From Putting people first by Mark Vanderbeeken
As our lives become exposed to more and more technology, and companies become more and more interested in how technology affects us and how we interface with it, anthropologists have found themselves in increasing demand. Ken Banks of Kiwanja.net provides some context:
“The explosive growth of mobile-phone ownership in the developing world is largely down to a vibrant recycling market and the arrival of cheap US$20 phones, but is also down, in part, to the efforts of forward-thinking mobile-phone manufacturers. Anthropologists working for companies such as Nokia spend increasing amounts of time trying to understand what people living at the so-called “bottom of the pyramid” might want from a phone.”
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links for 2007-05-01Post Date: 2007-05-01 00:00:00
From designswarm thoughts by Alexandra Deschamps-Sonsino
Design for the Other 90% | Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum
something else to go see while im in NY
(tags: NY exhibition museum design)
Beroepseer - Werken met moed en vertrouwen
(In dutch) Nice online community .designed by my friend James Burke, that puts you in touch with your representative and invites a dialog to happen between the people and it’s political representatives. issue based discus...