Presentata alla quinta Girl Geek Dinner Milano, il 24 ottobre da Sara Rosso e Bruna Gardella. Un introduzione all'Open Source, il mondo della donna e l'Open Source, la Girl Geek e l'Open Source, e tanti modi di essere più coinvolto nel mondo Open Source.
Presentata alla quinta Girl Geek Dinner Milano, il 24 ottobre da Sara Rosso e Bruna Gardella. Un introduzione all'Open Source, il mondo della donna e l'Open Source, la Girl Geek e l'Open Source, e tanti modi di essere più coinvolto nel mondo Open Source.
Presentata alla quinta Girl Geek Dinner Milano, il 24 ottobre 2008 da Sara Rosso con la contribuzione di Bruna Gardella. Un introduzione all’Open Source, il mondo della donna e l’Open Source, la Girl Geek e l’Open Source, e tanti modi di essere più coinvolto nel mondo Open Source.
Presentata alla quinta Girl Geek Dinner Milano, il 24 ottobre 2008 da Sara Rosso con la contribuzione di Bruna Gardella. Un introduzione all’Open Source, il mondo della donna e l’Open Source, la Girl Geek e l’Open Source, e tanti modi di essere più coinvolto nel mondo Open Source.
Tratto dalle conferenze tenute tra la fine di gennaio e l'inizio di febbraio presso gli Ordini degli Architetti P.P.C. delle provincie di Como e di Bergamo.
"Open and collaborative design processes. Meta-Design, ontologies and platforms within the Maker Movement"
Doctoral defense @Aalto University 11.11.2020
Custos: Professor Lily Diaz-Kommonen, Aalto University, Department of Media, Aalto Media Lab
Opponent: Professor Elisa Giaccardi, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands
The emergence of the Maker Movement has taken place in the context of a design practice and research that is now open, peer-to-peer, diffuse, distributed, decentralized; activity-based; meta-designed; ontologically-defined; locally-bounded but globally-networked and community-centered. For many years the author participated and worked in the Maker Movement, with a special focus on its usage of digital platforms and digital fabrication tools for collaboratively designing and manufacturing digital and physical artifacts as Open Design projects. The author’s main focus in practice and research as a meta-designer was in understanding how can participants in distributed systems collaboratively work together through tools and platforms for the designing and managing of collaborative processes. The main research question of this dissertation is: How can we support and integrate the research and practice of meta-designers in analyzing, designing and sharing open and collaborative design and making processes within open, peer-to-peer and distributed systems?
Press release: https://www.aalto.fi/en/events/defense-in-the-field-of-new-media-msc-massimo-menichinelli
Video: https://youtu.be/ZYSCcIG0Q6k
Dissertation: http://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-64-0091-4
Research On And Through Design With Open, Distributed And Collaborative Desig...Massimo Menichinelli
Massimo Menichinelli
"Research On And Through Design With Open, Distributed And Collaborative Design Processes Within The Maker Movement"
08/11/2019
https://www.designsociety.org/939/Symposium+on+Design+Theory+and+Innovation
Platforms, Networks And Impact Of Open, Distributed And Collaborative Design ...Massimo Menichinelli
Massimo Menichinelli
"Platforms, Networks And Impact Of Open, Distributed And Collaborative Design And Making Processes"
Tongji University - Shanghai
19/11/2019
The Decentralization Turns In Design: An Exploration Through The Maker Moveme...Massimo Menichinelli
Massimo Menichinelli
Priscilla Ferronato
"The Decentralization Turns In Design: An Exploration Through The Maker Movement"
DeSForm19 - MIT Design Lab
10/10/2019
The challenges posed by the complexity of our times requires the Design discipline to understand the many complex relationships behind the social, business, technology and territory dimensions of each project. Such nature of complex systems lays not only inside design projects, but also inside the design processes that generate them, and the ability of organizing them through meta-design approaches is becoming strategic. Since the turn of the century, the design discipline has increasingly moved its scope from single users to local and online communities, from isolated projects to system of solutions. This shift has brought researchers and practitioners to investigate tools and strategies to enable mass- scale interactions by adopting several models and tools coming from software development and web-based technologies: Open Source, P2P, DDD (Diffuse, Distributed, and Decentralized) systems. This influence has matured over the years, and if we observed in the past how such systemic models can be applied in the design practice (part 1), we are facing now a new phase where Design will have an increasing role in enabling such systems through the analysis, visualization and design of their collaborative tools, platforms, processes and organizations (part 2). This scope falls into the Meta-Design domain, where designers build environments for the collaborative design of open processes and their resulting organizations (part 3). In this paper, we address this phenomena by elaborating the Open Meta-Design framework (part 4), that provides a way for designing open, collaborative and distributed processes (including those in the professional design domain). The paper positions the framework among current meta-design and design approaches and develops its features of modeling, analysis, management and visualization of processes. This framework is based on four dimensions: conceptual (describing the philosophy, context and limitations of the approach), data (describing the ontology of design processes), design (visualizing designing processes) and software (managing the connections between the ontology and the visualization, the data and design dimensions). We believe that such a framework could potentially facilitate the participation and the creation of open, collaborative and distributed processes, enabling therefore more relevant interactions for communities. As a conclusion, the paper provides a roadmap for developing and testing the Open Meta-Design framework, and therefore evaluating its relevance in supporting complex projects (part 5).