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It's really hard to design products by focus groups. A lot of times, people don't know what they want until you show it to them.
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| Marcel Wanders Designs a Device to Slash Energy Use | 6:25 AM |
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This week Eneco, a Dutch energy company, kicked off a "battle of the watt" to challenge people to lower their energy use. The device, naturally, was designed by Marcel Wanders. Produced by Innovaders, the Wattcher plugs into an electrical outlet and simply monitors your energy use. Eneco is holding a contest to see which user can slash their bill the most.
It seems ineffectual, but ambient devices like the Wattcher can readily help cut consumption by 20% and up, due to some subtle social dynamics. Since electricity consumption is invisible, just being cognizant of your energy patterns allows you to change them in real time. Thus, some of the best at-home solutions to cut electricity use are extraordinarily simple, such as an orb that glows red during peak times (when electricity production is least efficient) and the Wattson, a minimal interface that tracks energy use. Of course, data geeks have their own solutions too, such as the Tweet-A-Watt, which can send electricity use reports to Twitter. Nice to see Wanders jumping on the band wagon with his form-factor know how--you've got to think that able designers will play a crucial role in marketing such technologies to the mainstream.
[Via Dezeen]
| Waterproof Laptops? Future Gadgets Will Go Everywhere | 6:23 AM |
HP just stumped-up with some news on its cheap, fully-flexible, "unbreakable" screen, which is the sort of display we've been expecting on gadgets for decades, courtesy of many a sci-fi movie. A flexible screen like this allows a radical redesign of product shapes: it's easy to imagine a notebook PC with a simple rod containing all the electronics, which the screen rolls around when not in use. But there's a bigger implication--that our future gadgets will be portable into places where currently they're not taken. Partly this is due to changes in design facilitated by inventions like the flexible screen, but there are a number of other technology trends that you can add in to this mix such as toughened devices and waterproofing. Panasonic's Toughbook range of notebook PCs, for example, is designed so that the machines can resist rough treatment that gadgets may receive in outdoors work environments: you don't often see a builder on a construction site wielding a traditional laptop. Similarly, JCB's Tough Phone recently entered the record books as the world's toughest cellphone, able to resist serious knocks, bangs, dust and bad weather. And Olympus and Sanyo have a number of digital cameras that distinguish themselves in the crowded camera market by being drop-proof and moderately waterproof. Waterproofing itself is a key to enabling technology to go into new locations. Traditionally it's been a question of achieving a good seal to prevent moisture from contacting delicate electrics and electronics, but with products like Golden Shellback entering the scene, it may no-longer be necessary to make products totally sealed. This almost-magical product is a dip-coating for existing devices that covers them in a thin transparent sealant, and allows for devices like MP3 players to operate happily underwater. And that of course raises the question: would you stay on the call on your cellphone as you step into the shower? Would you take your notebook PC into the bath to finish that vital email? The penetration of the cellphone into every corner of modern life is almost complete.Almost. Without buying dedicated devices you're unlikely to take the phone absolutelyeverywhere. And depending on the situation, and the sensitivities of those nearby, the cellphone nuisance factor is an increasingly nasty little modern problem. In fact one UK train company has taken its "Quiet Zone" carriages so seriously that it's coated the train windows with a metal film to create a Faraday cage, rendering the wireless aspect of cellphones useless. For now there's no way to tackle the irritating high-frequency sound leakage from over-loud MP3 player headphones, apart from policing of Quiet Zone policies. But imagine a world where you could take your ultra-portable notebook/cellphone device skiing, then into the sauna, since it could resist all your slope-bound bumps and bangs, moisture, extreme cold, and extreme heat. And that's only with existing devices...with another five years of product innovation, who knows what "lifestyle" gadgets will be integrated into our daily lives. Strictly-enforced "No Gadget" zones may become a regular sight in the future, unless our gadget-use sensitivites change quite significantly.
| Waterproof Solar-powered Phone from Sharp | 12:22 AM |
The power of the sun is an excellent source of energy and summer is a perfect period when people can use gadgets based on the sun-power. Keeping with the trends and necessities of the modern world, Sharp in collaboration with Japanese cell phone company AU KDDI announced the release of its new waterproof phone that can be charged using sun-power. This idea is by no means new: LG has already announced creation of solar-powered phones. Samsung comes with its Blue Earth solar-powered touch phone. Moreover, Intivation Company has already released the ZTE Coral-200 and Commtiva Sola solar-powered phones.
It is little known of the new phone: the only information is connected with its capability to use the power of the sun. The phone, which is yet unnamed, offers one minute of talk time or two hours of standby time after being under the sun for 10 minutes. So, if you are on the beech, you may sleep for an hour or two and then you will be able to talk for 10 minutes. The phone receives up to 80% of its charge from solar power. The solar panel is placed on the top of the handset. However, it is not very convenient, for you will have to wait for a long time in order to talk a little. Thus, this is another attempt to produce environmentally friendly gadgets. Additionally, it is waterproof.
However, some of the phones mentioned above, have advantages concerning talk-time: LG phone offers three minutes of talking after 10-minute sunlight charging. But while Sharp announced the release date of the phone – June, 2009 – there is no information from LG Company concerning the date. Thus, Sharp phone may be considered as the first waterproof solar-powered handset.