Blogless: Blog of Design Less Better.

Apple: Make the iPhone 5 ethically

Now may be a good time to petition Apple to overhaul the way its suppliers treat their workers.

BlogLESS-readers-slash-Apple-product-owners: here’s a chance to do your gadget-crazed bit for corporate responsibility. I quote in full below.

The iPhone factory?

Every day, tens of millions of people will swipe the screens of their iPhones to unlock them.

On the other side of the world, a young girl is also swiping those screens. In fact, every day, during her 12+ hour shifts, six days a week, she repetitively swipes tens of thousands of them. She spends those hours inhaling n-hexane, a potent neurotoxin used to clean iPhone glass, because it dries a few seconds faster than a safe alternative. After just a few years on the line, she will be fired because the neurological damage from the n-hexane and the repetitive stress injuries to her wrists and hands make her unable to continue performing up to standard.

Right now we have a huge opportunity as ethical consumers: The launch of the iPhone 5 later this year will be new Apple CEO Tim Cook’s first big product rollout, and he can’t afford for anything to go wrong — including negative publicity around how Apple’s suppliers treat their workers. That’s why we’re launching a campaign this week to get Apple to overhaul the way its suppliers treat their workers in time for the launch of the iPhone 5.

In many cases, people literally are dying while making Apple products. Reporters have documented cases of deadly explosions at iPad factories, and repeated instances of employees dying of exhaustion after working thirty to sixty hour shifts. In some of the factories Apple contracts with, so many employees have attempted suicide that management installed nets to prevent employees from dying while jumping off building ledges.

Can Apple do this? Absolutely. Apple is the richest company in the world, posting a profit margin for the last quarter of 42.4% yesterday. They’re sitting on $100 billion in the bank. According to an anonymous Apple executive quoted in the New York Times, all Apple has to do is demand it, and it’ll happen – “Suppliers would change everything tomorrow if Apple told them they didn’t have another choice.”

We, for one, think this kind of thing can make a difference. If you are like-minded, why not head on over and sign the petition?

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PaulFeb 10, 2012
 

World Subways at Scale

Neil Freeman over at Fake is the new Real has done us all the great service of drawing world subway systems at scale.

New York Subways, at scale
New York
London Subways, at scale
London
Paris Subways, at scale
Paris
Tokyo Subways, at scale
Tokyo
Moscow Subways, at scale
Moscow
San Francisco Subways, at scale
And finally, my local system, the relatively pathetic-looking San Francisco MUNI/BART system

See many more world subway systems at scale right here. Thanks to Adwait for the tip.

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PaulFeb 3, 2012
 

Moebius (Jean Giraud)

Enjoy these fine drawings by French illustrator Moebuis.

Moebuis - Baudrillard (1/4)
Moebuis - Baudrillard (2/4)
Moebuis - Baudrillard (3/4)
Moebuis - Baudrillard (4/4)

Via

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PaulJan 27, 2012
 
Tagged with: Drawings, Illustration

Silence/Shapes

Here are some photographs of homemade smoke bombs by Filippo Minelli.

Filippo Minelli - Shapes (1/3)
Filippo Minelli - Shapes (2/3)
Filippo Minelli - Shapes (3/3)

Via

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PaulJan 20, 2012
 

Mimesis

Thanks to Today and Tomorrow for the heads up on these nice photos by Barbara & Michael Leisgen.

These photos are from 1972-73. Die Natur erzeugt Ähnlichkeiten!

Mimesis (1/5)
Mimesis (2/5)
Mimesis (3/5)
Mimesis (4/5)
Mimesis (5/5)
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PaulJan 13, 2012
 

Buy this. Look, you’re already wearing it!

Evan Selinger and Shaun Foster over at Slate have written a short meditation on some possible futures for personalized advertising, with some questions about their ethical upshots.

Putting the consumer in a cereal ad, by Evan Selinger and Shaun Foster
Putting the consumer in a cereal ad, by Evan Selinger and Shaun Foster

Imagine it’s the near future. You’re walking along a city street crowded with storefronts. As you walk past boutiques, cafes, and the Apple Store, your visage follows you. Thanks to advances in facial recognition and other technologies, behavioral marketers have developed the capacity to take your Facebook profile, transform it into a 3-D image, and insert it into ads. That sweater you’re eyeing? In the display, the mannequin wearing it takes on your face and shape. The screen showing a car commercial depicts you behind the wheel. At a travel agency (let’s pretend they still exist—after all, this is a thought experiment!), you see yourself sunning on a beach, while the real you is bundled up against the cold. The ads might show you with an attractive stranger or a lost love (after all, Facebook knows whom you used to date). Or they could contain scenes of you and your happy family. No longer do you have to picture yourself in the ad—technology has that covered.

How plausible is this scenario? What would it mean if it happened? How would it change the ethical landscape of advertising? Would anybody care? We advise you to read some thoughts on these and related questions by Evan Selinger and Shaun Foster.

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PaulJan 6, 2012
 

More 2011 Review: Year in Color

To add to our review of year-in-reviews from last week, check out Imprint's Year in Color.

Ok, we’re biased, since the list references our collaboration with FICTILIS for the Colors of Commerce exhibit. But author Jude Stewart highlights some other notables in color from 2011:

#1: On This Day calendar

Reusable for every year, this handy wall calendar consists of heat-sensitive cubes, each marking a noteworthy event from that day in history. Scribble your own notes for the year on the cube’s side, then wash-and-reuse next year – or frame and mount a year in your exceedingly colorful life.

 #9: Imprint’s series on synesthesia

#6: Google Image Search by Color. More useful than I would have ever thought!

Happy 2012!


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AndreaJan 2, 2012
 

2011: Year in Review: In Review

Please enjoy from the future in 2012 this brief summary of reviews of design in 2011.

First off, Design Milk has a nice review of the best of architecture in 2011.

River Side House in Horinouchi by Mizuishi Architect Atelier

Then, enjoy this write-up of the Plumen light bulb by designer Samuel Wilkinson and product design firm Hulger. The Plumen was named the Design Museum‘s Brit Insurance Design of the Year.

Plumen lightbulb by Samuel Wilkinson and Hulger

Also from the Design Museum, the winner of the Brit Insurance Graphics Award for 2011 is BlogLESS favorite Homemade is Best, by Swedish Interactive graphics agency Forsman & Bodenfors.

Homemade is Best, Forsman & Bodenfors for IKEA

And, finally, the interesting A Year in Web Design: How the Experts Saw 2011 from Web Design Tuts is worth a look.

Happy new year to each of you very fine BlogLESS readers.

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PaulDec 30, 2011
 
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