geert on Tue, 25 Sep 2001 02:28:38 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
[Nettime-bold] i3 Village and Conference at Orbit/Comdex Europe Basel Sept. 25-28 |
From: "Strebel Barbara" <bstrebel@messebasel.ch> Sent: Tuesday, September 25, 2001 4:22 AM Subject: i3 Village and Conference at Orbit/Comdex Europe Basel Sept. 25-28 ORBIT / COMDEX Europe E- Business Congress 2001 26- 28 September http://www.messebasel.ch/orbitcomdex People and machines: who is driving whom? 14:30 - 17:00 Friday Sept 28 Convention Center Messe Basel http://www.i3net.org/ac2001/orbitcomdex Visit the i3 Research Village in Halle 5 17-18:00 an Apéro will be offered by Xerox http://www.xerox-iss.com The Conference: Hands-On Workshop ( W5 250.- Sfr.) Years ago, car manufacturers introduced a voice system that said, "fasten your seat belts" when needed. The drivers and their passengers hated it. On the other hand, we are all charmed by gadgets: from the tamagoshi to the walkman, from games to kitchen utensils. Technology is enchanting us. The conference questions how we, as humans accept technology and react to it rather than what new gadgets can be put together. Even more, how can we design technology that people accept rather than hate? This tension is at the centre of i3's preoccupations. i3 organises this conference within the E-Business congress of Messe Basel to explore these issues. The speakers will present experiences and insights in this situation, based on their wide-ranging and interdisciplinary experiences. The conference will begin to answer the following questions: . Who leads: the technology or humans? . How do we live with technology? Why is GSM widely accepted and the electronic book much less? . How do we decide which technology to deploy? Are market forces the only forces to reckon on? . How do we build our future? To begin the conference two world-renowned researchers present their view on the subject. After which a panel will discuss these points and will provide glimpses of the wider i3 experience: making, playing, thinking, applying and using. Presenations: Prof.Richard Noss (Chair) London Uni. Prof. Stephen Hepell, Dir. of Ultralab, Anglia Polytechnic Uni. Derrick de Kerckhove, Director, McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology Panel Participants: Prof. Celia Hoyles, Uni. of London, Chair of Joint Mathematical Council of UK Irene Mavrommati, Project Manager, CTI, Patras, Greece DC project e-Gadget. Professor Phil Ellis, University of Sunderland, i3 Project :Caress Dr. Jean Schweitzer, Siemens Luxemburg i3 project: Magic Lounge Prof. Nicholas Charles Henri Balacheff, Uni. of Grenoble Moderator : Dr. Mimo Caenepeel, Uni. of Edinburgh, Editor of i3 magazine Presentations : Professor Richard Noss, London University. i3 Project Playground Chair: Professor, Stephen Hepell, Ultralab, Anglia Polytechnic University: i3 Project Etui E-people? It's a people thing So many technology developers miss a central concept about the use of their designs? People develop new capabilities in reaction to the tools and environment they find themselves in and it is thus people who shape their use of the technology and who subvert it for their own needs. Of course, many past technologies have distorted our behaviours and clouded our expectations, but when they have trapped us in their own limitations they have either been rejected or their use has needed reinventing by people.When technologies have enhanced our capacity to create our own content or produce our way out of technological straitjackets, then they have proved to be highly successful. This is why, with newly emerging technologies, content isn't king, but communities might be sovereign. This isn't about delivery technology, if content was important then we would only build libraries, not schools. People are reaching out to be engaged, involved and to participate. They are reclaiming their entitlement to narrative control. These matters are crucial for the future of telecommunications, broadcasting, learning and the economic potential emerging technologies and are explored in this presentation. _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold