{"id":4855,"date":"2010-11-15T08:36:01","date_gmt":"2010-11-15T15:36:01","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.nearfuturelaboratory.com\/?p=4855"},"modified":"2017-08-18T17:58:53","modified_gmt":"2017-08-18T17:58:53","slug":"design-fiction-workshop-failures","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blog.nearfuturelaboratory.com\/2010\/11\/15\/design-fiction-workshop-failures\/","title":{"rendered":"Design Fiction Workshop: Failures"},"content":{"rendered":"
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I’ve been away for awhile so obviously I’m just now catching up with some notes for the events and activities of the last few weeks. One thing I want to make a note about is the fun workshop<\/a> that Nicolas and I facilitated at the Swiss Design Network<\/a> conference in Basel Switzerland late last month. The workshop was largely Nicolas’ organization and we took advantage of the conference theme of “Design Fiction” to consider the topic of failure in design \u2014\u00a0failure as a guide and approach and provocation together with the considerations that design fiction can offer.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Nicolas has posted the notes from the workshop<\/a><\/p>\n It was a relatively short workshop \u2014\u00a0a couple of hours in total. Initially I was nervous that there would be not enough guidance to allow the participants to grab onto the material enthusiastically. That proved to be wrong. After an initial presentation that went over the topic of design fiction and failures<\/a> that Nicolas had prepared, we broke the approximately 30 or so participants into groups of four or five individuals. There were three assignments that we had prepared that each group was meant to conduct. After completing each assignment \u2014\u00a0which lasted from 20-25 minutes each \u2014\u00a0the group turned inward and shared some summary insights, results and conclusions. They didn’t know all the assignments ahead of time.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The first assignment was to consider where and when failure happens in design. Without a specific definition of what constitutes failure, the assignment was meant to warm things up by creating a debate and set of examples as to what failure was and when and how it occurs. From Nicolas’ notes (my notebook has escaped me temporarily):<\/p>\n This assignment was useful to begin the thinking about failure. The goal was less about creating a definitive or definitional list and more about thinking beyond and using examples as motivators and things to think with.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The next assignment was essentially the first but to create examples that one might anticipate as a typical failure in the future \u2014\u00a0the design fiction failures. Things that could occur given that everything fails to meet our highest expectation or (as I’m particularly interested in) the highest of the hype that surrounds new designed stuff. Epic failures, or just routine annoyances were all open for consideration. How might the cloud computing promise fail in both the major disaster ways \u2014\u00a0as well as the small, wtf!? sort of ways.<\/p>\n Again, from Nicolas’ notes:<\/p>\n I was particularly taken by the 3D printer example. There’s of course lots of excitement about the possibilities of 3D printers in the home so that everyone makes their own stuff that they need. But, making stuff is hard and inevitably open to all kinds of crazy failures such as described here. Also \u2014 what do people do with the materials when they mess something up? How is the plastic (or whatever it ends up becoming \u2014\u00a0maybe noxious nasty stuff) get recycled? Will there have to evolve an entire system of rematerializing the goop? What about the equivalent of the print failures we often experience where one document ends up printing one letter per page, after page after page and we don’t notice until fifty sheets of paper have been used? Or when we scale something wrongly and the machine blindly goes ahead and prints something at 3 meters when we meant 3 millimeters? All these sorts of things will happen \u2014\u00a0can we use these insights to help make decisions about what and how to design? Can we start to communicate these failures as a way to design not with the expectation that the world is perfect \u2014\u00a0but that the results of designs have chinks and kinks in them?<\/p>\n <\/p>\n The final activity was to think about possible taxonomies for designed failures \u2014 what are the types and kinds of failures as we’ve discussed them in the previous two assignments?<\/p>\n Why do I blog this?<\/strong> Well \u2014 just mostly to get some notes from the workshop up to share. I’m learning quite a bit from Nicolas on the failures theme, and perhaps its a way to answer a question that Chairman Bruce has lofted \u2014 now that we “get” the idea of design fiction and it seems to be inspirational for folks and useful in that regard \u2014\u00a0witness the theme of the Swiss Design Network conference<\/a> this year. But..okay. We get it. Now what? How does the idea of design fiction either operationalize or become part of specific sorts of design practices in some informal or formal ways? It’s happening of course \u2014\u00a0all over the place and not because of this idea of design fiction itself, either how I’ve discussed it over the last 18 months or so, or how it’s been described and enacted by many people and agents. It’s not just about science fiction of course \u2014\u00a0and this was the topic of a paper at the conference that I may have the energy to describe in an upcoming post. But it is useful in very direct ways with the activities and goals of design generally speaking, that much is clear.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" I’ve been away for awhile so obviously I’m just now catching up with some notes for the events and activities of the last few weeks. One thing I want to make a note about is the fun workshop that Nicolas and I facilitated at the Swiss Design Network conference in Basel Switzerland late last month. … Continue reading Design Fiction Workshop: Failures<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":6086,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[39,47,50,52,65,175,203],"tags":[1186,1188,1192,1038,1251],"yoast_head":"\n<\/a>\n<\/div>\n
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