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Why We Need Universal Design | Michael Nesmith | TEDxBoulder

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    [applause]
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    Hello!
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    It's great to be here.
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    You might be noticing that I have a female
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    voice that's speaking for me right now.
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    That's because my interpreter is a woman.
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    If I could have chosen, if I could have
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    picked anyone for tonight, I think it
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    probably would have been a British man.
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    [laughter]
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    Have you ever been in that situation—
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    maybe you're in a supermarket
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    or you're walking down a hallway—
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    and you're walking towards a stranger
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    coming the opposite direction,
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    and you start that awkward dance where
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    you're trying to pass them
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    and you go to the right,
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    and they go to the right,
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    and you go to the left.
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    You know how awkward that is?
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    Have you ever been there?
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    [laughter]
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    So suppose you were deaf like I am
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    and you're going down the hallway
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    and the person coming towards you
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    is completely blind
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    and you start the awkward dance.
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    What would you do?
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    Have you ever thought about that?
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    How would you communicate?
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    This happened to my friend.
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    He's completely deaf,
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    and he was coming down the hallway
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    and there was a blind person
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    coming towards him.
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    And they started the awkward dance
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    and the blind man began to talk.
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    And my deaf friend--
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    what was he going to do?
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    He couldn't hear.
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    So his first intuition is to gesture,
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    point to his ears, and say, you know,
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    “I'm deaf,” but obviously
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    the blind man's not going to see that.
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    So his second intuition was to take out
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    his phone and type in his notes.
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    The blind man's not going to
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    see that, either.
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    So the third thing he did
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    was a little unusual.
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    He grabbed the blind man's hand,
    and he held it up to his ear
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    and he shook his head no.
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    And the blind man felt this
    and immediately understood,
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    “oh, this guy's deaf.”
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    That awkward dance was over.
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    They were able to just kind of
    share a laugh and pass each other.
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    So let's change the story a little bit.
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    What if my friend was himself-- he was
    deaf-- but this person wasn't
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    blind at all.
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    He could still see.
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    Maybe he spoke a different language.
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    If my friend decided to do the
    same thing, anyway--
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    grab his hand, put it up to his
    ear, and shake his head no—
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    would that person still understand him?
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    Probably.
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    Might be a little awkward, but
    it'd be universally understood.
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    This is what I do every day as a
    creative for Amazon and a designer.
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    I make visuals on the front page
    of the world's largest online storefront.
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    I solve these problems that have to be
    accessible to millions and millions
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    of different kinds of people
    with different backgrounds.
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    As a deaf person, I have to
    innovate solutions all the time.
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    I do this in my everyday life.
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    My communication medium changes
    with every interaction I have.
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    Everything from a pitch--
    pitching an idea to a client--
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    to going into a bar
    and simply ordering a beer.
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    My communication style has to change.
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    I'm constantly thinking about
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    how to make a better solution
    and sometimes my solutions are awkward.
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    Like, for example, you see me
    signing with two hands right now,
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    but then I have to stop to click.
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    That's one example.
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    But I would like to argue
    that everyone in this room
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    has a disability, regardless of
    if it's permanent or temporary.
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    It could be something as
    simple as being pregnant,
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    having a broken arm,
    being older, or being a child.
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    Everyone has to figure out a way to cope
    and navigate around their disability,
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    and these solutions are worth sharing.
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    One example would be my wife.
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    She's hearing, and we visited
    Iceland a few years ago.
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    She's an educator, and she wanted to take
    a tour of a school for the deaf.
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    Now, neither of us can
    read or write Icelandic,
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    and I can't speak Icelandic Sign Language.
