The Virtual Reality Phone is Here

The award winning LG Touch mobile phone concept combines state-of-the-art touch technology with a minimalist aesthetic that challenges the limitations of existing mobile phones. The primary feature is a high-tech polymer membrane touch surface that constantly changes to give the user tactile feedback to what’s displayed on the screen. It allows those with sight impairments to read Braille, or users who are shopping online to literally feel the texture of the material they are looking at. It’s virtual reality put to real world use.

LG Touch is the Grand Prize Winner of the 2012 LG Mobile Design Competition.

Designer: Andrea Ponti


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(The Virtual Reality Phone is Here was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Autodesk to Offer "Comprehensive 3D Modeling in the Cloud" with Forthcoming Fusion 360

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Autodesk has announced Fusion 360, “the world’s first comprehensive cloud-based 3D modeling offering.” The emphasis is on collaboration via the cloud, as well as refining the UX.

3D Industrial and Mechanical Design in the Cloud
A comprehensive product design tool geared toward small business professionals, Autodesk Fusion 360 capabilities span all aspects of industrial and mechanical design, melded with anytime, anywhere access to data, collaborative and social development capabilities the cloud has to offer. Autodesk Fusion 360 also connects to advanced capabilities such as large scale mockup, simulation, PLM and rendering.

Next Generation User Experience
Autodesk Fusion 360 offers a radically different user experience through an intuitive interface that conforms to the role and level of user expertise. Autodesk Fusion 360 provides built-in guidance to novice users to speed the learning curve, and the ability to turn off guidance and access deeper functionality for design experts. Regardless of their level of expertise, users can start designing in a matter of minutes and begin to leverage Autodesk Fusion 360’s integrated social collaboration tools.

Redpoint Studios, a New England based industrial design and product engineering consultancy, recently adopted Autodesk Fusion 360 to help their clients bring compelling new products to market faster. “The learning curve is phenomenal. In a matter of days I was modeling blends and transitions that would take months, if not years, of skill building to achieve in a NURBS modeler,” said Matthew Harris, Industrial Designer, Redpoint Studios, LLC. “The potential for this product is huge and I can’t wait to see what’s next.”

Enough verbiage, we’re sure you just want to see it. Teaser videos are all that’s available right now, and we’re not sure why these are three separate videos—they all ought to be combined in our opinion—but here’s what we’ve got:

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Manage secure passwords for all your online endeavors

Tomorrow is National Computer Security Day, 2012. This day was first recognized in 1988 and still serves as a reminder for all computer users to be safe and smart. Computer security is a huge topic, but I’ll use this post to focus on a single topic: online passwords.

Entirely too many people use easily-guessed passwords or even the same one over and over again. Neither practice is a good idea. In this post I’ll share one app I use to generate secure passwords without requiring me to memorize a single one. I’ll also share a few tips for people to keep in mind. Let’s get started.

1Password

I’ve been using 1Password from Agile Bits for a few years. I like it so much that I recommend it to everyone who uses online passwords. There’s so much to like about this software and almost everyone can use it: Mac owners, Windows users and even iPhone, iPad and Android users can get in on the security and piece of mind that 1Password offers. It has several great features, and the first is tipped off by the name.

One Password to Rule Them All

On your computer, 1Password has two components. The first is the app itself. This is the main repository for your passwords and more. You’ll use the application to enter information, change information and review it.

The other component lives in your web browser. This simple button lets you log into sites for which you’ve saved a password and username, as well as create new ones.

Of all the magic that 1Password performs, its greatest trick is that it only requires you to remember one password. This master password offers access to all the others. Once you’ve entered it, you can log into services like Facebook, Twitter, Amazon and just about anything else you can think of with a click. As long as you can remember the master password, there’s no need to memorize any of the others.

1Password also generates secure passwords. What do I mean by that? You pet’s name is not a secure password. Neither are your kids’ initials or your spouse’s birthday. Skip the name of the town you grew up in, too. In fact, almost anything you can pronounce and/or find in a dictionary is risky. Fortunately, 1Password can generate a secure password all on its own.

