PP1: Greek Festival/Claw of Eradication
Posted: September 7, 2015 Filed under: Alexandra Stilianos, Pressure Project I Leave a comment »Get started: When asked to go to a public place and make hypothetical choices that will affect the general population, the urge to (theoretically) choose malevolency was too strong an urge to ignore. Also, first instincts were embraced and explored.
Location: Columbus Greek Festival, Courtyard
Food: My favorite Greek pastry, galaktoboureko- Delicious
Map: I choose to observe the courtyard area of the festival which served multiple functions. The east side of the lot held the entrance, a performance space for folk dancing and a small stage with a band and various musicians. The center and rest of the space held portable tables for dining and various food/alcohol vendors. The flow of traffic moved erratically (as would any festival) but most often it was cyclical. Existing major technologies were listed in the legend but also included my main focus/perpetrator: the cellphone.
Notes: The highest areas of congestion were around all the vendors as one would suspect but the corner that shared space between access to the bar, stage, musicians and dining area was the most dense. Not only because of sheer numbers, alcohol consumption and children running erratically waiting to perform but a common 2015 problem: the multitasking text and walk combo. While this problem was illuminated in this space, it is a common problems in all areas of the festival (not to mention shopping malls, side walks, the oval, etc.). While hardly anyone can admit to being innocent of this crime, it is more problematic in a setting such as a small festival than it is in a large, public area. For that reason, I choose to devise a system that was effective, isolated and also a bit hilariously cruel.
Devise:
“The class is our master, the claw chooses who will stay and who will go.”- Alien’s, Toy Story
I devised a crane of sorts that can eradicate people who have, in a congested public space, become an obstruction because of their absorption in their devices (particularly, smartphones.) This would be done by a sensor who reads body posture, as well as other factors, and in a sort-of magnetic field, alien abduction-esque way, be lifted from the space and returned to the entrance where they can re-enter after disregarding their distraction.
I used the ability to ignore actualities of creating this device freely but did determine three factors that needed to be taken in account when determining who gets ejected. They are:
- Device in hand
- Curvature of cervical spine
- Forward mobility
The Claw would have a system of sensors that had the ability to read these various requirements and would only eject perpetrators that met all three. The first would require some sort of heat sensor that could detect the phone was out of a pocket or purse and touching human skin. Then it would also be able to detect the curvature of the cervical spine, since a person can walk and talk on the phone more effectively than when they are hunched over staring at the ground. The final requirement is the necessity for the subject/victim to be in a forward motion, a considerate person can step aside out of a traffic pattern to complete their cellular duties, which should not be punished.
Conclusion: While this solution is highly impractical in the ‘real’ world, it was enjoyable to not only observe and find a solution, it also gave me a sinister satisfaction to deal with a pet peeve of mine. All the while, with a devising experiential mind.
OPA!
It knows when you are sleeping , it knows when your awake, it knows when you are board. …
Posted: September 7, 2015 Filed under: Extras Leave a comment »http://www.technologyreview.com/news/540906/your-smartphone-can-tell-if-youre-bored/
M(ansion) A(partment) S(hack) H(ouse)
Posted: September 7, 2015 Filed under: Alexandra Stilianos Leave a comment »A twist on the classic fortune-telling list game.
The original MASH is played by making lists of various aspects/milestones of ones life (marriage, job, home, kids, etc.) in separate categories, picking a number at random then using that number to cross off potential ‘candidates’ one by one until each section has only one option left. The method we used to decide how many jumps to take until a candidate was crossed off included me drawing a spiral until Sarah said, ‘Stop’ and counting the number of rings.
In our (truncated) controlled, original version of the game Sarah can look forward to marrying Stephen Hawking, living in a mansion in Ireland and be employed as a CEO. Not too shabby a life, Sarah!
Next we decided to take out the constraints of having all the corresponding potential categories in the same list. We randomized them in a word cloud, used the spiral method to find a number and cross off at random until only 4 remained. This added the possibility that a player could have multiple jobs but nowhere to live (and all the variants therein).
I very much enjoyed the ‘risk’ involved in the world cloud set up of the game. In the original, making some of the categorical choices unappealing left some risk but the stakes are higher when all these ‘goals’ are not necessarily guaranteed. We ran into a problem when in the second version, which was at times it was difficult to be unbiased when ‘randomly’ crossing off choices. An amendment which included still putting the contenders in a list, but one long continuous and arbitrary one adds the element of organization with the suspense of the intended outcome.
