
Fireside Chats with Empathic Futures Lab (Empathic Futures Lab)
Explore every episode of Fireside Chats with Empathic Futures Lab
Pub. Date | Title | Duration | |
---|---|---|---|
22 Nov 2017 | Episode 1: Home | 00:43:57 | |
In this episode, we discuss what home is and where the future of home is going. We discuss how things will change in terms of how we relate to our homes as our homes become "smarter" and more technologically advanced. Please feel free to comment or visit our website at: Https://Empathicfutures.wordpress.com | |||
05 Feb 2018 | Episode 10: The Infrastructure of US | 01:01:34 | |
This week we are excited to welcome Robert Prochaska to our 10th episode of Empathic Futures Lab. It was recorded with all 3 of us together in Champaign, Illinois. We would like to thank him for taking the time to talk. It was a fantastic way to hit hit double digits. Robert is an architectural designer and freelance photographer currently working on an photography project and exhibit/installation called "Portals" which will be displayed at the University of Illinois starting April 2nd. You can find his other work at the following links: https://www.rsprochaska.com/portals and https://www.instagram.com/takethe___train/?hl=en. Robert's work, a series of sub-projects under a main research project called "Americana", focuses on the state of infrastructure in the United States with the goal of both highlighting the understated beauty of these objects as well as the need to maintain it going forward. The discussion starts by introducing Robert's interests and how they came about then moves towards the meaning of infrastructure both our our built environment and our culture. Along the way we dive into his up-coming exhibit and how to best use photography to bring awareness to these issues. Hope you enjoy this episode and feel free to comment below with questions, concerns or comments to continue this dialogue. | |||
13 Feb 2018 | Episode 11: Filters are Us | 00:52:12 | |
This episode is our last installment in our mini-series on Kevin Kelly's book: "The Inevitable." We discuss his chapter on filters. The basic premise of the chapter is that as society creates an increasing amount of content and data, it becomes impossible for us as humans to view/experience/process those creations. Our attention is hard limited at 24 hours per day after all (supposing we don't get any sleep). This is where filters come in: they help us decide what content to interact with. Our discussion starts off around this question of what are successful filters and what do they mean to us. We talk heavily about advertising in today's society and move into discussing how friends and people filter content for us. Where does this lead us as a person and as a society? How do we manage these filter bubbles? We then discuss what this means for space. Can we have these environmental experience market places for designers, both amateur or professional, to showcase and sell their work? Then we discuss, at the end, how all of this filtering and AI algorithms has the potential to make us more human rather than less human as the world increasingly centers around "experience" and "personalization". Thanks for listening and, as always, feel free to comment. We'd love to hear your thoughts. | |||
24 Feb 2018 | Episode 12: Sensors Save Us? | 00:40:26 | |
Sensors Save Us? features a lively discussion regarding the impact that sensors and information collection may have on the police forces of the near future. We start by considering how officers deal with information being collected about them and the ways that can influence how one would act in specific scenarios. We also discuss the role data collection plays in relation to their firearms. Finally all this culminates in the idea that if you could use data collection to manipulate the stress levels of an officer in the field it would allow them more opportunity to act as a community officer, flipping the public perspective that is often associated with police forces today. Additionally we have included a few articles that helped inspire this conversation.
On Gun Sensors:
NJ Law
Smart Charger https://www.theverge.com/2017/2/9/14561358/dodge-charger-pursuit-police-ambush-protection
Body Sensor Network
Future Officers | |||
29 Mar 2018 | Episode 13: Empathic inJustice | 01:03:20 | |
In this episode, we have James Addison and Olivia Huang with us to discuss their joint MArch thesis from MIT. There work can be found here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/ss4e9ap92ckefq3/Spaces%20of%20Justice.pdf?dl=0 Their thesis is entitled "Spaces of Justice" and aims to address the more political/social/economic fringes of architecture in that the aspirations of the work takes priority over the architectural details themselves. That being said, there was great thought put into the program included in their proposals as well as the spatial arrangement of these spaces. It is, despite the socio-cultural nature of the work, very much an architecture. In this episode, we discuss the following: -The motivations for this project -What exactly did they do? -How did they decide on their separate (though related) proposals? -What did they learn about architecture and how to include research in the design process? -How would you design "success" in such a political/academic work as this? -What is next for them? In the end, it is all about trying to put people (and our collective communities) first when thinking about socio-cultural problems. Architecture has a unique say in this because of how space influences people and we must be willing to be part of this conversation. *if you enjoyed this episode, please rate us on itunes* Thank you for listening.
