
Working on the “Curious Ritual” book project, I found that interview of Bruce Sterling very much in line with what we are exploring (with field observations as the one represented above):
Tish Shute: This year we have seen gestural interfaces go mainstream. What are the most interesting directions for gestural interfaces that you have seen emerge in recent months?
Bruce Sterling: To me, the most “interesting” part is seeing people do gestural stuff in public. William Gibson, my fellow author, observes that cellphones have stolen the gestural language of cigarettes. There’s lots of fidgeting, box tapping, ash-swiping, slipping boxes in and out of pockets… People quickly learn to do that without thinking twice, and they forget how weird it looks. It’s “design dissolving in behavior,” as Adam Greenfield puts it.
-
elcongelador likes this
-
rootfish likes this
-
productification reblogged this from betaknowledge
-
emergentdigitalpractices reblogged this from notational
-
rafaelfajardo likes this
-
ch0c0laeva likes this
-
naranzarian likes this
-
iamdanw reblogged this from betaknowledge
-
selectall likes this
-
ladymeng likes this
-
justement likes this
-
nussbaum reblogged this from notational and added:
never thought of it this way, but i couldn’t agree more. my obsession with my phone verges on being unhealthy at times....
-
notational reblogged this from ecotone
-
ecotone reblogged this from betaknowledge
-
julian likes this
-
worsethandetroit likes this
-
urbansheep likes this
-
orbit48 likes this
-
warrenellis likes this
-
myhumaninteractions reblogged this from betaknowledge
-
myhumaninteractions likes this
-
betaknowledge posted this