designing the city as interface & the interface to the city

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Due to population growth in cities around the world, their infrastructure and services are challenged to keep up with the growing demand. At the same time the availability of new technologies and their appropriation by citizens leads to certain expectations and new challenges regarding the interaction design of interfaces and their use in the city. By designing for new experiences using the city as interface, and by better understanding how to design interfaces to the city that follow new interaction models, some of the issues in contemporary cities can potentially be addressed, alleviating pressure on ageing infrastructures and services. These are the slides for a talk I gave at the IxDA Sydney chapter meetup on 23 January 2014. The key take away are a set of design parameters for urban interaction design: scale, interaction models, users, and research & prototyping. There is not much text on the slides, but most of the slides include references to further information about the examples that are included in this slide deck.

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Designing the city as interface & the interface to the city

Martin Tomitsch@martintom

Bachelor of Design Computing

Master in Interaction Design and Electronic Artshttp://sydney.edu.au/architecture/programs_of_study/postgraduate/IDEA.shtm

http://sydney.edu.au/architecture/programs_of_study/undergraduate/design_computing/

Situated computing illustration by Rune Nielsen, Kollision

Crowded train in India | video from: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XtpEXgtOcwY

scale design parameters

TripStats mobile app by Tamara Chahine | Design Computing class, 2010

Tra!c Light Pong | Still taken from: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3Ozz6_pdMI

Public Interactive Display at the University of Sydney | http://chai.it.usyd.edu.au/Projects/Mediawall

Image by Tcc8 | http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Federation_square_melbourne.jpg

Blinkenlight, Berlin, 2001 | Image by Thomas Fiedler

Solstice LAMP, Vivid Sydney 2013 | Concept sketch by Sean Bryen

Solstice LAMP, 2013 | Photo by Digital Pulse | http://www.amplifyfestival.com.au/solsticelamp

scale | interaction models

A. Streitz, C. Röcker, Th. Prante, R. Stenzel, D. van Alphen: Situated Interaction with Ambient Information: Facilitating Awareness and Communication in Ubiquitous Work Environments.

In: Proceedings of HCI International 2003.

Vogel, D. and Balakrishnan, R.: Interactive public ambient displays: transitioning from implicit to explicit, public to personal, interaction with multiple users. In Proceedings of UIST 2004, ACM.

Curious rituals http://curiousrituals.wordpress.com/

scale | interaction models | users

scale | interaction models | users | research & prototyping

Urban probes | http://www.urban-atmospheres.net/UrbanProbes/

Solstice LAMP, 2013 | Photo by Luke Hespanhol

Neighbourhood Scoreboards | http://neighbourhoodscoreboards.com/

Neighbourhood Scoreboards | http://neighbourhoodscoreboards.com/

Neighbourhood Scoreboards | http://neighbourhoodscoreboards.com/

Neighbourhood Scoreboards | http://neighbourhoodscoreboards.com/

Urban interface studies

TripStats mobile app by Tamara Chahine | Design Computing Honours project, 2011

TripStats mobile app by Tamara Chahine | Design Computing Honours project, 2011

Tamara Chahine 308186982

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Figure 3.20: User input for bus arrival

Once each submission has been recorded and sent, the list of reports is refreshed to provide

feedback for the newly added information.

3.6.6 Bus route histories

Data that is being collected by the application is also shown in other configurations. In this feature, users can view a historical ‘profile’ of the behaviour of certain buses. While recent reports can be

useful in the short term, this information was intended to be used for making travel decisions in the

long-term. First, a series of rankings for each bus in Sydney was aggregated under three categories - (1) Fullness (2) Lateness and (3) Bus arrival (or lack thereof).

TripStats mobile app by Tamara Chahine | Design Computing Honours project, 2011

TripStats mobile app by Tamara Chahine | Design Computing Honours project, 2011

Video by Tobias Ebsen | https://vimeo.com/78236205

A N I M A T E D I C O N S

L A S T 7 D A Y S : U S E R S C R E E N O P T I O N S

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O P T I O N 1 : A b s o l u t e c o n s u m p t i o n ( c o n s e c u t i v e s c r e e n s ) :

O P T I O N 2 : P e r c e n t a g e o f r e l a t i v e c h a n g e ( c o n s e c u t i v e s c r e e n s ) :

O P T I O N 3 : V i s u a l c o m p a r i s o n o f r e l a t i v e c h a n g e ( c o n s e c u t i v e s c r e e n s )

O P T I O N 4 : C u r r e n t r a n k i n g ( c o n s e c u t i v e s c r e e n s )

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o r

A L T E R N A T E D I S P L A Y O P T I O N S

More on this topic

City of Sound (Dan Hill) http://www.cityofsound.com/

Urban Interaction Design http://urbanixd.eu/

Media Architecture Blog http://www.mediaarchitecture.org/blog/

Smart Cities: Big Data. Civic Hackers, and the Quest for a New Utopia (Anthony Townsend)

Against the Smart City (Adam Green!eld) GRADUATE CERTIFICATEINTERACTION DESIGN AND ELECTRONIC ARTS

FACULTY OFARCHITECTUREDESIGN & PLANNING

URBAN INFORMATICS

Introduction: DR LIAN LOKE Director, Interaction Design + Electronic Arts Program

The IDEA program trains you to push the boundaries of contemporary design practice, through its unique blend of design thinking, human-computer interaction and emergent technologies.

A studio-based teaching environment challenges you to critically engage with the human experience of a computationally enhanced world and to collaborate in creating innovative design solutions exploring new interactive forms and expressions.

You will work closely with leading researchers to embed computational possibilities into our physical world - blending the digital and the real. Graduates of this program are equipped with strategies and tools for designing and building creative applications of technology that have the potential to transform and shape the world.

Cover Illustration, Rune Nielsen, Kollision, 2013

DESIGNING THE DIGITAL CITY

Image credits & sources

Situated computing illustration by Rune Nielsen, KollisionTripStats train app by Tamara ChahineCrazy crowded train in India video from: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XtpEXgtOcwY Tra"c Light Pong still taken from: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3Ozz6_pdMIFederation Square: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Federation_square_melbourne.jpgSolstice LAMP photo by Digital PulseImage taken from: A. Streitz, C. Röcker, Th. Prante, R. Stenzel, D. van Alphen (2003), Situated Interaction

with Ambient Information: Facilitating Awareness and Communication in Ubiquitous Work Environments. In: Tenth International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction (HCI International 2003), June 22-27, 2003.

Image taken from: Vogel, D. and Balakrishnan, R. (2004), Interactive public ambient displays: transitioning from implicit to explicit, public to personal, interaction with multiple users. In Proceedings of the 17th Annual ACM Symposium on User interface Software and Technology (Santa Fe, NM, USA, October 24 – 27, 2004). UIST ’04. ACM, New York, NY, 137-146.

Curious rituals http://curiousrituals.wordpress.com/City people from: http://oceancity.shownbyphotos.com/Ocean_City-dorchester-street-pictures.html

Martin Tomitsch@martintom

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