{"id":509,"date":"2011-04-16T19:08:25","date_gmt":"2011-04-16T19:08:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/munnecke.net\/?p=509"},"modified":"2022-01-24T20:33:37","modified_gmt":"2022-01-24T20:33:37","slug":"visions-by-philips-design","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/munnecke.net\/blog\/visions-by-philips-design\/","title":{"rendered":"Visions by Philips Design"},"content":{"rendered":"

Philips Design is owned by the Dutch multi-national electronics corporation Philips with headquarters in Eindhoven, the Netherlands. It is an independent consultancy, but has a close collaboration with Philips Research and other business divisions. Design has been an essential part of Philips since 1925 and they have presented proposals for radical innovation early in its history, as described in the historic review of future concepts in the preciding chapter.<\/p>\n

When the Italian architect Stefano Marzano was appointed head of design in 1992, the consultancy initiated an ambitious endeavour to explore radical innovation. We will start the review with the Vision of the Future project (1996), which marked a milestone in the field of design in its comprehensive analysis and visionary proposals for the year 2005 \u2013 far beyond the horizon of conventional market analysis.<\/p>\n

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Vision of the Future. Philips Design (1996)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Vision of the Future<\/h3>\n

The objective of the Vision of the Future project was to propose ways in which new technology could improve the quality of people’s lives and show the advantages of changing from a mindset of quantity and complexity towards a focus on quality, simplicity and customer satisfaction. These ideas were to be presented in public in the form of realistic objects and the context in which they could be used, so that people could respond and provide Philips Design with information so they could offer more appropriate products and services in the future.<\/p>\n

To start with, extensive research was conducted in two main areas: socio-cultural and technological trends. It was found that the perception of time and space are the main parameters that determine how people will act and think in the coming years. Furthermore, these parameters interact with more specific trends, such as subjectivity, sociability, exploration, connectivity, ethics and holism, to produce a wider variety of behaviour patterns. The technological research identified increasing computing power, voice recognition, virtual agents, smart materials and micro-chip sensors, among others, to be influential for the functionalities of future products.<\/p>\n

Next, Philips Design set up multi-disciplinary teams consisting of anthropologists, sociologists, engineers, product designers, etc., who in a series of workshops developed more than 300 scenarios based on socio-cultural and technological research. Thereafter the scenarios were distilled into 60 concept descriptions and categorized according to four main domains of everyday life: personal, domestic, public and mobile.<\/p>\n

The study presented a number of smart ways to interact with electronic devices and new functionalities that made it easier for people to gain access to information, communicate with friends and colleagues, monitor and control the home, etc. Apart from the concepts which dealt with the efficiency and ease with which people go about their everyday lives, there was a substantial collection of concepts that addressed more sensible human aspects, such as emotional communicators (and containers) to give assurance, recall a memory, or reinforce a bond. The collection also featured a make-up box for the virtual world to retain privacy and mask identity, and an interactive family tree which could help family members feel closer and more in touch and diminish feelings of separation and isolation.<\/p>\n

Unlike the typical future concepts, they were styled in visual language with much reference to the human body and everyday context. With the aim to communicate the concepts to the wider public, the concepts were presented at various exhibitions and events together with video clips illustrating how, where, by whom and for what purpose they might be used. Furthermore, a website and book about the project were produced.<\/p>\n

Many of the ideas of the Vision of the Future project were elaborated in more specific studies over the following years. The Home of the near Future project (1999), for example, presented an exploration of the domestic environment and a proposition for the future, while the New Nomads (2001) investigated wearable electronics and smart textiles.<\/p>\n

The emerging field of ‘ambient technology’ was given continuous attention by Philips Research and in 2002 they opened a home-like laboratory in which ordinary people could test and experience new concepts. The book The New Everyday (2003) summarized the project. Through the 24 future concepts that Philips had developed in the preceding years they explored the future possibilities of ambient technology. More than 60 experts in technology, design, social sciences and business had participated and presented the 24 concepts which sought to enable a natural and social interaction within the digital environment. Further developments were recorded in the book Ambient Lifestyle (Aarts & Diederiks 2006)<\/p>\n

Simplicity<\/h3>\n

In 2004 the \u201cLet’s make things better\u201d company slogan was substituted by the brand tagline \u201cSense and simplicity\u201d in order to clearly position Philips as being people-oriented, and not technology-oriented, as in the past. In the following years Philips Design played a key-role in the transformation of the company by outlining the philosophical foundation in the corporate magazine New Value by Design and by presenting future concepts which show how the brand tagline can be translated into concrete products.<\/p>\n

From 2005 to 2008 an annual event was hosted to allow customers, media, government representatives and employees to experience radical concepts in a real-like context.<\/p>\n

At the first event 25 design concepts demonstrated how the new ‘simplicity-led design’ could shape products over three to five years across the healthcare, lifestyle and technology sectors. The concepts were divided into 5 groups:<\/p>\n