All signs point towards the e-reader: Kindle is the most gifted item in Amazon’s history

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Despite hiccups earlier this year concerning the privacy of its users and their ownership of digital material, the Kindle pulled through, becoming the most gifted item ever in the history of Amazon. Though we don’t have an exact figure, think of the most popular item you could imagine being gifted from Amazon (iPod Touches, Garmin Nuvis, Twilight) and Kindle has sold more.

Another milestone reported by Amazon: on Christmas Day, digital books outsold physical ones, no doubt in response to everyone’s brand new Kindles. While this doesn’t mean that digital books have overtaken physical ones, e-reading seems here to stay and is certainly one of the hot tech topics of the year.

via engadget

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Matt Mullenweg talks at SVA

MFA Interaction Design Fall Lectures: Matt Mullenweg from MFA Interaction Design on Vimeo.

The MFA Interactive Department at SVA brought in Matt Mullenweg, founder of Automatic to share his insights on design, entrepreneurship, and open source. It runs over an hour, but is worth it.

Hot In The Hive: Skullcandy Pipe iPod Speaker

imageBefore you write off the Skullcandy Pipe iPod Speaker as yet another gimmicky dock that saves space but doesn’t quite deliver where it counts (sound quality and volume), hear me out. Yes it’s suspiciously small, fits all-too-conveniently on your living room mantel or dining room windowsill without toppling off, and appears to be a too-perfect-to-be-true source of your holiday gathering ambiance music, but take the time to consider that maybe there’s no fatal bug that renders it unworthy of purchasing. The little fella really does get loud despite its compact size and has the ability to sound great whether it’s serving out gentle seasonal tunes to accompany the sounds of your meal-munching or filling the room with dance-worthy beats once your relatives have had a little too much eggnog. Plus, with its handy remote you can switch things up even from your food coma-induced collapse on the couch!

Price: $69.99
Who Found It: xgalexy was the first to add the Skullcandy Pipe iPod Speaker to the Hive.

EverydayLives: An iPhone app for ethnography

ethnogapp.jpgEverydayLives is a UK-based research agency that focuses their attention on ethnographic research. This week they released “a sophisticated research tool designed by ethnographic researchers for ethnographic researchers, field anthropologists, agency planners, marketers and research respondents” and it comes in the form of a convenient iPhone app. We think designers could benefit from this tool, as it would complement our research activities perfectly. And it reduces all that cumbersome equipment often required for in depth inquiry. Using this tool, you can capture video, photos, text and audio and then immediately share any outcomes with clients, colleagues or participants while in the field. We stumbled across a preview video that shows the app in action. And if you aren’t an iPhone user, word on the street is that a Blackberry version is in the works.

Available now at the iTunes store.

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Is checking voice mail, text, and e-mail messages outside of work hours cluttering your life?

We’ve recently talked about strategies for curing your e-mail addiction to reduce the number of times a day you check your e-mail at work. With many of us in the western world having a day or two off from work this week, I thought it might be appropriate to address the addiction you might have with checking messages of all kinds when you’re not at work.

How many times have you been at dinner with a friend and she puts her phone on the table without any explanation? (I’m not talking about when someone is waiting for an emergency call, but rather when she simply doesn’t want to miss any social call that might happen to come her way.) How many times have you done it? How many times have you been talking with someone and he reaches into his pocket to check his phone to see if he has any messages? (Again, not when he is on call or expecting an important message, but because the person can’t go for five minutes without checking to see what may have filtered in.) Has this been you? Are you obsessed with checking your phone for voice mail, text, and/or e-mail messages?

