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MMMR - May 27th, 2008

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NY Design Week Coverage: All posts in one place!

Check out this list of Core77's event coverage of New York Design Week in one easy-to-browse place.

NY Design Week 2008: Parsons BFA Show at Felissimo

NY Design Week 2008: Housewarming Party

NY Design Week 2008: Gallery Of Functional Art Party

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF: It's raining light!

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF: Konstantin Grcic on the Myto Chair

NY Design Week 2008: Core77's Black Light Ping Pong Party

NY Design Week 2008: BluDot couch sitters

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF: Uhuru

NY Design Week 2008: Bait-and-Switch

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF: Straight Line Designs

NY Design Week 2008: Hardcore Finnish Design Show in the Meatpacking District

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF: Laurie Beckerman Design

NY Design Week 2008: Miranda Meilleur

NY Design Week 2008: Spring 3D "Bring it to the Table" Exhibition

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF: Monacca

New York Design Week 2008: ICFF: Design Entrepreneurs: Make Good and Prosper

NY Design Week 2008: Super Normal exhibition at Vitra

NY Design Week 2008: Design Boom Mart

NY Design Week 2008: SVA booth winner!

NY Design Week 2008: Bloc Lego candles

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF: Azuamoline

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF: Inflate

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF: Alexander Kneller

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF: Concreteworks

NY Design Week 2008: Aykuterol booth

NY Design Week 2008: Core77's Ping Pong Squad take over the ICFF

NY Design Week 2008: Left Brain/Right Brain


VIDEOS:

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: ICFF Surprse!

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: Industrial sludge in the Meatpacking

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: Koncept Lamp

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: SCAD Safe bed

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: Bocci wall plugs

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: Knoend Ecodesign

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: Salt and Pepper in one, then two


NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: Umbra U+ Collection

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: Stakit at Danish Crafts

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: Molo Cloud-Somethings

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: Yale University of Architecture

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Bandini's different take on the bathroom

They're definitely not for everyone, but we're liking Italian company Bandini's take on the bathroom vanity; their pop-y designs are a marked departure from the current crop of sharp-angled offerings out there. Lots of great pics up on their site.

via trenddir

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1 Hour Design Challenge: 2 Days Left

Listen-up!
It's time to design some kick-ass speakers!

Brief:
We bet you have a set of computer speakers on your desk that resemble some form of a gray blob that cost you about $10 USD. Kurt Solland, VP of Design for, Harman Consumer Group has been doing everything he can to make that bet a long shot. For this challenge, Core77 invited Kurt to join the 1HDC as a guest moderator. (Did ya' hear that?!) So we ask you to crank up the tunes and crank out your best spin on a computer speaker design with whatever means you can scratch together in an hour.

Doors open:
Thursday, May 22, 2008
10 AM PST (5 GMT)

Doors close:
Thursday, May 29, 2008
9 AM PST (4 GMT)

Criteria:
Judging will be based on quality of presentation and whether or not your work could have realistically been done in 1 Hour (this is an honor system).

Prize:
Publicity in Core77 May Newsletter, publicity on Core77 Blog and bragging rights that Kurt Solland chose your design (neener neener neener!), plus a secret prize hand-picked by the speaker-guru himself!

Jury:
Winner will be selected by the Kurt Solland and Core77 Admin. Community discussion is encouraged to help ensure the best design wins.

>>>Click here to enter your submission<<<

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Book Review: Decoding Design, by Maggie Macnab

Possibly as soon as in the next few months, the large hadron collider nearing completion at CERN outside of Geneva will be smashing little tiny particles at obscene speeds into one another in the hopes of finding the elusive Higgs bosun, the "god particle" that may provide teleological hope to the Standard model of physics, or might just destroy the universe as we know it. No joke. Admittedly the unleashing of antimatter and the subsequent rendering of all of us into non-existence is highly unlikely, but even the scientists behind this enormous underground atomic racetrack acknowledge that the total obliteration of matter (and maybe even space!) can't be ruled out entirely.

I bring up this hypothetical of impending doom in part because it's emblematic of pattern recognition. While we don't yet know what the physicists will find, that doesn't mean we don't have guesses. In fact, several theories already exist, including multidimensional vibrating strings and branes that form the constituent particles of our universe, even though we only exist in three dimensions, plus time. So while there really isn't any empirical data about multidimensional N-space and our puny brains can't even conceive it, we've got brilliant physicists postulating its existence. Even scientists see patterns everywhere. The human condition makes us see giraffes in the clouds, Jesus burnt into our toast, and buy into malarkey like astrology and numerology. I like to think of myself as scientific, but I don't really know much about physics, so I know better than to postulate about whether the large hadron collider will kill us all. I'm simply not qualified, and a large part of science is an awareness of when to suspend judgment.

Maggie Macnab's Decoding Design applies the science of mathematics to design elements of typography and graphics, so it should totally be up my alley. As an occasionally aesthetically-impaired former mathematician who happens to work in design, I love that the restrictive rules of the grid let me manufacture an appealing layout without exercising any artistic judgement. The grid, that end-all-be-all of layout, is modular arithmetic. Decoding Design addresses shape and form numerically, but it also does a lot more, and that's why, as someone who does know something about number theory (as opposed to numerology), Maggie Macnab's book is both wonderfully fascinating and endlessly frustrating.

>> read on

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A plastics future

The European association of plastics manufacturers, Plastics Europe, commissioned UK futurist Ray Hammond to write a book about the world in 2030, with a special focus on the challenges for plastics.

Changing demographics, extreme weather conditions, peak-oil, resource-conflicts, surveillance society, hyperreal leisure time, robots, sustainable globalisation, healthcare revolution, virtual companions, biodigital interfaces, the global brain, new retailing, ...

A summary of the book including a first response of the plastics industry on the challenges ahead, can be found here.

via a thousand tomorrows

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Nanotubes may pose a health risk

Every time a new material comes out, people get excited, and manufacturers assume it's safe; it's only years later that we discover that the plastic we drink out of or make baby pacifiers from actually releases endocrine disrupters, and that asbestos is not something you should breathe in.

Now research is coming to light showing that carbon nanotubes can have the same effect as asbestos and eventually lead to cancer.

