QR codes. Now boarding!

Brands with the greatest volume of human interactions are rapidly adopting technology which accelerate transaction speed whilst retaining utmost safety and security.

A perfect example of a high value, high volume and rapid transaction is the airline boarding pass.

Millions of travellers board aircraft every single day. Ensuring faster and more accurate boarding converts to savings in millions of dollars for airlines and generation of additional fees for airport managers, as well as an increase in productive time for business travellers.

The paper ticket is rapidly being replaced by the e-ticket and the boarding pass is now being supplanted by the smartphone QR code.

Purchasing airline tickets is one process which can now be conducted almost entirely in a digital environment. Online purchase, email or smartphone ticket issuance, digital seat allocation and e-boarding passes enable an end-to-end paper-free transaction.

The same process is now happening at the other end of the value scale, with low-cost transactions being processed by NFC (near-field communication), where a small amount can be charged directly to the users smartphone account.

Digital Tsunami has long advocated the use of QR codes as a fast and efficient mechanism for conveying complex data. As an example of this commitment, all Digital Tsunami business cards and datasheets have integrated a QR code since 2008.

To explore how innovative, proven technology can be integrated into an enterprise-wide digital strategy for your brand, contact Digital Tsunami today!

 

Events engage with apps

Commencing at the Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre on Tuesday 27 August, the major AV industry exhibition Integrate 2013, will engage with visitors at an unprecedented scale via an app for handheld devices.

Registered visitors are invited via smartphone message to download the app,  which allows them to plan their attendance at events, access an electronic floor plan, select exhibitors by sector, browse products by category, monitor events, locate facilities and receive customized alerts all in their hand.

Integrate (in association with InfoComm International and CEDIA), offers manufacturers and suppliers the opportunity to connect with Australasia’s professional, commercial and residential AV IT industry. Hundreds of exhibitors promote their products and services to tens of thousands of visitors.

In exhibition halls around the world, an irreversible trend is reducing paper and replacing it with digital communications. Online registration and smartphone identification are speeding the processes of ticketing and access as well as data transfer to organisers and exhibitors.

The number print barcodes and QR codes is rapidly expanding as the ability to rapidly transfer data in both directions is adopted.

While the Integrate 2013 app is iOS platform-specific, it is still therefore readable by a substantial number of attendees who possess a late model iPod touch, iPad or iPhone.

The options for engagement in person and remotely through handheld devices is not restricted to high volume and high value relationships. Any retailer, service provider or manufacturer can harness innovative and well-proven technologies to increase efficiency and generate sales.

Digital Tsunami can counsel you on strategies for the integration of communications efficiencies through the use of digital devices and processes across your entire enterprise.

Call us today!

 

Inarc wins Asia/Pacific Interior Design awards

Hong-based, interior and architectural practice Inarc Design, has won two prestigious awards in the 2012-2013 Asia Pacific Property Awards.

The Best Office Interior Design, Hong Kong was awarded to Inarc for its work on the Centralized Monitoring Centre, 37/F Exchange Square, Central, Hong Kong for Hongkong Land Limited.

This ultra-modern facility combines banks of monitors in the master control room with warm timbers and contemporary furnishings to provide an efficient and calm environment.

The Best Leisure Interior Design, Hong Kong award, was recognition for Inarc’s sumptuous interiors of the Derby Restaurant & Bar, in The Hong Kong Jockey Club’s Happy Valley Clubhouse.

The signature international restaurant and bar, and private function rooms on two floors of The Hong Kong Jockey Club, establish a prestigious yet comfortable restaurant ambience appropriate to international fine dining.

Both awards were part of the 2012-2013 Asia/Pacific region, determined by an international panel of judges. In association with HSBC Bank Malaysia Berhad and the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors Asia, the Asia Pacific Property Awards are a regional component of the globally renowned International Property Awards, which has become the world’s most prestigious property competition.

Inarc Design commenced in Hong Kong in 1988, and has provided interior design and architectural design consultancy for corporate, hospitality and retail clients in countries across Asia and in Europe.

The Australian born principal, Tony Spinolo, has extensive creative design and professional project management expertise.

Inarc commissioned Digital Tsunami to develop a bold and impressive web interface for the company to showcase its work across the region and around the globe. Full-screen project images are featured and viewable by reducing the navigational panel to a minimal vertical strip. Individual projects include photo galleries which display enlargements in a slideshow.

Digital Tsunami has a strong heritage of delivering solutions to the building, construction and engineering sector. Amongst the clients to which solutions have been delivered are Barclay Mowlem, Bilfinger Berger (GBFG:FRA), Leighton International (LEI:ASX) and Group One.

Ten principles of good design

For over 3 decades, German industrial designer Dieter Rams was Braun’s Chief Design Officer, responsible for the style of a wide range of Braun products, from open reel tape decks to shavers. He even designed the Braun logo.

He often stated “Less, but better”.

As an advocate of the Functionalist School of industrial design, Rams believed that the design a of product should be based on its purpose. The aesthetics would reflect the product’s simplicity and functionality.

He was prolific in his production of exceptional designs, including: audio/visual equipment, radios, coffee makers, calculators, consumer appliances and office products, many which have become recognised classics.

Amongst these is the minimalist, Cylindric T 2 lighter (1968) and Braun Phonosuper SK 4 record player. Dieter Rams and Hans Gugelot designed this product with an innovative clear Plexiglass lid, which displayed its function and prompted the name “Snow White’s Coffin”.

Wunderkind Apple designer Jonathan Ive admired Rams, and remembered vividly his first encounter as a young boy with a Rams designed Braun MPZ 2 Citromatic juicer. “The surfaces were without apology, bold, pure, perfectly-proportioned, coherent and effortless.”

