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- 91-08/SFI.info
- From: cyberoid@milton.u.washington.edu (Robert Jacobson)
- Subject: Santa Fe Institute Simulation Tools Workshop: Brief Review
- Date: Sun, 25 Aug 1991 18:41:03 GMT
- Organization: Human Interface Technology Lab, Univ. of Wash., Seattle
-
-
-
- I just returned from a three-day "Simulation Tools Workshop" at
- the Santa Fe Institute, in Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA. There, 30 invited
- participants, including both users and interface designers, discussed
- visualization tools for complex environments. The workshop was
- organized by Sim Labs' James Kalin. (Sim Labs produces Sim City, Sim
- Earth, and the soon-to-be-released Sim Ant). The general conclusion of
- the workshop, despite our best attempts at integration and design, was
- that scientists doing complex computations, particularly on big
- machines, are going to remain frustrated until there are radical
- breakthroughs in both presentational technology and acceptance of this
- new technology's use.
-
- One such "breakthrough," advocated by chaos-theory mathematician
- Dr. Gottfried Mayer-Kress (UC Santa Cruz, now an SFI Fellow), is the
- virtual environment. Mayer-Kress is doing some wonderful things in
- this regard, building virtual encyclopedias that combine sound, sight,
- and text on topics of popular as well as scientific interest. He is
- currently preparing an installation for next year's ARS ELECTRONICA
- show in Europe.
-
- For more information about the Santa Fe Institution Simulation
- Tools Workshop (for which proceedings will soon be available), or for
- general ideas on simulation tools, you can contact James Kalin at
-
- jfkalin@well.sf.ca.us
-
- When the proceedings of the workshop become available, I will be
- glad to summarize them more fully here.
-
- I found the Santa Fe Institute to be a remarkable institution in its
- own right, a fount of new thinking on the solution of complex problems.
- Everyone was so secure in his or her personal knowledge and competence
- that the atmosphere was totally supportive, a state of affairs which
- unfortunately does not yet grace our own nascent industry. The one
- drawback to SFI's work is its lack of accessibility to the layperson and
- policymaker who does not possess a profound skill in mathematics. SFI
- is remedying this situation by hiring more "interpreters" of its work, a
- strategy that can only increase the value and prestige of this unique
- intellectual "watering hole" in high desert. For more information, you
- can send email to SFI at
-
- email@sfi.santafe.edu
-
- Bob Jacobson
- Moderator
-
- --
-
-