How To Break Anything

Innovation + experience-minded design strategy. The pieces of a working model for understanding culture + change in an increasingly complex world.

  • About
  • Weak Signals
  • nanotrends & links
    • 0
      14 Sep 2010

      "To Disconnect or Not to Disconnect" [while on vacation]

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost

      That is the question I wrestled with before leaving on a week-long trip to Costa Rica.

      Even though there’s mounting evidence to suggest that digital downtime can provide a healthy break for our brains, the thought of not being in constant communication seemed almost too foreign, too scary, even, to enjoy.

      As the days ticked down to my departure, I tried to decide whether I should simply leave my phone at home or bring it and banish it to some remote zippered corner of my suitcase.

      Typically when I travel, my iPhone doubles as my camera and camcorder. But I worried that it’d be hard to resist posting a particularly gorgeous shot to Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and the likes.

      But as it turned out, I didn’t need to worry about it — the decision was made for me. I wasn’t able to get an Internet connection on my phone during the entire time abroad.

      ...On the trip back to New York, I prided myself on the notion that I’d been reformed, reconditioned to no longer weigh the merit of my experiences by the number of likes, favorites and shares that each photo, update and tweet earned.

      That is of course, until I touched down in Miami for a layover. I immediately whipped out my phone and began checking in, posting updates and missives to Twitter and sending a couple photos through to Tumblr. But I didn’t forget the liberating feeling of no access, the freedom from digital obligations.

      via gadgetwise.blogs.nytimes.com

      When travelling in London this weekend I was subjected to the same forced disconnectivity, and found myself wondering about the same question of whether or not it's a good thing to be disconnected.

      I ultimately decided that it's never been the ability to "weigh the merit of my experiences by the number of likes, favorites" etc that ever drives me to constantly stay connected. Rather, it was more that without connection I lost the ability to put that small bit more value into the things I was doing.

      Simple things like being able to better understand where I'm at in relation to other areas on a map and solidify that picture in my head more easily. Being able to get a bit of history on a monument or neighborhood in front of me that others around may not necessarily have on their mind. Storing a note away about a place I had a nice beer at by logging it on foursquare.

      "Augmenting reality" is something humans have been doing for ages with technology; it has a lot less to do with the internet as the subtext tends to imply when we talk about "being too dependent on technology."

      The worry seems to be that technology distracts us from the world around us, but as with most things there's a useful way to use tools and then there are also less useful ways to use tools. Inevitably there will be those who find themselves in one boat or the other. I find it hard to make the blanket statement "connectivity and vacations should not go together."

      • views
      • Tweet
      • Tweet
    • 0
      18 Aug 2010

      IKEA’s Kitchen Of The Future: Design Challenges For Intelligent Homes

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost

      IKEA Future Kitchen

      IKEA has commissioned a report with The Future Laboratory to explore what the kitchen of the future could potentially look like. This reactive environment takes advantage of a number of sensor-based technologies designed to help users make more sustainable and healthy decisions around food, from EEG-based readers tuned to individual brainwaves to intelligent virtual chefs that deliver recipe recommendations. The Future Laboratory explains in a press release below:

      In thirty years time, the kitchen will be so technologically advanced that it will almost be alive, responding actively to our needs like only a mother could. To reflect this IKEA has created an image of the future kitchen – INTUITIV. As you walk into the INTUITIV kitchen of the future, LED light projections adjust to your mood – it will know if you have a hangover via sensors that will read your brainwaves. Aromatherapy infused walls will be synced to your calendar, calming you before a big meeting or energising you before a gym session. The fridge will have selected some breakfast options, identifying the essential vitamins for your day via sensors. When you get home, a hologrammed chef will be on hand for recipe inspiration. This kitchen will be intelligent, predicting its inhabitants’ needs with smart technology. Synchronized appliances will make everything happen at the touch of a button, communicating through iPad style devices which will act as the brain of the kitchen, making our lives easier.

      The concepts described extrapolate on technologies in development and emerging today – so while the above will all certainly possible on a technical level, we find it important to consider how technological developments actually unfold within technosocial and sociocultural realities. Designers working to develop systems like those that know whether you have a hangover based on your brainwaves have to consider to what extent the individual benefit of having that information (the kitchen serves you a bloody mary, perhaps?) outweighs the social implications of having that information collected (do I want my home to know I’ve been drinking so much, and potentially share that with my friends and family?).

      Or consider the classic example of the refrigerator that knows when you’re low on milk, so it can order it from the supermarket and have it delivered. The technical aspect of these kinds of systems are relatively easy problems to solve; the difficult design questions are those of how to give people the level of control they need to feel they have over devices, that lets them determine when/why/how their fridge talks to the supermarket. These are questions that will continue to be raised, inspired by projects like INTUITIV that give them a focus point, as home environments continue to become interconnected with the rise of sensor-based technologies and the Internet of things.

      [via Electripig]

      [this post originally appeared on psfk.com]

      • views
      • Tweet
      • Tweet
    • 0
      12 Aug 2010

      A Guide To Long-Term Perspective On Trends

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost
      Hello friends, readers, and legions of followers. I've organized a panel in consideration of SXSW 2011, titled A Guide To Long-Term Perspective On Trends. The synopsis is below; I'd be entirely thankful if you were to follow on over and click the thumbs up vote as hard as you can. 
      This discussion will inspire attendees with the means to observe short-term phenomena through the lens of long-term perspective.

      Many savvy SXSW attendees follow immediate-term trends as part of their daily business; this level of trend includes new technologies/platforms & hot items of public discourse. Just beyond this level of trend exist short-term microtrends, which help explain the 2-5 year impact of immediate-term trends by highlighting patterns that emerge through analysis of individual manifestations.

