Monthly Archive for December, 2009

Technology first, invention second, needs last

dan-thumbDonald A.Norman recently posted an essay to his web site http://www.jnd.org discussing technological innovation.

I’ve come to a disconcerting conclusion: design research is great when it comes to improving existing product categories but essentially useless when it comes to new, innovative breakthroughs. I reached this conclusion through examination of a range of product innovations, most especially looking at those major conceptual breakthroughs that have had huge impact upon society as well as the more common, mundane small, continual improvements. Call one conceptual breakthrough, the other incremental. Although we would prefer to believe that conceptual breakthroughs occur because of a detailed consideration of human needs, especially fundamental but unspoken hidden needs so beloved by the design research community, the fact is that it simply doesn’t happen.

For the complete essay…

Power vacuum, part one. Victor Margolin on design and sustainability

powervacuum

From Eye blog at eyemagazine.com

Victor Margolin, Professor Emeritus of Design History at the University of Illinois at Chicago, a lucid thinker and vivid critic, shared some critical thoughts with Ksenija Berk last winter, in this two-part interview. His overview of basic ideas in design thinking brought to light some thoughts that could foster positive change in society – and in design itself, which all too often forgets its chief goal: the wellbeing of all mankind.

Professor Margolin argues that design can’t introduce positive changes into any society if we fail to create a sustainable economy on a global scale. Sustainability is a fundamental value of life, not something that can be found solely in a product; it is a total way of living.

More…

Design Journal, Volume 3 now complete

The final issue of Volume 3 of Design Principles and Practices: An International Journal is now available.

Volume 3, Number 6 contains:

Continue reading ‘Design Journal, Volume 3 now complete’