World's Fair Nano Coverage: More Wearables with Rowkin's Assortment of Self-Charging Wireless Earbuds

In the previous post on wearables seen at the World’s Fair Nano, we looked at Ashley Chloe’s Helix Cuffs vs. Apple’s AirPods. This time we’ll look at Rowkin’s offerings, which are much more similar to Apple’s product than the Cuffs, but have some minor differences in UX.

Rowkin displayed their three versions of wireless Bluetooth headphones: The Bit Stereo, Bit Charge Stereo and Micro products. Each consist of wireless earbuds that “live” in a little charging case, just as the AirPods do, with some minor differences.

Micro

Price: $130

The diminutive $130 Micro’s case holds enough juice for four charge cycles providing three hours of battery life each, meaning the user is carrying around 12 hours’ worth.

Bit Stereo

Price: $110

The Bit Stereo’s chief physical distinction is that the designers have opted for a cylindrical case resembling a lipstick tube:

These are more casual-use earbuds, as the battery life contained within the charger only provides two charging cycles that each provide “up to 3 hours of talk time and up to 2 hours of music playback.” The key benefit seems to be that the cylindrical form factor takes up a minimum of space.

Bit Charge Stereo

Price: $130

Although priced the same as the Micro, the larger Bit Charge Stereo provides a whopping 15 charging cycles or can completely charge an iPhone 7, the company claims. Clearly designed for the power user, the battery case comes in at just over 3.5 inches tall.

In short, the Micro is similar to Apple’s AirPods in form factor, minus the aesthetic differences. (I’ll let the technophiles argue over which sound better, as we’re only concerned with the role of the industrial designer here.) But Rowkin offers the customer more choices with their light-duty Bit Stereo and power-user Bit Charge Stereo.

Time will tell whether Apple’s one-size-fits-all approach, which undoubtedly streamlines their manufacturing process versus Rowkin’s requisite multiple factory lines, proves to be the winning one. With wearables, it’s still not clear whether one type of design will “win” and dominate the category, or whether these will continue to be, like eyeglasses, wristwatches and other on-body devices, ruled by fashion rather than function.

Link About It: The Erosion of Easter Island

The Erosion of Easter Island


One of the most remote inhabited locations, Easter Island captivates because of the remnants of the ancient civilization it once housed: moai statues and “ahu” platforms, found predominantly along the island’s coast. Many of these iconic relics are……

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Amanda Levete warns UK government: "Do not mess with trans-European collaboration"

London architect Amanda Levete has warned that, if the UK government doesn’t provide certainty over Brexit soon, it will result in a major shortfall in the country’s creative talent pool.

Speaking at a Brexit conference in London, the AL_A founder said that the UK leaving the European Union is set to dismantle a “spirit of co-operation” that has taken decades to build, and has huge implications for the creative industries.

“My message to our leaders is: do not mess with this trans-European collaboration,” she told the audience.

“It’s not just about trade and what we can extract, it’s about culture and society. It’s about the exchange of talent and knowledge and respect for each other’s nations.”

Levete considering part-relocation to Paris

Levete revealed she is considering moving part of her architectural studio to Paris, in the fear she won’t be able to recruit enough talented staff after Brexit.

She previously raised the idea during a Brexit design summit hosted by Dezeen in 2016 – even though, she said, it goes against the collaborative approach she wants to promote in her practice.

Amanda Levete said she is considering moving part of her studio to Paris in the wake of Brexit

“I would be derelict in my duty if I were not now exploring the potential for having a base in the EU,” she said.

“We are being actively encouraged to set up an office in Paris and they’re making it financially competitive because they see the value that a practice like ours would bring to the city,” she continued.

“But this is a distraction for us and it sends the wrong message. Our studio and our discipline have collaboration at its core. Having separate offices for people with different passports runs completely counter to those values.”

Talent must be imported so ideas can be exported

The Creative Industries Federation invited Levete to give the speech as part of an event billed as the “single largest gathering of creative industries on Brexit”. The aim was for UK creatives, business leaders and politicians to set out their priorities, to inform the government’s Brexit trade negotiations.

