The "glitch" offers a way to see how digital systems work and fail. In Peder Norrby's Mapglitch project, he captured surreal images created when Apple Maps incorrectly converted images to 3D, which produced melting planes or distorted landscapes. Norrby treated them as artifacts rather than just errors and then documented them. While these may not fit the traditional definitions of an "artwork", I think they demonstrate how "glitch" can be a form of technical exploration and potentially a creative visual technique utilizing system breakdowns/failures. These kinds of glitches expose the underlying algorithms and how things are processed behind the scenes.

My own glitch video works by shifting each RGB color channel in different directions. Interestingly, while I was working on it, a real unintended glitch occurred on the left side of the video due to a displacement of color information here and there. This shows how working with glitch isn't just about creating intentional distortions, but also about discovering unexpected results during the data manipulation.

The original sound was recorded from an espresso machine, and it had a more tense and high-pitched sound with irregular hissing and bursts. However, by trimming it into a small piece and looping it, it creates an unexpected rhythmic pattern, like a mechanical pulse.
...Are you lost?