Event

City Robotics Member Workshop

City Science

Saturday — Monday
September 15, 2018 —
September 17, 2018

Recent advancements in autonomous and intelligent machines introduce an unprecedented opportunity to reimagine how people live, work, and play. Mobility—personal or shared,  passenger-use or goods-moving—can be designed to prioritize the human experience, enhancing people’s abilities to lead creative, productive, gratifying and sustainable lives.

Don Norman and Colleen Emmenegger of the UC San Diego Design Lab and Kent Larson of the MIT Media Lab jointly bring together leading scientists, engineers, designers and policymakers from across the public and private sectors to address emerging challenges in urban mobility and to explore new directions for potential futures.  

Part I   |   Design + Make  (Sept.  15-17)

$10k Competition Main Pagehttps://www.media.mit.edu/events/city-robotics-hackathon/

Students and member company representatives will participate in an around-the-clock workshop to brainstorm and prototype their proposals, building on the following themes ( $10,000 cash prize + 10 Apple Watch 4):

  • Life Mobility:  How might we make active mobility--walking, cycling, skateboarding, scooting, etc--a universally awesome experience? How might new forms of active mobility enable new ways of travel in the city, for not just individuals, but also for lovers and families, and people of all abilities, needs, and incomes?
  • Socially Intelligent Robots:   How might we make machines socially and sensorially empathetic to enhance the wellbeing of people and to enable a more trusting, productive and sustainable relationship?  How can the machines better interact with people on the move-- riders, pedestrians, cyclists, etc.?
  • The New Street:  How might we reimagine streets, public spaces and urban infrastructures to respond to emerging challenges associated with new technology and changing modes of consumption and production?  How might we facilitate sustainable community development while prioritizing the human experience?

Part II   |   Member Workshop  (Sept.  17)

Join the UCSD Design Lab, MIT researchers, and chief scientists/designers of member companies for lightning talks, sharing of new technologies and research learnings, identification of sectoral challenges, ideation on potential solutions, and review of outstanding proposals from the designathon.

Thank you for IDEO and Greenfield Labs for their help in coordination for the event.

Seat Limit:  Two delegates per member organization 

Agenda:

8:30am  |  Breakfast

9:00am  |  Lightning Talks:  with Don Norman, Kent Larson, Colleen Emmenger, MIT scientists  and industry leaders

10:30am  |  MIT Student pitches, Guests invited to preview projects from designathon and interact with students

12:00pm  |  Lunch

1:00pm   |  Ideation Sessions in parallel 
~Exploring human-centered design with UCSD
~Exploring the future of the street with Greenfield Labs

3:30pm |  Designathon Presentations 

4:30pm  |  Judging

5:15pm   |  Awards and What’s Next

5:30pm  |  Reception for Media Lab member company representatives and hackathon  participants to continue the exchange of ideas over food and drinks

Register now! — This workshop is for Media Lab member company representatives only

Copyright

Don Norman

About 

The UC San Diego Design Lab is a center for interdisciplinary design focused on providing research, education, and community interaction. The Design Lab focuses upon complex sociotechnical issues in such areas as mobility, education, activity-based visualization, healthcare, and social computing. Although the Design Lab is new, members of the Design Lab helped introduce the fundamental concepts of user-centered system design (through a book with that title—UCSD) in 1987, which today is called human-centered design. Today, the Design Lab is developing a new philosophy: variously called democratizing design, bottom-up design, or community-driven design, moving away from external experts who tell people and communities what they should be doing, and instead, working with creative people in communities to help them develop and communicate their ideas.

MIT Media Lab transcends known boundaries and disciplines by actively promoting a unique, antidisciplinary culture that emboldens unconventional mixing and matching of seemingly disparate research areas. The Lab creates disruptive technologies that happen at the edges, pioneering such areas as wearable computing, tangible interfaces, and affective computing. The City Science group proposes that new strategies must be found for creating the places where people live and work, and the mobility systems that connect them, in order to meet the profound challenges of the future.

Underwriting Members:

Copyright

DENSO, PMP, Toshiba Memory, Huawei


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