From the monthly archives:

July 2009

White, environmentally sound and cool to the touch OLED lights could very well be the future of mundane office environment lighting, but for now they’re just meant to be man handled by four geeks at a table.

Still, Office Space comparisons aside, for me the simple dimming of the four-square OLED, and the fact that these lights won’t rape and pillage the environment like those nasty mercury-containing fluorescents we see everywhere today, were cool enough to warrant the wait.

Unfortunately, just like OLED HDTV screens, these lights are starting small and expensive (the prototype shown here is just 24-inches). Hopefully the $2 million Department of Energy grant awarded to manufacturer UDC in July 2008 (it’s their prototype) will hasten the process, if only slightly.

 

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Cologne based architects Christian Hartmann, Christian Dieckmann and Robert Wetzels have chosen a very special location for their brand new office: the abandoned TV tower right in the center of city.

 

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The Dalki Theme Park and Shop is 12,000 square feet of retail and entertainment space in Heyri, South Korea. Created in 2000 by Slade Architecture in collaboration with Ga.A Architects and Mass Studies.

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Strong Suit

by Levi of eOffice News on July 15, 2009

A lot has changed since 2004, when DLA Piper hired Lehman Smith McLeish to personalize a spec building going up on a parking lot in the Penn Quarter in Washington, D.C. As the desolate neighborhood blossomed into a vibrant mixed-use hub, DLA Piper morphed, after multiple mergers, into one of the largest law firms on the planet. Leaving behind a tired 1980’s office, the expanded firm seized upon the 230,000-square-foot space to forge a new identity and work paradigm.

Debra Lehman-Smith lost no time in presenting modifications to developer Boston Properties and building architect Hartman-Cox Architects, which embraced her vision to reshape the structure, still in the schematic phase. That set the tone for an extensive and remarkably collegial collaboration and of course reduced the expenses and complications that last-minute interventions entail. The changes were hardly insignificant. Lehman-Smith completely reorganized the entry and eliminated a through-block lobby that would have bisected the building and fragmented the other ground-level spaces. This created two distinct entries, including a dedic
ated one for DLA Piper on the building’s quieter side, facing the historic General Post Office, now the Hotel Monaco.

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e-Ink displays are in our future: whether it is to build eBooks, display art/advertising or to be used in hybrid LCD/e-ink displays, they are bound to be everywhere one day. This advertising display from Neoluxiim is so energy efficient that indoor solar power is enough to get it going. That’s pretty much our dream gadget to display art in the office.

What’s the catch? Well, it dies after 18 month, which is a big issue in terms of e-Waste. If they can’t recycle/repair it easily, that’s a no-go for now…

source: UberGizmo

 

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Office 2010

by Levi of eOffice News on July 13, 2009

It’s just been confirmed that the upcoming Microsoft Office 2010 is in the private testing phase right now. Office 2010 is Microsoft’s newest update to their Office application suite, and it includes free online versions of all of its apps.

Online applications will include Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and OneNote. Anyone with a Microsoft Live account can use them. This much we’ve known for a few hours. What’s new is the fact that we now know that the actual app suite itself is now in the “Technical Preview” phase of development. There will be an invitation-only testing of the product by thousands of selected users. Of the changes coming to office, PowerPoint video editing and the option to ignore threads in Outlook appear to be the biggest ones. Microsoft’s also added in a Backstage view, which will supposedly make it much easier to prep a document for publication. From what screenshots I’ve seen, the new Office does look pretty spectacular. It’s a pity that only a few thousand testers get to play with it right now.

Apparently the Technical Preview for Office 2010 has leaked onto the Internet. Read more about this here.

 

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Is your desk a hot trannie mess of tangled wires and gadgets galore? Do you even remember what color your desk is under all that crap highly important business tools? The Bluelounge Design SpaceStation The SpaceStation is a Space Saving…Station will not only get the clutter off the desk, it will cool off your laptop. Hidden beneath the stylish exterior is an internal 4-port USB 2.0 hub and cable management pins to keep all your gadgets plugged in neatly. Look at this before and after:

Your laptop can rest right on top of the SpaceStation which allows your laptop to cool off and sit at a more ergonomic angle for more comfortable typing. You can also place your phone and other gadgets neatly on top of the bar. A rear accessory rail acts as a great business card holder or page holder for sheets of paper.

The effect is of a much neater and more organized appearance for your desk as well as a cooler laptop (which can extend the life of your computer’s parts).

 

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Click to Build

by Levi of eOffice News on July 12, 2009

The McMansion has worn out its welcome, hope for prefab is fading, and anyone with a sense of contemporary design taste shudders at what homebuilders are producing these days. But for most people who want to build a modern, “architectural” house, the price is out of their reach. That’s where Hometta, a new Houston-based company, comes in. Launched in late June, coinciding with LA’s Dwell on Design conference, the firm offers house plans designed by contemporary architects from across the country, and then guides owners to finding a way to build them.

Co-founder Andrew McFarland, and his team of four architects and designers from the Houston area (many are affiliated with or attended Rice University’s architecture school) picked the talented firms after a thorough search. Co-founder Mark Johnson, a builder based in Houston, said that their group of architects and house plans will grow much larger by the fall, which is what sets Hometta apart from the plethora of other sites offering home plans online: designer cache. That, and the sense of community the company attempts to foster through its playful, interactive site.

All projects are single family houses, and none measure more than 2,500 square feet, part of the company’s niche-oriented business plan—“If you can afford to build a larger house, and you can find an architect that you like, then you should,” said Johnson—and also a way to assure that the non-custom projects don’t overwhelm contexts. Johnson notes that if clients do want to customize the homes after buying the plans they are welcome to work with the designers.

 

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