Bits of Steve woven in with an overview of the new campus. I especially like the line, “The idea is to bring California back to Cupertino.”
Design
Dad makes a 3D-printed prosthetic hand for his son
Wow. Just wow.
Compound shapes in CSS
I love that this could have been done with images, but he tackled the problem with CSS instead.
Complete restaurant automation
We’ve all seen sushi restaurants where they put the food on a conveyor belt, you pick off what you like. But this restaurant takes that process to the next level.
So much to see in this video. Special orders on some sort of tablet. Looks like an iPad power plug, but where’s the home button? Is that an iPad?
Got to love the game you can play if you deposit 5 dishes at the end. Motivation to eat more, motivation to clean after yourself.
The hubless wheel – a trunk for your bike
This is a lovely bit of design.
Jonathan Ive and Marc Newson interview
Jonathan Ive you know. One of his best friends, Marc Newson, might not be quite as familiar a name to you. Newson is also a world-class designer. The two are collaborating for the first time for an auction to benefit Bono’s Product (Red) anti-H.I.V. campaign. Vanity Fair interviewed them both.
In an effort that is part connoisseurship, part creativity, and part curatorship, the two designers have assembled a group of more than 40 objects that will be auctioned at Sotheby’s in New York on November 23 to benefit Product (Red), the eccentrically punctuated charity set up by Bono and Bobby Shriver in 2006 to support international efforts to fight the H.I.V. epidemic in Africa. Two one-of-a-kind pieces—a metal desk and a special Leica camera—were designed by Ive and Newson in collaboration, specially for the auction. Several others, like a customized Steinway grand piano and a Georg Jensen silver pitcher, are variations on existing objects that Ive and Newson both liked and got the manufacturers to agree to tweak for the sale, generally by adding something red. (The Steinway appears to be entirely white, but when you lift its lid, the underside turns out to be painted an intense, brilliant red, while the pitcher has a red enameled interior.) A few other items, such as a circa-1990 Russian cosmonaut’s space suit and a sketch for one of Elvis Presley’s stage costumes from 1970, are objects Ive and Newson found and decided that they liked well enough to include in the auction as is.
On obsession with detail and commitment to design:
“We are both fanatical in terms of care and attention to things people don’t see immediately,” Ive said. “It’s like finishing the back of a drawer. Nobody’s going to see it, but you do it anyway. Products are a form of communication—they demonstrate your value system, what you care about.”
On the one-of-a-kind Leica camera the pair designed for the auction:
The camera is based on the Leica Digital Rangefinder and was manufactured by that company as a custom item. The overall shape is similar to a conventional camera’s, but the finished object looks altogether different. It is made of brushed aluminum, and the controls are sleek and understated, as on Ive’s products for Apple. It does everything the regular Leica does, with the same lenses and the same functions, but the controls no longer seem intrusive, like silver barnacles on a black metal beast. Instead, every button and every lever is a tiny sensual moment, subsumed into the overall form of the camera. Never a thing of beauty, the Leica has become one by being boiled down to its essence.
“I found it a very odd and unusual thing to put this amount of love and energy into one thing, where you are only going to make one,” Ive said. “But isn’t it beautiful?” The camera’s dollar worth is hard to estimate, since it is an art piece as much as a functioning object, but the value of the time Ive, Newson, and Leica’s own engineers put into it probably totals well into six figures, and possibly seven. The process of designing and making the camera took more than nine months, and involved 947 different prototype parts and 561 different models before the design was completed. According to Apple, 55 engineers assisted at some part in the process, spending a collective total of 2,149 hours on the project. Final assembly of the actual camera took one engineer 50 hours, the equivalent of more than six workdays, all of which makes Ive’s comment to me that he thought the Leica might bring $6 million seem not so far-fetched.
Good read, especially if you are into design.
Conical Gradients in CSS
I love seeing smart people doing smart things.
10 mobile app design tips
Design tips worth reading before you start your next app project. These aren’t perfect, they aren’t exhaustive, but good food for thought.
Theft-proof bike lights
I love great design.
One afternoon last year, Menn and his business partner, Tivan Amour, headed out to Kendall Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to invite passersby to walk away with their theft-resistant bike light. The team announced in poster board and Sharpie: “Free bike lights… if you can steal them.” Next to the light, Menn offered an array of bicycle light–busting tools: needle-nose pliers, an Allen wrench, lock wrenches and heavy-duty plumbing wrenches. If strangers could pry the light from the bike in two minutes (“No opportunistic thief will spend more than two minutes,” explains Menn), the light was theirs to keep.
Excellent way to beta-test.
Great looking chair design
I love this. Expensive, but you pay for great design.
How Sagrada Familia will look when it’s done
Gizmodo:
This video shows the culmination of the work being funded mainly through public donations, including the massive, yet-to-be-finished 564-foot tower at its center.
The Sagrada Familia is probably the most famous unfinished building in the world and its design is fascinating whether you like it or not. This video of the finished building shows even more radical changes in the future.
CSS Regions
CSS Regions allow you to flow content into a series of containers on a single page. It’s the equivalent of linking text boxes in an application like InDesign. It makes possible some layouts that were previously only possible by blurring the line between data and styles.
National Geographic’s “The Power of Photography” issue
Today photography has become a global cacophony of freeze-frames. Millions of pictures are uploaded every minute. Correspondingly, everyone is a subject, and knows it—any day now we will be adding the unguarded moment to the endangered species list. It’s on this hyper-egalitarian, quasi-Orwellian, all-too-camera-ready “terra infirma” that National Geographic’s photographers continue to stand out.