Within days of being injected into mice, the nanotubes -- which are increasingly used in electronic components, sporting goods and dozens of other products -- triggered a kind of cellular reaction that over a period of years typically leads to mesothelioma, a fatal form of cancer, researchers said.

...the preliminary evidence of cancer risk is strong enough to justify urgent follow-up tests and government guidance for nano factory workers, who are most likely to be exposed, experts said. Others called for labels to guide consumers or recyclers, who might encounter the material when incinerating or otherwise destroying discarded nano products.

via washington post

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Hard, clear plastic and epoxy resins: watch out for BPA

In more "materials that are bad for you" news, BPA, a chemical found in hard, clear plastics like baby and sports bottles as well as epoxy resin, is apparently something you should avoid.

In studies of laboratory animals...BPA changes play behavior, weakens gender differences, decreases sperm count, stimulates prostate cancer and causes ADHD symptoms.

As a designer, what do you need to know about this? With papers on the ills of BPA "being published at the rate of about one a day," manufacturers are getting hip to its dangers and are coming up with alternatives; if you're in a position to spec out materials, you may want to have a look at these.

These [safer alternatives] include glass baby bottles instead of polycarbonate ones -- the Glass Packaging Institute recently reported a surge in demand for these -- and natural resin for lining cans instead of epoxy. Japanese manufacturers started using natural resin in 1997, and two years later a study found that BPA levels had gone down significantly.

As a consumer, what do you need to know? Don't put polycarbonate plastics in the nuke or the dishwasher; heat makes the BPA leach out of the plastic, and into you, faster. Read all about it here.

via la times

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Future scenarios - coming to terms with the end of the era of growth

Australian David Holmgren, the cofounder of the permaculture concept has just launched a new global scenario planning website - Future Scenarios.org A snippet from the Energy Bulletin elucidates,

Holmgren says his future scenarios will help both policy makers and activists come to terms with the end of the era of growth.[...] uses a scenario planning framework to bring to life the likely cultural, political, agricultural and economic implications of peak oil and climate change.

"Scenario planning allows us to use stories about the future as a reference point for imagining how particular strategies and structures might thrive, fail or be transformed," says Holmgren

Future Scenarios depicts four very different futures. Each is a permutation of mild or destructive climate change, combined with either slow or severe energy declines. Scenarios range from the relatively benign Green Tech to the near catastrophic Lifeboats scenario..

Here's a link to Holmgren's 12 design principles of permaculture.

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Merger between Danish Design Center and Index:

The Danish Design Center (DDC) and Index: announced that they are now joined within one organization, with Index: being a subsidiary company of DDC, 100% owned by the latter.

Index: is a global non-profit network organisation based in Copenhagen that sponsors awards every second year, the famous Index: Award, for design to improve life.

The merger will allow for a stronger international branding of Denmark as one of the world's leading design nations. With more integrated resources, the new structure is also better positioned to be a key player in carrying out the Danish Government's design policy.

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High tech underpants by Philips

According to The Register, Philips is taking wearable computing one step further with underpants ("pants", "briefs" or "smalls" in British English) that monitor the wearer's blood pressure.

The hi-tech undies have sensors sewn into the waistband that measure the wearer's pulse wave velocity - the rate at which pulses of blood stream through a person's circulatory system. By measuring the time it takes for one pulse to pass between two sensors, the smalls will be able to calculate the wearer's blood pressure.

(The photo is from the Philips patent application.)

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Herman Miller's award-winning Lifework

During the dotcom boom, a friend who worked at one of the big dogs complained to me about the office-wide Aeron chair policy. "After sitting in one for ten hours, you can't go home and sit in a regular chair," she said (leading me to bring to her attention a Russian geographical feature, the "Crimea River").

That point was echoed in an M-Live article describing the Body of Work award given to Herman Miller's Lifework collection, which seeks to make the home office as cush and chic as the office office. With designs by Blu Dot, Industrial Facility, Kaiju Studios and Korb + Korb, Lifework goes on the market in August.

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Fake TV: the continuing appearance of useless products

We sincerely hope this is a gag: the Fake TV "uses an array of colored, flashing LEDs to create the illusion of the stroboscopic effect of a television," apparently so thieves walking by will see the flickering in your window and move on to greener pastures.

Do we need this, do the numbers bear this one out? Are our lands so roaming with robbers that somewhere they had to set up a factory to crank these things out? D'you reckon this is what the inventor of LED's had in mind? Sure, the Fake TV burns less juice than leaving the regular TV on, but where are we supposed to put this thing, in a fake entertainment console?

Hell in a handbasket, folks.

via technabob

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Ethiopia brands its coffees

A small design firm here was recently hired by an unusual client with an unconventional request: The Ethiopian government commissioned Brandhouse to come up with a logo that will make consumers feel like they are drinking a luxury when they have Ethiopian coffee. This month, the Ethiopian government is releasing the logos for three varieties of Ethiopian coffee beans that it hopes will eventually appear from the burlap sacks that are used to transport coffee beans to coffee cups in cafes. It is the first time the country has introduced a brand for its major export.

The logos are the culmination of years of sometimes-bitter wrangling between Ethiopia, British charity Oxfam, Starbucks and the National Coffee Association, a trade association for U.S. coffee importers, wholesalers, retailers and roasters. The Ethiopian government has argued that companies such as Starbucks should sign licensing agreements for its coffee. Oxfam supported its cause and last year, the Seattle coffee chain reached a deal with Ethiopia to license, market and promote Harar, Yirgacheffe, and Sidamo coffee.

Full story courtesy the Wall Street Journal

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Stalk and predict Apple moves thru job openings

Not only can you stalk your ex via the internet, you can stalk companies, too. We love how Apple fanatics relentlessly forecast the company's future offerings by tracking their job openings.

The latest in the iPhone category: an open slot for Lead Camera Design Engineer, meaning iPhone shutterbugs will eventually have a better camera, and two other positions--Senior RF System Engineer and Product Design Engineer--than apparently mean the device is receiving some sort of wireless upgrade. (We didn't link the latter position because, interestingly enough, it's been removed and presumably filled between the time we first read the post and now.) More detailed analysis available here.

