Why Some Designs Are Impossible to Improve: Quintessence


[…]

Sign up to learn more about the design book that we’re going to publish: https://www.studioello.com/mail

Check out my online industrial design course, Form Fundamentals: https://bit.ly/335vsqO
Join my discord channel:

/ discord
Follow me on Twitter:

/ john_mauriello
Follow my Instagram:

/ mauriellodesign
Follow me on LinkedIn:

/ mauriellojohn

All content directed and written by John Mauriello. John Mauriello has been working professionally as an industrial designer since 2010. He is an Adjunct Professor of industrial design at California College of the Arts.

Edited by Brad Heath: https://bradleyheath.com/

Check out Technology Connections, the guy who reviewed the toaster:

• The Antique Toaster that’s Better tha…

Check out TFLClassics, they do cool stuff with their Model T (and other cars):

• Driving a 100-Year-Old Car Through th…

Some designs don’t change much. The paperclip, the Bic pen, the QWERTY keyboard layout, and even the PlayStation controller. Decades and sometimes even centuries pass, but these designs barely change at all. They’re quintessential. Why do some designs last for decades, while other seemingly better alternatives never catch on?

Time stamps:
0:00 Intro to Quintessential Design
2:49 Paperclips & Manufacturing Process
3:46 Maglite: Intellectual Property, Patents, & Legal Strategies
4:55 Opera
5:56 Maglite part 2
8:19 Setting the Standard: Playstation Controllers & QWERTY Keyboard
12:20 Designs that Change Culture: Model T
21:49 Indispensable Addictions
30:28 The Fifth Element

Works Cited: https://text.is/0K1Z

[…]

Unknown's avatar

About agogo22

Director of Manchester School of Samba at http://www.sambaman.org.uk
This entry was posted in Technology and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.