View
161
Download
4
Category
Tags:
Preview:
Citation preview
What happens when the internet disappears?
2
What did I do?
3
Harnessing Personal Data
4
Health CareThe most intimate of information is stored where and shown to you how?
5
BehaviorMost people exist in 100-300 different digital systems.
6
Soft DataDigital signature, identity, tastes,
preferences. The “constructed” self.
The quantified self plus the internet of things wrapped around synchronicity could redefine the natural order of things?
Hard DataWearable, IOT, biological and
environmental data that can’t easily be manipulated. The “actual” self.
Core DataLab results, Micro biome, genetics. The
“quantified” self.
Biological AssistanceThe use of personal data to understand and comprehend the meaning of events
and assist in real time to adapt.
Insights
7
ComplexityEasy to collect, categorize, prioritize and transport.
ProjectMove my information into a
repository where I can see, search and mine my information.
ReflectPrioritize what’s important for me. What are my basic human needs
and how do they relate to the data I’m creating?
ProtectCategorize my data so it makes sense and I can see how I spend
my time.
CollectCollect personal data with little intervention and live my life.
8
OrganizationYour living behavior is the genetic code for habit change.
Being able to see, search, mine, toggle and review my time in a calendar, weighted to the type of information and it’s purpose in my life is a break through.
Suddenly random interactions cast a shadow of meaningful insight into your day to day habits. Coincidence becomes opportunities to retool fate to put into motions
different versions of a timeline.
9
What did I learn?
10
Your life’s data is valuable.Buying devices is cheap, buying you back is expensive.
11
People care about discovering who they are.Pressing Issues
BusinessWeek 2014 CoverMagazines
BBC, Fox, WSJTV, Radio, Movies
25 CountriesGlobal Press
Wired, NPR, TechCrunchTech Press
“if there is one person qualified to speak for the individuals
of the world on the subject of the quantified self it’s probably
Chris Dancy” – March 2015, Wired.
12
HomeostasisFounder the property of a system in
which variables are regulated so that internal conditions remain stable and
relatively constant.
Cybernetic feedback loop via psychological resilience
NeuroplasticityThe umbrella term that encompasses
both synaptic plasticity and non-synaptic plasticity—it refers to changes in neural pathways and synapses due to
changes in behavior, environment, neural processes, thinking, emotions, as
well as changes resulting from bodily injury.
Epigeneticsthe study of these chemical reactions and the factors that influence them.
Meet the epigenome and learn how it influences DNA. Change the level of
gene expression in a cell with the turn of a dial.
Biological Resiliencethe ability to rapidly recover from
adversity.
Power transformation can be found in awareness.
13
Like technology a little awareness goes a long way. A little perspective applied.
2015180 pounds
2014220 pounds
2012280 pounds
2011320 pounds
Farming
How do we lose the internet?
15
1970 – The age of the office
People Politics Lost the farm
Meetings, politics, and professional dress
16
1990 – The age of productivity
PC Interface Digitized Politics
Known for work “STATIONS”, the user interface, and the digitization of office politics.
17
1995 – The age of Information
Internet Browser Operating System
The PC disappears into the browser, operating systems become irrelevant
18
2000– The age of the e-commerce
Cloud Computing Commerce Infrastructure
Money disappears along with infrastructure
19
2005– The age of the status
Social Content People
People as content, documentary style vision.
20
2008– The age of the attention
Liquid Interface Attention Browser
Attention is sweep away by constant connectivity, the browser, like the PC becomes irrelevant.
21
2010– The age of data
SMAC Apps 1990-2000
Attention is sweep away by constant connectivity, the browser, like the PC becomes irrelevant.
22
2015– The age of wearables
Wearable behaviors 1990-2015
Behavior is the platform for tasks.
23
2020– The age of everything
Sensor Assisted living We’ve lost the interface
Behavior is the platform for tasks.
24
The internet, ourselvesHumanity doesn’t understand how to function without three things.
Identity Narrative Ownership
25
IdentityPrivacy, Quantification and experience
26
Narrative
"The great collective organism we're becoming part of will have a completely different sense of time” -George Dyson
Ownership
28
30
Evolution of the user interface to people
Face to SelfFace to SolutionsFace to InformationFace to Face
31
Evolution of the user interface to behavior
32
You are the User Interface, Your life is the experience
pplkprOther humans as an Interface via
biology
NestYour body as the interface to your
home environment.
AutomaticThe vehicle as the interface
LunaMattress as an interface
Evolution of the user experience to convenience
33
Implications – “The internet of everything”The corporatization of the individual
2012 IT’S NOT A PHONEIt’s gone from a phone that takes pictures, to a camera that makes calls.
2014INTERNET TO THE BODYApple, Google and many startup health organizations map the human body.
2014INTERNET TO THE HOME
IOT comes home to roost as your body becomes the middle man.
2013 SMAC vs. SEAMNo more applications!
(Social, Mobile Analytical, Cloud) versus (Sensor, Environment, Algorithm, Mesh)
34
Implications – “The internet of identity” Convenience event horizon is reached.
2017BEHAVIOR AS PLATFORM
Stitching together predefined behaviors becomes the platform for anticipation over attention.
2018EXISTENCE AS PLATFORM
Everything starts to become programmable and feedback for everything else. People and environments merge into a single routine.
2015BODY AS INTERFACE
Services use biological and environmental factors as feedback loops for experience.
2016 ENVIRONMENT AS AN INTERFACE
Devices become interfaces for each other and us.
35
Implications – “The personalization of things”Identity, narrative and ownership collide
IDENTITY AS A PLATFORM
The onslaught of services catered to our fluid identity creates a marketplace for skin walking devices and services.
2020PERSONIFICATION OF THINGS
We embed identity into things and services.
2019HABIT AS A SERVICE
Habits and environments replace mainstream applications as people choose identity services over consumption.
Your Business
Goals here
36
SolutionsTop 10 focus areas
Existence
1. Focus on “Big Mother”
2. Design for
contemplation, not
attention.
3. Put the Internet in your
products, not your
products on the internet.
4. Create low tech and
human gathering
systems.
5. Repeatable substandard
beats inconsistently
remarkable.
6. Insert yourself into the
perpetual present.
7. Recognize the role fluid
Identity plays in
experiences.
8. Design for behavior as a
platform
9. Focus on what a world
without keyboards or
screens looks like.
10. Put kindness in to all
your products, services,
applications, data and
devices.
37
We know we can do better.We don’t count moments, we make moments count.
38
Market place challenges
Expensive Data Overwhelming dataDifficult dataShame data
39
"We don't know how to measure what we care about,
so we care about what we measure."
Richard Tapia, mathematician
Market place challenges
40
Shameless Data
41Native Tracking EngineExistence fully leverages the iPhone sensors to track a user’s activities
Motion Coprocessor GPS
HealthKit Photos EventKit
The user owns their dataBy removing dependencies on 3rd party APIs we can ensure that
a user maintains ownership of the data tracked by Existence
42
Expensive Data
Behavior Platform Identity Platform Behavior System Population dashboards
43
Overwhelming Data
Feeds Maps Photos
44
Change the interface for health.Empowering experiences through behavior.
What if applications knew where you were?
2010
What if applications knew how you were?
2015
45
What happens when the Internet disappears?
Chris DancyExistence, your life, lived and resilient.
Chief Digital Officer, Mindful Cyborg
Recommended