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− | Launched in [[established::2002]] by [[KIBLA Multimedia Centre]] in collaboration with the Linux Users Group of Slovenia Association (LUGOS, established in 1997), the international open code [[KIBLIX Linux IT Festival]] was developed out of the so-called Linux Install Fest (LIFe), established in 1999. Since its inception the KIBLIX Festival has gradually developed in the contemporary art and education-related festival tackling the issues of information technology, open code and open society. | + | Launched in [[established::2002]] by [[KIBLA Multimedia Centre]] in collaboration with the Linux Users Group of Slovenia Association (LUGOS, established in 1997), the international open code [[KIBLIX Linux IT Festival]] was developed out of the so-called Linux Install Fest (LIFe), established in 1999. Since its inception the festival, named simply as KIBLIX since 2008, has gradually developed in the contemporary art and education-related festival tackling the issues of information technology, open code and open society. |
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Level head, exhibition by Julian Oliver (NZ) interactive project dealing with spatial memory, KIBLA Multimedia Centre, part of the project gRIG (Guild for Reality integrators and generators), during KIBLIX Festival, 2008
Launched in 2002 by KIBLA Multimedia Centre in collaboration with the Linux Users Group of Slovenia Association (LUGOS, established in 1997), the international open code KIBLIX Linux IT Festival was developed out of the so-called Linux Install Fest (LIFe), established in 1999. Since its inception the festival, named simply as KIBLIX since 2008, has gradually developed in the contemporary art and education-related festival tackling the issues of information technology, open code and open society.
In the 2010 edition KIBLA Multimedia Centre joined forces with another two Slovene festivals dedicated to art and technology – the HAIP Festival and the International Festival of Computer Arts (IFCA). The 9th edition of the KIBLIX Festival, conceived by Miha Horvat, is dedicated to low technology, ecology, open code and waste. The Waste – Technology Minus programme brings exhibitions, presentations, fashion shows, workshops, and installations by international artists.
See also
Related festivals
External links
Gallery
Guest lecture about the implications of wireless networks by Sascha Meinrath, scientific research director at the New America Foundation's Wireless Future Program for the 7th KIBLIX Linux IT Festival in Maribor, 2007
Level head, exhibition by Julian Oliver (NZ) interactive project dealing with spatial memory, KIBLA Multimedia Centre, part of the project gRIG (Guild for Reality integrators and generators), during KIBLIX Festival, 2008