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Much of health care is designed with the “comfortable middle” of society in mind, says designer Yves Behar, when it should be tailored to children, the elderly, and those with disabilities. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Yves Behar and Jakob Lange share many passions: from skiing to a deep trust in new technologies and science. Sustainability is their motto because, as designers and architects, they can “imagine the world we would love to live in.Salone del Mobile and STIR present Design Voices - #thinkNEXT, produced by Dog-Ear.
So nice being here to meet old friends we were missing so long but it's time to create new connections for sharing ideas and knowledges. Could be the designers the glue? Welcome to Yves Behar with Jakob Lange and Marius Myking with Bryan Young. Salone del Mobile and STIR present Design Voices - #thinkNEXT, produced by Dog-Ear.
Episode 165: Adam Fisher (https://www.adamfisher.org) grew up in Silicon Valley playing Atari, programming computers, and reading science fiction. He still lives in the Bay Area but now spends his time thinking about the future, tracing its origins, and writing about it. Valley of Genius is his first book. His second book, Designing Ideas, is about Yves Behar. When he's not writing about the evolution of ideas, he works as a private historian, writing bespoke biographies for the world's tech billionaires. Adam's writing at Alta https://www.altaonline.com/author/960295/adamfisher/ My review of Valley of Genius https://one-handed-economist.com/?p=355 Affiliate links to buy Valley of Genius (https://amzn.to/3rR5Acx)and Designing Ideas (https://amzn.to/3GssHyf)
The Carnegie Museum of Art has opened a new show that comes to celebrate and define current architecture through the work of 10 practices from around the world. The exhibition is called The Fabricated Landscape, and it explores some innovative minds working in contemporary architecture today. What defines the projects is not a common style, but rather relationships, to local communities, to natural environments, awareness of cultures, but also cutting edge perceptions and sustainable solutions.
In this episode, we're going to talk about a different valley – “The Valley of Genius”, which happens to be the most most-read and best-reviewed book about the history of modern Silicon Valley. And our guest is its brilliant author – Adam Fisher! From having a “geeky” childhood in the Silicon Valley, to working for magazines in New York, to writing about some of the biggest companies in the Silicon Valley, Adam learned a lot about passion and success. And he gave us some great insights about:
Technovation with Peter High (CIO, CTO, CDO, CXO Interviews)
582: In this interview, Yves Behar, Founder and Principal Designer of fuseproject, discusses the importance of product design and how companies can think about developing their own products. Yves discusses the importance of integrating storytelling and intent into product design. He also speaks on the importance of continuously improving product designs and using the problems and frictions that arise as opportunities for improvement. Additionally, Yves talks about bringing these designs to market from team alignment to marketing strategy. Finally, Yves talks about his team's work on the VOX ventilators as a response to an open innovation challenge and how it is important to sometimes allow your team to drive the ideas and support them along the way.
Technovation with Peter High (CIO, CTO, CDO, CXO Interviews)
582: In this interview, Yves Behar, Founder and Principal Designer of fuseproject, discusses the importance of product design and how companies can think about developing their own products. Yves discusses the importance of integrating storytelling and intent into product design. He also speaks on the importance of continuously improving product designs and using the problems and frictions that arise as opportunities for improvement. Additionally, Yves talks about bringing these designs to market from team alignment to marketing strategy. Finally, Yves talks about his team's work on the VOX ventilators as a response to an open innovation challenge and how it is important to sometimes allow your team to drive the ideas and support them along the way.
The product designer talks about the tech that inspired him and the ideas that enthuse him, as well as a piece of clothing he longs to get back. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Join us for another incredible conversation with award-winning Industrial Design Director, William Stuart. Will has built an incredible portfolio over the last fifteen years, working on many well-known products, including; August Lock, FORME Life, Coway Icon Air Purifier, Vodafone Neo and Hive View. Will currently leads an industrial team at the world-famous FuseProject, working alongside the legendary, Yves Behar. If you're not familiar, you have got to check out this studio! Their work is continuously receiving recognition from Good Design, Dezeen Awards, Red Dot and Core77. In our conversation, Will shares his personal journey from designer to design leader and his move from London to San Fran. Along the way, we explore his creative process, leadership style and discuss some of his favourite projects. This is a great chat for designers of all levels, but there is some wonderful content for those leading teams. Designer, check. An outstanding portfolio, check. Great character and open to sharing with the Design community, check. Let's get into this one. 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
