Tag archives: design

Solar power bus stations…hmm

just came across this, now lets think for a sec, california is putting them now, sooo east coast will do it in like say.. 8 years? and i am not talking college campuses!

San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom recently unveiled the first of 1,100 solar powered bus shelters that will be installed throughout the city between now and 2013. Crowned with a rolling red crest of photovoltaic panels, the shelters will use the sun’s rays to power their intercom, LED lighting, and even wireless routers that will help blanket the city with WiFi goodness. Designed by Lundberg Design and contracted through Clear Channel, the new shelters signal a bright future for solar technology in the Bay Area.

via Inhabitat » Solar Powered Bus Shelter Unveiled in San Francisco.

Dia-gramic Personal Resume

I think this is a better way of starting to see resumes, well look for a second… this engages me to look further and to develop a sense if i like their “style” or not… their creativity or not… SO instantly i know if i would like this person. And it makes my life easier to decide yah or nah on the person…. it is harsher but the person set themselves up to be judge instantly instead of the traditional approach… except they would be on the bottom of my pile and maybe looked at when i think i need someone.

Flickr Photo Download: Personal Resume (updated).

RISD graduation tomorrow

I know i have not been blogging much… I seriously been working hard on my personal work… inspirations come first. but this is brought to my attention for tomorrow… gotta love twitter.

Sir ken robinson  and johnathan ives will be at risd graduation ceremony tomorrow, when do you see this? an english event!!! So for those who don’t know RISD graduation and how it is done… usually involves rain on you… in a parking lot… or baking hot… in a parking lot… for the guests… lets say you are standing for 4 hours straight so bring some lawn furniture :D

but see these these two great inspirators…. it is a master card priceless moment!

RISD to honor creative knight at graduation | Rhode Island news | projo.com | The Providence Journal.

Sir Ken Robinson, knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 2003 for his achievements as a writer and arts advocate, is considered one of the world’s leading thinkers on creativity. His concepts about adapting creativity to the ever-shifting global economy have been embraced by education, government and business leaders, as well as by the arts world. From 1989 to 2001, Robinson taught at the University of Warwick in the United Kingdom. He now lives in Los Angeles.

Robinson will receive an honorary doctor of fine arts degree, along with four other “exceptional individuals who have made groundbreaking contributions to the world of art and design,”

•Caterina Fake, founder of Flickr, an online photo-sharing Web site, made Time magazine’s list of the world’s most 100 influential people. Fake, 40, now works as chief product officer at Hunch, a customized decision-making Web site that “gets smarter the more you use it.”

•Jonathan Ive is the senior vice president of industrial design at Apple and leads the team behind the iMac, iPod and iPhone. In 2003, he was named designer of the year by the Design Museum London and was awarded the title Royal Designer for Industry by the Royal Society of Arts.

A long over due quippit – lets support DesignSojourn Mentorship

I have not “quippit” in a long time, and for good reasons… when do people see me writing endless and not get anything done? I prefer to be mute (or talk when I need to) and just do! Of course this is my work mode… get me out of the office and you will see an entire different experience.

–I think it has to do with my two identities of being a PA Dutchman verses a RISDer. They are the same but complete opposites. Oh well that is another topic theory all together–

I guess I need a reflection cause well, 2006 I was burnt out from school, 2007 sort woke up and pick up interest in design research/strategy/ethnography, then 2008 addictive to web exploration (how to use the web like how I researched RISD style – it may have to do with a new laptop too), and finally 2009 woke up! But it is still morning for me this year. Still groggy, needing some tea, need to look around my studio and my mind saying “what the heck did I do late last night.”

So this is where I am at:

Few years fresh from school with tons of personal questions and these are questions that no one can really give an answer for them. Or they can be answer but I know what the answer would be and yet don’t wish to hear it… But like others I am sure you have questions about design and so I came across this Designer Mentoring Program

Reading it, I was left with this question, what is a mentor? No really, what makes people a mentor to others? What does a mentor means to someone?

Cause think, what makes a mentor different than a lecturer? A lecturer just tells you their statement and expects you to apply it. UH? Don’t you ever feel from some people that you are “told” to do something their way without questioning or debating? …that is lecturing… and you have no say or objection.