      Understanding these types of trends is indeed important, but this discussion aims to illuminate how these short-term patterns fit within long-term sociological narratives that span decades. These are difficult to see manifest, and it is even more difficult to consider how they might impact long-term value when making decisions about the near-term.

      Attendees will leave with insight on why long-term perspective is valuable to anyone hoping to design tools that speak to fundamental human truths. The concepts of "revolution vs evolution" and change blindness play important roles in our story, as considerations in capturing perspective on present-day developments.

      This discussion does not aim to teach attendees how to predict future trends. Instead it will provide the tools for thinking about micro-level manifestations within a macro-level scale of historical development, as a way to better think about potential implications for the future.

      via panelpicker.sxsw.com

      Thanks for considering this concept. The team at SXSW had nice things to say about it in their confirmation letter; I agree with their sentiment and the sentiment of the commenters thus far that it's a discussion that we could all stand to be a part of. I try to speak to this briefly in the above - most SXSW attendees and readers here are all quite savvy when it comes to staying abreast of daily culture and hot items of public interest. But there's also deeper value in being able to pull out long-term patterns from analysis of these nanotrends, driven by an understanding of how humans fundamentally interact with each other and their technologies that is grounded in historical consistencies. 

      This is organized as a dual-panel discussion, which leaves room for fascinating friends of PSFK who have identified interest in sharing their great insight on long-term perspective. We're looking forward to this as an exploration of value, as it applies to seeing past the hype and excitement of near-term nanotrends into capturing a deeper socio/techno-cultural understanding of how people interact in the world.

       

      Update: Timely enough, Seth here has just shared some thoughts on this exact subject, in characteristically pithy fashion; do read on, if you're interested: Resilience and the incredible power of slow change

      • views
      • Tweet
      • Tweet
    • Search

    • Tags

      • perspective
      • value
      • metasocioculture
      • culture
      • long-term thinking
      • decisionmaking
      • offline inspiration
      • cognitive fallacies
      • future
      • time-orientation
      • limitation
      • perception
      • causality
      • definition
      • irrationality
      • art
      • behavioral economics
      • game mechanics
      • emergence
      • experience
      • exposure
      • observe everything
      • philosophy
      • programming
      • human insight
      • illusion
      • paradox
      • privacy
      • reactionary
      • want
      • worry
      • adaptation
      • advertising
      • behavior
      • design strategy
      • evolution
      • identity
      • metaphors
      • networks
      • optimization
      • shortsightedness
      • social interactions
      • weak signals
      • connections
      • counterintuitive
      • doomsday
      • feedback loops
      • indirect
      • meaning
      • tangible data
      • context
      • glanceable
      • memory
      • motivation
      • seeming
      • trends
      • utopia
      • chronological proportionality
      • cognitive environments
      • complexity
      • control
      • cyborg anthropology
      • gaming
      • happiness
      • human programming
      • information art
      • nostalgia
      • rationality
      • scarcity
      • time
      • timeline
      • Entrepreneur
      • PSEA
      • asking the right questions
      • classification
      • cultural narratives
      • data
      • deception
      • design thinking
      • filter theory
      • games
      • habitat media
      • historical context
      • information theory
      • intelligence
      • levels of abstraction
      • linguistic programming
      • metaphysics
      • nonlinear
      • optimaization
      • organization
      • patina
      • pattern recognition
      • reactive culture
      • serendipity filters
      • truth
      • wisdom
      • wonder
      • youth
    • Archive

      • 2012 (58)
        • May (9)
        • April (14)
        • March (9)
        • February (13)
        • January (13)
      • 2011 (188)
        • December (14)
        • November (6)
        • October (6)
        • September (9)
        • August (9)
        • July (26)
        • June (21)
        • May (12)
        • April (17)
        • March (21)
        • February (25)
        • January (22)
      • 2010 (214)
        • December (22)
        • November (14)
        • October (8)
        • September (7)
        • August (13)
        • July (17)
        • June (16)
        • May (16)
        • April (22)
        • March (36)
        • February (31)
        • January (12)
      • 2009 (95)
        • December (6)
        • November (9)
        • October (9)
        • September (8)
        • August (6)
        • July (2)
        • June (9)
        • May (17)
        • April (7)
        • March (8)
        • February (7)
        • January (7)
      • 2008 (47)
        • December (10)
        • November (12)
        • October (7)
        • September (7)
        • August (4)
        • July (3)
        • May (1)
        • April (1)
        • March (1)
        • January (1)
      • 2007 (4)
        • October (1)
        • September (3)
    • Contributors

      Kyle Cameron Studstill
    • Obox Design
  • How To Break Anything

    Hello friends and collaborators. I deal in innovation, working to build fantastic experiences enabled by the digital world. As part of this I track cultural change, primarily through observations guided by models and filters calibrated over years to sort out the cream.

    These pieces of thoughts here reflect concepts that are elements of those models: ecosystem thinking, long-term value, information filters, and pattern recognition.

    ("How to break anything" is an abstract notion that reflects my background in observation and analysis. Rules are meant to be broken, but only through understanding the rules - observing them with an empathetic eye - can they be broken constructively.

    So how to break anything? Observe everything.

    [You can't observe everything so how do you know what to observe? That's another project that I call Filter Theory - see the About link above.])

    267087 Views
  • Get Updates

    Follow this Space »
    You're following this Space (Edit)
    You're a contributor here (Edit)
    This is your Space (Edit)
    Follow by email »
    Get the latest updates in your email box automatically.
    Loading...
    Subscribe via RSS
    TwitterFacebook