19
Jan 2010
18
Jan 2010
16
Jan 2010

Fixing bad design: A better boarding pass

One of the great things about design thinking is the can-do attitude that invites critics to fix what ails them. Case in point: Tylern Thompson, SquareSpace's prolific design director, vented his frustration with Delta's banal boarding pass by crafting a replacement. And it's beautiful...

07
Jan 2010

CES 2010: Parrot AR.Drone – An iPhone-Controlled Quadricopter | Touch Arcade

parrot-drone-iphoneScreen shot 2010-01-06 at 2.13.39 PM

Parrot AR is a helicopter that is fully controlled via an iPhone. Look at the screen to see the world from the view of the helicopter, tilt and touch to control. As a bonus it has autopilot features and Augmented Reality video games (think helicopter dogfights).

Click, go, see, be amazed.

(thanks Bob)

 

04
Jan 2010

Eames: Design is a Method of Action

Transcript from an interview with Charles Eames on French Television 1972
 
What is your definition of “design?”
A plan for arranging elements in such a way as to
best accomplish a particular purpose.

 Is design an expression of art (an art form)?
The design is an expression of the purpose.
It may (if it is good enough) later be judged
as art.

 Is design a craft for industrial purposes?
No— but design may be a solution to some
industrial problems.

 What are the boundaries of design?
What are the boundaries of problems?

 Is design a discipline that concerns itself with
only one part of the environment?
No.

 It is a method of general expression?
No— it is a method of action.

 Is design a creation of an individual?
No— because to be realistic one must always
admit the influence of those who have gone
before.

 …or a creation of a group?
Often.

 Is there a design ethic?
There are always design constraints and these
usually include an ethic.

 Does design imply the idea of products that
are necessarily useful?
Yes— even though the use might be surely subtle.

 It is able to cooperate in the creation of
works reserved solely for pleasure?
Who would say that pleasure is not useful?

 Ought form to derive from the analysis of
function?
The great risk here is that the analysis may not
be complete.


Can the computer substitute for the
designer?
Probably, in some special cases, but usually the
computer is an aid to the designer.

 Does design imply industrial manufacture?
Some designs do and some do not—depending on
the nature of the design and the requirements.

 Is design an element of industrial policy?
A. Certainly; as in any other aspect of quality,
obvious or subtle, of the product. It seems that
anything can be an element in policy.

 Ought design to care about lowering costs?
A product often becomes more useful if the costs
are lowered without harming the quality.

 Does the creation of design admit constraint?
Design depends largely on constraints.

 What constraints?
The sum of all constraints. Here is one of the
few effective keys to the design problem—the
ability of the designer to recognize as many
of the constraint as possible—his willingness
and enthusiasm for working within these
constraints—the constraints of price, of size, of
strength, balance, of surface, of time, etc.; each
problem has its own peculiar list.

 Does design obey laws?
Aren’t constraints enough?

 Ought the final product to bear the trademark
of the designer? Of the research office?
In some cases, one may seem appropriate. In some
cases, the other, and certainly in some cases both.

 What is the relation of design to the world of
fashion (current trends)?
The objects of fashion have usually been designed
with the particular constraints of fashion in mind.

 Is design ephemeral?
Some needs are ephemeral. Most designs are
ephemeral.

 Ought it to tend towards the ephemeral or
towards permanence?
Those needs and designs that have a more
universal quality will tend toward permanence.

 To whom does design address itself: to the
greatest number (the masses)? to the specialists
or the enlightened amateur? To a privileged
social class?
To the need.

 Can public action aid the advancement of
design?
The proper public action can advance most
anything.

 After having answered all these questions,
do you feel you have been able to practice
the profession of “design” under satisfactory
conditions, or even optimum conditions?
Yes.

 Have you been forced to accept compromises?
I have never been forced to accept compromises
but have willingly accepted constraints.

 What do you feel is the primary condition for
the practice of design and its propagation?
Recognition of the need.

 What is the future of design?
(No answer)

03
Jan 2010

Bram Geenen’s Gaudi Stool

In the days before CAD, Anton Gaudi modeled his Sagrata Familia upside down using strings and bags of lead shot to simulate the archways of his magnum opus.

While modern computers render this method moot, Bram Geenen has applied it to create a beautiful stool.

01
Jan 2010

Dezeen » Blog Archive » Civita’ di Bagnoregio by Progettospore

Civita' di Bagnoregio, that marvelous italian village-on-a-hill, is accessible only by a fairly pedestrian looking pedestrian bridge. A group of Italian architects have proposed a modern replacement that speaks more of British inclinations to merge old and new than of the Italian penchant for drowning in antiquity.

I hope they build it, but fear it's a long shot...

(via Nina)

31
Dec 2009

Senator Al Franken can draw the USA from memory - Core77

Given that some of our government officials can't find neighboring states on a printed map, it's pretty amazing that the comedian cum senator can create a map solely from memory....

30
Dec 2009

Web 2.0 Suicide Machine

Feeling overwhelmed by the demands Facebook, Twitter, Linked-In, and MySpace put on you? Ever wish you could just end it all, terminating your existence in these social networks, but afraid of what that might entail? Now there's a safe, painless, easy way to end your (virtual) life...

22
Dec 2009

Fire = friend

Though I'm attracted in theory to the idea of sitting in a room and enjoying a quiet evening of reading and contemplative thought, in reality there's always something more "important" I should be doing instead...

...so why is it that when you add a fire I'm happy to sit, read, listen to music, and generally chillax for hours on end?