Archive for March, 2008|Monthly archive page
KDDI au concept phones
The KDDI au design project is probably a favorite among many industrial designers and phone designers. Japan’s phone technology is certainly world-leading – this is fortunately paired by KDDI’s commitment to explore the forefront in the design side as well. Many design luminaries were engaged to envision what could mobile phone really be, resulting in many breath-taking concept phones, with quite a good percentage going into mass-production (such as the Infobar by Naoto Fukasawa, the Mediaskin by Tokujin Yoshioka, Talby by Marc Newson etc).
I’m not sure if I’m late to the party, but I just came across these three new(ish?) phone prototypes – the latest in the series.

Even though there are English descriptions, the really poetic nature of the descriptions for the Sorato can only leave me guessing at its intention (I have absolutely no qualms about its product design though). The Sorato – “use this phone to reach up and touch the sky, and feel the present moment in your hand” – if I guess correctly, the phone’s outer skin morphs according to the environment around it, much like how a chameleon blends into the surrounding. The crystal clear and yet soft object becomes like a drop of rain on the car windshield, capturing the poetry of the environment into itself.

In the Hitoka concept, the typically tech-centric phone interface is swapped for a much more emotive scene: think of it as having your own butler that lives in the world within your phone’s frame – “they are your friends, your assistants, your confidants, and even your alter egos. A little human touch adds even greater pleasure to communication”.

Actface translates activity on your phone into a SimCity-like arena: “your town grow as you use the phone. Your town’s residents are the people in your address book. In your town, something is always happening”. It’s pretty interesting to see how the harvested information is translated into different developments of the town too – and in this way, everybody has their own truly customized, a unique digital fingerprint on their phones.
I’m not sure whether KDDI set a specific theme for this year’s exploration, or did the designers explore their own paths and coincided on a broad perspective – it does seem like there’s a focus towards the the software rather than hardware – on how the phone behaves; how the phone reacts emotionally and organically.
It’s no longer so much about the product design: the curves, surfaces and line of a technological product. Instead, you get a feeling that this is an emotional object, with a life and world of its own, that just happened to be a phone as well. The designers are really designing the phones’ behaviors as much as the phones themselves.
What are the implications of designing behaviors be – what are the new challenges and opportunities as compared to designing products/artifacts?
WordPress in Flash

Number Eight Wired is a rather interesting experiment(?) – it adopts the very typical WordPress blog style, but implements it in Flash instead of the more typical CSS. You do get some bells-and-whistles that comes with Flash ( ability/control in animations and effects particularly) – the site do feel slick and polished. And you can use your favorite unique fonts without worrying that your viewer not having it (unlike in standard webpages).
For all the polish though, you’d (usually) have to sacrifice the much taken-for-granted things in webpages: ability to right click, deep-link to specific pages, save images off the web, etc (Note: these are in fact do-able even with Flash contents – it’s just that they’re not common).
Which’d you prefer? Style vs usability (or is this actually a false dichotomy)?
Magis Linus Chair – Great Details

1… 2… 3, exclaim, “Beautiful detailing~~~”. Designed by Javier Mariscal, the graphical motifs puts a playful and lively twist to what could’ve very easily have been left as simply standard mechanical-design features. Cleverly integrated, the support ribs and turned into imaginative tree trunks swaying about – great work!
[via NOTCOT]
Democratic Sheep Art

The picture on the top may look like some indecipherable Matrix-like message from outer space, but if you look closely enough, they’re actually rather familiar (and harmless!) things – drawings of sheeps facing the left side. That big, 10000-sheep artwork is known as ‘The Sheepmarket’.
The Sheepmarket is a really interesting experiment in art and harnessing the power of the masses. Artist Aaron Koblin assembled an army of sheeps by asking random strangers to each draw him one for $0.02, through Amazon’s labor distribution mechanism – The Mechanical Turk. Here’s the artist explaining the project:
With the project turning into printed books and exhibitions, I suppose this is proof that leveraged correctly, the sum is indeed more than its parts?
D/A Clock

I am always rather intrigued when digital or virtual experiences are brought back into the physical realm of ‘things’ (‘thing‘ being, ‘stuff’, feelable, touchable stuff). From the popularity of ‘steampunk’ computers we see an almost desperate claw at turning our increasingly digital lives back into something more tangible, more crafty.
The D/A Clock is yet another example – converting a whole table-sized display of time in the classic LCD segments. What’s also interesting though is the purposefully slow transition from one digit to another. When I first saw the picture I thought the blocks would simply jerk up and down as it changes; the video however shows a much more subtle transition:
This object plays on the common LED-display digital clock with physical segments that slowly fade in and out of a white surface. The D/A Clock introduces new characteristics to the digital mediation of time: a physical dimension and intermediate states – the time between 0 and 1.
I like that the designer Alvin Aronson noticed and chose to play-up this subtle difference. In the digital world of ’0′ and ’1′s, there are no intermediate states: it’s either one or the other. And when the clock is borne onto this full-sized, physical display, it drops its ‘digital’ properties and re-adopts the analog properties that this world operates in. Interesting thought.
Fed up of Facebook – Video
Are you suffering from Facebook fatigue? (Personally I’ve never been into Facebook… though I could sympathize with the video…)
Weird Food Fight
There are many ways to re-examine our history – making films of them are one of the means. But this video scores brownie points for taking a rather different tack: it re-enacts the World War II and other subsequent battles that the US engaged in, with each country represented by popular foods from that country, taking you (via culinary tracts) through the American-centric history of world politics. From World War II, to Korean War, to Vietnam War right up to the current Iraq War – you’ve got it all!
Absolutely weird, but very amazing at the same time too!
Chocolate Pencil Shavings

I loved this chocolate shavings done in the classic color-pencil interpretation. Designed by nendo (many other great works in the website too!) in collaboration with patissier Tsujiguchi Hironobu, the mastermind behind popular dessert shops like Mont St. Claire and Le Chocolat de H, this initially awkward association between ‘delicious chocolate’ and ‘coloring stationery’ becomes gratifyingly apt:
Our “chocolate pencils” come in a number of cocoa blends that vary in intensity, and chocophiles can use the special “pencil sharpener” that comes with our plate to grate chocolate onto their dessert. Pencil filings are usually the unwanted remains of sharpening a pencil, but in this case, they’re the star!
I loved that design-gymnastic on how he managed to link pencil shavings to chocolate shavings – it certainly must take a very acute observation and mental creativity to note this, so that after the design is done everyone else can go “Ah it’s so logical right from the start!”.
And now I can’t look at chocolate, truffle or any other food-shavings without thinking of this.
[via Cool Hunting]
Sudoku + Rubik

If Sudoku or Rubik cube isn’t enough of a challenge, try Sudoku AND Rubik Cube!
Evolution of Internet
The people at Kansas State University seem to be churning out many interesting videos as part of their work in digital ethnography. Here’s yet another one – chronicling the evolution of text -> hypertext -> XML etc. Enjoy!
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