Etude de cas, Alessi, entreprise, innovation Alessi, conception Alessi
Opération de R & D dans laquelle une communauté d'architectes, fournisseurs, critiques, éditeurs, artistes, designers et autres s'immerge dans un discours sur le rôle, l'identité et le sens d'un produit bien avant qu'ils abordent sa forme.
Je l'appelle «effet de réseau de Design ».
IDEO: confiée à un studio de design.
[...] NON « Graves » : architecte américain « Alessi »: Avocat « Gismondi », Président de Artemide: ingénieur aérospatial Tous ne sont pas italiens < number > Pourquoi des architectes? Les répercussions d'un changement dans la conception et la signification d'un objet expliquent en partie pourquoi le groupe Lombardie montre une préférence particulière pour les architectes Les architectes arrivent à créer des environnements < number > L'innovation axée sur la conception-- Comment? Culture lointaine et designers alertés Imaginer le mode de vie des générations futures Combinaison des aspects local et global < number > Why was the Spaniard Pizarro with his ragtag band of 168 soldiers able to brazenly attack and capture the Inca Emperor Atahuallpa in the midst of 80,000 of his soldiers? [...]
[...] Diamond argues that Eurasia, with its east/west axis and size, gave its inhabitants a distinct advantage over those dwelling in Africa and North and South America, with their north/south axes meaning that peoples, innovations, useful crops and domesticated animals would have to travel not only across significant physical barriers such as desert, jungle and mountains, but also have to traverse different climates. Therefore Eurasian societies benefited significantly more from cross-pollination of ideas and innovations than did societies of other continents. Parts of Asia, especially the Fertile Crescent and China were also blessed with more than their share of wild plants suitable for domestication -wheat, barley, peas, and lentils in the Fertile Crescent and rice, millet, soybeans and mung beans in China. In contrast Mesoamerica had only corn -inferior in nutritional value to the Eurasian crops. [...]
[...] Innovation et design ALESSI < number > Pourquoi Alessi? Vendu dans le monde pour 3000 dollars Le modèle de Michael Graves 9093 < number > Les principes de conceptions communs Alessi ne suit pas l'un d'eux. Technologie poussée: une amélioration des performances et la fonctionnalité dicte une modification dans la conception Pousser le marché: la conception peut accueillir la demande des consommateurs pour de nouvelles fonctionnalités. Innovation ouverte - P & IBM, Intel < number > Principe de conception Alessi Opération de R & D dans laquelle une communauté d'architectes, fournisseurs, critiques, éditeurs, artistes, designers et autres s'immerge dans un discours sur le rôle, l'identité et le sens d'un produit bien avant qu'ils abordent sa forme. [...]
[...] -When the Canadian Pacific railroad was being built through Saskatchewan in the 1880's, that province's Native Americans, who had previously had little exposure to whites and their germs, died of tuberculosis at the incredible rate of 9 per cent per year. -When syphilis was first recorded in Europe (1495) it was much more virulent, causing pustules that covered the body from head to the knees, causing flesh to fall off people's faces, and causing death within a few months. By 1546 syphilis had evolved into the disease with the symptoms so well known to us today. The disease had adapted, so that by keeping its victims alive longer, it could spread its spirochete offspring into more victims. [...]
[...] We all know what the reality would be. ) Here is what the author has to say about Zebras - 'Zebras have the unpleasant habit of biting a person and not letting go. They thereby injure more American zookeepers each year than do tigers Zebras are also virtually impossible to lasso with a rope, even for cowboys who win rodeo championships by lassoing horses, because of their unfailing ability to watch the rope noose come towards them and then duck their heads out of the way.' Areas with the climate and the plants and animals suitable for domestication inevitably gave rise to increased populations and towns, with attendant technology advances and the development of diseases, both of which were then passed on to adjacent areas. [...]
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