The 2013 event title "Make Innovation Happen" clearly conveyed the theme at the heart of the celebratory programme, and it is no coincidence that the conference's elected location is where the web was born. Young English physicist Tim Berners-Lee went to work at CERN, the world's leading physics laboratory, as a software engineering consultant in 1980; here is where he created the first software that stored information and brought order to the growing quantity of data produced by the computers used for scientific experiments. That prototype, never exported and intended only for internal use, was to form the conceptual basis for the future development of the World Wide Web.
The conference itself is divided into several sessions focusing on the intersection between sociology and technology, with presentations and ideas from some of the greatest innovators worldwide. The traditional conference is held in the CICG auditorium in Geneva, but Lift also features a packed fringe programme of workshops, events, venture nights and exhibitions for students and start-uppers local and international, all in a relaxed and open atmosphere.
Above: Grand-Central by Thibault Brevet, his bachelor diploma project at ECAL / University of Art and Design Lausanne.
The common thread linking all the themes addressed by the speakers — and this is the true reason behind Lift's international success — is the exploration of the social repercussions of technology, in both the working and personal worlds. Every speech rests on the axiom that technology and society influence each other: sometimes it is technology that changes the way we live and sometimes the reverse occurs, when a user transforms the technology by applying it to uses other than those envisaged by companies and developers.
The contents of Lift are further enriched by the constant interaction among people from very different backgrounds