The exhibition closed in August, but another is planned for 2003. Designers featured in the exhibit continue to grapple with much more than shape, size, and color. "The most interesting designers are the hybrids-the architects who use product-design software, the industrial designers who integrate media," points out Donald Albrecht, adjunct curator for special projects at the Cooper-Hewitt museum.
The National Design Triennial featured work created by the Advanced Design Group at Thomson Consumer Electronics Inc., Indianapolis, a division of Thomson Multimedia SA, Paris. Dennis J. Erber, 49, started the group in 1997 to force the division's three dozen designers to focus on breakthrough products. Erber wanted to give his designers an opportunity to build projects that may never make it to market, but that would help them see consumer electronics in 2005 and beyond. "Once they do that kind of conceptual thinking, it can transfer over and make next year's line fresher," he believes.
Every Friday designers work on blue-sky projects or interests that may lead to innovation. Almost anything goes: visiting a museum in Indianapolis or walking the streets of Paris. "This frees the designers from day-to-day black boxes," acknowledges Erber.
ONE OF THE MOST IMAGINATIVE devices to emerge from the Advanced Design Group is the Internet radio. Flipping through pages in a book about Picasso, the designer came across sketches of a bull. He decided to put a stylized version of the animal's horns on the radio to give it the retro look he sought. The horns also hold compression-drive technology. In the main body sits the subwoofer that enables lower frequencies.
IMAGE PHOTOGRAPH 18
The Internet radio from Thomson Consumer Electronics' Advanced Design Group.
A crucial component of design involves risk taking. Thomson is taking a chance with its Advanced Design Group-gambling that dreamy products that will never generate corporate profits will yield innovation in goods that end up on store shelves.
"If you don't take risks, you end up with an upgrade on what someone else has done," points out Sohrab Vossoughi, the 43-year-old founder and president of Ziba Design Inc., Portland, Oreg. Ziba, which means "beauty" in Farsi, takes risks with other companies' technology. It employs a hybrid design team made up of social scientists, design planners, and designers from around the world. Some 80% of Ziba's designers are foreign born, which helps them offer fresh perspectives. The 16-year-- old firm, whose client list includes Black & Decker Corp., McDonald's Corp., and Microsoft Corp., is itself a hybrid. Born a traditional design firm concentrating on a device's appearance, Ziba reinvented itself as a company that considers what products a corporation should be making.
When consumer-electronics contract manufacturer Vadem Inc., San Jose, came to Ziba with technology and a desire to develop its own branded products, the Portland firm went to work using consumer research and analysis of competitive products, as well as traditional design techniques. Ziba sought to create a personal-information-management gadget that employed both paper and electronic technologies, but it didn't want to churn out a modified Palm Pilot or laptop.
The group enacted a process it calls "lurking." Designers followed around potential users, recording how they used pencil and paper, PDAs, and desktop computers. They observed the planned and unplanned activities people encounter every day: scrambling to write a number down after an unexpected phone call and taking notes in a meeting.
Observation revealed opportunities. Ziba saw information-management needs that Vadem's competitors had missed. They understood how a slow desktop computer, for instance, failed to handle note taking related to unplanned phone calls. They came up with 25 prospective products, then narrowed that number down to three. These include the ePlanner, a wallet-sized appliance that gives users immediate access to databases and lists as well as a pen-based display and a Post-it-sized notepad; and the leather-bound MeetingPad, a letter-size paper pad as well as a pen-based electronic display.
Vadem turned these suggestions into the third product. A model of the Allegro, a paper pad attached to a folding pocket-sized PDA, gained notice at the 1999 Consumer Electronics Show. It never made it to manufacturing because Vadem decided to shift its focus from hardware to software.
JUST AS DESIGNERS OF CONsumer electronics struggle with ways to develop watershed products, so does Bijan Davari, vice president of technology development in emerging products at IBM Corp.'s multibillion-- dollar microelectronics division in East Fishkill, N.Y. "The most important element in being ahead of competitors is speed, so a complicated part of product design and development is completing the cycle of idea generation to final product with the minimum number of barriers," explains the 46-year-old scientist.
One of 52 IBM Fellows, the highest honor a technologist can attain at Big Blue, Davari is responsible for technology development and product design at the IBM division that leads the industry in semiconductor patents. Products that Davari and his team design appear in Apple computers, Nintendo game systems, and Qualcomm telephones. The holder of eight U.S. patents, Davari became a fellow following his work on the complementary metal oxide semiconductor that enables computer manufacturers to make devices smaller, faster, and cheaper.
Now Davari is working on a systematic way of predicting what future products will be. To go about this, the Iranian-born Ph.D. implemented "idea-generation machinery." This involves gathering creative people from different IBM disciplines-- technology, business, and manufacturing-in a room and talking about the world five to 10 years in the future. Davari also solicits ideas from universities. With a couple hundred blue-sky projects under discussion, Davari calls on his advisory board to sift through the ideas and pick out the best four or five.
Those ideas are then plunked into a fast-track process that turns them into salable products. IBM's speech chip has been through Davari's idea-generation machinery. His division is taking a kernel of the speech-recognition technology and putting it into a small piece of silicon that can be built into applications such as cell phones and computers. By 2002 Davari predicts consumers will be able to buy a cell phone with a speech recognition device capable of translating a Parisian's French into English for a New Yorker, for example.
Fast-tracking technologies represents a big change at Big Blue. Just five years ago product design and development seemed to occur by happenstance. After completing 15 to 20 years of research, some scientists would watch in dismay as their projects were ignored while others would see theirs go into manufacturing. "It was almost an accident for something to be made into a product. Now we've taken that process from accidental to systematic," Davari explains.
The other shift involves motivation. At one time psychological walls existed between technologists, manufacturing experts, and marketing professionals. Davari is eliminating those walls and encouraging technologists to see their products through to market. "One of the strengths of IBM in the past five years has been allowing people like myself to do the execution as well as the dreaming. How do you motivate people? You let them follow their dreams and make them happen," he believes.
By: Royal, Weld
Publication: Industry Week
Date: Nov 6, 2000
Subject: Consumer electronics, Office furniture
Location: United States