this is not a question in regards to digital tools, software or types of media. it's a question of the increasing technological drivers that now move and influence the human experience, much like how architects approach the design of space.
Until the digital experience is capable of giving us seamless 3D, with surround sound, odours, tactile abilities, etc, then it's all just a poor simulacrum of the real thing in my opinion. Other people can work on that while I attend to my own job as an architect in the real world, with real materials, real people, real money, real consequences.
I think the OP is asking about how digital can improve the built environment. Then again the OP's post is so poorly written I don't think even they understand what they've asked.
Dec 28, 20 4:30 pm ·
·
bowling_ball
Yeah upon reading the question again, it was either written by a student or a robot. I'm not sure which, but I should have ignored it.
During a physical a few years ago, my doctor casually mentioned something about a digital exam; I wasn't really paying attention. Next thing I knew, he was he was practicing his Morse code on my innards.
This architect would rather not talk about that particular digital experience any further.
do architects talk enough about the digital experience?
this is not a question in regards to digital tools, software or types of media. it's a question of the increasing technological drivers that now move and influence the human experience, much like how architects approach the design of space.
That's a rather broad question. I think it could be helpful to narrow or at least direct the question a bit.
a 2x4 is still analogue. I don’t understand the question.
^ In sudden motion, it's a real attention-getter, too.
Until the digital experience is capable of giving us seamless 3D, with surround sound, odours, tactile abilities, etc, then it's all just a poor simulacrum of the real thing in my opinion. Other people can work on that while I attend to my own job as an architect in the real world, with real materials, real people, real money, real consequences.
I think the OP is asking about how digital can improve the built environment. Then again the OP's post is so poorly written I don't think even they understand what they've asked.
Yeah upon reading the question again, it was either written by a student or a robot. I'm not sure which, but I should have ignored it.
I just downloaded some new drivers. The experience was meh. Would rather not talk about it.
I'm not sure experience itself can really be digital, unless you are an AI
During a physical a few years ago, my doctor casually mentioned something about a digital exam; I wasn't really paying attention. Next thing I knew, he was he was practicing his Morse code on my innards.
This architect would rather not talk about that particular digital experience any further.
My senses are analogue unfortunately...
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