Ideally your ex would apply for one of these jobs, so you could do one-stop stalking.

via iphone world

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Design Directions '08 winners just announced

Edward Austin took top prize in the 2008 Design Directions competition's "Ceramic Futures" category, sponsored by the UK's Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA). While Royal College of Art student Austin is undoubtedly a young buck, the contest itself is the oldest we can think of--it's been around since 1924! (Previous winners: Leonardo da Vinci, "Rock Drawing Slate;" Unknown Caveman, "Wheel.")

Austin's winning design is for a vegetable peeler and cheese slicer made from zirconia (the stuff that, in crystalline form, cheapskates can use to propose marriage). We like that Austin's design not only considers the end product, but also thinks heavily about the manufacturing process:

[Austin's designs] include sections that can be sacrificed in the [manufacturing] process, specifically to hold the fine blade edges in place during firing. This enables the pieces to be fired upside down, which minimises warping and keeps the blades straight. These sections are removed in the sharpening process, using progressively finer grinding media on a wheel.... The pieces are also only fired once, saving fuel costs and adding environmental credibility.

The RSA Design Directions winners site has just gone live today, and while it's no fun to navigate, you can check out the winners and runners-up in the fifteen other categorieshere.

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Glenn Ross: design is man's best friend

"I really like the design process and doing custom work, but it's very difficult to make a living at it," says Vancouver-based designer Glenn Ross, who's got a rather unusual career arc. After he found a wood-bending vacuum press and some woodoworking tools at an auction, he began using them to produce furniture in earnest; but it was his dog that led him to success.

"It was one of those epiphanies, staring at that ugly pet feeder," Ross now says, referring to Oliver's food dish and all the crusty grossness and mucky floor gunk left behind when a big dog sticks his snout into a pile of Alpo in the corner of the kitchen.

Sensing there might be a market for a pet food dish not quite so hard to look at, he designed and built a stylish raised feeder fashioned out of bamboo, maple, cherry and wenge veneer, as well as hammered aluminum. The feeders come in a variety of sizes, with stainless steel bowls.

Ross' creations were good enough for Architectural Digest's "Great Design Issue," and his eye-catching WoWo collection is, if you'll pardon the expression, the cat's meow. Check out his full line here, and read the full article here.

via vancouver sun

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Social networking for the elderly

And finally when design students, like Ben Arent, engage in extensive user research, we take notice.

Jive is a proof of concept for a new communication device - a range of 3 products designed to get elderly technophobes connected to their friends and family.

Unfortunately, Ben doesn't give information on whether the concept was iterated further based on contextual user testing. This would definitely be necessary to make sure the product would actually be used by the elderly.

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Special thanks to Mark Vanderbeeken and Niti Bhan for their contributions to this weeks newsletter!

Please share the Monday Morning Must Read with colleagues, clients and collaborators. Many email programs do not forward messages in their original format, so please use this link: http://www.designdirectory.com/blog/newsletter

Email us your feedback and comments. We are looking for stories, case studies and global news on where and how design can make the difference.



MMMR - May 19th, 2008

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NY Design Week Coverage: All posts in one place!

Check out this list of Core77's (ongoing) event coverage of New York Design Week in one easy-to-browse place. Check back often for more posts!

NY Design Week 2008: Parsons BFA Show at Felissimo

NY Design Week 2008: Housewarming Party

NY Design Week 2008: Gallery Of Functional Art Party

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF: It's raining light!

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF: Konstantin Grcic on the Myto Chair

NY Design Week 2008: Core77's Black Light Ping Pong Party

NY Design Week 2008: BluDot couch sitters

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF Faves: Uhuru

NY Design Week 2008: Bait-and-Switch

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF Faves: Straight Line Designs

NY Design Week 2008: Hardcore Finnish Design Show in the Meatpacking District

NY Design Week 2008: ICFF Faves: Laurie Beckerman Design

NY Design Week 2008: Miranda Meilleur


VIDEOS:

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: ICFF Surprse!

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: Industrial sludge in the Meatpacking

NY Design Week 2008: Video Drive-by: Koncept Lamp

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Book Review: Buying In, by Rob Walker

The turn of phrase "buying in" could mean ponying up enough coin to get a seat at a high stakes poker game or changing one's mindset to encompass a radical ideology. Rob Walker is the author of the "Consumed" column for the New York Times Magazine, so he is clearly familiar with ambiguously subtextual titles (since consumption connotes both a state of obsession and its untidy aftermath . . . both of which should be viscerally familiar to most Americans). His new book Buying In: The Secret Dialogue Between What We Buy and Who We Are, delves into the attitudes of the global consumer in the age of plenty, and, well, we aren't too pretty.

Walker carries the reader on a frenetically paced tour of senseless consumption spanning from Viking ranges to custom high-tops. Along the way he introduces the reader to a diverse cast of characters like Dietrich Mateschitz, the entrepreneur who brought the world Red Bull, the sponsor of both the Flugtag air races, and in the opposite direction, the late night drunken falls of people who've imbibed too much alcohol along with the cough syrup caffeinated punch of that narrow little can. Other characters include an assortment of white guys without any discernable street-cred who've managed to build clothing empires around hip-hop and urban culture, and even viral marketers who pretend to be customers, proselytizing to others about the merits of products (and apparently not always disclosing their affiliations).

By presenting both uber-consumers and the professionals who deal with trying to sell us the stuff to fill our endless appetites, or the holes in our souls, Walker indirectly addresses what he coins the "pretty good" problem: What distinguishes a product when assembly lines or underpaid third-world workers can make even the cheapest products "pretty good?" Since quality really isn't much of a criterion any more, there must be other signifiers, and that's where our subconscious steps in.

>> read entire review.

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Product Design Technology Event

Join us for an evening of food and drinks in NYC and learn how to couple SolidWorks with SensAble Technologies and Z Corp 3D Printers to maximize your design process, helping you to get products to market faster.

May 21, 2008
6:30PM to 8:30PM
5Ninth Restaurant & Bar
5 Ninth Avenue, NYC




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Dr. John Todd's Visionary "Carbon Neutral World" Wins The 2008 Buckminster Fuller Challenge

"Dr. John Todd's comprehensive design strategy to bring about a carbon neutral world, in the opinion of this jury, best embodies the bold, visionary approach to large scale societal transformation pioneered by Buckminster Fuller." said the Buckminster Fuller Challenge jurors in a statement about their decision.

