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With Flipsters, Aussie ID'er and law student hit success in just one year

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Barely a year old, the Australian company Flipsters is wildly successful and has but a single product: Folding flip-flop shoes for women. Australian law student Ben Lipschitz and industrial designer Rick Munitz teamed up to create a product that women could carry in their purses that would unfold into comfortable footwear, and since launching in October of '09 the response has been tremendous. "We're now stocked in over 120 retailers across Australia, have an active online store and are exporting to a number of countries," says Lipschitz. "We always had the vision of where we wanted to go, but had no idea just how quickly things would happen!"

Munitz spent the first half of '09 perfecting the design, which he realized could not just fold in half if it was to perform as functioning footwear:

The genius behind Flipster's sole saving comfort is the creative way in which they fold. Flipsters unique "triangle" folding pattern has been tried and tested to work with the motion of your natural walk. Thanks to these angles, Flipsters will only fold when you want them to - and remain super sturdy while you're wearing them on your feet.

Flipsters come in three different sizes and are retailing for just under $30 in the U.S. You can read the full story of the company in this Australian Business & World News article.

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Call for Entries: Building the Internet of Things

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The newly established IDAT, the Institute of Design, Art and Technology of Barcelona, has begun a new series of interaction design competitions, beginning with the theme "Building the Internet of Things," a call to imagine the reailty of networked products and systems in the 21st century.

Below, IDAT elaborates:

The term Internet of Things has come to describe a number of technologies and research disciplines that enable the Internet to reach out into the real world of physical objects. Technologies like RFID, short-range wireless communications, real-time localization and sensor networks are now becoming increasingly common, bringing the Internet of Things into commercial use. They foreshadow an exciting future that closely interlinks the physical world and cyberspace—a development that is not only relevant to researchers, but to corporations and individuals alike.

The idea is as simple as its application is difficult. If all cans, books, shoes or parts of cars are equipped with minuscule identifying devices, daily life on our planet will undergo a transformation. Things like running out of stock or wasted products will no longer exist as we will know exactly what is being consumed on the other side of the globe.

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Working Title: Makeshift Solutions become Casual Furniture

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Drahtbank, top, and Kleiderstiele, bottom.

Berlin-based Johanna Dehio has released a series of furniture based on makeshift solutions, playing up our tendency to stack, lean and perch in a series of participatory products. A favorite is "Wandwinkel," or wall-angles, a sideboard and mirror that lean against the wall at an angle that makes them just stable. A similar gesture, "Kleiderstiele," or clothing-sticks, is a boiled-down coat rack—a broomstick to hold garments.

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SCAD is seeking a Chair of Motion Media Design in Savannah, Georgia

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Chair of Motion Media Design
Savannah College of Art and Design

Savannah, GA

Qualified candidates will have a terminal degree in art and design, or undergraduate degree with extensive, recognized industry experience. College level administration and teaching experience is required. A strong portfolio and/or industry experience is essential. Ideal candidates will be able to demonstrate outstanding teaching and administration experience (and will have responsibilities in both areas). Experience in diverse issues in Motion Media such as concept development, pre-production, cinematography, media theory, digital culture, new media and critical studies is important as these and many other industry concepts exist throughout the core of this program of study.

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The best design jobs and portfolios hang out at Coroflot.

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CoreToon: Five Ways that the Beer-Coffee Crossover Will Revolutionize Starbucks

The World's Smallest Hydroponic System Produces Bite-Sized Plants

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We aren't sure what exactly it is about miniaturization that makes it so fascinating— probably something slightly depressing about the psychology of cuteness and a human need to feel that we have dominion over nature—but that doesnt' change the fact that it is. Though not a bonsai tree, a toy puppy, or a tiny replica of designer furniture, The Micro Grow Project demonstrates this miniphilia once again with Pocket Grow, a tiny hydroponic grow box that uses LED's to provide light and a small circuit to control watering cycles. This all mixes together to produce, for example, a small herb.

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An Illustrated Guide to Building an Emergency Tarp Shelter

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TYTHEdesign is working on a one-page, illustrated, ikea-esque guide to the construction of emergency shelters with sticks, string, stones and tarps.

According to Tythe, because disaster response is, by its very nature, disorganized, delayed, hurried and inadequate, victims will be required to construct their own shelters from limited materials, most often plastic sheeting or tarpaulins donated in large supply by AID organizations.

Despite the large knolwedge-base concerning appropriate, safe, and secure construction of tarpaulin-based emergency structures, TYTHEdesign noticed that instructional materials are missing from the aid process. In response, they created a single-page guide illustrating the basics, to be distributed among displaced populations with shelter materials.

