Category: Made in Taiwan

Thoughts from an Industrial Designer living in Taiwan.

  • Miami Vices


    Delightful Americana on display

    Persistence pays off! Months of angling to score a trip to the USA, and I line up three weeks in Miami and Texas, with brief stops in San Francisco and Los Angeles.

    Miami was host to this year’s annual IDSA conference – a meeting of minds and bodies from the Industrial Design Society of America. I expected great things – the finest brains in the industry, a broad cross-section of consultancies, in-housers and orbiting services, and five days in one of the most cosmopolitan style-spots in the Americas. The scene was set for some challenging debate about the future of the industry, questions around our changing roles as creative thinkers, and reflection on some of the global macro-trends shaping the planet.

    But before all that, a brief Architectural interlude:


    Neon

    In order to at least slightly offset some of the crushing 12-hour jetlag, I arrived a day early, and set about taking in as much of the delightful Art-Deco district as possible. In their infinite wisdom, the area narrowly escaped complete destruction in the 80s at the hands of imaginative hotel developers, and we are today left with a superb slice of kitsch Americana that cannot fail to warm the soul in its bright hopefulness.

    Add into the mix a large Latino population (fronted by our own Cuban-Miamian, Pedro), large quantities of aerospace-grade silicon, 22-inch rimmed cruisers and loud loud music … and you have yourself a rather efficient distraction from the more mundane activities at the conference.


    Balmy. Barmy.


    Cavalier Attitude


    I did also see the place in the daytime, honest.


    Post-modern postcards


    Several of the hotels kept classic cars on-hand to tempt gullible photographers into stopping for over-priced coffees. Which, worked just great.


    Heydays in the sun


    There were new Camaros and Mustangs everywhere, but none of them challenges the considered delicacy of the original, if you ask me. The new ones just seem like they were designed as toys, and scaled up accordingly, which may have been true.


    The style extends to the interior of the local restaurants, which in many cases seem untouched from the 50s.

    But enough of the tourist attractions – back to the conference, and some man-sized debate about … oh … everyone is by the pool?


    A theme emerges. Perhaps different from the one envisaged by the organisers.


    Friday night Ocean Drive showmanship.

    In the first days of the conference, I endeavoured to attend as many sessions as I could, constructing a buffet of strategy, techniques and more out-there subjects like how the Human Genome Project could effect design. I have to say, however, that I had a sinking realisation that the sessions were not as meaty as I was expecting, and that in actual fact, the people that I wanted to meet, and the people that I wanted to spend more time with were all creating their own buffet, and only dipping into the sessions that most piqued their interest.


    The Pedromobile!

    And indeed, the most memorable events were those extra-curricular activities that had Pedro leading us a merry- dance through the back streets of Miami, ending up one night at a most delightful little bistro in Little Haiti. A Jamaican restaurant. Run by a pair of Indians. Cooking Indian-Jamaican fusion food out the back of a local store; complete with riot screen, security cameras and cans of Red Stripe to wash it down with.


    “Culturalization”


    Roti + Jerk Chicken = Yum


    Washed down with some delicious glucose-delivery syrups


    The tips jar was in no danger of walking off


    Pedro bonds with the locals


    Team Miami.


    Big brother.


    Time to leave.

    So what of the conference? I went expecting to professionally broaden my mind. For that, I was disappointed. The dialogue I expected to see – the rise of China, commoditisation of design, the role user-interface and software design, the notions around Design Thinking – simply were not successfully addressed; at least in the main sessions. There was a faint whiff in the air of self-congratulatory 1980s excess, and a blissful ignorance of the realities that face our profession. John Kolko of Frog Design pretty much nailed it in his article “End of an Era”, which sums up many of my own thoughts. You have to take it with a grain of salt – if there is one thing Frog seems able to do, it is talk the big talk. Indeed, Frog, Smart, Ideo and others are positioning themselves ‘above’ basic ID, and aligning themselves alongside the Andersons and McKinseys of the world, which I am not totally convinced by yet. I find it interesting that the ‘conversation’ that is driving ID is one of business, rather than a more philosophical skew, as-per architecture.

    Above and beyond this, however, I met up with colleagues and old friends, made new friends and contacts, and took away some great memories.


    MIAMI VICE

  • Earl Grey in San Francisco

    6 hours stop over in SF. Not been here in 15 years … chowder, ale, cool sea breezes … and back to the airport.


    Boarding on the bay of the dock


    Something for the weekend.

  • Stormtrooper on a Bicycle


    Like I said. Stormtrooper on a bicycle. Yes, it’s the Deaflympics closing ceremony.

  • Shanghai Quickie


    View from my hotel room – I am quite a big fan of the Renaissance in Shanghai – not super downtown, but close enough.

    It also floats above Zhongshan Park, which I had written about before. It’s quite a pleasure to drop in on the way to the Shanghai Dell offices, and get a little slice of everyday Chinese life before logging into the old e-mail.


    Old dudes together, found everywhere in the world.


    Pleasure boats, lined up for a weekend of action.


    Practice makes perfect.

    As has happened with Hong Kong, it’s a little strange to realise that the regular trips I make there are becoming routine. When people ask ‘hey, how was the Shanghai trip?’ it seems terribly spoiled to say ‘oh, normal’ … it just doesn’t cut it!

    I think much of that is down to losing some great friends from the city (now in Germany and … well, I am not too sure), and I am building up some new links and all. It will get its mojo back, of this I have no doubt.

