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What does it means to design space for the digital natives ?
How digital artefacts are currently shaping our culture, our thinking forms, and how this deep integration of digital culture will progressively start to play a considerable role in postdigital architecture design processes.
“This invisible layer of electromagnetic signals is particularly dense in the populated and technology-driven environments constituting the postdigital cities. [...] Furthermore, it is also very important to realize that this invisible layer has a direct impact on the physiological reality of our bodies. The humans of the postdigital age are literally, as much metaphorically navigating in an information ocean of electromagnetic waves” – Mathieu Bujnowskyj
I’m starting to read these two new books from HGK and ZHdK Libraries. Very timely books, both published in 2015. It is somehow confirming that postdigitalism is becoming an important subject in our current society, beyond the artistic practice. /*Oh My God! They Killed Kenny!*/
Information, especially in digital culture, is text or code — things that come up on screens to be interpreted through one sort of language or another. The more ubiquitous these devices become, the harder it is to see spatial technologies and networks that are independent of the digital. The world has become an “internet of things” — an interplay between smart buildings, smart cars and countless mobile phones and computing devices.
Keller Easterling. “The Action Is the Form. Victor's Hugo's TED Talk, 2012
My hope is that Fab will inspire more people to start creating their own technological futures. We've had a digital revolution, but we don't need to keep having it. Personal fabrication will bring the programmability of the digital worlds we've invented to the physical world we inhabit
Neil Gershenfeld, FAB, 2011