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Why Design Now? Solving Global Challenges Conference Videos Now Online!

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The Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum has graciously posted videos of all the public sessions of the conference to YouTube. If you missed our live broadcast, or have just been waiting to rewatch your favorite bits, head over to theGEreports channel on YouTube for the full list of videos. Or, better yet, start here with TED founder Richard Saul Wurman's keynote, where he begins with a nicely pointed criticism of the video documentation itself.

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Design Academy Students Awarded Unconventional Pig-Head Trophies Instead of Diplomas

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Every year, the Design Academy in Eindhoven commissions a designer to create a special trophy for the graduating students. We didn't want you to miss this year's version, simply a 3-D printed pig head that comes apart in slices to become giant amulets, customized for each student and stating their degree.

Designed by Ted Noten, and fabricated by Freedom of Creation, the trophy celebrates the pig as a long-time Dutch icon, honoring the students in a beautiful, memorable, and slightly tongue-in-cheek way.

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Thanks, Alissia!

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8 House: Bike to the Top of BIG's Newest Mixed-Use Building

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The just completed 8 House, probably named for its bow-tie shape, is the newest and final addition to Bjarke Ingels Group's trilogy of housing projects with developer Hopfner Partners. The building, located in the Orestad neighborhood of Copenhagen, is the largest private development in Denmark. The essential "ingredients of a neighborhood are stacked in horizontal layers and then twisted, imitating the condition of a city block, where buildings and houses co-exist. In this one, though, you can ride your bike from the ground all the way to the 10th floor.

Thomas Christofferen, the 8 House Partner in Charge, says:

The apartments are placed at the top while the commercial programme unfolds at the base of the building. As a result, the different horizontal layers have achieved a quality of their own: the apartments benefit from the view, sunlight and fresh air, while the office leases merge with life on the street. This is emphasized by the shape of 8 House which is literally hoisted up in the northeast corner and pushed down at the southwest corner, allowing light and air to enter the southern courtyard.
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OMFG, Run! - Run Right to Hand-Eye Supply for Great Coverall Deals, That Is!

Oakley is seeking a Design Engineer in Foothill Ranch, California

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Design Engineer
Oakley

Foothill Ranch, CA

Have you led cross functional product teams from "blue sky" concepts through production? Questioned existing design guidelines and defied engineering conventions? Developed and packaged elegant, robust mechs into complex organic volumes? Built functional prototypes that accurately demonstrate engineering intent within aesthetic constructs? Destroyed and critically analyzed prototypes using scientific test methods? Conceptualized and designed 1, prototyped 10, tested 100, verified 1,000 then manufactured 100,000?

If YES, we would like to talk to you!

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The best design jobs and portfolios hang out at Coroflot.

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Invisible Bike Helmet Inflates Before Impact

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Anna Haupt and Terese Alstin's Hövding bicycle helmet blew our minds this morning—it works like an airbag, inflating immediately before impact from a shawl-like collar worn around the neck. The name translates to Chieftan. after the headdress-like form the helmet evokes when open. In our opinion, it's got a fantastic Hussein Chalayan thing going on as well.

You're probably feeling skeptical right about now. Does it open reliably? What happens if you have a hoodie on? Does it provide enough protection? Well, concerning inflation and protection, at least, they've been dilligent, providing the following test video of a 20km collision between a car and a crash test cyclist. We admire that the two have come so far in making this thing real.

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Life Edited: Graham Hill's Competition to Live With Less

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Graham Hill, founder of Treehugger and a true believer that less is more, invites you to submit designs to Life Edited, a design competition for a 420sf apartment that embodies this philosophy and demonstrates how we can "radically reduce our urban footprint, while living better and saving money." Your proposal should be easily reproducible, encouraging others to follow suit.

Life Edited would like to see a transformable space furnished only with essentials and digitized media. The occupant should be set up to use access services like Netflix, Zipcar and Airbnb to support their lifestyle, instead of relying on ownership.

Graham has used his own 420sf apartment as a reference for what the space ought to support—not only the day-to-day life of a real occupant, but also a sit-down dinner for 12, a lounging option for 8, a space for 2 guests (with privacy), a home office, a work area with a rolling tool chest, and a hideable kitchen. Be sure to take a look at the requirements, both mandatory and suggested. It's a long list, including robot servants and telepresence technology (optional).

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Studiotalk.tv - Open Planet Ideas

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In case you missed yesterday's livestream broadcast interview at studiotalk.tv with Ben Moore (Sony) and Dax Lovegrove (WWF), you can watch it here via YouTube.

