
Product design use and usability, designs new and old, inspired and unspired. The little things that matter.
More Upcycling - iPod packaging becomes speaker...

Kiss-and-Fly - More time for what matters...

iPod Video Camera Dock - Doing it the hard way...

[via Engadget]
Plant-Top Dish Drainer - Dishwater used down to the last drop...

Twist 'n Shot - Finally, Jello shots made less messy...

List: Top 100 User-Centered Blogs
If you're interested in the kinds of subjects covered here at Unpressable Buttons, HTML.com has published a list of the Top 100 User-Centered Blogs that you might want to check out. HTML.com itself has mission statement (only dating back to August 2007) aiming to become "the authoritative resource online about retail virtual hosting plans." So, they're straying a bit from their core competence with this list - and "Top" lists are often a ploy to gain more visitor traffic. But, cynicism aside, it'd be nice to make it onto such a list next time around - not a bad goal, here...
Orkut: Lightweight champion for dialup-speed users...

Setting aside what comments I might make about the usability of too-highly-customizable webpages (and especially regarding the monstrosity that is MySpace, I'd have a lot!), it seems that an important lesson is this: usability doesn't just depend on the most appealing ideal design, but on making the right technologically-influenced decisions so a design can actually function in a non-ideal world. In this case, dropping some bells and whistles to make a faster-loading site seems to be a no-brainer for user satisfaction.
Some markets aren't looking for the best website in any category - they're looking for the lightweight champions!
Theft Foiler - OnStar slows down crooks...

This anti-theft feature is reminiscent of the previously-blogged iAlertU for Mac laptops, which snaps a photo of a would-be thief in the act and emails it to a pre-set address. It's not just preventing theft, or recovering what was stolen - it's a "gotcha!" moment where the rightful owner gets a feeling of personal revenge over the thief. Products are designed to appeal to all kinds of emotions in consumers - but revenge is a fascinating one indeed!
Radiator Food Warmer - A case of perceived practicality...

With that prelude, check out the The Natural Wave, from designer Byung-seok You at Yanko Design via BoingBoing Gadgets. This ceramic plate is designed to fit on top of and use the heat from old-school steam radiators, in order to keep your hot drink and pastries toasty. Perceived to be practical and/or efficient? Definitely. Actually practical? Well, that depends on a lot of things: the shape of your particular radiator matching the fins on the underside of the Wave, the radiator actually being on a heating cycle when you're looking to use it, the radiator and atmospheric conditions interacting with the plate's thermal mass so that it's hopefully at the right temperature for use, and of course, where the radiator is located in your house or room. It's a lot of things to have to get just right - but when you do, I bet there's a wonderful perceived practicality and added value to the product!
Tongue Sucker - Simplicity when it's most needed...

So, how about that? Good usability design can actually save lives!
Crazy Convergence, Part 3: The Gamerator!!!

So it turns out that sometimes, even though convergence might be crazy and not really rooted in logic, it can bring a smile to the face of even the most cynical consumer!
[via Engadget and Gizmodo]
Crazy Convergence, Part 2: Electronics and water...

One more convergent contraption coming up next!
Crazy Convergence, Part 1: Mice that aren't...

Today, two computer mice definitely take convergence too far: these rodents were bred with calculators (Sanwa, via Gizmodo) and label printers (Casio, via Engadget), and the offspring ain't pretty. The calculator at least has a glimmer of reason - less distance to move your hand in order to make quick onscreen calculations - but the sacrifice in ergonomics (and accidental calculator keypresses?) more than obliterates it. And the label printer is simply ludicrous - there are better label printers, and better mice, and no reason to slap them together!
Come back next time for more of the good, the bad, and the ugly of convergence...
Perception vs Reality, and innocent bystander usability...

I suppose the tech-savvy set doesn't shop for PCs at Walmart, so this is at least understandable. It's just unfortunate that as perception is pandered to and reality ignored, usability is left by the wayside. A smaller computer scores better on many measures of usability: lower transportation costs and efforts, less packaging, a smaller footprint in the home, and less junk to chuck at the end of the product lifecycle. (Ironically and sadly, this computer is also marketed as a "green" machine.) But if perception can drive sales, it will continue to guide the product - and we all end up suffering just a bit from our ignorance.
Under-Cabinet Vacuum - So long, dustpans...

iPod Deathclock: Upper or downer?

The question is whether this quantification of the iPod's mortality is a bummer or a pick-me-up. It could be a bummer because, hey, you just dropped hundreds of bucks on this thing, and it'll only last until then? On the other hand, it could be a date to look forward to, because on that date you'll have to upgrade to the shiniest new one on the market. The perception of the quality of the iPod itself is also affected, seeming either to be either a junky thing that doesn't last or one of an exciting series of products that will just keep improving.
So, what influences whether a user sees the glass half empty or half full? Is it related to income? Tech-savviness? Natural optimism or pessimism? Apple or Microsoft fan?? It'd be fascinating to know, but we probably never will...
Blind Spots - Car cameras made more useful...

Memo Pad Phone - One pro, many cons...

PRO: It puts a memo pad right where you might need it, if you're scrambling to get down some info on a hastily-answered call.
CON: Much of the writing space is virtually unusable, since writing in the upper and left areas would cause your hand to mash the keys, making a symphony--no, cacophony--of tones for your unfortunate listener.
CON: This makes the aforementioned unusable paper a nasty waste - very non-green!
CON: Just to nitpick, ID folks never seem to make phones look like phones. Especially the handset - if this thing were ringing, I might not know quite where to "pick it up!"
CON: ...And who uses landline phones like this anymore, anyway?
Looks like this one fails by a score of 4 to 1. But one good idea isn't bad!
Bathroom Reading - Hands-free probably a good idea...

Your Body as the Clicker - Gestural remote control...
