PENKI: Trying Future Magic

Tried out the Penki iPhone app released by DenstuLondon on the AppStore. The awesome project by conceived by BERGLondon and done in collaboration with Denstu. Awesome stuff!

More here on my Flickr set.

Eric Topol on the Future of Wireless Medicine

Many interesting points raised here. Very inspiring talk on a subject I have been working alot on lately. There’s so much here that we haven’t explored in our Medica Helping Hands concept at Ergonomidesign. And so much that we’ve addressed in the concept that hasnt been thought of or demonstrated by anyone yet. The field is wide open!

Bonnier on the Future of the Newspaper

Following the huge success of their Mag+ concept (done in collaboration with BERG London, which later went on to become the Popular Science+ app for the iPad) Bonnier are back with yet another awesome video – this time called News+. News+ is Bonnier’s take on the future newspaper and they’ve written much more about it on their site.

While I love the PopSci+ app alot, I blog about this video here because its another example of crisp, simple, coherent storytelling about a concept. It’s something I am very passionate about trying more of for myself and videos like these are a huge inspiration. I think there’s an unmistakable hint of an inspiring Timo Arnall aesthetic that’s found its way to these videos. :)

John Sculley talks about Steve Jobs

A very honest, humble and insightful interview about El StevO by the man who was hired by him only to fire him later. Of course, the rest is legend.

Some excerpts:

I didn’t know really anything about computers nor did any other people in the world at that time. This was at the beginning of the personal computer revolution, but we both believed in beautiful design and Steve in particular felt that you had to begin design from the vantage point of the experience of the user.

He always looked at things from the perspective of what was the user’s experience going to be? But unlike a lot of people in product marketing in those days, who would go out and do consumer testing, asking people, “What did they want?” Steve didn’t believe in that.

He said, “How can I possibly ask somebody what a graphics-based computer ought to be when they have no idea what a graphic based computer is? No one has ever seen one before.” He believed that showing someone a calculator, for example, would not give them any indication as to where the computer was going to go because it was just too big a leap.

What makes Steve’s methodology different from everyone else’s is that he always believed the most important decisions you make are not the things you do – but the things that you decide not to do. He’s a minimalist.

More here.

Transparent interfaces and interactive mirrors

Why do I blog this? The roadmap to ubicomp is a truly bizarre and fascinating one. Will this really be the future? Will this really be the way we interact with our content and the things we need to interact with? Or will this be one of the ideas that tried to make its way in and died for a variety of reasons. What would those reasons be? We’ll just wait and see I guess.

Excerpt from TAT blog – Capacitive screens has now become a commodity for touch screen devices. Screen technology is now taking the next leap and the coming years imagination is the only thing stopping us. We will soon have dual screensmalleable screens, screens built into wifi connected mirrors, desks or backside of gadgets clothed with e-ink screenstactile feedbackcolor screens with great contrast in sunlightholographics/stereoscopic screenscolor e-ink touch screens, or screens actually knowing where they are in relation to other screens thanks to ultrasonic emitters and microphones.

I’m Here – The Movie

Some golden nuggets from ‘I’m Here’, a short story about love in an Absolut World by Spike Jonze.

Man: “What do you mean? We (robots) cant dream!”

Woman: “Of course you can, you just make it up!”

—–

Man: “…This dream was easily the best dream in the history of all dreams”.

A library assistant plods through an ordinary life in LA until a chance meeting opens his eyes to a the power of creativity and ultimately, love. When this new life and love begin to fall apart, he discovers he has a lot to give. This short film proves that ordinary is no place to be. (via IMDB)

View the trailer here…

I was reading some essays on Design Fiction by Julian Bleecker recently and was especially struck by this film after reading it. ‘I’m Here’ is such a perfectly imagined and made work of design-fiction in the sense that it makes you completely believe in the World which is created here. Not only are the ‘props’ and costumes entirely authentic, the fact that its set in the Almost Present makes the impact breathtakingly moving and simple. It focuses on human/robotic emotion while keeping the work of design very secondary.

This scene in the movie was such a brilliant piece of architectural fiction. It almost made me believe that such hospitals exist.

My moral from this story – A truly moving piece of design fiction is infinitesimally more valuable than a billion half-resolved design truths.