The Art of Engineering and The Engineering of Art

Ivan Sutherland gave a talk about “The Art of Engineering and the Engineering of Art” at Hyperkult conference in Lüneburg. You might wonder where Lüneburg is. Depending on your location, it is likely to be in a far far away country. But for me it is almost between home and the Oracle office in Hamburg. Without further ado, here is his 1:22h talk_

Ivan Sutherland: The Art of Engineering and the Engineering of Art from mprove on Vimeo.

Last chance to watch

Google Video is closing down. Last chance to watch…
Last chance to watch Spin
Last chance to watch Bill Buxton at IIT Institute of Design Strategy Conference 2008
Last chance to watch Aza Raskin – Death of the Desktop
Last chance to watch David Weinberger’ Everything is Miscellaneous
Last chance to watch The Archimedes Palimpsest
Last chance to watch The Science and Art of User Experience at Google
Last chance to watch Jared Spool: How to Design for Branding
Last chance to watch Douglas Adams’ Hyperland
Last chance to watch Alan Kay at OOPSLA ’97
Last chance to watch Engelbart at 4th Conf on Innovation Journalism 2007
Last chance to watch Zeitgeist Addendum
Last chance to watch Barry Schwartz’ Paradox of Choice
Last chance to watch Ted Nelson on Electronic Literature
What are your favorites?
PS_
some videos are also hosted on YouTube, e.g.:
Aza Raskin: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3UwZkKsWgc0
Jen Fitzpatrick: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6459171443654125383…
Spin : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwMB4WijqNo&playnext=1&am…
Winberger’s Everything is miscellaneous: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x3wOhXsjPYM

Bill Verplank at Interaction 11


Bill Verplank: Opening Keynote from Interaction Design Association.
“Bill Verplank is a human-factors engineer with a long career in design, research and education. As a fresh ME PhD from MIT he worked eight years at Xerox on the testing and refinement of what we now call the “desktop metaphor”: bit-map graphics, keyboard and mouse, direct manipulation. For six years, he worked with Bill Moggridge at IDTwo and IDEO doing “interaction design” – bringing the insights from computers to the industrial design of medical instruments, GPS navigation, mobile phones, and new input devices (keyboards, track-balls, mice). From IDEO, he moved to Interval Research for 8 years of innovating design methods (observation, body-storming, scenarios, metaphors) and researching active force-feedback (“haptics”).

He began teaching design and man-machine-systems as a graduate student at MIT and “visual thinking” and product design at Stanford in the ’70s. Since then he has lectured regularly in human factors, user-interface design and most recently “new music controllers” at Stanford’s CCRMA. In 2000, he joined the steering committee of the Interaction Design Institute Ivrea (IDII) in Italy and has consulted most recently with the Copenhagen Institute of Interaction Design (CIID). He co-authored ACM SIGCHI Curriculum Recommendations and, for seven years, taught popular tutorials on Graphical Interface Design and Sketching Scenarios. He is known for sketching as he talks.”
See also_ Bill Verplank sketches metaphors at BayCHI 2008

Sun Founders Panel 2006

I was a little concerned when I realized that a video has vanished from a Computer History Museum‘s page at the time when Sun’s website was reorganized during the transition to Oracle. It was an intriguing panel with Sun founders and pioneers Andy Bechtolsheim, Bill Joy, Vinod Khosla, Scott McNealy, and John Gage. Ironically I remember the quote

“Get them on tape before they die.”

And if you have them on tape, keep the video up regardless of any changing situations; you are a museum! But here is the good news (thanks Oliver): The webcast is still available on YouTube. Enjoy!

Some quotes at A Tribute to Sun Miscrosystems: A Night to Remember

sun systemnews Jan 4, 2011:

Redundancy is sometimes the salvation of technology. Certainly in the case involving the supposed holdings of the Computer History Museum, without redundancy and YouTube, the Sun Microsystems Founders Panel (Bill Joy, Andy Bechtolsheim, Vinod Khosla, Scott McNealy and moderator John Gage) would have vanished forever since the video disappeared mysteriously from the museum’s web site during the confusion around the reorganization reflecting Oracle’s acquisition of Sun. Now, in all their glory, the founding four, courtesy of YouTube, share their personal stories of the early days at Sun.

Ted Nelson at Hypertext 01

This is not my planet. And this is not my conference.

What an opening to a talk at ACM Hypertext 01 by Ted Nelson! Ted Nelson at ACM Hypertext 2001 from mprove on Vimeo.at University of Nottingham
Some quotes:

[2’10”] I think of the world wide web and XML and cascading style sheets is the ultimate triumph of the typewriter over the author. +++ three fundamental problems today: 1) hierarchical file structures 2) simulation of paper 3) the application prison +++ [12’40”] Software is a branch of movie making. +++ [17’50”] The question is about starting over. +++ ZigZag / Authoplectic structures where trees and tables are just edge cases. +++

More at Ted Nelson Bibliography

Killing Me Loudly – Cameron Carpenter about his dream organ

I just became aware of Cameron Carpenter, a passionate and virtuous US organ outlaw. In the talk he explains the intimate relationship between the artist and the instrument. Which turns out to be quite difficult because no organ is like the other. On the quest to present the best experience to his audience he is designing a new virtual organ with 5 keyboards and an extended pedal board.
Cameron Carpenter at
University of Michigan School of Art & Design
Penny W. Stamps Distinguished Visitors Series
iTunes University Video 1:23′
Cameron Carpenter at TED EG 08 20′
25.11.2010 – Live at Laeiszhalle Hamburg

PS_ The same iTunes U channel has much more to offer, e.g. Tim Brown “From Design to Desgin Thinking”, Stewart Brand “Hacking Civilization”, Carole Bilson “Design, Innovation and Leadership”, Yes Men.