| |||
05 Apr 2018 | Episode 14: Future Business | 00:45:35 | |
In this episode, we delve into some ideas for the future of the business of architecture. As technology and culture progress towards this world of shared experiences and minimal costs to distribution and manufacturing, how does the nature of space, and who runs space, change? Are architects and their businesses on the right side of history? (resources discussed are linked below) We start by introducing the topic through a Sidewalk Labs "Sidewalk Talks" event and what was discussed there. Christian then introduces us to this idea of Megaforms and how businesses like WeWork and Sidewalk Labs can be compared to megaforms discussed by past theorists like ArchiGram's plug in city. We then briefly discuss how Sidewalk Labs could make money. Perhaps the biggest chunk of this episode then discusses how WeWork leverages inefficiencies in the architectural business model in terms of how architects don't leverage the information at their disposal as well as tech companies do. Architecture firms also integrate towards construction but can a case be made to instead integrate towards experience instead? What other sources of experience can we leverage? WeWork is expanding greatly, Sidewalk Labs is pushing towards Smart Cities, and there are opportunities in Brand Stragegy. What is next? Resources below:
| |||
11 May 2018 | Episode 18: A Design Language | 00:44:19 | |
This week we got the conversation kicked off with a segway from Molly Wright Steenson's Architectural Intelligence. Here she introduced both of us to a fresh take on the work of Christopher Alexander, and because of this we decided to dedicate a full episode to exploring the structure of A Pattern Language. We initially looked at the comparison drawn between Alexander's approach to objectivity in design and Eisenman's approach. From there we discussed what it means to make a public critically aware and engaged with their physical environment and which approach was better at accomplishing this goal. This discussion then led us to consider how a language evolves and changes over time. Chris raised the point about how slang and new words are adopted into a language and how that adoption is applicable in the architectural realm. Given that we have more parameters in just the last 20 years that we now have to facilitate in design how should a pattern language continue to evolve and augment itself over time, and what agency to individuals have to make this change in their own design decisions. Newsletter signup: https://wordpress.us18.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=dbf620955f84c3d9b8321ea7b&id=4d5745e1b3 Pattern Language Website: https://www.patternlanguage.com/
Christopher Alexander Lecture: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98LdFA-_zfA
Molly Wright Steenson Architectural Intelligence: http://www.girlwonder.com/papers-articles
Empathic Futures Lab Blog by Christian Pepper - Evolved Pattern Language - 1: https://empathicfutures.wordpress.com/2018/05/09/advanced-pattern-language-1/ | |||
05 Jun 2018 | Episode 20: Trust Us, Reputation is the Future! | 00:46:54 | |
In this 20th episode we discuss the role that reputation will play in the future. We worked from a poignant article written in Fast Company by Gloria Origgi, an Italian philosopher. In this piece she dissects how she believs that reputation will take over information as the primary driver for how we make decisions. From here we discuss how reputation and branding interact. We also discuss the role that biases play in our understanding of reputation, and how you might be able to shift those biases. But when reputation is so significant you need a real way to verify someone or something is who they say they are. And we think that is where Foam may come in. A blockchain system designed to provide proof of location based on interactions in a physical world. And we discuss more, so tune in to this episode to get the full scoop of ideas.
Reputation Article: https://www.fastcompany.com/40565050/say-goodbye-to-the-information-age-its-all-about-reputation-now
Foam Protocol, Ethereum Block Chain System: https://blog.foam.space/introducing-the-foam-protocol-2598d2f71417
Be sure to check out our weekly newsletter here: https://wordpress.us18.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=dbf620955f84c3d9b8321ea7b&id=4d5745e1b3 And our blog for more information and excitign content: | |||
02 Oct 2018 | Episode 22: Season 2 Kick-off Event | 00:40:52 | |
We're Back! Season 2 is finally kicking off after a long layoff. We hope to have a good season for you all. In this episode, we recap what we did with our Summer. Go over what we have done this fall with our installation in the lead up to today. We go over what are next projects are for Empathic Futures Lab. Finally we touch on the future of this podcast and what sorts of topics we want to addresss. It's a bit rambling at times but it does the job of setting up this season. Thanks for tuning in and hope you stick around for the real meat of the season next week and beyond. | |||
19 Oct 2018 | Episode 24: Big Bias, Big Data, Blockchain and other Topics | 00:54:39 | |
This week, we started out discussing biases in our media, machine learning, and our world in general. This lead to a discussion revolving around how do you temper the bias in Artificial Intelligences, looking specifically at Amazon's intelligent resume filter. Do you set up distributed systems that put that check on rogue bias? How do you establish a transparency and tell people the bias included in particular systems? We ask all these questions and more in this week's episode Some related links.