Levete said that, without access to talent and expertise from Europe, she feared the UK would struggle to maintain its position as a world leader in architecture and design.

“In the 20th century, Britain went from the position of being the “workshop of the world” when we sent finished goods across the globe, to being the “workshop for the world”, importing talent and exporting ideas,” she stated.

“If we can’t import the talent, how can we export the ideas?”

V&A would be different in post-Brexit Britain

The architect also suggested that her latest big project – the new wing of the V&A museum in London – would have been inferior if completed after the UK left the European Union.

“We depended on talent and expertise from architects and specialists from across Europe,” she explained.

Victoria & Albert museum by AL_A
Levete suggested her V&A museum extension would have been inferior if completed after the UK left the European Union

“By way of example, the porcelain tiles for the courtyard required two years of intense research with a manufacturer based in The Netherlands. Yes, we have great manufacturers in Britain. But we cannot replace the expertise that we don’t have,” she added.

“Tichelaar is the oldest company in Holland and they’ve been working with ceramics for over 400 years. In future, Dutch tiles may prove to be too expensive and we’ll have to use cheaper, inferior products for our national museums.”

Levete warned that uncertainty about the UK’s trade future with Europe will not only discourage talented staff but will also affect the way that institutions like the V&A operate.

“All clients – and especially public institutions – need cost certainty. But unknown tariffs and delays at customs will give cause for alarm,” she said.

“Rather than a bold new Britain, we will become more cautious and risk-averse. And that runs completely counter to creative thinking.”

Loss of talent will dilute UK’s creative voice

Levete ranked at number 134 on Dezeen Hot List 2017.

She has long opposed the UK’s vote to leave the EU, in the referendum that took place on 23 June 2016. She was among hundreds of high-profile architects and designers that signed the Dezeen Brexit Manifesto, which set out guidelines for what the architecture and design industry needed to thrive after Brexit.

Two years later, she said one of her biggest concerns is that the culture of “democracy, openness and creativity” that has underpinned the UK’s creative sector is under threat.

“The creative industries are engaged, enterprising and solve problems every day. It’s what we do,” she said.

“We have a voice that is listened to and respected on an international stage. But loss of talent will hugely dilute our voice and the UK’s pre-eminence in the creative sector. We need to mobilise now and to hold our leaders to account – so that Britain remains a creative nation – of hope, diversity and tolerance.”

Read on for Levete’s entire speech in full:

The post Amanda Levete warns UK government: “Do not mess with trans-European collaboration” appeared first on Dezeen.

MAD's museum for George Lucas breaks ground in Los Angeles

Fresh renderings of the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art by Beijing studio MAD have been released to coincide with the project’s groundbreaking in Los Angeles.

Construction began this week on the museum that will be dedicated to the work of filmmaker and Star Wars creator George Lucas, following the project’s own saga that has involved it moving across the country.

Lucas Museum by MAD Architects

The new images show alterations to the roof of the curvaceous building, where visitors will be able to stroll around and get views across LA’s Exposition Park.

Members of the public will also be able to wander along landscaped paths circling the structure, and walk through a giant arch that cuts through its middle.

Lucas Museum by MAD Architects

The renderings offer a glimpse of the interior, which will include 100,000 square feet (9,000 square metres) of gallery space for displaying Lucas and wife Mellody Hobson’s art collection, and memorabilia from his movies.

Transparent tube elevator shafts will transport visitors up through the swooping white ceiling in the cavernous lobby area.

MAD‘s design also incorporates education and retail spaces inside the museum, which is expected to open in 2021.

The City of Los Angeles approved the museum in June 2017, after it was chosen as the location over San Francisco earlier the same year.

Lucas Museum by MAD Architects

Lucas originally intended to build his venue in Chicago, and hired MAD for the project back in 2014, but faced legal issues over the proposed lakefront site.

Architect Frank Gehry voiced his support for the project, and MAD unveiled a slimmed-down version of the building in an attempt to appease critics.

Lucas Museum by MAD Architects

The city council eventually gave the project the go-ahead, but then its mayor suggested moving it to another site after a judge upheld the block requested by local opposition groups.