All in all: we are the future.
There is only software (Manovich)
Posted: September 7, 2015 Filed under: Anna Brown Massey Leave a comment »Okay, okay, jeez. I get it. THERE IS ONLY SOFTWARE
“There is no such thing as digital media. There is only software–as applied to media data (or ‘content’).
“Digital media” and “new media” are not enough
Digital representation makes computers possible.
Software determines what we can do with them.
Baudrillard: Short Introduction (Mann)
Posted: September 7, 2015 Filed under: Anna Brown Massey Leave a comment »[I am analyzing a five-page typo-riddled summary of a sixty-year span of work, so I am uncertain whether the vigorous disagreements I have with Baudrillard are actually with Mann, or with Baudrillard’s work itself.]
Added “sign exchange value” to Marx’s “use value” and “exchange value”
– signs of social distinctions
Vietnam War: we won through our own camera reality of victory-aimed cinema
My dear Baudrilliard, I do think you are entirely alone in this interpretation, at least about Vietnam, but perhaps you wrote this in the middle of the war, or were only reading the National Review?
The Gulf War didn’t take place because Americans experienced it solely through hypperreal images on tv.
“We” (this summary uses “we” instead of “Americans”) actually experienced the Gulf War as people who flew across, shipped across, and fought, and traveled, and died, and got hurt, and were okay and killed. And not “we,” but yes, “we” were also the 20,000+ Iraqis who died. Right, I get that there is a sense of the “hyperreal,” but this ain’t new my friend. For as long as there have been humans using language or drawn symbols to communicate, we have been living in the hyperreal. All stories are “hypperreal.” The advent of television did not bring those stories and that sepration of experience; instead it provided a different forum for those stories, and for different types of stories.
I appreciate later that Mann points out Baudrillard’s interpretations of misogyny, er, “love.” It always helps to have a sense of a person’s perspective on the ladies when examining their worldview. The gentleman was born in 1927 France, so his fixation on the binary of the sexes and women as “seductive, artificial, symbolic, manipulative of signs” (Mann, p 2) against the male direction and “rational” phallus enlightens us to his ignorance that perhaps he misread his own “map of reality.”
Orders of Simulcra
.. Because yes, we do trade in maps of reality. We always have. One essence of our human identity is our cognition with which we may interpret experience. We derive meaning from experience, and Baudrillard’s suggestion that this means that we live among simulcra I can stand behind, but his ethnocentric “Orders of Simulcra” is pathetically narrow at best and insidiously culturally harmful at worst. His orders also further exclude that living in a “desert of the real” is the nature of being human.
Interactive Dramaturges Ch. 3 (Krieg)
Posted: September 7, 2015 Filed under: Anna Brown Massey Leave a comment »Machines are on logic domain: not “dialoguing”
Dialogue etymology: “two” + “knowledge” / collegial reasoning
— probably enabled the development of self-consciousness and human identity
Computers: underlying architecture is logically closed
Search engines provide the “where” but not the actual answer
Knowledge system: : analyze all represented data and synthesize new knowledge
– ability to create new hypotheses
– complex, not complicated
– thinking is always analytical and intuitve
— (ahem, Western culture) has a history of privileging a hierarchy of “rational”/logical/analytical over intuitive, synthetic thinking considered irrational
> Let’s note that these two separate categories of attributes have been applied to sex: male to the former, female to the latter
Computers work with “if-then” hierarchy, which demands a beginning and an end
– mono-logic.
– humans are polylogic
“Autopoiesis” (coined by Humberto Maturana): humans can simulate through language
Virtual Reality games give the illusion of dialogue, but not dialogue itself
Krieg’s Interactive Cinema System for Electronic Video Interactive System:
– option to select “footnote” sequence via personal controller through majority voting
– no dialogue
Future aim: polylogic architecture + virtual data => cognitive computing + true human-machine dialogue
– Future computers would be able to “invite Shakespeare to dinner”
Krieg fails to note in his description of how a future polylogic computer could dialogue about Shakespeare that there would remain, like humans, multiple answers to the questions put to Computer Shakespeare, just as English scholars would respond with conflicting interpretations. This vision of a polylogic computer who can work in meaning and infinite interpretations is far from us, as until humanity determines a “right” answer, a computer will also be unable to provide much more than further fodder into the murky philosophy of life.
