Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Everyone has a favorite “concept car.” Whether it’s the ‘54 Firebird, ‘64 Stiletto, ‘80 Epcot or ‘88 Sunraycer, these “flights

This is worth a read, how relevant is concept work if you don't try to make it real?

"Another flashy concept product is the Nokia Morph, the self-cleaning,

self-aware, self-preserving, self-charging, semi-opaque and semi-flexible

mobile device that the company hopes to integrate into handheld devices

in seven years. (This from a company that hasn't even been able to

answer the multi-touch iPhone challenge in nearly two years.)"

Everyone has a favorite "concept car." Whether it's the '54 Firebird, '64 Stiletto, '80 Epcot or '88 Sunraycer, these "flights of imagination" all have one thing in common: they weren't for real. 9/22/2008 3:59 PM from http://counternotions.com/2008/08/12/concept-products/

design is in the blood

@ Ryder , thanks for the comments, was surprised to hear that youuse the site in that way, it’s a nice compliment. Maybe I’ll drop some more thoughts now and then as a notepad. thanks

 

 

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

radio silence

Anyone out there wonderign what happend to the blog? I have stopped! No one seems to look or react? I am tempted to go on for my own archive?

 but is anyone out there?

I’ll be on the peer at noon everyday, when the sun is at it’s highest J

 

Monday, May 26, 2008

“Advertising is the price companies pay for being un-original”

Yves behar ted talks

 

 

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Emailing: hardcore-composite-468

Arihiro Miyake's Trush-in Extension Cord above, a cord management solution that looks like it might actually manage cords and be at home next to your desk. nice.
seen on core 77

Thursday, May 15, 2008

material inovation

this sandwich steel is as strong as steel but less than half the wieght due to a hollow construction inspired by bird bones! developed by vovlo of course:)

Thursday, May 08, 2008

Monday, May 05, 2008

Bmw ’s concept homage to the 70’s M1, bmw’s only mid engine car designed by lambourgini was a big flop (horribly expensive and plastic body panels) but did start the m series off probably meaning Mid engine but translated into “race” anyways…

 

Thursday, April 03, 2008

my favorite teddy's

I have taken to watching TED presentations (in the train on pspJ). many are fascinating and inspiring, usually talking around 10 to 15 min.

“TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design. It started out (in 1984) as a conference bringing together people from those three worlds. Since then its scope has become ever broader.”

Here is a list of my favorites they are all really worth watching (and there are many more on TED.com)

http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/104

William McDonough explaning CRADEL TO CRADEL design put into practice

http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/5

chris Bangle head designer BMW tells what design management is all abou

thttp://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/172

john meda on the art of simplicity

http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/43

paul bennet tells about design at IDEO

http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/63

charles Leadbeater small guy versus big companies!!

http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/140
hans rosling with a fantastic presentation technique and great statistics

http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/view/id/65

8 min. shows a fantastic multi touch interface

Also see my blog http://design-dump.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Emailing: ferrari3

new ferrair
ugly interior
 
bit porsche ish too!

design is doomed

 

Starck denounces design, on the hunt for new career

Monday, March 31

 

According to an interview with Germany's Die Zeit weekly newspaper, Philippe Starck is ashamed of ever taking part in product design and plans to call it quits as a designer within 2 years.

"I will definitely give up in two years' time. I want to do something else, but I don't know what yet. I want to find a new way of expressing myself ...design is a dreadful form of expression."

Claiming that design is officially dead, Starck predicts future designer types to fulfill the roles of the personal coach, the gym trainer, and the diet consultant. (And here we thought a sedentary life of Doritos and Solidworks was our calling...)

As Starck finds a hole to crawl into, his explosive statements will probably stir the design pot, at least once around ...and we can't say we're not pumped to witness his career twist in a couple years. If it involves being a fitness guru, will his workout studio and exercise videos be well-designed?

 

Seen On core 77

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Apple's design process, a must read!

Posted by: Helen Walters on March 08. on core 77

Interesting presentation at SXSW from Michael Lopp, senior engineering manager at Apple, who tried to assess how Apple “gets” design when so many other companies try and fail. After describing Apple’s process of delivering consumers with a succession of presents (“really good ideas wrapped up in other really good ideas” — in other words, great software in fabulous hardware in beautiful packaging), he asked the question many have asked in their time: “How the f*ck do you do that?” (South by Southwest is at ease with its panelists speaking earthily.) Then he went into a few details:

Pixel Perfect Mockups
This, Lopp admitted, causes a huge amount of work and takes an enormous amount of time. But, he added, “it removes all ambiguity.” That might add time up front, but it removes the need to correct mistakes later on.

10 to 3 to 1
Apple designers come up with 10 entirely different mock ups of any new feature. Not, Lopp said, "seven in order to make three look good", which seems to be a fairly standard practice elsewhere. They'll take ten, and give themselves room to design without restriction. Later they whittle that number to three, spend more months on those three and then finally end up with one strong decision.

Paired Design Meetings
This was really interesting. Every week, the teams have two meetings. One in which to brainstorm, to forget about constraints and think freely. As Lopp put it: to "go crazy". Then they also hold a production meeting, an entirely separate but equally regular meeting which is the other's antithesis. Here, the designers and engineers are required to nail everything down, to work out how this crazy idea might actually work. This process and organization continues throughout the development of any app, though of course the balance shifts as the app progresses. But keeping an option for creative thought even at a late stage is really smart.

