Digital Symbiosis and its maps
The Lab's conceptual cartography. Five maps articulating the paradigm shift — from software that executes to agents that decide, from organizations that use to organizations that coevolve.
A space for applied thinking, sustained over time. What stays here is worth reading twice. The day-to-day pulse — notes, columns, events, talks — lives on LinkedIn and Instagram.
The Lab's conceptual cartography. Five maps articulating the paradigm shift — from software that executes to agents that decide, from organizations that use to organizations that coevolve.
A governance framework for collaboration between humans and artificial intelligence. Five levels. Three pillars. One conviction — autonomy is delegated, never assumed.
A space of public thinking on AI governance, human-AI collaboration, and organizational transformation. ARL seen as a whole — three documents, one shared craft.
Pólya and the discipline of the problem. A Hungarian mathematician from 1945 describes with precision what it takes to govern AI in a real organization — fundamentals predate the tool, which is why they survive when the tool changes.
From Bioferia Latinoamérica, live at the Tu Compromiso Vale booth. Circular economy, nature, responsible consumption, and the real environmental cost of AI models.
Ariana Cárcaba and Luz Juárez examine the data behind women's underrepresentation in the sector, the challenges of inclusion, and the role of the UNLaM Tech Hub as a space for reducing inequality.
Caro Sosa and Camila Navarro present the Lab's core concepts: AI literacy, digital symbiosis, the productive uses and shortcomings of artificial intelligence. Who trains whom.
Daniel Cundari and Micaela Frias on the role of coaching in developing soft skills, and how technical teams build them.
Daniel Cundari and Juan Giménez (Nursing faculty at UNLaM) on how 3D printing in service of the community lands in hospitals and concrete medical practice.
Daniel Cundari and Giselle González on using digital resources efficiently, minimizing the environmental impact of prototyping while maximizing social benefit.
Daniel Cundari and Giselle González open the column with the principle that runs through it: using digital resources efficiently and responsibly. The beginning of the conversation that follows.
This Lab keeps what settles — manifestos, essays, maps. The day-to-day — notes, readings, the radio column, team photos, live talks, advisory work, books — lives on LinkedIn and Instagram. The rest is there.
Circo Studio has existed since 2014. What the Lab has produced over these years — hardware projects, preoperative planning, advisory work for organizations, books, talks, community work — emerged from concrete work, not from the urge to publish. The radio column is one of many ways that work circulates. This page grows slowly.