Adversarial Interface: Difference between revisions
Andre Castro (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Andre Castro (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
|Date=2017 | |Date=2017 | ||
|Bio=Colm O'Neill (IE) is a designer and researcher based in Rotterdam and Brussels. His work is concerned with mediations of digital literacy through graphical, user and programmatic interfaces. The research and practice that result follow the ideals of free and open source development models. | |Bio=Colm O'Neill (IE) is a designer and researcher based in Rotterdam and Brussels. His work is concerned with mediations of digital literacy through graphical, user and programmatic interfaces. The research and practice that result follow the ideals of free and open source development models. | ||
|Thumbnail= | |Thumbnail=Interfaces2.gif | ||
|Website=http://adversarial.interfacing.space | |Website=http://adversarial.interfacing.space | ||
|Description=[http://adversarial.interfacing.space Adversarial interfacing space] is a website collecting tools, extensions and projects that enable agonism and critical responses to an overwhelming feeling of mono-narrative in user interfaces on and offline. | |Description=[http://adversarial.interfacing.space Adversarial interfacing space] is a website collecting tools, extensions and projects that enable agonism and critical responses to an overwhelming feeling of mono-narrative in user interfaces on and offline. |
Revision as of 14:54, 22 May 2017
Adversarial Interface | |
---|---|
Creator | Colm O' Neill |
Year | 2017 |
Bio | Colm O'Neill (IE) is a designer and researcher based in Rotterdam and Brussels. His work is concerned with mediations of digital literacy through graphical, user and programmatic interfaces. The research and practice that result follow the ideals of free and open source development models. |
Thumbnail | |
Website | http://adversarial.interfacing.space |
Adversarial interfacing space is a website collecting tools, extensions and projects that enable agonism and critical responses to an overwhelming feeling of mono-narrative in user interfaces on and offline.
The site gathers new and pre-existing browser extensions that alter web interfacing in ways that change the schematics set out by designed interfaces.
The practice of user interface design has developped over the last decade to support the spreading of ways and devices to access the Internet. On screen user interfaces are actively thought of as experience producers, concerned with making tasks easy and making technical seems invisible. An outcome of this is a subset of practices of user experience design. That has more roots in marketing than in visual design.