<![CDATA[Gizmodo: minimalist]]> http://tags.gizmodo.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/gizmodo.com.png <![CDATA[Gizmodo: minimalist]]> http://gizmodo.com/tag/minimalist http://gizmodo.com/tag/minimalist <![CDATA[Areaware 2B Radio: Minimalist Design and Features For Your Stylish Grampa]]> Kids these days, with their baggy jeans and their MTV and their fancy networked booming boxes, they don't know the joy of sitting around the old-timey radio and listening to the soothing stories. The Areaware 2B radio just might be the bridge to these whippersnappers: its visible vacuum tubes have a cool retro feel, not to mention a warm sound, and the minimalistic design is hip with the Apple generation. And thank god, this radio is only a radio, without any wifi, 3G, DRM, or any of those other scary acronyms. The 2B will ship in November for a price of $550, but what's a few hundred dollars for such comforting simplicity? [Apartment Therapy]

]]>
http://gizmodo.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5055870&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[Nulla Minimalist Bike Concept Dispenses With Spokes, Most of Frame]]> Designer Bradford Waugh came up with Nulla (meaning "nothing") as a way of making bikes more stylish and lightweight. And visually stunning of course. Lacking spokes, it uses a direct-gear-chain drive system, which leaves the bike looking like a simple set of open curves. Whether or not it would ride well would be immaterial, methinks: rock up to a cycling meet on this thing and you'd have an instant bunch of admirers. Just a concept... but who knows, it looks exactly sort of thing we're riding in twenty years time. [Tuvie]

]]>
http://gizmodo.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5034640&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[Are Gadgets Getting Plainer or Will Crazy Hardware Design Come Back? The Experts Speak]]> We all know minimalism is currently king in the gadget design world. Fancy shapes, switches and knobs have been eschewed in favor of clean and simple designs that take a backseat to interface. So we asked Fake Steve Jobs, Bruce Sterling, Daniel Will-Harris and Yves Behar whether or not they thought there would be a counter-minimalist backlash.

Fake Steve Jobs:

Yes, there will be a backlash. Wait until you see what the mobile phone guys have planned. Like Nokia. God love those Finns, but they never met a button or a switch that they could resist. They’ll load their devices up with every possible feature and they’ll create a software interface that nobody can understand, and for reasons I don’t understand, weird people all over Europe (the artsy kind wearing too-small jackets and scarves wrapped around their necks) will embrace this clusterfuck of useless features and impossible operating design as a new breakthrough.

Not us, though. We’re going to keep driving toward even greater minimalism. My goal is to have zero buttons. Zero visible screws. Just nothing at all on the outside. Perfectly smooth surfaces. Remember the Pet Rock craze in the '70s? That was a huge inspiration for me. People spent a fortune buying those little rocks, just because everyone else around them was doing it too. Huge lesson in that and it led directly to the founding of Apple in 1977. My pet rock — I call him Frank, after Frank Gehry — still sits on the desk at my office. Kind of a reminder of what our company is all about.

Bruce Sterling

Yeah, it's incredible how much power [the real Steve] Jobs has, isn't it? Even when his company's on the ropes, if he says, "It'll be translucent, blob-shaped and in lickable candy-colors," people from Toledo to Taiwan just go for it. Whereas, if an iPod or iPhone's got no buttons, all of a sudden buttons are like leprosy. You can "backlash" the Reality Distortion Field, but you're better off not trying.

Projects Watch Designer Daniel Will-Harris

Minimalist designs like the iPhone are quite beautiful, but also, in a way, invisible. They become frames to the content. But fashions in design are always evolving, and what's cool now may look dated, or at least "not new" in a few years.

I see a time when devices have a standard core of electronics designed to be placed into a wide design of cases tailored to your specific needs and desires. These cases would be offered by the device manufacturer, and also by third-parties who are given the open specs for creating a case. Think software skins, but as hardware. You could get a custom device case that specifically is molded to your grip, or is shaped like your favorite pet pygmy hamster. Maybe you want your device to be made of waterproof soft orange silicone, or milled out of hard cold malachite.

Now with rapid prototyping machines [and other new techniques], mass production doesn't have to mean endless sameness, it can mean endless variety. Sure, there will always be those who want what Madonna is carrying (and knockoffs will be easier and cheaper than ever). But customization and personalization will let you make devices more uniquely your own.

Yves Behar, head of fuseproject design firm:

Rather than going with a trend—minimalism vs. a more showy design—we're gonna get much more diversity. Companies will have the opportunity to be unique. The hope here is that there is opportunity that is taken by tech companies to create their own direction, create their own ethos recognizable, one from the other. Wired Magazine created something like this from the start, a unique look. Whether you like fluorescent colors or not, it's that kind of individualism or uniqueness, eclecticism. Hopefully this is something we'll see happening more. Living in a trend-driven environment with everything being matchy matchy isn't very interesting.

]]>
http://gizmodo.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5026519&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[Get Around the Time with Lexon Around Clock]]> Minimalist clocks pop up from time to time, and while sometimes they're just good enough for you to know it's "three-ish," the Around clock can actually let you know it's "three fifteenish." It's about as simple design as you can get: with a rotating dial and a red wire that tells you the time. From Lexon, it's available for $45. And you can't get that tune out of your head now can you? Round round get around.... [Acquire]

]]>
http://gizmodo.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=5018234&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[The Supper Surround Stereo: When a Mug isn't a Mug]]> This concept stereo designed by Taguchi Craft, is made to blend in with your kitchen. There's currently no word on pricing, but they're scheduled to pop up around winter 2008. Might be better in a shelf in the kitchen than on the table. I'd keep trying to drink from the midbase driver or something. [Design Spotter via Technabob]

]]>
http://gizmodo.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=311068&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[Iseey Miyake OVO Minimalist Watch]]> Even though this watch doesn't have MSN or tell you when someone's calling, we're still in love. Why? Because we love minimalist watches.

Instead of having two hands radiating from the center, this Issey Miyake OVO watch has two dials on the outside. The only way this could get any more minimalist is if the entire face was black and only lit up the time if you tilted the watch toward your face. Hmm, that gives us an idea.

Product Page [Rakuten via Nexus404]

]]>
http://gizmodo.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=263807&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[Plus Minus Zero Minimalist Clock Radio]]> From the same folks that brought you the aromatherapy donut, is this very minimalistic CD radio. From the outside it seems that this clock radio just has a CD slot and OLED display, and I can't figure out if this concept radio will have everything controlled by remote control or black magic because the website is just filled with artsy-fartsy talk. No, seriously, look:

Music − it soothes the soul and enriches our lives. It's something that's an inherent part of our lives. But the audio systems around us which we use to play beautiful, enjoyable music on have no soul − they're just machines.
And that is just the beginning.

Product Page [Via Red Ferret]

]]>
http://gizmodo.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=244193&view=rss&microfeed=true
<![CDATA[Milk is the Desk Dreams are Made of]]> Saying that this desk is simple and minimalist is a bit of an understatement. If the iPod were to magically grow to a full size functional desk, this is how it would likely look. Everything is neatly tucked away, including cables and compartments for peripherals. Oh, and did I mention it has a fish tank? A fish tank! The single column holding the desk is also fully adjustable.

Now is the only good time to be a Denmarkianite (just kidding, me love you long time Denmarkers) because this desk is only available through Holmris Hansen A/S in Denmark.

Product Page [Via YankoDesign]

]]>
http://gizmodo.com/index.php?op=postcommentfeed&postId=236264&view=rss&microfeed=true