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.
Chad Miller
Dec 28, 20 2:16 pm
That's a rather broad question. I think it could be helpful to narrow or at least direct the question a bit.
Non Sequitur
Dec 28, 20 2:52 pm
a 2x4 is still analogue. I don’t understand the question.
citizen
Dec 28, 20 3:04 pm
^ In sudden motion, it's a real attention-getter, too.
bowling_ball
Dec 28, 20 4:21 pm
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.
Chad Miller
Dec 28, 20 4:30 pm
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.
bowling_ball
Dec 28, 20 7:10 pm
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.
Wood Guy
Dec 28, 20 5:32 pm
I just downloaded some new drivers. The experience was meh. Would rather not talk about it.
Koww
Dec 30, 20 1:11 am
I'm not sure experience itself can really be digital, unless you are an AI
citizen
Dec 30, 20 2:52 am
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.
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...