Derrick de Kerckhove on the Augmented Mind
Via Kathy Gill, I found this interview with Derrick de Kerckhove, author of a new short book, Augmented Mind: Q: Could you define for our readers what 'Augmented Mind'
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Skip to contentVia Kathy Gill, I found this interview with Derrick de Kerckhove, author of a new short book, Augmented Mind: Q: Could you define for our readers what 'Augmented Mind'
I've been reading up on the effects of CAD-- and more specifically, the abandonment of drawing in architectural education-- on architectural thinking and practice. It's a great example
A nice example of a technology being repurposed by users; or of a communications technology we had thought of as ephemeral and world-girdling having a real-world, local impact:
My fellow futurist and author Anthony Townsend pointed me to this New York Times piece by Tony Perrettet on writing and distraction: Literary distraction seems a very modern problem.
Last year Alok Khorana published a really excellent short piece on the impact of electronic medical records (EMRs, those things that are supposed to save medicine) on the
From his 1972 article on the early videogame: Spacewar as a parable is almost too pat. It was the illegitimate child of the marrying of computers and graphic
Last night I stumbled on Writer, a writing tool designed by Information Architects Inc., a Tokyo-based Web design and branding firm. Rather like OmmWriter, it's a high-end minimalist
Not completely. But close. from the brilliant xkcd
Edward Tenner in The Atlantic on what is at stake in offloading memory: The issue isn't whether most information belongs online rather than in the head. We were
Interesting piece in the Guardian about arguments over the efficacy of nudges in dealing with social problems. The Cameron government has been very keen on the idea that