Max Weisel

Max Weisel (born November 12, 1991 in Tucson, Arizona) is an American software engineer and digital artist. His experience as an iOS app developer predates the release of Apple's App Store.[1] He's collaborated with avant garde artist Björk, to produce Biophilia, the first full-length app album.[2] In addition his work has been featured in museums such as the New York Museum of Modern Art.[3] He is the founder of the San Francisco-based research and development company RelativeWave, which was acquired by Google in 2014.[4]

Max Weisel
Born (1991-11-12) November 12, 1991
NationalityAmerican
Known forNew Media
MovementArtificial Intelligence, Interactive Art

Works

  • MxTube, 2008
  • Soundrop, 2010
  • Biophilia, 2011
    • Moon
    • Dark Matter
    • Solstice
  • Björk: Solstice, 2011 - A Christmas separate app.
  • Biophilia Tour, 2012 - App Developer, Performer, Musical Director.[5]
  • RelativeWave, 2012 - Founded a research and development studio in San Francisco.
    • ARTPOP App, 2013 - An app to accompany the album ARTPOP by Lady Gaga
    • Form, 2014 - An app prototyping and development tool.
gollark: Which is very annoying, because apart from the privacy (it can read basically any data and is designed so that you cannot know/see what it does) and security (they could have exploits) implications, it breaks stuff like WINE.
gollark: As I said, lots of anticheat things run in the kernel already.
gollark: Most anticheat things run with ridiculously high permissions, but this one runs *constantly* and apparently does cause slowdowns in other games.
gollark: They do tend to, at least, use tons of RAM because Java Edition is increasingly terribly programmed.
gollark: I have something a tiny bit like that because I needed a way for some base systems to communicate status to each other (reactor control based on main capacitor bank level), but that's basically just a network protocol/library and not really a GUI.

See also

  • Björk
  • Software Engineering
  • Artificial Intelligence

References

  1. "Found Footage: MxTube". TUAW. Retrieved November 2, 2011.
  2. Björk's Biophilia The Guardian, 28 May 2011
  3. "Talk To Me: Design and the Communication between People and Objects" (PDF). MoMA. Retrieved November 1, 2011.
  4. "RelativeWave - Joining Google". RelativeWave. Retrieved November 19, 2014.
  5. "Björk's Biophilia Live Show". Archived from the original on January 9, 2012. Retrieved January 9, 2012.
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