12.00
Uno spazio si trasforma, uno spazio nasce.
reload@autistici.org

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dove?
by michelinux Monday, Sep. 08, 2003 at 6:19 PM mail:

Ma in che citta'?

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milano
by blicero Monday, Sep. 08, 2003 at 6:49 PM mail:

corretto la cosa :))))))

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Sarebbe a dire?
by Migrante metropolitano Monday, Sep. 15, 2003 at 10:18 AM mail:

WOW, FIGO!
Ma che vuol dire?

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Che bella cosa,dietro l'ango
by rex516 Monday, Sep. 15, 2003 at 9:02 PM mail:

Che dire, mi auguro che sia una bella inziativa visto che ce ne sono altre [anzi dir che non ce ne sono inziative del ganere, fresche occupazioni in cittą]. Basta che emerga, l'importante,e di essere prenti in luoghi ormavi adagiati al degato sociale urbano, fatto di traffico, gente investita dalle strisce pedonali, gente che corre. Pochi spazi che danno un'opportunita di incontro, di confronto, di relazionarci, e di anche dire che magari si e contrari al questo sistema fatto di commercio e consumo, dove ognu ha il suo prezzo.

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Pipeline Attacks Cut Iraq's Oil Exports
by rex516 Tuesday, Jun. 15, 2004 at 10:56 PM mail:

Pipeline Attacks Cut Iraq's Oil Exports 43 minutes ago By DANICA KIRKA, Associated Press Writer BAGHDAD, Iraq - Insurgents stepped up their campaign against Iraq's infrastructure Tuesday, blasting two oil pipelines, cutting the country's oil exports and driving up world oil prices. Gunmen also attacked a convoy of civilian contractors, killing some of them. Authorities curbed oil exports through the Persian Gulf by half _ from an average of 1.85 million barrels per day to more than 800,000 barrels _ after saboteurs blasted the two pipelines on the Faw peninsula of southern Iraq. The attacks sent ripples through international petroleum markets. Contracts for U.S. light crude for July delivery jumped 81 cents in New York, before easing to $37.17 per barrel. July contracts of Brent crude rose 41 cents before retreating to $35.78, down 24 cents in late trading in London. Iraqi officials told Dow Jones Newswires they expected to have the damage repaired within a few days. However, petroleum analyst Paul Horsnell, the head of energy research at Barclays Capital in London, said that as a result of the blasts, Iraq would probably fail to meet its export target of 2 million barrels a day for June. Reviving petroleum exports is the key to restoring Iraq's economy after decades of war, international sanctions and Saddam Hussein's tyranny. However, repeated attacks have slowed the process of returning Iraq, with the world's second largest petroleum reserves after Saudi Arabia, to the forefront of global energy markets. Insurgents are targeting the infrastructure apparently to undermine confidence in the new government, which takes power June 30. On Monday, a car bomb killed 13 people in Baghdad, including three foreign engineers working to restore the electricity sector. Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt, the coalition deputy operations chief, said another convoy of contractors was ambushed Tuesday in Baghdad and that "some" people had been killed. He refused to give further details. A car bomb exploded Tuesday outside a coalition base near Hillah south of Baghdad, killing one Iraqi and wounding another, the U.S. military said. And gunmen killed an Iraqi police official in a town near Hillah as he went to work, the military said. Meanwhile, new allegations surfaced about the professionalism of the Iraqi police, who are due to assume greater responsibility for security after the formal end of the occupation June 30. On Tuesday, dozens of Iraqi Shiites complained that Shiite truck drivers who had sought refuge in a police station in the Sunni town of Fallujah were instead handed over to extremists, who killed them after they were unable to pay a ransom. Six of them were found dead Monday in a morgue in Ramadi, also a Sunni town. At a protest rally, a 12-year-old boy, Mohammed Khudeir, said he was among those allegedly handed over by the police to a hardline cleric. But the cleric and his followers let him go, apparently because of his age. "We tried to seek police protection, but the policemen handed us over," Mohammed said. He said the cleric "handed us over to a group of Arabs who spoke with non-Iraqi accents. I was tortured for a while, but then I was released." Mohammed said the insurgents killed his brother and uncle. One man, Alaa Mery, said that on June 8, he went to Fallujah to negotiate for the hostages' release. He said he met with some Syrians who identified themselves as members of the extremist Wahhabist sect and said they were holding the drivers because they collaborated with the Americans. The Syrians demanded the money, which the families could not pay, he said. "Fallujah clerics and people made a big fuss regarding Abu Ghraib torture, but now they are killing and mutilating Muslims," Mery said, referring to the American abuse of Iraqis at the Abu Ghraib prison. "They are not resistance. They are a copy of Saddam." Also Tuesday, differences emerged between the United States and Iraq's interim government over control of the Republican Palace, used as headquarters for chief administrator L. Paul Bremer. On his return Tuesday from the United States, interim President Ghazi al-Yawer said Iraq would insist on the return of the Republican Palace to Iraqi control. U.S. officials have said they intend to use the palace, located in the Green Zone along the Tigris River, for offices that cannot be accommodated in the U.S. Embassy, which formally opens with the end of the occupation. "There is no talk of inviting the United States to keep the Republican Palace as an embassy supplement," al-Yawer told reporters. "We asked that the Republican Palace be vacated in the fastest opportunity for us to use it as Iraqis, as a Republican Palace or a museum. Whatever we do with it is a matter for Iraqi sovereignty. It is a symbol of Iraqi sovereignty." Coalition spokesman Dan Senor said the future of the palace and other facilities in the Green Zone were under discussion with Iraqi authorities. He noted that the U.S. Embassy would be one of America's largest and "obviously we need substantial space, property, for the U.S. mission here." The Americans are also concerned about security if they are unable to hold on to most of the fortified Green Zone. Questions have been raised about the capabilities of the Iraqi police following recent incidents, including the Monday car bombing, after which youths looted the vehicles, burned an American flag and prompted both U.S. troops and Iraqi police to withdraw. Copyright 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. printable version HEADLINES Pipeline Attacks Cut Iraq's Oil Exports Iraq Neighbors Welcome Interim Government Diplomats Near Agreement to Censure Iran Abu Ghraib General Says She's a Scapegoat Bush Outlines New Afghanistan Initiatives French Anti-Terror Police Make Arrests Westerners Seek Protection in Saudi Arabia Bribery Case Against Sharon Dropped

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ci siamo
by rex516 Sunday, Jul. 18, 2004 at 8:23 PM mail:

ci siamo anche noi in compagnia di omar qua in isola

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