Geert Dekkers on Tue, 25 Dec 2001 23:52:01 +0100 (CET)


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[Nettime-bold] Re: Re: <nettime> design


Hello,

"Design follows content" is as much of a fiction as "form follows 
function". Perhaps content producers could leave the production of 
the actual stuff to others.  Without ever taking a second look. But 
would they actually do that? Would they dare? I certainly wouldn't.

Designers and content producers work together to make something that 
conveys meaning. Sometimes the designer and the content producer is 
one and the same. Sometimes not. Content is formed and the form forms 
the content. I admit, its a bit of a mess.

But don't try unmuddling this mess by ranking content above design.

Geert Dekkers
(not a designer all of the time)



>Hi,
>
>>  Over the past decade the world has changed. Designers found new ways for
>>  communication. Globalization succeeded. Everything is connected to
>>  everything. We enjoy all this. It's beautiful! One planet, one network, one
>>  style.
>>
>>  We did it!
>
>You, dear designer, did nothing of the sort. The idea of networks, of
>connecting people and machines, originated among technologists tampering
>with the technology they were allowed to put their hands on, among
>idealistst (read the history of the Fidonet for example) who used this
>technology to spread content and meet others, and among traders of all kinds
>who wanted to expand their markets. All the originators of the global world
>had either a clear 'problematic' or a clear idea of content.
>
>Digital designers came in only to manage the attention of people long after,
>indeed very long,  the networks had been laid down. Their problematic was a
>derived one.
>
>Please, don't take pride in the work of others.
>
>>  But the promise came with a warning: please, don紅 be creative, don紅 come
>>  up with new ideas, because it約 not in our concept and business plan. Our
>>  time and money is limited and our managers have everything under control! Do
>>  your shockwave and flash but not disturb our speculations. Play around on
>>  your computer but don't ask questions.
>
>This subversion has one, and only one, fundament, namely the fact that
>designers are better skilled to represent than to produce content. Content
>is provided from the outside. Designers are soldiers without a nation.
>
>I may be too old (65+) to understand this new world, by why people choose to
>be better skilled at representation than at producing content is beyond me.
>By choosing to be a professional designer, to become a manager of attention,
>one has lost the right to complain about the source of the content. By this
>choice you have placed yourself in ranks of the useable specialists. Period.
>
>It does not really matter whether the directives originate from the circle
>wealthy CEO's or the squadrons of noisy NGO-leaders: professional design
>sucks by design.
>
>>  I糾 a designer because I want to change the world. But changing the world
>>  actually has nothing to do with designing. It has to do with the
>>  responsibility for how this world functions and looks like. But to be
>>  honestS. I only became somebody who want to change the world after my
>design
>>  style had developed for about 10 years.
>
>Then it seems to me that your choice now should to produce content and make
>design a secondary thing in your life. Perhaps in 10 years you can say
>something like "I have given the world this new concept/new technology/new
>story/a new method of comprehending the world". And you may use your
>undeniably great skills of design for that purpose.
>
>But BEING a designer?? Get Real!!
>
>L.
>E. lake@lake.nl
>W. http://www.lake.nl (Dutch only)
>
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