Aalto Media Lab Demo Day
Aalto Media Lab Demo Day, Tuesday 28 May at 13.00-17.45 in Väre, Kukkapuro lounge.
The event's history goes back to the early 1990’s. The first Demo Day was organised in 1994 or 1995. This happening is an open gathering of Media Department’s students, alumni, staff and friends. Being an open event, the Demo Day is a combination of and an . The event is open for all and those who attend are exactly the right people.
The idea of “demo” was introduced by Douglas Engelbart’s team in 1968 (). Engelbart's idea was to demonstrate “new media” that was very difficult to communicate to people in any other means than by showing and telling.
In Finland in the 1980's the was growing among early game players. Some of these early demo-people also found their way to study and work in the Aalto Media Lab.
In the 1980’s the MIT Media Lab came up with the slogan “demo or die” that was a comment to the thinking, common in academia. In the resent update of the slogan, the MIT Media Lab’s director Joi Ito introduced the idea of “deploy or die”.
Building on these traditions, our Demo Day's approach has been "demo and flourish”. The idea is to demonstrate — to show / play and tell. In the core of our thinking are the people playing with interactive things, videos, sounds, games, smoke and mirrors: on stage and in a number of demo booths.
You are all welcome.
Read more news
Professor Hironori Yoshida: “Machines should adapt to materials, not the other way around”
Professor of Formgiving believes the future of design lies in embracing irregularity rather than eliminating it. His research combines design, AI and robotics.
The use of artificial intelligence in business has been a popular topic in customized student business projects
The student group is selected based on the needs of each project’s client
From seaweed to startup, fostered by PdP and Aalto’s ecosystem
Sealevä shows how Aalto’s innovation ecosystem can turn biomaterial ideas into companies, combining education, infrastructure and entrepreneurial mindset to reshape how products are made.