Archive for May, 2007

Preorder Art. Lebedev Optimus Maximus Keyboard

Three days ago, I posted about the imminent release of the Optimus Maximus Keyboard by the russian design studio Art. Lebedev. Now, the countdown on their website finally reached zero and we get to see the details of the 1500$ keyboard:

  • Keyboard Dimensions: 53.7cm x 17.3cm x 3.8cm
  • Key Dimensions: 2.02cm x 2.02cm
  • Visible OLED area: 1.01cm
  • Resolution of each key: 48px x 48px
  • Frame Rate: min. 10 frames per second
  • Color: 65536
  • Viewing Angle: 160°
  • Connection: USB2.0
  • OS: Windows XP / Vista, Mac OS X 10.4.8 or higher

Optimus Maximus

To enhance the life of the OLED displays and the ribbon cables used to control them, Art Lebedev Studios decided to make every button a module consisting of a chip, the OLED display and a moving, transparent cap. Since only the plastic cap is moving, the displays have a much higher lifespan.

Preorders can be placed now. The price is US$ 1564 or approximately € 1257.


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Simulate Color Blindness with Color Oracle

I just noticed an interesting article on color blindness over at Pixelgraphix. Color Oracle helps webdesigners to view in real time, what a website would look like for people suffering from one of the various color blindnesses. The filter is applied to the whole screen so it's completely independent from the browser and even works with images in Photoshop.

Color Oracle

Color Oracle is free and available for Mac OS X, Windows and Linux.


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Preorder Optimus Maximus: The $1500 Keyboard

We often see massively hyped products which then fail to emerge as their release date is postponed time and time again. The correct term for these products is Vaporware.

The Optimus Maximus Keyboard of Art. Lebedev Studio could fit this description. First announced in 2005, the release was postponed twice. To be more cost-effective, the technical specification of the keyboard changed and after another postponed release were changed back to the original.

Especially at an estimated price tag of $1500 for a keyboard, noone would be interested in the product anymore. But the much-hyped and long-awaited Optimus Maximus keyboard is different. Behind each of its 113 keys, a small 48x48 pixel OLED display works its magic, allowing the user to change the picture on each key. Custom keyboard layouts or shortcuts can be switched easily on a per-application basis.

Optimus Maximus

Today, Art. Lebedev Studio announced via a countdown on their website that they will apparently start taking pre-orders from computer owners with more money than sense in roughly 3 days. Only 800 keyboards will be shipped until end of January 2008, ensuring that the price is kept high.


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Designed: Kickmap, The New NYC Subway Map

About three years ago a new NYC subway map design by Eddie Jabbour, graphic designer for Kick Design, started to find its way to the internet. It had issues but it was much better than the current MTA design in that it tried to focus on stations instead of trains. People using the subway want to get from point A to point B in the shortest possible time so they look for stations close to those points, not for specific trains.

Encouraged by the positive feedback, Eddie contacted the MTA but was quickly put off:

 

... when he showed up at the agency’s Midtown offices with copies of his work, they were quick to find fault with it. According to Christopher Boylan, the transportation authority’s executive director of corporate and community affairs, who recalled the meeting, the main criticism was that Mr. Jabbour’s map, like Mr. Vignelli’s, was artistic but geographically inaccurate. "He’s a good designer and it’s an interesting map," Mr. Boylan said. "The design is important, but the thing we’re concerned with is the best directional guidance. We design a map for use, not solely to look good, and we think it looks good."

NYC Subway Map

Original map on the left, the Kickmap on the right.

But Eddie Jabbour is not a man easily deterred. He works on his maps on weekends and nights with the feedback of his 17-year old daughter.

Criticism that Eddie's map is geographically inaccurate is inappropriate as most people use road maps or street signs for that type of information. As previously mentioned, the usability should focus on the key features of subway lines - something the Kickmap gets right.


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Cork’d sold

What started as a side project for Dan Benjamin and Dan Cederholm on a Mac Mini in a collocation facility has grown to be one of the largest online communities for wine tasting. In about one year the site amassed about 20.000 users. A lovely design paired with a big community got the site quite far.

This week, the creators of Cork’d announced the sale of the site to Gary Vaynerchuk, the host of WLTV. A really nice outcome for everyone, especially since Gary seems to be a guy who understands the values of good design and a community. If you haven't seen him before, watch this little summary - it's worth it.

Congratulations to they guys from the iceberg!


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Apple’s Unobscured Touchscreen

Rain Noe wrote an article on Apple's new Touchscreen patent:

Touchscreens have one single but, as of yet, unadressed design flaw: your finger on the screen is obscuring the very elements you're interacting with. This has several implications for the user interface, for example buttons need to be quite large so you can still see them.

Never fear though, the clever designers from Cupertino have come up with a solution for this particular dilemma. It's still only a patent and I would be very surprised if this ever made it into a real product but it's nevertheless a cool and unique idea.

Basically it's an iPod or (i)Phone with a screen covering the whole front of the device. A transparent control layout on the screen allows interaction. The difference is, you're not touching the screen, you touch the back, the opposite side of the controls. A cursor is shown to give you visual feedback on the position of your fingers and if you press harder, the device registers it as a click.

Apple’s Unobscured Touchscreen

Since your fingers end up on the back of the iPod anyway, simply by virtue of holding the thing, it sounds like a pretty good idea. The whole thing, especially the cursor and "press harder to click" function might take a bit of getting used to but I'm sure Apple's designers and engineers could come up with something.

 


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