Flickr conxn


Wow ! how did he shoot this one ?
Simple: "Requires a little effort to get up this early.. & Nikon D300"

Cloud Gate is a public sculpture by Anish Kapoor in Millennium Park, Chicago. The sculpture is shaped like an ellipse, and its legume-like appearance has caused it to be nicknamed “The Bean”. It is made of 168 highly polished stainless steel plates, and stands at 33 feet high, 66 feet long, and 42 feet wide, weighing 110 tons. From a distance it could be mistaken for a huge drop of mercury, while up close its highly reflective surface captures and transforms the skyline, the downtown cityscape and even the passers-by into a wonderfully warped new vista. The artist, Anish Kapoor, has referred to the sculpture as “a gate to Chicago, a poetic idea about the city it reflects.” The 12-foot underbelly is called the "omphalos" or navel and multiplies reflections in a vortex.

Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloud_Gate

>> one more view in: iceman

Break or make with: Customer


I got a chance to talk to one of the chief product designer of the company, who was just back from product show in Vegas. We were talking about - if companies give much priority to the end user while designing a product ?

I was in the favor of the point: yes, since customer centric experience and user centric marketing is the fad, companies do give utmost importance to end user while ideating a product. While studying the user behavior, companies tend to be soft towards the majority taste of the user base.

During the conversation he made an interesting point: not necessarily companies need to be in favor of what the market or user wants. They might take altogether a different path than the herd and create a different sector altogether. In which the end user is psychologically forced to move to that sector. He calls it : differential user experience, without the end user engagement in ideation. Breaking from the path but not deviating the from the norm.

According to him: user study says, 80% of the users use clamshell or flip phones in USA. When Apple planned to penetrate into handsets market, instead of favoring user study, they choose to introduce a bar design- iPhone. Apple broke the 'common path of introducing a bar phone. They didn't even bother to be in safer side at least by releasing a clamshell, instead choose to create a new segment altogether in mid-tier handset market with the touch sensitive bar phone. The way iPhone became a instant Jesus phone - it's a history every phone company is envy of !

Incidentally, I came across an interesting read By Greg Nudelman, about -the way to give center stage to customer delight. Meaning, it's reality that design is an ongoing human-to-human partnership between designers and customers who combine forces to reach a common goal. “If they (end users, experience partners) are not involved in the process, they are hardly likely to approve the product. It’s that simple”—Roger Fisher.

But his clarity of this proposition is damn interesting with this statement: The term user leads to sloppy design thinking. “The term users limits us to old ways of thinking about the world we live in and the products we develop.”

>> Read more on experience partnership

Choice.

Checking eMail is a good habit

Digsby, the all-in-one Hello!


You've multiple accounts in yahoo,facebook, gmail, AOL etc., and you would like to use all those accounts to communicate with your colleagues, friends, co-workers for one or the other reason: "to be in touch". If the solution is all about installing multiple chat engines, think about it.

The days of multiple messaging softwares was wiped off with the entry of Trillian and pidgin( formerly, gaim). And now the fad is all about -meebo like simple & browser based online chat client, which is accessible anywhere, anytime. It doesn't have hassles like IP settings at workplace and home. But there're few messaging softwares gaining popularity with innovative features, hassle free convergence & ease of interoperability.

Today, I happen to dash on new IM client which is buzzing netizen for quite some. The all-in-one chat, messaging, email and social-networking client - Digsby,. It's neat, functional and polished compared to free chat systems out there. The best of all is its facebook integration. Thought it's in beta stage; sofar fulfilled what pidgin is lacking with. I've started using it & yet to test its effectivity.