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IRI - Institut de recherche et d’innovation du centre pompidou, Accueil

http://www.iri.centrepompidou.fr/

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The State of UX in 2017 – uxdesign.cc – User Experience Design #3 Everything is a conversation “Chatbot” is one of the hottest terms in our industry right now, and we are pretty confident you are going to be building one quite soon — if you haven’t already. But what does the future of Conversational Interfaces look like? Sound About UbuWeb Sound Originally focusing on Sound Poetry proper, UbuWeb's Sound section has grown to encompass all types of sound art, historical and contemporary. Beginning with pioneers such as Guillaume Apollinaire reading his "Calligrammes" in 1913, and proceeding to current practitioners such as Vito Acconci or Kristin Oppenheim, UbuWeb Sound surveys the entire 20th century and beyond. Categories include Dadaism, Futurism, early 20th century literary experiments, musique concrete, electronic music, Fluxus, Beat sound works, minimalist and process works, performance art, plunderphonics and sampling, and digital glitch works, to name just a few. As the practices of sound art continue to evolve, categories become increasingly irrelevant, a fact UbuWeb embraces. Hence, our artists are listed alphabetically instead of categorically.

“Alexa, play some music” isn’t the only time Amazon is listening to you. The tyranny of menus and why is “voice” such a big deal. To understand why companies are investing so much in voice recognition technology, and why they risk invading your privacy, you have to understand how objectively poor today’s “digital” experience is and how it got that way. Voice is the natural way humans interact with others and their environment. But in the early days of the internet, interactive voice technology was neither advanced enough nor cheap enough to use outside of a few advanced laboratories. The most cost-effective voice technologies of the day were “telephone menu tree” systems that infuriated even the most patient callers. If a “natural” interface wasn’t ready for the birth of the internet, what was the next best alternative?

Five tips on how to reinvent remote teaching The Covid-19 health crisis has made remote teaching a reality for all, but not without difficulty. At our University, our students have been learning remotely for almost a year and the successive lockdowns have taken their toll. At the start, we battled with technical difficulties, poor Internet connections and insufficient IT equipment while we struggled to isolate ourselves from others. We were then quickly faced with even more serious challenges: students confined to tiny bedrooms with intermittent wifi, some dealing with economic and social difficulties, sometimes worsened by psychological strain. As lecturers, we have all had to get adapted and tweak our teaching methods to compensate for the constraints of remote learning.

As Kids Kickstart The Metaverse, Is Public Service Media Ready? - PSM Campaign - The Children’s Media Foundation (CMF) Our Children’s Future: Does Public Service Media Matter? David Kleeman draws on his extensive global research to highlight the challenges and opportunities for regulators and children's media producers as they prepare for changes in media habits we have only begun to imagine. "[The metaverse is] arguably as big a shift in online communications as the telephone or the internet." David Baszucki, CEO, Roblox Any debate on the future of public service media for children cannot assume that what children are doing now is what they will be doing five years from now. To plan for the future you have to imagine the future.

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