| |||
07 Dec 2018 | Episode 25: Edges, Interfaces, the Formalization of the Digital | 00:40:48 | |
Christian and Chris delve discuss the how the digital world is formalized in the physical world through interface design. They discuss how our interfaces and interactions with digital environments have evolved over time. How have physical forms of digital entities been explored in the past and what has led to the reduction of formal elements over time? Is the phone really the best universal interface? What do stores such as the Amazon Go Store or Nike's new House of Innovation mean for architecture and digital design? How does an entire building act as an interface for people's interactions in the world? Y2K Futurism: Gun for Shooting Tears: Nike Flagship NYC: https://www.fastcompany.com/video/will-nikes-new-store-reinvent-retail/7rZ7xQAd Hyper Surfaces: https://www.hypersurfaces.com/ Knocki: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/knocki/knocki-make-any-surface-smart/description VR Healing: Strange Nike Forms:
| |||
25 Jan 2019 | Episode 26: Digital Environments - Picnics or otherwise | 00:40:45 | |
This episode features a special guest: Colter Wehmeier. Christian and Colter took on the final design and construction of the Digital Picnic and absolutely killed it. It looked great while it was up. Colter is a fascinating and very intelligent guy so it was great fun to have it on the show. During the episode we discuss the Digital Picnic, the design decisions that we made as well as how it turned out. We also discussed the future of technology in terms of the immersing the digital world within the physical world and what happens when we blur or even remove the boundaries between the digital and physical environments. | |||
05 Feb 2019 | Episode 27: What AirBnB's Backyard project might mean and other tangential topics | 00:44:50 | |
Christian and Chris step back into the news cycle (or at least the news cycle at the time that this was recorded rather than the time of release) to discuss AirBnB's recent announcement of their Project Backyard. Not much new has come from AirBnb since that initial press release. We start the discussion by talking about what AirBnB is and what it means to produce "authentic" experiences in the real world through a digital application. We then discuss why AirBnb might get into the physical nature of architecture and what that might mean for the industry of architecture. We conclude by diving into how successful AirBnB might be in creating new architecture, how that architecture might affect the places that it is located in, and what all that data collection might mean to the people who live in that architecture. Spoiler alert: we think they will do a good job on the actual physical product. Jury is still out and if it'll be good overall or not.
AirBnB best instagram experience referenced in the episode: https://www.airbnb.com/experiences/362343
AirBnB/Samara Backyard: | |||
13 Feb 2019 | Episode 28: Disconnecting - find your premium | 00:55:32 | |
At Empathic Futures Lab, we often put technology on a pedestal. This episode's discussion is about stepping back and trying to figure out how to get away from technology when we feel the need to. Colter is back with us as well this week. The episode starts off with Colter discussing this time in a sensory deprivation tank and what that experience meant to him and how he thought about "being." We then discuss how we can build off of cheaper or easier DIY solutions for that. Is there a difference between consuming vs producing in terms of overload? We then discuss why offices and coffee shops are different in terms of production? Often times, it seems we enjoy working in coffee shops more than offices... How does out attention work and how can we plan for that in terms of which environments we live and work in? Is this large number of distractions a problem for us as humans? We then discuss who is best able to fix the issues? Is it the technologists themselves or our public servants or someone else? Do we needs apps to mitigate our app overload? We then discuss Front Porch Forum, its article on the Verge, linked below, and how it gives an example of how perhaps apps can be beneficial to the larger community...though by perhaps forgoing revenue streams to do so. https://www.theverge.com/2019/1/24/18129437/front-porch-forum-vermont-social-network-listserv-local-online-community This leads to a discussion on what is "premium" engagement? What does it mean online and what does it mean as an "environment?" Colter brings up Sea Ranch as an example of a "premium" environment: https://www.google.com/search?q=sea+ranch&rlz=1C1MSIM_enUS651US651&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiL9u7l4LjgAhWL5IMKHQUUCeAQ_AUIDygC&biw=1920&bih=938 We end on a thought that Colter brings up: "How do you make good design high volume, low margin"? Trickle up design: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_yCh4_5i_5o | |||
