Thought You Should See This, January 27th, 2012

Last week’s Thought You Should See This update, for my friends at Doblin:

Doblin’s Brian Quinn gets top billing this week, for his excellent article in Fast Company, “Is Innovation Too Messy To Be Managed and Taught? Hardly.” It’s a super piece that takes a measured look at the value of the innovation practice. Do take a look.

Nerd out over old pictures of Manhattan, on show at a new exhibition at the Museum of the City of New York. Union Square and Columbus Circle as you’ve never seen them before (nor ever will again.)

One of the weirder stories of the week was the revelation that Disney, a key supporter of SOPA and PIPA, was selling a T-shirt with graphic “inspired by” Peter Saville’s iconic image for Joy Division’s Unknown Pleasures (above). Cue hysteria (the T-shirt has now been withdrawn from sale.)

Couple of cute videos to watch when you have a minute: a charming homage to the practice of reading a book; and Shynola’s thought-provoking, beautifully shot video for Coldplay song, Paradise.

Interesting piece in the Wall Street Journal, documenting the fledgling practice for companies to overlook the need for a resume in favor of a more Web-savvy style job application.

Dr Chrono is another entry into the world of electronic health records. With funding from various Silicon Valley bigwigs, it’s worth checking out.

This detailed report in the New York Times about Apple’s business practices within its factories in China makes for chilling reading. (Also, do listen to a This American Life episode on the same topic.)

Lovely piece on new architectural finds in Turkey. Some might argue that I picked up on this story solely so I could share one of my favorite pictures from last summer’s Istanbul vacation. And truth be known, they might have a point. But it’s also a glimpse of the truly painstaking nature of this type of work and the reminder that, doubtless, nothing we look at is truly what it seems

Finally, General Electric CMO Beth Comstock was logging video reports from the World Economic Forum in Davos. As you might imagine, she had some interesting insights into how leading executives and politicians are thinking about innovation.

Thought You Should See This, January 20th, 2012

This week’s Thought You Should See This update, for my friends at Doblin:

Doblin’s fearless leader, Larry Keeley, gets top billing this week, for a fortuitously timed piece on Kodak’s demise. (The piece was published in Fortune the day before the Rochester giant filed for bankruptcy protection.) The Kodak Lie digs into the organization’s deeper innovation failings, so be sure and read it.

Fortune writer, Adam Lashinsky, has a forthcoming book on real life at Apple, which looks like it’ll be well worth the read. I picked up on Bob Sutton’s favorable review, which took a close look at the section detailing the company’s organizational structure.

Super old school video of designer Herb Lubalin detailing the story of the evolution of the PBS logo. Great look at the designer/client relationship–and the often fraught branding design process.

British design critic, Rick Poynor assessed ongoing tension between design and management, a continued issue for anyone looking to build any kind of design presence in the world’s C-suites.

“Do what you love. It’s going to lead to where you want to go.” Creative genius, Wayne White, will be immortalized in the upcoming biopic, Beauty is Embarrassing, which will premiere in March at this year’s South by South West Film Festival. Watch the trailer and swoon.

I went on a bit of a SOPA/PIPA frenzy, capturing multiple perspectives, including Clay Shirky’s clear description of how we got where we are. Then I decided to immortalize the day-long, web-wide protest itself (Google’s blacked out home page shown, top.) So I asked six designers to subject the protests to a design critique, and then tried to extrapolate their thoughts to see what this said about the companies’ approach to design. A stretch, perhaps, but I do believe a serious point was made among the fun. (And seriously, some of the critiques are geniusly funny.)

Nike launched the Fuelband, its way to expand the popularity of its Nike+ platform to the less obviously sporty among us. I wondered what executives at Fitbit, a startup with a similar idea but rather less funds, must be thinking right now.

In a great example of the iteration that’s so vital to the innovation process, Burt Herman explains the evolution of Storify, a site designed to “create engaging social stories.”

Thought You Should See This, January 13th, 2012

This week’s Thought You Should See This update:

Be confused about what year it is, when you read about Lou Reed and John Cale of the Velvet Underground suing the Andy Warhol Foundation over the use of *that* banana image (above.)

This super-provocative piece about educational data-mining, Colleges Mine Data To Tailor Students’ Experience, raises as many questions as it answers, and is well worth a read.

Watch an amazing video about “realtime gesture recognition with contact microphones.” No, really. Watch it.

