A Thread for Fine Design
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Mike
What a great find!
Judy and I spent long stints as Rangers in a remote wilderness area here in BC called Kakwa Lake.
We would have really appreciated something like this, as we didn't have an extensive wardrobe, and there was lots of hard dirty work involved.
As you say for many, in third world situations, this would be quite welcomed.
I also think it would be great for washing freshly harvested carrots and potatoes etc -
I once had the pleasure of designing and assisting the fabricator in building a steel and wood stairway. This was hands on the grinder, assembled in situ stuff.
I was searching for a photo of them this morning, and as they were done many years ago, I came up empty. In fact the picture may have even been taken with film.(yeah that's right, I'm old enough to remember when you had to walk to the TV to change channels )
But Running through my files, I came upon some links I had around for inspiration. So I re-screenshot them for this.
I'm always impressed with how diverse metal can be.
The Last one is Victor Horta house. http://www.hortamuseum.be/
I had an interesting thought. I wondered if there was some subconscious link or inspiration that Art Nouveau has had on the curvy ("Nurbsy") works of the likes of Zaha Hadid
HadidHorta
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Hi Guys,
I've been reading of late that Steve Jobs wanted to build an iCar before he died. From what I gather there was not much done design wise but I wonder what he would have come up with!
Here is a link where this came to light.
Would it have looked like this,
It also seems Apple were in talks with VW! So would it have looked more like the mini VW at $15,000? I don't think so.
I would like to think we would have been looking at something along the lines of the LIT C-1 or the Qbeak, both to be priced at around the $15,000 from what I gather. The C-1 will be relying on the iPhone for much of its driver information feedback and it would not surprise me if the Qbeak does not do likewise.
LIT C-1
Qbeak
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Mike
You've been following the progress of these for quite a while. Is the battery still the bottleneck in the electrics development?
The C1 website has some wonderful pic's of the Design process at work. Great to see the development from cardboard tubes to reality. It really exposes the process, and, positive outcome of strong collaborative design. I'll be paying more attention to these. Thanks.
http://litmotors.com/about/how/
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Good find there Dale. I have high hopes for the C-1, even went as far as paying my couple of hundred $$ booking deposit. I definitely would use the C-1 as my daily transport for Jock and myself!
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For the guitarist in you. This is really quite an innovation, and has received a Red Dot Design award.
http://uk.yamaha.com/en/products/musical-instruments/guitars-basses/amps/thr_home/
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I am really taken by this concept. It is really a different approach to a major problem.http://www.archdaily.com/182435/arctic-food-network-lateral-office/#more-182435
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Another imaginative design for using the rainwater footprint. http://www.urbanlab.com/urban/ps1.html
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Interesting finds there Dale.
And on the subject of water ..... gray water!
Advance could turn wastewater treatment into viable electricity producer
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This is really interesting Mike. We are currently working on a community of 25 dwellings,with common systems, rainwater harvesting, geo exchange, off grid PV, and a biodigester which will convert the septic into bio-gas. We are in the engineering discussions right now. It is very fascinating.
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.... anything eco friendly interests me as we need to get into gear pretty soon before we push things past the point of no return ...... we are close to that
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@mike lucey said:
.... anything eco friendly interests me as we need to get into gear pretty soon before we push things past the point of no return ...... we are close to that
Then you will love this, from one of my most admired (and alive) architects, Norman Foster:
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Yeah, Foster gets stuff done
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Pete, Great find. I am amazed a project like this can fly under the radar.
"One of the most sustainable communities on the planet, Masdar City is an emerging cleantech cluster that offers a creative and entrepreneurial atmosphere where businesses can thrive and innovation can flourish, in part because the city itself serves as a model of what green urban development can be. This is especially the case because Masdar City is being designed and operated to provide the highest quality of life with the lowest environmental footprint β all in a manner that is commercially"
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And while on the green theme.http://www.gatesfoundation.org/Pages/home.aspx
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Dale, you should have shown the picture of Bill G. staring at the substitute turd
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^^ here's hoping you never get a 'blue screen of death' when needing the gates potty.
(to be fair, i have been impressed with the gates foundation's efforts on health care, tech in school, libraries, etc...)
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While there are strong moves away from using up paper these days, I feel there is still a need for those little notes that we like to pin up and have 'in our face!' as reminders. Smart phones are good but 'out of sight, out of mind!'
I think the Little Printer by Berg will prove popular as it allows for just the right size prints for the wallet or pinning up. It looks that the Little Printer is in the pipeline and only taking pre-orders at Β£199! A bit pricey on first slight.
There is also an other option, one that looks equally well designed. Its the mPrinter , a KickStarter project. The prices are also a lot less
One of the mPrinter prototypes
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@bmike said:
^^ here's hoping you never get a 'blue screen of death' when needing the gates potty.
(to be fair, i have been impressed with the gates foundation's efforts on health care, tech in school, libraries, etc...)
Yes, I agree. Bill G and the Missus do great work AND get personally involved rather than just throwing cash around. Apple and Google could take note rather than continuing to try and put their hands around the World!
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