Hi vs Ai – Human intelligence versus AI, design automation and machine learning
I was Invited to join the debate at the Foundry, the cool design and CGI software house to write about some of my design thinking and workflows.
See the post at the foundry blog www.thefoundry.co.uk/blog/man-and-machine-partners-in-creativity/
Here is the uncut version:
I would like to thank The Foundry for inviting me to join the conversation around ‘creativity vs automation’.
This topic is at the centre of my research. I feel as if automation is almost equal to freedom.
It frees us from certain elements that can be done in a better, faster way. It is also a form of magic; we look at an automated process and we get a sense of pleasure, a sense of achievement.
It mimics human behaviours and sometimes replaces human skills. As we step into an era of complex social hierarchies, it is our responsibility to design technologies and mechanisms that unlock and enhance human capacities rather than merely replacing them.
We are designing all sorts of automated processes within our digital design and co design workflows. Below I hope to illustrate some principles that guide us in that process.
Tool-making is a human instinct
We are very busy with improving our tools, a bit like the shoemaker who is always thinking about improving his working bench and sharpening his blade. Or perhaps the hunter, going out hunting and the trapper designing his trap mechanics, planning and speculating.
Repetition can be automated
When you are repeatedly designing and producing things, you start identifying elements with shared identities. Patterns, behaviours and elements that repeat themselves are maybe the first opportunity for automation in design.
Need for automated sense of materiality
Working with 3D virtual workflows, we need a sense of physicality and scale. Designing objects on a flat screen without any real life sense of load and materiality, we often struggle to perceive the true nature, durability and characteristics of the virtual object. This is another domain that needs some form of automation that can be in turn efficiently associated with human decision making and judgment mechanisms.
Signs, symbols and applied beauty
Designing, shaping and sculpting are perhaps the most advanced forms of human visual expression. A bit like sketching, these are strokes of intuitive imagination. We are consumers of forms and functions, therefore designing for usability and are experts in the application of perceptual signs and symbols that makes an object readable, projecting its nature and functions.
Aesthetics is the joy in perception. We are controlling the outlines and contours of a surface by manually conforming, restraining and enhancing its continuity and flow. These are challenging tasks to automate as we design the object perceptual system, symbolic impact and aesthetic value.
Technology to unlock and amplify human capacity
We are the consumers at the end of this industrial cycle. We design and manufacture objects for a better life, sustainability, survival but also comfort and beauty. It is clearly about efficiency, energy reduction, and better use of resources, while keeping people working and happy. As industrial designers, we have the responsibility to innovate inclusively. AI, machine learning and automated digital processes will replace some of the existing human professions in the near future, and while this is a natural progress, is seems that there is a great opportunity to design technologies that will intelligently unlock and amplify human way of doing things instead of merely replacing them.
User informed objects – Hi vs Ai, Assa’s talk at Victoria & Albert museum orgenised by RCA reaseach
We should own less but with more value – Objects we own need to perform better for usI will discuss:
1, A technology to enable user input into objects. online at the virtual phase, where objects are ‘alive’ and can be reconfigured and personalised to achieve a better value and fit.
2, Retail workflow, design freedoms Vs cost optimisations. local manufacturing horison, logistics and supply chain within this digital environment
3, Hi Vs Ai – Human intelligence Vs software automation, where can design process be automated and wear do we must have human check points or creative intervetions
Join us February Saturday 23rd 2016 at the victoria & Albert Museum LondonRedistributed Manufacturing research at the RCA http://www.rca.ac.uk/research-innovation/research/current-research/future-makespaces-redistributed-manufacturing/
V&A Event link http://futuremakespaces.rca.ac.uk/so-hows-this-event-going-to-work-then/
Images of Support Sitting – working progress by Assa Ashuach
3D hubs conference london wednesday 28,10,15
hello friends,
ill be talking digital design and manufacturing, mainly within the SLS & DMLS at the coming 3D hubs conference in London. fascinating to see how home 3D printing is now part of DIY and maker communities, will it be a real production tool for us industrial designers to use? yes, I believe so. FDM materials and machines are now robust, it is more about smart utilisation.
details: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/3d-printing-for-designers-and-architects-tickets-18860916509
location: Getting to The Proud Archivist http://www.theproudarchivist.
image of the new OMI light XL


PD+I Conference
Assa will give a talk at the PD+I conference on Thursday 21th May at 9:30 am.
Venue: America Square Conference Centre
Book here
Talk topic and abstract:
‘User informed objects’ a shift in the order of use
Consumers can now connect directly to designers. It is a shift from consumer to user to partner. We are designing 3D interactive products to be ‘Open’ or ‘Unlocked’ for user co-designing online. The user is in the center of what we do. It is about the notion of ‘In Touch’ and how can we stay ‘In Touch’ with our user communities. Using 3D algorithms and personal data streams, we can now capture user behavior patterns and ergonomic characteristics. Over time we can study our users and propose better products and services with enhanced performance and better fit.
‘Open within boundaries’ the Digital Forming technology.
Introducing the notion of ‘Open within boundaries’ and the Digital Forming technology, a novel two sided 3D communication platform whereby the designer designs both the product and its 3D user experience as an integral and essential part of the product design process. An embeddable interactive file is then presented to the user with its own predesigned boundaries and freedoms, defining the user co designing experience.
‘We should own less but with more value’ – ’Things we own need to perform better for us’
Zumtobel Re:work, Hamburg
Some pictures from the Hamburg talk organised by Zumtobel, curated and designed by Florian Pfeffer from One One studio.
Great evening discussing digital design manufacturing social impact with former Bauhaus director Arch Philipp Oswalt.
Talk at the Zumtobel RE:WORK, Hamburg
Assa will give a talk tomorrow in Hamburg at the RE:WORK Micro Popup Konference.
18 Feb 2015, 18:00 CET
HAMBURG – designxport
Hong Kong Straße 8, 20457 Hamburg
HafenCity University U4
Zumtobel Re:work event, Berlin
Some pictures from last week talk in Berlin organised by Zumtobel, curated and designed by Florian Pfeffer from One One studio
Great evening!
We are looking forward for the Hamburg event.
Talk at RE:WORK Berlin
Assa will give a talk tomorrow in Berlin at the RE:WORK Micro Popup Konference.
29 Jan 2015, 18:00 CET
LEHRTER SIEBZEHN
Berlin
Assa talk at the OCC in Athens
Assa will give a talk tonight at 7pm at the Onassis Cultural Centre in Athens.
Talk title: User informed objects – Consumers as Partners
http://www.sgt.gr/en/programme/event/2198
Assa had a nice surprice while reading the flight magazine:
Pushkin State Museum Exhibition Moscow
Open now in Moscow, the exhibition “British Design: from William Morris to the Digital Revolution” at Moscow’s great Pushkin Museum.
The show is organised and curated by a great young team that are establishing a new Russian Design Museum, a contemporary design wing within the Pushkin sate Museum great art tradition. the team is focusing on collecting and preserving great Russian design history, while promoting contemporary design for the first time.
We are very excited to take part in this pioneering show and will present some studio objects among famous pieces from William Morris and Charles Rennie Mackintosh. If you are in Moscow you can’t miss it. Assa will be there on the 25th of November to give a talk about “User informed objects”.
For the new Moscow Design Museum http://www.moscowdesignmuseum.ru/en/education/3613/
For the Pushing state Museum http://www.arts-museum.ru