20 Feb 2019 | Episode 29: Mirror Worlds - or why the future is Green | 00:56:40 | |
This episode was inspired by Kevin Kelly's MirrorWorld article for Wired. Here is the link: https://www.wired.com/story/mirrorworld-ar-next-big-tech-platform/ Our conversation starts with summing up the article and describing what a Mirror World actually is as an augmented reality future. While doing this, we dig into particular sections of Kelly's writing starting with his ideas of "super vision" - the ability AR might gives us to see the digital insides of every object. We then discuss what "authenticity" means in a world such as this where we can augment reality - past, present, future melding into one - on top of what "actually" exists. How does this change how we understand "place"? What is "place" in a world where we have a much larger control over how we experience space? Does placemaking no longer necessitate building new buildings and should we then discuss new business models for create places? What does it look like to design something for the mirror world? Or is it purely a visual overlay? Why pay for architecture if all of the cool stuff is just an overlay? Then we get to this point in the discussion where we ask if the future of architecture is quite literally "green". Mirror World article with the mountains and school children that we discuss. http://blog.leapmotion.com/mirrorworlds/ For those of you looking for the Architectural Intelligence book that was referenced a couple times, it is here: https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/architectural-intelligen ce Instagram photobooth article: https://www.theringer.com/tech/2019/1/23/18193574/instagram-photo-wall-personal-home | |||
30 Nov 2017 | Episode 2: Post Thanksgiving Lightning Round | 00:42:34 | |
This week, with the holiday weekend interfering with our usual Sunday Night recording, we decided to keep this episode light and fun rather than on topic. We will resume next week with our Mass Customization vs Standardization topic. Show Notes: Robots - What would we want out of a robot in our home Classes - What classes would we take if we went back to school. Chris's Latest Post on EmpathicFutures.wordpress.com - How writing could be very beneficial for design and how experts are biased and may miss things. Fairy Tales - Our up coming entry to the Fair Tales competition Smart Home - What would we want in a smart home (spoiler: Christian wants to feed his Guinea Pig better) Hobbies - The value of them and how to connect them to productive work. | |||
05 Dec 2017 | Episode 3: Standards vs. Customization | 00:46:18 | |
In this episode, we discuss the differences between Standards and Mass Customization: where is there value in each and how/should we go towards Mass Customization? Show Notes: What do we mean by Standards and Mass Customization/Individualization? How did Corbu and the Modernists define these conversations? First principles and early standards: how do we start off this conversation? How do we begin to implement a designed environment where mass customization exists? This is an especially tough question if that mass customization is run by AI or ML. We run a scenario about how this system might get up and running and then discuss its pros and cons. Why aren't we mass customizing our environment yet if we are already starting to do that with our entertainment, news, and transportation? Takeaways. Thanks for listening! Reading more at: empathicfutures.wordpress.com
| |||
02 Apr 2019 | Episode 30: [AR]chitecture | 00:57:56 | |
This discussion is our follow-up to our last discussion on Mirror World’s. This time, we have Colter on with us as well.
We start by discussing different ideas for mirror worlds such as how we might simulate feelings or very large spaces within the context of small physical spaces.
Somehow, we end up on a tangent of really “bad” technology. Ideas such as the digital murphy bed, America’s funniest AI home videos, and what’s the dumbest thing that you can make self driving?
The first part of the episode is really just a giant tangent though. Eventually we work our way back to the real discussion. Colter get’s us started by bringing up the differences between working in physical vs digital design processes. Particularly, he brings up the idea of svelteness or the scale/fuzziness that occurs in the physical world that we do not get in the digital world.
He brings up Dreams by Media Moleculte: https://www.mediamolecule.com/games/dreams as an example of sveltness in the digital world.