The CoVent-19 Challenge The CoVent-19 Challenge is the creation of 13 anesthesiologists and advisors from Massachusetts General Hospital and the Boston-area who have come together to help overcome the ventilator supply crisis during the devastating the COVID-19 pandemic. As experts in mechanical ventilation and frontline workers fighting COVID-19, they seek to develop low-cost, rapidly manufacturable solutions to support heavily burdened modern medical facilities. CoVent’s goal is to close the gap between our actual resources and those in need around the world. The CoVent-19 Challenge is an open innovation 12-week Grand Challenge for engineers, innovators, designers, and makers. The Challenge launched on the GrabCAD Challenges platform on April 1, 2020. The general admission round resulted in over 213 entries from 43 countries. Seven teams were invited to participate in the invite-only finalist round (details below). The Baxter Academy team is one of the 7 finalists. The invited teams are receiving access to additional resources for completing their ventilator designs and support in creating functional prototypes, including test kits, test lungs, and testing protocols. The prototypes will be evaluated using a test bed to determine which design provides the best combination of performance, safety, reliability, manufacturability, affordability, and simplicity. The final ventilator designs are due to CoVent on June 21st and will then be evaluated by a team of expert medical and technical panelists. Team Name: fuseproject + Accenture + CIONIC Team: The overall fuseproject + Accenture + CIONIC team is led by Senior Industrial Engineer Daniel Zarem and a team of 8 designers and creatives from the design consultancy fuseproject, based in San Francisco. Other team members include Dan Semo, Judy Leung, Jayati Sinha, Jaehon Jung, MC Abbott, Eric Oesterle, Qin Li and Harriet Zhou. Members of the extended team include 3 engineers from Accenture’s Seattle office, Brad Laird, Eric Spaulding and Jonathan Schreven. Two team members from ICONIC include Jeremiah Robison and Tyler Smith. The three groups are operating as a virtual team from their lockdown locations in San Francisco and Seattle, conducting all of their work, including user interviews, remotely. Much of their work was conducted asynchronously, using remote design collaboration tools like Miro, Interestingly, the core fueproject team approached this global innovation tournament with a different orientation than the other finalists in that they are designers first and foremost. I think you’ll get a clear sense of this mindset if you watch the video and listen to Daniel and the fuseproject’s CEO Yves Behar. Here is a 6.5 minute video that introduces you to the team and the interim design https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trMOjdNOIuI&t=5s The commercial entity, fuseproject is a San Francisco and New York based design and branding firm established by Yves Behar in 1999. He has also simultaneously served as Chief Creative Officer at Jawbone, where his work helped the company become a leader in wearable and audio consumer electronics. Behar is also the Creative Co-Founder of OUYA, an open sourced gaming platform, and is Co-founder of start-up August, a next generation home entry system. Yves’ has had other collaborations with renowned partners such as Herman Miller, GE, Puma, PayPal, SodaStream, Samsung, Issey Miyake, Prada and many others.
Games we play: What's That Word (01)? Words have invisible power. They can be as feathery as a puff of air, or sharp as a barber's blade, or brutal as an atomic bomb, or transformative as the breath of God, or all at once. Watch that word! This episode features snippets from the transformative works of Celeste Headlee, Isabelle Allende, Bishop TD Jakes, Thasund Ducket, Yves Behar, and James Veitch, with contributions from Mary McMean, Lanah Harry, and Marshall Mack. Sources linked below. The Journey.RyoSports.com Games We Play
Verge editor-in-chief Nilay Patel interviews Yves Behar and Jason Jason, co-founders of the smartlock company August about their new products, the state of the smart home, and making products that work in both European and American homes. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode, we meet a prolific product designer and a serial entrepreneur to discuss the many challenging hurdles in transforming good ideas into good products that are finally able to make it market.
Art critic Alastair Sooke, in the company of some of the leading creatives of our age, continues his deep dive into the stunning works in the Museum of Modern Art's collection, whilst exploring what it really means “to see” art. Today's edition features Swiss designer Yves Behar, whose choice is a powerful one - literally. He chooses the internationally recognised power symbol, the circle broken with a vertical line. Is it really art? That is how he sees it. Producer: Paul Kobrak Main Image: International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC)'s Power Symbol (2011)
The Swiss designer talks about growing up during the Quartz Crisis, creating products with integrity, and why his favorite products are prototypes. Show Notes (2:15) Fuseproject (6:47) The Frame by Samsung (9:40) Happiest Baby Snoo Smart Sleeper (20:19) “See Better to Learn Better” Project (36:40) Movado Edge (37:27) Yves at The Aspen Ideas Festival (58:00) SFMOMA Presents The Sea Ranch
Yves Behar is an award winning designer whose clients include Herman Miller, PUMA, Kodak, Western Digital and many more.A video version of this podcast can be found herehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z063wC-Uerc
Yves Behar is a Swiss-born entrepreneur and ArtCenter alum who has become the design world's reigning rockstar. As founder of the industrial design and branding firm, fuseproject, Yves has become a leading force in forging the future of sustainable technology. Equally important to Fuseproject's business model is a deep commitment to the social good. Yves regularly partners with nonprofits to create groundbreaking products like One Laptop Per Child, See Better to Learn Better, and more. In this episode, ArtCenter President Lorne Buchman speaks to Yves about his most innovative products, his inclination to question conventional wisdom, the ways in which the DIY punk movement inspired his passion for making and his commitment to designing products that prioritize human connection over time spent with screens. Learn more about Yves' work: One Laptop Per Child See Better to Learn Better Samsung's The Frame Snoo Smart Crib Aura Powered Suit
Happiest Baby on the Block author Dr. Harvey Karp joins to talk about the development of his approach to calming crying babies and the crucial role dads play. We also discuss Dr. Karp's groundbreaking Snoo Smart Sleeper that took him five years to create with MIT-trained engineers and famed designer Yves Behar. The Parents Phrase Book author Whit Honea joins to encourage us to let our teenagers cry.