Dr. Todd's visionary proposal touches the coal mining ravages of the Appalachian mountains and proposes a brighter future based upon a carbon neutral culture and an ownership economy in which the people of these regions owned their own lands, resources and enterprises.

We applaud John's claim for more considerate use of our resources through more designing and less mining - and we are sure that the $100,000 prize will support his current efforts in making a blueprint for a post coal era and carbon neutral economy for the coal land regions of Appalachia.

Curious? Read more about his proposal here (including a wonderful "A Tale of the Future") or ask Dr. Todd for yourself if you can make it to the award ceremony on June 23rd at The Center for Architecture in New York City.

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First World Industrial Design Day on 29 June

From a press statement by the International Council of Societies of Industrial Design (Icsid):

World Industrial Design Day is a new global initiative to provide professional industrial designers and design enthusiasts with an opportunity to promote a global understanding of design and all that it encompasses.

First declared on June 29, 2007 on the occasion of Icsid's 50th anniversary, the international observance is an occasion to mark the development and evolution of industrial design throughout the course of its history, as well as accentuate industrial design's role in improving the economic, social, cultural and environmental quality of life around the world.

Through a series of international events World Industrial Design Day will present an engaging variety of initiatives highlighting the many contribution designers and academics have made to the discipline of industrial design relative to the study of design theory, research, and practice.

29 June is also the start of the World Congress of Architecture in Turin, Italy. A large amount of architects, designers and design thinkers are on the speakers list

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photo: Megan Ann Rucker

RSS Alert: New Article up at Coroflot's Creative Seeds: Want to Save the World? Just Ask. By Carl Alviani

What happens to all those hopes n' dreams? Carl Alviani's got a call to arms for designers over at Coroflot's Creative Seeds blog. Here's a sneak peek:

...talk to practically any student or recent graduate, and nearly all of them will attest that they want to improve the world, solve problems of waste and poverty through better design, make a positive impact, make a difference. Even kids who want to do nothing more than draw cars and shoes all day will light up when explaining the fuel cell technology that drives their roadster, or the compostable uppers on their high-tops. This was true when I was in school, five years ago, and if you ask someone who studied a creative profession 10 years ago, it was mostly true then.

As far as I can tell, the change occurs in the first year or two out of school. The bravado nurtured by professors and studio-mates rapidly withers in the harsh conditions of the job market, leaving the junior no less able to devise green strategies, but deeply doubting his or her right to voice them.

What's the issue here?

...one of clout, or perceived clout, and it results in a double-sided silence: management doesn't ask for more conscientious solutions, and design doesn't tell...[A] degree of license enables discussions that would otherwise never occur. Imagine for a moment you went into every client or management meeting knowing your suggestions would be granted that kind of weight. What would you do with it? Judging by conversations I've had with professional colleagues, I'd suspect that issues of sustainability and social benefit would be broached far more frequently, even if they weren't always enacted.

>> read entire article <<

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Cannondale: new products division, and some concepts from the past

According to bicycleretailer.com, bike manufacturer Cannondale is putting together a sort of product dream team, its new Advanced Product Division:

APD is a global group of engineers and industrial designers led by Torgny Fieldskaar, Cannondale's global director of industrial design and advanced products. "The group that we've assembled includes the most forward-thinking minds in the industry. They should be working at NASA. Fortunately, they chose bikes," Fieldskaar said.

For a look at some interesting, older images of pre-APD Cannondale concepts (photos below), click on one of these links from Vintage Cannondale: 1, 2, 3.

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Designing out crime: abuser-centred design

Speaking of bicycles the UK Design Council has published a designer's guide to designing out crime from products, systems and services with advice from those who've done it, young crime victims and technology experts.

The site also contains an overview of graphic, product and systems that tackle hot product crime, including the Bikeoff bicycle stands, orange school projectors, the Immobilise online security service, anti-theft number plates, biometric security for mobile devices, service design for secure bike hire schemes, and cutting crime at a Birmigham hospital through improved wayfinding and increased natural surveillance.

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Gravity Free 2008: Man vs Machine

Last week we spent some time in Chicago at the Gravity Free event. Here is a snippet of the experience:

In a man-vs machine face-off, Chipp Kidd, renown book jacket designer, and Janne Kyttanen, rapid prototyping guru, took the stage in front of a hungry crowd. Kidd walked us through the best (and worst) of his career in book design. His unconventional methods (throwing a bucket of water on paper to produce Burroughs' 'Dry' cover!!) and his skillful artistry demonstrated how unique ways of thinking lead to successful design. He emphasized the role of limits when creating, stating "The more you are limited the more you are forced to think."

On the other side of the industry, Janne Kyttanen presented work from Materialise, the rapid prototyping resource. From tiny shoes to lamps, Kyttanen emphasized the role of speed in his creation process, as well as the joy of being able to make "anything he wants". He recounted the story of designing a product in the length of a cab ride from JFK airport to the MOMA in New York. When asked about his pace of work, Kyttanen happily admitted it was his dream to work on projects that only take one or two days to produce.

During Q&A the designers were asked about the role of hand vs technology. Neither discounted the other, but Kidd left us with a quote to chew on (man we're hungry!):

paraphrased

I was part of one of the last generations of graphic designers to be trained working by hand. That experience trained me in the IDEA, to be concept driven vs technically driven. That's something we can't lose. The idea, the concept is king.

Check out our other Gravity Free Coverage:

>> Gravity Free 2008: Session 1

>> Gravity Free 2008: Session 2

>> Gravity Free 2008: Sagmeister Round Table

>> Gravity Free 2008: Day 2

>> Gravity Free 2008: Relationships

>> Gravity Free 2008: Culture

>> Gravity Free 2008: Experience

>> Gravity Free 2008: Signing Off

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Copyrights and trademarks, vis-a-vis product design

The WSJ has an article up on a rather complicated topic: "non-traditional trademarks," or the copyrighting of three-dimensional shapes. Two examples of this form of copyrighting, which should be of interest to industrial designers more and more in the future, are listed: the obvious one (Apple trademarking the shape of its iPod) and an obscure one (Yamaha trademarking the "arcing water spray produced by its personal watercraft").

