Technology & Innovation

A new era of design

September 15, 2014

Global

September 15, 2014

Global

A new era of design

The IoT calls for nothing less than a new era of design.

And the designers that define it will be the architects of the modern world

By 2020, there will be 50 billion devices connected to the web, from lamp posts, cars and doorbells to your pet dog and the chicken sitting in your fridge.

These connected objects, collectively known as the Internet of things, will soon outnumber people. They have the potential to enrich our lives - but they could also prove overwhelming, infuriating and even hazardous to our health.

Will you need to use a new app when you visit a new supermarket? Will buying a new fridge require migrating all your data to a new platform?It is vital that, as the IoT grows, we don ’t add to the burden of managing our lives and instead find ways to make sure it works for us.

The difference lies in user experience design. The term user experience is most commonly associated with digital systems and their interfaces. In the digital world, although there is an ever-growing range of devices on the market, the standard interfaces - touchscreen, keyboard or mouse – are pervasive.

In the IoT world, there is no standard interface. Every “thing ” that has a use has its own way to be used. Interacting with a coffee machine is a fundamentally different problem that interacting with a car.

The design challenge therefore moves from an ‘interface ’ design to an experience and even environment design.

The challenge of making this shift falls at the feet of the user experience designer, described by Xerox PARC researcher and author Mark Kuniavsky as “the midwife of technological change, theperson whose job is imagining the world as it should be.”

It’s these technological midwives who are collectively responsible for capitalising on the incredible opportunities but also negotiating the challenges of the IoT, where complex sequences of choreographed interactions for new, multichannel and multi-platform, services must be analysed and constructed.

In fact, the IoT will usher in nothing less than a new era of design and offer the opportunity to embrace a novel approach; a shift away from emerging technologies and a refocus framing the needs and motivations of the people using them. Screens will soon be dé classé , replaced by interactions through a diverse range of objects and through the environment itself.

For designers, this shift is hugely exciting. Unlike interfaces, systems can empower people to participate, create and also change society. As the conduit of change, ‘ design’ takes on new connotations. Far beyond making things aesthetically beautiful or cool, it can also encourage functionality, not only in a device, but in how that device is used by people, and how this use impacts society.

How can we best equip designers to mitigate the pitfalls and harvest the opportunities of designing for the IoT? Are current design principles sufficient or do we need to create new ones? To share your thoughts, please visit the Future Realities LinkedIn group, sponsored by Dassault Systèmes

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