Projections
Interviewees
Amanda
McDonald Crowley
Australian Network for Art & Technology
Stream Video
Andres
Burbano
Professor,
Universidad de los Andes, Columbia
Stream Video
Anne
Nigten
Manager, V2 Lab, Netherlands
Stream Video
C. Kim
Transcript
Chi-Ming
Ho
Transcript
Chris
Salter
Interaction Architect/Co-Director, Sponge, Germany/USA
Stream
Video
David
Awschalom
Trancript
Diana
Domingues
Professor
& Coordinator of Graduate Researchers, Semiotics and Communication Graduate
Program, University of Caxias Do Sul, Brazil
Stream Video
Eli Yablonovitch
Transcript
Fraser
Stoddart
Transcript
Heather
Maynard
Transcript
Hermann
Gaub
Transcript
Jacquelyn
Ford Morie
Associate
Director for Creative Development, USC Institute for Creative Technologies,
USA
Stream Video
James
Gimzewski
Transcript
John
Winet
New
Media Producer & Researcher
Stream Video
Lisa
Naugle
Assistant Professor, Dance, University of California,
Irvine, USA
Stream Video
Mark
Beam
CEO,
Creative Disturbance, USA
Stream Video
Michael
Century
Professor,
Chair of Arts Department, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA
Stream Video
Ming
Wu
Transcript
Nina
Czgledy
Artist,
Critical Media, Canada
Stream Video
Owen
Witte
Transcript
Prof.
Jiang
Transcript
Prof.
Liao
Transcript
Roy Doumani
Transcript
Russ
Caflisch
Transcript
Sam Gambhir
Transcript
Sarah
Tolbert
Transcript
Sha Xin
Wei
Assitant
Professor, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Stream Video
Shimon
Weiss
Transcript
Slade
Gardner
Transcript
Victoria
Vesna
Media Artist, Chair of Design|Media Arts, UCLA
Stream Video
Heather Maynard
The dreams of nano.. my one dream of nano is very simple and it’s always been the same. And that is that it reduces fear and unhappiness in the world and that people feel happier, safer, less threatened, and that means in terms of finantial security, in terms of their own privacy, that type of thing. That’s what I’d like nano to do. Nano to make people basically feel less afraid. And the nightmares of nano. There are many, many nightmares of nanotechnology. Probably the biggest nightmare would be that due to politicians or banks or the wrong kind of people in power, that they don’t give nano a chance, that they have too high expectations of it, and they dump it. And if they do that, you know, what will happen is that California and the United States will miss a great opportunity and another country will dominate in nano.
Q: Nightmares
Being 40 years older and none of this coming to fruition [laughs].