DRIVE 2016 | 26 October: Smart Industry T2T

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DRIVEWed, Oct. 26

Funded by:

Connected Everyday LabElisa Giaccardi

Coordinated by:

TOOLS & EXPERIMENTS

» Adding a chip canhelp us track and monitor anything

» Optimize distribution, maintenance andperformance

» Make ‘things’ more effective

REFRAMING IOT

» Where is the human in the loop?» What sort of values do we want to design for?» How do we shift the focus from collecting data to sustaining

value?

» This image furtherelaborates on the previousslide

» This image furtherelaborates on the previousslide

How can we reframe the Internet of Things as a platform for ‘doing design’ - not just a tool?

datapractices

embodiment intelligence

ORGANIZERS

Elisa GiaccardiTU Delft

Chris SpeedUn. Edinburgh & TU Delft

Marco RozendaalTU Delft

Geke LuddenUniv. Twente

Jelle StienstraNEWCRAFT

Matthijs NettenTU Delft

Holly RobbinsTU Delft

David DerksenDD Studio

Ron WakkarySFU & TUe

PARTICIPANTS

and more

“For design to contribute to world-wide challenges, building communities of ambitious and curious people is of utmost importance.”

- Dan van Eijk, Scientific Director, Design United- Bart Ahsmann, Managing Director, Design United

T2T PROGRAM

13:30 – 14:30 Tools, Experiments & Insights

14:30 – 15:00 Break (with performance)

15:00 – 16:00 Next Steps? Innovate!

16:00 Drinks

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DRIVEWed, Oct. 26

Organized by:

Funded by:

OBJECTS WITH INTENT

Connected Everyday Lab & DesignLabDr. Marco Rozendaal & Dr. Wouter Eggink

Breathing life into a product or environment by giving it a personality and acting it out makes for a quick but powerful way of understanding the nuances of good smart product interaction.

- Pieter Diepenmaat

TOOLS

» Intentional stance towards smart networked products» Embodiment as the nexus of interaction » Behavior change within everyday practices

» ”We focused on how the expressed intent of objects blended naturally in the everyday practise of coming home” - Wouter Eggink

OUTCOMES

» The mood-changing kitchen

OUTCOMES

» The house as a servant

OUTCOMES

» The lamp that cares

REFLECTIONS

Power Play

REFLECTIONS

Give and Take

REFLECTIONS

Living Things

“Thank you, are there any questions?”

- Rozendaal and Eggink

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DRIVEWed, Oct. 26

Organized by:

Funded by:

MORSE THINGS

Everyday Design StudioProf. Dr. Ron Wakkary

An Internet of Things we can be proud ofJust Things Foundation

thing-centered not human-centered

Morse Things

TOOLS

» Six sets of Morse Things» Six households of designers, researchers, artists» Six weeks of living with the Morse Things

“Brilliant. Interesting. Strange.” – Travis Kirton

TOOLS

1.Describe what it is like to live with the Morse Things from the perspective of the Morse Things

2.Design an artifact, system, or service to co-exist with the Morse Things

OUTCOMES

OUTCOMES

OUTCOMES

REFLECTIONS

REFLECTIONS

1.It is difficult to take on the perspective of things – they “withdraw” from us.

REFLECTIONS

2.The Morse Things form a “quiet” attachment over time.

REFLECTIONS

3.The Morse Things are a “third” thing in the home.

“finally heard a bowl! It's been a week. I didn't expect that I would be as surprised or excited as I ended up being. Had a pretty good rhythm to it. Dah-do-dah-do-do-dah-dah-do-dah-dah ... or something like that.”

- Ryan Betts

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DRIVEWed, Oct. 26

Organized by:

Funded by:

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DRIVEWed, Oct. 26

Organized by:

Funded by:

IM/MATERIALS

Connected Everyday Lab & David Derksen DesignHolly Robbins & David Derksen

» We are surrounded byblack boxesand blurrypeople

TOOLS

» “Traces of use” is a design approach that can help uncover the relationship we have with technology.

» This can shape a relationship with the object that’s based in mutuality- it communicates how these technologies work and how we work with them.

» This is even more critical as our technologies are becoming more complex and are able to collect intimate data about us and communicate it to others

OUTCOMES

Explored the expressive capabilities of traces to reveal how data-intensive technologies work in 3 phases

» Phase 1. Material Exploration » Phase 2. Speculative Design: Ideation of IoT Devices» Phase 3. Design Phase: Exploring Traces as a Design Approach

» Phase 1. MaterialExploration

» Phase 2. Speculative Design of IoT Devices

» Phase 3. Design Phas: ExploringTraces as a Design Approach

How to anticipate use time while designing

» Designing with traces» Designing for traces.

