That time a bot invaded Thingiverse and created weird new 3D objects

Shiv Integer is a bot whose entire purpose in life is to create bizarre objects for 3D printers. It has been living for several months on 3D printer project site Thingiverse, posting objects cobbled together out of dozens of other objects listed on the site. The results are art or spam, depending on your perspective. Last month, artists Matthew Plummer-Fernandez and Julien Deswaef finally came out as the humans behind Shiv Integer, showcasing the results of the bot’s work at an event called (appropriately) The Art of Bots in London’s Somerset House.

Taken on its own terms, Shiv Integer’s work is fanciful and amusing. Each piece looks like a mutant gadget, possibly unprintable, often with one recognizable item merging into another one. The best part is that even the names of the objects are a random salad of words taken from other objects on Thingiverse, creating inadvertent absurdist poetry like “quick cat near a jaw,” “disc on top of an e-juice golf,” “automatic event adapter,” and “customizable damage mask.” The bot is known to post several times per day, and in the “about” section of the entry it always credits users whose objects it has repurposed (the bot only works with objects that have been CC licensed for remixing).

Artists Plummer-Fernandez and Julien Deswaef explain the idea behind their project:

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Technology Lab – Ars Technica