Updated: 18/08/2003; 12:47:16.
rodcorp
mobile, product design, user experience, project and team management ... and various things
        

10 June 2003

Rodcorp went looking for illustrations for Italo's Calvino's Invisible Cities. We didn't find much, so will be making some of our own.
  • Wayne Thiebaud illustrated a limited-run edition by Arion Press. "The artist Wayne Thiebaud contributed 12 drawings, with the idea that the images of cities and objects remain invisible until the reader takes action. To realize this concept, Andrew Hoyem designed the book with the drawings printed on clear plastic in different colors of inks, each matching the color of the following sheet. The images are revealed only when the transparent sheet is turned back onto the preceding page, a white sheet with printed text.". Also: the related Souvenirs of Cities print. (His Hill Hill City (1981) is slightly ICish, and reminiscent of the urban canyons of Brazil.)
  • The Illuminated Italo Calvino project (tantalising, because there aren't any pictures. Nor here)
  • [updated] Not an illustration, but an interesting project by Medialab's Rich Streitmatter-Tran on Impossible/Invisible Forms, which planned to render visually four narrative strands/accounts - those of Calvino, Polo, Khan, the reader. A project that might work better for IC's If On A Winter's Night a Traveller. [Update: R.S-T writes to say the project hasn't made huge leaps forward yet, and suggests Murakami's Hard Boiled Wonderland as another interesting target]
  • [updated] Binary Bonsai's concepts and renderings for Baucis
  • Lynne Devine, Glasgow School of Art
  • Catherine Rive (slightly ambiguous as to whether it's an illustration of IC or not)
  • Possible illustration in an essay called Utility and Uselessness
  • Something by Martin Lee

11:47:19 PM     comments

Marketingfix.com cites the story in Creative Review [subscription required] this month. If it had been a song published by a major label instead of a video by some artists, the ad agency would have obtained (or at least discussed obtaining) licenses.

Peter Fischli said:
Of course we didn't invent the chain reaction and Cog is obviously a different thing, but we did make a film which the creatives of the Honda ad have obviously seen. We feel we should have been consulted about the making of this ad.
Previous Cog coverage by Marketingfix is a pretty good summary, includes an amusing discussion about whether it's faked or not.
1:24:08 PM     comments

"We're going to increase the number of devices in your life but you won't think of them as devices."

[...] Ambient started with a $299 color-shifting glass orb sold primarily through Hammacher Schlemmer and Web sites like ThinkGeek. The direction of the stock market — deep red when the Dow Jones Industrial Average is headed down, shading to bright green when it is surging — has been the most common subject of interest for the 800 or so early purchasers, Mr. Rose said.

[...] Ambient's focus is different, though, because it is gambling that consumers want information to be made noticeable without it commanding attention

[...] But independent researchers caution that it is difficult to test the impact of devices designed to be unobtrusive. "It's surprisingly hard to evaluate the usefulness of information people are not focusing on,"
[via ?]
12:59:03 PM     comments

Chris Sells explains that program managers have to persuade, cajole, sell "doing the right thing" to others at Microsoft. Management by buy-in (as opposed to management buy-in). Responsibility without authority is is designed into the role, and is seen as a key differentiator for MS.
The PM's job is wake up in the morning and think to him/herself, "What's the right thing to do today?" The range of things that fall into this category is far too wide to even give you the bounds, but essentially it's whatever someone else isn't already doing (or isn't doing to their satisfaction : ). Once they identify the right thing to do, they can attempt to take "ownership" of making it happen (your boss gets a say in how you spend your time).

Once ownership is acquired, that's when things get interesting. PMs have all kinds of responsibility, but no authority. While this kind of position is generally one to avoid in the world of corporate politics, the internal product cycle training video I watched a couple of weeks ago points out that "responsibly without authority" is by design. Instead of ruling by fiat, PMs have to wander around the company finding folks that are involved with what they're doing to get their "buy in" and their help. The way to do that is through old-fashion politics, i.e. gathering consensus, persuasion, trading favors, brow-beating, table thumping, complaining up your own management chain, complaining up your opponent's management chain, etc. It's not just a popularity contest, although being liked certainly helps. It's also about your reputation, as established by your technical chops and your ability to produce, among other things.

11:16:35 AM     comments

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