Think about design and… smell, and read about a series of “smell-walks” being held around the world in order to challenge participants to think about environments according to multiple senses, not just the obvious ones.

Challenge your perceptions of the state of the Japanese economy by reading this fascinating piece about The Myth of Japan’s Failure.

Consider the antipathy faced by legislators, litigators and lobbyists when it comes to thinking about innovation. In a great piece about the movie industry and the Stop Online Piracy Act, entrepreneur Steve Blank breaks it down in simple, if acidic, terms.

Be glad you didn’t have to attend the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this week. Laugh at the account of the Gizmodo reporter who did.

Consider the mis-application of design trends–and their potentially fatal consequences, by reading this Jalopnik piece looking at the integration of touchscreen technology into car dashboards.

Marvel at the polymathic wizardry of Dr Eric Lander, profiled in a New York Times piece that details his journey from math genius to human genome-finding pioneer to founding director of The Broad Institute at Harvard and MIT.

Enjoy a rant about Google’s introduction of “Search, Plus Your World.” “Google just broke its search engine,” writes Slate’s Farhad Manjoo. Do you agree?

Thought You Should See This, January 6th, 2012

Whoops. Forgot to post this last week. Kind of a bumper round-up of Thought You Should See This links to kick off the year:

Why Best Buy Is Going Out Of Business… Gradually, a *scathing* piece in Forbes about the failings of executives at the big box retailer.

How a Few Bad Apples Ruin Everything is a great piece by management professor, Bob Sutton, who makes an important point: “Superstars get a lot of attention from bosses. But bad apples deserve even more.”

Smart piece in The Economist looking at the hypothesis of my former BusinessWeek colleague, Mike Mandel, that today’s economy favors big companies rather than small ones. The arguments both for and against the idea are important for anyone thinking about innovation.

The Touchy-Feely Future of Technology is a super package from NPR that digs into the background, development and impact of tablet computers and touch technology.

RIP, Sori Yanagi, pioneer of Japanese industrial design, who died in Tokyo, aged 96. (Magazine spread showing his beautiful work shown, above, c/o soriyanagi.com.) Also, I didn’t note but definitely should have done: the amazing ceramicist Eva Zeisel also died, aged 105.

2012 predictions already seem so, well, last year, but one of writer Daniel Pink’s might come true sooner rather than later. He predicted the demise of two of Groupon, Newsweek and Kodak by yearend. Things sure aren’t looking good for the latter.

Mother Jones ran a horrific story detailing The FDA’s Christmas Present for Factory Farms. In a nutshell, the FDA has decided not to pursue its decades-long quest to limit the routine use of antibiotics on animal farms, ruling instead that now it will support voluntary reform. This made me grumpy.

2011 reportedly had the lowest movie-going audiences since 1995. In I’ll Tell You Why Movie Revenue is Dropping, Roger Ebert explains why.

Writer and “optimistic doomer”, John Thackara chats about the crisis (and opportunities) facing the design industry–and has a particularly useful breakdown/definition of social innovation.

IBM’s now-former CEO, Sam Palmisano shared his framework of four important “why” questions to ask at every moment.

Thought You Should See This, December 23rd, 2011

Bit of a puny Thought You Should See This update for my pals at Doblin this week, as I’m allegedly on holiday (Mexico!) And not a particularly festive one, either, as I seem to have avoided all the year-end lists like the plague. But I did quite like the round-up from visualizing.org, which shows 2011 in data visualization, and confused me for wondering what Keith Urban had to do with the death of Osama Bin Laden. (Hint: absolutely nothing.)

Still, this week on Thought You Should See This:

Fast Company ran a glowing story about an Indian entrepreneur looking to redesign the sanitary pad. The reporter seemed to unwittingly stumble on the true challenge for would-be disrupters: the behavioral/cultural issues at play.

Mel Exon, founder of BBH Labs, explained why she is sending creatives and strategists to learn more about coding.

Harvard Law professor Larry Lessig gave a simply brilliant presentation at Google, containing a story about the alcoholic captain of the Exxon Valdez that I simply cannot get out of my head. Super important; watch the whole thing if you have a spare hour over the break.

NYT tech writer, David Pogue gave his take on why the leaders of companies including Hewlett-Packard, Netflix and the Flip camera messed up. It boils down to their failure to remember why they’re in business in the first place (to serve customers).

