3.03.2010

Designing Capitalism to the EXTREME


So I found this just recently and I wish I lived and bought everything in Japan. Making barcodes look cool might not be functional at all, but I could foresee a whole package designed around one large barcode. It'd definitely make the supermarket line shorter
In Japan, Even the Barcodes Are Well Designed | Design & Innovation | Fast Company

Information is beautiful: 30 examples of creative infography


Infographics are cool. I wish I was as skilled as these people. It is so much better to change your excel graph into something like this- although, some of these I'll admit are pretty just for the sake of being pretty, they don't add much to the communication of information.

2.24.2010

Inkendar

I was inspired by Lilo's post about clocks and decided to write about this awesome ink based calendar that I saw:Dezeen � Blog Archive � Ink Calendar by Oscar Diaz

The design uses specially timed capillary action to soak up the ink and color in the dates. Having something like this on your wall makes you cool. Although I love the design, I would criticize its lack of functionality. Calendars are used for much more than just knowing the date- birthdays, holidays, appointments, etc and it doesn't seem like it would be easy to write in. What would be cool is if you could input all of that stuff before they printed the calendar, and the event would ink up maybe a week before so as to give you a reminder. Just a thought, its still an awesome idea.

2.17.2010

Boarding passes not boring passes

This is a really cool site I stumbled upon recently discussing redesigns of airplane boarding passes. The author does a really good job of explaining the experience. There are things you need to know before security- terminal number, after security- gate and flight number, during boarding- seat number, and throughout the journey- departure time. Why can't boarding passes display this information in an easier way: passfail.squarespace.com/

2.12.2010

One more for good measure

Most of these devices aren't that practical or useful- they're just cool. Plus I love food and food-related devices
www.toxel.com/tech/2010/02/08/12-cool-products-for-your-kitchen/

Because I need something that's already built in

Bonus post, but not really, since I forgot to do anything last week. This little gem I found in Dominick's, it's a tuna and veggie "Press & Strainer", although based on the text size on the packaging I would have to claim that the product is really called a Tuna & Veggie which sounds appetizing. Too bad its a blue plastic disc that doesn't need to exist.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure everyone else uses the lid to a can to also drain the can. I might be making that up though. This blue product is already built into the packaging of tuna and canned foods so why would I ever need this product.

I can admit that when I was a kid I would have died to have this product. I remember walking down the soda aisle and begging my mom for a special top which keeps sodas (pop for those who speak strangely) from going flat. My mom always responded with a no, but not because it wasn't a clever invention. The reason she gave was that our family of four finishes a two-liter bottle before it goes flat- there's no need. I guess the point of this post is that products should fulfill a need. This Tuna & Veggie doesn't offer me anything. In fact, its just another thing I'd have to clean, plus- where would I put it?

2.11.2010

That deaf, dumb, and blind kid sure does laundry remarkably well considering his overwhelming handicaps

When doing laundry the other day, I noticed the fantastic device that stole all of my quarters. Although the machine was relatively new, the mechanism functioned like the coolest 1950's slot machine ever.

Everyone knows the hardships of sourcing and hoarding the necessary quarters to do laundry. Its quite an impossible task in our new "plastic world," and although I don't like to admit it, I usually cave in and buy a roll of quarters from the bank- I know its cheating, but seriously, who uses cash anymore?

Placing $1.50 of my hard earned quarters into the perfectly sized slots felt like a breeze. There were just enough slots for the quarters I needed to place in the device, but thankfully it was labeled so I new exactly how much money I was wasting on laundry. After I set the water temp, then the magic happened. It took all I had to not break down and cry at the sheer majesty that I was about to experience. Pressing forward on the front tab of the coin-o-matic sent a wash (haha laundry) of nostalgia down my spine. It was like pushing on a backwards pinball plunger. The slider offered a strong springed resistance and slid along its metal base with such a satisfying sound, I wish I had recorded it.

That was only half of the experience though, because after I pushed it in, I had to pull it out in order to finish. With a swift pull, the device gave off a satisfying "shunk" as the quarters fell to the bottom of the coin bank and the machine began. How great! Like a backwards pinball machine that eats quarters and cleans my clothes.

1.31.2010

The Homer and why are Mini SUVs so damn popular?




