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I like the videos, and I enjoy their conceptual thinking but one major danger is that the connection with the user is severed here. By abstracting our concepts into primitive shapes and interactions we essentially limited our scope for people to understand the value of the concept to their everyday lives. This is exactly the problem we needed to avoid and was kindly pointed out to us by our advisor during this process, Durrell Bishop.
The main issue with these video prototypes remains that the affordances, specificity of function and attention to the variety of people’s lifestyles & behaviours were greatly overlooked. However, as an exercise in storytelling the films here show an area of learning for me in conveying ideas quickly and efficiently.
As part of our idea development phase on the Tangible User Interface module at CIID it became increasingly necessary to express our concepts on a medium that could talk more about the interaction and response of the ideas we were only capturing on paper. Sketching is great but when your trying to describe the idea of a fruit bowl that follows you around your kitchen, things get a bit more tricky.
Cue The Awesome Fruit Bowl and it’s accomplice, Water vibes!
Thanks to Marco Triverio and Hari Gopalakrishnan for the collaboration.
The Making of OnRoute is a short movie showing the process of making the animated story OnRoute which was developed in the Video Prototyping Class at CIID in response to a service design project brief.
Me and Alix Gillet-Kirt developed an interesting technique for achieving the effect in the final film which this short flick will hopefully explain. Enjoy!
A simple concept for the Physical Computing class ran by Massimo Banzi @ CIID.
Group: Mac Oosthuizen & Mette Lyckegaard