We're pleased to announce the publication of our eighteenth issue, Active Rot, which will be unfurled in installments over the next few weeks. It includes a wide range of writing and artist projects, including Sara Greenberger Rafferty's meditation on televisual drama; Jibz Cameron and Hedia Maron's epic tale of dreams dashed by the Cartoon Network; B. Wurtz's invigoration of everyday objects; Martin Beck's study of American communes and their language; Peter Fend's plan for a global methane-powered economy; Boru O'Brien O'Connell's cannibalization of Gregory Bateson's metalogues; and a delectable story of offshore finance, murder, and commercial thrillers told by Alexander Provan with John Barlow and Goldin+Senneby.
Active Rot is the final issue to be published under the reign of TC 2.0. We will spend the summer developing our new publishing platform,
TC 3.0, and launch issue 19 in September. (According to wiseGEEK.com: "Active rot happens when the program is used and updated but the updates either do not reflect changes needed to properly adapt to the computer environment or the original source code has been changed so much that problems are occurring.")