thoughtstrudel-blog
thoughtstrudel-blog
thoughtstrudel
239 posts
I'm interested in how cities work, what makes great design and how we become better human beings. Sometimes I also use Twitter.
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 9 years ago
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 9 years ago
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 10 years ago
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Self-driving cars cartoon by Paul Noth for New Yorker
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 10 years ago
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That narrative explains the Patagonia paradox: there’s bad growth, and then there’s good growth. An expanding economy driven by ever greater individual consumption of ever more disposable products is bad. In a more sustainable future, people will buy fewer things at higher prices, technological innovation will reduce the impact of those products’ manufacture, and the goods themselves will be made to last and then be recycled at the end of their useful lives. Since those are the kinds of products Patagonia is striving to make, and the kinds of relationships to products that Patagonia is trying to foster, then the more that Patagonia expands its market share, the better. The new economy must grow out from beneath the old one. Patagonia’s Anti-Growth Strategy - The New Yorker http://www.newyorker.com/business/currency/patagonias-anti-growth-strategy
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 10 years ago
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 10 years ago
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Ideas for a smarter library.
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Freiburg’s new Death Star
Since September 2015 the Albert-Ludwigs University of Freiburg, where I study has a new library. (Official Webpage | Wikipedia)  It’s not even three months old and they call it the “Death-Star”. I think, you should see why.
I like libraries, I like architecture and I like interaction-design. Most of all however, I am a keen observer of how the built environment and the objects we use can shape our own behavior. As an (involuntary) power user of this building I was therefore excited to see the impact that this building would have on my day-to-day life as a student in Freiburg. 
Three months after the opening, I feel it is save to say that people are happy with the general look and feel of the building. It is a nice and quiet place to go to, the coffee is not too bad and they have fancy Vitra chairs, if you want to take a nap. Some impressions from the University Photo Gallery:
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If you’re interested, you can read some of the (German) media critique here :
Video-Tour @Badische Zeitung
SPIEGEL ONLINE: Baupanne in Freiburg, Blendende Bibliothek
Badische Zeitung: Die neue Freiburger Unibibliothek wird eröffnet und polarisiert
FAZ: Blendend: Neue Universitätsbibliothek in Freiburg
As far as my critique goes, it turned out the devil was mostly in the details. Here are some examples (and my respective comments)
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The buildings facade is so splendid and shiny, that during certain times of the year parts of the building have to covered with some textile cover, to prevent drivers on the nearby road from getting blinded. (At least it’s no like in London where skyscrapers are destroying cars.)
People get stuck in the new but slow entrance doors for a minute or so. (Nice psychological side effect: A little 30sec forced break that helps you switch from street-mood to working-mood.)
The info desk is in the quiet area. (?!)
Something (probably a broken light sensor) makes all the blinds and lights go crazy on cloudy days. Every five minutes. (Probably easy to fix.)
The windows are covered with a metal paint that kills your cellphone reception. (Probably good for productivity, but unintended.)
So far so bad/good. Those little flaws and errors are certainly just normal for a building this size.
21st century architecture - Technology from the 1980s
A few days ago however, sitting around in this very building I had some thoughts on libraries, design and technology, that felt worth sharing. 
My thoughts were kicked off by two little observations I made.
First, a university employee came by with a manual “click counter” counting the number of people working around me. Apparently they were trying to track, how many people are using their new thing. This seemed almost absurdly old fashioned to me, in such a futuristic building. 
A minute later, the lights on my table and all the other tables around me went out, so that you had to turn them on again. This kept happeng every consecutive hour for the rest of the day.
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I obviously thought, this was another technical glitch. 
Later on, I read that it was instead designed to save energy on unused tables, where people leave without turning the lights off. Furthermore, the fact that you have to switch your light on again every hour, should give you a sense of how much time you spend at your table studying (not that anybody would count the hours to leave).
Delighted by this little, yet effective idea I thought about how the old fashioned “tracker” could also be replaced with something a little more sophisticated using modern network technology. Something such as tracking the number of devices logged into the WiFi or just counting the number of table lights turned on. It struck me as ridiculous, that with the exception of some Macs and some WiFi routers, the very same building could have been built in the 1980s.
