Earlier this month, Business of Design Week brought designers, architects and entrepreneurs to Hong Kong for topical lectures and panel discussions. During the event, CNN Style put some of its speakers in the hot seat for a series of rapid-fire exchanges, covering everything from their views on Asia’s greatest design challenges to their one essential design luxury.
When asked which technology had the potential to be the most disruptive in the design industry over the next decade, Vince Lim, of design studio Lim + Lu, chose augmented reality. “If you want to plan out the space in advance and really see, let’s say, a furniture piece in the space before you purchase it, that (augmented reality), has a lot more potential to it.”
Meanwhile, Dr. Paul Thompson, of London’s Royal College of Art, shared his reservations about artificial intelligence: “Are we all going to be relying more and more upon a machine to do the thinking for us? To carry out tasks? Are we going to suddenly become sort of more and more de-skilled?”
Architect Rocco Yim on the other hand, chose automation: “It gives us efficiency, convenience and ever higher speed of doing things. But it loses the humanity in the process of design. And that’s the danger.”
Watch the video above for more.