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内容简介在这一期,我分享我过去近3个月的创业经历,刻意做的一些放弃和减法:没有融资和借债、不做B端和定制化、拒绝功能膨胀和模仿、拒绝过度加班、坦诚地面对自己。如果你对我的产品感兴趣,可以搜索同言翻译。如果想要了解更多我的分享,欢迎加入知识星球。同言翻译:Transyncai.com知识星球:t.zsxq.com/7amVa参考文献: Kenney, M., & Zysman, J. Risk and reward: Venture capital and the making of Silicon Valley. Stanford University Press. Rams, D. Less but Better: The Design Ethos of Dieter Rams. Verlag Hermann Schmidt Mainz. Josh Miller. Arc Browser 创始人访谈及演讲内容。 Manus AI. Manus AI 官方产品文档与发布内容。 Loveart AI. Loveart AI 官方产品介绍与用户案例。 Gralona AI. Gralona 官方会议纪要产品案例及财报数据。 Friedman, M. Capitalism and Freedom. University of Chicago Press. Christensen, C. M. The Innovator's Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail. Harvard Business School Press.
Benjamin Edgar is a Chicago-based designer who's been making a lot of very cool things for a very long time. He co-authored the early aughts blog THE BRILLIANCE, founded Boxed Water, and more recently started An Object Company. We talk about the importance of design consistency, how we're at an inflection point with “phone stuff,” Dieter Rams, bar etiquette, applied design, Adrien Brody's art, why it's interesting to know what you're interested in, Chicago, the sin wave of culture and more. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ned and Meg admire the magnificent Dieter Rams, who pointed and shrugged his way into our hearts, and we discuss his legendary ten principles of good design.
We continue to make slow progress developing our HealthKit dashboard app, codenamed "Bento Fit." In this episode, our update includes more HealthKit metrics discussion, Xcode Cloud configurations, a discussion on Git workflows, implementing basic logging, using Grok to write bad HealthKit code, and Kotaro's "Full Dieter Rams" UI designs. Plus, it looks like we need a persistence strategy, maybe SwiftData, maybe something else?## Show Notes- Bento Fit Update - How to manage your time on a side project - Metrics discussion from Side Project Saturday - Xcode Cloud is setup - Steve learned Swift Testing - Git workflows - HealthKit metric updates - Using LLMs for HealthKit code generation - Kotaro's UI update & discussion- Prototype Driven Development- Next Time - Add/Remove bento boxes dynamically - More HealthKit metrics to implement - Data model / caching strategy? - Learn Swift Charts?- Wrap-Up - http://phillycocoa.org- Not a Sponsor - https://miovino.app## Chapters00:00 Introductions & The Story So Far04:55 Bento Fit Update: Setting Expectations06:12 Bento Fit Update: SPS Metrics Discussion09:30 Bento Fit Update: Xcode Cloud & Git Workflow14:52 Bento Fit Update: Logging17:20 Bento Fit Update: Implementing HealthKit Metrics18:27 Bento Fit Update: Using Grok to Generate HealthKit Code21:53 Bento Fit Update: Kotaro's UI Update & Discussion27:28 HealthKit Data Persistence Strategy33:06 Prototype Driven Development35:58 Next Sprint51:10 Wrap-Up53:07 TagIntro music: "When I Hit the Floor", © 2021 Lorne Behrman. Used with permission of the artist.
En este episodio de "The Designer Class", nos adentramos en las lecciones que podemos aprender de la trayectoria profesional de Dieter Rams, uno de los diseñadores más influyentes del siglo XX. Conocido por su filosofía de "menos, pero mejor" y sus "Diez Principios del Buen Diseño". Rams transformó productos cotidianos en iconos de funcionalidad y estética. Puedes ver más en nuestro blog creatyum.media
Send us a textHow can you encourage a retail bank, which will always focus on risk management and stability, to innovate? In this episode we talk with Ian Crawford, NatWest Group's Head of Innovation Design. We explore the ways in which designers are uniquely positioned to help corporate innovation programs to think differently.Ian shares how his group interviews design candidates to evaluate their innovation mindsets, and talks about the trends that his group believe will reshape retail banking in the future. In a conversation that roams from Dieter Rams to Blackadder's Christmas Carol, we explore how you can promote two of your designer superpowers: Framing and encouraging bolder thinking, Expert facilitation helping to create consensus and commitment to get great ideas into the real world. About IanIan leads an Innovation Design team at NatWest Group as part of a wider department of approximately 70 people in Innovation & Partnerships. The department are responsible for catalysing the creation of brand new services, products and experiences for the wider Group, often leveraging start-ups and other technology partners to bring NatWest's strategy to life.He is an award-winning designer with over 15 years of experience across design, digital strategy and marketing and has worked with a wide range of organisations including Lloyds Bank, Amazon, Microsoft, CYBG, Standard Life, the NHS and Scottish Government among many others.Sources cited in this podcast:The Innovation Expedition: The Jobs to be Done Playbook:When Coffee and Kale Compete: Service Design YAP is developed and produced by the Service Design Network UK Chapter.Its aim is to engage and connect the wider Service Design community. Episode Host: Stephen Wood Production Assistance: Jean Watanya
Erik Spiekermann ist ohne Zweifel eine der absoluten Legenden des deutschen Designs. Ich traue mich ohne weiteres, ihn in einem Atemzug mit Leuten wie Dieter Rams zu nennen. Für mich war es eine echt große Nummer, als ich ihn für Folge 39 in seiner Werkstatt in Berlin treffen durfte. Ich war etwas eingeschüchtert, klar, ich mein: Erik Spiekermann! Aber Erik war einfach gleich Erik: Freundlich, witzig, easy going. Wir tranken Cafe und saßen im Innenhof in der Sonne und quatschten einfach für zwei Stunden. Damals hatte ich die Folge aufgeteilt. Ich weiß auch nicht so genau warum, irgendwie dachte ich, zwei Stunden könnten zu lang sein oder sowas. Aber ich hab seit damals immer mal wieder daran gedacht und fand es eigentlich schade, denn ich habe Erik sonst noch nie so umfassend und frei über sein Leben sprechen gehört. Und deshalb habe ich genau dieses Gespräch für heute rausgepickt.
OpenFreeMap puts OpenStreetMap data on your website for free, Fatih Arslan builds a Dieter Rams inspired iPhone dock, Joseph Gentle thinks the Rust programming language feels like a first-gen product & the web dev community is debating the viability of Web Components once again.
OpenFreeMap puts OpenStreetMap data on your website for free, Fatih Arslan builds a Dieter Rams inspired iPhone dock, Joseph Gentle thinks the Rust programming language feels like a first-gen product & the web dev community is debating the viability of Web Components once again.
OpenFreeMap puts OpenStreetMap data on your website for free, Fatih Arslan builds a Dieter Rams inspired iPhone dock, Joseph Gentle thinks the Rust programming language feels like a first-gen product & the web dev community is debating the viability of Web Components once again.
