@IKnowTheseWords: A Twitterbot Textual Performance

Twitterbots automate the process of tweeting. They proliferate the social network with messages crafted for hash tags, themes, or replies. @IKnowTheseWords is a bot that I created to assist me in automatically archiving my wordhord from the “OED Word of the Day” database as an online Twitter perform...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: xtine burrough
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Deakin University 2016-05-01
Series:Persona Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/ps/article/view/529
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spelling doaj-fae41649c179432e9cf9d05a8d699cdc2020-11-24T21:58:59ZengDeakin UniversityPersona Studies2205-52582016-05-0121121910.21153/ps2016vol2no1art529535@IKnowTheseWords: A Twitterbot Textual Performancextine burrough0University of Texas at DallasTwitterbots automate the process of tweeting. They proliferate the social network with messages crafted for hash tags, themes, or replies. @IKnowTheseWords is a bot that I created to assist me in automatically archiving my wordhord from the “OED Word of the Day” database as an online Twitter performance. As such, the bot is a helper-agent that serves words to my Twitter timeline, one day at a time. Consequently, it is essential that I talk back to the bot, letting it know (and anyone else who views these tweets and replies) which words should be included in my personal archive. This process will take years as the bot and I perform the tasks: Tweeting a word from the OED, sorting each word, and capturing those words that are part of my current vocabulary using a Twitter archiving Google spreadsheet. With two “I”s involved in the process of knowing—or not—these words, @IKnowTheseWords speaks predictably and intelligently as a bot and randomly, with culturally specific musings as the “I” who replies to each tweet. In this case study I arrive at a philosophical understanding of how the project made a theoretical pivot as a result of its current processing and performance with emerging media tools.https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/ps/article/view/529TwitterbotBeing and BecomingWordhordAutomation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author xtine burrough
spellingShingle xtine burrough
@IKnowTheseWords: A Twitterbot Textual Performance
Persona Studies
Twitterbot
Being and Becoming
Wordhord
Automation
author_facet xtine burrough
author_sort xtine burrough
title @IKnowTheseWords: A Twitterbot Textual Performance
title_short @IKnowTheseWords: A Twitterbot Textual Performance
title_full @IKnowTheseWords: A Twitterbot Textual Performance
title_fullStr @IKnowTheseWords: A Twitterbot Textual Performance
title_full_unstemmed @IKnowTheseWords: A Twitterbot Textual Performance
title_sort @iknowthesewords: a twitterbot textual performance
publisher Deakin University
series Persona Studies
issn 2205-5258
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Twitterbots automate the process of tweeting. They proliferate the social network with messages crafted for hash tags, themes, or replies. @IKnowTheseWords is a bot that I created to assist me in automatically archiving my wordhord from the “OED Word of the Day” database as an online Twitter performance. As such, the bot is a helper-agent that serves words to my Twitter timeline, one day at a time. Consequently, it is essential that I talk back to the bot, letting it know (and anyone else who views these tweets and replies) which words should be included in my personal archive. This process will take years as the bot and I perform the tasks: Tweeting a word from the OED, sorting each word, and capturing those words that are part of my current vocabulary using a Twitter archiving Google spreadsheet. With two “I”s involved in the process of knowing—or not—these words, @IKnowTheseWords speaks predictably and intelligently as a bot and randomly, with culturally specific musings as the “I” who replies to each tweet. In this case study I arrive at a philosophical understanding of how the project made a theoretical pivot as a result of its current processing and performance with emerging media tools.
topic Twitterbot
Being and Becoming
Wordhord
Automation
url https://ojs.deakin.edu.au/index.php/ps/article/view/529
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