Designing Smart Objects in Everyday Life
portes grátis
Designing Smart Objects in Everyday Life
Intelligences, Agencies, Ecologies
Marenko, Betti; Rozendaal, Marco C.; Odom, William
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
08/2021
224
Dura
Inglês
9781350160125
15 a 20 dias
524
Descrição não disponível.
Foreword
Introduction
Perspectives
1. An Illustrated Field Guide to Fungal AI for Designers, David Kirk (Northumbria University, UK), Effie Le Moignan and David Verweij (Newcastle University, UK)
2. Dramaturgy of Devices: Theatre as Perspective on the Design of Smart Objects, Maaike Bleeker (Utrecht University, the Netherlands) and Marco C. Rozendaal (TU Delft, the Netherlands)
3. The Telling of Things: Imagining With, Through and About Machines, Kristina Andersen (Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands) and Tobias Revell (London College of Communication, UK)
Interactions
4. What are you? Negotiating Relationships with Smart Objects in Intra-Action, Christopher Frauenberger (TU Wien, Austria)
5. The Dynamic Agency of Smart Objects, Jelle van Dijk (University of Twente, the Netherlands) and Evert van Beek (TU Delft, the Netherlands)
6. What can Actor-Network Theory Reveal about the Socio-Technological Implications of Delivery Robots? Nazli Cila (TU Delft, the Netherlands) and Carl DiSalvo (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA)
Methodologies
7. Sketching and Prototyping Smart Objects, Philip van Allen (ArtCenter College of Design, USA)
8. Co-Designing and Co-Speculating on Different Forms of Domestic Smart Things , William Odom (Simon Fraser University, Canada), Arne Berge (Technische Universitaet Chemnitz, Germany) and Dries De Roeck (Studio Dott, Belgium)
Critical Understandings
9. Marx in the Smart Living Room: What Would a Marx-Oriented Approach to Smart Objects Be Like? Betti Marenko (Central Saint Martins, UK) and Pim Haselager (Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
10. Not a Research Agenda for Smart Objects, Ann Light (University of Sussex, UK and Malmoe University, Finland)
11. Towards Wise Objects: The Value of Knowing When to Quit, Pim Haselager (Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
Conclusion
Index
Introduction
Perspectives
1. An Illustrated Field Guide to Fungal AI for Designers, David Kirk (Northumbria University, UK), Effie Le Moignan and David Verweij (Newcastle University, UK)
2. Dramaturgy of Devices: Theatre as Perspective on the Design of Smart Objects, Maaike Bleeker (Utrecht University, the Netherlands) and Marco C. Rozendaal (TU Delft, the Netherlands)
3. The Telling of Things: Imagining With, Through and About Machines, Kristina Andersen (Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands) and Tobias Revell (London College of Communication, UK)
Interactions
4. What are you? Negotiating Relationships with Smart Objects in Intra-Action, Christopher Frauenberger (TU Wien, Austria)
5. The Dynamic Agency of Smart Objects, Jelle van Dijk (University of Twente, the Netherlands) and Evert van Beek (TU Delft, the Netherlands)
6. What can Actor-Network Theory Reveal about the Socio-Technological Implications of Delivery Robots? Nazli Cila (TU Delft, the Netherlands) and Carl DiSalvo (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA)
Methodologies
7. Sketching and Prototyping Smart Objects, Philip van Allen (ArtCenter College of Design, USA)
8. Co-Designing and Co-Speculating on Different Forms of Domestic Smart Things , William Odom (Simon Fraser University, Canada), Arne Berge (Technische Universitaet Chemnitz, Germany) and Dries De Roeck (Studio Dott, Belgium)
Critical Understandings
9. Marx in the Smart Living Room: What Would a Marx-Oriented Approach to Smart Objects Be Like? Betti Marenko (Central Saint Martins, UK) and Pim Haselager (Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
10. Not a Research Agenda for Smart Objects, Ann Light (University of Sussex, UK and Malmoe University, Finland)
11. Towards Wise Objects: The Value of Knowing When to Quit, Pim Haselager (Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
Conclusion
Index