Pony Meeting
This refers to a story Lopp told earlier in the session, in which he described the process of a senior manager outlining what they wanted from any new application: "I want WYSIWYG... I want it to support major browsers... I want it to reflect the spirit of the company." Or, as Lopp put it: "I want a pony!" He added: "Who doesn't? A pony is gorgeous!" The problem, he said, is that these people are describing what they think they want. And even if they're misguided, they, as the ones signing the checks, really cannot be ignored.

The solution, he described, is to take the best ideas from the paired design meetings and present those to leadership, who might just decide that some of those ideas are, in fact, their longed-for ponies. In this way, the ponies morph into deliverables. And the C-suite, who are quite reasonable in wanting to know what designers are up to, and absolutely entitled to want to have a say in what's going on, are involved and included. And that helps to ensure that there are no nasty mistakes down the line.

 

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Ideal for all designers

Ideal for all designers as the best ideas always tend to come when you are on the loo!

 

Monday, February 25, 2008

is it a sofa or chair?

When is a chair not a chair? When it’s a sofa, or a chaise of course. Well that is the idea behind this three-in-one design from newcomer Roel Verhagen-Kaptein. Roel’s take on modern seating just might have been inspired by those lovable, petrol blooded Cybertrons. With the same utilitarian notion built into Optimus Prime, you too can simply rearrange the pieces of this seating concept to transform into a chair, a three person sofa, or a chaise lounger for those nights spent drawing Kate Winslet in the nude. However you look at it, this design has your ass covered. (Golf clap)

Nice phone

The Edge phone is designed for the style conscious fashionistas. The name has nothing to do with data speed. In fact we don’t even know what this phone is capable of because as with all fashion phones, looks rein supreme and the Edge phone makes sure you notice with its glowing glass keyboard.

To answer an incoming call, slide the glass keyboard out. An embedded LED illuminates the etched numerics via refraction creating a glowing effect. The only visible lines is the microphone wiring which designer Chris Owens has cleverly disguised as a keyboard border.

 

uno-single-seat-urban-transporter-

 

Tuesday, January 29, 2008


mooi lelijk is niet lelijk! $20.000 voor een hoesje voor je IPhone. zouden die diamanten niet prikken in je zak? www.casemat.com
Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Emailing: 4_cybertech-mat

tourniquet stops blood flow fast! with one handed use!
for more life saving designs see

needel dispensor

Hân Pham won an award for this super cheap disposable needle container with a one time click onto standard drinks can!
Good stuff!

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

muji_coffee2

the masters of simplicity, apparently the watertank is wraped arround the coffe filter, allowing him to be perfectly cylindical! being beautifull from all sides! seen on www.yankodesign.com

easy unplug!

clever stuff seen on yanko "Raise Me Up is an electric powerstrip designed to make it easy for one handed operation. Normally you would have to brace a powerstrip with one hand while pull the plug with the other. Raise Me Up uses a simple lever switch to connect and disconnect plugs."

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

10 Best Books On Innovation To Get You Through The Recession.

Posted by: Bruce Nussbaum on January 06 (BUSINESS WEEK)

We are at a tipping point in the economy where recession is probable so CEOs and top managers need to quickly shift their strategies for 2008. The CEOs who will be tossed out by their boards in a year or two will be the ones who simply focus on cutting costs over the next twelve months, allowing competitors to smack their companies hard with new products and services as the economy begins to grow strongly again in 09. Smart managers will focus on innovation during the tough months ahead and come out swinging by the end of the year. This is what Apple tends to do so look to Apple—not for its products—but for its strategy.

So here are 10 books on innovation that can guide you. It’s not an

exclusive list and I'll probably add a couple when people post comments to remind me of what I've left off.

Here goes for the 10 top books on innovation for 08:

1- The Opposable Mind: How Successful Leaders Win Through Integrative Thinking by Roger L. Martin.

2- Prophet of Innovation: Joseph Schumpeter and Creative Destruction by Thomas K. McCraw.

3- Meatball Sundae: Is Your Marketing Out of Sync? Seth Godin.

4- The Design of Future Things by Don Norman.

5-Innovation Nation by John Kao.

6- Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything by Don Tapscott and Anthony D. Williams.

7-The Future of Management by Gary Hammel.

8- Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die, by Chip Heath and Dan Heath.

9- The Laws of Simplicity by John Maeda.

10- Everyday Engineering: What Engineers See, by Andrew Burroughs.

Three new books coming out in 08 you need to read. Two are by Clay Christensen-- Disrupting Class: How Disruptive Innovation Will Change the Way the World Learns; and Diagnosing the Disease, on the disruptive innovations taking place in both the education and healthcare industry. The other is by Roger Martin--Design Thinking, The Next Competitive Advantage.

Finally, if you are a manager contemplating laying people in the months ahead, or face layoffs yourself, please take a look at Robert Suttons' The No Ass.... Rule: Building a Civilized Workplace and Surviving One That Isn't.

 

Emailing: 2117922283_715587b2cb

 
decapitating street ads, for more of this gorish graffiti see link. (seen on 77)

Emailing: radiator2

radiator mug, cools quicker probably, or intended not to burn your hands or to warm them up quicker on cold days with hot choclate ?

looks nice though:)

seen on 77. Available at Charles and Marie at $25.00 each.