This is a recap of the top 10 posts on Hacker News on September 23rd, 2024.This podcast was generated by wondercraft.ai(00:37): I designed a Dieter Rams-inspired iPhone dockOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41623467&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(01:41): What's inside the QR code menu at this cafe?Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41622632&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(02:48): How the iPhone 16's electrically-released adhesive worksOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41623251&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(03:57): Cloudflare's new marketplace lets websites charge AI bots for scrapingOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41625903&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(04:57): The Intelligence AgeOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41628167&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(06:12): In 1870, Lord Rayleigh used oil and water to calculate the size of moleculesOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41629475&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(07:37): The war on remote work has nothing to do with productivityOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41622640&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(08:46): iPhone 16 Pro Storage Expansion 128GB to 1TB [video]Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41631130&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(09:55): A terrible way to jump into colocating your own stuffOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41622653&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(11:07): Free-form floor plan design using differentiable Voronoi diagramOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41627549&utm_source=wondercraft_aiThis is a third-party project, independent from HN and YC. Text and audio generated using AI, by wondercraft.ai. Create your own studio quality podcast with text as the only input in seconds at app.wondercraft.ai. Issues or feedback? We'd love to hear from you: team@wondercraft.ai
In this episode of The Design Vault, we explore the iconic Braun ET66 calculator, designed by Dieter Rams in 1987. We discuss how this calculator, now featured in the Museum of Modern Art, embodies Rams' 'less, but better' philosophy through its distinctive features like convex circular buttons and a high-contrast color scheme. We highlight how the ET66's ergonomic design and intuitive layout demonstrate the lasting impact of thoughtful industrial design. Our conversation then shifts to Dieter Rams' influential career as Chief Design Officer at Braun and his ten principles of good design. We examine how Rams' approach has shaped modern design, including its notable influence on Apple's product aesthetics. We also discuss how the ET66's design principles have been adapted for digital interfaces, as seen in the iPhone's calculator app. We conclude by challenging the myth of the lone design genius, exploring the shift towards collaborative, user-centered design approaches in today's complex technological landscape. Join us as we shape the future of design by learning from the past. FOLLOW US Linkedin Albert Linkedin Thamer Instagram Hosts: Albert Shum and Thamer Abanami Production and Post-production: Romina Hakim, Toño Tellez and Poonam Patel Music: Red Lips Media LLC Brand Design: Rafael Poloni
Die diplomierte Innenarchitektin und Design-Expertin Barbara Glasner (*1970) arbeitet als freie Beraterin, Kuratorin und Herausgeberin für Design und Architektur sowie als Creative Director für den Verlag form in Frankfurt am Main und Konstanz. Im Rahmen ihrer Zusammenarbeit mit dem Rat für Formgebung/German Design Council kuratierte und projektierte sie von 2001 bis 2007 für die internationale Kölner Möbelmesse imm cologne die Editionen des Designprojekts „ideal house cologne“, mit denen renommierte Gestalter*innen wie Zaha Hadid, Hella Jongerius, Patricia Urquiola, Fernando und Humberto Campana, Konstantin Grcic, Ronan und Erwan Bouroullec, Naoto Fukasawa, Stefan Diez und Dieter Rams ihre Visionen für das Wohnen der Zukunft vorstellten. Begleitend zu den Messeprojekten fanden internationale Pressereisen statt. Hierfür entwickelte Barbara Glasner eigens ein Ausstellungsformat, dass die jeweiligen Designer*innen und deren Arbeit portraitierte. Weiterhin entwickelte und kuratierte sie für die imm cologne mehrfach das Ausstellungsforum für internationale Nachwuchsdesigner*innen „inspired by cologne“ sowie das Interiordesign-Trend- und Vortragsforum, jeweils mit Begleitpublikationen. 2006 war sie die verantwortliche Kuratorin für die Ausstellung „Weltmeister Design Deutschland" im Haus der Gegenwart in München, ein Projekt des Rat für Formgebung und des SZ Magazins in dessen Mittelpunkt die Inszenierung deutscher Alltagsproduktkultur stand. Die Ausstellung wurde stellvertretend für einen Katalog mit einer Sonderausgabe des SZ Magazins dokumentiert. Ebenfalls in Kooperation mit dem Rat für Formgebung konzeptionierte und projektierte sie diverse Designexpert*innen Workshops (z.B. BASF/Ultradur mit Stefan Diez, Konstantin Grcic, James Irvine und Hannes Wettstein, 2006, oder Dupont/Corian u.a. mit Blocher & Blocher, Schneider + Schumacher, KSP Engel Zimmermann, 2005), Vortragsformate sowie die internationale Wanderausstellung des „Bundespreis Produktdesign“ (heute German Design Award). 2008 veröffentlichte sie zusammen mit Petra Schmidt und Ursula Schöndeling das Buch „Patterns 2. Muster in Design, Kunst und Architektur“, 2009 in Zusammenarbeit mit Petra Schmidt das Buch „Chroma. Design, Architektur und Kunst in Farbe“ und 2012 mit Stephan Ott das Buch „Wonder Wood – Holz in Design, Architektur und Kunst“ (alle Birkhäuser Verlag). Alle Publikationen sind auch in englischer Sprache erschienen. Zusammen mit ihrem Ehemann Prof. Dr. Peter Wesner gründete sie 2011 den Verlag form in Frankfurt am Main und gibt als Creative Director unter anderem die form Designeditionen heraus, die sie mit renommierten Designer*innen als limitierte Objekte entwickelt. Seit 2018 ist sie Herausgeberin der wieder aufgelegten Buchreihe form Designklassiker. Für den Beschlaghersteller FSB Franz Schneider Brakel realisierte sie unter anderem die Corporate Publishing Projekte „Türklinke FSB 1144 von Jasper Morrison“ / „Door Handle FSB 1144 by Jasper Morrison“, 2019, „An der Oberfläche: Metalle in Architektur und Design“/„On the Surface: Metals in architecture and design“, 2020 sowie „Griff zum Himmel“/„Handle to Heaven“, 2021. 2023 veröffentlichte sie im Verlag form das Buch „Most Touched“, ein Kompendium mit über 1.000 Fotografien von Türgriffen aus aller Welt. Für das 2024 im Verlag form erschienenen Buch „Was ist gut 2023?“ des Deutschen Design Clubs war sie lektorierend und beratend tätig. Seit dem Sommersemester 2023 nimmt Barbara Glasner Lehraufträge an der HSPF Hochschule Pforzheim, Fakultät Design, Studiengänge Accessoire Design/Produktdesign/Modedesign zum Thema „Farbe“ und „Presentation“ wahr.
