Sunday, October 7, 2012

alzheimer's presentation


jessica and i have spent the past several weeks researching alzheimer's and working to determine a way that design can improve the quality of life for both those suffering from the disease and those who care about them and are suffering alongside. our proposal includes a memory box that can blur the boundaries between the physical and digital, holding real keepsakes and uploaded memories in whatever format they want to be. friends, family, and loved ones have access to an online repository  and each individual memory provides a jumping-off point for the rest of the family to reminisce, add to, lovingly contradict, and compare their own memories. simultaneously, the physical memory box encourages time spent close to family members and stimulation through the viewing of memories. this system helps the patient and the family come together throughout the illness while preserving those memories and feelings for the future, to become a family heirloom and legacy, and to keep the spirit of a loved one alive long after they are.


Rojas Wilson FinalKeynote

we gave this presentation on october fifth. the night before, as we were practicing, i was thinking of my grannie, vivian gust. we lost her to alzheimer's in 2009, quite some time after we'd already lost her to alzheimer's. that night was the fourth: her birthday. <3

sustainable business/cradle to cradle



catherine gray, of the natural step, writes:
"at a fundamental level, our industrial system was built without sustainability in mind."
how common is it that people utilize partnerships with sustainability experts like the natural step?

she continues: "the reward system currently in place supports unsustainable business practices."

this feels like a game theory issue, that for every company that cooperates and plays by the rules, the way is left open for another, even more insidious, company to come in and get ahead by defecting toward exploitative practices. 

how big does a company have to be before they trust their ability to make it, even by playing fair? 


/


the book cradle to cradle asks, "what do we gain by playing environmental roulette?"
and indicts: "recycling is an aspiring, alleviating a rather large collective hangover… overconsumption."

it contrasts between two characters, guardian and commerce.

guardian: 
•the government
•preserve & protect the public
•slow & serious
•regulation is its tool
•right to kill/war
•public interest
•shuns commerce

commerce
•day to day instant exchange of value
•currency is its primary tool
•urgent, quick, creative, inventive
•short & long term advantage
•inherently honest.

money + guardian = corruption.
commerce + regulation = slow.

the use of the tool of the guardian, regulation, is a signal of design failure. regulation is a "license to harm", to dispense sickness, destruction and death at an "acceptable rate."

can we really trust that good design can require no regulation at all? is it safe to have that much faith, or is it in our nature as humans to try to enslave nature, and should there always be regulations to safeguard that protection?