Some of Ive’s designs pay a clear tribute to Rams work. The elegant simplicity and circular control of the Ive designed iPod Mini (2004), echoes the Braun T3 pocket transistor radio, designed by Dieter Rams in 1958.

In the 1970s, Rams introduced the idea of sustainable development, and the concept that obsolescence is a crime in design. In asking himself the question “Is my design good design?”, he formulated his now celebrated ten principles.

Good design:

  1. Is innovative – The possibilities for progression are not, by any means, exhausted. Technological development is always offering new opportunities for original designs. But imaginative design always develops in tandem with improving technology, and can never be an end in itself.
  2. Makes a product useful – A product is bought to be used. It has to satisfy not only functional, but also psychological and aesthetic criteria. Good design emphasizes the usefulness of a product whilst disregarding anything that could detract from it.
  3. Is aesthetic – The aesthetic quality of a product is integral to its usefulness because products are used every day and have an effect on people and their well-being. Only well-executed objects can be beautiful.
  4. Makes a product understandable – It clarifies the product’s structure. Better still, it can make the product clearly express its function by making use of the user’s intuition. At best, it is self-explanatory.
  5. Is unobtrusive – Products fulfilling a purpose are like tools. They are neither decorative objects nor works of art. Their design should therefore be both neutral and restrained, to leave room for the user’s self-expression.
  6. Is honest – It does not make a product appear more innovative, powerful or valuable than it really is. It does not attempt to manipulate the consumer with promises that cannot be kept.
  7. Is long-lasting – It avoids being fashionable and therefore never appears antiquated. Unlike fashionable design, it lasts many years – even in today’s throwaway society.
  8. Is thorough down to the last detail – Nothing must be arbitrary or left to chance. Care and accuracy in the design process show respect towards the consumer.
  9. Is environmentally friendly – Design makes an important contribution to the preservation of the environment. It conserves resources and minimizes physical and visual pollution throughout the lifecycle of the product.
  10. Is as little design as possible – Less, but better – because it concentrates on the essential aspects, and the products are not burdened with non-essentials. Back to purity, back to simplicity.

In 1980, American inventor and designer Buckminster Fuller stated, “When I’m working on a problem, I never think about beauty. I think only how to solve the problem. But when I have finished, if the solution is not beautiful, I know it is wrong.”

This philosophy applies equally to conveying ideas as to products. Often, when designing an app, writing copy, producing a print ad, framing a photograph or planning a video, the most important decisions are those on what to leave out.

Restraint takes courage, but the best results derive from eliminating the extraneous to reveal the essence.

As Steve Jobs said, “Design is not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works.”

 

Reference:

To learn a more of Dieter Rams thinking, read his Designboom interview
To learn a more of Jonathan Ive, read his Design Museum interview

Books:

Less and More: The Design Ethos of Dieter Rams edited by Klaus Klemp and Keiko Ueki-Polet, published by Gestalten. ISBN: 9783899552775.

As Little Design As Possible: The Work of Dieter Rams by Sophie Lovell, published by Phaidon. ISBN: 9780714849188

Sources:

View some of these designs in Pinterest.com

Dieter Rams portrait
Braun logo structure
Braun TG 60 ‘open reel’ tape recorder
Braun RT 20 ’tischsuper’ tube radio
Braun SK 4 ‘phonosuper’ record player
Braun T3 pocket transistor radio
Braun T2 cylindric cigarette lighter
Braun MPZ 2 Citromatic juicer
industrial design

Skip a skinny cap, feed a skinny child

In these economically harsh times, there is an unseen problem in Australia. It is the inability of the “working poor” to provide family members with 3 meals a day. Of the total food relief delivered by welfare agencies, 80% is going to families.*

Australia also has many people for whom the cost of the next meal is never a consideration. For the top echelon, a watch, handbag or coat can cost more than the annual income of an impoverished household.

However, all individuals and companies can do something to help, whether through corporate support, corporate volunteering, workplace giving or ad hoc donations. Recently, Foodbank Australia implemented a regular donation scheme, whereby average Australians can provide measurable assistance for just a few dollars a month.

Foodbank Australia is the largest hunger relief organisation in Australia. A non-denominational, non-profit organisation, it acts as a pantry to the charities and community groups feeding Australia’s hungry. Last year Foodbank Australia (through its branches in all mainland states and territories), provided sufficient food for 32 million meals.

Based on a monthly donation, Foodbank has identified targets and evaluated a donation to achieve them.

  • For less than the price of a capuccino a week, 100 kids can be served milk and cereal for breakfast at home, to give them a chance to concentrate in class and improve their opportunities
  • For $35 a month, one person can be provided with three meals a day for a whole month
  • One hundred dollars a month can provide a nourishing meal for 1,000 people
  • A donation of $136 a month will provide a child with a nutritious breakfast for an entire year!

You can read more about Foodbank online or donate by clicking the appropriate button below:

All donations are used exclusively to fund food sourcing and hunger relief activities, not to cover administration costs.

 

 

 

 

 

Since the start of 2000, Digital Tsunami has supported Foodbank in Australia on a pro-bono basis, as a corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiative. This support has included the development, hosting and technical support of web presence at national and state levels.

 

*Source: “The Hunger Report” © 2012 Foodbank Australia. The online research tool used to conduct the survey was provided by Qualtrics. Analysis for the report was undertaken by Deloitte Access Economics.

References:
http://www.foodbank.org.au/
http://www.qualtrics.com/
http://www.deloitteaccesseconomics.com.au/
http://www.afr.com/