AIxDESIGN Bookmark Library
Culture meets Artificial Intelligence
by Kursat Ozenc via Ritual Design Lab | 6 Reflections on Stanford’s Culturally Relevant AI Summit
A New AI Lexicon: Responses and Challenges to the Critical AI discourse
Call for Contributors — AI Now Institute
When are we going to start designing AI with purpose?
by Josh Lovejoy | Jan, 2021 | UX Collective
Humans & Machines & Agency
By fph | What if human data is de-humanized? What if technology restricts human agency? This speculative design work and reflection explores the digital culture that might emerge, while serving as a reminder of the necessity for human-machine collaboration.
Body, Movement, Language: AI Sketches With Bill T. Jones by Bill T. Jones & Google Creative Lab | Experiments with Google
PoseNet experiments made in collaboration with one of America’s most celebrated and important artists.
HyperText
An artistic overview of an experimental AI x typography project done by a graphic design student using Processing, Wekinator (no-code ML tool), and a microphone. Check out the other projects from CCA IxD and graphic design students on the showcase page.
How art holds AI to account
By Daphne Milner via It's Nice That | Mainstream conversations around artificial intelligence, while sometimes characterised by a rhetoric of scientific progress, often deal with anxieties related to the tech. Critiquing its shortcomings is not enough, however. Art can help shape the future of artificial intelligence by exposing its limitations and tendencies to further systemic inequalities.
PhD position in Culturally and Socially Responsible AI
Universiteit van Amsterdam
12 Colab Notebooks that matter by Vlad Alex
Want to get more hands on with Machine Learning? This article links to various Colab notebooks that you can use to play around with various models.
Train a GPT-2 Text-Generating Model w/ GPU
on Google Colaboratory
The Art of Code
By Dylan Beattie | Software and technology has changed every aspect of the world we live in. At one extreme are the ‘mission critical’ applications - the code that runs our banks, our hospitals, our airports and phone networks. Then there’s the code we all use every day to browse the web, watch movies, create spreadsheets… not quite so critical, but still code that solves problems and delivers services. But what about the code that only exists because somebody wanted to write it? Code created just to make people smile, laugh, maybe even dance?
OPENRNDR
Open source framework for creative coding for Kotlin / Java 8+ that simplifies writing real-time interactive software.
Consequence Scanning
From doteveryone | An agile practice for responsible innovators