Tune into this 9th episode of a 10-part series, "Designer's Digest” with Chandrashekhar Wyawahare. We talk all about Industrial Design, Make in India, and the skills required to become an Industrial Designer. This series is in partnership with @godrejdesignlab. Designer's Digest series is about Design as a profession, its daily grind, the secrets to climbing the design career ladder, and what edge we'll need to thrive in the captivating design world. When you look at Braun or any industrial product designed by Dieter Rams, whether it's the Braun T4 Radio designed in 1960 or the T2 Table lighter designed in 1968. Undoubtedly, you'll fall in love with the form factor and the simplicity. Industrial design has always been fascinating. Chandrashekhar Wyawahare, co-founder of Futuring. Chandrashekhar graduated in architecture with a master's in industrial design from IDC in IIT Mumbai. Before co-founding Futuring, he worked in Europe with leading design studios. His work in Neumeister Design exposed him to a fine sense of styling and helped him develop a keen eye for perfection. Chandrashekhar has been subsequently responsible for a strikingly wide range of work from appliances to transportation design. He is a keen educator and has been on design juries at many architecture and design schools. Futuring sees Industrial Design as a dynamic, empathetic, and strategic process. Questions Who is an industrial designer? It has a wide canvas, specializing in multiple sub-disciplines. But what is the core of being an industrial designer? Or being a designer for that matter? How has the landscape of industrial design evolved in India? What were the biggest transitions you've witnessed, and how did Futuring adapt? Make in India is now a buzzword. Where are you on that? Should it be designed in India or made in India? Are we ready for it? In an era of mass production and globalization, what does it mean to be an "Indian" industrial designer? What Indian ethos do you think we can bring to the products we design or make? By the very definition of industrial products, it's safe to say that it's mass produced. Can mass-manufactured products truly be "high quality"? What compromises are typically made, and how can we advocate for better quality standards in Indian design? Consumerism often drives design trends. How do you balance aesthetics, user-centricity, and sustainability, and yet be cost-sensitive for a market like India? You have a keen interest in education and have been on jury panels in top design schools in India. What's happening in new-age India and how is the talent gearing towards entering the workforce? From skill to gender diversity to leveling up for actual work. How do you spot talent for Futuring? What gives you the confidence to recruit designers? What do you look for in their work/portfolios? You often speak about Industrial design one needs a good tech background, be it engineering or architecture. What does the Industrial designer's career ladder look like? From a new entrant to say, being a principal designer? What one piece of advice do you get from your mentor that you still practice? What advice to young designers? What according to you is the future of industrial design in India? Perhaps in the world of automation and meta-verse. Reference Reading https://futuring.design/Voices https://onlyonceshop.com/ https://www.punedesignfestival.com/speaker/chandrashekhar-wyawahare/
This is the inaugural DT101 Live!, with guest George Aye. George co-founded Greater Good Studio with the belief that design can help advance equity. Previously, he spent seven years at global innovation firm IDEO before being hired as the first human-centered designer at the Chicago Transit Authority. He speaks frequently across the US and internationally. George holds the position of Adjunct Full Professor at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Today, we are talking live about ethics in design in the design industry. Listen to learn about: >> What is ethical design? >> The current state of ethics in the design industry >> Project “gut checks” and saying no to projects >> How power can warp ethics Show Highlights [01:33] Audience welcome + breakfast fun + mochi doughnuts! [05:20] Dawan shares the event agenda. [07:42] Dawan introduces George. [09:06] George starts off by talking about human-centered design. [09:41] The story of the invention of e-cigarettes on the Stanford campus and how it relates to human-centered design. [11:13] What George found most shocking about the story. [11:24] It's not just about can we do something, it's about should we do it? [12:38] Looking at the roots of the design industry. [13:13] The weakness of Dieter Rams' ten principles of good design. [14:20] What we need is an ethical framework for good design. [15:12] How Greater Good Studio approaches ethics in design. [15:58] Lived experience is expertise. [16:21] Design is transformative. [17:04] The design industry and education has trained designers to always say yes to projects, but not to know when to say no. [18:01] George's Ten Provocative Questions. [19:10] Losing one's inner conscience and voice. [20:47] A succinct definition of power. [21:24] Power asymmetry. [23:59] The risk of working on projects that potentially cause harm. [26:00] Greater Good Studio's weekly gut checks and breakup emails. [27:38] Some patterns and a framework when writing your own breakup emails. [29:12] Design is an accelerant. [31:08] We must call out the ways in which design can be harmful. [31:24] George's ideas around a possible standard design code of ethics and standards for practice. [32:05] Accountability, not gatekeeping. [37:21] Leadership needs to constantly practice being receptive to hard feedback from the team. [38:19] The gut check is a deliberate tripping hazard. [40:28] Ethics for people who don't normally handle ethics. [42:48] Approaching the potential for harm in a trained-to-be-optimistic design industry. [47:58] How do we approach C-suite and other leaders to have conversations around ethics? [51:49] What the next ten years looks like for ethics in design. Links George on LinkedInGeorge at SAICGreater Good StudioGreater Good Studio on MediumArticles by George Why designers write on the walls (and why you should, too)Design Education's Big Gap: Understanding the Role of PowerIt's Time to Define What “Good” Means in Our IndustryThe Gut Check, by Sara Cantor Aye DT 101 EpisodesDesign for Good + Gut Checks + Seeing Power with George Aye — DT101 E50 Design for Good + Ethics + Social Impact with Sara Cantor — DT101 E100 Trauma-informed Design + Social Work + Design Teams with Rachael Dietkus — DT101 E81
This is the inaugural DT101 Live!, with guest George Aye. George co-founded Greater Good Studio with the belief that design can help advance equity. Previously, he spent seven years at global innovation firm IDEO before being hired as the first human-centered designer at the Chicago Transit Authority. He speaks frequently across the US and internationally. George holds the position of Adjunct Full Professor at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Today, we are talking live about ethics in design in the design industry. Listen to learn about: >> What is ethical design? >> The current state of ethics in the design industry >> Project “gut checks” and saying no to projects >> How power can warp ethics Show Highlights [01:33] Audience welcome + breakfast fun + mochi doughnuts! [05:20] Dawan shares the event agenda. [07:42] Dawan introduces George. [09:06] George starts off by talking about human-centered design. [09:41] The story of the invention of e-cigarettes on the Stanford campus and how it relates to human-centered design. [11:13] What George found most shocking about the story. [11:24] It's not just about can we do something, it's about should we do it? [12:38] Looking at the roots of the design industry. [13:13] The weakness of Dieter Rams' ten principles of good design. [14:20] What we need is an ethical framework for good design. [15:12] How Greater Good Studio approaches ethics in design. [15:58] Lived experience is expertise. [16:21] Design is transformative. [17:04] The design industry and education has trained designers to always say yes to projects, but not to know when to say no. [18:01] George's Ten Provocative Questions. [19:10] Losing one's inner conscience and voice. [20:47] A succinct definition of power. [21:24] Power asymmetry. [23:59] The risk of working on projects that potentially cause harm. [26:00] Greater Good Studio's weekly gut checks and breakup emails. [27:38] Some patterns and a framework when writing your own breakup emails. [29:12] Design is an accelerant. [31:08] We must call out the ways in which design can be harmful. [31:24] George's ideas around a possible standard design code of ethics and standards for practice. [32:05] Accountability, not gatekeeping. [37:21] Leadership needs to constantly practice being receptive to hard feedback from the team. [38:19] The gut check is a deliberate tripping hazard. [40:28] Ethics for people who don't normally handle ethics. [42:48] Approaching the potential for harm in a trained-to-be-optimistic design industry. [47:58] How do we approach C-suite and other leaders to have conversations around ethics? [51:49] What the next ten years looks like for ethics in design. Links George on LinkedInGeorge at SAICGreater Good StudioGreater Good Studio on MediumArticles by George Why designers write on the walls (and why you should, too)Design Education's Big Gap: Understanding the Role of PowerIt's Time to Define What “Good” Means in Our IndustryThe Gut Check, by Sara Cantor Aye DT 101 EpisodesDesign for Good + Gut Checks + Seeing Power with George Aye — DT101 E50 Design for Good + Ethics + Social Impact with Sara Cantor — DT101 E100 Trauma-informed Design + Social Work + Design Teams with Rachael Dietkus — DT101 E81
Soon to celebrate his 50th birthday by journeying from Paris to Tokyo by car along the Southern Silk Road, the French Moroccan creative director, artist, and entrepreneur Ramdane Touhami says he's “thirsty for life like it's just the beginning,” and it shows. Among his 17 (yes, 17) companies are the cult grooming brand Officine Universelle Buly 1803, which he and his wife co-founded in 2014 and sold to LVMH in 2021; the Paris-based creative agency Art Recherche Industrie, whose clients include Christofle, Moynat, and Gohar World; and Hotel Drei Berge, which he opened in the Swiss Alps last year. With each of his enterprises, Touhami has proven, time and again, how much craft matters—that there's a real demand for it in a streamlined world that prioritizes efficiency, and that it's not necessarily at odds with turning a profit.On the episode, Touhami talks about the parallels between Japan and Switzerland, business as a religion, and the healing power of mountains.Special thanks to our Season 9 presenting sponsor, L'École, School of Jewelry Arts.Show notes:Ramdane Touhami[5:29] Hotel Drei Berge Hotel[5:29] Élisée Reclus[8:36] Angelo Mangiarotti[8:36] Tobia Scarpa[8:36] Dieter Rams[5:29] “Ramdane Touhami's Peak Performance”[17:12] Mos Def[20:28] Henry David Thoreau[28:16] Officine Universelle Buly 1803[28:16] Cire Trudon[1:00:35] Aman[27:06] Ignacio Mattos[28:16] LVMH[34:54] An Atlas of Natural Beauty[34:33] Bernard Arnault[34:54] Izumi Aki[41:54] Société Helvétique d'Impression Typographique[43:54] Émile Shahidi[44:30] Radical Media[44:59] Tricontinental magazine[57:24] “A Parisian Designer Builds His Dream House in a Former Brothel”[1:00:35] Southern Silk Road
In this episode, I explore the 10 design principles of Dieter Rams, an industrial design for the Braun company. I focus on two of the 10 and ask you one simple question as to the design of your own life.
