Rights statement: © 2018 Copyright is held by the owner/author(s). Publication rights licensed to ACM. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of ACM for your personal use. Not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in NordiCHI '18 Proceedings of the 10th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/3240167.3240265
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Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSN › Conference contribution/Paper › peer-review
}
TY - GEN
T1 - The Futures of Computing and Wisdom
AU - Pargman, Daniel
AU - Kirman, Ben
AU - Eriksson, Elina
AU - Bates, Oliver
AU - Comber, Rob
N1 - © 2018 Copyright is held by the owner/author(s). Publication rights licensed to ACM. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of ACM for your personal use. Not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in NordiCHI '18 Proceedings of the 10th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/3240167.3240265
PY - 2018/9/29
Y1 - 2018/9/29
N2 - There has been an increasing interest in discussing the consequences of the technologies we invent and study in HCI. Whether it is climate change, ethical computing, capitalist and neo-liberal models of commerce and society, grassroots movements, big data or alternative paradigms in distributed systems, this workshop will invite participants to explore these consequences and ask how we move forward with responsibility and new forms of knowing and knowledge. We invite participants to join us, as we cast forward fifty years to 2068 to imagine the future of wisdom, and to reflect on how we got there. By writing Fictional Abstracts, an abstract from a research paper yet to be written, we will unpick critical tensions in the advancement of computing over the next decades. The workshop will develop perspectives on the futures of computing and critically reflect on the assumptions, methods, and tools for enabling (and disabling) such futures.
AB - There has been an increasing interest in discussing the consequences of the technologies we invent and study in HCI. Whether it is climate change, ethical computing, capitalist and neo-liberal models of commerce and society, grassroots movements, big data or alternative paradigms in distributed systems, this workshop will invite participants to explore these consequences and ask how we move forward with responsibility and new forms of knowing and knowledge. We invite participants to join us, as we cast forward fifty years to 2068 to imagine the future of wisdom, and to reflect on how we got there. By writing Fictional Abstracts, an abstract from a research paper yet to be written, we will unpick critical tensions in the advancement of computing over the next decades. The workshop will develop perspectives on the futures of computing and critically reflect on the assumptions, methods, and tools for enabling (and disabling) such futures.
KW - Wisdom
KW - design fiction
KW - fictional abstracts
KW - ethics
KW - sustainability
KW - politics
KW - justice
KW - social action
KW - social change
U2 - 10.1145/3240167.3240265
DO - 10.1145/3240167.3240265
M3 - Conference contribution/Paper
SN - 9781450364379
SP - 960
EP - 963
BT - NORDICHI'18: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 10TH NORDIC CONFERENCE ON HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION
PB - ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
CY - New York
T2 - 10th Nordic Conference on Human-Computer Interaction (NORDICHI)
Y2 - 1 October 2018 through 3 October 2018
ER -