Design Documents/Transcriptions

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Design Documents Transcription index

Design Documents, mapping communication in interdisciplinary and anti-disciplinary work with media, software and society

This is a full transcription of all presentations and discussion at the Design Documents symposium, Rotterdam, 13th October 2005

How do interdisciplinary teams communicate in media design and electronic art? If they do communicate well, what are the ways that artists, designs, programmers, engineers, and those they work with, such as users, discuss their ideas, clarify problems, and find results that enhance their work?

In the developing area of social software for instance, how could a social network draw up a brief? How does media design itself create tools and materials for such work? Are there new opportunities for the creation of design documents that come out of networked and computational digital media? How do the cultures of open and distributed creativity and production experienced in Free Software and other areas allow us to see other forms of collaboration?

Key to the theme of the symposium is the discussion of boundary objects within projects, devices, documents, sketches, plans, briefs, models, prototypes, mock-ups, experiential accounts and so on. Under the magnifying glass: examining existing design documents; creating typologies; vocabularies, in-project vernaculars; boundary or shared objects such as drawings, diagrams; in-code comments; divisions of labour; designing speculative research; mapping interactions; resisting or working with multiple economies of time and resources.

PART ONE

Anne Nigten, Opening Remarks

Matthew Fuller, Introduction

Nina Wakeford Director of INCITE in the Department of Sociology, University of Surrey. Along with colleagues at INCITE she is interested in the ways in which collaborations can be forged between ethnographers and those from other disciplines, such as engineering and computer science. She asks how critical social and cultural theory can play a part in the design process, including the challenges which feminist and queer theories pose to collaborative projects between designers and sociologists, as well as technology studies. http://incite.surrey.ac.uk/

TRANSCRIPTION OF PRESENTATION

Kristina Andersen works with sensors and sensuality, with performers and circuit hacking. http://www.lockergirl.com/ http://www.tinything.com/

TRANSCRIPTION OF PRESENTATION

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS, PART ONE

PART TWO

McKenzie Wark is Professor of Cultural and Media Studies at Lang College, New School University. He is the author of several books, most recently Dispositions and A Hacker Manifesto. http://www.ludiccrew.org/

TRANSCRIPTION OF PRESENTATION

Victoria Donkersloot is a media designer from Rotterdam. She recently worked as the interface designer for the cultural file-sharing application Apnaopus, http://apnaopus.var.cc/

TRANSCRIPTION OF PRESENTATION

Dennis Kaspori / Jeanne van Heeswijk are collaborators on a unique spatial and social planning project, Face Your World. Using sophisticated custom software, children are engaged in a serious process of social-spatial decision making. Most recently, Face Your World has been a six month project to design a park in the Sloterplaas area of Amsterdam. http://www.faceyourworld.net/ http://www.themaze.org/

TRANSCRIPTION OF PRESENTATION

Q and A WRAP-UP

Transcriptions by Todd Matsumoto

This event is organized by: Media Design Research, Piet Zwart Institute, Willem de Kooning Academy Hogeschool Rotterdam http:// www.pzwart.wdka.hro.nl/ http://www.wdka.hro.nl/

and V2_organisation: institute for the unstable media http://www.v2.nl/

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