ºÝºÝߣshows by User: ribosh / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif ºÝºÝߣshows by User: ribosh / Wed, 22 Feb 2017 11:46:43 GMT ºÝºÝߣShare feed for ºÝºÝߣshows by User: ribosh Domesticating intelligence @ Interaction17 /slideshow/domesticating-intelligence-interaction17/72455777 domesticatingintforslideshare-170222114644
With increasing amount of intelligence imbued in everyday products, designing for and with that intelligence is turning into a matter of understanding not only the perspective of the person but the one of the product too. As these products leave the ‘lab’ and enter our daily lives, they will be inserted into situations which they may not understand and which may not understand them. As it happened with learning-thermostats misunderstandings, roombas attacking hair and self-driving cars misbehaving, more examples will show the need for new languages, tools, and interfaces for products that might have to be understood, trained, tamed, trusted and dealt with. In this talk, we will look at a different way of designing for and with intelligence. Looking in the murky in between today’s reality and the utopian full automated future and by jumping in between real prototypes and fictional scenarios, we will explore new interactions that will emerge in the attempt of domesticating intelligence in our everyday lives.]]>

With increasing amount of intelligence imbued in everyday products, designing for and with that intelligence is turning into a matter of understanding not only the perspective of the person but the one of the product too. As these products leave the ‘lab’ and enter our daily lives, they will be inserted into situations which they may not understand and which may not understand them. As it happened with learning-thermostats misunderstandings, roombas attacking hair and self-driving cars misbehaving, more examples will show the need for new languages, tools, and interfaces for products that might have to be understood, trained, tamed, trusted and dealt with. In this talk, we will look at a different way of designing for and with intelligence. Looking in the murky in between today’s reality and the utopian full automated future and by jumping in between real prototypes and fictional scenarios, we will explore new interactions that will emerge in the attempt of domesticating intelligence in our everyday lives.]]>
Wed, 22 Feb 2017 11:46:43 GMT /slideshow/domesticating-intelligence-interaction17/72455777 ribosh@slideshare.net(ribosh) Domesticating intelligence @ Interaction17 ribosh With increasing amount of intelligence imbued in everyday products, designing for and with that intelligence is turning into a matter of understanding not only the perspective of the person but the one of the product too. As these products leave the ‘lab’ and enter our daily lives, they will be inserted into situations which they may not understand and which may not understand them. As it happened with learning-thermostats misunderstandings, roombas attacking hair and self-driving cars misbehaving, more examples will show the need for new languages, tools, and interfaces for products that might have to be understood, trained, tamed, trusted and dealt with. In this talk, we will look at a different way of designing for and with intelligence. Looking in the murky in between today’s reality and the utopian full automated future and by jumping in between real prototypes and fictional scenarios, we will explore new interactions that will emerge in the attempt of domesticating intelligence in our everyday lives. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/domesticatingintforslideshare-170222114644-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> With increasing amount of intelligence imbued in everyday products, designing for and with that intelligence is turning into a matter of understanding not only the perspective of the person but the one of the product too. As these products leave the ‘lab’ and enter our daily lives, they will be inserted into situations which they may not understand and which may not understand them. As it happened with learning-thermostats misunderstandings, roombas attacking hair and self-driving cars misbehaving, more examples will show the need for new languages, tools, and interfaces for products that might have to be understood, trained, tamed, trusted and dealt with. In this talk, we will look at a different way of designing for and with intelligence. Looking in the murky in between today’s reality and the utopian full automated future and by jumping in between real prototypes and fictional scenarios, we will explore new interactions that will emerge in the attempt of domesticating intelligence in our everyday lives.
Domesticating intelligence @ Interaction17 from Simone Rebaudengo
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From StoryTelling to StorySensing : Sensors at plat (sxsw 16 teaser) /slideshow/from-storytelling-to-storysensing-sensors-at-plat-sxsw-16-teaser/50873111 sxswteaserdeck-150724034723-lva1-app6892
Teaser for the panel picker for SXSW16.]]>

