Neora Shem-Shaul

[5] She created websites for the internet[3] and put online the complete writing of Hanoch Levin, Golda Meir,[6] Uri Avnery,[7] and Zvi Yanai.

[9] Regular contributors included Sivan Rahav-Meir, Koren Shadmi, Edo Amin, Yoav Ben-Dov, Nimrod Kerrett, and Shem-Shaul.

Lecturers include John Draper, Andy Müller-Maguhn from Chaos Computer Club, and Kevin Mitnick via Videotelephony.

[11] The imminent conference wreaked havoc in the Knesset when MK Anat Maor, chairperson of the Science and Technology Committee, asked Elyakim Rubinstein, the Attorney General, to cancel it by claiming that hacking is a criminal activity.

The book was available in soft copy and Floppy disk versions, with the latter containing the text, Tetris (the protagonist’s addiction), and communication software for connecting to the author’s computer.

Additional texts were taken from Seneca, Heiner Müller, Robert Graves, Laurie Anderson, Mahmoud Darwish, The Beatles, and Shem-Shaul.

[21] Online and on-site audience function as chorus, with real-time choices, using 3D projection, staged at the Acre Amphitheatre made by Nimrod Kerrett.

[2] In 1976, she wrote the song "I Have a Little Brother," performed by Arik Einstein, which includes in the vinyl Children, composed by Shem Tov Levi.

[23] In 1982, she edited and rhymed Classitaf, a vinyl featuring classical music for children, which Yosi Gerber and Galia Yishai narrated.

[25] The structure was inspired by Meir Wieseltier’s poem and featured a clip of leafing pages of the book Digital Affair at the end of a dark corridor.