Friday, March 10, 2017

Design Thinking: Improving In-flight Entertainment


 Design Thinking: Improving In-flight Entertainment

Emirates, one of the most prestigious airline companies in the world is considered to have the “Best In-Flight Entertainment” two years in a row, according to Airlineratings.com. Sure, you have access to the news, your email, and can browse over 1,800 different channels of movies/games/television in 30,000 feet, but do airlines really pay attention to the little details in building this technology?

After doing some research on my flight from Chicago to San Francisco on Virgin America (also known for having one of the best IFE systems), I’ve come to realize majority of these airlines don’t pay attention to the design and ease-of-usability when it comes to in-flight entertainment.

I give Emirates credit for giving their flyers access to great content and the ability to clean out your inbox, when you have nothing better to do 30,000+ ft in the air. Though, we live in an age where design plays a key factor in our everyday lives. Our brains are wired to the simplicity of our smartphones and tablets. Why can’t the 7th largest airline company (by revenue) design a better IFE system for its aircrafts?

This question was being repeated in my head throughout the first half of my flight. So as any ADD design freak would do (ok maybe just me), I decided to pull out my laptop and design a quick mock of what I expect 2015 IFE systems to look like. Thankfully, Virgin America has an IFE system in all of their planes.

Friday, March 3, 2017

While other pop stars make albums, Kanye is making entertainment software
















While other pop stars make albums, Kanye is making entertainment software

You will probably never again own a new album by Kanye West. But if it makes you feel better, you can rent his software.

You probably won’t be too upset, either, just like when people quickly forgave Bethesda Softworks last November when their blockbuster game, Fallout 4, shipped with a few glitches.

To address the bugs, Bethesda released an update (called a “patch”) that had to be installed to make the game work properly online. Even if you’re not a gamer, you’ve probably seen a so-called “day one patch.” Think about the day you bought your smartphone: odds are that as soon as you turned it on, you had to download a set of fixes that developers forgot to include with the original product.

Kanye West quietly introduced rap music to the “day one patch” when he uploaded “No More Parties in L.A.” to his website in January, only to quickly delete it. He then uploaded a new version, because as he said, there was “slight distortion in the main loop” of the first one.

"Un momento, there was a slight distortion in the main loop within Real Friends.

Kanye took this a step further when he finally released “The Life of Pablo” on Tidal, but tweeted that he was going to “fix ‘Wolves’,” the 13th track on the album. Then, he said that the album would never be available for download, which essentially means that he is reserving his right to make any changes he wants — to “Wolves,” to “30 Hours,” whatever — tomorrow, next year, a decade from now.

Monday, February 27, 2017

Men Intentionally Sabotage Reviews Of Entertainment Aimed at Women


Men Intentionally Sabotage Reviews Of Entertainment Aimed at Women

It didn’t come as a surprise that a particular subset of men online set out to sabotage the upcoming all-female “Ghostbusters” remake. But surely that kind of intentional, misogynist scheme didn’t pertain to all entertainment that was either aimed at women, starring women, or had a large audience of women, right? Men don’t spend a significant amount of time online trolling through ratings sites like IMDb in order to trash women-centric entertainment, do they?

Well shit, actually there are men who do just that. According to a detailed investigation from website FiveThirtyEight, male users are sabotaging the online reviews of TV shows aimed at women.

The analysis began when the writer, Walt Hickey, noticed a discrepancy in the way HBO’s hit series “Sex and the City” had been rated on IMDb. “Any reasonable person should concede that ‘Sex and the City’ was an above-average television program (at minimum),” Hickey wrote. “You don’t need to think it was a perfect show, or even an outstanding one, but I think most people would agree it was better than average.”

Its IMDb ratings would argue otherwise. Hickey detailed, “‘Sex and the City’ has an overall rating of 7.0 on a scale from 1 to 10 — the average score of an English-language television series with 1,000 or more ratings is 7.3. So why did a show roundly considered seminal in the now ubiquitous genre of driven-New York-women-make-a-go-of-it programming score so low? Yeah, it’s men.”

Monday, February 6, 2017

Tudor Heritage Black Bay Steel is the First Black Bay with Date


Tudor’s Heritage Black Bay collection of vintage Tudor watches — which added its first bronze-cased model last year —  expands again at Baselworld 2017 with the introduction of an all-steel version with brushed-steel bezel insert. The Heritage Black Bay Steel, which contains a Tudor in-house movement, is noteworthy as the first in the Black Bay family with a date function.

In contrast to the colorful inserts in the rotating bezels of its predecessors in the Heritage Black Bay series, this watch’s insert is machined from steel and circular satin-brushed for a matte surface and a very industrial overall look.

The movement, Tudor manufacture Caliber MT5612, is a variation of the brand’s first truly in-house movement, Caliber MT5621, which made its debut in the North Flag model in 2015. Developed specially for this model, it adds a date indication (displayed in a window at 3 o’clock) to the timekeeping functions of the base caliber. Like other Tudor in-house calibers, this one boasts a 70-hour power reserve, and a frequency of 28,800 vph (4 Hz); it’s regulated by a variable-inertia oscillator with silicon balance spring held in place by a traversing bridge. Caliber MT5612 (“MT” for “Manufacture Tudor” has also been chronometer-certified for timekeeping precision by the Swiss Official Chronometer Testing Institute (COSC).



The watch’s bracelet, like so many other aspects of the Black Bay series, is a nod to the past: it is inspired by the folding riveted bracelets on Tudor watches produced in the 1950s and 1960s. These were known for their visible rivet heads on the side of the bracelet for attaching the links, and for their distinct, stepped construction. Despite the vintage look they evoke, the modern versions of these Black Bay Steel model are very contemporary in their modern manufacturing methods. In addition to the bracelet version, the Heritage Black Bay Steel is also available on a black aged leather strap with folding clasp. Both versions come with an additional khaki-green fabric strap (below), a signature element of Tudor Heritage watches, which is made using the Jacquard technique, a traditional craft still practiced by a hundred-year-old family business from the St-Etienne region of France.

The Tudor Heritage Black Bay, like its predecessors, represents a synthesis of designs from Tudor dive watches of the past. The prominent winding crown and the red triangle on the bezel were first seen on the Tudor Submariner Reference 7924 from 1958 — nicknamed by collectors the “Big Crown” — the first Tudor watch to be water-resistant to 200 meters. The line of red text on the black, slightly dome-shaped dial, highlighting the maximum guaranteed water resistance, recalls the look of certain rare Ref. 7923 models from 1955. Other key dial features include the “snowflake” hour and seconds hands, characteristic of the Tudor dive watches used by the French Navy in the 1970s, and the domed sapphire crystal, a common element of many early Tudor dive watches.

The 41-mm case, with satin-brushed and and polished finishing, is water-resistant to 200 meters (660 feet) and secured by a steel screw-down crown with a Tudor rose emblem engraved and lacquered in black. The price is $3,800 on a steel bracelet and $3,475 on a leather strap.