Inventing the Medium NINCH Building Blocks Workshop October 2000 Janet Murray Information Design and Technology Program Georgia Tech

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Presentation transcript:

Inventing the Medium NINCH Building Blocks Workshop October 2000 Janet Murray Information Design and Technology Program Georgia Tech

Information Design and Technology at Georgia Tech Professor Janet H. Murray Director of Graduate Studies Information Design and Technology Program Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta Georgia

Pattern Whenever I design a chip the first thing I want to do is look at it under a microscope -- not because I think I can learn something new by looking at it but because I am always fascinated by how a pattern can create reality. Danny Hillis The Pattern in the Stone

New Media

Soliloquy as Technology of Representation

Properties of the Medium Procedural Participatory Encyclopedic Spatial

Legacy Design Paradigms Graphic Design: Poster Human Computer Interaction: Appliance Television Producers: “Enhanced” TV Instructional Design: Distant Classroom Communication: Broadband Telephone Library Science: Card Catalog Literary/Cultural Studies: Potato Root System

A Medium of Representation

Script the interactor

Design Issues Is it a “show”? Is there a “movie underneath”? Segmentation and juxtaposition Standardized labels Encyclopedic expectation

Cross-Media Structures

Granularity, Juxtaposition

Textbook to Archive Virtual Screening Room Henry Jenkins, MIT CD-ROM/DVD Project

A New Medium

Medium of Representation allows us to: –Inscribe perceptible signs –Create patterns of meaning –Preserve and transmit patterns –Expand our understanding and our humanity

New Media

Moments of Invention

Patterns of Meaning

New Forms…New Knowledge Digital Archive Simulation Kaleidoscopic structure

John Belcher, TEAL, MIT, NSF

Reinventing Biography

How to invent the medium

Pick something complicated Think of a particular task you are obsessed by Do you know more about it than you can contain in books, classes, diagrams? Do you want to know something / explain something just beyond the reach of available means?

What are the core tasks? What other tasks are like this one? What would this task be like if it were doable in the most perfect way? Think abstractly, build concretely

Look for Harbinger Materials Based on The Norman Conquests, Trilogy by Alan Ayckbourn Built with IBM “HotVideo ” Hot Norman: A prototype for Digital TV

Exploit the Medium Procedural: Patterns of Rule-Based Behavior Participatory: Patterns of Participation Encyclopedic: Patterns of Segmentation, Categorization, and Agglomeration Spatial: Patterns of Navigation and Boundary Definition

Create Authoring Tools CharacterMaker 4 J. Murray, M. Privat

British Museum Stance Everything will be brought to you Everything has been indexed Every medium available Every artifact available Every part of every artifact at every level of granularity Every marginalized group/idea represented or addable

Design for the Future Environment Standardized metadata Distributed annotation Open ended archive Growing ability to manipulate with kaleidoscopic power Growing ability to replay, readjust parameters

Avoid Pitfalls Fetishism of legacy formats Constraints of legacy processes Confusing expert authority with legacy formats and processes “Hypertext” “Intuition”

Look for the patterns Whenever I design a chip the first thing I want to do is look at it under a microscope -- not because I think I can learn something new by looking at it but because I am always fascinated by how a pattern can create reality. Danny Hillis The Pattern in the Stone

Remember what is sacred Not the book: it’s a legacy format Not the process: it can be improved The expansion of human knowledge and human understanding

Information Design and Technology at Georgia Tech Professor Janet H. Murray Director of Graduate Studies Information Design and Technology Program Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta Georgia

Information Design and Technology at Georgia Tech Professor Janet H. Murray Director of Graduate Studies Information Design and Technology Program Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta Georgia

Information Design and Technology at Georgia Tech Professor Janet H. Murray Director of Graduate Studies Information Design and Technology Program Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta Georgia

Information Design and Technology at Georgia Tech Professor Janet H. Murray Director of Graduate Studies Information Design and Technology Program Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta Georgia

Information Design and Technology at Georgia Tech Professor Janet H. Murray Director of Graduate Studies Information Design and Technology Program Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta Georgia