How do you design for zero-gravity??

Industrial designers are required to fit themselves into a wide variety of scenarios so as to solve problems effectively. But how do you solve problems in a scenario that’s literally out of this world? This is the Ballantine’s Space Glass. Its purpose? Letting astronauts efficiently get tipsy in outer space!

The Space Glass for Ballantine’s remains one of my most favorite case studies. It strikes all the right chords and showcases an incredibly detailed design process. “As a designer, you spend your whole life breaking your babies”, says James Parr of the Open Space Agency, the team that was approached by Ballantine’s to solve a rather unusually complex problem. It’s a layered feeling, rejecting concepts your brain tells you is right, only because it actually isn’t. You fall in love with your creations multiple times and the nature of your profession is to make sure your creation survives… and performs. So a lot of times, you need to break your creations.

Designing for space is an extremely complex challenge not just because of zero gravity, but also because of the effects of zero gravity. A lot of things we take for granted get changed in space. Fluid dynamics change dramatically, there’s no air to oxidize the alcohol, so what you taste outside the Earth is a whole lot different from what you taste on Earth. Not to mention your body changes in space too. Your senses behave differently in the absence of gravity.

So how do you design for a scenario as obscure and unrelatable as this? The video above shows how Parr and his team at OSA designed, tweaked, and validated their concept for a glass that could deploy alcohol in antigravity. The glass is entirely 3D printed, with a baseplate that allows the alcohol to stay within the glass. A helical channel allows you to create a vacuum and sip the alcohol from a gold mouthpiece that gives you the exact intended taste. Ballantine’s designed a special space blend scotch whisky, meant for drinking in outer-space, and what’s truly worth noticing is that even though the Space Glass is a marvel of engineering, it looks like a beautifully designed piece of glassware that could just as easily sit among the finest spirits on earth as it could on the International Space Station!

Watch the advert for the glass below, and the case-study documentary on its design and testing above!

Designer: Open Space Agency for Ballantine’s

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Would You Like a Nyan Cat Running on Your T-Shirt? You Can Do that With tshirtOS

So this won’t be the first time that you’ll see an interactive shirt (remember the fully playable electric guitar t-shirt and the drum machine shirt?), but this is the first shirt of its kind to actually be able to do all that it promises to do. The tshirtOS. A t-shirt with its own operating system. The name already sounds cool, but just wait until you see the actual thing.

tshirtOSThe tshirtOS is the result of a joint venture between Ballantine’s and CuteCircuit. The shirt is described as a wearable (obviously), sharable, and programmable piece of clothing that you can use to display random stuff like tweets, animation, and photos, and even play music and videos.

The shirt features a large multi-color, flexible LED grid, connected to a controller circuit and battery pack. It’ll also have a camera, accelerometer, microphone and speakers for truly interactive displays. It’s controlled by an app that’s to be installed on your smartphone. Because of its programmable nature, the sky’s the limit with this baby.

Make a fashion statement, share your thoughts by displaying your tweets as you go along, and make a nyan cat run around your shirt to give everyone around you a dose of geeky randomness.

Want it? Head on over to tshirtOS.com to find out more.

[via Dvice]


TshirtOS is web-connected, programmable, 100 percent cotton (video)

TshirtOS is webconnected, programmable, 100 percent cotton

An LED display, camera, microphone, speaker and accelerometer all packaged into a t-shirt and controlled via your smartphone? That's the concept behind tshirtOS, a wearable platform for "self-expression" that currently only exists as a prototype. It can show off tweets, play music videos, capture belly-height photos and send them off to Instagram, and pretty much do anything except play percussion. CuteCircuit, which came up with the idea in cahoots (inexplicably) with Ballantine's whisky, says it's about to conduct product tests and will mass produce the smart-shirts if enough folks register interest. There's no Kickstarter page, definite specs or pricing for any of this, but based on CuteCircuit's history and the video after the break we're inclined to believe TshirtOS is more than just viral marketing stunt for the sake of a dram -- click onwards and judge for yourself.

Continue reading TshirtOS is web-connected, programmable, 100 percent cotton (video)

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TshirtOS is web-connected, programmable, 100 percent cotton (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Aug 2012 05:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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