A video of a talk on design and social innovation at the Feast Conference given by William Drenttel, director of Winterhouse Institute. Delivered October 1, 2009 in New York City at the Times Center Auditorium.
Design Observer Twenty Years 2003-2023
Comments [11]
09.05.10
02:50
09.05.10
05:19
Moving from "artifact to consequence" is a great term, speaks to the need for designers to realize that products are really byproducts, the logical "remains", that come from a bigger picture framing of the problem.
09.05.10
05:34
09.05.10
08:17
For example, user interface design is largely about the stuff that goes on behind the scenes of what people see online. Can the notion of designing for interaction not apply to a vast array of social endeavor like healthcare, conferences and energy supply that are presented here? Not every designer's chosen path, to be sure – but does that mean that those who choose to stick with form-making pursuits should deny the merits of the wider applications of design?
09.05.10
10:32
Thank you for quoting from 1000 Words: A Manifesto for Sustainability in Design.
“We think that we’re in the artifact business, but we’re not; we’re in the consequence business.” – Allan Chochinov
Here is the link:
09.05.10
11:40
In the most rigid context, I cannot argue with your conclusion. Strictly speaking, the act of designing is, as you say "using the tools." What is more interesting to me—and what, I believe, Bill is getting at in this talk—is what happens when those of us who have been "using the tools" for our entire career then step into the role you describe as managing, producing, directing (or maybe envisioning). Call it what you will, but when you view a complex social problem through the lens of an experienced designer, the result is fundamentally different than when it is viewed from a more conventional perspective. Design methodology often garners empathic, human-centered solutions that are surprising and effective. Not matter what you call it, this is needed. And we know how to do it.
09.06.10
06:10
09.07.10
10:34
Design is a process which analyzes layers of information, specifically in this case hard statistics and narrative, distilling a provocative, and in the most fortunate occasions a sublime, understanding. This was a tirade of powerpoint slides. Please excuse me for the vernacular, but this is an UTTER DESIGN FAIL.
Mentioning the Right of Women to vote on the floor of Grand Central is a classic example of value by association. Cheap linguistic programming techniques in a talk about social change, sheesh!
Didn't he mention ‘we started out doing new media’ at the onset?
Wait, who did what? New media?
I believe I may have arrived from the distant future, because a static biaxial, right rising graph, coupled with the statement, ‘the numbers start getting really powerful and really exciting’ is utterly obsolete in my time.
I'm left wondering whether he desires the crowd to become engaged with his intended subject or he's merely satisfied with talking to something else besides a mirror. Really!
Really? Is this honestly anyone's idea of inciting social change? If William honestly cared about change, why does he not hire talented people who can make this intention a reality? Big thinkers get the job done, small thinkers tinker about.
Not impressed. This money could be spent on actual change, too bad.
Oops! Business expense, drinks on me after the talk!
09.07.10
08:48
09.08.10
04:10
09.08.10
12:28