Teaser for the panel picker for SXSW16.]]>
Fri, 24 Jul 2015 03:47:23 GMT /slideshow/from-storytelling-to-storysensing-sensors-at-plat-sxsw-16-teaser/50873111 ribosh@slideshare.net(ribosh) From StoryTelling to StorySensing : Sensors at plat (sxsw 16 teaser) ribosh Teaser for the panel picker for SXSW16. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/sxswteaserdeck-150724034723-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Teaser for the panel picker for SXSW16.
From StoryTelling to StorySensing : Sensors at plat (sxsw 16 teaser) from Simone Rebaudengo
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The House that knew too much - Thingscon15 workshop /slideshow/the-house-that-knew-too-much-thingscon15-workshop/48016552 thingscon15workshopthehousethatknewtoomuch-150511204813-lva1-app6892
What would a coffee machine do if it only knows about my heart problems? And what if the same machine is in my office and knows that I could be more productive with more coffee? We are building a future of things that observe us and the environment, that learn and are trained to take decisions. In this workshop we will explore this near-future. We will build a map of an home full of mundane objects that are smart and make decisions, but may not be completely neutral as «they know too much» or «not enough». We will tap into the weird, awkward, and potentially ironic relationships that emerge with an object that knows partial, wrong or even biased information about us.]]>

What would a coffee machine do if it only knows about my heart problems? And what if the same machine is in my office and knows that I could be more productive with more coffee? We are building a future of things that observe us and the environment, that learn and are trained to take decisions. In this workshop we will explore this near-future. We will build a map of an home full of mundane objects that are smart and make decisions, but may not be completely neutral as «they know too much» or «not enough». We will tap into the weird, awkward, and potentially ironic relationships that emerge with an object that knows partial, wrong or even biased information about us.]]>
Mon, 11 May 2015 20:48:13 GMT /slideshow/the-house-that-knew-too-much-thingscon15-workshop/48016552 ribosh@slideshare.net(ribosh) The House that knew too much - Thingscon15 workshop ribosh What would a coffee machine do if it only knows about my heart problems? And what if the same machine is in my office and knows that I could be more productive with more coffee? We are building a future of things that observe us and the environment, that learn and are trained to take decisions. In this workshop we will explore this near-future. We will build a map of an home full of mundane objects that are smart and make decisions, but may not be completely neutral as «they know too much» or «not enough». We will tap into the weird, awkward, and potentially ironic relationships that emerge with an object that knows partial, wrong or even biased information about us. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/thingscon15workshopthehousethatknewtoomuch-150511204813-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> What would a coffee machine do if it only knows about my heart problems? And what if the same machine is in my office and knows that I could be more productive with more coffee? We are building a future of things that observe us and the environment, that learn and are trained to take decisions. In this workshop we will explore this near-future. We will build a map of an home full of mundane objects that are smart and make decisions, but may not be completely neutral as «they know too much» or «not enough». We will tap into the weird, awkward, and potentially ironic relationships that emerge with an object that knows partial, wrong or even biased information about us.
The House that knew too much - Thingscon15 workshop from Simone Rebaudengo
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Memoirs of an Object @ Solidcon /slideshow/memoirs-of-an-object-solidcon/35172366 solidmemoirsofanobjectsrebaudengoslides-140527102109-phpapp01
The discussions on connected and smart products are mostly centred around highly utilitarian and efficiency based scenarios, but these products have evolved beyond simply offering remote access and are becoming relevant actors in our daily lives. But what changes when we a product actually becomes an actor? In this talk about one of them: a toaster, its addiction and its memoir]]>