In the end, Lucas decided to abandon Chicago for the West Coast, where the museum was received with open arms. LA mayor Eric Garcetti called it “a slam dunk” and “one of the boldest pieces of architecture we’ve seen in the world” when it received unanimous approval.

MAD – ranked 56th on last year’s Dezeen Hot List of design’s buzziest names – is also working on a residential development in nearby Beverly Hills.

The post MAD’s museum for George Lucas breaks ground in Los Angeles appeared first on Dezeen.

The Real Cost of Financial Clutter on the Road to a Remarkable Life

This guest post comes from Trent Hamm, the author of The Simple Dollar: How One Man Wiped Out His Debts and Achieved the Life of His Dreams. Be sure to check out his blog, The Simple Dollar after reading this truly inspiring piece.

Every time you spend a dollar, you sacrifice a bit of your future.

Five years ago, I believed the above sentence was foolishness. I was 24 years old, working at a high paying job, and about to get married to a wonderful woman. I had just spent almost ten thousand dollars on a wedding ring and an exorbitant honeymoon in Europe, and I was actively shopping for a new vehicle because, well, my current ride just wasn’t quite good enough.

Roll forward three years. I had $17,000 in credit card debt and literally not enough money to pay my bills. A good chunk of the debt incurred for that honeymoon still sat on the credit cards. My wife, son, and I lived together in a tiny apartment, trying to figure out what we were going to do next.

Everywhere I looked around me in that apartment, I saw stuff I didn’t need. Video game consoles piled high under the television, along with a small mountain of games for the consoles. Over a thousand DVDs. A gigantic television set that dwarfed our living room, looking almost comically out of place. A huge collection of Magic: the Gathering cards. So many books that half of our child’s bedroom consisted of bookshelves. Two nearly-new cars sitting outside.

And yet I felt empty inside. I held my child close, thinking about all of the things I wanted to give to him, but instead I had chosen to spend all of my money on stuff

Every time you spend a dollar, you sacrifice a bit of your future.

Today, not only do I believe deeply in that sentence, it underlines every choice I make in life. I turned that disastrous ship around, realized that all of that stuff was standing in the way of my passions and dreams, and in just two short years, I found enough financial freedom to do what I’ve always wanted to do: quit my nine to five job, stay at home, and focus entirely on my family and on my passion for writing.

The name of this blog, Unclutterer, really underlines the entire idea. Clutter exists in all aspects of our life, not only in the way we arrange items in our office and in our home, but in how we manage our time and manage our money. Clutter is distraction from the big picture, in every way, shape, and form. Clutter can even blind you and choke you if it grows out of control.

Financial clutter is a particularly insidious form of clutter, because it winds through so many aspects of our life. Much of the clutter in our office and home has a financial cost to it, meaning that we actually spent some money to create that clutter. The cluttering of our time is also financial clutter – if we waste our time on things that drain our money or don’t earn as much as we potentially can, we’re draining our financial plans of a great deal of vitality.

Here are six great steps that you can do immediately to reduce the financial clutter in your life – and begin to open the path to a truly remarkable life.

Calculate the true value of your time. Figure up how much you earn in a year. Now, subtract from that the cost of transporting yourself to and from work, the cost of work clothes, the cost of income taxes, and any other costs that your job foists upon you (like entertaining coworkers, for example). Now, figure up how many hours you actually work in a year, and add to that the time spent transporting yourself to and from work, the “extra” time spent working when at home, the time spent buying work-related materials, the time spent schmoozing with coworkers, the time spent on business trips, the time you “need” to spend unwinding after work, and any other time investments you make at work. Then divide the calculated amount you make by the number of hours you work for the year. That’s how much you really value an hour of your life. Know that number. Remember that number. It’s important.

Physically unclutter your living space. Go through all of your possessions and ask yourself whether you actually use it or not. Is it something that has honestly provided value for your life? Look for books you’ve not read, DVDs you’ve only watched a time or two, unplayed games, unlistened music, collections of things that you no longer feel passionate about, and so on. Gather up all of this stuff and estimate how much you’ve spent on it. Then divide it by the value of your time that you calculated above, and if you want to, divide that by 40 (so you can see this in terms of weeks). That’s how much of your life you spent working so you could have this stuff. When I first did this, I estimated that I had spent two years of work accumulating stuff I barely use.