This leads us to a discussion about the human-ness of this technology. How do we get people started in digital tools vs physical things? How do we expose room for error?
What does it mean to be “literate” in 3D modeling in a truly digital world? What does it mean to be design literate in general? Does this increase or decrease the value of design?
| |||
06 May 2019 | Episode 31: The Many faces of Interfaces | 00:53:31 | |
We are trying this new thing where we come up with a topic and then just riff on ideas that come from that topic. This episode’s discussion was nominally about “interfaces.” That was our jumping off point, our “home plate” if you will, was interfaces or invisible interfaces.
Before we jump into the ideas though, we define what we mean by interfaces and what we mean by “invisible” interfaces. We discuss what effects they might have on society at this point in time. I’m pretty sure Colter uses the word “automagically” at some point during this section.
We then get into Christian’s idea and riff on it for a bit. It gets fun from there. The speculation is based on if your interfaces were connected to particular people or places.
Our following discussion gets into place based interfaces. How would that work and would that be better or worse? And does that relate to the demographic composition of that said place?
Colter then brings up the new Dimension that he has discovered in technology. This part is actually quite interesting as well. You should take a listen.
Hope you had fun. Listen again next time. | |||
13 May 2019 | Episode 32: Deep Dive on Heritage | 01:09:34 | |
Welcome to another episode of Empathic Futures Lab. This one features a guest appearance by Souyma Dasgupta. It's a pretty intellectual episode (after 5 minutes of fun/goofy introduction anyways) so buckle up. It was a really good discussion if you like that sort of thing.
The topic is about “Authenticity” and “Heritage.” Soumya is a Phd student who’s research centers around the topic. Colter too has researched the topic a bit. We start the discussion by defining the subject, what it means, and what it means to us in particular.
Colter discusses how he’s interested in unpacking or exploding authenticity because of how he perceives the inauthenticity around him. Souyma explains the nuances of heritage to his research. He explains the difficulty of even defining what is “authentic” at any one time.
This sort of sets us up for the largest talking point of the episode: We discuss authenticity and how it is derived from/related to identity. Moreover, how do we even draw define or draw boundaries around “identity?”
It’s probably one of our best discussions to date. Enjoy. | |||
03 Jun 2019 | Episode 33: Dumb AI | 00:59:36 | |
This episode’s home base is “AI” or rather...the current iteration of AI which attempts to pass as Intelligent. The idea behind the conversation is really that AI is at the cusp of being quite useful but it still is flopping around, making decisions that are almost right but wrong in silly ways.
Essentially, the conversation is about Dumb AI.
Enjoy. | |||
03 Jul 2019 | Episode 34: Value Engineering w/ Alex Bahr | 00:53:07 | |
In this episode, Christian and Colter sit down with architect Alex Bahr in the lobby of UIC’s Gallery 400 to discuss speculative architecture, subversive detailing, and alternative means of shaping the built environment. Bahr’s thesis project, the Play of Parts is also explored, check it out at the link below!
The Play of Parts (Portfolio +Thesis) https://issuu.com/alexbahr9/docs/alexbahr__thesis_book_pages
Alex Bahr’s Website | |||
14 Dec 2017 | Episode 4: Data and Identity | 00:38:50 | |
In this episode, we discuss the ramifications that ML/AI has on the privacy and identity. In particular, what design implications and solutions are incurred. The following topics come up during this discussion. We discuss this great article in the NY Times on explainable AI: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/21/magazine/can-ai-be-taught-to-explain-itself.html How can we reverse or change our identity in a time when are current selves are made up all the data produced by our past selves (data inertia). What does it mean to society if ML algorithms are digging up knowledge that we are not prepared to embrace? ML has no taboos, it just finds patterns. Life Designers in the future: can a person work in tandem with machines to curate our lives? What does that mean for our quality of life? How does that influence how we relate to each other? | |||
28 Dec 2017 | Episode 5: Design Trends for 2018, part 1 | 00:47:17 | |
Show notes: With the end of 2017 and the start of 2018, we are discussing design trends for the future. The design trends we are discussing come from the following article from Fast Company: https://www.fastcodesign.com/90153796/the-9-big-design-trends-that-will-shape-2018 1) A Revolution in User-Friendly Politics is Coming 2) Inclusivity will go Mainstream 3) A Whole New Field will be Born: Artificial Intelligence 4) Digital is Disappearing As always, please let us know what you though and leave comments here or on our website at empathicfutures.wordpress.com | |||
