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Gaming in the Men's room: Sega's new urinal device

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If the Japanese nation is famous for anything, passion for gaming, remarkable toilets and an ability to apply technology to the most unlikely of places are surely high on the list.

So really, Sega's new urinal arcade gaming device, revealed at a recent Japanese technology fair, shouldn't come as too much of a surprise. The game is obviously intended to improve the gentlemen's aim (as well as bombarding him with advertisements that is), but you have to wonder how easy it is to aim at the target whilst watching the action on-screen. The cherub in the demonstration below seems to manage anyway.


(via BitRebels)

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HP / Palm is Seeking a Visual Designer in Sunnyvale or San Francisco

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Visual Designer
HP / Palm

Sunnyvale or San Francisco

Palm is seeking a world-class user experience visual designer with a proven track record of shipping game-changing products. In this role you will develop groundbreaking mobile products, working with a cross-functional team from product conception to ship date to define the interfaces that millions will use every day. Palm is a wholly-owned subsidiary of HP.

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The best design jobs and portfolios hang out at Coroflot.

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More pre-ID industrial design: The Kelly Kettle

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The title of this entry is referencing James H. Boye's early-20th-Century POP design I wrote about a few days ago. I'm always fascinated by great design that happened before anyone knew what ID was--it's more fascinating to me, given the primitive production methods of earlier times--and here's another example.

The Kelly Kettle, devised in Ireland in the 1890s, came about even earlier than Boye's invention and unlike that POP display, it is still in use today by campers and outdoorsmen. The device is a brilliant way to quickly boil water outdoors, even in inclement weather.

When you boil water in a regular pot, the bottom of the pot is typically the only area with heat applied directly to it, and it takes a while for the water to boil. But the Kelly Kettle's clever design maximizes the amount of surface area being heated to produce more rapid results.

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The design of it incorporates what's called a double-walled chimney. It's essentially a metal canister with a hollow, conical core running from the open bottom to the narrower opening at the top. The user starts a small fire inside the base of the canister, which keeps rain and wind out. The fire vents through the little chimney at the top, and water in the "walls" of the canister rapidly comes to a boil.

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I'm guessing the first Kelly Kettles were made of tin or whatever other metals were readily available in 1890, but the modern-day version comes in stainless steel or aluminum.

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Spiral Foundatin's Wastepaper Baskets made from waste

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Go to any developing country--and heck, most of the developed ones--and at some point you see discarded plastic bags flying around as free-floating garbage. That's why I love these so much: These Wastepaper Baskets are made from cast-off plastic wrappers (and presumably plastic bags) by artisans in Nepal.

The $36 bags are manufactured under the SPIRAL Foundation Workshop, a nonprofit that renders asisstance to developing countries, and proceeds help keep a health clinic in Nepal up and running.

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Thinking of doing a design PhD? Trust me, I'm a doctor.

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In design post-graduation education the PhD is fast becoming the new Masters. This partly reflects the maturing of design research, but is also a response to the need for institutions to beef up their research quota and the attendant external funding. If you want to teach at a design college, the expectations of some institutions are often difficult to fulfill. Many ask for a PhD and several years of commercial practice, preferably current. It's a tough call - both are extremely time hungry and it's hard to do both well.

A Masters is often the terminating degree for a designer heading off professionally (certainly in the USA). For others it is a return the pleasure of self-determined projects having worked in agency life for a few years. But a PhD is a different beast to a Masters. I know of several designers who "fancy the idea" of doing a PhD and there are plenty of Masters students who are attracted to it, either because they want to expand their MA work or because they're not really sure what to do next.

Having officially become Dr. Polaine earlier in the year as well as having taught post-graduate students for many years, I thought I would offer some thoughts on the journey. As always, your mileage may vary.

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I give this package design a Bee Plus

Neat Ikeahack for off-set tabletop/work surface

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Digging this Ikeahack by RainyDayMagazine. Ikea's Capita brace, stock shot above, is meant for adding an elevated, off-set ledge to a table. RDM's Wan & Carolyn took four of them, mounted them outwards on a shop cart and connected a tabletop, with neat results:

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One ergonomic issue they're candid about is that the table is not ideal for dining, as leg space underneath the top is limited. This seems easy to rectify though, as you can add a wider tabletop or use a narrower shop cart.

I think this would be a great solution for a workbench, with the braces turned inwards; then you could have your work surface on top holding an object you're building or repairing, and all of your tools laid within easy reach on the secondary surface.

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"Sustainable Refrainables" Poster Design Competition: Deadline January 2nd

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Entries are pouring in for Core77's "Sustainable Refrainables" Poster Design Competition in conjunction with Compostmodern 2011. There's still 4 days remaining if you want a shot at winning one of the five copies of Adobe's CS5 Master Collection (and $500 cash for the jury and community favorites). Not to mention all top five winning entries will be printed and displayed in bus shelters during San Francisco's Design Week, June 13-19, 2011, and each winner will receive a copy of their poster.

