fran kresin - waag society - día 3
TRANSCRIPT
Artistic Research, Critical Design & Social Innovation
Frank Kresin Research Director
@kresin / [email protected]
Developing Services & Business
Outcomes
• Linking arts, science, technology & society in research programmes
• Human centered product development • Facilitating innovation processes • Consultancy, workshops & brainstorms • Visualizations, demonstrators & prototypes • Incubating products • Organizing events &
competitions • Academy programme
Activities & Services
Users as Designers
www.businessmodelgeneration.com
Cost structure Revenue streams
Key resources
Key activities
Key partners
Value proposition
Costumer relationships
Costumer segments
Channels
Artistic���Research Government
Critical ���Design Companies
(small/large)
Creative���Industries���
Fund
Research���Funding
Assignments
Social ���Innovation
Human���Talent
Lab Infrastructure
Travel, Expenses, ..
Funding���Agencies
one-to-one contact
Designers
Programmers Domain���Experts
website
Presentations
Peers
Knowledge���Institutes
Cities
R&D
Facilitations
Academy
Individuals / Groups
Civil Society
City of���Amsterdam
Products���& Services
Knowledge
Workshops
Text
Human Centered:
Income structure
Delivering to the Real World
Corporate Structure
Waag Group
Waag Society
Waag Products
FairPhone Seven Scenes CitySDK Story Table CultureGrid
Creative Research
Labyrinth Psychotica
Jennifer Kanary: http://www.labyrinthpsychotica.org/
Bodyguard
Fairphone
Books
Fablab Amsterdam
Sint Antoniesbreestraat 69 1011 HB Amsterdam waag.org
Frank [email protected]@kresin
Design Rules for Smarter Cities
• Your citizens know more than you. • Prototype early and fast, engage the stakeholders, iterate quickly and be
prepared to start all over. • Embrace self-organisation and civic initiative, but help to make the results
sustainable and scalable. • Know what you are talking about in the face of technology. Never rely on
consultants that will sell you more consultancy, not solutions. • Have binding decisions made at the lowest level possible and actively preach
self-governance. • Favour loosely coupled, smaller systems over monoliths and mastodons, and
use peer-defined standards to glue together the parts. Small systems tend to fail sometimes; large systems fail for sure.
• To raise and deserve trust, build systems based on data reciprocity and transparency.
• Reuse existing parts and design your additions for reuse, adding to the public domain and thereby strengthening its capacity to act and learn.
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http://waag.org/nl/blog/design-rules-smarter-cities