/>


Archive for October, 2006

h1

The long way to making sense.

Tuesday, October 31st, 2006

There are some days when I just spot things that are completely at odds with each other and make me seriously doubt our ability to make any sense as a species. Ok, maybe that’s too grand a statement, but seriously…

One the one hand we know we should be concerned about sustainability and the earth’s resources, global warming and our general position as a dominating species. Agreed? Ok so why on earth do we let technological advancement go against those concerns? Just because it’s technology, doesn’t mean it has to be dirty!

Projects such as this one, this one, and what was recently revealed are just unimaginative.

The mistake people make is assuming that making something green is hard and not a necessary requirement. Well i think it’s just lazy, irresponsible and short-sighted on the part of anyone who designs these days not to take sustainability in consideration. I mean just think of the marketing around your new product, would you rather be known as “the first green (insert name of product)” or “just another fossil-fuel based (insert name of product)”?

h1

On the road again

Tuesday, October 31st, 2006

Ok, so I’m sure this has been a little confusing for people to figure out where I am on any given week, but now it’ll be easy. As of next week, I am relocating to Amsterdam till late spring 2007. Hopefully I’ll find a cozy place of my own, I’m getting a bit tired of not having a place to buy plants for and decorate. So if you’re in that neck of the woods, come and say hi!

On my list of things to do: Make your own wearable workshop at Mediamatic, hunt for a flat, and buy a winter coat.

h1

Presenting Karola Torkos

Monday, October 30th, 2006

Ok so I’ve spent a little time with my lovely friend Karola to get her “webified” and i’m starting to think that maybe i should start a business being the “digital agent” of people in fine arts :)

She and I put together her website, blog and Flickr of course. Enjoy!

h1

post-Touch

Wednesday, October 25th, 2006



Reader-less wall

Originally uploaded by alexandra666.


I was thinking about the Near-field workshop when I saw the remains of the RFID reader at the Milan location of former idii.

It’s interesting to think of post-touch in a way. How will our environments react to stable versus mobile touch interactions? How will they be defaced or how will they show that a history of interactions once took place there?

h1

Some say it better (more Tagteam)

Wednesday, October 25th, 2006

I didn’t actually write anything about Tagteam I realise, just kinda dumped in on Flickr, so thank god Janne is there.

h1

Anyone/thing out there?

Wednesday, October 25th, 2006

There’s something strange going on whenever identity2.0 is mentioned these days, or more precisely when we speak of identity online in the future.

It seems to me that we used to ask ourselves whether the person behind the screen name was really who they are, but now we seem to be questioning whether they’re there at all or even human!

For example: the death switch project checks if you’re not dead by sending a subscriber an invitation to answer back with a secret password. Then there’s the Superconsumer a computer that buys and sells things on ebay independantly.

Is this the future of identity then? Is it that it’s not about the honesty of people online but actually if they’re even there at all to begin with?

Creepy…

h1

Milan!

Wednesday, October 25th, 2006



Great milanese graffiti

Originally uploaded by alexandra666.


Yes, hanging out in “la bella città” today with the dotdotdot kids and back in London tomorrow. I’m off to see if they’ve stripped the Duomo yet but mainly try to capture some of the great paper-based graffiti that animate the city everywhere…

Ciao!

h1

Mini trip to Milan

Monday, October 23rd, 2006

I’ll be going to Milan for the next 2 days, to meet an interesting company with whom I might collaborate. It will be very strange to go back to Milan post-idii, so many memories : /

Back on thursday with plenty of Flickr pictures : )

h1

Tagteam, an RFID service idea

Sunday, October 22nd, 2006

Last week at the nearfield interactions workshop in Oslo, Janne and I had a little bit of a rant while sanding some medium density foam and talked about the idea that we were developing as a team, but with a different twist to it. I decided to draw it out and annotate it…

Tagteam on Flickr.

h1

Near-field interaction workshop post-mortem

Saturday, October 21st, 2006

I came back from a very vibrant Near-field interactions workshop in Oslo, hosted and organized by Timo Arnall,Julian Bleeker and Nicolas Nova. This is the third workshop organized of this kind around this subject, the first one, which I attended, took place at LIFT, the second one took place in Geneva again a few months ago. Here is a chronological aggregation of some of what happened over the weekend.

Timo started by asking what the physical link to a virtual connection is. There are those who see RFID as a field worth exploring and that will open the development of a number of interesting projects but there are also some very real concerns around privacy and identity, areas which also were addressed in some of the discussions over the weekend. Katherine Albrecht was mentioned as an anti-RFID activist with the idea of spychips. There are also questions around “near-field” and the concept of “touch” and how these things literally collide. What are the different cultural meanings behind touching? What happens when the web becomes physical and is that even the right question to ask?

Nicolas spoke about bridging first and second life, between a data-bound world online and how it relates to the world of objects. What are the interfaces for these bridges?

Then we moved onto a “5-minute-madness” where each of the participants had to present themselves, why they were interested in this workshop and what their point of view was. I was invited to speak about some of my thoughts later on in the afternoon as well, so was pretty brief in the morning with these 3 slides.

