Future of UX in 100 Years (Stephanie Rosenbaum)

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1/5 of the "Future of UX" Ignite session from UXPA 2014. The purpose of this session is to get attendees dreaming about the possible, the likely, and the probable future of UX Design - and to inspire them to be a part of making these dreams a reality. We will have at least 5 visionary speakers directed to talk about what they think is possible, likely, and probable 20 years, 50 years, and 100 years with regard to personal and organizational technology design. Speakers will be asked to consider the following questions in their presentations: What similarities and differences do you foresee in how people think about technology in the next 20, 50, and 100 years? What trends will have come and gone? What trends are lasting How will the UX profession change? How will businesses , users and UX professionals collaborate on design challenges? What would you like to see in the future of UX Design and why?

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Stephanie Rosenbaum CEO, TecEd UXPA 2014 London

The Future of UXWhat will UX be like 100 years from now?

Which future?Utopian or Dystopian?

Dystopia

Back to medievalism?Back to 1800?Pockets of science?

Utopia

Individual UX elementsBio-machine integrationThe Big Picture

What kinds of UIs?

TodayIn the Future

Today’s UI could be better

Touch Vision Position Eyeball directionSound

Natural Language

May need 100 years

Fantasy or Reality?

Babel fishUniversal language translatorBOLT

Multiple Languages

Moore’s law for language learning?

Future UIs could include

SmellBlood pressureChemical products

More Future UIs

TastePainEmotion

Electronic Nerve Interfaces

Coming soon

Sex via Computer

From games to teledildonics

Blurring the Boundary

Is it alive?Is it human?Does it matter?

Inorganic Intelligence

The computer is conscious

The Librarian

What will UX be like in 100 years?

Our Assistant

Human knowledge not needed

Map Apps for Everything

All the answers we wantWhat answers will we want?

What Answers Will We Want?

Science, history, and art—or Facebook on steroids

The Future:

Looney-Tunes saw it first!

Thank you to all the scientists, science fiction fans, and critics who helped me with material for this talk, especially Whitfield Diffie, John Alden, Mike Ward, Karen Schaeffer, and Mark Baushke.

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