An addiction to checking your voice mail, text and/or e-mail messages may be cluttering up your life. It also might be interfering with your pursuit of what matters most to you. Even if you’re not addicted, and you just wish these forms of communication took up less time in your life, try the following tips to get message checking under control:

  • Determine why you are always checking your messages. What reasons are propelling you to check in all the time? Are these reasons tied to what matters most to you? Or, are they tied to insecurities or simply out of habit?
  • If some of your reasons for constantly checking your messages correspond to what matters most to you — maybe your job or your family — can you find a way to make these checks less obtrusive? For instance, can you set a specific ring tone for calls and messages from your technical support team at work? Can you turn off your message notification sounds but leave on an alarm so that you check your messages only at specified intervals?
  • If your reasons are tied to insecurities or out of habit, can you leave your phone in your car’s glove box when you go into an event so that you can have access to it if you need it, but that access is just annoying enough that you won’t do it unless there is a reason? Can you ask the person you’re out with to carry your phone for you while you’re together?
  • Remember that people survived only a decade ago without constant access to voice mail, text, and e-mail messages. If someone needs to reach you in an emergency, there is almost always a way to do it. Portable communication devices are extremely convenient, but using them shouldn’t be cluttering up the remarkable life you desire or interfering with what matters most to you.

Good luck to anyone who is struggling with a message-checking addiction. I have to admit, the first three months I had my iPhone, I was definitely addicted. I got through it, though, by having my husband carry my phone when we were out together. Eventually, I broke the habit and the novelty of constantly checking for messages wore off.


Mag+ Prototype

Voici la présentation de Mag+, un parfait exemple de tablettes électroniques qui montre les possibilités des journaux dans le futur. Un prototype présentant la navigation et la maquette sur une conception initiée par le groupe Bonnier. A découvrir en vidéo dans la suite.



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Previously on Fubiz

EXO reaction housing system by frog’s Michael McDaniel

In the chaos following Hurricane Katrina back in 2005, the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s much criticised response strategy resorted to the use of large public buildings, such as the infamous Superdome, and the deployment of 143,000 trailers to temporarily house those displaced by the disaster.

Senior Designer at frog, Michael McDaniel, saw this as a challenge for design. Since then McDaniel has been developing his own holistic system for reaction housing called EXO – something of a stackable modern tepee inspired by the humble Styrofoam cup.

EXO would not only cost a fraction of the price of FEMA’s trailers and cottages but can be transported and deployed quickly and easily – the projects homepage even counts the number of EXO units that could be built by 4 people in the time you spend on the site.

EXO’s homepage is here

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(via design mind)

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10 Unique Camera Gifts And Accessories For Shutterbugs

imageGift-giving is often made simpler when the person you’re shopping for has one prominent interest or hobby — let’s say… photography, for the sake of this post. But even after you’ve narrowed the spectrum of present possibilities down to camera accessories and photo goods, how do you even begin to choose the perfect photo gift in a day and age so technologically diverse?! My advice is to aim for the unique — while a photography fanatic can spend all the money and time they want trying to track down the latest release in digital cameras, they won’t necessarily have a sturdy waterproof case to go with it, or a self-taking revolving tripod for it to sit atop! Browse the slideshow for 10 nifty gifts for the photo enthusiast, including frames, gimmicky gadgets, and more!

view slideshow

Future Integrated Health Care Ecosystem

Trying to forecast the future of global healthcare is an ambitious undertaking, to say the least. Even trying to discuss the future of health insurance leads to heated debate and disagreement, as we’ve seen over the past few months. Not to be deterred, the team at Ergonomidesign took on this task, and created a short video outlining their vision of an Integrated Health Care Ecosystem.

The good news for our readers is that in this future scenario there seems to be plenty of work for product and interaction designers, in addition to actual healthcare professionals.

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Mag+: The magazine’s digital future

Mag+ is an investigation of the future of periodicals in digital media. A collaboration between design consultancy Berg and the R+D department of magazine publisher Bonnier, this study is particularly relevant after the sad announcement earlier this week that I.D. magazine would be ceasing publication. It might also be considered another unofficial response to “The Future of Digital Reading, our 1 Hour Design Challenge produced with Portigal Consulting.

In this e-reader proposal, Berg and Bonnier consider the magazine’s particular way of parceling out content. Unlike the endless RSS feeds we are now all accustomed to, magazines give people a “sense that they’ve consumed an editorial package,” something finite and episodic. At the same time, the flexible format of the e-reader allows periodicals to continue to art direct, with pull quotes, flexible layouts and pagination.

Also refreshing is the insight that a mock page flip as a means of navigation doesn’t actually work, and that the most successful e-reading experiences (emails, blogs, online newspapers) rely simply on scrolling.

Get all the background information and see the compelling visualization in the video above.

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