Sense and the City: Smart, Connected, and on the Move
If you find yourself in London between now and March 18th, check out this exhibition:
‘Comparing contemporary experiences of London with past visions of the future, the show looks at GPS, electric vehicles, internet access, smart phones and other recent advances in data and communication technologies, presenting these alongside works from the past by architects Le Corbusier, Archigram and others who imagined what the twenty-first-century city might look like.’
More on Time Out

Sense and the City: Smart, Connected, and on the Move

If you find yourself in London between now and March 18th, check out this exhibition:

Comparing contemporary experiences of London with past visions of the future, the show looks at GPS, electric vehicles, internet access, smart phones and other recent advances in data and communication technologies, presenting these alongside works from the past by architects Le Corbusier, Archigram and others who imagined what the twenty-first-century city might look like.’

More on Time Out

Toward the Sentient City: The Future of the Outernet and How to Imagine it? | UgoTrade
Toward the Sentient City, brought “architects and urban designers into a conversation that until now has been limited largely to technologists,” and created an extraordinary opportunity to investigate distributed architectures of participation of what we might call the “outernet.” This is a timely conversation as “web squared, “smart things,” the “internet of things,” or the “outernet,” and their popular “ambassador” augmented reality are rapidly becoming everyone’s “business.” From “evil” marketers, to global corporations, environmentalists, artists and community activists - everyone, it seems, is interested in the possibilities of this new frontier.

Toward the Sentient City: The Future of the Outernet and How to Imagine it? | UgoTrade

Toward the Sentient City, brought “architects and urban designers into a conversation that until now has been limited largely to technologists,” and created an extraordinary opportunity to investigate distributed architectures of participation of what we might call the “outernet.” This is a timely conversation as “web squared, “smart things,” the “internet of things,” or the “outernet,” and their popular “ambassador” augmented reality are rapidly becoming everyone’s “business.” From “evil” marketers, to global corporations, environmentalists, artists and community activists - everyone, it seems, is interested in the possibilities of this new frontier.