Monday, August 31, 2009

What Should We Judge When We Judge Art?

Art can be tricky at the metaphysical and ontological levels as well as at the value theory level. When we see a performance of Hamlet, how many works of art are we experiencing, and which should we judge? Perhaps there is only one relevant work of art, the whole performance, which many different people have contributed to, and which will exist briefly and then disappear. Perhaps the manuscript by Shakespeare is a distinct work of art from the play by the troupe, which is also distinct from the performance of the play by this troupe on this night, and all three can be judged, but are to be judged by different standards.

Perhaps every person involved should be judged separately on his or her own merits, and each costume or line is its own work of art (with perhaps the director having the job of unifying them all). Similar problems arise for music, film and even painting. Am I to judge the painting itself, the work of the painter, or perhaps the painting in its context of presentation by the museum workers?

These problems have been made even thornier by the rise of conceptual art since the 1960s. Warhol’s famous Brillo Boxes are nearly indistinguishable from actual Brillo boxes at the time. It would be a mistake to praise Warhol for the design of his boxes (which were designed by Steve Harvey), yet the conceptual move of exhibiting these boxes, as art in a museum together with other kinds of paintings is Warhol's. Are we judging Warhol’s concept? His execution of the concept in the medium? The curator’s insights in letting Warhol display the boxes? The overall result? Our experience or interpretation of the result? Ontologically, how are we to think of the work of art? Is it a physical object? Several objects? A class of objects? A mental object? A fictional object? An abstract object? An event?

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Microsoft's New Generation Windows 7

Microsoft declared its new operating system Windows 7 ready for delivery to the manufacturers. This means that they allow time for the new operating system to be built in with the remaining softwares. Microsoft released this as the new operating system has met all the validation checks. The new operating system is made based on the customer’s requirement.

Microsoft put Windows 7 for many quality tests and received the feedback from partners and test users before releasing it to the computer makers. The code will be delivered to hardware makers within the next few days.

According to Microsoft Windows 7 runs great on different hardware types ranging from netbooks to high-end gaming machines. More than 10 million people volunteered in testing Windows 7 software in a voluntary test program.

Microsoft announced the Windows 7 price in June. Microsoft’s corporate vice president for Windows consumer marketing said that they will offer free upgrades to Window 7 to the people who buy Vista-equipped PCs before the release date of Windows 7.