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For Wearables, Design Leads Tech | Molly Wood | The New York Times

  • 0:14 - 0:16
    (Journalist) Design is not just
    about how things look,
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    it's about how they act,
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    how you experience them
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    and whether you
    love them enough
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    to keep using them.
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    And that's
    increasingly true
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    when it comes to tech.
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    Astro Studios
    in San Francisco,
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    has brought great design
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    to lots
    of consumer products.
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    Its biggest hit though
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    is the gadget
    that arguably
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    launched the wearables
    category,
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    the Nike FuelBand.
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    (Brett Lovelady) Design is, you know
    -- we're the translators,
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    you know, we really are
    the people that take the conversation,
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    and turn it
    into tangible vision
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    and then that tangible
    vision,
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    commercialise it.
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    So as we sat there (check)
    on the fuel band,
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    we'd spent a lot
    of time with Nike,
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    exploring how do you
    motivate people to be active.
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    We used
    a lot of design skills,
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    models, prototyping,
    illustrations,
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    story-boarding.
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    Early on, for example,
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    we might do something
    that's more experimental.
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    This happens to be a
    hard 3D printed product.
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    We went and looked at this
    and say ok,
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    how am I going to interact
    with this differently,
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    than with, say, something that is more,
    you know, sleek and small.
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    What's the tradeoff?
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    In this case, we made room to put
    in the hard pieces
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    with the soft pieces
    that are more plieable.
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    Then they started to take
    on more form, over time
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    to eventually start to look and feel
    like the real thing.
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    We designed the clock
    for example, you know,
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    like how many different kinds of
    communication go into it.
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    You might mark it like a Fuel aesthetic,
    (check)
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    for example, like little fuel gauge.
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    And there was a whole bunch of things
    we wanted this product to do.
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    Through dialogue and experimentation
    and prototyping,
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    We whittled it down to being
    just a few things really well.
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    Over all, I think the Fuel Band
    captured one of things
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    that's great about
    successful products.
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    It's a blend of
    technology information,
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    fashion and personality. ////
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    Out of that,
    a lot of people
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    came in and said,
    Hey you know what;
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    the differentiator
    is design,
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    the perspective on who it
    is we're designing for.
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    As design
    gets more important,
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    it has to be part
    of any new company
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    from the ground up.
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    In Silicon Valley,
    that means
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    a venture capital fund
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    where the tech
    isn't everything.
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    Designer Fund is
    dedicated to helping
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    businesses
    grow with design
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    at their core.
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    One of the growing trends
    that we observed
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    is the number of billion
    dollar companies,
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    co-foundered by designers
    within the last 10 years,
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    including AirBNB,
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    Interests, Instagram,
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    Square, Kick Starter.
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    I think there's something
    really special
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    when,
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    design including
    technology in business
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    all come together.
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    Every little touch point
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    is an opportunity
    to delight someone,
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    to bring joy
    into their lives,
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    to enrich the families
    of friends.
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    So companies
    that understand how to do that,
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    will continue
    to really innovate
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    and grow in ways that
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    we haven't seen other
    companies before.
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    I've always believed
    that design should be
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    leading the conversation.
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    When you've got a lot
    of the same wires
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    and bits and plastics
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    and whatever the physical
    and tangible materials are,
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    design is what's going
    to put them
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    into a unique context
    that will either be
  • 3:08 - 3:09
    perfect
    for a certain user,
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    demographic, use
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    or brand.
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    Wearables are probably
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    the current best example
    of how physical design,
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    combined with a great
    experience,
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    can inspire loyalty
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    and even love.
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    And the companies,
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    who get that balance
    right, are the ones,
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    who are going to win. (
    Music in background)
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    Watches and wearables
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    are moving
    to that same space
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    of shoes and purses
    and hats.
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    Not a lot of people
    have integrated
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    that with technology,
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    so I think we're
    a going to learn a lot
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    in the next few years,
    as to what really sticks
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    and what the churn
    of replacement
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    might be in this space.
Title:
For Wearables, Design Leads Tech | Molly Wood | The New York Times
Description:

Wearables are leading a revolution to combine design with ingenuity to make new products. During development of Nike’s Fuelband, for example, many details, from material to font, came from designers.

Produced by: Molly Wood, Rebekah Fergusson and Vanessa Perez

Read the story here: http://nyti.ms/1CwxN9X

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For Wearables, Design Leads Tech | Molly Wood | The New York Times
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheNewYorkTimes

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
03:58

English subtitles

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