#christinerosen — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #christinerosen, aggregated by home.social.
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• The Death of Patience: The program highlights startling statistics on our declining psychological tolerance, noting that search delays of just 400 milliseconds or video load times of two seconds can cause users to become impatient or abandon content. -
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• The Death of Patience: The program highlights startling statistics on our declining psychological tolerance, noting that search delays of just 400 milliseconds or video load times of two seconds can cause users to become impatient or abandon content. -
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• The Death of Patience: The program highlights startling statistics on our declining psychological tolerance, noting that search delays of just 400 milliseconds or video load times of two seconds can cause users to become impatient or abandon content. -
4/
• The Death of Patience: The program highlights startling statistics on our declining psychological tolerance, noting that search delays of just 400 milliseconds or video load times of two seconds can cause users to become impatient or abandon content. -
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• The Death of Patience: The program highlights startling statistics on our declining psychological tolerance, noting that search delays of just 400 milliseconds or video load times of two seconds can cause users to become impatient or abandon content. -
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• The Biology of Connection: We discuss how the human "empathy engine"—the vagal system—requires regular, face-to-face interaction to stay healthy. The episode explains how mediated communication through screens can lead to increased self-centeredness and a drop in our capacity for trust.
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3/
• The Biology of Connection: We discuss how the human "empathy engine"—the vagal system—requires regular, face-to-face interaction to stay healthy. The episode explains how mediated communication through screens can lead to increased self-centeredness and a drop in our capacity for trust.
-
3/
• The Biology of Connection: We discuss how the human "empathy engine"—the vagal system—requires regular, face-to-face interaction to stay healthy. The episode explains how mediated communication through screens can lead to increased self-centeredness and a drop in our capacity for trust.
-
3/
• The Biology of Connection: We discuss how the human "empathy engine"—the vagal system—requires regular, face-to-face interaction to stay healthy. The episode explains how mediated communication through screens can lead to increased self-centeredness and a drop in our capacity for trust.
-
3/
• The Biology of Connection: We discuss how the human "empathy engine"—the vagal system—requires regular, face-to-face interaction to stay healthy. The episode explains how mediated communication through screens can lead to increased self-centeredness and a drop in our capacity for trust.
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This discussion moves beyond a simple critique of technology to analyze a profound philosophical shift in how we define what it means to exist as human beings.This episode explores the biological, psychological, and societal costs of our tech-driven pursuit of efficiency. Key topics include:
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This discussion moves beyond a simple critique of technology to analyze a profound philosophical shift in how we define what it means to exist as human beings.This episode explores the biological, psychological, and societal costs of our tech-driven pursuit of efficiency. Key topics include:
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2/
This discussion moves beyond a simple critique of technology to analyze a profound philosophical shift in how we define what it means to exist as human beings.This episode explores the biological, psychological, and societal costs of our tech-driven pursuit of efficiency. Key topics include:
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2/
This discussion moves beyond a simple critique of technology to analyze a profound philosophical shift in how we define what it means to exist as human beings.This episode explores the biological, psychological, and societal costs of our tech-driven pursuit of efficiency. Key topics include:
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2/
This discussion moves beyond a simple critique of technology to analyze a profound philosophical shift in how we define what it means to exist as human beings.This episode explores the biological, psychological, and societal costs of our tech-driven pursuit of efficiency. Key topics include:
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UX vs The Human Condition
We examine the invisible, daily tradeoffs between our messy, unpredictable biological reality and a "frictionless, perfectly curated digital world". In this episode, we explore a central question posed by author Christine Rosen: "What do we lose when we no longer talk about the human condition, but rather the user experience?"
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UX vs The Human Condition
We examine the invisible, daily tradeoffs between our messy, unpredictable biological reality and a "frictionless, perfectly curated digital world". In this episode, we explore a central question posed by author Christine Rosen: "What do we lose when we no longer talk about the human condition, but rather the user experience?"
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UX vs The Human Condition
We examine the invisible, daily tradeoffs between our messy, unpredictable biological reality and a "frictionless, perfectly curated digital world". In this episode, we explore a central question posed by author Christine Rosen: "What do we lose when we no longer talk about the human condition, but rather the user experience?"
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UX vs The Human Condition
We examine the invisible, daily tradeoffs between our messy, unpredictable biological reality and a "frictionless, perfectly curated digital world". In this episode, we explore a central question posed by author Christine Rosen: "What do we lose when we no longer talk about the human condition, but rather the user experience?"
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UX vs The Human Condition
We examine the invisible, daily tradeoffs between our messy, unpredictable biological reality and a "frictionless, perfectly curated digital world". In this episode, we explore a central question posed by author Christine Rosen: "What do we lose when we no longer talk about the human condition, but rather the user experience?"
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"Do we spend too much time looking at our screens and too little looking into human eyes?"
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In de trein (75)
Het schijnt een warme dag te zijn, maar ik spendeer de dag in de cocon van airconditioning. Op het kopstation staat de sprinter klaar en wacht ik op vertrek. Een man komt binnen en roept ‘Wil er iemand een perenijsje?’. Blijkbaar heeft hij een doos gekocht en nog een ijsje over, en het smelt snel met deze temperaturen.
Niemand reageert, dus ik roep dat ik wel een ijsje wil, en kreeg een […]