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product design; smart technology; devices; digital; 21st century; applications; design research; objects; humans; agency; domestic design; machines; AI; artificial intelligence; internet; electronic; design futures; socio-technological design
Foreword
Introduction
Perspectives
1. An Illustrated Field Guide to Fungal AI for Designers, David Kirk (Northumbria University, UK), Effie Le Moignan and David Verweij (Newcastle University, UK)
2. Dramaturgy of Devices: Theatre as Perspective on the Design of Smart Objects, Maaike Bleeker (Utrecht University, the Netherlands) and Marco C. Rozendaal (TU Delft, the Netherlands)
3. The Telling of Things: Imagining With, Through and About Machines, Kristina Andersen (Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands) and Tobias Revell (London College of Communication, UK)
Interactions
4. What are you? Negotiating Relationships with Smart Objects in Intra-Action, Christopher Frauenberger (TU Wien, Austria)
5. The Dynamic Agency of Smart Objects, Jelle van Dijk (University of Twente, the Netherlands) and Evert van Beek (TU Delft, the Netherlands)
6. What can Actor-Network Theory Reveal about the Socio-Technological Implications of Delivery Robots? Nazli Cila (TU Delft, the Netherlands) and Carl DiSalvo (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA)
Methodologies
7. Sketching and Prototyping Smart Objects, Philip van Allen (ArtCenter College of Design, USA)
8. Co-Designing and Co-Speculating on Different Forms of Domestic Smart Things , William Odom (Simon Fraser University, Canada), Arne Berge (Technische Universitaet Chemnitz, Germany) and Dries De Roeck (Studio Dott, Belgium)
Critical Understandings
9. Marx in the Smart Living Room: What Would a Marx-Oriented Approach to Smart Objects Be Like? Betti Marenko (Central Saint Martins, UK) and Pim Haselager (Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
10. Not a Research Agenda for Smart Objects, Ann Light (University of Sussex, UK and Malmoe University, Finland)
11. Towards Wise Objects: The Value of Knowing When to Quit, Pim Haselager (Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
Conclusion
Index
Introduction
Perspectives
1. An Illustrated Field Guide to Fungal AI for Designers, David Kirk (Northumbria University, UK), Effie Le Moignan and David Verweij (Newcastle University, UK)
2. Dramaturgy of Devices: Theatre as Perspective on the Design of Smart Objects, Maaike Bleeker (Utrecht University, the Netherlands) and Marco C. Rozendaal (TU Delft, the Netherlands)
3. The Telling of Things: Imagining With, Through and About Machines, Kristina Andersen (Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands) and Tobias Revell (London College of Communication, UK)
Interactions
4. What are you? Negotiating Relationships with Smart Objects in Intra-Action, Christopher Frauenberger (TU Wien, Austria)
5. The Dynamic Agency of Smart Objects, Jelle van Dijk (University of Twente, the Netherlands) and Evert van Beek (TU Delft, the Netherlands)
6. What can Actor-Network Theory Reveal about the Socio-Technological Implications of Delivery Robots? Nazli Cila (TU Delft, the Netherlands) and Carl DiSalvo (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA)
Methodologies
7. Sketching and Prototyping Smart Objects, Philip van Allen (ArtCenter College of Design, USA)
8. Co-Designing and Co-Speculating on Different Forms of Domestic Smart Things , William Odom (Simon Fraser University, Canada), Arne Berge (Technische Universitaet Chemnitz, Germany) and Dries De Roeck (Studio Dott, Belgium)
Critical Understandings
9. Marx in the Smart Living Room: What Would a Marx-Oriented Approach to Smart Objects Be Like? Betti Marenko (Central Saint Martins, UK) and Pim Haselager (Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
10. Not a Research Agenda for Smart Objects, Ann Light (University of Sussex, UK and Malmoe University, Finland)
11. Towards Wise Objects: The Value of Knowing When to Quit, Pim Haselager (Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
Conclusion
Index
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