Authors
Fatemeh Alizadeh, Aikaterini Mniestri, Alarith Uhde, Gunnar Stevens
Publication date
2022/4/27
Book
CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems Extended Abstracts
Pages
1-6
Description
Technological objects present themselves as necessary, only to become obsolete faster than ever before. This phenomenon has led to a population that experiences a plethora of technological objects and interfaces as they age, which become associated with certain stages of life and disappear thereafter. Noting the expanding body of literature within HCI about appropriation, our work pinpoints an area that needs more attention, “outdated technologies.” In other words, we assert that design practices can profit as much from imaginaries of the future as they can from reassessing artefacts from the past in a critical way. In a two-week fieldwork with 37 HCI students, we gathered an international collection of nostalgic devices from 14 different countries to investigate what memories people still have of older technologies and the ways in which these memories reveal normative and accidental use of technological objects …
Total citations
Scholar articles
F Alizadeh, A Mniestri, A Uhde, G Stevens - CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing …, 2022