1 Quirinus Kuhlmann. Epistolae duae. Lotho de Haes, Amsterdam, 1674. [ 58 ]

2 John  R. Searle. Minds, brains, and programs. The Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 3:417–456, 1980. [ 91 ]

3 ibid., p. 46

4 Hans  Magnus Enzensberger. Einladung zu einem Poesie-Automaten. Suhrkamp, Frankfurt/M., 2000. [ 34 ], p. 13

5 ibid.

6 ibid.

7 Franz  Josef Czernin and Ferdinand Schmatz. Notes about the Poetry Program POE, 1990. http://www.aec.at/en/archives/festival_archive/festival_catalogs/festival_artikel.asp?iProjectID=8950 . [ 27 ]

8 Vuk Cosic. Contemporary ASCII. Kapelica, Ljubljana, 2000. [ 25 ], p. 14 and 32

9 Alan Kay. User Interface: A Personal View. In Brenda Laurel, editor, The Art of Human-Computer Interface Design, pages 191–207. Addison Wesley, Reading, Massachusetts, 1990. [ 54 ]

10 Katharine Mieszkowski. The most feared woman on the internet. Salon.com, 2002. http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2002/03/01/netochka/ . [ 67 ]

11 In an interview with John Duncan, McKenzie says: “This is one of the good things about Scientology—they’ve got this big list of the things which are used subliminally, they say, in control techniques to subdue people because it tells you something that you must be anyway, you can’t help being, to be a body. To be here. To be now. And of course you hear this and go ‘fuck!’ And they have this thing about having simultaneous commands, stand up / sit down. Well you can’t do them both at once, so what they call your ‘reactive mind’ gets completely confused.” http://www.johnduncan.org/stop.html

12 I/O/D Web Stalker homepage: http://www.backspace.org/iod/iod4.html