As I am reminded several times a day via gmail’s pop-up, my friend Lloyd Godman describes himself as an “Ecological Artist”. At CHI this year, Carl DiSalvo (along with Kirsten Boehner, Nicholas Knouf and Phoebe Sengers) explored what sustainable HCI can learn from such ecologically engaged art. They argue that radical shifts in design are needed for […]
May 6, 2009
A theme of CHI for me this year was behaviour change. This reflects the growing recognition that technology is at best only part of a solution. Sunny Consolvo and her colleagues presented an interesting set of design strategies that support behaviour changes in everyday life (paper). They propose that persuasive technology developed following their guidelines will […]
May 6, 2009
Yesterday I was reviewing my notes on Ron Wakkary’s Rethinking users as creative everyday designers. He gives an example of a family calendar to illustrate his argument that sustainable interaction design will be promoted by thinking about the users as everyday designers. What he didn’t say was that calendar was part of a family’s […]
May 5, 2009
Ron Wakkary and Karen Tanenbaum argue that by adopting a conception of the user as a creative everyday designer we can generate a new set of design principles that promote sustainable interaction design: Everyday design offers a formal lens through which to reconsider interactions with and the use of designed artifacts in the home. The everyday designer is a […]
May 5, 2009
It is hard to go far in the sustainability world before you hit ideas of participation. Kurt Luther presented an interesting development in this field at CHI recently. In a paper entitled “Pathfinder: An Online Collaboration Environment for Citizen Scientists” he (and others) examined computer support for citizen science. Inspired by the Christmas Bird […]
May 6, 2009
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