Finally, Hyundai USA is ramping up its design team, having poached Christopher Chapman from BMW to be chief designer at the Hyundai Design Center in Irvine, California. (And I made a snarky comment about the design of the 2011 HCD12 Curb concept car, top.)

So that’s it for 2011. Thanks so much for all your support over the past year, and here’s to a rocking 2012!

Thought You Should See This, December 19th, 2011

Last week’s Thought You Should See This update for my friends at Doblin:

This week, the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) was being weighed by the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee. It’s an important debate that’s got many Internet bigwigs in quite a tizz. Google co-founder, Sergey Brin weighed in (in a post on Google+, natch) while many others are also up in arms.

Venture capitalist and former And 1 executive, Phineas Barnes wrote a smart piece about the questions designers should ask when considering joining a start-up.

Chicago favorite, Scott Wilson launched the LunaTik Touch Pen on Kickstarter, the follow-up to his wildly successful Tik-Tok iPod Nano watch.

Amazon got everyone riled up over a campaign to get shoppers to use bricks and mortar for browsing, its service for buying. Meanwhile, comedian Louis CK streamed a one-hour special show online and pleaded with people not to “torrent” it. (A ploy, it should be noted, that seems to have worked pretty well.)

Google Creative Lab artist, Aaron Koblin launched a personal interactive artwork, sponsored by Progressive. A simple idea, beautifully executed, and an example of the new world of art patronage. (Screengrab shown, top.)

Tech world evangelist, Dave Winer sounded off about Why Apps Are Not The Future.

Tech Review took a look at the inevitable-seeming demise of Kodak and tried to figure out why the company failed to capitalize on technology it was early to develop. An interesting aside: Google is said to be examining Kodak’s assets. Imagine if that played out!

“People who think the Web is killing off serendipity are not using it correctly.” Writer Steven Johnson wrote about his research techniques and discovery process.

The Designer Fund launched a neat interactive piece demonstrating how many successful start-ups have had designers at the helm.

Thought You Should See This, December 12th, 2011

This video has been doing the rounds, and it’s one to savor: rapper Ice Cube waxing lyrically about the improvisational genius of Charles and Ray Eames.

Also last week, on Thought You Should See This:

Admire Doblin’s own Brian Quinn and Ryan Pikkel in action. We snagged the rights to stream their presentation from DMI’s Design at Scale. As you can see, they did a great job. Watch–and do send feedback!

Usability design guru, Jakob Nielsen explains why he does not love Amazon’s new Kindle Fire: ”You haven’t seen the fat-finger problem in its full glory until you’ve watched users struggle to touch things on the Fire.”

Liddy Manson makes the case for innovation focused on the senior set. As she points out, roughly 13% of the American population is currently over the age of 65, a statistic destined only to grow higher with time.

Urbanized is the new film from Helvetica and Objectified filmmaker, Gary Hustwit. It’s a stylish treatment of an enormously complex–and timely–topic. I jotted down some surprising stats.

Dr Donald Berwick got the pink slip from his job as administrator of Medicare and Medicaid. NYT columnist Joe Nocera looked back at some of his achievements–including his smart approach to management practices.

“Indie capitalism” is becoming a trend. Bruce Nussbaum writes about it at Fast Company, while This American Life ran a wonderful piece about “How to Create a Job.”

Turns out, intense psychological stress tends to shut down the part of the brain responsible for innovative, creative thought. A chilling story about the crash of Air France 447 has lessons for those looking to innovate, too.

Thought You Should See This, December 2nd, 2011

The Clockwork Forest (2011) from greyworld on Vimeo.

Bonanza Thought You Should See This update this week, to make up for the fact I headed back to London during last week’s Thanksgiving holiday. Enjoy!

Al Gore turned up in New York to talk about how gaming can help when it comes to trying to combat climate change.

A former Apple designer turns his design philosophy to a product that’s rather less glamorous than an iPod: a thermostat.

Little Printer” arrives (at least, is announced.) A printer intended to capture peripheral moments generated by social media, it sparked intense attention and, from me, an equal amount of crushing depression.

Some important questions to ask at the start of every project, culled from Michael Porter’s Harvard Business Review piece on creating shared value.

Greyworld creates a project that gets my vote for Most Amazing of the Year: a forest filled with clockwork trees (see video, top).

Frog’s VP of creative, Robert Fabricant, lays out important questions for designers and design firms in the United States to consider, as a matter of some urgency.