To my mind, no contemporary magazine has brought us more powerful images so consistently for so long. This 125th anniversary issue is one that should be bought in hard cover and kept as a family heirloom.
Chaos Computer Club hackers trick iPhone fingerprint scanner
Interesting, but required a bit of Mission Impossible trickery to make it work.
The CCC started by photographing a fingerprint with 2400 dpi. Next the image was inverted and laser printed at 1200 dpi. To create the fingerprint mask Starbug finally used, latex milk was poured into the pattern, eventually lifted, breathed on (for moisture), and pushed onto the sensor to unlock the phone. In this sense, it’s hard to definitively state the hackers “broke” the TouchID precautions, because they did not circumvent the security measure without access to the fingerprint.
This does raise a fair question, though. How usable are the fingerprints we regularly leave on our phones? How susceptible is the iPhone 5s to this technique?
iOS 7’s motion effects are triggering vertigo and nausea symptoms
Stuff:
A major change in Apple’s iOS 7 update was its sleek, minimal aesthetic; however, the amount of motion now found within is anything but minimal.The net result: “It feels to me like the whole screen is moving, and it generates a sort of motion sickness. I feel dizzy and can feel the very beginnings of nausea kicking in.”
It’s not as bad as full on motion sickness for me but I do find the animations to be annoying eye candy I wish I could toggle off.
Astonishing table design
This is remarkable craftsmanship. I want one.
USA Today talks to Jony Ive and Craig Federighi
There are so many good pieces in this story. You just have to read the whole thing.
Typ.io: A catalog of web typography
Very cool.
USB condom
When you plug your smart phone into a USB cable, your device will try to pair with the device on the other end of the cable. If the only thing on the other end of the line is your personally owned USB charger, no worries. But if you plug into a public charging station or a stranger’s USB charger, you are opening yourself up to malware. The device on the other end can pair with your phone and cause all sorts of mischief.
The soon-to-be-released USB condom is a dongle that sits on the end of your USB cable and prevents data transfer, meaning you can safely charge your device without fear of contracting malware.
I like the idea of the device, though I think a better answer is a USB cable with a switch built in, to toggle between data and charge-only modes.
The nICE mug, a mug made completely out of ice
If you like your beverage to stay cold, this is a great solution. So clever.
Samsung Galaxy Gear
There have been a number of posts discussing the impact of the release of the Samsung Galaxy Gear and, to a lesser extent, Qualcomm Toq smart watches. Some coverage hails the start of a revolution. But I found Mike Elgan’s ComputerWorld piece much closer to reality.
Press and pundits are treating these new entrants as the beginning of the revolution. But they’re not. They’re throwback, unserious relics from the past. They will both fail in the market. And they don’t represent the awesome smartwatch lineup to come.
If Apple chooses to enter this market, you can bet the farm that they won’t look anything like the Samsung and Qualcomm offerings.
The mechanics of the chestburster from Alien
A seminal moment for special effects, the Alien chestburster scared a lot of people and was a marvel of mechanical engineering. The video below shows how it was built, and the post’s title link will take you to a page filled with all sorts of goodies.
The GrOpener
There are a number of one-handed openers on the market, but this one, the Gropener strikes me as the best. The magnet is well placed to help target the bottle cap, the cap sticks to the magnet, and the opener sticks to most refrigerator doors. Well done.
Wall calendar that never needs replacing
This is clever, though imperfect. The calendar frame slides to properly portray the current month. There are no labels for days of the week (like a watch with no numbers), and every month has 31 days, so you have to say the little rhyme (30 days hath September…) to remind yourself when the next month starts.
Still, very clever.
3D shading with box shadows
I know I’m a sucker, but I really do like shading because it brings some depth to designs.
Apple patents new hinge to make laptops even thinner
The size of our devices are stuck at something of a bottleneck. We can’t exactly make them smaller because they’re so reliant on large, easily visible displays. So, the industry makes do, and makes the devices thinner, which reduces overall size without compromising display size. One object standing in the way of even thinner laptops is the hinge, and Apple might have found a way to remove that from the design equation.
Yesterday, a new patent application was published that describes “flexible segments” that interlock to form a rigid material. The material used isn’t some kind of top-secret new wonder metal only found deep within Apple’s subterranean volcano lair, but rather a process that can take rigid material — such as plastic or metal — and can cut it in such a way to create the flexible segments. The flexible segmented hinge could bend at various degrees, but that depends on the segments being cut in different patterns.
Intriguing.
Icon argument
Great article by Bobby Solomon on how making “hollow icons” aren’t going to confuse your users.
Student creates printer that swallows stack of paper
This is a lovely bit of design. Student Mugi Yamamoto created a compact printer which is placed on top of a stack of paper.
When printing, “Stack” slowly moves downwards and swallows the pile until no paper is left.
Really nice.
Apple patents 3D object manipulation gestures
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office on Tuesday published an Apple patent for a method of generating and manipulating a three-dimensional object on a computing device, with the process controlled by special gestures made above a touchscreen’s surface.
With the maturation of 3D printing and the emergence of technologies such as the Leap Motion Controller, this is a logical direction for Apple.
The document refers to a device that can detect the location of fingers with a combination of capacitive touch sensors and proximity sensors embedded in the display. These two components can be separate, or the capacitive sensors themselves can act as proximity sensors by measuring the capacitance of a nearby finger.
Proximity sensors mean that the gestures do not necessarily require touch, meaning you might rotate an object by rotating your hand. Tremendous possibilities.
Type Hunting
There are some great old fonts here.