Yanko Design - Latest Posts | |
- Energizing Neighborhoods
- Nooka Watch Giveaway Part Deux!
- Another Perfect Measure
- The Butterfly View of You
- The Porsche 929
- Anytime, Anywhere Deliverable Hospital
- Future Touch Tech
| Posted: 25 Jul 2011 08:46 AM PDT How can design be used to change and improve perceptions about shared spaces? Project Energizing Neighborhoods is a strategic addition to a city's ongoing narrative with its outdoor spaces, created by developing on the existing typology of a park bench. Now multi-functional, you can get your fitness on while you wait for the bus. The human generated power is stored to light the attached streetlamp. Designer: Bharat Bhargava ---------- |
| Nooka Watch Giveaway Part Deux! Posted: 25 Jul 2011 08:42 AM PDT Big congrats to Benji for winning last week’s giveaway but here’s another chance to win a custom Nooka Zub Zirc with the YD emblem watchband. To enter, snap a photo of your barren wrist with the words “Nooka watch goes here” and post a link to it in comments. You’ve got til’ Friday the 29th. One random winner will receive the aforementioned custom Zub Zirc. Sponsor: Nooka, Contest ends 07/29 Facebook Like Nooka ---------- |
| Posted: 25 Jul 2011 05:52 AM PDT One of the secrets to great cooking is to measure out the ingredients as accurately as possible. While dry ingredients are not so much of a pain, it's the liquids that make me quiver. Handy Meter is a digital measure that goes around the faucet mouth or spouts of bottles and jugs, to pour out the right amount of liquid. It does away with the need for a measuring jar, hence increasing the accuracy. I suppose it has an inbuilt mechanism that terminates the flow of liquid, once the desired amount has been poured. This will be an ideal feature. Designer: Jeon Hwan Soo ---------- |
| Posted: 25 Jul 2011 04:49 AM PDT I watch with amusement how my daughter struggles to take self-pictures from her cellphone and our camera. It's a crazy fad but in practical scenarios, where you are a lone traveler, I think a camera with some kinda modification to help you click self-photos will be a great idea. Just like this Butter-Fly Concept camera, it has little "wings" that come out from under the camera. Easy navigation buttons and a steady grip, allow you to take pictures and videos from an arm's length. Neat! Butter-Fly Camera Concept is a 2011 Sparks Award entry. Designer: Joh Minhoo ---------- |
| Posted: 25 Jul 2011 12:02 AM PDT The Porsche Panamara is ugly. There, I said it! Maybe the guys at Porsche should have taken some notes from Designer Julliana Cho, because this electric concept looks like one hell-of-a car. This 4-seater has suitable comfort for long distance drives with the fam, but maintains the brand’s iconic fluid styling with some added severity and drama in the lines and contours that give it that necessary edge the larger Panamara needed to maintain sporty appeal. The catch… you have to share! Tackling environmental and space issues, the designer imagines this concept as a community-share vehicle with a private feel. Members of the car-club could access a vehicle at any time from a central “docking” station where a variety of 929s would charge on a cleverly designed rotating parking structure. Personally, I want it all to myself. Designer: Julliana Cho ---------- |
| Anytime, Anywhere Deliverable Hospital Posted: 25 Jul 2011 12:01 AM PDT Designer Kukil Han imagines a go-anywhere solution for providing aid to victims of natural disasters such as floods, earthquakes, tsunamis and storms. The Mobile Hospital could be delivered to any part of the world (including hard to reach areas) in a matter of hours via helicopter, or be transported on a larger scale by ship, providing emergency medical attention to those in need. This thoughtful design can also be customized to provide support to specific needs with relative ease, furthering its adaptability to a number of scenarios. Designer: Kukil Han ---------- |
| Posted: 25 Jul 2011 12:01 AM PDT This concept computer-of-the-future by designer Jakub Záhoř allows the user to operate the device anywhere they can find a glass surface. The user simply attaches the central unit to any glass surface like a window or coffee table, switches on the power, and watches their system light up before their eyes. The display appears as an interactive hologram on the glass that the user merely has to touch to operate. It also makes for an easy, take-anywhere way to project photos and presentations or stream movies. Windex not included. Designer: Jakub Záhoř ---------- |
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