The next step is to get rid of all of this stuff and make a clean break. Eliminate the stuff that you’re not using, haven’t used, and likely won’t use again. Get some degree of financial return out of this stuff in any way you can. Don’t worry about maximizing your return – you rarely will be able to make back the value of your time by seeking out a slightly higher return for the stuff. Then take that money and put it into the bank – it’s now your emergency fund so you don’t have to turn to credit cards when something bad happens.

Set some big goals – and remind yourself of them all the time. This is an effective way to unclutter your mind. Sit down and figure out what your true big goals are. My goals were to spend more time with my children and write for a living – that’s what I really wanted to do more than anything else. Your goals may differ, but spend some time really searching within yourself to know what they are. Focus in on just one, two, or perhaps three goals that really speak to the core of your life.

Once you’ve figured out what you’re really shooting for, let most of the other stuff in your life melt away. If you’re focused on becoming a full-time writer, don’t burden yourself with chasing promotions at work. If you’re focused on being a great parent, don’t spend your mental energy worrying about social obligations in the neighborhood. Focus in on your goal and use all of your energy to reach that goal.

The best way I’ve found of keeping on focus with the goal is to put visual reminders of the goal all over the place. My desktop wallpaper is a picture of my children, and I keep pictures of them everywhere. I also keep notepads everywhere to make it easy for me to jot down thoughts – and also to remind myself of my writing dreams.

Use the true value of your time – and those visual reminders of your big dreams – every time you consider making a purchase. Let’s say the true value of your time came out to be $5 an hour (it can easily be this low, even at a “good” job). You’re at the store and you’re lusting after buying a Nintendo Wii — it’s $270 after taxes. That’s 54 hours of your life spent working for someone else so you can buy something else to clutter up your home. Even better, that’s $270 (or 54 hours) taken away from your big dream.

This works well for small purchases, too. Is that latte worth an actual hour of your life spent working? Is one latte a week for a year worth 52 hours of your life — more than an entire work week? Might that $270 not go better helping you save to make that dream come true, perhaps by helping you build up the financial cushion you need to quit your job and follow that crazy dream?

Go through every. single. monthly. bill. Many of the bills you receive every month have some sort of extra fee in it. Look at your cell phone bill, for instance. Are all of those features something you really need to pay for, every single month? Figure out what you don’t need – what’s just cluttering up your bill – then ring up your cell phone company and get those “features” dropped. Look at your credit card bill. Is that finance charge ridiculously high? Call up your credit card company and request a rate reduction. If the first person you talk to says no, ask to talk to a supervisor.

Even better are bills you can eliminate entirely. We used to subscribe to Netflix, but we were scarcely watching two movies a month, so we cancelled the service. Now, if we get the itch to watch a movie, we just go rent one or download one — it’s far cheaper than the Netflix grind. We used to be members at a gym, but now we get most of our exercise at home or by jogging around the block, so there goes another substantial chunk of financial clutter.

Unclutter your debt. Make a list of every single debt you have — credit cards, student loans, car loans, mortgages, and anything else you have. Write down the total amount you owe and the interest rate you’re paying on that debt. Order them by interest rate. Then, each month, make the minimum payment on each of them, then make a substantial extra payment on the highest interest debt. When that debt disappears, move on to the next one on the list until they’re all gone.

The best way to do this is to create a “virtual bill” for you to pay each month. Figure out an amount that you can afford without too much hassle – say, $200 – and then each month give yourself a bill for that amount. That bill is payable to whichever debt is on top of the list.

 

This post has been updated since its original publication in 2008.

Post written by Erin Doland

Gamers Going Green!

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Whether you grew up gaming, chances are your parents use the line “why don’t you do something with your life!” at least once. With the D’Or gaming drone system, now you can tell them you are!

