Browsing All Posts filed under »Computing for Sustainability«

Extraordinary computing

May 12, 2009

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Susan Wyche gave a paper at CHI recently: Extraordinary computing: religion as a lens for reconsidering the home (ACM DL).  In it she uses religion as as a lens to examine assumptions and values that shape future  domestic structures.  Her focus was not on faith-laden technology, but on how offline faith affects how people interact.  Following […]

Interactional trajectories

May 12, 2009

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I like the work of Steve Benford.  While his paper (From interaction to trajectories: designing coherent journeys through user experiences ACM DL) at  CHI was primarily concerned with interaction design, I think that we can see a wider application, particularly into education for sustainability.   Instead of one-off functions,  Benford considers interactions as a continuty of experiece […]

Process implications of a vision to transform

May 12, 2009

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We have long argued that computing needs to contribute more than reductions in its own footprint – computing is key to facilitating a wider change.   Several papers at CHI this year showed products to reduce impacts or change behaviour.  A few completed this circle and looked back to computing (or in this case interaction […]

Computing for habitual sustainability (and a cool bendy speedometer)

May 12, 2009

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Minjung Sohn aims to produce products that are “used unconsciously by users with reduced environmental impacts”.   With her colleagues from KAIST, she  argues that existing approaches to eco-friendly design mainly focus on educating users, or making them recognise the need for sustainability.  In Designing with unconscious human behaviors for eco-friendly interaction, Minjung and her colleagues instead […]

Tools for navigating landscape of community action

May 12, 2009

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In the early 90s I worked on the Otago Regional Council’s land and vegetation monitoring programme. One of the strategies we used was to closely involve the land managers in monitoring and analysis.  We hoped (and found) this would give greater credibility to the process and ownership of the results. The  involvement stemmed beyond labour […]