07 Jan 2018 | Episode 6: Design Trends for 2018, part 2 | 00:47:08 | |
With the end of 2017 and the start of 2018, we are discussing design trends for the future. The design trends we are discussing come from the following article from Fast Company: https://www.fastcodesign.com/90153796/the-9-big-design-trends-that-will-shape-2018 5) We'll finally move beyond Flat Design 6) We'll eat our Feelings 7) AI will turn the world into a big Uber Map 8) Designers will Wake up and Fight Back 9) Evolution in what Value means Bonus) Thoughts on Autheticity and how that matters in today's cullture As always, please let us know what you thought and leave comments here or on our website at empathicfutures.wordpress.com | |||
20 Jan 2018 | Episode 7: Becoming a Protopia | 00:45:27 | |
This episode starts off a series in which we will be discussing Kevin Kelly's "The Inevitable: Understanding the 12 technological forces that will shape our future." In this first episode of the series, we discuss the chapter entitled "Becoming." The premise of the chapter is that we live in a Protopia meaning a world that is constantly updating itself in incremental fashion. The episode starts with Christian posing a question around the societal effects of an increasing rate of change mean for our environments? Will we even notice these changes as they occur or will we be blind to them until one day, we wake up and realize the whole world is different? The second half of the episode is spent discussing the ramifications of where we are in the updating process. We have updated our world to such extent that everything is becoming smart. Everything is producing information. How do we handle this? | |||
24 Jan 2018 | Episode 8: Flowing Environments | 00:45:46 | |
This is the second episode in a series where we discuss some of the key trends in Kevin Kelly's book: The Inevitable. The trend for this episode is "Flowing." The idea is that as society progresses, we go from consumer rare, fixed items produced by specialially trained craftsmen to consuming ubiquitous copies of that media and finally to being able to modify and create such media on our own quite easily. Our discussion focused around the following questions: Where are we at in architecture/environment design today? How far into this state of flowing do we as designers want to proceed? And what does that mean for design? How do we reach a state of "flowing" for spaces and environments which are currently though of as fairly static? | |||
01 Feb 2018 | Episode 9: Design in the Relationships | 00:56:57 | |
We are excited to announce our first guest on the show: Marco Fabrega. Definitely give it a listen. It was our longest podcast to date but that is only because we have so much fun in the end. Marco is a User Experience Designer with Havas Group in Chicago as well as a veteran of a couple start-up companies. He shares his experiences of moving from architecture school into the digital design disciplines and discusses what he's learned along the way. Namely he discusses how this journey has shapedhis definition of design as not only for problem solving but also understanding relationships between disciplines, designers and the user. Next we get into the standards and practices of UX design. He shares hows he's learned the design processes and design practices within the User Experience profession. From there, we roll into the future of user experience design. What does it mean now and what will in mean in the future? How do we operate differently between screens, voice, and VR. What does this mean for the user? We talk about how we perceive motion, material, and voice and how mistakes in certain areas like this can produce greater cognitive load. Finally, we talk about quirks in design interfaces and problem solving within that discipline such as how Instagram and Ebay solved their branding issues differently. | |||
15 Apr 2018 | Episode 15: Authenticity in Fiction | 00:39:59 | |
We kicked this episode off with a brief history of fiction and the speculative design. Beginning in the 60s looking at Archigram, Ant Farm, Superstudio, and Buckminster Fuller. We briefly explored how these groups approached speculative futures and discussed the categories those may fall into. Then we moved on to examples of the current paradigm, focus on the merits of Jimenez Lai, Near Future Laboratory, and Tomorrow's Thoughts Today and disucssed the importance of grounding the fiction in a relevant real world issue. . Then we discussedthe role of fiction, how is it a useful tool and when is it merely art for the sake of art. One particular note was how it relates to sci-fi and its job of describing design to the larger public. Then we discussed how these ideas might coellesce in an up-coming seminar led by Christian at the UIUC ISoA, and how the idea for that seminar was inspired by our Fairy Tales Competition entry. From the Fairy Tales Competition entry we gleamed the significance of perspective when telling a fictional story in relation to design. The episode was concluding by reiterating how great design fiction is heavily influenced by a thoughtful researched approch and perspective.
