...the patterns can be analyzed, and you don't have to depend on having a human looking at a million different monitors, right? Adam Greenfield: You sure don't. It's inferential. And to me, one of the scariest things about it is that it's sort of imperceptible,...
...been to 'The Web and Beyond 2008' and hearing about Adam Greenfield's keynoting at the coming EuroIA Summit in Amsterdam, I started thinking about what he said at the time and what his words could mean. I also took into account two of the other main presenters:...
...on this post As the much buzzed about design publication Monocle wrapped up its first year, "Everyware" author Adam Greenfield felt ready to share his thoughts, now that he's got "a reasonable sense of what the magazine [is]." He points out his...
... "In our Urban Computing class this year, I’ve gone out on a limb and offered our students the following “central dogma”: "That which *primarily* conditions choice and action in the urban environment is no longer physical, but resides in the invisible and ...
... "It’s a difficult thing to talk about, actually. Having lived through the Oakland Hills fire, I’ve seen how very quickly it can all go away, right down to the basic infrastructure. I definitely believe that everyone should be prepared to go wheels-up on t...
...of Things, spimes, ubicomp, locative media, and ambient informatics. Everyware is the term coined by designer and futurist Adam Greenfield to describe âa vision of processing power so distributed throughout the environment that computers per se effectively...
...the final lecture of VISUALIZAR'08 took place and a large, enthusiastic crowd crammed into Medialab-Prado for the event. Adam Greenfield (design director at Nokia) presented The Long Here, the Big Now, and other tails of the networked city, a talk on ubiquitous...
...be tagged for optimum findability from search engines. Chatting with a journalist after my talk, I ended up showing up late for Adam Greenfieldâs talk, coming in for one of his more gruesome examples. Adamâs specialty is ubiquitous computing, and heâs done...
...as our manifesto puts it, "the resource is so insightful that its very existence is a step towards a solution." This essay by Adam Greenfield fits the bill: it speaks, with an almost fevered clarity, about the American relationship to the future, at a moment...
...Bruce Sterling, Adam Greenfield, Nicolas Nova and Yahoo scientist Elizabeth Churchill all geeking-out in high Italian form. Includes a host of ambitious Italian tech developers. "Can I leave the room now, professor? My brain is full!"))) Commenting is turned...