Tag: design fiction

  • deltamualpha: Near Future Laboratory » Blog Archive » Representations of the Future with Graphs

  • kekness: In the box alert! Men neme een kussen, propt er een wekker in, gooit er een kek design over qua instellen en u krijgt het wake-up kussen. Slim, maar om elke ochtend wakker getríld te worden… mwah. 

  • Alternative presents and speculative futures

    augerloizeau:

  • Drumbrella [PIC]

  • http://www.sdn2010.ch/ Negotiating Futures – Design Fiction Designers see the world not simply as it is, but rather as it could be. In this perspective, the world is a laboratory to explore the contingency of the existing and the thinking in options. Imaginations of the contra factual are a key source for the creation of alternative…

  • FUI Fantasy User Interfaces | Mark Coleran Visual Designer

    FUI Fantasy User Interfaces | Mark Coleran Visual Designer

  • The Climate Crisis Recreational Vehicle | Beyond The Beyond

    The Climate Crisis Recreational Vehicle | Beyond The Beyond *I’m all for design-fiction of this kind, but “keeps you safe”? That tinfoil gizmo looks mighty vulnerable to small-arms fire. http://www.ecofriend.org/entry/nomad-concept-rv-keeps-you-safe-in-a-globally-warmed-world/

  • I’m going to be in my bubble dress on a piano made of bubbles, singing about love and art and the future. I should like to make one person believe in that moment, and it would be worth every salt of a No. 1 record. How Lady Gaga Became the World’s Biggest Pop Star –…

  • Julian Bleecker “Design fiction” (Lift Asia09 EN) on Vimeo (via Vimeo) Design fiction: facts about science and designJulian Bleecker who works at Nokia Design is imagining the near future, creating “design fictions” and prototypes of networked artifacts such as objects that blog about their interactions with the environment. This presentation is about the relationship between…

  • I’m a science fiction writer, and as I became more familiar with design, it struck me that the futuristic objects and services within science fiction are quite badly designed. Why? That’s not a question often asked. The reason is pretty simple: Science fiction is a form of popular entertainment. The emotional payoff of the science…