Buy viagra online: yesterday, I attended the 13th annual Microwave New Media Festival’s Keynote Conference in Kowloon Park in Hong Kong.There were a number of interesting talks please see the exhibition website for more information.
I was really impressed with several of Natalie Jeremijenko’s recent projects, specifically a piece called Fwish; buy viagra online. Buy viagra online: the Fwish Interface is a grid of robotics buoys that monitor the dissolved oxygen levels in the water and sense fish presence. Buy viagra online: colored LED lights blink when fish swim beneath the buoys.

Schematic drawing for Fwish interface
The goal of Fwish is to collect and communicate real time data to the public about the water quality and fish activity. Fwish recently launched in NYC, though the project has been in development for several years. Jerimijenko and her collaborators needed to complete a great deal of negotiation and paperwork with the public authorities to gain permission to launch the buoys in the river.
Video available herE: http://vimeo.com/408474


Tappening is an activist group bent on spreading rumors about bottled water using the same techniques that bottled water companies use to spread rumors about tap water.
The lies include a multitude of tactics from the funny buy cialis online, “Evian is actually collected from the sweat that freely flows from the armpits of Gerard Depardieu,” to the more sensitive, “Bottled water causes blindness in puppies.”

In addition to the clever campaign of bottled water lies, Tappening’s website offers invaluable information on the truth about bottled and tap water and includes a database of quality tap water around the United States.For those in NYC, tap into the action with TapIt, an iPhone app that identifies cafes around the city providing a free fill-up service for reusable bottles.
Thanks to Coolhunting and Michael Mandiberg for bringing this ridiculously funny ad campaign to my attention; buy cialis online.
Order viagra online: i just got Eve Mosher’s summer newsletter and this NYC-based eco-artist is really busy! Mosher has a piece in New York’s Drawing Center called Paths of Desire that elegantly details a walking route in lower Manhattan that takes one by various aquatic sites-of-interest such as Maiden Lane, site of canal clothes washing for many young women. See the image below.
I’m not entirely sure of the scope of the Paths of Desire project, but it somehow involves dumping colored pigments from recycled water bottles. Mosher’s piece in the Drawing Center is part of the Arts on the Horizon series presented by the River to River Festival coming up on July 18th.Mosher encourages everyone to go down to the Battery Park Bosque between 11am and 4pm to pick up your pigment water order viagra online, then you are off to trace your path as you explore the history of Lower Manhattan as influenced by water.

Paths of Desire by Eve Mosher