Over the last few months, design engineering has by far been the #1 most requested topic. So I wanted to get the inside scoop from the team at Vercel to learn more. In this episode we get to hear from: 1. Glenn Hitchcock - https://twitter.com/glennui (Director of design engineering) 2. John Pham - https://twitter.com/JohnPhamous (Lead design engineer) The goal of this conversation is to help people understand the role that design engineers play and to outline a path you can take to develop some of these skills. We talk about: - The strategy behind Vercel's new website - Why Vercel built a design engineering team - How designers collaborate with design engineers - What Vercel looks for when hiring design engineers - How Vercel is always building with re-usability in mind - + a lot more - Maggie Appleton's quote on software creation from our group interview - https://anthonyhobday.com/blog/20240122.html - vercel.com/ship - Framer components - https://drams.framer.website/ (inspired by Dieter Rams' design principles) - Screwball scramble - https://us.tomy.com/screwball-scramble/ - Dead Simple Sites - https://deadsimplesites.com/ Dive is where the best designers never stop learning
In this session we talk about the importance of user experience and user experience design. My guest is Meag Doherty, who works for the National Institutes of Health in the USA and is a Fellow of the Software Sustainability Institute (SSI). https://www.software.ac.uk/fellowship-programme/meag-doherty Meag's Fellow profile at the SSI. Check out the link to her contributions on the same page.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rmM0kRf8Dbk The YouTube page to the full clip from Donald Norman, the author of 'The Design of Everyday Things'https://designmuseum.org/discover-design/all-stories/what-is-good-design-a-quick-look-at-dieter-rams-ten-principles Dieter Rams, the influential industrial designer and his 10-point thesis on what makes a good designhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Pattern_Language The book by Christopher Alexander on design principles and the importance on finding a common (pattern) languagehttps://www.uxdesigninstitute.com/blog/history-of-ux/ A bit of history on User Experience (UX)Support the Show.Thank you for listening and your ongoing support. It means the world to us! Support the show on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/codeforthought Get in touch: Email mailto:code4thought@proton.me UK RSE Slack (ukrse.slack.com): @code4thought or @piddie US RSE Slack (usrse.slack.com): @Peter Schmidt Mastadon: https://fosstodon.org/@code4thought or @code4thought@fosstodon.org LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pweschmidt/ (personal Profile)LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/codeforthought/ (Code for Thought Profile) This podcast is licensed under the Creative Commons Licence: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
Wat kunnen andere product designers leren van Teenage engineering? Waarom zijn veel consumer products veel te braaf?In deze voorlaatste aflevering van het eerste seizoen van Re:Design hebben we het over de wereld van product design waar het wat speelser mag of uitnodigt tot spel. We hebben het onder andere over Dieter Rams, Apple en Nintendo en Polaroid. Thomas brengt een familie erfstuk mee en we nemen je mee door de geschiedenis van Braun en Olivetti.
En este episodio especial de RitaCast, cerramos la quinta temporada con una reflexión inspirada en las conversaciones recientes y un post en LinkedIn. Cristián "Ritalin" León comparte los "10 Principios del Buen Branded Content", inspirados en los principios de diseño del gran Dieter Rams, adaptados al mundo del contenido de marca. Desde la importancia del diseño hasta la necesidad de empatía y originalidad, estos principios buscan elevar la calidad y la efectividad del contenido que las marcas crean y comparten. ¡Imperdible! Además, Cristián anticipa lo que está por venir en la sexta temporada. No te pierdas estos valiosos insights y la oportunidad de profundizar en cómo crear contenido de marca que resuene y tenga impacto en tu negocio. Seas una Pyme o una marca grande.
news birthdays/events best documentaries to watch with kids word of the day news do you re-use your ziplocs? (ashley's grandma used to reuse tin foil) game: the princess bride quiz what's your favorite style of home? you won't believe which one came in first place news would you eat your favorite food if it was a different color? game: speakout it's almost music festival time...here's a basic 'survival list' news if you like pickles...you'll LOVE these products game: general trivia goodbye/fun facts....Clean Out Your Bookcase Day...Yes, your old dusty bookcase...take all the books off the shelves..have a plan to reorganize all the books, and what you plan on doing with the books that you don't want anymore....but make sure to dust off the ones you want to keep. the bookcase has existed in one way or another since the invention of books....some were basic...some very ornate. but in 1876 John Danner invents a revolving bookcase....then in 1960 Dieter Rams introduces his Vitsoe 606 Universal Shelving System....that modular system that mounts to a wall and allows users to move shelves.
Adrian und Ruben sprechen über 5 von 10 Thesen von Dieter Rams. Jede These bringt uns dazu dezent abzuschweifen. 5 VON 10 THESEN VON DIETER RAMS 6. Gutes Design ist ehrlich 7. Gutes Design ist langlebig 8. Gutes Design ist konsequent bis ins letzte Detail 9. Gutes Design ist umweltfreundlich 10. Gutes Design ist so wenig Design wie möglich Dieter Rams pointing at things he doesn't like https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ypyAg3Zbs_8
Adrian und Ruben sprechen über 5 von 10 Thesen von Dieter Rams. Jede These bringt uns dazu dezent abzuschweifen. 5 VON 10 THESEN VON DIETER RAMS 1. Gutes Design ist innovativ 2. Gutes Design macht ein Produkt brauchbar 3. Gutes Design ist ästhetisch 4. Gutes Design macht ein Produkt verständlich 5. Gutes Design ist unaufdringlich
Industrial Design, Creative Inspiration & Personal Projects! Today we chat about knowing when to stop, Keither Herring & KAWS at the AGO and Dieter Rams' design book.Industrial Design, Creative Inspiration & Personal Projects! - Knowing when to stop - Books from the holidays - Kieth Herring at the AGO - KAWS at the AGO - Dieter Rams - a complete work - The art of death stranding - The Creative Gene - Makehastecorp.comAll the links, all the time! Industrial Design, Creativity & Inspiration! For Industrial Design related business inquiries: Big Design Company Website: www.bigdesigncompany.com Big Design Company email: hi@bigdesigncompany.com Follow us on Instagram! @theprocess__podcast Zak Watson // LinkedIn Behance Website NFTs Dylan Torraville // LinkedIn Website 3D Dyl Behance Send us an email to hi.theprocesspodcast@gmail.com if you have any questions or want to reach out! The Process is a podcast created by industrial designers Dylan Torraville and Zak Watson. Dyl and Zak are picking up microphones to chat about their experiences in design school, personal projects and navigating the creative process. Oh yeah, and there will be some sweet interviews with other designers and friends too.
#11280% of property businesses don't realise what they set out to achieve. One reason for this is because they follow the herd by chasing money rather than customer satisfaction.As a result, they don't create products that stand the test of time.Julian Maurice of Icon Living has been a lettings agent, estate agent, project manager and plumber and DJ!But he is best known as a designer.In this episode, he reveals why design is so much more than aesthetics, why simplicity is important, and functionality is paramount.If you want to know how to maximise your rental income not just for today but in five, ten and fifteen years in the future, then listen now. During the episode, we discuss:· Dieter Ram's Principles of Design· Warren Buffet's · Functionality over aesthetics· How good design can future proof your property businessWhy The Majority Are Always WrongTo Join our Mailing List to access our 37 Question Due Diligence Checklist; our 23 Step Guide to Buying Property at Auction and our Monthly NewsletterTo Follow the Show on InstagramTo leave an honest review of Expat Property Story To tell us the one thing you're struggling with in UK propertyKeywordsshort term accommodation, builders, spacious shower cubicle, clerical contractors, student HMOs, bicycle storage, serving others, Council Bluffs, Iowa, challenges, expat property story, estimating costs, builder assessment, desired end result, quality level, buying based on one item, aesthetics, flooring, ceiling, colors, lighting, artwork, furniture, view outside, meetups, Hong Kong, Dubai, Singapore, 4 bed mini mos, housemates, serviced accommodation, design elements, HMO management, Dieter Rams, durability, smaller HMOs, profitability, deferred gratification, leverage in property market, ROI, remortgaging, loan-to-value ratios, rents, sale of property, bad tenants, operational requirements, perception of landlords, good design, functionality, tenant turnover, repeat bookings, durability, future-proofing, end user experience, ROI calculation, contractor categorization, dirty work, clean work, cleaning challenges, choice of materials, Expat Property Story podcast.
