Crafting Human™ Podcast
The use of signs is disappearing. Cars are already driving themselves, and soon navigation may be something we stop looking at altogether. For nearly a decade, Will Ayers, founder of Found, has been rethinking wayfinding and environmental graphics, building identity systems for some of the most recognizable spaces in tech and beyond across the world. His newest venture explores a haptic software technology that communicates directional wayfinding through touch alone. A tap on your right shoulder means right, a tap on your left means left. No screen. No voice. No shared language required. In this episode of Crafting Human, we sit down to talk about what it means to design for a world where the visual infrastructure of cities begins to fall away, why intentional imperfection might be the antidote to a world starting to look the same everywhere, and how touch, the oldest interface we have, could become the most human technology left. The conversation moves through: * Why every glass tower in every city is starting to look the same and what craft can do about it * The case for intentional imperfection in an era of algorithmic sameness * How Will uses AI as a creative collaborator without handing over his judgment * Why the difference between precision and perfection matters more than ever * What design education must teach to equip the next generation to stay adaptable * The quiet radicalism of building technology that helps people feel more oriented, not less This is a conversation for anyone paying attention to how the built world is changing and wondering what gets lost, and what might be recovered, in the shift.
14 episodios
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