Jessica dazzles and inspires us, while admitting that from an early age she enjoyed pushing the envelope to elicit reactions. Perhaps this is the secret to her success as an art curator for Jessica Silverman Gallery, her namesake San Francisco gallery. We discuss curating the exhibition space, Fused, with industrial designer Yves Behar, what is too strong regarding content, and her family history with Fluxus Art.
NBBJ partner Ryan Mullenix and Fuseproject founder Yves Behar talk with Recode's Kara Swisher and Johana Bhuiyan about the changing needs of workers across the country and how new types of offices might reflect that. Mullenix is working with companies like Amazon and Samsung to rethink corporate offices, while Behar is trying to launch co-working spaces, called Canopy, which will be located closer to where people live. Behar says even iconic elements of the office like the conference room should be thrown out because they increase stress and decrease productivity. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
По-летнему легкий и горячий, ветреный и простой - именно такими эпитетами мы одаряем шестнадцатый выпуск нашего подкаста. Для вас его провел Илья Казаков и Андрей Барышников, в то время как Сергей Епихин грел кости за теплым рубежом. [00:00 – 02:24] Вступление[02:24 – 06:23] Отделение Yota, отвечающее за смартфоны, переезжает из Москвы в Канаду[06:23 – 10:24] Ив Беар (Yves Behar), человек, ответственный за облик большого количества современных девайсов[10:24 – 18:22] За что Google удаляет аккаунты разработчиков[18:22 – 23:35] The Last of Us: Remastered, впечатления от уровня сложности “реализм” и сравнение с “максимальным” - в чем цимес?[23:35 – 30:14] Почему планшеты - современные копьютеры[30:14 – 32:28] 6 жестоких истин, которые сделают вас лучше[32:28 – 34:27] DeviantArt заблокирован Роскомнадзором за легкую аниме-эротику[34:27 – 50:39] Ответы на вопросы слушателей[50:39 – 52:33] Прощание Мобильный рынок стагнирует, но это хорошо - статья в тему одного из вопросов слушателей Сайт: http://beardycast.com/ RSS: http://beardycast.com/feed
An object is no longer something you merely consume. It’s something you create. Famed industrial designer Yves Behar explains why this shift is a revolution in the making.
Arguably, some of the most dramatic changes to the ways we communicate and work, from the iPhone to social media, are rooted in the design thinking applied to technologies that we all now take for granted – right in the palm of our hands. What’s next on the horizon? John Doerr interviews a group of remarkable tech entrepreneurs: Path’s Dave Morin, NEST’s Tony Fadell, Flipboard’s Mike McCue, and designer Yves Behar, about their visions for the future. Tony Fadell Dave Morin Yves Behar Mike McCue John Doerr
Ouya is the most successful Kickstarter project ever. The open Android gaming system has blown away expectations and is the hottest piece in technology right now. Obsessive Disruption focuses on how the Kickstarter paradigm is now bringing these projects and start-ups to the limelight. What exactly does this mean for the capital raising process? Is Ouya a success merely because of the amount of money it raised? Is the ability to raise such money a good or bad thing and ultimately will watching a project like this live its course will we see a huge success or not?
The Crystal Palace was a favorite amongst the Salone's visitors this year. It was a place to get inspired in the theatrics of light and crystal with the help of the designers who each created their own world inside a room. Featuring works of Tokujin Yoshioka, Yves Behar, Gwenael Nicolas, Rogier van der Heide, Vincent van Duysen and some works from previous years. video by designguide.tv www.swarovskicrystalpalace.com
The Crystal Palace was a favorite amongst the Salone's visitors this year. It was a place to get inspired in the theatrics of light and crystal with the help of the designers who each created their own world inside a room. Featuring works of Tokujin Yoshioka, Yves Behar, Gwenael Nicolas, Rogier van der Heide, Vincent van Duysen and some works from previous years. video by designguide.tv www.swarovskicrystalpalace.com
The Crystal Palace was a favorite amongst the Salone's visitors this year. It was a place to get inspired in the theatrics of light and crystal with the help of the designers who each created their own world inside a room. Featuring works of Tokujin Yoshioka, Yves Behar, Gwenael Nicolas, Rogier van der Heide, Vincent van Duysen and some works from previous years. video by designguide.tv www.swarovskicrystalpalace.com
Yves BEHAR, designer Forum des 100 | 2009: La Suisse romande en questions. Dans un monde globalisé mais en crise, à l’occasion de sa 5e édition, le Forum des 100 interroge ses orateurs sur des thèmes essentiels – ou simplement intéressants – pour l’avenir de la Suisse romande et de la Suisse. On y discutera d’économie, de politique et de gouvernance, de changement climatique, de design, de libre-échange et des questions d’identité culturelle.