NYT: New York City Wants a New Graduate School of Engineering

“Worried that New York City is not spawning enough technology-based start-up companies with the potential to become big employers like Google, city officials are inviting universities around the world to create an engineering campus on city-owned land.”

Let’s hope this happens, and if it does, let’s hope the school just doesn’t turn into a feeder channel for the financial services industry.

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The Suits of James Bond

An awesome, new(ish) blog examining the wardrobe details of the James Bond franchise in penetrating detail. The author’s sartorial knowledge is shockingly complete and edifying. For those who appreciate or are fascinated by the subtle semantics of men’s dress, every post is a pleasure to read.

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Tivoli Model One

For my birthday a few weeks ago I received this Tivoli Model One table radio as a gift from my mother. It’s basically a very simple, very solidly built AM/FM tuner. Here’s what came in the box: the radio itself and a power cable. Oh, and a brief manual that I didn’t even bother reading.

Tivoli Model One

Set-up took about a minute: attach the cable to the back of the unit and then plug it into a wall and it was working. The tuning dial feels so substantial in its turning motion — incredibly precise, incredibly well-manufactured — that it has the feel of luxury. Not the flashy, superficial notion that passes for most luxury these days, which is really more about price tags than build quality. Rather this radio exudes a truly ‘high end’ sensibility that suggests enough thought and care have been invested in its design and engineering that the whole unit could last several decades.

I know that radio designers and engineers have almost a century of best practices and technological refinement at their backs when they sit down to create a product like the Model One. And it’s perhaps unrealistic to expect that today’s constantly changing networked technology products could work like this, could be so simple and solid. But it still made me wish that all electronic products could offer an out-of-the-box experience as satisfying as this. (Get yours at Amazon through this link and I get a little kickback.)

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iOS Fonts

A rundown of (most of) the typefaces available on Apple’s devices, comparing what’s available on iPad versus iPhone. Looking at the full inventory like this, it’s surprising to me to see some of the fonts that Apple deliberately chose to include on the iPad. Zapfino, Copperplate, Bradley Hand and others strike me as running counter to the Apple design sensibility. See the full inventory here.

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Predictions for 2011 from the Year 1931

“Way back on September 13, 1931, The New York Times, founded in 1851, decided to celebrate its 80th anniversary by asking a few of the day’s visionaries about their predictions of 2011 — 80 years in their future. Those assembled were big names for 1931: physician and Mayo Clinic co-founder W. J. Mayo, famed industrialist Henry Ford, anatomist and anthropologist Arthur Keith, physicist and Nobel laureate Arthur Compton, chemist Willis R. Whitney, physicist and Nobel laureate Robert Millikan, physicist and chemist Michael Pupin, and sociologist William F. Ogburn.”

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Editorial Designer Francesco Franchi

I’ve come across the work of this Italian editorial designer a few times, and each time I stop whatever I’m doing and marvel. His work for the Italian magazine Intelligence in Lifestyle is preternaturally precise, rich and bold.

Helpfully for those of us who would be students of his work, a trove of Franchi’s samples can be found over at his Flickr stream.

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“Designing Media” by Bill Moggridge

Moggridge is a renowned interaction designer and the director of the Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum. His new book “examines connections and conflicts between old and new media, describing how the [mainstream media] have changed and how new patterns of media consumption are emerging.” It’s composed of Moggridge’s interviews with almost forty prominent people shaping media today.

You can buy the book Amazon. Over at the marketing site, there’s a wealth of interview segments available.

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What Open Can Look Like

For the record, I really do think that open systems are better than closed ones. But not always. Sometimes, open systems turn into a complete mess.

I was thinking about this as we get into the holiday season, a time when lots of new consumer audio-visual electronics are purchased and make their ways into our homes. Last year I purchased what was recommended to me as a very good “home theater in a box,” i.e., a single-unit, multi-speaker system that serves as a central hub for audio from my cable box, Mac mini, Apple TV, Blu-Ray player, Wii console etc. Along with our television, it’s the principal interface for basically everything my family does in the living room.

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