Quick reminder to the serious contenders, the design brief is to visualize a phrase of persuasion and bring it to life with typography and visual cues—that, and if you want to win—we probably don't need any more computer warning message metaphors, I think we nailed that one!

Good luck, enter now, and see you at Compostmodern!

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Your desk is so plane

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If I could hire employees, I'd have a desk like this and sit behind it wearing a leather flying cap, bomber jacket, scarf and goggles while I interviewed prospectives. I would act normal through much of the interview but pause at intervals to shoot down enemy bombers with pantomime and self-generated sound effects.

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That's Restoration Hardware's new Aviator Wing Desk, "inspired by streamlined World War II fighter planes." It instantly reminded me of the work of MotoArt, a California-based firm we looked at last year that produces furniture from old airplanes. There are a couple differences, though: MotoArt's stuff is made from the real deal, while RH's desk is just aluminum sheets screwed (not even riveted?) to a wooden frame; and judging by the close-up shots, the fit and finish of the latter's product doesn't look up to the former's standards.

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Anyways, back to my interview fantasy. If the interviewee gave an answer I didn't like, I'd suddenly go into a tailspin and re-enact a fiery crash.

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Until ID'ers get their own hack blog, this'll have to do

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It's not quite FailBlog, but neither is it a site documenting triumphs of the human spirit. No, the Russian site Misuse.su is something in between, collecting shots of various objects that have creatively been hacked into something else with results of varying aesthetic value. You may have to wade a bit, but more than a few of these remind me of what you'd see on people's personal studio desks back at ID school.

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And yes, that's a guy using a laptop as a compass.

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Make your existing socks obsolete with this interesting footwear design ("interesting" being the operative word)

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I know they're not meant to be funny looking, but I keep thinking these are the kinds of shoes you send your kid out in when you want him to get beat up at the playground:

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They're by a Japanese company called Globe, and the advertised merits of having separated-toe shoes is improved circulation, hygiene (I guess isolated toes develop no "funk"), and a better sense of grabbing the ground with your feet for those being physically rehabilitated.

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One merit they forgot to add is that it will make your boy tougher or at the very least, accustomed to fighting off a daily onslaught of attackers at the monkey bars. Yeah, if my kid had to wear these I'd draw attention away from his feet by giving him one of those beanies with the propeller on top.

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Vizio is Seeking a Senior Industrial Designer in Irvine Calif.

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Senior Industrial Designer
Vizio

Irvine Calif.

If you're looking for a 9 to 5 job in a comfortable, slow moving corporate environment, with policies and paperwork to guide every aspect of your decisions and responsibilities, this job is NOT for you. However, if you want to unleash your creative skills and you yearn to play a key role in a fast-paced, impactful company on a skyrocketing trajectory, we want to hear from you. We are looking to hire an exceptionally talented Sr. Industrial Designer to contribute to our team of world-class experts. Our top candidate must have an informed design perspective, ambition, and a desire to work in a dynamic and entrepreneurial company.

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The best design jobs and portfolios hang out at Coroflot.

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The coffee table: Conversation starter and a lesson-in-waiting for children

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Respect me, boy

The original purpose of a coffee table seems so respectable and quaint. You and your spouse invite the Joneses over for dinner--presumably to show them you're keeping up with them--and afterwards, repair to the comfort of your living room, where coffee is served on a low table to "[encourage] conviviality and light conversation," as Wikipedia puts it. (Plus if the table's nice, you can disrespect your neighbor--who does he think he is, flaunting his yard like that--by demonstratively placing your feet on it.)

Then there's the coffee table book, a large, glossy tome sporting a design unconcerned with living a vertical life crammed on a shelf. It knows it will be able to sprawl out on the coffee table to entertain guests. It is the roomy suburban manse of the book world, unlike the Manhattan skyscraper shelf-hell that your other books live in.

An interesting piece in the Times looks at a darker coffee table world, one in which they are the instrument of child injury. The low table is the right height for your tot to slam into during play, and chances are you can recall several instances from childhood in which you or your playmates got a boo-boo from a Barcelona. Industrial designer Bruce Hannah, quoted in the article, jokingly refers to the Mies van der Rohe piece as "a deadly weapon."

Some might feel it's a furniture designer's responsibility to design coffee tables to be safe for all ages. Other would argue the burden is on the parents to child-proof their home or select appropriate furniture. But I prefer the sensible attitude expressed by one father in the article whose own child had a coffee table accident in someone else's living room:

"Life has hard edges," the father told [the apologetic hostess]. "Better he should learn it now than think everything's padded and be surprised later."
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Muscular furnace design

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Good gosh do I want one of these Bullerjan furnaces, a woodburning stove whose design suggests in contains a V8 engine. In fact the pipes on the bottom draw in cold air and those on top vent hot air, giving this "Free Flow" design an "enormous heating capacity."