For example, say you’re visiting a new site that requires a password. Once you create an account with a username and password, 1Password’s browser add-on will notice what you’ve done and offer to generate a long password with numbers, letters and symbols (you tell it how long you want it to be, too). Let it do so and save the result by typing the master password. Presto! Your new account is in place with a password that isn’t easily guessed.

Sync across devices

1Password works on your Mac or Windows machine, and mobile apps are available for the iPhone, iPad and several Android devices. What’s great is that over-the-air sync keeps them continually up-to-date. If you create a new or updated password on your Mac, for example, that change will be reflected on your iPhone or Android device.

And, finally, it should go without saying, but no one was compensated to recommend this program. I’m seriously a user who likes the product.

More Than Passwords

1Password holds more than passwords and username. The desktop application can store account information, like iTunes or Google, notes you want to keep secure software registration information and even financial records and the like. It can even store your credit card information for easy completion on retail sites. It’s all secure and very handy.

Finally, one other benefit of using iPassword is that it eliminates the tendency to use the same password over and over.

Additional Tricks

I promise a couple of additional tricks for people who don’t want to use 1Password, and here we go. To create a reasonably secure password that you’ll be able to remember, shift your hands on the keyboard. Those of us who took a typing course remember the home keys: ASDFJKL;. Simply shift your hands one key to the right and start at SDFGKL;’. Now, type a long word or phrase that you’ll remember easily. Toss in a number or two and presto. You’ve got a password that looks like gobbledygook but is easy to recall.

Finally, here’s one for iPhone owners. You might know that you can type special characters by pressing and holding on certain keys. For example, press and hold on “o” to produce “ô”, “ö” or “ò”, among others. Use one or more of those when setting up your passcode to help ensure no one will ever guess it.

There you have it! Computer security is a huge topic, and using an app like 1Password is a small but crucial step in ensuring a safer web browsing experience.

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Beginning Water Projection

Novina Studio a réalisé récemment Beginning Water Projection lors de l’évènement « Revocation end of the world » organisé en juin dernier. Avec un sound design d’Adam Hryniewicki, cette création visuellement bluffante a servi d’introduction à l’évènement en proposant une animation à couper le souffle.

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The simplest alarm as a knob

What we’re looking at right here is a device that essentially amounts to a countdown sound-blaster with a user-interface that’s just about as easy to use as humanly possible. That’s what it’s all about, and it’s the details that make it just fantastic enough to be the most awesome little twist-and-snooze gadget on the block.

What you’ve got here is the “Timer Switch” – simply titled – designed by Myeong Ho Kang, made to be both lovely in its simple aesthetic state and simple to use. You twist the rim and watch the numbers appear along the area between the edge and the center button. When you see the amount of time you desire, you press the button.

Once the timer goes off, a sound and a light goes on, and you’ve only to tap the button back to its off-state to reset.


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(The simplest alarm as a knob was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Leonid and Zodiacal Light

« Leonid and Zodiacal Light » est le nom de cette jolie vidéo en technique time-lapse réalisée au Champ du Feu en Alsace, la nuit du 17 novembre 2012. Réunissant 610 clichés réalisés avec un Nikon D3 et un Sigma 8mm, cette impressionnante vidéo de Stéphane Vetter est à découvrir dans la suite.

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Vinyl album amplifier goes cone-shaped with NFC

It’s time to get literal in the music universe with a vinyl speaker that’s not just made out of vinyl, it’s got the look and feel of a vinyl record album as well. This conceptual design would have a 12-inch platter up on the wall with NFC technology making the connection between the amplifier inside and the smartphone in your pocket. With a simple pull of the disk you’ll also have amplified sound with a cone-shaped bit of physics on your side.

Having seen some rather similar designs in our day as far as physical amplification of sound goes, it wouldn’t be out of the question to have this device entirely mega-popular out in the streets. We’d love a few for the office, that’s for sure!

Designers: Zhou Yuxiao, Ren Ying / He Ji, and Liao Chunhui


Yanko Design
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(Vinyl album amplifier goes cone-shaped with NFC was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Auto Design History: Origin of the Mercedes 300SL Gullwing, Part 2 – The W194

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World War II put a lot of things on hold, among them, international auto racing. Mercedes, or rather Daimler-Benz as it was then known, stopped producing racecars and started producing war materiel sometime around 1939. But by the 1950s the world was getting back on its feet, and Mercedes was flexing with the 1951 release of their Type 300. The company higher-ups decided it was time to get back into the racing game.