The discussions on connected and smart products are mostly centred around highly utilitarian and efficiency based scenarios, but these products have evolved beyond simply offering remote access and are becoming relevant actors in our daily lives. But what changes when we a product actually becomes an actor? In this talk about one of them: a toaster, its addiction and its memoir]]>
Tue, 27 May 2014 10:21:09 GMT /slideshow/memoirs-of-an-object-solidcon/35172366 ribosh@slideshare.net(ribosh) Memoirs of an Object @ Solidcon ribosh The discussions on connected and smart products are mostly centred around highly utilitarian and efficiency based scenarios, but these products have evolved beyond simply offering remote access and are becoming relevant actors in our daily lives. But what changes when we a product actually becomes an actor? In this talk about one of them: a toaster, its addiction and its memoir <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/solidmemoirsofanobjectsrebaudengoslides-140527102109-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The discussions on connected and smart products are mostly centred around highly utilitarian and efficiency based scenarios, but these products have evolved beyond simply offering remote access and are becoming relevant actors in our daily lives. But what changes when we a product actually becomes an actor? In this talk about one of them: a toaster, its addiction and its memoir
Memoirs of an Object @ Solidcon from Simone Rebaudengo
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Designing Addicted Products @ Ux London 13 /slideshow/designing-addicted-products-ux-london-13/19577108 uxlondon1104113-130422090031-phpapp01
The deck of my talk at UX London 2013 on designing addicted products. In a similar way to an addict, we are increasing getting rewards from our consumption of products - we simply have much more than we need. As designers, we can find strategies to cure this addiction or to push for a behavioural change. Still, most of it is in vane. However, What if things themselves can be designed with a goal, which we may not understand or agree with, but that might bring to a long term positive change? What if we shifted perspective and the products themselves were instead addicted to be used - the primary concern of any product from its own perspective? This is the story of Brad and a network of Addicted toasters, an experiment that explores the conversation between a product with its own goal and its owner and the implication coming from this product being part of a network of things and people.]]>

The deck of my talk at UX London 2013 on designing addicted products. In a similar way to an addict, we are increasing getting rewards from our consumption of products - we simply have much more than we need. As designers, we can find strategies to cure this addiction or to push for a behavioural change. Still, most of it is in vane. However, What if things themselves can be designed with a goal, which we may not understand or agree with, but that might bring to a long term positive change? What if we shifted perspective and the products themselves were instead addicted to be used - the primary concern of any product from its own perspective? This is the story of Brad and a network of Addicted toasters, an experiment that explores the conversation between a product with its own goal and its owner and the implication coming from this product being part of a network of things and people.]]>
Mon, 22 Apr 2013 09:00:31 GMT /slideshow/designing-addicted-products-ux-london-13/19577108 ribosh@slideshare.net(ribosh) Designing Addicted Products @ Ux London 13 ribosh The deck of my talk at UX London 2013 on designing addicted products. In a similar way to an addict, we are increasing getting rewards from our consumption of products - we simply have much more than we need. As designers, we can find strategies to cure this addiction or to push for a behavioural change. Still, most of it is in vane. However, What if things themselves can be designed with a goal, which we may not understand or agree with, but that might bring to a long term positive change? What if we shifted perspective and the products themselves were instead addicted to be used - the primary concern of any product from its own perspective? This is the story of Brad and a network of Addicted toasters, an experiment that explores the conversation between a product with its own goal and its owner and the implication coming from this product being part of a network of things and people. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/uxlondon1104113-130422090031-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The deck of my talk at UX London 2013 on designing addicted products. In a similar way to an addict, we are increasing getting rewards from our consumption of products - we simply have much more than we need. As designers, we can find strategies to cure this addiction or to push for a behavioural change. Still, most of it is in vane. However, What if things themselves can be designed with a goal, which we may not understand or agree with, but that might bring to a long term positive change? What if we shifted perspective and the products themselves were instead addicted to be used - the primary concern of any product from its own perspective? This is the story of Brad and a network of Addicted toasters, an experiment that explores the conversation between a product with its own goal and its owner and the implication coming from this product being part of a network of things and people.
Designing Addicted Products @ Ux London 13 from Simone Rebaudengo
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OMG! immortality! /slideshow/omg-immortality-5638434/5638434 presentationresearch-101101190132-phpapp01
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Mon, 01 Nov 2010 19:01:22 GMT /slideshow/omg-immortality-5638434/5638434 ribosh@slideshare.net(ribosh) OMG! immortality! ribosh <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/presentationresearch-101101190132-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br>
OMG! immortality! from Simone Rebaudengo
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-ribosh-48x48.jpg?cb=1522805990 I design real and fictional products and experiences to explore and anticipate the implications of technology leaking in our everyday life. simonerebaudengo.com https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/domesticatingintforslideshare-170222114644-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/domesticating-intelligence-interaction17/72455777 Domesticating intellig... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/sxswteaserdeck-150724034723-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/from-storytelling-to-storysensing-sensors-at-plat-sxsw-16-teaser/50873111 From StoryTelling to S... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/thingscon15workshopthehousethatknewtoomuch-150511204813-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/the-house-that-knew-too-much-thingscon15-workshop/48016552 The House that knew to...