En este episodio, adentramos en el fascinante mundo del diseño y su evolución en manos de la tecnología, guiados por la perspectiva única de Cristina, una inteligencia artificial con más de 20 años de experiencia en el tema. Juntos, desmenuzamos los principios de Dieter Rams, reflexionamos sobre la era actual de productos y cómo a veces, en la búsqueda de estética, se sacrifica la funcionalidad. La conversación toma giros inesperados, sumergiéndonos en temas como la percepción de calidad en productos, el diseño minimalista de Tesla, y cómo las marcas grandes buscan sorprendernos mediante detalles sonoros y táctiles. Pero, ¿qué hace realmente especial a este podcast? Es la primera vez que la voz experta proviene de una máquina. Cristina, más que una simple asistente virtual, nos ofrece insights y reflexiones que nos llevan a replantearnos qué significa realmente el diseño en la era digital y cómo se entrelaza con la humanidad. Puedes buscarme por redes sociales con @olivernabani, y puedes encontrarme habitualmente en Twitch: http://twitch.tv/olivernabani Además si quieres participar en la comunidad mashain, tenemos un server de Discord donde compartimos nuestras inquietudes: https://discord.gg/7M2SEfbF Y por supuesto lo más importante, recuerda: No se dice Machine, se dice Mashain
Minimalism is Getting Absurd: Updating Dieter Rams' 10 Principles https://youtu.be/p5InhRf2JrU?si=HRNrFRhfNDMMa0pQ Dieter Rams' 10 Principles of Good Design https://www.heurio.co/dieter-rams-10-principles-of-good-design Diese 10 Thesen von Dieter Rams sollten Allgemeinbildung sein https://www.usabilityreport.de/design-thesen-rahms Sixties Fashion: Swinging London https://pca.st/uf3xika6 Iconic supernova captured by the James Webb Space Telescope https://www.newscientist.com/article/2390189-iconic-supernova-captured-by-the-james-webb-space-telescope/ meu perfil no Threads: https://www.threads.net/@renedepaulajr meu perfil no BlueSky https://bsky.app/profile/renedepaula.bsky.social meu perfil ... Read more
Jamey Stegmaier es el rey del producto, el Dieter Rams de los juegos de mesa. Hace solo 12 años su editorial Stonemaier Games dio su primer paso gracias a Viticulture y Kickstarter. Desde entonces se ha convertido en un referente en la industria, definiendo los estándares del crowdfunding de juegos de mesa, creando y editando […] Lee la entrada completa en 6x06 - Jamey Stegmaier.
Willkommen zu einer neuen Folge von UX Heroes! Dies ist der zweite Teil von meiner Session mit Oliver Reichenstein. Wenn ihr also den ersten Teil noch nicht gehört habt, holt ihr das am besten jetzt nach! Oliver Reichenstein ist Gründer und Direktor von iA, der Designberatung mit Sitz in Tokio, Zürich und Berlin. Er hat in Basel und Paris Philosophie studiert und arbeitete nach seinem Abschluss für eine Bandagentur. Im Jahr 2003 zog er nach Japan und gründete iA, wo er versucht, die Punkte zwischen Design und Philosophie zu verbinden. In dieser Episode spreche ich mit Oliver über den schmalen Grat zwischen Unfreundlichkeit und Einfachheit im Design und wie er dieses Thema in der Produktentwicklung angeht. Außerdem diskutieren wir die 10 Thesen für gutes Design von Dieter Rams und wieso ihn billige und primitive Kopien seiner Apps so quälen. (02:00) Dieter Rams 10 Thesen für gutes Design(06:30) Die Verbindung zwischen Design und Philosophie(13:30) Die Geschichte hinter dem iA Writer(23:00) Fantasielose Kopien von iAs Designs Olivers Links iA WebsiteiA WriteriA Presenter Ich hoffe, ihr fandet diese Folge nützlich. Wenn ihr auch die nächsten Folgen nicht verpassen wollt, abonniert UX Heroes doch auf Spotify, Apple oder eurem Lieblingspodcaster - ihr könnt uns dort auch bis zu 5 Sterne als Bewertung dalassen. Wenn Ihr Fragen oder Feedback habt, lasst uns doch eine Sprachnachricht auf ux-heroes.com da und wir beantworten sie mit etwas Glück in einer der nächsten Folgen. Ihr findet ihr mich auf LinkedIn unter Markus Pirker. Bis bald bei UX Heroes. UX Heroes ist ein Podcast von Userbrain.
Cosa c'entra è un podcast del Post condotto da Chiara Alessi. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Prof. Dr. Kai Vöckler ist Urbanist in Offenbach am Main. Gründungsmitglied von Archis Interventions. Stadtentwicklungsprojekte in Deutschland und Südosteuropa. Stadtforschungsprojekte in Europa und Asien. Wettbewerbe und städtebauliche Projekte mit Landschaftsarchitekten und Architekten. Publikationen zu kunsttheoretischen und urbanistischen Themen. Promotion in Kunstwissenschaft über Raumbilder des Städtischen. Kurator von Ausstellungen an europäischen Kulturinstitutionen. 2010–2021 Stiftungsprofessur für Kreativität im urbanen Kontext. Seit Wintersemester 2021 Professor für Urban Design am Fachbereich Design der Hochschule für Gestaltung (HfG) Offenbach. Zusammen mit Peter Eckart hat er mit dem OIMD – Offenbach Institute of Mobility Design den Forschungsschwerpunkt Mobilitätsdesign etabliert. Prof. Peter Eckart ist Designer in Frankfurt. Er studierte an der GHS Wuppertal und der HfbK Hamburg bei Prof. Peter Raacke und Prof. Dieter Rams. Bis 1993 arbeitete er als Produktdesigner bei Braun. Bis 2000 arbeitet er gemeinsam mit Olaf Barski als Eckart+Barski Design und heute mit unit-design in Frankfurt und Bern. Für Kunden wie die Stadt Frankfurt, EZB, FraPort, Lufthansa, Deutsche Bahn, Karlsruher Verkehrsverbund, Deutsche Bank, City of Riyadh, City of Paju, Roche, Siemens u.a. entwickelt das Büro Design im öffentlichen Interesse und Mobilität. Nach Lehraufträgen an der Hochschule Darmstadt ist Peter Eckart seit 1999 Professor für „Integrierendes Design“ an der HfG-Offenbach und Vizepräsident. Zusammen mit Kai Vöckler hat er mit dem Offenbach Institute of Mobility Design (OIMD) den Forschungsschwerpunkt etabliert.
