Time Benders: Design for Asynchronicity

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Day in, day out, most people work to meet somebody else’s schedules and deadlines, based on precise and objective synchronization technologies. In this speculative design project Time Benders, Final Year undergraduate student Qiu Guo (supervised by Thomas Fischer) asks: If watches and clocks are shackles that constrain our movement through time, can designed objects be imagined that may release us from these constraints?

In response to this question, Qiu Guo proposes a family of products enabling regular people to take control of their personal time by manipulating the clocks of those in charge of collective time. Technically speaking, the four Time Benders perform (wo)man-in-the-middle attacks on key synchronization technologies: the network time protocol (NTP), radio time signals, AC mains frequency synchronization and quartz oscillators.

Thomas Fischer

Thomas Fischer is a Professor at the School of Design at the Southern University of Science and Technology. He holds a Ph.D. in Education from the University of Kassel and a Ph.D. in Architecture from RMIT. Thomas is a Fellow of the Design Research Society, a Fellow of the Cybernetics Society, and a recipient of the American Society for Cybernetics' Warren McCulloch Award. He previously taught at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University and Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University and was a visiting academic at National Cheng Kung University and Humboldt University. His research focuses on design computing, design cybernetics, design geometry, and digital media. Together with C.M. Herr, Thomas has edited the book "Design Cybernetics - Navigating the New (Springer, 2018). His design of THE ANALOG THING with anabrid GmbH (Germany) recently won the 2024 IF Design Award (Products, Computer) as well as the 2024 Red Dot Design Award (Product Design).