AoIR conference - Pilot survey
Pilot survey on the AoIR Conference Dear AoIR's
From 2005 AoIR will directly organize the annual conference (Chicago). We'll not have anymore a local university hosting-shaping the event. We need to hear from you now... !
Please answer this short 5 questions pilot survey . Do not forget to indicate the locations (plural !) you'd like to propose under "SUGGESTIONS"! The pilot is completely anonymous. Your sincere replies will be very helpful in shaping future AoIR conferences. Please contact me for any further information at monica.murero@unifi.it The AoIR pilot survey is here: http://www.scils.rutgers.edu/~bunz/aoir/confsurvey.htm Your thoughtful and sincere answers are important to the future of AoIR. Thank you for your collaboration (and thanks to Ulla's technical support). Monica Murero AoIR Executive Committee ==================================== Prof. Monica Murero, PhD Director, E-Life International Institute Professor in Communication and Media Integration University of Florence MICC - Center of Excellence for Media Integration and Communication RAI Sede Regionale Toscana (III p.) Largo A. De Gasperi, 1 50136 Firenze (Italy) Tel. + 390 55 666 445; Fax + 390 55 666 465 E-mail: monica.murero@unifi.it; Website: http://www.micc.unifi.it/organization.htm International Association of Internet Researchers http://www.aoir.org AoIR Executive Board - First Appointed Seat
Call for Participation www.designtimeline.org We would like to invite you to contribute to the online collective web design history timeline. This project wants to map your encounters with design for the World Wide Web. It is part of a larger project entitled 'A Decade of Web Design' that includes an international conference in Amsterdam, January 21-22, 2005. Open History Timeline www.designtimeline.org is an 'open research' website/database into the first decade of web design. The online forum is a visual and textual timeline generated out of a self-customizable questionnaire. Using a custom content management system the site will allows: . Users to add images, comments and links, making a collective history of webdesign as it developed. Such elements might include histories of their own first homepage; the first use of a technology; original html code; reminiscences of key designers, innovators, critics and technologists. . Using a question-based interface users can write their own questions and respond to those of others. All questions entered are available, ensuring that no one set of views or way of writing predominates. . Multi-lingual use. The site is designed for use for anyone involved in web design over the past ten years. It is also ideal as a simple structured tool which can be used for both research and teaching. This project is intended to be of interest to a broad range of disciplines from design to computer science and from history to sociology. If you are a teacher we would like to invite you to consider integrating this site into your curriculum, as a piece of independent research for students, as a set workshop, or as the basis of a sustained project. The project starts now and continues until the end of march 2005, at which point it will be archived. Please - make history! http://www.designtimeline.org Conference: A Decade of Web Design (www.decadeofwebdesign.org) Until recently web design discourses have been dominated by a frantic, market driven search for the latest and coolest. The ongoing media buzz around 'demo design' has prevented serious scholarship from happening. Technical innovations such as frames, flash, WAP and 3G have dominated the field. Until 2001 a substantial part of the sector's activities was geared towards instruction and consultancy. The dotcom crash and IT slump have cleared the field-but not necessary in positive ways. Due to budget cuts firms now believe they can do without design altogether. Instead of asking ourselves what the Next Big Thing will be, we firmly believe that future design can be found in its recent past that offers a rich mix of utopian concepts and undigested controversies. In short, these ten years of web design has seen design change as much as it has seen the impact of a new form of global media. We want to celebrate this and to use a consideration and testing of the recent past to provide a platform for thinking about what is to come. In this, the conference will be unprecedented, the first event of its kind. Sessions for the event will be: -Histories of Web Design What do social, technical and cultural historians propose as ways to make an account of the last decade? -Meaning Structures As automated site-design becomes increasingly important the history of the interweaving of technology and culture up to the point of semantic engineering is mapped out -Modeling the User Creativity and usability have often been set up as the two key poles of web design. This panel asks instead for a more sophisticated narrative about the change in understanding of user needs and desires over the last ten years - Digital Work Following on from the Digital Work seminar this panel brings together key observers and critics of the changing patterns of work in web design along with designers - Distributed Design The web amplified an explosion on non-professional design. This panel will ask what happens to design once it becomes a non-specialist network process. Confirmed Speakers Michael Indergaard, John Chris Jones, Olia Lialina, Peter Luining, Peter Lunenfeld, Geke van der Wal, Franziska Nori, Danny O'Brien (NTK), Steven Pemberton, Helen Petrie, Rosalind Gill, Adrian McKenzie, Jimmy 'Jimbo' Wales, Schoenerwissen/OfCD, etc. Further speakers are yet to be confirmed. Organization Media Design Research, Piet Zwart Institute, Rotterdam, http://pzwart.wdka.hro.nl/ Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam, www.networkcultures.org (online October 8, 2004) Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, www.stedelijk.nl Register for the conference by sending an email to info@networkcultures.org. --- Sabine Niederer Institute of Network Cultures sabine@networkcultures.org
participants (2)
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Monica Murero -
Sabine Niederer