Flickr: Pantone colours in real life

Many designers swear by Pantone color charts, saying that they give the most accurate specification on what exactly he/she wants. I still have a half-suspicious view towards Pantone charts though – secretly thinking “are we just trying to make ourselves feel more professional?”.

Anyway, that aside, this Flickr photo-set made me smile, looking at the innocuous Pantone color placed against real life items. Is that trying to say that Pantone does cover every imaginable color? Or that most, if not all, of manufactured products were specified as one of those Pantone numbers?

pantonematchingcolor

Treadmill Dance


Treadmills, to me, equate monotonous boredom.  And so I was delighted to see an excellent piece of dance choreography that leverages the treadmills for a number of dance moves, making exercise on treadmills seem like a fun activity – no less thanks to a great matching tune, “Here it goes again” by OK Go.

Concrete Pipe Hotel

concrete-pipe-hotel

I have fond memories of my primary school, where abandoned concrete pipes like these would lie around in the field. We would climb onto them, in them, skip around them, hide in them. The thick, solid pipe seemed like an impregnable fortress – while we shared jokes and secrets within the echo-y walls. Perhaps the designer went to a similar school too!

This is a ho(s?)tel in Austria, designed by art college graduate Andreas Strauss. Organized into clusters of threes, they nestle in green fields beside the Danube River. Facilities like shower, bar and cafeteria are in a central location. The hotel currently works on an honor system – you leave behind however much you think is fair for the duration of your stay.

Now I”m just wondering – is there a little big plug that’d cap the sky-hole should there be rain?

Link

Red Guinness!

red-guinness

Woo! RED Guinness! Perhaps it’d be a hit in the next Chinese New Year! Personally I find it a little queer though – the whole image of the stout, rich, malty and dark Guinness seem a little frivolous – almost like it’s trying to snatch some market share from the likes of Bacardi. Apparently the taste is still the same though.

Maybe Dracula would switch.

Dutch Design Prize 2006

bicycle-stand-with-pump

The Dutch Design Award winners for 2006 are out!  There are more than 15 categories: transport, product, illustration, interaction, well basically everything. Head over to the site – you can also see last year’s winners there. For those of us who have not quite mastered Nederlandse, Bing Translator can help – well at least somewhat!

[Pictured above – Winner for Public Space Product – A bicycle bump has been integrated unobtrusively into a standard bicycle parking beam.]

Virtual Virtual Tourism

synth-travel

Instead of touring physical landmarks on Earth, Synthravel organizes tours to online places – places in online games such as Everquest, World of Warcraft, Second Life etc – so you don’t have to have a game character to see what it’s like, and there’d actually be a tour guide bringing you around to the more interesting places (you can request).

Now is this surreal or what? Many years ago, some predicted that tourism would decrease as they are replaced by online tourism – we can see that that hasn’t happened. A virtual experience is no match for a physical one. But what about a virtual experience of a virtual world? Hmm. Subversion of the greatest order.

It seems that the concept was not as successful as hoped for as it appears the site is under extended maintenance.

Art-o-Meter

artmeter

“Art-O-Meter is a device that measures the quality of an art piece. It bases its evaluation on the amount of time that people spend in front of an artwork compared to the total time of exhibition. The measurements are graphically represented by comments and a 5 star rating system”.

The design of the physical artifact aside, I think this device is symptomatic of a two interesting issues: 1) Democratization of content selection, and 2) Love/Hate is better than Indifference.

1) Democratization of content selection
While Internet search engines like Yahoo!, Altavista and Lycos (*gasp*, do you still remember them?) and others were still grappling over who had the largest directory. As hindsight would tell, it wasn’t the quantity that mattered, but the quality of these sites. The spawning of larger masses of choices made human top-down editing nearly impossible, and spurred the creation of aggregate sites like Digg and Reddit, where users up votes or down votes site links that interests them. The collective scores would reflect the aggregate interest level in the community, and be afforded prominence on its site accordingly.

I can imagine the same happening here too. When an art museum installs this (hopefully more discreetly), it could gauge the human interest level in their patrons with respect to individual art pieces and adjust accordingly. At the elementary level, the art museum may shift the more popular pieces to more strategic locations, like nearer the entrance, around the corners etc., and perhaps also influencing which pieces get stored and which get displayed more often. In a longer run, I can even envision a user-generated art museum that has tools where patrons contribute, and the pieces be up/down voted by fellow patrons based on the Art-O-Meter principle.

Some may argue that nothing beats the artistic taste and direction of a human, experienced curator. Well perhaps there are indeed art collections that will pale if one or more pieces are removed from the series; but I do believe that there are room for both types (curatorial vs popular choice) of galleries, just as there are both types of websites today.

2) Love/Hate is better than Indifference

Of course, some may say that the time spent in front of a work cannot equate to its quality – for all you know, he could be condemning the piece – and surely that must be the worst possible rating. But alas, the purpose of art is to provoke, to suggest, to bring in new dimensions. As many marketers (and perhaps also college fraternity boys trying to get a girl) preach, the worst part of the love-hate curve is in the middle – in the “indifference” zone. “Love” is good, “Hate”, you can still work it out, but indifference – not even noticing or caring that it’s there – is certainly the worst.

Borrowing a diagram from the blog “Creating Passionate Users“:

loveandhate10bt1

Mac vs PC. Pepsi or Coke. Settling and compromising for something that pleases everyone eventually would be a guarantee for failure – the zone of mediocrity above.

Wow, did all rant all that just because of a little black box? Hmmm, looks like it’s pretty effective already!