From: bluefire@well.com (Bob Jacobson)
Subject: EVENT: Information Design, Feb 21, Stanford U.
Date: 19 Feb 1997 05:17:58 GMT
Message-ID: <5ee2e6$hns@was.hooked.net>
Organization: The Well, San Francisco, CA


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Stanford Seminar on People, Computers, and Design (CS547)
<http://www-pcd.stanford.edu/seminar.html>
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Friday, February 21, 1997, 12:30-2:00pm - Skilling Auditorium

 Robert Jacobson , SRI Consulting
        bluefire@well.com

TITLE: Information Design and Why It Matters

ABSTRACT: Information design is the newest of the design disciplines
and, like a volcano in formation: we can see in its convulsions the
way in which a profession grows. In and of itself, information design
is important to its practitioners, of course; but as a mirror of our
times, when the crafting of messages and meaning is so central to our
lives, it is not only important: information design is essential.

My talk will focus on the moral as well as professional dilemmas
facing information designers today, and how designers resolve or
transcend these impediments to practice. My focus is not on technique
but rather how this emerging community of professionals -- information
designers -- begins to define itself as a community, enunciates rules
of practice and ethics that become canons, and embraces (or rejects)
critical theory as a way to systematize their practice and pass it
along to the next generation of professionals.

****
(Excerpted from the editor's introduction to INFORMATION DESIGN, Robert
Jacobson, editor, MIT Press, 1997)
See <http://www.worldesign.com/nf/resource/book.html>

  Human history is a continuing story of information being systematically
  designed and conveyed for the purpose of sharing perceptions and forcing
  conclusions. In our own time, Joseph Goebels twisting Germany around the
  stark Nazi finger and the cartoon reality of the Gulf War as seen on American
  TV bear stark testimony to this possibility. But information design is
traceable
  to more distant roots: the prehistorical mythologies and tales told by
priests,
  tyrants, and dramatists were the first efforts to subjectively craft human
  experience.

  What makes the current discussion of information design exciting is its
  emphasis on edification and commutativity. Edification is the process of
  personal enlightenment. Commutativity is the process of mutual change.
  Contemporary information designers seek to edify more than persuade, to
  exchange more than to foist upon. We have finally learned that the issuer of
  designed information is as likely as the information's intended recipient
to be
  changed by it, for better or worse.

  This new awareness is forced on us by ever more powerful technologies of
  communication. These media dramatically highlight and shorten the links
  among those who generate information designs and those who receive and act
  on designed information. It is getting so that all of us, all of the
time, are both
  designers of information and consumers, whether we know it or not.

  Given that information design is so pervasive, it behooves us to to be caring
  and deliberate in the application of this discipline. That is the purpose
of this
  book: both cautionary and hopeful, Information Design offers visions of how
  information design can be practiced diligently and ethically, for the
benefit of
  information consumers as well as producers.

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Bob Jacobson is a senior consultant at SRI Consulting's Business
Intelligence Center, in Menlo Park, CA. Prior to joining SRI-C he ran his
own company, a virtual-worlds-applications startup, Worldesign Inc., in
Seattle. Worldesign was a a spinoff from the Human Interface Technology
Laboratory, or HIT Lab, which Bob cofounded and staffed as associate
director, at the Washington Technology Center located on the campus of the
University of Washington.

>From 1981 through 1989, Bob was principal consultant and staff
director of the Assembly Utilities and Commerce Committee,
specializing in telecommunications and information policy. His book,
AN "OPEN APPROACH" TO INFORMATION POLICYMAKING (Ablex, 1989),
describes the iterative planning process applied to information
policymaking -- prelude to design. Bob has been a Fulbright Research
Scholar studying telecommunications and economic development in
Scandinavia and an active member of the Public Access movement in the
1970s, when many of the same promises and pitfalls now associated with
computer communications were associated with community video. "The
parallels are striking," he says.

His B.A. (sociology of mass communications), M.A (television studies),
and Ph.D. (urban planning/design) were all earned at UCLA. He also
holds an M.A. (communications management) from the Annenberg School of
Communications at USC, "a booby prize for taking information design
too seriously for a doctoral student in a behaviorally oriented
communications program. It's time that craft found a place in the
lexicon of knowledge."

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NEXT WEEK: Feb. 28, 1997, Jon Bowersox, MD, PhD,
    Department of Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine
        bowersox_j@hosp.stanford.edu
        Designing an Interface for Telesurgery

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