Insights 10.29

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Insights 10.29

Design:

Roadmapping the Future:  

Big Business: 

Waste:  

Material Culture: 

  • A fascinating and weirdly beautiful viral social media trend in China referred to as the "flaunt your wealth challenge" amounts to a photo or video of a fallen person, surrounded by the artifacts and objects of their day-to-day life. It's a sort of living, 21st century version of ancient ancestor practices of being buried or entombed with their earthly possessions. 


More next week. 

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Insights 10.23

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Insights 10.23

Design:

Roadmapping the Future:  

Up In the Air: 

Communication:  

Archiving:  

Bias and Brains:   

 

More next week. 

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Insights 10.16

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Insights 10.16

Design:

Mapping Markets:  

Building Things: 

  • Behind the scenes at NASA: the process for painting the Mars rover

  • Christopher Mims in The Wall Street Journal describes a nearly seamless system of production, warehousing, and distribution enabled by Industry 4.0 technologies like cheap sensors, sophisticated data analytics, and robots, that will make the movement of goods as easy as the movement of data. One example given in the article is of a container of strawberries plucked by a robot arm, then handed off to a drone for delivery to the end customer. In the 21st century we have witnessed an undeniable upheaval in the handling of logistics and distribution, but the actual production of goods still contains its own universe of friction-filled complexity. Compare the strawberry example to an iPhone: in the case of the strawberry, the assembly (and to some extent, the sourcing, refining, and movement of raw materials) is taken care of, more or less, by nature. In the case of the iPhone, blocks of aluminum (ore harvested, refined, packaged and shipped) must be milled with specific cutting tools (manufactured, packaged, shipped), combined with electronics and battery technologies, all assembled by a mix of human and machine labor. Those inputs must all converge at the right place, at the right time, at the right price. The supply chain for 'manufacturing' fruit (and inputs) are quite localized, whereas the supply chains for complex goods are long, convoluted, and always at risk of disruption from issues of labor, natural disaster, trade policies, and a thousand other variables. The production side of the equation for perfectly balancing demand and fulfillment is loaded with far more stubborn challenges than the vision of a tidy bin of strawberries couriered by drone presents. Atoms, ultimately, are not bits: the proverbial gears in the machinery of physical systems face an ever-present threat of the dirt, dust, and muck of our dirty world seizing them up. 

Automatons:  

Just A Game:  

 

More next week. 

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