Our ‘everyday’ is becoming increasingly connected. How can we design meaningfully and responsibly in a connected world? Rather than looking at the Internet of Things merely in terms of efficiency or profit, this session explores, using examples, how we can be sensitive to how products fit into our lives and society at large, and how to bring this to bear on how connected products are designed and valued. The session is the launch of a series of IoT design workshops across the 3 TUs.
Mookuthi is an artisanal nose ornament brand based in Madras.
DRIVE | things to things - where are the connections?
1.
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47. Material Speculation: Things of
Practice and Unaware Objects
Ron Wakkary
Simon Fraser University, Canada
Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands
Oct. 21, 2015
CLICKNL Drive 2015
50. Borgmann’s device paradigm (1984)
• Devices put commodities or services at our
disposal
• Things intimately connected to focal practices
Verbeek argues for technological things (2005)
“Things” of Practice
65. Sensible Artefacts
The Internet of Things (IoT) can potentially reconfigure how we relate artefacts not only to
ourselves but with our everyday lived worlds. A phenomenological perspective in design
offers insights and alternatives in considering the role of context in IoT. From this
perspective we developed several artefacts that consider context as property held between
the actors in the world and that shape themselves dynamically in interaction. This take on
design delivers an alternative IoT, which we refer to as an Internet of Sensible Things.
Jelle Stienstra | j.t.stienstra@utwente.nl
EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY & UNIVERSITY OF TWENTE.
67. Jelle Stienstra | j.t.stienstra@utwente.nl
EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY & UNIVERSITY OF TWENTE.
Fonckel by Philip Ross
68. Jelle Stienstra | j.t.stienstra@utwente.nl
EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY & UNIVERSITY OF TWENTE.
Comfort Lamp by Jelle Stienstra, Axl Pizzinini, Federico Tecchi, Arne Wessels & Lilian Admiraal
69. Jelle Stienstra | j.t.stienstra@utwente.nl
EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY & UNIVERSITY OF TWENTE.
Perceptual Rug by Eva Deckers
70. Jelle Stienstra | j.t.stienstra@utwente.nl
EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY & UNIVERSITY OF TWENTE.
71. Jelle Stienstra | j.t.stienstra@utwente.nl
EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY & UNIVERSITY OF TWENTE.
Sensible Door
72. Jelle Stienstra | j.t.stienstra@utwente.nl
EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY & UNIVERSITY OF TWENTE.
73. Jelle Stienstra | j.t.stienstra@utwente.nl
EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY & UNIVERSITY OF TWENTE.
74. Jelle Stienstra | j.t.stienstra@utwente.nl
EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY & UNIVERSITY OF TWENTE.
75. Jelle Stienstra | j.t.stienstra@utwente.nl
EINDHOVEN UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY & UNIVERSITY OF TWENTE.
78. Design from data: when systems are designed by people, where
they are inspired by measurable features of humans, computers,
things, and their contexts.
Design with data: when systems are designed by people, where
they take into account the flows of data through systems, and the
need to make data manifest, reduce its obfuscation and improve
trust.
Design by data: when systems are designed by other systems,
largely autonomously, where new products and services can be
synthesised via the data-intensive analysis of existing combinations
of humans, computers, things, and contexts.
Designing From, With and By Data
79. Design from data: when systems are designed by
people, where they are inspired by measurable
features of humans, computers, things, and their
contexts.
Designing From, With and By Data
85. Design with data: when systems are designed by
people, where they take into account the flows of
data through systems, and the need to make data
manifest, reduce its obfuscation and improve trust.
Designing From, With and By Data
93. Design by data: when systems are designed by
other systems, largely autonomously, where new
products and services can be synthesised via the
data-intensive analysis of existing combinations of
humans, computers, things, and contexts.
Designing From, With and By Data
94. ThingTank
“By 2017, a significant disruptive digital business will be launched
that was conceived by a computer algorithm.”
Gartner Report 2014, www.networkedworld.com, October 2014
Design by Data: ThingTank
100. Design from data: when systems are designed by people, where
they are inspired by measurable features of humans, computers,
things, and their contexts.
Design with data: when systems are designed by people, where
they take into account the flows of data through systems, and the
need to make data manifest, reduce its obfuscation and improve
trust.
Design by data: when systems are designed by other systems,
largely autonomously, where new products and services can be
synthesised via the data-intensive analysis of existing combinations
of humans, computers, things, and contexts.
Designing From, With and By Data
101.
102. • How will extraordinary things change
ordinary lives?
• Should things be intelligent or sensible?
• To what extent will the design of
products and service become
autonomous?
103. • We embrace the
‘unknown unknowns’
of the near future of IoT
thoughtfully and creatively.
104.
105. Thing2Things 2016
#1 Im/material Traces . TU Delft
#2 Predictive Materialities . TU Delft + Centre for Design Informatics
#3 Objects with Intent . UTwente + TU Delft
#4 Material Speculations . TU/e + Simon Fraser University