February 10, 2018
This past February, the University of California Irvine's Forum for the Academy and the Public hosted a symposium called, "Who Do We Think We Are? American Identity and the Ideal of Democracy in the 21st Century." I was invited to speak on a panel on "Democracy and Technology", and it's now online and linked above. I took the opportunity to talk about infrastructure and other systems, building on what I wrote in this piece for the Atlantic in 2017.
#democracy #technology #culture #techcultureJuly 12, 2017
Andrew Sempere
My friend Natalie Kane quoted me on stage last year: "Any sufficiently advanced neglect [or negligence] is indistinguishable from malice." I'm regularly saddened by how apropos this quote is. Photo by Andrew Sempere.
#culture #technology #ArthurCClarke #quoteJune 27, 2017
Eyeo 2017 - Deb Chachra from Eyeo Festival // INSTINT on Vimeo.
I was delighted to be invited to speak at the brilliant Eyeo Festival in Minneapolis this year. I gave a talk about the last two hundred or so years, and the next fifty or so years of engineering structures, in which I argue that increasing computational power, embedded sensors, and the ability to carry out fabrication in situ means that architecture is approaching the geometries and responsiveness to mechanical force of tissues in organisms. And yes, I was indeed delighted at the chance to spend fifteen minutes explaining bone biology to a roomful of designers.
#speaking #design #technology #engineering #biology #materialsMay 18, 2017
I was invited by The Atlantic to contribute a piece to their series, "Can Technology Rescue Democracy?" I decided to write about infrastructure and our large-scale systems, like the Food and Drug Administration, the Federal Aviation Authority, GPS, and more.
When we think about caring for our neighbors, we think about local churches, and charities—systems embedded in our communities. But I see these technological systems as one of the main ways that we take care of each other at scale. It’s how Americans care for all three hundred million of our neighbors, rich or poor, spread over four million square miles, embedded in global supply chains.
Gratitude for Invisible Systems
#technology #culture #writing #infrastructure #systemsJanuary 23, 2015
I wrote about how we overvalue making and undervalue caregiving for my newsletter, and The Atlantic asked permission to publish a version at their site. I'm really delighted at how strongly this piece has resonated with people all over the world.
#culture #technology #writingTags