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I love seeing this kind of nuts-and-bolts industrial design. Seattle-based designer Eric Brunt observed that what makes snowshoes work is their increased surface area, which enables the wearer to "float" atop the surface. But that increased surface area also means that the wearer has to walk like s/he's in a Monty Python sketch. What if, Brunt reasoned, the footprint could shrink when lifted, enab
Coder Stelian Firez recently tweeted this screenshot of what has to be the world's worst web form for entering one's phone number: oh. my. god. pic.twitter.com/DpXu7bpqkA — Stelian Firez (@stelian) April 15, 2016 ">
What are These Giant Concrete Arrows Across the American Landscape? Backpacking through Europe in my 20s, my sense of direction served me well—until I hit the cities with the truly medieval street plans. So in Florence, after renting a motorcycle, I devised a clever way to find the garage again: Next to the garage was an impressive, obviously important brick building, with a large arrow and some I
Welcome to the second article in the the new Core77 "Sketchnotes Channel" (www.core77.com/sketchnotes) where we'll be exploring the application of visual thinking tools in the worlds of design and creative thinking. So you say you're ready to start sketchnoting. Maybe you're not much of a sketcher but you take a lot of notes, and are interested in making them more meaningful and interesting, but y
A powerful myth has arisen upon the land, a myth that permeates business, academia, and government. It is pervasive and persuasive. But although it is relatively harmless, it is false. The myth? That designers possess some mystical, creative thought process that places them above all others in their skills at creative, groundbreaking thought. This myth is nonsense, but like all myths, it has a cer
Core77 speaks with Jonathan Ive on the design of the iPhone 4: Material Matters As a designer you can't help but think about weird stuff. I can't help but imagine that if curious space aliens with no knowledge of human artifacts came to this planet and went through my apartment, they'd initially find little to distinguish one possession from another. But I'd be willing to wager that it is the iPho
Core77 + Aava Mobile Design Invitational: The Results are In! Core77 is proud to announce our collaboration with AAVA Mobile, an innovative Smartphone design company founded in Oulo, Finland in 2009, and Rocket Science, a marketing firm based in San Francisco, Boston and Helsinki. Together, we produced a design invitational that challenged five candidates to dream up innovative connectivity scenar
Berlin-based artist Hans Hemmert (famous for his work with balloons) threw a party where guests wore shoe-extenders to make them all the same height of 2 meters. Aside from bringing the partygoers all to a common eye level (and eliminating the awkward postures of party talk between the tall and the short), the gathering is lent an infographic nature by the shoes: all made from blue foam, the perso
Iron Disassembly Process from Alex Diener on Vimeo. The iron was on, but the plate was cool to the touch. The realization set in that after two short years of service, the thing was dead. I remember seeing Granddad fix all sorts of household appliances growing up, tinkering and cursing for hours before yielding a re-functional product. So, I, too, set the iron on my workbench to revive it. Right o
Ok, we're over the crystal-bling craze, but crystal-bling-steampunk?! Yep. Hold onto your blowtorches n' chisels, design fans, the new Harman Kardon GLA-55 speakers are exactly that. Kurt Solland, the VP of ID at Harman and Core 77's very own 1HDC judge, gave us the low-down: "The idea was to meld high-tech with craftsman styling and pushing 'Steam Punk' in an elegant way. For the technology side,
If you live in Tokyo and you're feeling nostalgic about your daily commute, or you're just visiting and want a crazy tech-noir souvenir then you might want to pick up one of the Yamanote Line Watches. It's an almost perfect replica of the stations electronic signage and is available for the Shinjuku, Ikebukuro, Ebisu, and Shinagawa stops. Unfortunately that's as good as it gets, there's no train t
A nice execution but, as a marketing promotion, it's a piece of junk and a creative jerk-off. It would've been more more effective if they could've come up with something that was actually better (whether perceived or actual) about this brand of camera. Any camera can help you see this mutt in "more detail" -- it doesn't take a Meister to do that.
Work stress: we all have it, few of us do anything about it. Here's the latest photographic "proof" of work stress taking its toll, as this Japanese newscaster goes from "hey!" to gray in a mere three years. He's like the portrait part of The Portrait of Dorian Gray. Thank God tomorrow is Friday. via albotas
Parallel Universes: Making Do and Getting By + Thoughtless Acts (Mapping the quotidian from two perspectives) By Kevin Henry Preface This article is all about reading images—the many ways in which we capture our world through photographs and reflect on them. In particular, it looks at the work of industrial design researcher Jane Fulton Suri of IDEO (author of Thoughtless Acts) and sculpto
Gravia is an LED-lit floorlamp energized by people. To light Gravia, the user places a mass approximately 48" above the ground, that, in falling, powers a mechanism, generating electricity. Gravia harnesses the potential energy imparted by the user, rather than relying on any existing electrical infrastructure. The design goal of Gravia is to provide light in a room (600-800 lumensâroughly equa
The EnerJar took top prize of the design competitionboth a favorite of the judges and the crowd at the Greener Gadgets Conference in New York City. The EnerJar is an easy-to-build, DIY device that accurately measures the power draw of electrical appliances. Sitting between any wall outlet and the appliance (think blowdryer versus laptop), the EnerJar helps users gain an understanding of power dra
Experience IS the Product... and the only thing users care about By Peter Merholz "You press the button, we do the rest." In 1888, an inventor named George Eastman designed, manufactured, and marketed a camera that changed not only photography, but consumer products—forever.Four years earlier, Eastman invented a new kind of film, roll film, that was much easier to handle than fragile photographic
If this ain't your first rodeo - if you've made a guide before - you are what we consider a Guru and will get a $15 Apple gift card, just for participating in this year's hoedown. If you ain't ever made a guide before - you are what we call a Greenhorn and don't get nothing but a chance to win the big prizes, which, we should say, are splendid. All published guides, regardless of provenance, will
Core77 Weekly Roundup (10-15-24 to 10-18-24) Here's what we looked at this week: Form follows function: A clever Norwegian design... October 18
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