Needless to say, the average designer will find the copyrighting process nearly as opaque and frustrating as working with Marketing; but the article breaks the process down into five easy pieces. Click here to read.

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There's some inevitability about Michael Bierut taking on this object, a favorite of industrial designers if there ever was one. Here goes:

Charles F. Brannock only invented one thing in his life, and this was it. The son of a Syracuse, New York, shoe magnate, Brannock became interested in improving the primitive wooden measuring sticks that he saw around his father's store. He patented his first prototype in 1926, based on models he had made from Erector Set parts. As the Park-Brannock Shoe Store became legendary for fitting feet with absolute accuracy, the demand for the device grew, and in 1927 Brannock opened a factory to mass produce it. The Brannock Device Co., Inc., is still in business today. Refreshingly, it still only makes this one thing. They have sold over a million, a remarkable number when one considers that each of them lasts up to 15 years, when the numbers wear off.

Read the whole thing.

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Bombay's IDC: Good design is in the mail, finally

Good design takes time. Years ago when B.K. Chakravarthy of the Industrial Design Centre in Bombay came across a rusted mailbox, he "felt shameful that being a design professor, we could not do any good design in the public domain." India's mailboxes were difficult to empty, rusted easily and filled with water during monsoon season, making many hesitant to use them. Chakravarthy solicited the Postmaster General's assignment to "design a maintenance-free postbox" and turned the problem into a student assignment.

[Concepts were] collated into a series of idea sketches using engineering plastic, sheet metal and stainless steel, and prototypes were made. The final product is a sleek affair with a stainless steel body with a red beak-shaped lid that slides on top. It's sleek, elegant, easy to install and user-friendly--you can even use the surface for writing.

That was back in 2005, when 30 of the mailboxes were produced; three years later they are finally going into mass production, starting with a run of 200. And you thought the mail took a long time to arrive....

via business standard

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What's the right acronym? Disney World for the military

In last weeks NYTimes, an almost-fascinating-enough piece on Shades of Green, the customized mouse-ear experience for military personal and their families. Such a great gesture. Here's a taste:

Although Major O'Rourke's Iraqi quarters were hardly spartan--he lived in an air-conditioned trailer with satellite TV--they didn't rival his family's here. Rooms are on a par with those of top-level Disney resorts charging $350 a night, but cost as little as $89.

The only element too reminiscent of Iraq, he said, was being woken up by the late-night fireworks in the Magic Kingdom. "I swear to god," he said, "it was just like an artillery barrage."

Oops.

Thanks tortor for the tip!

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Shots of Beijing's Koolhaas-designed CCTV building in progress

And finally DRB's culled some cool in-construction photos of China's OMA-designed CCTV building. In construction since '04, the structure is slated to be completed in time for the Olympics, when coverage will be projected along its undersurface.

For some eye-catching photos of the construction process snapped by the prolific Flickr community, click here.

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Special thanks to Mark Vanderbeeken for his contributions to this weeks newsletter!

Please share the Monday Morning Must Read with colleagues, clients and collaborators. Many email programs do not forward messages in their original format, so please use this link: http://www.designdirectory.com/blog/newsletter

Email us your feedback and comments. We are looking for stories, case studies and global news on where and how design can make the difference.



MMMR - May 12th, 2008

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Project H Design (Anti) Manifesto: A Call To Action For Humanitarian (Product) Design, By Emily Pilloton

I think we can all agree that manifestos are over-written and under-executed. So call this a rant or a pep talk, a sermon if that's your cup of tea, or maybe most appropriately, a call to arms.

Here's the rose-colored glasses version: We need the design world (particularly industrial design) to stop talking big and start doing good; to put the problem-solving skills on which we pride ourselves to work on some of the biggest global issues; to design for health, poverty, homelessness, education, and more.

And here's the brass tacks reality: We need to challenge the design world to take the "product" out of product design for a second and deliver results and impact rather than form and function; to reconsider who our clients really are; to turn our tightly-cinched consumer business models and luxury aesthetics on their heads; to get over "going green;" and to enlist a new generation of design activists. We need big hearts, bigger business sense, and even bigger balls.

>> Read entire article.

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Serious Play 2008 Coverage: All posts in one place!

Check out all of Core77's event coverage of Art Center's Serious Play Design Conference 2008 in one easy-to-browse place. Congrats to the organizers, and good luck with clarifying the "bi-annual" over the next two years!

Serious Play 2008: Art Center Turns on the Fun

Serious Play 2008: Hockenberry and the Space Dudes

Serious Play 2008: Play Study, Places to Play, and Playing With Paper

Serious Play 2008: Google, Second Life and *Magic*

Serious Play 2008: Opening Night Target Party

Serious Play 2008: Tuxedo Travels and Mentos With Coke

Serious Play 2008: John Maeda Rocks!

Serious Play 2008: frog's Crows and Eames' Elephants

Serious Play 2008: Paula Scher, Seriously

Serious Play 2008: How Things Work, Inside/Outside

Serious Play 2008: Bruce McCall, Aimee Mullins and Your Moment of John Oliver

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May 21, 2008
6:30PM to 8:30PM
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One Day Paper Waste Furniture by Jens Praet

What can you do with waste paper apart from filling up your dustbin? Jens Praet knows! One Day Paper Waste is a little table/console, obtained by taking shredded confidential documents, mixing them with resin and compressing them into a strong mould... End result: a new interesting object that has the strength of wood.

Every document tells a story. By shredding confidential documents, part of its information remains mysteriously visible. One Day Paper Waste gives new life to these documents, that's the real beauty of this product.

Check out more waste paper concepts at Jens' website (don't miss his "black edition").