Jonathan Hoefler explains the intricacies of the type design process–and why this matters even to those who aren’t type aficionados.

Harvard Law School’s Lawrence Lessig discusses issues of governance and policy in an interview conducted on the publication of his latest book, Republic Lost: How Money Corrupts Congress and a Plan To Stop It.

The Atlantic runs a delightful story about the evolution of the design of the bendy straw.

A departing Twitter engineer flags potential trouble at the social media company.

Veteran autos writer, Phil Patton writes about the Audi Urban Future Summit–and the car as one part of a complex transportation system.

An HBS MBA student outlines why he and his class don’t want to be a part of the so-called “1%”.

An innovative idea in Manhattan proposes the “Lowline” equivalent to the popular High Line public park.

Designer Rob Giampietro shares advice for those starting a studio (his tips apply to entrepreneurs and collaborators of all stripes.)

And finally, British writer George Monbiot rails at the inequity of government and policy in the United Kingdom.

Thought You Should See This, November 18th, 2011

This week, Roger Martin, dean of Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto, swung by the New York office to talk strategy with Monitor partner, Steve Goldbach. I live-tweeted the affair… and captured the highlights in a blog post on Thought You Should See This. Touching on topics from executive compensation to the philosophy of serving on a board, Martin was thought-provoking and precise, as always.

Also this week on Thought You Should See This:
Jack Dorsey broke down his 80-hour work week, split between his responsibilities at Twitter and Square. Most interesting? That one full day is given over to nurturing the companies and their culture. Impressive.

The Guardian runs a profile of The Horse Whisperer author, Nicholas Evans. It’s astonishing, not simply for its account of the real-life drama that beset the writer and his family after they ate some poisonous mushrooms, but also for his insight into his craft and work.

British designer, researcher and educator Andy Polaine makes a powerful case for the failure of our academic institutions to produce the creative thinkers our future really needs.

Also on an education tip, Greg Matusky looks at the state of higher education through the lens of the Penn State scandal and calls for the bubble to burst.

Former Xerox PARC-er, Anne Balsamo laid out her philosophy of innovation, a welcome contrast with many of the “future of” videos that fail to imagine any kind of interesting future.

Designers “have to do things that a typist with a computer can’t do. This means that they have to be thinkers, problem-solvers, whether they like it or not.” Bob Gill, Pentagram founder and author of Bob Gill: So Far, spells it out.

Is “Stealing Ideas” Really Such a Great Idea? I questioned the trendy meme and failed to answer my own question.

Radiohead artist, Stanley Donwood, released a high resolution, free download of an image to be used by the Occupy protesters (shown, top).

Thought You Should See This, November 11th, 2011

Round-up of this week’s Thought You Should See This posts:

This week, artists Christo and his work and life partner, the late Jeanne-Claude, got the go-ahead for a project they started planning in 1992. They’ll cover over a 5.9 mile stretch of the Arkansas River in southern Colorado with fabric. (Collage 2010, © 2010 Christo, shown.) It promises to be quite something.

Also this week on Thought You Should See This:

Tech world maven, Tim O’Reilly writes about the birth of the collective mind. “Our computers have no intelligence without us, but they accelerate our collective intelligence at a speed that has never been seen before.”

Management expert Jim Collins has a new book out, and in it tells the tale of the “snorkel award“, given by Stryker CEO John Brown to executives who failed to meet his annual challenge of 20% net income growth.

In A Brief Rant on the Future of Interaction Design, Bret Victor goes ballistic over some of those “Future of Technology” videos that have been doing the rounds of late. His problem: that the ideas contained therein are lame. Or, as he puts it: This vision, from an interaction perspective, is not visionary. It’s a timid increment from the status quo, and the status quo, from an interaction perspective, is actually rather terrible.

Stephen Boak of interesting-sounding data visualization platform, Boundary, gave me the inside scoop on the development of the company’s own logo. A great case study on how identity design works in the digital era.

Random video of the week: Onward to the Edge, the latest installment in the Symphony of Science series, auto-tuning insights from the likes of Neil deGrasse Tyson, Brian Cox and Carolyn Porco. Bonkers and amazing.

And finally, artist, illustrator and unapologetic all-round kook, Laurie Rosenwald weighs in on the creative process. “A blank sheet of paper is the devil. People come up with ideas when they’re living life and doing stuff.”

So here’s to living life and doing great stuff all weekend long. Have a good one.

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