Watch to learn more about the evolutions taking place at Open Planet Ideas and find out how you can put your design skills to the test.

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Dominic Wilcox completes his 30-Day Speed Creating Challenge

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Pencil Shelf

Last month Core77 mentioned that London-based Dominic Wilcox began his Speed Creating project where he would create something every day for 30 days as part of the Anti-Design Festival Mestakes and Manifestos events.

Now 30+ plus days later he has a retrospective of this work and all 30 creations can be seen on his nonstop blog, Variations on Normal. There are some great examples of material explorations and the documentation for each idea is a real insight into what goes through Dominic's mind as he puts his ideas into practice.

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The Value of Empty Spaces: Thomas Kong's Zero Project

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With the support of the Jaap Bakema Fellowship, Thomas Kong, Director of the Ungraduate Architecture and Interior Architecture Programs at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, has been researching emptiness in the midst of large Asian metropolises. Entitled Zero Project, Kong's research investigates the value of the void. He asks, "what can ZERO offer as we live through the Great Recession, when the myth of continuous economic growth is shattered and the assumption of ready capital for development can no longer be guaranteed?"

Kong's interpretation and portrayal of zero is not the one of zero-energy buildings, but of emptiness. What is the value of blankness? What happens there? For him, this translates to "new attitudes in a post economic bubble age," collected here. They include: "Think and act Micro," "Be Tactical," "Make Do," and "Celebrate Contingency."

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Vienna Design Week 2010: Core77 Interviews Mischer'Traxler

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mischer'traxler with their Relumine prototype lamp for Bulb Fiction, top, and their Till You Stop automated cake icing machine in action, pictured bottom. Photo credit: kollectiv fischka

The Vienna based design studio mischer'traxler are so super prolific, that during Vienna Design Week they showed work in at least three exhibitions, exhibition the Till You Stop - How Much is Enough cake icing machine at Design Criminals, the first prototype of the 'Relumine' lamp at Bulb Fiction, 'Nespresso Battery' for the Nespresso Sustain.Ability competition, and the Rumkugelbahn installation in the MAKshop.

Despite their busy design week schedule, we managed to catch up with Katharina Mischer and Thomas Traxler to discuss cakes, rumkugelbahns, compromise and collaborations.

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The Rumkugelbahn - The Rumballrun by mischer'traxler. Photo credit: kollectiv fischka

Core77: How did the Rumkugelbahn come about for Vienna Design Week?

Mischer'Traxler: Actually the Rumkugelbahn is old work that we originally did for the DMY Berlin this year. In the installation are different pieces of work by designers and manufacturers from Vienna., created during previous Vienna Design Weeks. It is actually an exhibition display to promote and advertise the Vienna Design Week, to encourage people to come and visit.

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HP needs to Alt-Tab-Delete. What would (and wouldn't) Apple do?

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Here's a depressing illustration of a product philosophy encapsulated in a completely extraneous design feature. This is Engadget showing a pull-out tab on HP's forthcoming Slate tablet computer, a supposed challenger to the iPad. As Daring Fireball points out,

This photo says it all -- the device has a permanent slide-out tab that serves no technical purpose. It's just a place to put a bunch of regulatory and licensing small-print crap.

Is it any wonder that the iPad doesn't seem to have any real competition?

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The merits of personal garbage compression embodied in the Smash Can

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Finding good roommates is hard, because most people have domestic idiosyncrasies that a) they're unaware of and b) they can't shake. I've had roommates that turned the kitchen garbage can into a game of Jenga, stacking and balancing one piece of trash onto another rather than taking it out. Me on the other hand, I'm a garbage compressor, a habit I picked up in Japan.

When I was working in a school there, after lunch I observed each student cleaning up after themselves as taught to do. Each and every one took their regulation milk carton and folded it completely flat before placing it in a clear recycling bag in the classroom. When all the bags schoolwide were gathered up for collection, it became obvious why they flattened the cartons: The entire school's worth of discarded milk cartons fit in just a few tidy bags. Less plastic bags were used, saving some plastic there, and this also made more room in the recycling truck. District-wide this resulted in less trips made by the truck, less gas used, and less exhaust fumes. These savings were achieved by hundreds and then thousands of students performing a ritualistic two-second act after their meals.

I was reminded of this when I saw the Smash Can, a kitchen garbage can that has a sort of accordion built into the lid. Press it down and it compresses your trash without getting your hands into contact with the refuse. Not as efficient as hundreds of thousands of students folding something completely flat, but a good start.

via inhabitat

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