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1HDC Winner: THE Olympic Torch

Given political climate, it's tough to know what role design should play in the creation of an Olympic torch. Can such a symbolic object ignite commentary or should it remain as universal as the Games themselves? This month's 1 HDC sparked a participation that was as diverse in form as it was in function. Results were as wide-spread as from Pakistan to Detroit, and as pretty as they were political. In homage to the diversity of Olympic competition, we picked three winners this round. Yup, a Gold, a Silver, n' a Bronze. (Insert trumpet blasts and national anthems here)

GOLD:
A forum fave, the Gold medal is awarded to Soyun's 'Olympic Torch for Mumbai, India.' Inspired by the harmony of Indian culture, the participatory nature of this design can function both on a local and universal level. The shaft neatly houses puzzle pieces from each participating country, added one-by-one as the torch makes it journey through the world. The design is completed as the final piece - representing India - is added upon arrival to Mumbai. A symbol of participation and community, this is a fine representation of the ideals the Olympic games stand for.

Check out our Silver and Bronze medalists here.

>> See all the entries here.

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Local River

Designed for the "locavore," Local River, created by Mathieu Lehanneur and Anthony van den Bossche is a home storage unit for fish and greens. This DIY fish-farm-cum-kitchen-garden is based on the exchange and interdependence of two living organisms - plants and fish.

Here's the dirty stuff:

The plants extract nutrients from the nitrate-rich dejecta of the fish. In doing so they act as a natural filter that purifies the water and maintains a vital balance for the eco-system in which the fish live. The same technique is used on large-scale pioneer aquaponics/fish-farms, which raise tilapia (a food fish from the Far East) and lettuce planted in trays floating on the surface of ponds.

Simply put, now you can have your fish, lettuce, and eat 'em too! The ultimate goal of Local River is not just decorative, but functional too -- serving as an aquarium/refrigerator it allows fish and greens to cohabit until .....um.....dinner time rolls around.

On view at Artists Space from 25 April to 21 June 2008.

Check out more pix here.

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RSS Alert: New Gallery up at Core77: Material Xperience

From recycled chewing gum to transparent concrete, Core's materials addict, Aart van Bezooyen, inspires us with the look and feel of Material Xperience 2008. This four day event in The Netherlands (April 23-26) showcases the latest materials for architecture and design.

View Gallery: 80 images

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Whitepaper on Design & Sustainability

Established late last year, DesignTalks is "the online community for the UK design and manufacturing industry, and the ideal place to debate the hottest topics of the moment. As well as providing an online debating environment, we also produce whitepapers and other resources designed to help manufacturers get the best from designers - and vice versa."

Their latest whitepaper is on Design & Sustainability and can be downloaded, free, here.

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Smart / Models

Smart / Models is a one-day event scheduled for Saturday May 17 at the Times Center in NYC. The conference will feature presentations by five design firms describing their five different business models. According to the web site, the day will cover 'the overlap between smart design and business smarts." Sounds like you'd be smart to register while there are still tickets left!

Cool poster design by Sam Potts!

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LG Chairman "gets" design, puts his money where his mouth is

Good news for designers, or 700 of them, anyway: LG Corp has announced they're expanding their focus on design. With a steadily increasing design budget--US $77 million in '06, $88 million in '07, and nearly $100 million this year--and a recently formed LG Design Committee, the South Korean conglomerate is expanding their design staff from 640 to 700 designers. Chairman Koo Bon-moo's "design-first management philosophy" is said to be driving the surge.

LG is probably best known outside of Korea for their mobile phones and appliances; what is not well-known about the company is its history.

LG claims that it was the first Korean company to introduce the concept of industrial design in the 1950s. Started as a cosmetics maker, the group has been considered to have more feminine qualities among Korean conglomerates, compared to Samsung and Hyundai Group that are based on heavier industries such as cars, ships and construction.

"Design does not only mean visual beauty. It has become a crucial factor in improving the value of people's lives," the group said in a statement. "With sustainable investment in design, LG will focus on creating unique designs that can lead the lifestyle of customers."

via korea times

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Cooper Hewitt's National Design Awards winners announced

The winners of Cooper-Hewitt's 2008 National Design Awards have been announced. This year's first prize and two runners-up in the Product Design category were all New-York-based firms: Antenna Design, Boym Partners and Karim Rashid. To see the winners in all of the categories (Architecture, Communications, Fashion, Interior, Landscape, Design Mind, Corporate Achievement and Lifetime Achievement) click here.

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Touch Diamond Smart Phone

San Francisco based studio One & Co have collaborated with the HTC design team in Taiwan to create the HTC Touch Diamond. The irregular back facets are a trend we've seen in recent contemporary architecture and furniture providing a highly recognizable design element.

Close-up pics here.

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Interview with exciting speakers designer Kurt Solland

iLounge has a great interview up with Kurt Solland, Design Veep over at Harman International. Solland is the man behind JBL and Harman Kardan speakers like Champagne, Creature and On-Stage, and was one of the first to successfully move computer speakers from beige boxes into something that actually investigated design. In the interview Solland's not only forthcoming with his design philosophies and intentions--he's provided a bunch of his sketches as well. Click here to read.

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Fish in a Barrel: Steven Heller Deconstructs "Design Patois"

The puff-tastic sameness that pervades the language design firms use to promote themselves has bugged us for a long time, but leave it to Design Observer regular Steven Heller to finally take the gun to this particular barrel of fish.

In a wickedly precise article on the AIGA website Tuesday, Heller gives a bit of history on the relationship between designers and the written word, and then steps back to let modern design firms (attempt to) speak for themselves. The results are horribly familiar, and raise the excellent question of how it got to be this way.

The list of samples is long and telling; we dare you to read all the way through the list without either glazing over or dissolving into a giggle fit. A few choice entries from section one: Happiness Is a Warm Client:

* The process begins with analysis, immersion into the client's situation in order to define the true problem. * Our primary concern is with our client's success in their business. * The basic need of most clients who come to us is to fulfill a business function. * Our primary concern is to solve the client's communications objective. * Our goal is to meet our clients' visual communications needs by applying an approach based on discipline, appropriateness and ambiguity. [huh?]

Read the full article here.

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New York Design Week 2008

Core77's New York Design Week Guide 2008

And finally here is the first cut of our definitive guide to this year's ICFF and New York Design Week. We'll be updating the list regularly this week with the best exhibits, parties and events, so check back often and refresh your browser!

And If you're putting on an event that's not listed, drop us line.

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Special thanks to Aart van Bezooyen for his contributions to this weeks newsletter!

