Mira Kestrel
Mira Kestrel is a product designer and former robotics engineer who writes about the intersection of AI, design, and society. She holds a master’s degree in Human‑Computer Interaction and spent the first decade of her career building embodied AI prototypes in startups and academic labs. Mira brings a hands‑on perspective to speculation: she prototypes ideas to find their social fault lines before they become headlines.
Her work focuses on practical ethics, human-centered AI product strategies, and the cultural shifts that follow technological change. Mira favors storytelling paired with tooling — expect explainers, blueprinting exercises for teams, and occasional failure postmortems that reveal how systems break and how to fix them. She writes with a skeptical curiosity, aiming to make complex futures usable and accountable.
When she’s not sketching interaction flows or testing sensors in thrift-store gadgets, Mira composes ambient electronic music and gardens on her apartment balcony. On this blog she offers weekly essays and frameworks to help builders, leaders, and curious readers think clearly about what’s possible — and what we should choose to build.
Mira Kestrel
Mira Kestrel is a product designer and former robotics engineer who writes about the intersection of AI, design, and society. She holds a master’s degree in Human‑Computer Interaction and spent the first decade of her career building embodied AI prototypes in startups and academic labs. Mira brings a hands‑on perspective to speculation: she prototypes ideas to find their social fault lines before they become headlines.
Her work focuses on practical ethics, human-centered AI product strategies, and the cultural shifts that follow technological change. Mira favors storytelling paired with tooling — expect explainers, blueprinting exercises for teams, and occasional failure postmortems that reveal how systems break and how to fix them. She writes with a skeptical curiosity, aiming to make complex futures usable and accountable.
When she’s not sketching interaction flows or testing sensors in thrift-store gadgets, Mira composes ambient electronic music and gardens on her apartment balcony. On this blog she offers weekly essays and frameworks to help builders, leaders, and curious readers think clearly about what’s possible — and what we should choose to build.