Relevant Links to the Podcast: Archigram http://archigram.westminster.ac.uk/
Ant Farm http://www.spatialagency.net/database/ant.farm
Buckminster Fuller http://www.spatialagency.net/database/buckminster.fuller
Near Future Laboratory http://nearfuturelaboratory.com/
Tomorrow's Thoughts Today http://www.tomorrowsthoughtstoday.com/
Jimenez Lai: Citizens of No Place | |||
01 May 2018 | Episode 17: Re-Installing Architecture | 00:45:41 | |
Are installations the key to unlocking the future of architecture? The small scale at which they operate allows them the flexibility to explore a wider range of ideas and potential solutions. If approached as part of a larger framework of research and exploration, rather than one-off creative outburts, perhaps they can be better used to push our understanding of our environment further, not just in terms of architecture, but in terms of all the disciplines. To not do this is almost a missed opportunity. In this episode, our conversations covers those questions above as well as well as perhaps how to answer these questions: "What is the basic value that installation design can provide?", "Does providing a value hierarchy in discipline much like installation design allow us to see more opportunities?", and other questions. Finally here are the links that we referred to in the podcast: Newsletter signup: https://wordpress.us18.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=dbf620955f84c3d9b8321ea7b&id=4d5745e1b3 Second Story Blog about Responsive Wall https://blog.secondstory.com/2016/09/20/stepping-into-the-future-of-collaborative-workspaces/
Sapient Razorfish Hacking Architecture: https://admin.podbean.com/empathicfutures/episode/update/id/BD6W4905F45
Importance of Site Specificity to Design: http://www.metropolismag.com/architecture/whatever-you-do-dont-call-daniel-buren-art-installation/
Light Frieze: https://admin.podbean.com/empathicfutures/episode/update/id/BD6W4905F45
Hackable Wall Paint: https://www.designboom.com/technology/disney-research-smart-wall-04-26-2018/
| |||
23 Apr 2018 | Episode 16: What does Experience Mean? | 00:41:01 | |
This episode was a sort of rambling discussion on what we mean when we discuss experience. We really just ask how we can nail down an experience and add a little context to what we mean when we discuss experience. It is a topic that is never too far from our discussion points and yet there is no real easy way to define it. It is extremely vague. We eventually get to the point where we discuss how we can think about a potential installation that works with and changes according to how people experience space.
| |||
25 May 2018 | Episode 19: Why do we detail? | 00:49:50 | |
In this episode Chris and Christian discuss the architectural detail. How its meaning has evolved over time, and what its significant might be in today's archtectural landscape. Using Edward Ford's The Architectural Detail as the primary conversation vehicle, we start by picking apart the 5 definition of architectural detail that he identifies. Following this we decide to pit two of those definitions against each other and explore the validity of each, the joint vs the autonomous detail. "What role does the autonomous detail play in the future of design?" and "how might an intimate element of building design be an active participant in the experience of environment?" are among the conversation topics, here.
Partial Intro to The Architectural Detail: https://issuu.com/papress/docs/architectural_detail_screen
Ideo's article about AI infused design objects: https://www.ideo.com/blog/what-the-ai-products-of-tomorrow-might-look-like
Future Cities Lab: http://www.future-cities-lab.net/datagrove
Be sure to check out our weekly newsletter here: https://wordpress.us18.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=dbf620955f84c3d9b8321ea7b&id=4d5745e1b3 And our blog for more information and excitign content: | |||
09 Oct 2018 | Episode 23: Why Media is so Broken (and other clickbaity titles) | 00:46:40 | |
This week, Chris and Christian discuss advertising and the media. They begin by trying to define a basis for what media is. They then contrast the human focused characteristics of media with that of more natural landscapes. Following this they question the incentive structures of media and how that might be augmented to introduce a system that is more "fair." From there they discuss a few different ideas about the physical space that media might exist in. Additionally, is it possible that if people are able to physical connect to their media outlets, do they find them to be more trustworthy and dependable? A few links for information that was referenced during the discussion: Regarding Media Incentive Structures https://medium.com/@SeanBlanda/medium-and-the-reason-you-cant-stand-the-news-anymore-c98068fec3f8 Regarding the Evolution of Media Environments
|