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E-raamat: Designing Smart Objects in Everyday Life: Intelligences, Agencies, Ecologies

Edited by (Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands), Edited by (Simon Fraser University, Canada), Edited by (Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London, UK)
  • Formaat: 224 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Jul-2021
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781350160149
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: 224 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Jul-2021
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781350160149

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The dramatic acceleration of digital technologies and their integration into physical products is transforming everyday objects. Our domestic appliances, furniture, clothing, are growing in intelligence. Smart objects are increasingly capable of interacting with humans in a purposeful manner with intentionality. This collection of essays, descriptions of empirical work, and design case studies brings together perspectives from interaction design, the humanities, science and technology studies, and engineering, to map, explore and interrogate ways in which our relationships with everyday smart objects might expand and be re-imagined.

By offering a critical assessment on the growing place of smart technology in everyday environments, this book outlines a transdisciplinary research agenda for the future of 'smartness' to help define, envision, and inspire future collaborative design practices. These essays propose an understanding and design of smart objects that embrace their hybrid nature as shifting and blending tools, agents, machines, or even 'creatures'. Authors argue that smart objects have the potential to enter into multiple kinds of relationships with humans, and form complex human-nonhuman ecologies that are both meaningful and empowering in the context of everyday life. This book also shines a light on the hidden infrastructures behind the functioning of smart objects with stirring debates tackling questions of technology, human values, and economic and ecological impact.

Whether you are a design scholar, design practitioner or design activist this book will inspire through offering theoretical insights, design concepts and practical ways on how to engage in this research agenda for future smartness.

Arvustused

Designing Smart Objects in Everyday Life is a compelling study of the intelligences, agencies, and ecologies of smart objects, which are responsive, online devices. The editors and authors apply rich insights about our interrelationships with smart objects to fresh ways of designing them. The various essays in this collection exemplify the corollary processes of putting theory into practice and imagination into objects. This collection will be a great asset to any designer or scholar aspiring to push the boundaries of what design can be. * Leslie Atzmon, Professor of Graphic Design and Design History, Eastern Michigan University, USA * The time when we could think of computational technology as something we simply use is over. The question now is how to live, and live well, with this technology as new breeds of smart objects bring artificial agency at an unprecedented scale into everyday life. To prepare design for this challenge we need to understand the dynamics, not just the static features, of this emerging landscape. We need to understand how perspectives and practices come together and form new trajectories. And that is precisely why we need this book. This is not just a snapshot, its a collaborative choreography. * Johan Redström, Professor of Design, Umeå Institute of Design, Umeå University, Sweden * The time when we could think of computational technology as something we simply use is over. The question now is how to live, and live well, with this technology as new breeds of smart objects bring artificial agency at an unprecedented scale into everyday life. To prepare design for this challenge we need to understand the dynamics, not just the static features, of this emerging landscape. We need to understand how perspectives and practices come together and form new trajectories. And that is precisely why we need this book. This is not just a snapshot, its a collaborative choreography. * Johan Redström, Professor of Design, Umeå Institute of Design, Umeå University, Sweden * Designing objects that can learn, act and relate to humans and non-humans well is a monumental challenge. This collection provides much-needed starting points for an interaction design research agenda for addressing that challenge through expanding possibilities for thinking, making and critiquing "smart objects" and the ecologies in which they live. A sense of curiosity and care infuses the book, sparking imagination but also cultivating sensibilities for the messy implications and non-neutral consequences of things we might design and live with. It is important reading for anyone wanting to develop a wise approach to the design of smart objects. * Heather Wiltse, Associate Professor, Umeå Institute of Design, Umeå University, Sweden * This book took me on a roller-coaster ride through different perspectives, ideas, approaches, theory and examples. Starting from a more than human perspective, the book introduces, deepens, alienates, critiques, and speculates on the future of the design space of smart objects in everyday life. In doing so, it offers a compelling research agenda for connected and smart IoT. I thoroughly enjoyed reading the book and highly recommend it. * Joep Frens, Designer and Researcher in the Future Everyday Group, Department of Industrial Design, Eindhoven University of Technology, the Netherlands *

Muu info

Explores the human relationship with smart, designed objects and the possibilities, challenges and responsibilities that inform the work of interaction designers, theorists and practitioners.
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 Universität 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 Malmö University, Finland)
11. Towards Wise Objects: The Value of Knowing When to Quit, Pim Haselager
(Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
Conclusion
Index
Marco C. Rozendaal is Associate Professor of Interaction Design at the Faculty of Industrial Design Engineering, Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands.

Betti Marenko is Reader in Design and Techno-Digital Futures at Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London, UK.

William Odom is Assistant Professor in Design at the School of Interactive Arts and Technology at Simon Fraser University, Canada.