But a mentor… well, to me a good mentor is a person who you come to with a question and you ended up not really answering the question but creating an renewal sense of inspirations of newer questions for you to figure out.

So if you are curious about this program just as much as I am, you just need to be an industrial designer or in that field of product design with little or exponential amount of experience. And from my perspective it is no fun if you don’t already have a baggage of questions to get started on the journey.

The other side of my curiosity is the “how” it works and maintaining that relationship. First it is a global situation so you will be using the “IN” thing these days… social media… yeah, I am intrigue with the whole social media because for me it makes my job easier and cost effective.

Lets face it, many American clients does not see the insight of design research yet. I don’t blame them, since I am having difficulties understanding how non – visualizing researchers translate their findings to the egocentric visualizing designers for product innovation. It is that part of the design process still not easy to cross. Of I don’t forget the other bridges in the design process that is difficult to cross either.

Maybe my next quippit will be my conflicting personalities… I have to ponder on that some more it might sound like I need to go to a mental institution or something.

ID sketching sketching…

Headphone winners | Industrial Design Sketching and Drawing Tutorials.

I maybe in love and have the passion drive of a design researcher but come on… the illustrator inside me loves to draw… I dig the sketch composition… (a little secret about sketching – composition goes a long way…) i looked at the other competitors on the website and notice it was not about techniques or ideas (well… hesitating a bit) but execution and composer.

but i think the first image still need to relook at photoshop cause it is too air brushie and that is so has been! you can really make color marking in photoshop very sharp, it is called path tool and a bit of feathering. It is a terrible hill to climb to learn in the program but once over it, it is like sledding. WAH OHHHHHHHH!

2111

I am a firm believer of Milton Glaser

Ten Things I Have Learned

i am just going to list the ten titles but be sure to read Milton Glaser ‘s take on his statements. For one I just love hearing from very establish designers saying what i am feeling but never could pin point it. This is what happens when i grew up with my parents friends and never with my own age group…

what he talks about is so true to what i am experiencing in the workforce, and it might be a reason why there are ton of early designers that quickly move away from their career path because what they ideally believe is actually false, and viewing that all designers as great observers of humanity and empathy is heartbreaking cause lets face all people are one and the same no matter what their job title are. They may have empathy or not… you must seek the right set of passionate people to work it is the main goal.

1.

YOU CAN ONLY WORK FOR PEOPLE THAT YOU LIKE.

2.

IF YOU HAVE A CHOICE NEVER HAVE A JOB.

3.

SOME PEOPLE ARE TOXIC AVOID THEM.

4.

PROFESSIONALISM IS NOT ENOUGH or THE GOOD IS THE ENEMY OF THE GREAT.

5.

LESS IS NOT NECESSARILY MORE.

6.
STYLE IS NOT TO BE TRUSTED.

7.
HOW YOU LIVE CHANGES YOUR BRAIN.

8.

DOUBT IS BETTER THAN CERTAINTY.

9.

ON AGING.

10.

TELL THE TRUTH.

ENJOY!

why i love abstract architecture

The shadow structures by Ball Nogues @ Dailytonic.

sometimes i wish i was an architecture…

kindle parting…

via LINK

While we were having a difficult time disassembling the Kindle 2, the rear cover of the Kindle was removed. Looking down the inside of the Kindle, the engineer said, “The cost must be very high. It’s really filled with components.” In fact, with a number of parts crammed in the small space, it gave us the impression of “a heap of parts.”

Looking at it more carefully, there was another substrate mounted on a part of the main board. It was an SD memory card slot. This is the only “two-structured” and thick part of the main board. In fact, the back side of the Kindle slopes along this part, making it look “distorted.”

“I think they designed the chassis after designing the board,” the engineer said.

In the mean time, the back cover of the Kindle 2 was taken off after some struggles.

We finally took off the back cover of the Kindle 2, sometime after removing the back cover of the Kindle.

“Oh, this is very tidy,” said the engineer who participated in the teardown. “They completely revamped the design.”

The exposed main boards of the new and old Kindles were clearly different from each other. While the old one was crammed with components, there was no double that the new one had much fewer parts and was well organized.