REFLECTION

How to trace our interaction with algorithms?

» Tendency to design techniques to notify of automation.

» Traces became a means to trace the invisible.

REFLECTION

Explored

» Material Exploration» More about the ghost» It has a wide smile

OUTCOMES

REFLECTIONS

Traces can be a means to express how an object works, which can lead to a greater understanding of how we use it, and in the case of connected technologies, how it uses us.

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DRIVEWed, Oct. 26

Organized by:

Funded by:

PREDICTIVE MATERIALITIES

Centre for Design Informatics & Connected Everyday LabProf. Dr. Chris Speed & Prof. Dr. Elisa Giaccardi

INTRODUCTION

“By2017,asignificantdisruptivedigitalbusinesswillbelaunchedthatwasconceivedbyacomputeralgorithm.”

GartnerReport2014,www.networkedworld.com,October2014

INTRODUCTION

INTRODUCTION

TOOLS

» Algorithmic Society» Machine 2 Machine conversations

TOOLS

» Machine Learning» Blockchain

» Algorithmic Society» Machine 2 Machine conversations

TOOLS

» PredMat: Machine Learning for designers game» Neil Rubens, Active Intelligence Group AI Lab, » University of Electro-Communications Tokyo

TOOLS

» Block Exchange: Blockchain workshop for designers» Richard Kohl, Bitcoin

Wednesday, Amsterdam

Designing with Data:

» Use the data shadow of a participant to design them a gift from the future.

OUTCOMES

Here we have two columns. One column is for a ghost-like monitoring device.

» Then, we go bulleted» More about the ghost» It has a wide smile

OUTCOMES“I have been following [him] online for quite a bit but I haven’t met him until recently, so I have been following this constructing, tech sort of person and I constructed this image of who he is…

On the Flicker, the photos they came in really handy. I tried to look at text and didn't end up being inspiring. But when I went back to Flickr pictures, specifically old pictures, I noticed some kind of change in his stuff; he was kind of sharing more, was my perception.

Then I devised this idea about whenever anything is shared it will never be, like, too regular; there will always be some kind of special experience involved in it, which was a challenge I gave myself: to make something logical that can do that…so I came up with this…”

Makers who want to leave Etsy and adopt a ledger to record the expiry of their design files.Celebrities who want to track the use of personal photographs.Local governments wanting to guarantee the safety of public voting.A cryptocurrency exchanged through the delivery, reception, and outcomes of learning, with teachers becoming shareholders in the success of their best students. LifeCoin offered a community service that allows skills to be traded across local residents in order to increase social capital.

OUTCOMES

makers who want to leave Etsy and adopt a ledger to record the expiry of their design files, celebrities who want to track the use of personal photographs, and local governments wanting to guarantee the safety of public voting. Team EduCoin presented a cryptocurrency exchanged through the delivery, reception, and outcomes of learning, with teachers becoming shareholders in the success of their best students. And team LifeCoin offered a community service that allows skills to be traded across local residents in order to increase social capital. LifeCoin is an assemblage of technologies proposing a hammer that can trade its owner’s skills with other tools or users via smart contracting.

» Then, we go bulleted» More about the ghost» It has a wide smile

OUTCOMES» LifeCoin is an assemblage of

technologies proposing a hammer that can trade its owner’s skills with other tools or users via smart contracting.

REFLECTIONS

REFLECTIONS

• Designers need to exercise and practice the principles of a technology before they can actually design with it.

• Data is a design material that can anticipate, predict and push in ways that require nuanced consideration of the contextual significance and situated value of the data used.

• The key is not to collect lots of data but learn how to use it to ask interesting questions.

ACTIONS

Practising new representations of value.The KASH cup turns the opportunity to talk to strangers into a currency, and the cups become the record of these transactions.

ACTIONS

1. Take a cup2. Check the number3. Check the balance4. Put credit on it by talking

to someone5. Get a coffee!

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DRIVEWed, Oct. 26

Funded by:

Connected Everyday LabElisa Giaccardi

Coordinated by:

KEY INSIGHTS

TAKE AWAY

As we bring consumers closer to the creation and distribution of products and services, industry will require designers to develop connections that are trustworthy, ethical and in the interest of people.

datapractices

embodiment intelligence

data

Openness is best served if the designers design for attachment

between people and things rather than prescriptive actions and

functionality.

embodiment intelligence

practices

embodiment intelligence

They key is not to collects lots of data but learn how to

contextualize it and use it to ask interesting questions.

datapractices

intelligence

Traces can be a means to express to people how an object works,

and in the case of connected technologies, how it uses us.

datapractices

embodiment

The personality and character of objects could help people build

relationships with these objects in ways that

are suitable and appropriate.

» We’ll make your ideas fly, literally!