So on my way home from class the other day, I was walking down Simpson and came across this ridiculous sight. Five "mini SUVs," parked in a row, all in either white or silver and all with only two doors and four seats.
The sight itself was funny enough for me to take a picture, but then I decided to write about the complete stupidity in not only mini SUVs but also the lack of style and creativity in the current car market.

I really don't understand why anyone would want to purchase such a vehicle. The four seaters hold no more people than a regular sedan, and additional storage space is minimal at best. The performance is totally overshadowed compared to any sedan of similar cost, and I won't even talk about fuel economy. None of these vehicles were anything special to look at, and all featured similar generic styling. The only foreseeable advantage to owning one of these is the ability to sit higher than other drivers on the road, granting you some sort of superiority complex? To bastardize Roosevelt's classic saying, "be an idiot, and drive a big stick."

Which brings me to my next point, the lack of originality in car styling. As I was walking, I thought I was experiencing deja vu, but when the fifth car came, I realized that each car was a different brand, however, they looked almost identical. Why can't someone ever break the mold? Car's have looked the same for ages, but there has to be a better form factor that could increase something? Even the new Smart Car is different, but fits the same mold as the Mini Cooper.

I am reminded of the classic Simpsons episode when Homer is given full reign to design a car that the everyman would want. While ruining his brother's car company, and creating a monstrosity, Homer's failure highlights the stupidity of the auto industry and provides some new insights in automotive design that people might not have thought of. The Simpsons also highlights the importance and yet sometimes failure of involving the user in the design process. As Don Norman highlights so often, users are stupid, and it takes a designer to actually understand and interpret what a user really needs.

"Onboard something-or-other and rack-and-peanut steering."

I took this image from http://www.cooper.com/journal/2008/09/the_homer.html and I would suggest reading the article. Its short and illustrates the perils of designing for the "elastic user"

href="http://www.cooper.com/journal/assets_c/2008/09/02---Homer_Blueprints-thumb-350x228.jpg">

1.24.2010

Mutant Birds love Slices of Bread


I was at the Davis St El stop the other day and found took a picture of a really interesting sign. It gets the designer's point across, "don't feed the birds," but what struck me were the proportions of everything. I'm no graphic designer and I'm not saying I could do any better, I just wanted to comment on the human sized bird, trying to eat full slices of bread the size of his head. It made me chuckle

1.20.2010

Enabling Alcoholism

This lever action bottle opener has some of the greatest usability innovations in bottle opening technologies in the past century:

The levering and screw design moves the interaction from twisting with the wrist to a much more joint friendly and satisfying lever motion that requires now turning. The two handles are curved on the outside affording grasping and easily squeeze towards the center to clasp around the neck of the bottle. The unenclosed mechanisms allows the user to identify the physics of the process providing a reflective component to the emtional design of the device. When one grabs the handle shaped lever and starts pulling down, the screw mechanism turns the corkscrew skewering the cork. To remove the cork, all one needs to do is lift up on the lever and it comes out with a satisfying plunk. The difficulty in use still lies in removing the cork from the screw which must be done manually, but all of the turning and leveraging of the old corkscrew is improved with one swift up and down motion of the user's hand.

Not only is this product useful, it looks cool and serves as a great conversation piece at dinner parties and socials.

1.10.2010

Checkout Lane Dividing Bar: Dividing Groceries or Dividing People?

As I stand in line at the checkout lane, shopping cart filled with groceries, I wait for the shopper in front of me to place down the distinct yellow bar behind her groceries as a definitive, nonverbal, mark that she is indeed finished unloading her groceries. It represents and ending and yet a beginning; it is now my turn to transfer all of my groceries to the conveyor. I consider it a race of consideration for my fellow shopper. I must keep up with the movement of the belt and I try to unload everything and stamp down my victory bar behind the Dr Skipper to trade off the never ending relay race of grocery shopping.

The checkout lane divider bars are possibly the simplest interaction one performs at the grocery store but perhaps the most important. The plain plastic bar segments off different buyers' goods, it interacts with the belt movement to halt motion while the previous person pays, and ensures that I don't have to pay for my neighbor's grapes. The bar continues in a seamless circular set of interactions:
1) I pickup my bar from its resting place
2) It rides along with my groceries until its position stops the belt
3) The cashier moves the bar back to its narrow track conveniently pushing its bar brothers further down the line

A perfect yellow bar that can even serve as advertising space, the checkout lane divider bar proves to be a simple yet effective design.