I enjoyed Florian and Stephan’s presentation about the Mobile Prosumer. They were interested in researching whether touching is relevant in the retail environment and what is the relevant technology to support it. They were interested in developing a service-oriented architectures which I think is something very interesting.

Vincenzo Palotta, from the Université de Fribourg, presented his project on KUIjects or Kinetic User Interface objects. Based on the activity theory paradigm, he argued that if you want to avoid interactions between objects, you have to focus on their movement itself as the source of design. There will be incidental interactions that occur without an explicit focus on the object, in short removing objects from the equation of interactions all together.

Janne from Nokia, with whom I had a lot of fun in the group work, had some interesting thoughts about security and RFID. If we assume that near-field capabilities will be accessible to everyone owning a cell phone, what happens when 2 000 million users have access to it. How do you build trust in the technology? He also pointed out that people care about security once it’s gone and it’s in the newspapers.

Ulla-Maria talked about some of the thinking behind her project Thinglink. She spoke about the perception of potential NFC action and how we can either pre-determine these affordances or let the user generate the social affordance. These then become accumulative and organised around shared motives. We connect on a very personal and emotional level with objects (i want, like, hate, own, sell, give) and so we need to equip these objects with personal relationships on a virtual level as well.

Matt talked about the “middleware” of that project and the impact that this has on thinking about global naming and collecting information about objects that are independant of context.
He spoke about what happens when you focus on object-oriented development, literally and open-data.

Then Gil, from Plot, introduced the movie that they produced based on some interviews with “future-casters” in London. When asked to think of future RFID-services they asked some very real questions:

How visible am i? How information-leaky am i?
How close can orgs get to me?
What are the layers of visibility?
What are the implications of having things close to me?
How do we design behaviours that are appropriate behind this?
How do we build-in empathy?
How do we deal with attention span?
What is the level of agency of that technology? How are questions of control engagement, permissions dealt with?
Participation: how do i see it, how am i taking part, how can I self select in and out of this?
Transparency?
Data as a commodity: how are we leaving an information trail that becomes more visible, tangible and tradable?
How are people seen and valued? Are people considered active users and not passive ones?

At the end of the 2 days, Ben made the final presentation, the first time I say him speak, although we’re good friends. It was quite a treat. Some of the points he talked about I will only attempt to list as a bullit list, this will most probably not make any sense to anyone who wasn’t there…

What does nearfield mean from a culture flow: layering space with meaning in a way that we can’t see.

This is something that happens on a peer to peer level.

There will be grouping and rules that will be sorted in the background, messages that will be passed back and forth, what does this mean for civic and architectural structures.

Flow of movement is tracked, leaving information behind.

The flow through architectue becomes erosive.

People’s own awareness is accued. a new definition of personal space…the virtual fields get more physical.

Movement is happening in the heard and self organisation within flicks of people become more visibla ena tangible.

Signification intentions are blurred

Modeling - New Bablyon condensation of social purpose… second life transformation of the city… a social city above the city itself.

Morphology
What does this do to products and spaces? How do you suggest action because there is no longer a physical interface? How does this influence architecture?

h1

Figs and 86% chocolate (A rough guide to eating in Oslo)

Wednesday, October 18th, 2006



21.30

Originally uploaded by Ti.mo.


I just spent the weekend in Oslo at the wonderful Near-field workshop and thought I’d post up my list of places I would recommend to anyone dropping in town (most of this was because of Timo of course):

- The Sound of Mu a lovely club with lots of small screens in frames :)

- Pascal a very nice restaurant with delicious cakes.

- Delicatessen a great tapas bar.

- Kunsternes hus a lovely restaurant for seafood.

- Freia is an awesome chocolate brand.

h1

Stating the obvious

Wednesday, October 11th, 2006

.

“He (the artist) says studies back up his belief that slides can help combat stress and depression.”

It’s called fun! I don’t really think you need extensive research to prove that point.

h1

Stint online

Tuesday, October 10th, 2006

Finally, after much procrastination, my thesis project is online. This is really not meant to be that academic really, but more of a pitch for the idea as such. Most of the thinking is in the paper I wrote, but everyone knows that people prefer pretty pictures ; )

h1

You are looking at your phone

Monday, October 9th, 2006

I was looking through the list of people who will be attending the NordiCHI workshop this weekend and landed on this very funny (yes perhaps relevant for that service) piece of interface design from Imity.

Are we laughing at technology or is it laughing at us i wonder?

h1

The sound of conversation

Monday, October 9th, 2006

Pecha Kucha is coming up this fall in London on the 18th of October and on the 1st of December in Amsterdam and I feel incredibly temped to participate. For those of you who don’t know what this this, its a way for designers to talk about their work, network and meet potential clients as well potentially. Each presenter is allowed 20 images, each shown for 20 seconds each - giving 6 minutes 40 seconds of fame before the next presenter is up. This keeps presentations concise, the interest level up, and gives more people the chance to show.

I wonder what i would present though: either Stickychat, The Hungries (Alejandro is presenting them at the Bogota edition), or maybe Stint.