Cultural Probes and the Value of Uncertainty (Gaver, Brucher, Pennington, Walker)
Posted: September 7, 2015 Filed under: Anna Brown Massey Leave a comment »Designing for pleasure is different approach than designing for utility
Designing for utility is different approach
Pleasure is best with empathy, passion, humor
> This is a strangely narrow interpretation of pleasure: pleasure can be through rigor, surprise, change, familiarity, difference, etc..
> I suggest that utility and pleasure are interchangeable: something is not easily used if it causes displeasure. (We’re going to except here the circumstances where frustration is the goal of a “product.”) The well-balanced hammer is designed for utility and, one could argue, for pleasure. The sense of the dropped weight in each end of the product gives rise to to a more optimal–read: easier–use.
Cultural probes: design-led approach to understanding users through empathy and engagement
– knowledge has limits
– values uncertainty, play, exploration, subjective interpretation
Towards knowing your audience…
Designing for friends: “we know them well, but that doesn’t mean we know exactly what we should make for them” (6).
> Important to recall that when we “know” the “audience,” there are still possibilities of their having interpretations (or actions) that we could not have predicted.
Probes: “collections of materials posing tasks to which people respond over time.
Probology: uses probes to encourage sujective engagement, empathetic interpretation, and a pervasive sense of uncertainty as possible values for design.
> I like this phrase: pervasive sense of uncertainty. I would not aim for this, at least not in my following work, but returning to Forlizzi and Battarbee, this would fit into choices over what elements I provide that are fluent experiences, and which would present uncertainty through a cognitive experience. How much do I want my audience working mid-experience to figure it out.
Understanding Experience in Interactive Systems (Forlizzi, Battarbee)
Posted: September 7, 2015 Filed under: Anna Brown Massey Leave a comment »Themes: what is experience, especially in design
Design, human factors, interaction design
Ethnographic methods to mediate experience with specialized people & specialty roles of designers
Design research: interactions between people and products + the experience that results
“User experience” has many definitions:
– Product-centered
– User-centered
– Interaction-centered
User-product interactions: 3 ways to describe:
1. Fluent: automatic, e.g. coffee-making machine, bike/riding
2. Cognitive: requires focus on the product at hand, e.g. learning/using “foreign” toilets
3. Expressive: help user form a relationship with the produce, e.g. restoring old furniture, customizing car, appearance
> As I build interactive theater-works that appear through marketing media to present a contract of sit-down-in-the-dark-and-watch-listen, I’m interested in examining what “fluency” to retain when I subvert that expectation and “ask” (through a few methods of communication) my audience to move in the space, acknowledge each other, experiment with their own bodies and social interactions–what Forlizzi and Battarbee would call a “co-experience” with expressive and cognitive interactions. What methods would empower the audience to form their own relationship with the virtual and present media and fellow theater citizens?
“Co-experience”: in social contexts
– Experience in which users interpretations are influences by the physical or virtual presence of others.
– Provide new channels for social interaction
>This, above, is my intention for my approaching 2016 MFA project: to design an interactive experience in which I’ve delineated the fluent, cognitive, and expressive elements in the process towards redefining the theater social interaction with a focus on spoking ideas rising from empathy research.
Hang Man 2.0
Posted: September 6, 2015 Filed under: Sarah Lawler Leave a comment »This is an enhanced version of Hang Man.
Objective: Guess the word before the stick man is formed.
Added rule: At the beginning of the game, the player that chooses the word places boxed letters at his/her choosing. Boxed letters allow for a “freebie.” The catch is when a boxed letter is requested to be filled in, a limb will be drawn. However, if a letter is guessed without the box being requested to be filled in, then the player that’s guessing the word gets a point towards removing a limb from the stick figure.
Players: 2
Player 1 Strategy: Use a more complicated word with carefully placed boxes. If a boxed letter appears more than once throughout a word and the other same letters are not boxed, they will have to be written in if player 2 requests that box to be filled in.
Player 2 Strategy: Try to guess the boxed letters in order to receive points. Those points can be used at any point in the game.