Artifacts & breakfast

10/17/2008 - 09:00
10/17/2008 - 10:30
Etc/GMT+2
  1. Field Video Visibility in a Corporate Setting
    Sue Faulkner
    Intel Corporation, Domestic Designs & Technologies Research

  2. Excavating Parameters
    Larisa Sitorus, Jared Donovan, and Mads Vedel Jensen
    Mads Clausen Institute

  3. Wisdom
    Scott Ternovits and Martha Cotton
    Gravitytank

  4. From Logs to People
    Jens Riegelsberger and Olga Khroustaleva
    Google

  5. Ethnosnacker
    Siamack Salari
    Everyday Lives

  6. Current-C
    Melissa Cliver
    Carnegie Mellon University School of Design

  7. Building Relationships to Improve Food Systems
    Zoe Bridges and Sophie Date
    Fit Associates

  8. Ethnography, Videography, Reality and other Artifices
    Inga Treitler, Antonella Fabri, Jason Eng, Jo Yung
    Knology

  9. Putting the person in persona
    Rebecca Denson & Dennis Nordstrom

  10. Day in the lIfe: Children Living with ADHD
    Ric Edinberg
    Communication Science

  11. Making “Media Landscape” Visible: Usage of Media in Japan and Korea via Home-visiting-method
    Aya Kubosumi & Noriko Ohara
    Konica Minolta Technology Center, Inc.

  12. The Practice of Seeing: 2 Examples of Teaching New Field Methods to an XD and Product Development Community
    Keren Solomon
    Intuit

  13. The Delphi Party Service
    Jessica Charlesworth
    RCA

  14. IT Management and Practices of Small Business Glen Anderson
    Intel Corporation, Channel Services & Planning, User Experience Group

  15. Telemedicine Services & Potential Uses for an Unknown Technology
    Maritza Guaderrama
    DNX

  16. Group Work and Levels of Abstraction: Building a Productive Workflow Diagram
    Mike Griffin & Susan Dybbs
    Ricoh

  17. Revealing the Invisible
    Christina Worsing
    IDEO

  18. Near Future - RFID
    Anab Jain & Alex Taylor
    Microsoft Research

  19. Presenting: The World Improvement Process. A User-Driven Approach To Generate Market Growth. By Solving Global Social And Environmental Challenges
    Tobias Lau