My favorite part of the product copy is the company's claim that it was developed by Canadian lumberjacks. I picture a group of enormous Paul-Bunyan-lookin' dudes in red flannel shirts crammed around a comparatively tiny CAD machine in a forest cabin, waiting for the render to complete. "It's stuck at 82%, eh?"

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After seeing Bertelli's Biciclette, now I understand bike porn

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I love how good product photography and good industrial design can draw you to objects you previously had no interest in; it's part of why I'm currently obsessed with vintage sewing machines, and it takes all of my willpower not to post about them every day. But do have a look at these ridiculously beautiful bicycles, and snaps of them, by NYC-based Francesco Bertelli. (No word on who the shooter is, but if it's Bertelli himself, the man has been blessed with multiple talents.) Even more impressive, the bikes have been built with a combination of new and found parts.

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A better Post-It? And made from wood waste

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This is a great design project because a) it incorporates recycling, b) it's a useful product, and c) the design addresses and corrects the flaws of earlier generations of the same product.

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Shibuya-based Naruse-Inokama Architects, comprised of Jun Inokuma and Yuri Naruse, takes wood waste from houses and turns that into paper. The resultant paper is then formed into a stack of Post-It-like sticky notes that are in turn shaped like little houses. (They're called IE-TAGs as "ie" is Japanese for "house.") And as anyone who's ever seen a thick book loaded up with Post-It bookmarks can attest, the corners of the Post-Its get dog-eared like nobody's business. The resultant mess could hardly be called aesthetically pleasing.

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The house shape of NIA's sticky notes, on the other hand, get rid of the corners altogether. I do wonder how they'll hold up if the book is, say, thrown into a crowded bookbag, and I'm curious enough to try 'em if someone would kindly start selling these at a store near me. (Muji, get on these!)

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Ziiiro Watches: Time doesn't fly, but it swirls

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Just when I think I've seen every possible variant of clock and watch design, someone comes up with a new way to represent those two little sticks that make us on time or late.

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The most recent to catch my eye is Ziiiro's line of Gravity and Mercury watches, which are silicone-bracelet-style and stainless-steel-mesh-band-style watches, respectively. Rotating thick and thin swirls take the place of hands, and if you get bored of the color, you can swap the swirls out for others.

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Yves Behar on why we should look forward to 2011

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Yves Behar gave a quick Q&A to the Times, providing quotes on technology, sustainability, and the role of social activism in design. He kicked things off with this encouraging view:

I truly believe that we're about to enter a second golden age of design. The first one was in the '50s and '60s, when designers like Raymond Loewy, Charles Eames, George Nelson and Dieter Rams were shepherds of the brands they were working with. They had influence over the products and how companies communicated and promoted themselves.

To me, this year is the promised year....

In the hopes he's right, we'll raise our glasses a little higher tonight.

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New furniture designs from Patricia Urquiola

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Channeling 1950s California Modernism is Patricia Urquiola's recently released Silver Lake line of armchairs and sofas, named for the hip L.A. neighborhood. Produced by Italy's Moroso, the line is made from wood, steel and fabric "playing on continuous geometries of solids and spaces, with volumes creating multi-faceted shapes."

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Urquiola's no stranger to Moroso; see more pieces from their prolific collaboration here.

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Ongoing debate about design of commercial HD vehicles

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There's an interesting discussion going on over at the Core77 boards on the design of commercial heavy duty vehicles, and we're liking the variety of voices (and willingness to throw images up there). Topic starter Ginrod comments on the sportscar-like styling adopted by many tractor manufacturers like this one:

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Further down, former HDR (Heavy Duty Repairman) and Operating Engineer LMO, who has logged more than 10,000 hours "in the seat" in addition to actually fixing the machines in question, sounds off with the invaluable firsthand experience that's so important in discussions like these:

I'd be more concerned with the ease of operation (ergonomics) and maintainability of these machines than their appearance. All the swoopy curves...are pleasant to look at but since they are only attainable via molded plastics their field longevity is probably not too good; all the the stuff that I've worked on suffered from it (most operators of this equipment aren't too concerned with bumping into things).

The typical HDR is expected to keep his employer's equipment running (often approaching a 90% duty cycle) with the tools s/he has on the truck, and that seldom, if ever, includes a drum of polyester resin and roll of fiberglass cloth, let alone the technical composites expertise to use it correctly.

In the vein of the classic "form follows function," LMO then points out that styling can make an important contribution by opening up line-of-sight from the cabs, which can increase both safety and productivity.

His last point is the one we found most interesting, as it says something about what happens when design moves faster than people are willing to adapt to. Look at the interior and controls of the CAT 160H Motor Loader, a vehicle that dates from 1995 (captions by LMO):

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"Typical of all other makes, control (ten levers) must be reached for and manually 'blended.'"

Then look at the controls inside CAT's current M14 model:

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"All controls accessible without moving the hands from 3-axis joystick hand controllers.... Many of the old hands that I know, who operate 'blades' (as they're called), are so frustrated with learning these new controls that they are retiring from the business."

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