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10 results
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ItemShape Machine and Shape Signature( 2019-04-11) Hill, Cvetelina
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ItemShape Machine and Interpreters( 2019-04-11) Hong, Tzu-Chieh Kurt
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ItemInteractive Introduction to Shape Machine( 2019-04-11) Economou, Athanassios ; Hong, Tzu-Chieh KurtThe talk presents the current state-of-the-art of the Shape Machine, a new computational, visual and disruptive technology, to leading experts in various fields including AI, engineering, computer science, mathematics and design to review, discuss, and envision the field of shape cognition and computing at Georgia Tech.
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ItemShape Machine and Architecture Theory( 2019-04-11) Ligler, Heather
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ItemShape Machine Symposium - Panel and Final Discussion( 2019-04-11) Earl, Chris ; Flemming, Ulrich ; Knight, Terry ; McKay, Alison ; Shelden, Dennis R. ; Stiny, George
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ItemShape Machine and Parametrics( 2019-04-11) Park, James
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ItemShape Machine Symposium - Welcome Remarks( 2019-04-11) Leigh, Nancey Green ; Marble, ScottThis symposium presents the current state-of-the-art of the Shape Machine, a new computational, visual and disruptive technology, to leading experts in various fields including AI, engineering, computer science, mathematics and design to review, discuss, and envision the field of shape cognition and computing at Georgia Tech. The Shape Machine is a new computational technology that fundamentally redefines the way shapes are represented, indexed, queried and operated upon. Its foregrounding of visual rules (shape rules drawn in a 2D or 3D modeling system) over symbolic rules (instructions defined in some programming language) provides a robust technology for engineers, computer scientists, designers, students and educators, and in general academics and professionals who use drawings and visual models to develop and communicate their ideas. The Shape Machine is currently developed at the Shape Computation Lab at the School of Architecture, College of Design, in collaboration with the Schools of Mathematics and Interactive Computing at the Colleges of Science and Computing at Georgia Institute of Technology.
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ItemThe Future of Energy and Design(Georgia Institute of Technology, 2016-11-11) Augenbroe, Godfried ; Breen, Rita ; Gentry, T. Russell ; Jackson, Roderick ; MIller, Justin ; Schmidt, JacquelineEvery year, the world’s population increases by 65 million people, and over the next 13 years, 600 cities will account for nearly 65 percent of global GDP growth. This afternoon symposium will explore ideas related to 21st urban housing in the context of changing urban demographics, sustainability targets and alternative energy requirements, via guest presentations, audience involvement and exemplary design projects. There are a number of new initiatives focused on understanding the forces in play as urbanized areas like Tokyo, Seattle, Atlanta, San Francisco, and New York City work to address issues associated with designing livable, energy efficient and affordable urban dwellings. As cities like Atlanta continue to experience a move away from satellite single family bedroom communities towards center city, mid and high-rise housing blocks, our challenge is to create sustained focus and dialogue on ecology, opportunity and affordability.
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ItemThe Future of Housing Affordability and Access to the City(Georgia Institute of Technology, 2016-11-11) Dickens, Andre ; Hirsch, Jennifer ; Immergluck, Daniel W. ; Smith, Nathaniel ; Watson, SarahEvery year, the world’s population increases by 65 million people, and over the next 13 years, 600 cities will account for nearly 65 percent of global GDP growth. This afternoon symposium will explore ideas related to 21st urban housing in the context of changing urban demographics, sustainability targets and alternative energy requirements, via guest presentations, audience involvement and exemplary design projects. There are a number of new initiatives focused on understanding the forces in play as urbanized areas like Tokyo, Seattle, Atlanta, San Francisco, and New York City work to address issues associated with designing livable, energy efficient and affordable urban dwellings. As cities like Atlanta continue to experience a move away from satellite single family bedroom communities towards center city, mid and high-rise housing blocks, our challenge is to create sustained focus and dialogue on ecology, opportunity and affordability.
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ItemMeasuring the Unseen: a Symposium About Building a Cultural Framework for Design and Technology(Georgia Institute of Technology, 2016-04-04) Kim, Julie Ju-Youn ; Addington, Michelle ; Kennedy, Sheila ; Clark, Jennifer ; Mynatt, Elizabeth D.Sophisticated knowledge and skills in the right hands and minds can empower designers to make smarter design choices, but these instruments are not prescriptive. The balance lies between the space of the qualitative and the quantitative, between the immeasurable and the scientific. In this field of hightech and big data, where are the spaces for the ephemeral, the un-quantifiable, in an arena driven by metrics and computation? How can technology not prescribe but rather leverage and amplify the articulation of the thoughtfully considered design artifact? What are the possibilities when the skills of the craftsperson are merged with cutting-edge tools? This symposium will share the innovative research and creative production of the work of design leaders operating at the intersection of architecture, art, culture and technology.