Bu bölümde Hogwarts Legacy oyunu, Dieter Rams, Haptic Feedback, teenage engineering ve Bing Chat üzerine sohbet ettik.Bizi dinlemekten keyif alıyorsanız, kahve ısmarlayarak bizi destekleyebilir ve Telegram grubumuza katılabilirsiniz. :)Yorumlarınızı, sorularınızı ya da sponsorluk tekliflerinizi info@farklidusun.net e-posta adresine iletebilirsiniz. Dilerseniz bizi Twitter üzerinden takip edebilirsiniz.Zaman damgaları:00:00 - Giriş00:40 - Hogwarts Legacy16:09 - İzlediklerimiz23:17 - Okuduklarımız36:30 - Dieter Rams49:57 - Haptic Feedback1:03:20 - Kitaplar1:12:10 - Gazoz1:20:30 - teenage engineering1:39:28 - Bing Chat1:58:15 - Microsoft vs. SonyBölüm linkleri:Hogwarts LegacyDear EdwardHello Tomorrow!Shape IslandShape Up: Stop Running in Circles and Ship Work that MattersTechnopoly: The Surrender of Culture to TechnologyArriving Today: From Factory to Front Door-Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We BuyGlobal KöyAmazon Fulfillment Center Video TourTravelling salesman problemStarshipWeniger, Aber Besser/Less But BetterRams DocumentaryVitsoeButtons beat touchscreens in cars, and now there's data to prove itPlaying haptics - Apple Human Interface GuidelineBetter Haptics, 10x Faster with Lofelt StudioWait But WhyLife in Code: A Personal History of Technologyteenage engineeringThe founder of Teenage Engineering opens up to his creative spaceplaydatepanic - A Prototype Original iPodThe Story of PlaydatePerennial DesignFrom Bing to SydneyWhat Is ChatGPT Doing … and Why Does It Work?Why Microsoft's CEO is ready to take on Google with ChatGPTBing ChatHerMicrosoft recruited Nintendo and Nvidia to help fight Sony over the Activision deal
Jakob Wagner is a multi-award-winning Product Designer who has been creating iconic work from his Copenhagen-based studio for the last 30 years. His minimalist yet sophisticated style has seen him reach international acclaim, with his work winning numerous awards from IF and Red Dot. He's been awarded Designer of the Year, and you can find his work displayed in MoMA's permanent collection next time you're in NYC. In 2020, his studio made a pivotal change to work exclusively with brands that align with his personal commitment to "improve our shared future". Along with this new direction, Jakob set out to develop an entirely new product company – Rejoyn, which strives to create products with a deeper meaning, helping us to reconnect with our ancestral past and discover the next "human operating system". We look at his studio's three decades of invention and innovation, touching upon some of his most famous collaborations with technology and furniture brands. But, where it gets really good, is where we get deep into the 'unseen, but felt' aspect of design – the intangible energy and meaning that objects have provided the human race throughout millennia and how Jakob's new focus is a commitment to taking a look at the past, to inform the future. In other words, how design can help us unlock a better version of ourselves, moving from the distraction of modern life to a new 'human OS'. If that didn't intrigue you enough, Jakob wraps up our interview with his personal design values – over thirty years of experience boiled down in a few short minutes (which gives Dieter Rams a run for his money). This might be the most profoundly philosophical conversation yet on The Design Podcast. Get show updates on Instagram: @design_podcast https://www.instagram.com/design_podcast/ LinkedIn: @design_podcast https://www.linkedin.com/company/design-podcast All episodes are available on: www.designpodcast.co
On this week's show we look at an article at CE Pro which is a list of 12 products that CE Pro writer Bob Archer thought were 2022's products of the year. We only look at two products. One that is unobtainium and the other a mere mortal can buy today. We also have a buying guide that is a bit different than our usual one. We also read your email and take a look at the week's news. News: Bowers & Wilkins And McLaren Automotive Launch Px8 McLaren Edition Headphone Bally Sports Content Is Available to Samsung Smart TV Users Google Home routines keep saying that the Nest x Yale lock has ‘been unlocked' Oppo's hi-res audio chip could finally make wireless earbuds sound as good as wired Other: Monoprice Blackbird 4K HDMI Audio Extractor Ara's Woodworking Join the Flaviar Whisky Club and get a free bottle Bob Archer's 2022 Products of the Year We found this article (Bob Archer's 2022 Products of the Year) at CE Pro which is a list of 12 products that CE Pro writer Bob Archer thought were, as the title suggests, 2022's products of the year. We are going to highlight two products on the list, one is unobtainium and the other a mere mortal can buy today. The rest of the items on the list are things that most people can buy and a few that we dream of buying. Please check it out, it's linked in the show notes. Unobtainium DALI KORE Loudspeaker Taking a step up into the rarified air of high-end audiophile speakers, the Danish company DALI applied its impressive R&D resources to the development of its $110,000 Kore loudspeakers. Emphasizing the company's fundamental audio philosophies and a return to its Danish roots through the use of Danish labor and raw materials, the KORE performs at extremely high levels. The 88dB, 4-ohm speaker delivers a frequency response of 26Hz to 34kHz and the statuesque speakers nicely complement a range of home designs and amplifiers to deliver lots of musical fun. By the way, each speaker weighs 148Kg (not pounds!!!). In pounds that's 325!!! I thought this was funny! From the user's manual: Disposal - If you want to dispose of your DALI KORE speakers, don't mix them with your general household waste. In accordance with EU legislation, a separate collection system for used electronic products enables private households in EU member states, Switzerland, Liechtenstein and Norway to return used electronic products free of charge to designated collection facilities or to a retailer (if you purchase a similar replacement product). If you reside in a country not mentioned above, please contact your local authorities to determine the correct method of disposal and prevent any potential negative effects on the environment and human health For Mortals Epson Pro Cinema LS12000 4K PRO-UHD Laser Projector If the projector category had a pound-for-pound ranking like the UFC, the leader of the pack would be Epson's LS12000 laser projector. The 2,700-lumen LS12000 features the company's 4K PRO-UHD pixel shifting technology, along with its 32-bit ZX Picture Processor and laser light engine that delivers up to 20,000 of lamp life. The LS12000 produces nice levels of image brightness, color performance and image clarity. You can find these online for $5000. Projector Central rates this projector Performance 5 Stars, Features 4 ½ Stars, Ease of Use 4 ½ Stars, and Value 5 Stars. Gift Buying Guide We usually do a buying guide this time of year but you can sum it up like this. Go to Costco and buy an OLED or QLED TV by either Samsing, Sony or LG. And if you are budget conscious take a look at Vizio or TCL. Yes that is an oversimplification but this year we wanted to help you find something that the music, movie or smarthome lover will be thrilled to unwrap. So without further ado, here is our 2022 gift giving guide for Audiophiles, Movie Lovers and Smarthome Owners. Audiophiles Pro-Ject Debut Carbon EVO, Audiophile Turntable with Carbon Fiber tonearm, Electronic Speed Selection and pre-Mounted Sumiko Rainier Phono Cartridge $600. The new Debut Carbon EVO represents the epitome of Pro-Ject's philosophy: high performance, clean aesthetics, and superb value. The elegant, simple aesthetic is unmarred by gimmicky lights, sliders, and buttons. It is a pure, high-performance turntable. Hi-Fi, The History of High-End Audio Design $85 "Gideon Schwartz's book goes on a visual journey through the innovative world of home stereo design, from the tank-like amplifiers of the ‘50s to the sleek streaming hubs of today. Hi-Fi's 272 pages are filled with photos of iconic systems, including Bose's earliest forays into loudspeakers, and Dieter Rams' famous all-white turntable design for Braun. Warning: Perusing this book may result in eBay-fueled debt."―Wired Online Custom Audio Rack/Furniture (prices vary $250 up to $3000) These stands are designed to be simple and elegant. Depending on your requirement, many designers can custom build something just for you! Typical designs come with enough shelf space to hold a turntable and amplifier with enough room left over for your record collection. Movie Lover Movie Posters - Movie posters are easy to find on Amazon or ebay. The real old ones are expensive but you can find replicas for as little as $10. Framing costs more. Custom Acoustic Panels ($100 24”X24”X1”) - Get better sound while adding a nice visual element to your theater with acoustic panels. Movie Logbook Notebook $26 - Sure you can set up a spreadsheet with this information but where's the fun in that! Keep this log book in your theater and keep a diary of what you watch and who you watched it with. Home Automation Starter Kit ($200) - There are so many starter kits out there but for this list we decided on simple lighting system to dip your toes in the automation arena. We also chose the philips hue lights because they are compatible with everything and will support matter soon. Start with one room and work your way up to your entire house. Hubitat Elevation ($99.95) - For that someone who is a little more technical and does not want to be beholden to a cloud system for their home automation, this gift is ideal! By combining the advantages of local automation processing with cloud IoT connectivity, Hubitat's innovative Hubitat Elevation hub ensures personal data privacy and is more reliable and responsive than competitive cloud-based solutions. Hubitat Elevation is compatible with popular home automation devices, comes with a variety of built-in apps, and has an active user community to share ideas, insights and solutions. Smart locks - There are plenty of smart locks out there to choose from. Last week we had a listener write in about his Level Invisible Lock. They range in price from $199 up to $399 depending on style and lock mechanism. The best thing about these locks are that they don't need to change the style and look of the original lock. There are models by Schlage and Kwikset as well. But for these you really need to know the style and look of the lock you are replacing.
