“Constantly checking our feeds for new information, we seem to be hoping to discover something of interest, something that we can share with our networks, something that we can use, something that we can talk about, something that we can act on, something we didn’t know we didn’t know.
It almost seems like an obsession and many critics of digital technology would argue that by consuming information this way we are running the danger of destroying social interaction between humans. One might even say that we have become slaves of the feed.
Thomas Petersen, co-founder and partner of Danish digital creative agency Hello, reflects on the experience and design implications of the exponential growth of information.
Leave a Reply
Experientia news
Low2No Camp: entrepreneurial ideas to activate Low2No vision
Article by Experientia collaborator Irene Cassarino, with additional input from Jan-Christoph ...
Article by Experientia collaborator Irene Cassarino, with additional input from Jan-Christoph ...
Low2No project wins Holcim acknowledgement prize
Medium rise timber office building in low-to-no carbon emissions district, Helsinki, Finland, wins ...
Medium rise timber office building in low-to-no carbon emissions district, Helsinki, Finland, wins ...
Interview on Experientia's strategy on sustainable living in Helsinki
This month's e-Periscope review has a brief interview with Experientia partner Mark Vanderbeeken, ...
This month's e-Periscope review has a brief interview with Experientia partner Mark Vanderbeeken, ...
Experientia teams with Innovhub, to make its services available to Milan SMEs at 50% of the cost
Innovhub, the innovation agency of the Milan Chamber of Commerce, has selected the international ...
Innovhub, the innovation agency of the Milan Chamber of Commerce, has selected the international ...
Studying interaction design in Switzerland
A new master in interaction design will start in September in Switzerland -- with some teaching ...
A new master in interaction design will start in September in Switzerland -- with some teaching ...
Putting people first
is powered by WordPress
is powered by WordPress


