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2008/09/03

Antenna Design: Bridging Art and Commerce

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September 03, 2008
 

Innovation & Design

A weekly guide to innovative people, ideas, and companies

NEWS  THIS WEEK'S TOP STORY
DESIGN
Antenna Design: Bridging Art and Commerce
This year's National Design Award product design winners have found a solution-seeking work ethic to be the best approach


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Amazon's Kindle: The Next Generation
The new version of Amazon's e-book player is significantly thinner, has a better screen, and is a big improvement over its predecessor

INTERNET
Google's Chrome Ups the Ante
Google doesn't just want to grab market share with its new Web browser, Chrome. It wants to change the way we use computers

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  Inside: This Week in Innovation
This week, innovation and design reporter Matt Vella profiles New York design firm Antenna, winner of this year's National Design Award for product design. The firm's founders, Masamichi Udagawa and Sigi Moeslinger, have established a solution-seeking ethic while working for such major companies as Bloomberg, Knoll, and McDonald's. Senior technology writer Peter Burrows reports on plans brewing inside Amazon to unveil a larger-screen model of its Kindle e-book player, this one aimed at students. And in this week's podcast, Robert Brunner, co-author of a new book looking at the ways great design can make people love a brand, discusses how companies including Apple, BMW, and Target use design to establish lasting and lucrative relationships with customers. Happy reading.
-- Helen Walters

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  INNOVATION PODCAST Design That Matters
Robert Brunner, co-author of a new book that looks at the way great design can make people love a brand, discusses how companies such as Apple, BMW, and Target use design to establish lasting and lucrative relationships with customers.
 

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  NUSSBAUM ON DESIGN >>

openquote

I'm off for the annual Indian Market at Santa Fe, the biggest juried contest of Native American art in the world. I go every year because I get to meet some of the best innovators and designers in the world. closequote

-- Bruce Nussbaum
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