To analyze the main boards in detail, we removed them from the front covers of the chassis and looked at the back sides of the boards. The back side of the new Kindle’s main board was mounted with no part. In contrast, many components, including Samsung Electronics Co Ltd’s 256-Mbyte NAND flash memory, were found on the back of the old Kindle’s main board, reinforcing the impression that the old model is complicated and the new model is simple.

The back covers were taken off from the Kindle 2 (left) and the Kindle (right).

Era of User-Generated Devices

http://techon.nikkeibp.co.jp/article/HONSHI/20090428/169511/fig2.jpg

User-Generated Devices UGD, allowing people to enjoy themselves making their own equipment with friends, are making a showing in the electronics industry, fueled by the outsourcing of development and manufacturing, open constituent technologies, and other trends. Only companies capable of discarding the paradigm of volume production will be able to evolve apace with this new dimension in user participation.

The electronics industry has delivered a wide variety of entertainment to consumers: radio, television, audio, mobile phones, games and more. The enormous quantity of equipment shipped from the factories of electronics manufacturers has fascinated users around the globe. Profits from sales provided the capital for new research and development R&D, creating a host of new technologies. Electronics grew into a gigantic industry by delivering identical products to as many users as possible…

via [Feature] Everybody’s a Manufacturer: Era of User-Generated Devices 1 — Nikkei Electronics Asia — May 2009 – Tech-On.

http://techon.nikkeibp.co.jp/article/HONSHI/20090428/169512/fig3.jpg


One excellent example is the development environment represented by widgets, now enjoying increasing use in PCs and becoming available to digital appliance users as well. In Sept 2008, Sony Corp of Japan began supplying the widget development tools for the AppliCast content download function packaged with its liquid crystal display (LCD) TVs to individual users. Although the tool had formerly been available only to professional developers, Sony released it to the general public. Widgets created by individuals run on the TVs. Similar tools are also provided by a host of newly emerged manufacturers in Internet appliances such as chumby industries inc of the US, in the form of “Web gadgets”.

The movement toward providing an environment supporting unrestricted Internet service to users, by mounting browsers, is spreading from flatscreen TVs into digital cameras. A variety of miniature detachable modules are available for digital appliances now, making it possible for users to modify shape, function and other characteristics with plug-ins.

In the second quarter of 2009, modu Ltd of Israel will release a mobile phone that can change its appearance, function, etc to match specific usage. The ultra-compact mobile phone is inserted into a “jacket” module for use, and a variety of different jackets offer various designs, functions, etc, as needed.

Consumer Imagination

All of these activities, however, are likely to create new ways to enjoy digital appliances, thanks to unique user ideas.

Equipment manufacturers provide the platforms, but users are thinking up ways to use them that the manufacturers never imagined. If these new uses appeal to a large number of users, all of a sudden a best-selling product is born.

Users no longer merely passively receive information from manufacturers, mass media and other sources, because now the environment makes it easy for them to obtain specialized information such as manufacturer technology. This simplified access is not limited to merely end products, but is rapidly spreading to the R&D field, almost in the realm of constituent technology, where specialized knowledge is crucial….

http://techon.nikkeibp.co.jp/article/HONSHI/20090428/169514/fig5.jpg

Algae…BioFuel…What are the possiblities?

There are some signs that the algae-based fuel industry might be ready to bloom.

One of the nascent industry’s biggest and most well-heeled players, Sapphire Energy, announced last week that it would be producing 1 million gallons of diesel and jet fuel a year by 2011, double its initial estimates.

The La Jolla, Calif.-based company – with big-name backers like Bill Gates and the Rockefeller family – says it will be producing more than 100 million gallons a year by 2018 and 1 billion gallons a year by 2020 – enough to meet almost 3 percent of the U.S. renewable fuel standard RFS of 36 billion gallons.

But there’s a hitch: Federal law makes no room for algae-based fuel in the RFS. The 2007 energy law caps corn ethanol production at 15 billion gallons a year by 2015 and has the remaining 21 billion gallons of renewable fuels coming from advanced biofuels, including 17 billion gallons from cellulosic biofuels and biodiesel.

via Is Algae the Biofuel of the Future?: Scientific American.