Exploring tech, culture, & human experience. Prof and author of Delayed Response | Mobile Interface Theory. bsky.app/profile/jasonfarman…

Joined July 2007
867 Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
4 Sep 2023
Replying to @farman
My book, tentatively titled “A History of New Things,” shows how industrial design created newness as a value. I trace the history of our desire for the new, show its impact on our lives & environment (as we dispose of things at an accelerating pace), and what we can do about it.
2
22
2,726
Jason Farman retweeted
Harvard, apparently, is about to adopt a new policy to combat grade inflation. I devised my own anti–grade inflation policy 25 years ago. I’ve shared it with provosts and deans, to no avail. Here it is: The Muñoz Plan Against Grade Inflation The plan has three key components:
128
195
2,381
856,507
Jason Farman retweeted
So it turns out that writing is thinking. It's the same process. "Writing compels us to think — not in the chaotic, non-linear way our minds typically wander, but in a structured, intentional manner." Outsourcing writing to LLMs is THE SAME THING as outsourcing thinking.
183
1,533
5,669
222,696
Jason Farman retweeted
Basically
79
1,391
6,913
1,354,883
Jason Farman retweeted
@farman thinks usability in tech design is a problem, but not the way you think. “The problem isn’t usability itself; it’s what it has become—a design approach that replaced any need whatsoever to understand complex systems with the ability to thoughtlessly interact with them.” slate.com/technology/2026/04…...
1
1
3
492
Jason Farman retweeted
A great piece by @farman on frictionless design's perils: "Intuitiveness is often achieved by hiding complexity...When we trust systems we can't see into, we lose the capacity to recognize—let alone resist—how they've been built to shape our behavior." slate.com/technology/2026/04…
1
3
127
Jason Farman retweeted
Apr 4
It’s a design principle that has transformed the world and even saved lives. It has gone way too far. slate.trib.al/Jr7BIut
1
1
9
4,355
My latest piece in Slate
Apr 4
It’s a design principle that has transformed the world and even saved lives. It has gone way too far. slate.trib.al/Jr7BIut
2
4
1,862
Jason Farman retweeted
27 Nov 2024
Why We’re Wired to Want, But Not Enjoy, Black Friday Deals: A Neuroscientist and an Industrial Designer Have Advice About Your Black Friday Buying Habits. My latest post on Substack substack.com/home/post/p-152…
1
3
436
Jason Farman retweeted
25 Nov 2024
My new Substack article: How a Camera’s Design Changed Technology Forever When industrial design gave technology a sleek surface—one that could be change each year to represent updates—consumers were distanced from how these devices actually work. open.substack.com/pub/jasonf…
1
1
234
26 Nov 2024
Baudelaire in 1859 on photography (or perhaps a 2024 critic of #AI promptography?): "If photography is allowed to supplement art in some of its functions, it will soon have supplanted or corrupted it altogether, thanks to the stupidity of the multitude which is its natural ally.”
2
187
Jason Farman retweeted
25 Nov 2023
Those Black Friday desires hit hard
1
2
473
18 Nov 2024
I’ve been on Twitter since 2007. Find me over on Bluesky, please: bsky.app/profile/jasonfarman…

ALT Bye GIF

1
123
18 Nov 2024
When he told me, “We are more adept at wanting than we are at liking,” it felt like he gave me the keys to unlock the deeper reasons why we’ve ended up in a cycle of endless upgrades. open.substack.com/pub/jasonf…
109
15 Nov 2024
Against Panic: A Survival Kit nytimes.com/2024/11/11/opini…
1
103
Jason Farman retweeted
13 Nov 2024
Sabbatical Update: My New Book on Our Age of Endless Upgrades! open.substack.com/pub/jasonf…
1
1
207
13 Nov 2024
I cannot wait for this event! Everyone reading this should sign up to join the conversation! I’ll be joining via Zoom and hope you do, too!
12 Nov 2024
Giving an online talk, "Getting Maintenance Organized," for @LindaHall_org and @SocHistTech this Thursday at noon CT. events.lindahall.org/getting… Looking at the history of the phrase "operations and maintenance." The British Navy adopted it in 1917. US railroads by the 1930s.
2
233
3 Nov 2024
This is how I want politics to be: I do not listen to Shania Twain and will not buy her albums. But my God she is talented. I understand why people like her even if I don’t. Republicans, where are you Shania Twains???
1
384