This conclusion however, got me thinking about how we could use connected things, apps and sensors to built a better library.
Ideas for a smarter library
So: Here are some of the things I came up with for a potential “SMART LIBRARY”. It’s just loose ideas, nothing tangible or even concrete. I just thought about the kind of data that could be collected (I.) and how we could maybe use it (II.).
I. Collecting data
1. Information that the building itself can collect
Number of power sockets in use
Number if lamps in use on individual tables
Sensors in doors (entrance, toilets, elevators)
Data form the library Wifi Routers:
Individual time spent in the library
Usage patterns in terms of location
Noise hotspots and what to do about them
Consumption of snacks/coffee at the library cafeteria
Content people consume digitally (websites, papers, articles)
2. Extra information via user input
Favorite workplace within the library
Transport patterns
Personal preferences for temperature/light conditions
Personal preferences in brake times
II. Use cases for this data
1. Status screens on each floor displaying useful data for users
Overall occupancy rate
Overall noise level
Temperature on each floor
Todays cafeteria (Mensa) menu.
Current productivity/coffeine level of the library
Event suggestions for life after the library
2. A smartphone app showing you for example
Books that you have to give back soon
Books that match your courses
Book recommendations, based on what you have rented
Your weekly productivity report
Hours spent in the library working/doing others things
Friends of yours, that are in the library, maybe a coffee break button
People near you, working on the same stuff as you
When does your next tram leave?
3. Playful new interactions such as:
A productivity competition with your friends (Library Leaderboard)
Discounts at the cafeteria for hours spent at the library
The smart Library as a flirt platform (think spotted for libraries)
Free coffee if you don’t come at rush hour
Stuff to be careful about
Broken sensors can break the library (see window shades)
Privacy and Data protection
More tech can be more distracting
For now this is just a loose collection of ideas. Think of it as a base for further thinking and drop your own ideas. May the force be with you!
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(Last photo: Credit to Mira Döhring | Fudder.de)
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 10 years ago
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Manuel Neuer, Prüfprotokollschreiber.
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 10 years ago
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“These four practices — multitasking, task switching, getting distracted and managing multiple projects — all fit under the label “multitasking”. This is not just because of a simple linguistic confusion. The versatile networked devices we use tend to blur the distinction, serving us as we move from task to task while also offering an unlimited buffet of distractions.”
FT.com Multi-tasking: How to survive in the 21st century
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 10 years ago
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Quite, Some characters I didn't know yet.
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 10 years ago
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digitalparadox
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 10 years ago
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Rivers and cities. Fascinating to see why it sometimes works and why.
Some riverside baths a la Zurich, together with a Berlin style Badeschiff certainly wouldn't hurt anyone.
BTW: It's European river bathing day today so go swimming in you city.
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 10 years ago
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Find the error.
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 11 years ago
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Sad thing, all of these photos could easily be real . #distopia
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Urban Sprawl Art
by Marcus Lyon
from the Brics & TimeOut series.
Images of urban sprawl out of control by Marcus Lyon. The images, created with careful meticulous planning, an abundance of creativity, photography and image manipulation combining as much as a thousand photo’s for one piece come together to form what can only be described as overwhelming. At the same time it’s easy to mistake these for real photograph’s, an impression they were purposefully  designed to portray.
MarcusLyon.com
via Wired
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 11 years ago
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Kirsten Dunst on Selfies
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 11 years ago
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"The Journey". A beautiful film that explains pretty good why this month I will run the third marathon of my life, this time in Frankfurt.
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 11 years ago
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It's certainly a bit more complicated, but makes a point.
-Last year I was in Bogota and blown away by seeing what effect great Infrastructure can have on peoples' life and how people feel about their city.
The #TransMilenio in Bogota is a good example, but if you look at the #MetroBus in Buenos Aires you see, that it is not just about the idea, but really about a good execution with attention to detail.
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"A developed country is not a place where the poor have cars, it’s where the rich ride public transportation." —Enrique Peñalosa, former Mayor of Bogota, Columbia,1998–2001
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thoughtstrudel-blog · 11 years ago
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"The Human Scale" - Definitely a movie, if you want to get someone interested in urbanism. Watch the whole movie: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9HE5oBH5Ww
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