Uppvärmning Ett tråkigt hörn Årets julkalender - ett trevligt hörn Ämnen Tangentbord, möss, och arbetsplatser Skärmäventyr - Fredrik har mer plats på skrivbordet En bra kundupplevelse - Fredrik blev portad Appar för grupper och Microsofts önskan att bygga en allt-i-ett-app. Vi är milt skeptiska Film & TV Rams - dokumentär om Dieter 4/5 BMÅ (F) Länkar Pixelbelysning - Twinkly squares Marsedit 5 Red sweater software Fredriks 40%-tangentbord Ett billigt HP-tangentbord Fredriks 4K-skärm Magnet - fönsterhanteringsapp för Mac Zencastr Torget Freja e-ID Rams - dokumentären om Dieter Rams Gary Hustwit - dokumentärfilmaren som gjort Rams med flera fina dokumentärer Apple-design som liknar Dieter Rams-design String-systemet Vimeo App: the human story Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-335-riktigt-viktigt.html
James and Nick celebrate episode 100 with a marathon 2 hour podcast. Guests call in to chat about music, AI, and hobbies. Nick reviews the Quest Pro. James has a hot take on Dieter Rams. Email us your questions at minordetailspodcast@gmail.comKYOSHY (ᴛʜᴇ ᴋɪᴅ) 100th Episode Themehttps://soundcloud.com/yoshikon/minor-details-pod-100th
Dieter Rams es una de las figuras más importantes de la historia del diseño industrial. Fue Director de Diseño de Braun la mayor parte de su carrera, dónde diseñó, junto con su equipo, más de 1800 productos, marcando así la identidad de la marca. Su concepción del diseño llega hasta una compañía tecnológica que quizás […] La entrada ¿Belleza o funcionalidad? ¿Qué es más importante a la hora de diseñar?, con Guillem Ferran – LA BELLEZA #228 se publicó primero en Toni Colom.
Objetos, utilidad, felicidad y… diseño. Diseño y sociedad de consumo. La obsolescencia programada y el diseño sostenible. El credo del maestro Dieter Rams.
We were super excited to chat with Katie Lim while she was director of Industrial Design @ BARK! The ultimate destination for dog toys. Now a senior industrial designer @Frog, we chatted with Katie about designing for dogs, corporate vs consultancy, and leadership.Show Notes: http://katielim.com/Follow Katie Lim on Instagram | @katielim.idBark AustraliaBARKhttp://naotofukasawa.com/projects/What is "Good" Design? A quick look at Dieter Rams' Ten Principles.Follow (REDACTED) on Instagram | @redacted_designpodFollow (REDACTED) on TikTok | @redacted_designpodHosted by Lucy Bishop, Fraser Greenfield & Louis Mills with guest Katie Lim
Nach dem Studium der Architektur nahm Dieter Rams eine Stelle beim Elektrohersteller Braun an. Dort blieb er über 40 Jahre und entwarf so ziemlich alles für den Haushalt, was einen Stecker hat. Seine Arbeit inspirierte auch den Chefdesigner von Apple.
Das Aussehen von Apple-Produkten ohne die Vorarbeit von Dieter Rams - undenkbar! Dabei wollte der Mann aus Wiesbaden eigentlich nur aufräumen. Schnörkel und Chaos beseitigen. Damit wurde Dieter Rams eine Ikone des Industriedesigns. Autorin: Anke Rebbert Von Anke Rebbert.
Living a life of less, but better is about removing what's not necessary so we can focus on what's most important. It helps make life easier, and improves the world around us. In this week's episode we take a look at the principle of ‘less but better', a concept coined by designer Dieter Rams, and how that can help us live with more clarity and freedom. Decluttering Masterclass — Join my 21 day challenge: https://www.nataliewalton.com/declutter Podcast shownotes: https://www.nataliewalton.com/podcast/55 Connect on Instagram: @nataliewalton Connect on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thenataliewalton
Industrial Design, Creative Inspiration & Personal Projects! Today, we chat about the Polestar O2, how Polestar is able to embody Dieter Rams' 10 Principles of Good Design and making the most out of your design. On today's episode of “The Process” we discuss: Finally getting a tattoo! Polestar O2 Polestar embodying Dieter Rams' 10 Principles of good design Making the most out of your design Sustainable design ethos The why of Polestar All the links, all the time! Industrial Design, Creativity & Inspiration! For Industrial Design related business inquiries: Big Design Company Website: www.bigdesigncompany.com Big Design Company email: hi@bigdesigncompany.com Follow us on Instagram! @theprocess__podcast Zak Watson // LinkedIn Behance Website NFTs Dylan Torraville // LinkedIn Website 3D Dyl Behance Send us an email to hi.theprocesspodcast@gmail.com if you have any questions or want to reach out! The Process is a podcast created by industrial designers Dylan Torraville and Zak Watson. Dyl and Zak are picking up microphones to chat about their experiences in design school, personal projects and navigating the creative process. Oh yeah, and there will be some sweet interviews with other designers and friends too.
