LeatherSkin and More

Leatherskin-furniture

I do try to post pics on a regular basis because… well… everyone gets tired of words (I think). So I grabbed the above from Core77’s gallery showcasing Dutch Design Week 2005 (thanks to dezain for reminding me).

The above is a piece by Wendy Boudewijns. I’m not entirely sure I understand what she’s doing or why, but I like the forms. You can read about this piece and surf some more photos on the Core77 gallery.

{Image Copyright © 2005 Core77}

Sizzling Virtual Property Values

Speaking of the “Hot land values” trend, virtual property sales have themselves taken off. I don’t pretend to understand the extreme to which this is currently being taken, but when money’s no object I guess it’s… not an issue. And the big story over the past week has been the astronomically high price that a virtual space station fetched at auction: a cool US$100,000. Let’s say that again so no one thinks it’s a typo: a cool US$100,000.

There were some rumors that this was all a publicity stunt (which is why I didn’t bother mentioning it), but now the BBC News is carrying an online article that suggests it’s not the developer playing games. Here’s a few excerpts from the beeb news story:

The gamer who bought a virtual space station for $100,000 (£56,200) says he wants to turn it into a nightclub to change the face of entertainment.

“I’m already in talks with some of the worlds biggest DJs about spinning live sets inside the nightclub,” he told the BBC News website.

“Gamers want to be entertained while they play, hunt, socialise and craft, and because of the real cash economy aspects of Project Entropia, they can afford to pay for their entertainment.”

“I truly think that this will be the decade that gaming and virtual reality changes the face of popular culture,” said Neverdie.

“Club Neverdie will enable the entertainment industry to reach inside virtual reality and target the gamer while he’s in his element, while also harnessing the economic power of the gamers to raise the quality level of the content on offer.”

Maybe this will motivate me or someone else to contact some indy filmmakers and set up a virtual movie theater (something I’d considered when Second Life added support for Quicktime). If virtual world residents will pay real money to watch pirated, first-run movies streaming into Second Life, I bet they’d pay to watch legitimate indie films and interact with the filmmakers as well.

via Blue’s News

The Trends Fad

Just read a three-page article over on the LATimes site called “Fads are so yesterday“. As an Industrial Designer, when I see these kinds of articles I figure they need to be read (kind of like how as a kid I learned how to sit still when the dentist gave me the “numb shot”). To be honest, I’m not entirely sure what to make of this one though. The piece makes this big distinction about how Trends are more important then Fads. Okay. I get the point. But is seeing the writing on the wall really that difficult? And isn’t identifying some Trends really just a kind of Fad sometimes? I mean, check out the end of the article where, among the “Macro Trends” (what the heck is a “macro trend”?), they include the following:

• “Conscious living” — increased social activism, community service, spiritual awakening, eco style, the organic boom.

• “Hot land values” — real estate craze, Middle America, Christian-themed entertainment, redneck humor.

• “Hip parenting” — stylish, Gen-X-driven baby brands, blogs and mags, kid-friendly rock shows, members-only clubs.

• “Curation nation” — mass customization craze, e.g., podcasting, TiVo, custom Nikes, Internet-driven interests, niches.

Let’s look at this brilliantly insightful list for a moment. The first, “Conscious living”, isn’t a trend afaic. It’s a natural evolution of a society in which basic needs and many – or even most – “wants” are met. Ever wonder why so many of the great thinkers in human history were well-to-do? It’s because they weren’t busy out hunting their meals! Things would be really different today if Newton had been picking apples as a laborer instead of lounging around the orchards getting beaned as an aristocrat. Y’know, one could almost attribute this so-called trend to Wal*Mart, where the latest buzz is on the sub-$400 laptops they’re rumored to be selling this coming holiday season. Heck, we might even see the eventual emergence of the “Wal*Mart School of Philosophy” – a surge in Western philosophical writings written on those cheap laptops and uploaded via free wireless connections. Now there’s a thought: a built-in branded cultural movement coming out of the Haight-Ashbury district!

The second on the list, “Hot land values”, is supposed to be a trend? Huh? Cripe. That’s nothing. Just watch people swarm overseas for beachfront property when the big terrorism scare finally subsides and Americans decide the relatively low prices are worth the risk of living in a foreign land (something many Europeans are already hip to). The tsunami that hit Thailand was one big real estate ad, afaic. Sad but true.

“Hip parenting”? What the hell is that? The realization that once again – after all the “Guide To…” and “How To…” parenting books the Boomers scooped off the shelves to figure out how to raise their kids (because they’ll be damned if they listen to their “Leave it to Beaver” parents) – parenting needs another new approach? How many more of these stupid parenting trends will children have to suffer? Enough already.

And finally my favorite: “Curation nation”. If any of these big Trend Ideas is a Fad, this one is it. Check almost any trendy magazine or website and you’ll see a proclamation about how customization is the new wave of the future. I’d agree. But where the hell were the experts when magazines like Metropolis carried articles on this trend years ago? Where were they when rapid-prototyping machines started making their way into corporate R&D departments years ago signaling this potential development? Damn. I should have sold my “Design Trends” presentation back in 2000 (which contained this and other trends) for a cool $20,000 a pop when I had the chance. I’ve missed the Trend Fad, I guess. Bummer.

via O’Reilly Radar

Telecommuting To Nowhere

Second Life resident Torley Torgeson has been tracking MSM news articles of late and posting links to them on the SL forum. Usually I’ve already seen the articles. The latest one I’d not read. And this Seattle Post-Intelligencer article is a good little read. One interesting bit from Peter Svensson’s article:

Its 60,000 users trade $2 million a month, making its economy about the same size as that of the South Pacific island of Tuvalu. That’s small, but large enough that it supports about 100 virtual jobs, according to Philip Rosedale, chief executive of Linden Research Inc., which created Second Life.

I can’t help but find those kinds of comparisons really interesting. And now that Second Life has grown to over 76,000 residents (in a matter of days), I wonder to which island it now compares. And also wonder how many more people could be telecommuting to a virtual world. Makes my comment about a virtual Moto City not seem so outlandish.

Airlift In The House

Airlift-Light-Fan

After that monster post this morning I was hoping to find something fun, and over on the Funfurde website I found it: Monte Carlo’s new “Airlift” ceiling fan and light fixture. As shown in the image above (which I’ve shamelessly ripped from Funfurde’s post; I have a feeling this was a custom job), the blades change position. Sweet. Think I’ll have to keep my eye out for this thing.

{Image Source: Funfurde}