Please share the Monday Morning Must Read with colleagues, clients and collaborators. Many email programs do not forward messages in their original format, so please use this link: http://www.designdirectory.com/blog/newsletter

Email us your feedback and comments. We are looking for stories, case studies and global news on where and how design can make the difference.



MMMR - May 5th, 2008

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Where La Laptop Hits El Camino: The OLPC Roll-out in Peru

After months--nay years--of anticipation, criticism, setbacks and praise, the One Laptop Per Child program is finally taking the diminutive slab of highly-designed tech to its intended audience in a large way. Peru, one of the earliest and strongest supporters of the OLPC, is beginning to ship them in large numbers to some very poor school districts, and MIT Technology Review has a well-researched tale of how it's all going. The findings are cautiously encouraging.

First and most gladdening, it appears that the laptops are truly ending up in the hands of the students who need them most; several references are made to communities and schools that are poor, but "not poor enough" to participate in the program. Secondly, the point about the raw economic effectiveness of the program is driven home by Oscar Becerra, head educational technologist at Peru's Ministry of Education:

These tools will land in the hands of first through sixth graders who in many cases never even had books--at home or elsewhere--and whose teachers themselves had little education. They will not come cheap; Peru is spending about $80 million on the laptops--nearly a third of the education budget normally available for capital expenditures--plus about $2 million for teacher training. Becerra characterized the sum as a special appropriation meant to bring schools up to date. "To distribute all these books would cost five times the cost of the machines," he estimates. "We are reaching the poorest schools in Peru for the first time in history."

Scrutiny on Peru's program will be high, but if it works the way the Ministry (and the teachers) are hoping, the delays, price hikes, and exasperation over the "give one, get one" program will become footnotes in one of socially-engaged design's great success stories.

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RSS Alert: New Gallery up at Core77: Milan 2008

If you've been overwhelmed by the mass of hype from Milan in the last weeks, take a breath, save yourself some time and checkout out core's fresh picks from this year's Salone Internazionale del Mobile.

View Gallery: 412 images

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Product Design Technology Event

Join us for an evening of food and drinks in NYC and learn how to couple SolidWorks with SensAble Technologies and Z Corp 3D Printers to maximize your design process, helping you to get products to market faster.

May 21, 2008
6:30PM to 8:30PM
5Ninth Restaurant & Bar
5 Ninth Avenue, NYC




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April Fool's or something far more serious? How the design world gets punk'd every single day.

La Tour Awful: The Truth Is Rendered, by Alissa Walker

David Serero wants you to know, first of all, that it was not a hoax. It was not, as many claim, a publicity stunt. And it was certainly not an April Fool's joke. "We do have this tradition also," the Paris-based architect told me in an email. "But our project was released three weeks before. Isn't that a little early?"

For those three weeks, whatever it was unfurled through the design world like gigantic Kevlar petals rippling open atop one of the most iconic structures on the planet. By late March it was common knowledge that Serero Architects' winning idea had claimed victory in an open competition to temporarily remodel the public reception and access areas for the 120th anniversary of the Eiffel Tower.

On March 24, the Guardian synthesized the information from all the blogs and took it it one step further, reporting that Eiffel Tower officials had issued a statement confirming that the design had indeed won its competition. But two days later the Société d'Exploitation de la Tour Eiffel actually did issue a statement--this is translated from French--"[We] did not launch any invitation concerning the installation of the top of the monument and the Parisian cabinet of architects quoted never stood as a candidate to any consultation launched by the company."

In three short weeks we went from from gawking at our monitors in disbelief, to raising flutes of Champagne on a temporarily-bolted 580-square-meter viewing platform, to gawking at our monitors in disbelief again.

>> read entire article

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Dell's ReGeneration Finalists Announced

Dell's ReGeneration "sustainable computing" competition released its five finalists last week (on Earth Day, if you must know), and reactions are mixed.

With more than 500 entrants from an unspecified number of countries, and an exhaustive list of competition requirements, chances are good that submissions ranged from hard-science to blue-sky, and that maybe some of them didn't look like they were designed by Apple, but you wouldn't really guess it by looking at the finalists.

There's some clever ideation in the featured designs, and the promising concepts of modular recycling and thin-client systems as ways of reducing consumption pop up a couple of times, and for that we applaud both the applicants and the judges. Polling some wonky engineer friends and looking through the frequently exasperated comments, though, it appears that much of what was selected is either too far-fetched to be meaningful (Power Flower PC, anyone?) or little more than a nicely rendered take on a long-established technology.

In any case, the winning design is a matter of public vote, so if you have an opinion, let Dell know, and us too.

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Book Review: The Endless City, by Ricky Burdett and Deyan Sudjic

An enormous orange compendium, The Endless City approaches architecture itself in scale, scope and design. All of the little details are right, from its visually comfortable grid to the stunning panoramic long-exposure photos of cities and urban sprawl. The result of a joint project between The London School of Economics and Deutsche Bank's Alfred Herrhausen Society, the book contains so much data, information and statistics that some facts even needed to spill some over onto the cover. Despite the imposing cover, the information and opinions within prove not only to educate but also to inspire.

Before discussing any book on urban planning, it's worth first addressing the elephant in the room, and her name is Jane. The Death and Life of Great American Cities by Jane Jacobs stands as a triumph of urban planning literature. By criticizing the architecture establishment and deriding the work of Robert Moses in reshaping New York, Jacobs entrenched herself into the urban planning cannon. Jacobs' work is small, accessible, and heartfelt. Anyone who has ever walked through an empty park, or pondered why portions of cities that governments push toward growth often fall into disarray would be well served examining her work. The Death and Life of Great American Cities reads as a cautionary tale for anyone hoping to adopt Le Corbusier's towers and parks as a mode for urban planning (as though walking past any project in America wouldn't be enough). Jacobs speaks lovingly about the diversity of the city streets, the need for a heterogeneous population and a "neighborhood" actively engaged in monitoring or policing its own behavior and growth. Walking down the quirky and vibrant streets of lower Manhattan, I can't help but feel that any other thesis would be tragically misguided. Consequently, I remained concerned until reading this book that urban planners might still hold some megalomaniacal tendencies. I was proven wrong only part way into the introduction and I still had a lot more to learn.

