Today's humanistic reaction to technology takes the form of discipline convergence and an ever increasingly large pool of devices embracing the semantic, social, and structured web.
From a user perspective, this means a constant array of surprises around every corner. New ways of thinking. New methods of communication. New outcomes. And because of increased collaboration via these tools, it's often not industry which drives innovation, but the users themselves.
From an industry perspective, making sense of all this "stuff" isn't all that easy. If technology didn't matter, perhaps it would be favorable to ignore it altogether. However, to some degree, today's complicated networks of information and cross-collaboration creates an environment which requires an attentive eye for refinement and ability to identify these new trends. But how exactly do you understand all of this?
Let's just put it this way. Keeping persistence is being fair to the user. As fields come together, it's becoming more and more obvious everything is connected to information. In a trans-disciplinary world, narrow perspectives only make things harder to grasp. By designing with users in mind (whose requirements are constantly evolving), one can essentially create effective "tools" needed in the future context.
So, design for the future. One probably wonders, "How do I fit into this whole collaboration-hungry notion of constant change?" As a student, this means understanding a resume for the future isn't merely composed of a set of tools, but a portfolio full of experiential expertise. Now you have something to talk about.
As an employer, this means placing an emphasis on integration of cross-disciplinary teams. This comes with the acknowledgment that tools do and often change, but problem solving often stays much the same. So, you don't need team with merely sharpened utensils, but one that can challenge the numerous weeds out there. A team capable of chopping them down and taking cultural responsibility for fertilizing multiple channels of knowledge throughout the entire world.
Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Design for the Future
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
About Me
Topics
- Accessories (60)
- Advertising (14)
- Advice (15)
- Anime Reviews (12)
- Apple (47)
- Appliances (9)
- Architecture (65)
- Art (329)
- Bath (6)
- Bedroom (47)
- Bikes (44)
- Branding (15)
- Business (8)
- Cameras (42)
- Cars (18)
- Clothing (64)
- Concerts (2)
- Customize (8)
- Decor (155)
- Dermatology (1)
- Design (496)
- DIY (1)
- DS Lite (11)
- Economy (1)
- Entertainment (5)
- Event Reviews (2)
- Exposition (251)
- Fashion (73)
- Feature (2)
- Finance (3)
- Food (44)
- Funny (126)
- Furniture (131)
- Game Reviews (20)
- Games (68)
- Gear (124)
- Girls (127)
- Giveaways (3)
- Graffiti (2)
- Green (8)
- Hair (1)
- Hardware (20)
- HCI (82)
- Head-Fi (23)
- Health (1)
- Hip-Hop (13)
- Home (271)
- Ideas (50)
- IKEA (30)
- Inspiration (75)
- Interface (6)
- iPad (5)
- iPhone (11)
- iPod (6)
- Jokes (1)
- Kitchen (60)
- Landscape (2)
- Laptops (20)
- LCD (14)
- Lighting (1)
- Linux (1)
- Marketing (2)
- Materials (2)
- Medicine (1)
- Movie Reviews (201)
- MP3 (104)
- Music (261)
- Music Reviews (6)
- News (24)
- Nintendo (12)
- Office (59)
- Pens (3)
- People (4)
- Phones (2)
- Photography (59)
- Picks (1)
- Poetry (9)
- Politics (10)
- Print (1)
- PS3 (35)
- PSP (2)
- Publications (7)
- Puppies (1)
- Quotes (28)
- Random (127)
- Reads (1)
- Real Estate (3)
- Recipes (31)
- Retro (5)
- Roundup (5)
- Shopping (1)
- Software (12)
- Software Review (1)
- Speakers (2)
- Square-Enix (2)
- Style (131)
- Technology (224)
- Technology Reviews (6)
- Television Reviews (5)
- Tools (1)
- Toys (15)
- Travel (8)
- Trends (40)
- Tutorials (40)
- Video (242)
- Wallpapers (2)
- Windows (12)
- Xbox360 (7)
Popular Posts
-
An argument ensued in the forums over an article written by the Examiner expressing the need to bear arms and the injustice of jailing a pe...
-
Now that's a clever idea. Mismatching chairs just give it that extra +2 points in the hip department.
-
A second viewing justifies an updated score. Powerful, mesmerizing, and unbelievably emotionally draining; this multi-layered portrait of al...
-
I keep tellin' people, white walls isn't always a bad thing. Especially if every single piece of your furniture is complimentary and...
-
Peep this track because it's hot. Hot like Costco pizza on an overcast Monday. Devin the Dude - I Can't Make It Home (MP3)
-
Tired of your standard, boring wooden banisters? Paint it glossy red. Yeah, that'll show 'em.
-
I was once asked why I got into design. And when I say design, I do speak of the many languages of design. From interior of baths to t...
-
Make no mistake: this is as epic as cinema gets. The visuals are absolutely stunning, the score emphasizes "big production" in eve...
-
Good god, drool. This unbelievable space has a little bit of everything I want in a fun home. Tall ceilings. Modern open floorplan...
Archives
-
▼
2009
(460)
-
▼
October
(33)
- This is Living
- Apple Legend Jonathan Ive Talks Design
- La Haine Review
- It's All About Me
- Drag Me To Hell Review
- Livin' with Fancy Woods & White Walls
- Mac Hack Attack: Multiple Identities on Apple Mail...
- Modern Fireplace Sans the Mounted TV
- Rug Hunter
- CSI Uses Modern Technology
- Shelves That Float
- Jack Purcell, Race Around Hi Kicks
- It's Pervasive. It's Computing. It Needs Testing.
- The Wonderful World of Hyberbole
- Color Theory, Ya'll
- Tennis Ball Steady Cam Hack
- Zebra Sharbo X LT3 Matte... The Orange Flame!
- Lot 18: So Modern It Hurts
- Soup & Sandwich Tray
- More Notebook Fun
- Experience Design Like Photography
- Nathan, You Will Be Remembered
- Ólafur Arnalds Does Fireplace Visuals
- Tumi Snow Collection Backpack
- Harajuku: Half-Man, Half-Hype Machine
- Fall Colors and Rainfall
- Defining the Digital Home
- Design for the Future
- The Richter Side of Things
- Another Throwback Saturday
- The Curious Case of Benjamin Button Review
- Searching for the Perfect 0.38 Gel Pen
- DJ Maar Gets Selbyfied
-
▼
October
(33)
0 comments:
Post a Comment