If the recent health, climate and geopolitical crises have taught us anything, our future is looking to be increasingly digital and filled with disruption.
On Friday, the 16th of September 2022, the University of Sydney Digital Futures Research Group will host thought leaders, academic and industry experts, and technology specialists in the annual DISRUPT.SYDNEY conference. This is a time to learn, reflect and envision what the future looks like.
奥丑别谤别:听The University of Sydney Business School CBD campus (133 Castlereagh Street Sydney)
When: Friday 16 September 2022, 9.00AM to 6:30PM
搁别驳颈蝉迟别谤:听
Speakers from the University of Sydney Business School include:
DISRUPT.SYDNEY 2019 highlights
In addition to researchers and scholars from the University of Sydney, prominent guest speakers at the event will include:
Grant is flying from Ukraine for the conference to share his remarkable technology, which uses artificial intelligence to perform 鈥 鈥 transforming any voice into the voice of your choosing.
Kai Riemer, Professor of Information Technology and Organisation at the University of Sydney Business School, will co-host a workshop Unlearning 鈥楾he Future鈥.
鈥淐onventional ways of thinking about the future treat it as a distant destination that we want to get to know, and control, by way of predictions or forecasting. Yet, most of these predictions are grounded firmly in today鈥檚 understanding about how the world works. Time and again, changes that unfold around us bring about surprising developments that turn out to be unpredictable 鈥 but not unimaginable,鈥 Professor Riemer said.
鈥淏y unlearning the very concept of 鈥榯he future鈥, we will introduce an approach to anticipate and prepare for possible futures using signals that already exist all around us in the world today.
鈥淛oin us to challenge common sense, learn about new ways of thinking, and engage with our digital futures in fun and creative ways.鈥
Launched in 2013, DISRUPT.SYDNEY is Australia鈥檚 premier disruption conference. Our expert speakers engage with the big questions from a diverse range of angles.
Enquiries about DISRUPT.SYDNEY can be directed to Dr Blair Wang (blair.wang@sydney.edu.au) or Dr Julian Prester (julian.prester@sydney.edu.au).