What would happen if you made your life like an Apple product? Dieter Rams inspired Jony Ive who designed many of the Apple products we know and love. We look at an iPhone through the lens of Dieter Rams' 10 Principles for Good Design. How can we design our environments and days around the idea of Less, but better? ➡️ RESOURCES Documentary: Gary Hustwits' 2018 Documentary on Dieter Rams: Rams Ten Principles for Good Design by Dieter Rams Group: The Minimalists Documentary: Minimalism: A Documentary About the Important Things Book: Essentialism by Greg McKeown Book: Atomic Habits by James Clear Person: Jordan Peterson ✅ Follow The Beautiful Mess ➡️ You can also follow me here: YouTube: https://youtube.com/pauldittus IG: https://www.instagram.com/pauldittus/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/pauldittus Website: https://pauldittus.com Hosted by Paul Dittus (@pauldittus)
Prof. Dr. Kai Vöckler ist Urbanist in Offenbach am Main. Gründungsmitglied von Archis Interventions. Stadtentwicklungsprojekte in Deutschland und Südosteuropa. Stadtforschungsprojekte in Europa und Asien. Wettbewerbe und städtebauliche Projekte mit Landschaftsarchitekten und Architekten. Publikationen zu kunsttheoretischen und urbanistischen Themen. Promotion in Kunstwissenschaft über Raumbilder des Städtischen. Kurator von Ausstellungen an europäischen Kulturinstitutionen. 2010–2021 Stiftungsprofessur für Kreativität im urbanen Kontext, seit Wintersemester 2021 Professor für Urban Design am Fachbereich Design der Hochschule für Gestaltung (HfG) Offenbach. Prof. Peter Eckart lebt und arbeitet in Frankfurt und Offenbach. Nach kaufmännischer Ausbildung arbeitete er bei Designbüros in Hamburg (Michael Suxdorf, Peter Schmidt Studios), studierte Produktdesign an der GHS Wuppertal und der HFBK Hamburg u.a. bei Dieter Rams. Nach dem Gewinn des Braun-Preises (1989) arbeitete er als Produktdesigner bei Braun. 1993 gründete er Eckart+Barski Design. Es entstanden Produkte im Bereich der Konsumgüter und Medizintechnik. 2000 gründete er zusammen mit Bernd Hilpert unit-design, das mit zahlreiche Gestalter:innen aus Medien, Design und Architektur vernetzt ist. Seit 2000 Professor für Produktdesign und Integrierendes Design an der HfG Offenbach; 2007 bis 2010 Dekan des FB Design. Seit 2011 Vizepräsident der Hochschule. Kai und Peter betreiben Designforschung an der HfG Offenbach, wobei sie betonen, dass es zu den zukünftigen Aufgaben des Designs gehört, die Entwicklung innovativer Methoden und spezifischer Werkzeuge und Strategien effizienter und sichtbarer zu machen, um zukunftsfähige und nachhaltige Projekte im Mobilitätsbereich zu befördern und die Akzeptanz in der Bevölkerung zu steigern. Wissenschaftliche Handlungsfelder wie Verkehrsplanung, Sozialwissenschaftliche Mobilitätsforschung, Kognitionspsychologie, Architektur, Informatik werden in dem Forschungsschwerpunkt Mobilitätsdesign mit Designforschung zum Thema Mobilität verbunden. Das am Fachbereich angesiedelte Designinstitut für Mobilität und Logistik (DML) widmet sich diesen Themen und bearbeitet diese wissenschaftlich. Seit 2014 wurden zahlreiche Forschungsprojekte in diesem Themenbereich durchgeführt. Aktuell schließen sie ihr bislang größtes Projekt, den interdisziplinären LOEWE-Forschungsschwerpunkt »Infrastruktur – Design – Gesellschaft« (gefördert aus dem hessischen Exzellenzinitiative) ab. Vier Jahre wurden systematisch die Anforderungen an die Gestaltung einer neuen, vernetzten und multimodalen Mobilität im Ballungsraum Rhein-Main untersucht. Unter Federführung der HfG Offenbach arbeiteten zwanzig Wissenschaftler:innen von der HfG, der Frankfurt UAS, der Goethe-Uni und der TU Darmstadt an gemeinsamen Fragen. In Kooperation mit der Stadt Offenbach das vom Bundesforschungsministerium geförderte Projekt »InterMoDe – Aufbau eines intermodalen kommunalen Mobilitätsystems« sowie als Teil eines Konsortiums im Auftrag des Eisenbahnbundesamts die Entwicklung eines Maßnahmenkatalogs für den »Bahnhof der Zukunft als Kern multimodaler Mobilitätsplattformen in Kommunen«.
What I learned from reading Let My People Go Surfing: The Education of a Reluctant Businessman by Yvon Chouinard.I had always avoided thinking of myself as a businessman. I was a climber, a surfer, a kayaker, a skier, and a blacksmith. We simply enjoyed making good tools and functional clothes. [0:01] One day it dawned on me that I was a businessman and would probably be one for a long time. I knew that I would never be happy playing by the normal rules of business; I wanted to distance myself as far as possible from this pasty-faced corpses in suits I saw in airline magazine ads. If I had to be a businessman, I was going to do it on my own terms. [0:32] One of my favorite sayings about entrepreneurship is: If you want to understand the entrepreneur, study the juvenile delinquent. The delinquent is saying with his actions, “This sucks. I'm going to do my own thing. [1:00]Work had to be enjoyable on a daily basis. [1:18]I've always thought of myself as an 80 percent. I like to throw myself passionately into an activity until I reach about an 80 percent proficiency level. To go beyond that requires an obsession and degree of specialization that doesn't appeal to me. Once I reach that 80 percent level I like to go off and do something totally different. [4:05]Tom Brokaw on Yvon: It's been helpful to me to be Yvon's friend. He makes me think about things in new ways. [5:36] Can a company that wants to make the best-quality outdoor clothing in the world be the size of Nike? Can a ten-table, three-star French restaurant retain its third star when it adds fifty tables? The question haunted me throughout the 1980s as Patagonia evolved. [7:35]I continued to practice my MBA theory of management, management by absence, while I wear-tested our clothing and equipment in the most extreme conditions of the Himalayas and South America. [10:13] Throughout the book he's has a really beautiful idea of comparing business and organizing human labor, to nature. Part of this idea is he intentionally puts Patagonia through a lot of stress because he feels you need stress to grow. [11:42] Doing risk sports had taught me another important lesson: Never exceed your limits. You push the envelope, but you don't go over. You have to be true to yourself; you have to know your strengths and limitations and live within your means. The same is true for business. The sooner a company tries to be what it is not, the sooner it tries to have it all, the sooner it will die. [18:05] I did not yet know what we would do to get our company out of the mess it was in. But I did know we had to look to the Iroquois and their seven-generation planning, and not to corporate America, as models of stewardship and sustainability. As part of their decision process, the Iroquois had a person who represented the seventh generation in the future. If Patagonia could survive this crisis we had to begin to make all our decisions as though we would be in business for a hundred years. [19:12] The first part of our mission statement, “Make the best product,” is the cornerstone of our business philosophy. “Make the best” is a difficult goal. It doesn't mean “among the best” or the “best at a particular price point.” It means “make the best,” period. [24:05]The functionality driven design is usually minimalist. Or as Dieter Rams maintains, “Good design is as little design as possible.” Complexity is often a sure sign that the functional needs have not been solved. Take the difference between the Ferrari and the Cadillac of the 1960s. The Ferrari's clean lines suites its high-performance aims. The Cadillac really didn't have any functional aims. It didn't have steering, suspension, aerodynamics, or brakes appropriate to its immense horsepower. All it had to do was convey the idea of power, creature comfort, of a living room floating down the highway to the golf course. So, to a basically ugly shape were added all manner of useless chrome: fins at the back, breasts at the front. Once you lose the discipline of functionality as a design guidepost, the imagination runs amok. Once you design a monster, it tends to look like one too. [25:53]When I die and go to hell, the devil is going to make me the marketing director for a cola company. I'll be in charge of trying to sell a product that no one needs, is identical to its competition, and can't be sold on its merits. I'd be competing head-on in the cola wars, on price, distribution, advertising, and promotion, which would indeed be hell for me. I'd much rather design and sell products so good and unique that they have no competition. [27:15]There are different ways to address a new idea or project. If you take the conservative scientific route, you study the problem in your head or on paper until you are sure there is no chance of failure. However, you have taken so long that the competition has already beaten you to market. The entrepreneurial way is to immediately take a forward step and if that feels good, take another, if not, step back. Learn by doing, it is a faster process. [32:40]Nonfiction marketing. Our branding efforts are simple: tell people who we are. We don't have to create a fictional character. Writing fiction is so much more difficult than nonfiction. Fiction requires creativity and imagination. Nonfiction deals with simple truths. [34:00]It's okay to be eccentric, as long as you are rich; otherwise, you're just crazy. [36:19]Quality, not price, has the highest correlation with business success. Whenever we are faced with a serious business decision, the answer almost always is to increase quality. [37:37]We never wanted to be a big company. We want to be the best company, and it's easier to try to be the best small company than the best big company. [40:20]We don't hire the kind of people you can order around. We don't want drones who will simply follow directions. We want the kind of employees who will question the wisdom of something they regard as a bad decision. We do want people who, once they but into a decision and believe in what they are doing, will work like demons to produce something of the highest possible quality. [43:57] Systems in nature appear to us to be chaotic but in reality are very structured, just not in a top-down centralized way. A top-down centralized system like a dictatorship takes an enormous amount of force and work to keep the hierarchy in power. All top-down systems eventually collapse, leaving the system in chaos. A familial company like ours runs on trust rather than on authoritarian rule. [44:52] The lesson to be learned is that evolution (change) doesn't happen without stress, and it can happen quickly. Just as doing risks sports will create stresses that lead to a bettering of one's self, so should a company constantly stress itself in order to grow. [50:29] I believe the way toward mastery of any endeavor is to work towards simplicity. The more you know, the less you need. [56:01] —“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested, so my poor wallet suffers.”— GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book. It's good for you. It's good for Founders. A list of all the books featured on Founders Podcast.