Merck, one of the leading manufacturers of liquid crystals, the key ingredient for all LCD-displays, invited me to speak about future ways of handling information as one of four speakers for its "Displaying Futures"-symposium on October 12th, 2011, at the German Embassy in Tokyo.

The symposium was the initial event for Merck's ongoing initiative to venture into the understanding on how designers, artists and architects could support and improve the development of innovative and competitive technology.

This could mean involving design thinking already at the planning stage of future technology concepts putting people's needs and desires at the center throughout the entire development. This can provide answers and non-orthodox solutions.

For further details about Merck's ongoing initiative and the other participants of the initial symposium visit the initiatives website on http://displayingfutures.com/

The abstract of my talk will be available on the next page.

Weiterlesen

posted by skarp, 21-11-2011

Das »Bifocal Display« Konzeptvideo von Robert Spence und Mark Apperley (Imperial College) ist nicht nur deswegen erwähnenswert, weil es bereits 1982 das inzwischen Dank Apples Dock weitverbreitete Visualiserungs-Prinzip von Hauptfokus/ Detail und Peripheriärer Information darlegt, sondern ist insbesondere auch wegen der Darstellungstechniken (Paperbased Modelling) interessant.

 

Mehr Details, insbesondere auch zu weiteren Anwendungen des Prinzips  sind zu finden unter http://www.interaction-design.org/encyclopedia/bifocal_display.html

posted by jochen, 10-02-2011

via Interaction-Design.org

Aufruf zur Teilnahme
Chemitz, 11.-14. September 2011


»Medien bestimmen zunehmend unser Leben. Ihre Vielfalt und Möglichkeiten bieten gleichsam Chancen wie Risiken. So kann aus einem reichen Repertoire geschöpft werden, um Informationen medial zu transportieren. Gleichzeitig wird ihre Nutzung zunehmend komplex.
Thema der Tagung sind Medien – ihre Möglichkeiten, ihre Gefahren, ihre Nutzung, ihr Einfluss auf unser Leben und unser Einfluss auf sie, heute und vielmehr noch morgen und übermorgen.«

Die Konferenz »Mensch & Computer« der Gesellschaft für Informatik (GI) findet gemeinsam mit dem »UPA Track« der Usability Professionals und den Thementrack »Entertainment Interfaces« statt. Beiträge umfassen Vorträge zu Forschungs- und Praxisergebnissen, Kurzbeiträge zu innovativen, noch laufenden Arbeiten, Systemdemonstrationen, Workshops und Tutorien.

Wie in jedem Jahr seit 2006 freue ich mich darauf, die Mensch & Computer durch meine Arbeit im Programmkomitee unterstützen zu können.

Programminfo und Registrierung unter http://uebermedien.org/
Call for papers unter http://uebermedien.org/call-for-papers/ 

posted by jochen, 26-01-2011

Oracle hat mit »IT 2020: Technology Optimism: An Oracle Scenario« ein lesenswertes White Paper veröffentllicht, in dem die MItarbeiter in kurzen Essays ihre durchaus subjektiven Ideen, Konzepte und Perspektiven für die IT im Jahre 2020 skizzieren…

Nachzulesen unter http://www.oracle.com/us/solutions/thoughtleadership/it-2020-technology-optimism-173105.pdf

posted by jochen, 05-10-2010

via XING – Ux Gruppe

Just published: http://interactions.acm.org/

Cover Story: The Washing Machine That Ate My Sari - Mistakes in Cross-Cultural Design
(Apala Chavan, Douglas Gorney, Beena Prabhu, Sarit Arora)

The rise of emerging markets has fundamentally altered the global marketplace. Actually, it has created a global marketplace, a vast, wired network of manufacturers, programmers and designers who can be anywhere. But consumers and users are always local. And when it comes to developing successful products and services for these users, there is an almost infinite number of ways to get it wrong. Less than half of companies competing in emerging markets have been very successful in meeting their goals, according to one recent study. Bringing a new product to an emerging and possibly untapped market is seductive. But operational investments to enter the market are steep, and failure to launch can be very, very costly.
Peter Drucker said, "the business enterprise has two - and only two - basic functions: marketing and innovation." So success in an marketers and designers are the ones who must get emerging markets right. Designers need to gain a deep, almost tactile awareness of the culture and context of their target market, never letting the global threads of networks and supply chains wrap them in a cocoon. It's essential that they learn from the mistakes others have made in creating products for emerging markets.
This cover story, by Apala Chavan and her team at Human Factors International, highlights the often amusing but economically critical differences between cultures - and the challenges of producing products for the global marketplace.

Click here to continue exploring "Cross Cultural Design..."

posted by jochen, 25-02-2009

Online-Präsentation von Todd Warfel zur Methode der Personas: http://www.slideshare.net/toddwarfel/data-driven-design-research-personas
 

posted by jochen, 25-02-2009

via IxDA Discuss