Before the war, Mercedes had dominated European Grand Prix racing with a car that set an astonishing 270 mph speed record. But for their 1950s re-entry their budget was small, and they had to make do with what they had. And what they had was the Type 300.

So it was that Mercedes engineer Rudolf Uhlenhaut was told he’d be building a racecar—using the engine and transmission from the Type 300. That car’s three-liter straight-six was good for 115 horses in stock form, which was fine for the road-going Type 300, but underpowered by racing standards. (The Mercedes racecar of 1939, for contrast’s sake, was half the size and produced nearly two and a half times the power.) Uhlenhaut and his team tweaked the engine to squeeze 60 more horses out of it, but no racing enthusiast in their right mind would say 175 horsepower was enough to bring home a championship.

Even worse, the engine was as big as it was heavy: The tall engine block fit neatly into the ship-like hood of the massive Type 300, but in the racing scene low, aerodynamic styling was coming into vogue. Uhlenhaut’s problems—a big, heavy, and underpowered engine meant to fit into a sliver of a car to win races—provided quite the design challenge.

Luckily for Mercedes—and later, a generation of car collectors—Uhlenhaut was equal to the task. For the W194, as the racecar was known internally, he and his team drew up the wind-cheating, bullet-like shape seen here:

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To shoehorn the relatively massive powerplant inside, they decided the engine would have to be tilted 50 degrees to one side:

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Note the tight fit, and how the center of the hoodline arches just enough to accommodate the air filter. Form follows function indeed.

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Then there was the problem of the engine and transmission’s heavy weight and low power. Under those restrictions, the only way Uhlenhaut could make the car fast was if the rest of it was built using some kind of innovative, lightweight method.

Uhlenhaut calculated that he could make a super lightweight frame, that still had the desired rigidity, by using a concept bicycle manufacturers would find familiar: take a bunch of tubing and weld it together in triangle formations. I should point out that no documentation exists saying Uhlenhaut was directly inspired by bicycle frames, but take a look at the picture below and decide for yourself:

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Darius Kazemi’s Blindfolded Bot Shops for You

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When people projected that in the future we’d have robots doing our shopping for us, this is probably not what they had in mind. Massachusetts-based programmer Darius Kazemi has created, as a lark, “a bot that randomly buys me crap on Amazon and mails it to me.”

Kazemi coded up the Amazon Random Shopper and gave it its own Amazon account, to which he feeds gift cards (as a basic way to install spending limits). The bot then accesses the Wordnik API (that’s Application Programming Interface, not Academic Performance Index; it means source code that software uses to talk with other software) to pull a random word out of the ether. Next it trawls Amazon and buys the first object that matches both the word and is under budget.

This week his first two objects arrived in the mail. The first was Noam Chomsky’s Cartesian Linguistics, the popular beach-reading thriller that links Rene Descartes’ Enlightenment-era linguistic theory to the Romanticist ideas of Wilhelm von Humboldt. (I hear Michael Bay has snapped up the movie rights, and I smell an action franchise.)

The second object, pictured below, held a bit more mystery:

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From the back of the CD cover I could tell it was from Sweden and printed in 1999. But what kind of music? I had no way of knowing, so I popped it in a CD player in my car.

Let me tell you: the tension was palpable. It is not often that I get a CD where I have no idea what’s on it, and can’t even make good inferences from the cover.

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Power strip makes all directions possible

The power strip design you’re about to witness allows you to plug in from any direction and at any point along the length of it. Designer Hung Wang created a design here that allows Live / Neutral-wire slots to sit next to one another no matter which of the four directions you plug in from. This power strip goes by the name of “CROSS” and without a doubt aims to keep all manner of electronics in energy in as versatile a manner as possible.

Designer: Hung Wang


Yanko Design
Timeless Designs – Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Yanko Design Store – We are about more than just concepts. See what’s hot at the YD Store!
(Power strip makes all directions possible was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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