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As the web as a medium for expression was just beginning to take
off, I had proposed a project called the "One Line Project" that
would take lines drawn by people and connect all of those lines end-to-end.
I was inspired in part by "Hands Across America" and was
wondering also if it were possible to realize a line that was as long
as the
perimeter of the Earth. I wrote a classic server-backended system
with a funky JAVA-based client that collected lines from people all
oer the world. In 1999 the contents of the line database were reported
in an exhibition called
"oneline.com," which was the name of the server. Of course there was
no profit involved in this adventure—it was primarily a peaceful branding
activity for Dai Nippon Printing. It turns out that after the two
years that oneline.com ran, I had only
collected around 4 kilometers of line
data
(using
72 pixels
=
1 inch)
whereas
my goal
was 40,000
kilometers.
The image below is an excerpt of the many line drawings (made from
a single line) that I had collected over the network. The image is
an extremely large GIF image that some browsers will not render at
all (OS X Safari does the job fine if you click on the image):

10% | 33% | 100% (8,898px by 787px)
I took all of these individual lines and wrote software to connect
each line endpoint-to-startpoint. I had to bend and twist some of
these lines to get them to fit on a single canvas. The result is below,
which is also an extremely large GIF image that some browsers will
not render at all (OS X Safari
does
the job
fine if you click on the image):

10% | 33% | 100% (18,709px
by 342px)
At the exhibition, a giant printout of the line was strewn in
the upper and lower galleries of the Ginza Graphic Gallery.
 
Concurrent
with the exhibition were a set of silly JAVA applets I had written
to
run
on a series
of
iMacs.
All
of them
had
the mouse
as a theme. There were 10 iMacs total: 3 of them accessed the
database of lines and the other 7 exhibited frolicking behavior
on behalf
of the mouse cursor. I have resurrected one of them involving
simple symmetry, which you can activate by clicking the following: 
One can also browse the
entire tapestry if you are of the adventurous sort. The following
archive contains a Java applet that requires
you to open the index.html in AppletViewer with security *off* (so
it can load the local file). If you don't know what that means,
I don't suggest you try it as it is somewhat confusing. I was able
to get it work in Java 1.3, but then it stopped working when I upgraded
to Java 1.4, so you know where I stand. You can scrub over the entire
canvas to see each individual line connection point. You can avoid
that confusion by just watching the movie:

Oneline.com was too difficult to maintain from the standpoint
of the rapid changes in Java in the late 1990's. Gotta love Java!
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