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    But being a native signer, I could
    understand much better than she could,
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    and so I ended up interpreting for her
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    for the first time
    in our entire relationship.
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    Often, I'm considered the disabled one,
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    but in this situation
    she was the one with a disability.
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    So what is Universal Design, anyway?
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    There was a professor named Ron Mace
    who passed away a few years ago.
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    He taught at the Center for
    Universal Design in North Carolina,
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    and he said that Universal Design
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    is the design of products and environments
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    to be usable by all people to
    the greatest extent possible
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    without the need for any adaptation
    or specialized design.
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    So humans interact
    with objects every day,
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    and all these objects fall somewhere
    on the spectrum of Universal Design,
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    from very universal to not at all.
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    So let's use a doorknob
    as a common example.
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    Doorknobs are not really
    usable by children.
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    They struggle. People with arthritis
    struggle to use doorknobs, and this guy.
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    [laughter]
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    So how could we improve on this design?
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    Well, the door lever. It's a lot better.
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    This guy can use it now.
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    But think about people with wheelchairs.
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    Have you ever seen them try to
    go through a door? It' horrible.
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    It's really tough for them.
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    Or parents with baby strollers.
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    It's really difficult,
    not fully accessible.
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    So to even improve upon
    the door design further,
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    the automatic sliding door was invented.
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    This is such a Universal Design.
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    It doesn't leave anyone out;
    even animals can use it.
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    One of my projects recently
    was to work on something
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    to make it more universally accessible.
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    Remember when Google glass came out--
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    It was so exciting a few years ago?
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    Now, may it rest in peace. [laughter]
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    But I started thinking about
    how could I use that--
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    how could I make that really
    awesome new technology beneficial--
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    for people like me?
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    So I thought of my mother immediately.
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    My mother is deaf,
    and she loves going to movies.
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    Often, movie theaters would
    release a movie with subtitles
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    that were imposed on the screen,
    and that was a really exciting event.
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    I don't know if you know this but
    deaf options in a movie theater
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    are really bleak, and you usually
    have to wear something like this.
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    Can you imagine going on
    your first date looking like this?
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    [laughter] Yeah.
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    So I thought, how can I make this better?
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    I decided to get a file for a movie script
    and put it in an app
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    so that you could have a timed app
    where you could press play
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    and go into any movie theatre
    and see the script on your Google Glass.
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    No one had done that before
    and I had to move pretty fast on that.
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    And the biggest reward was seeing --
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    was not only realizing that it helps
    people like my mom or people like me,
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    but also anyone can use it.
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    Imagine if you go to a different country
    and you go into a movie theatre--
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    you want to watch a movie-- you can watch
    it in your own language.
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    Or you could even have an app
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    become your own personal karaoke
    machine and have it play lyrics.
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    That is the genius of Universal Design.
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    When you achieve Universal Design,
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    it snowballs to the point where people--
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    even if you don't share
    the same disability--
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    everyone benefits from it.
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    Disability drives innovation.
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    The existence of disability forces you
    to come up with new solutions.
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    It does not impair you.
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    All of us have a disability,
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    regardless of if it's physical or
    cognitive, emotional or even temporary.
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    What is your solution?
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    Share it with us.
    It's what unifies us as humans.
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    Let's stop making that awkward dance
    so awkward. Thank you.
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    [applause]
Title:
Why We Need Universal Design | Michael Nesmith | TEDxBoulder
Description:

Michael is a deaf and native American Sign Language speaker working as a creative designer for Amazon. Throughout his career, Michael's visual/conceptual way of thinking and problem solving have served him both as an asset and a challenge. He finds solutions around his disability through Universal Design.

Michael Allen Nesmith, a Chicago native, was born into a deaf-culture family using ASL as the primary language. He attended Gallaudet University (an all-deaf college) in Washington DC and then moved back to Chicago for his MFA in Visual Communication Design at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He moved to Portland, Oregon to begin his advertising career in W+K12; an experimental advertising school housed inside Wieden+Kennedy's Portland office. He is now a visual designer at Amazon in Seattle, WA. Throughout his career, Michael's visual/conceptual way of thinking and problem solving have served him both as an asset and a challenge.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
10:30

English subtitles

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