    Next trip for me though, is of course Miami … still blows me away that I will be there in a matter of weeks!

  • Shanghai Tools


    The right tools for the right job (notice the saw, for cutting that huge diameter of pipe). Of course, four people need to watch at all times, in China.


    It shouldn’t, but I found myself exceedingly amused by seeing a scooter on fire while on the way to a factory visit.

  • Small Site Updates

    There have been several details on my website that have been bugging me for the last year or two since i did the redesign. First, the frankly stupid decision to remove the link back to the front page, from pages of content, has been revoked, so the site should be a wee bit easier to navigate now. Second, the layout of the ‘profile’ part of the page always really irritated me; I could never get it to line-up properly, and the text always failed to wrap properly. This problem has been more or less solved by deleting most of the information. Finally, there have been very detail changes to the layout and colours, and a couple of broken links have been reinstated.

    I have been playing with the idea of adding an animated ‘badge’ back to my Flickr or Last.FM pages, but they all look more like adverts when loaded up, rather than the subtle layout I would like more.

    At the same time as this ‘toy’ research, it has made me rather think how I want to move forward with the site. It looks comically small on my high-resolution monitor at work, and it is not especially easy to navigate or access older pages. I am wondering about adding a ‘greatest hits’ list to link to my favourite entries, or a tag cloud … but I don’t know, I think the list is already long enough as it stands – I don’t want to add any more complexity.

    I can imagine some paradigm shift in the near-future; geo-blogging enriched with photos, or Blogger offering some more intelligent and interactive way to engage … but until then I am more or less happy to continue to tweak and preen the site as it stands. What fun.

  • Wake Boarding Taiwan


    Wave rider

    Nick had the genius to book a day of wake boarding in west Taipei, near Wugu. After incessant requests from my sister to go while in the UK, I finally had the opportunity to bite the bullet, and ‘shred the rad’, as we wake boarders say. It took a few attempts to get up on my feet, but after that it was fun in the sun. A perfect activity for an oppressively humid day in Taipei, and one that I would like to repeat in the near future. Add to that this morning’s mountain bike ride, and I had a real ‘action’ weekend … and my body aches to prove it.


    The price of old rope


    Sneak pics


    Taipei Yacht Club


    Beautiful clear water – just don’t touch the bottom.


    Rear view mirror


    Views to the mountains / motor ways. It was nice to see Taipei from a different angle …


    … which I did. Several times.


    Rocket man.

  • Window Undressing


    Walking home after a late night in the office, and I stumbled across a window being re-dressed at Sogo. Or undressed, perhaps. Flickr.

  • Suschi

    I am feeling a little over-indulgent with my travel of late, with not so much a ‘Carbon Footprint’, as treading my big, muddy carbon boots across the carpet and into the living room. Indeed, checking my Dopplr record, I have clocked up 3200 kg of CO2 since June. Ouch.


    Cute as a button

    Anyway, I popped over to Kyoto last weekend to meet up with one my best friends from my university days in Glasgow, Robbie, and his fiancé Imke. They were there at a Neuroscience conference – flying in from Germany – where Robbie was learning about some of the recent developments in the field. It’s not exactly brain surgery, as far as I can ascertain.

    It’s my third trip to Kyoto, but it is not too much of a hardship to return. We focused on eating some good food, a wee little bit of hiking, and checking out some of the areas of the city that I had not been able to check out previously. I have a feeling that you could be there for a month and still not run out of interesting things to see.


    Luverly textures and pillars and depth of field


    Stairway to heaven


    Reflecting.


    Studying the largest bell in Kyoto. Or Japan. Probably.


    Busman’s holiday


    Hiking


    Obligatory mirror shot


    Kyoto from afar – good to get out of the city


    Stumbled upon a rather nice little village of thatched houses


    Reminds me of my local pub!


    Sunshine of my life.


    Political posters – Japan style.

    Kyoto is famous for its humid and hot summer weather, but we managed to mix in a little light rain, which cooled things down nicely. Still, the drinks vending machines took a pounding, and we had some kind of magnetic attraction to the Starbucks Frappuccinos, that seemed to line the routes of the streets. We did manage to pack in some temple action, interspersed with time spent in the Pachinko and video parlours, and some rather embarrassing results from the photo machines. One for the best man’s speech, perhaps.


    The drumming game – after two nights of waiting for people to stop using it, we finally had our time!


    Girls at play.


    Adjusting the artwork


    And a present for Nikki in Goettingen – we could not resist opening it, after one last bottle of Shochu.

    Cheers Robbie – hope to see you out this way again soon!

  • Typhoon Morakot


    In the eye of the storm

    The island has been hit by the first proper Typhoon of the year; ‘Morakot’. Well, I say hit, but this was a particularly impotent Typhoon by my standards, barely shaking the windows. The island did shut down on Friday, meaning I was working from home. This is okay, but I do tend to get a dose of cabin fever when stuck inside with the sound of rain outside – frustrating and greasy … but I did manage to complete Mario Kart in Arcade Mode yesterday so all is not lost.

    As ever, jumping on the mountain bike this morning managed to blow out the cobwebs and redeemed the weekend. Great feeling it is; riding in the rain when everyone else is indoors. Been off the wheels for a few weeks now, so it was well overdue.

    Update: While it has been pretty safe in Taipei, the rest of the island has been pretty hard hit … best wishes to all those down south who are facing some pretty tough conditions.