It explores the concept of gamification to rid the air of harmful pollutants so we call all breath cleaner, healthier air. The drone itself is equipped with the latest filtration and ion purification as directed by the European Space Agency. Viewing through an app on their smartphone, users can control the drone in a sort of augmented reality space, playing a variety of integrated games solo and versus other players. The more air they clean, the more points are awarded. Leaderboard and ranking features also encourage more cleaning!

Designers: Kavithasan Patkunam & Samay Sigamani

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The concept was also developed as part of the KTH Innovation startup incubator in Sweden.

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Designed and engineered to purify the air around us by using high-efficiency filter systems that are used in the International Space Station or ISS, which is currently orbiting around the earth.

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The filter systems are integrated seamlessly into the propulsion units of the drone.

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Computational Fluid Dynamics tools such as Ansys CFX and Fluent were used to understand the fluid motion/flow through the filters and the propellers.

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Amazingly Detailed Paper Cuts of Game of Thrones Characters

Puisqu’il y a encore une longue attente jusqu’à la prochaine (et dernière) saison de Game of Thrones, rafraichissons nos souvenirs de nos personnages préférés à l’aide des decoupages étonnantes de Robbin Gregorio. L’illustrateur et l’artiste philippin ne laisse aucun détail de côté, et inclut toutes les caractéristiques de chacun des héros de la série. Voir plus de son travail ici et sur Instagram.










Design Job: Bundle Up! The North Face Is Seeking a Footwear Designer in Alameda, CA

The primary responsibilities of the Designer are to provide design work of innovative and technologically advanced products that meet the needs of the company’s end users and which in turn drives company image, sales and profits. Accountable for the creative production of designs that drive the product category.

View the full design job here

World's Fair Nano Coverage: Analyzing the UX of Wearables with Helix Cuffs vs. Apple's AirPods

At the World’s Fair Nano in San Francisco, multiple companies were hawking their wearable wares. The diversity in the category indicates that wearables are still unsolidified as a product category: Each company seems to be wondering “Should the design be led by technology/function, the user experience, or aesthetics?”

In the next few entries we’ll cover some of what we saw on display. Let us know your thoughts on the practicality, desirability and/or usefulness, if any, of these items. First up:

Ashley Chloe’s Helix Wearable Cuffs

These are a pair of stereo earbuds connected to each other by a cable. At the midpoint of the cable hangs the controller. The earbuds do not physically connect to your phone/device, using Bluetooth instead.

The earbuds are designed, when not in use, to be stored within a compartment in the attendant bracelet. 

The bracelets come in a variety of colors.

So the key distinction of this product appears to be that the earbuds are always conveniently (if you like bracelets) on hand–assuming you don’t find the process of inserting or removing the buds into the bracelet a hassle:

What consumers have to decide:

An obvious competitor to the Helix is Apple’s AirPods ($159 vs. Helix’s $149), which have no cables and are stowed in a little pillbox when not in use. The different approaches taken by each product necessitate some decisions on what type of user experience the wearer wants to have:

– Do I prefer the physicality of the button control on the Helix, or the tap interface on the AirPods?

– Do I want a cable connecting the earbuds or not? Do I want the weight of a separate controller, however light, attached to a cable?

– Do I prefer to store the earbuds in a bracelet around my wrist, or in a pillbox which must then be stored in a pocket or bag?

– When I need to hit “pause,” do I want to physically remove an earbud from my ear, as I must do with the AirPods, or tap a button on the Helix controller, allowing the earbuds to remain in place (and both hands to remain free)?

– The bracelets are visible on the body. Do I want to make a fashion statement?

Assuming the sound quality and noise-canceling technology between both platforms are equal, which product do you find superior? I suspect it all comes down to personal preference, with there being no one “right” answer. Which is what makes wearables such a tricky category to tackle.

Buffalo's Lakeward Spirits Craft Distillery: Repurposing the 115-year-old Barrel Factory for a spirituous operation

Buffalo's Lakeward Spirits Craft Distillery


Buffalo continues to reclaim the grandeur of its past in ways both accessible and exciting—a benefit to its residents and an invitation to those drawn to the western New York city and its surrounding region. No example carries quite as many moving……

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