>> read entire review

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Airplane seat design: ignore your seatmates at a 30-degree angle

While air travel is still in a dreadful state, at least progress is being attempted in the area of design. Thompson Solutions has designed new "Cozy Suite" airline seats, which are staggered at angles to give you a) slightly more privacy from your seatmates, b) a place to lean your head and maybe get some shuteye, and c) more legroom.

Some of the claims seem overinflated; we can't see how the additional two inches of legroom mean the window guy can get to the aisle without the other two passengers having to get up, but that's what they're claiming. And while it doesn't look like the tan ones, photo above, recline--it looks more like the bottom and lumbar regions of the seat slide forward--the orange ones, photo below, clearly do.

With most airline seat innovations being made for higher-paying Business- and First-Class customers, it's a surprise that Delta will reportedly begin installing the seats in their Economy sections by 2010.

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via dvice

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Exploratory research and participatory design

BusinessWeek covers Nokia's recent Open Studio initiative in three slums on three continents where participants were encouraged to come in and draw their dream phones using materials and space provided by Nokia. Jan Chipchase writes on his blog,

One of the research methods Younghee and the research team have been experimenting with in the past year of working in shanty towns is setting up Open Studios in an attempt to engage a broad cross section of the community whist offering people different ways to articulate their wants and needs. We used a competition to design your ideal future phone as a vehicle for collecting data and the photos here show three of the 200+ entries from Buduburam near Accra, Favela Jacarezihno in Rio de Janeiro and Dharavi in Mumbai. It's easy to fixate! on! design! sketches! but bear in mind these are but a small part of the Open Studio - a lot of the research value comes through follow up interaction to help understand why participants chose these designs and how their design decisions are relevant in their context.

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BusinessWeek slideshow featuring 15 phones including the 'Paz' which emits a sound wave that brings peace to any argument, fight or even war.

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Spec It Green

The New York Industrial Retention Network (NYIRN) hosted the Spec It Green seminar last night in New York City. NYIRN works to strengthen New York City's manufacturing sector. This series of seminars focuses specifically on Green Building and the advantage of using local, sustainable building supplies and manufacturers. Green vendors were on hand to show their wares, followed by a discussion moderated by Erika Hanson, a green designer and consultant. Panelists included Monica Becker (above), a toxicity guru at RIT; John S. Howell, Director of Research and Development at ISLAND Architectural Woodwork, Inc; Chris Garvin from Terrapin and Cook+Fox Architects; and Amanda Clontz, Sustainable Construction Manager for One Bryant Park. The presenters each emphasized the need for greater communication between designers, manufacturers and contractors to ensure complete fulfillment of green initiatives. A bonus from the evening was a list of green resources compiled by all the panelists. Check out their faves here.

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Concrete But Different #3: Concrete Tableware

What comes after Concrete Curtains (huh?) and Inflatable Houses (huh?). German designer Alexa Lixfeld shows us with Creacrete.

Creacrete is a concrete based material which is highly dense making it possible to create filigree and thin-walled objects out of concrete. Unlike usual ceramics, Alexa uses the novel aesthetics of Creacrete for the design of tableware. Special processing makes it possible to achieve this glossy surface which is new to concrete. A nano-scale coating makes the cups and plates hydrophobic and food safe.

Last year, Creacrete has been recognized with the iF concept award - reason enough for Alexa to continue her concrete explorations. Let's hope we'll be the first to know if she updates her tableware with "concrete cutlery?"

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Samsung's new pebble; iPod slowdown

Coming out in June is Samsung's new "pebble"-style MP3 player, the YP-S2. Seemingly designed so it can be easily smuggled into prison, the $40 device will store 1GB, and the attractive design means the iPod Shuffle may finally have some viable competition.

Will we see more attempts to loosen Apple's death-grip on the MP3 market? Well, according to Google Trends, the iPod is on the decline....

via infosync world

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New electric vehicle with an unusual form factor

Canadian teenager Ben Gulak has invented a rather unusual vehicle: a unicycle with two wheels. Well, isn't that just a bicycle, you say? Not if the wheels are next to each other.

Powered by an electric motor, Gulak's Uno only has an on/off switch and is controlled like a Segway: lean forward to move forward, lean to the side to turn, lean back to slow down and stop. Segway-like gyros keep you from falling, and because the wheels operate independently of each other, the Uno can turn on a dime.

We have no idea where the kickstand is, and Gulak has no idea when the Uno will go into production; he's currently seeking investors.

via daily mail

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Femme Den: Design for females, without "pinking and shrinking"

"Women are still underrepresented in the design industry," says designer Erica Eden, of Smart Design. To combat that, Eden and three other female members of Smart's staff (Agnete Enga, Yvonne Lin, and Gina Reimann) have started Femme Den, an in-company initiative to address the needs of female consumers without alienating males by merely 'pinking and shrinking' existing products. As Eden explains:

A significant number of women live on their own, or are single parents, and have to use products that were not really designed for them. We don't adapt products to specifically target men or women, but we work to create cross-gender products...we believe that by understanding how gender plays a role, our designs will appeal to the largest audience and achieve [best-selling status.]

Femme Den will be presenting their most recent findings at September's IDSA conference in Phoenix, Arizona. Click here for their website.

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And finally, Five People Killed By Their Own Inventions

Neatorama's list of inventors who've died in the pursuit of creation is one that I'm sure many core readers could add to. If only Franz had Wayne Enterprises to offer a bit of R&D suppport.

Franz Reichelt was a tailor who was convinced that the next big thing was a coat that doubled as a parachute. So he got busy sewing and developed just that. To test the coat/parachute (coatachute? Paracoat?), Reichelt climbed up to the first deck of the Eiffel Tower. He told authorities that he was going to use a dummy to test the invention, but at the last minute he strapped himself in and jumped to his death in front of a large crowd of spectators.

I was going to link the youtube footage but it's a little disturbing.

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Special thanks to Aart van Bezooyen, and Niti Bhan for their contributions to this weeks newsletter!

Please share the Monday Morning Must Read with colleagues, clients and collaborators. Many email programs do not forward messages in their original format, so please use this link: http://www.designdirectory.com/blog/newsletter

Email us your feedback and comments. We are looking for stories, case studies and global news on where and how design can make the difference.



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