Creative Synthesis

The thoughts and works of the Creative Synthesis Collaborative.

Welcome to the Collaborative!

Hey, there! Nice to see you. Consider subscribing to our feed to stay in touch.

If you want to support our work, consider becoming one of our donors. Nonprofit organizations like us are really dependent on your private donations.

Feed Subscriptions

RSS FeedRSS Things
RSS Comments

Fundraising Initiatives

We're beginning serious fundraising initiatives.

Rolling Links

Things by Category

Things by Month

This thing was constructed on January 14, 2008, and it was categorized as hyperexperience.
You can follow comments through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a comment, or trackback.

altchi.jpg

at the staid but prestigious CHI conference engineers psychologists and human factors specialists get to discuss the future of computer human interface through peer-reviewed pseudo-academic papers and panels. but a lot of contributions to the field are somewhat hard to place, and for this reason, since 2005 they have included an ‘alternative’ conference within the conference: alt.chi. this is where i was fortunate enough to publish the dishmaker, and this year amanda parkes and i submitted a paper outlining the syllabus for this past fall course futurecraft. for a while people have suggested that alt.chi was better than CHI, and this year they’ve really gone out on a limb by making the conference-within-a-conference totally different by forgoing the peer-reviewed system and instead adopting an open, public forum where papers can be evaluated by anyone who logs on. will authors (who are required to review three of their colleagues’ papers as a condition for submitting one) be kinder or harsher or fairer? will popularity have an impact? this year’s alt.chi is not just a conference, it’s a research project on its own - one which may point the way toward open, democratic conferences where publication can be evaluated openly and independent of name or affilitation. why not give it a shot - but be nice…

This thing was constructed by .
Leo is a artist, inventor and all around practical person in the Tangible Media Group at the Media Lab. He has a background in sculpture, architecture and industrial design as well as an MS from the Media Lab spent working on the kitchen of the future. He is on a search for truth.

You can follow comments through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a comment, or trackback.

Post a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.