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News from Elf, a digital creative agency at the intersection of the arts and sciences.

Debunking Some Myths on Design Thinking

Elf

Design Thinking is a Popular Term Adopted Rapidly Today that is Often Misunderstood. Let’s Take a Closer Look.

Image by Anna McNaughty

Image by Anna McNaughty

How do you break down and explain the process of creativity?

‘Design thinking’ is a popular term today. It was first introduced into the mainstream by the San Francisco consultancy IDEO in the early 1990s to explain its methodology for solving problems when working with clients. The phrase itself comes from Carnegie Mellon professor and Nobel Prize Laureate Herbert Simon, who wanted to explain the process of human creativity systematically. Since that time, the phrase has been adapted, modified, and expanded to fit a variety of approaches and roles. Unfortunately, many misconceptions regarding this term and the actual work of designers have arisen. Here we address some of the primary ones.

Design thinking is a term first coined by Herbert Simon, a professor at Carnegie Mellon, in 1969 to attempt to explain the process of human creativity systematically.

Interestingly enough, Herbert Simon was not a designer and did not create any visual works. He, however, was a pioneer in artificial intelligence.

“What can a human being do that a computer cannot?” Simon examined questions like this. The term ‘design thinking’ naturally arose out of this process as Simon and other computer scientists aimed to harness the

power of individual human creativity, but still wanted the familiarity of a repeatable, proven process.


Myth #1 The design process can be done by people who cannot design.

This assumption offers an interesting dilemma. Today there are increasing numbers of private companies offering to teach ‘Design Thinking’ at the corporate level and for universities without actually including any design or creative input. They seem to be avoiding and circumventing the actual creative process. While having the gift of communication (oral and written) is admirable, teaching ‘design thinking’ as a self-sufficient design practice without hands-on work using prerequisite design skills is inadequate. That eliminates the majority of actual design, which is hands-on and requires excellent individual skill. In essence, such training teaches the theory without the practice. It is similar to offering you how to paint by just talking about the process of painting and never actually painting. Perhaps their customers would be better and more honestly served by offering to teach them the theory of design thinking since that is what they are offering.

Herbert Simon did not downplay the value of creativity or design skills. He just sought a way to bring the creative conceptual thinking behind design into work processes. Simon aimed to open up the design ‘thinking’ process to people who were not designers and who stayed away from non-linear, non-scientific methods. He tried to bridge the gap in understanding. Using a ‘design thinking’ approach enabled businesses and organizations to look at problems differently and thus propose different solutions.

Fact: ‘Design thinking’ process works if you have skilled designers guiding the process. You cannot just talk your way through design - you have to do it. Actual design work requires tremendous skill, precision, craftsmanship, and a keen awareness of composition, beauty, and balance.

The value in having a design thinking approach lies in bringing an awareness and understanding of the creative process, soliciting feedback, and making design more accessible to businesses.


Image by Elf art director, quote by Goethe

Image by Elf art director, quote by Goethe

Myth #2 Design thinking replaces actual design.

By far, this assumption about design thinking is the most dangerous and misleading. Design thinking as an approach helps in providing insight into the process. Design involves both a conceptual aspect and a physical action in creating and fine-tuning artwork. When the conceptual part involves software or digital design work, the work can benefit from feedback from other designers and other company members involved with customer engagement. This initial collaborative step helps bring all parties involved in the decision-making process on the same page. Thus all necessary feedback and relevant data are gathered to make the best, informed decisions. For example, with a product that you are selling to consumers, this process can help you discover unmet needs and learn where people are dissatisfied with using the current version of your product. Design thinking thus enables cooperation and collaboration in the first step of discovery and research into the problem you are solving. This brainstorming process is helpful, but only as an initial step.

There is considerably more effort involved to take the ‘brainstormed’ idea from conception to completion. The remaining steps involve excellent design skills, precision, and craftsmanship with many iterative, detailed cycles till final delivery. The act of creation itself is an original process unique to the individuals involved who draw upon their creative abilities and experiences.

Fact: While a ‘design thinking’ approach opens up the initial discovery process and can bring all parties (clients, partners, company staff, and stakeholders) to a common understanding of what is needed to design a solution, design thinking never replaces the original process of creation itself. People who lack essential design skills cannot complete the design process beyond the discovery phase. Thinking or talking about design does not replace design skill, precision, and craftsmanship. Design is an original process that requires fundamental design skills.

Design is an original process that requires actual design and craftsmanship skills.


What then is the value of design thinking?

'Design thinking' is a great way to help explain the value of design and solicit feedback from people at a company during the discovery process. It is a way of explaining the process involved to bring people together on the same page. It offers a way to provide a consistent approach for creating new products or services for businesses.

Explaining the value of design can often feel intangible and be hard to put into words. This dilemma prompted us to research the topic and explain design results in actual monetary terms and the value of design regarding the bottom line for businesses. This article has been shared over 3,700 times. The most important lesson that we take away from that research is how integrating design into business practice leads to creating better, intuitive products, services, and experiences for customers.

Design is about providing an excellent, intuitive, and empathetic customer experience. So how does your customer experience your product or service?

Design thinking helps bridge the gap in understanding that often accompanies the creative design process. It offers a way to provide a consistent approach for creating new products or services for businesses.

When you design thoughtfully, considering what your customers need and want, you will create better products, services, and experiences. 

 

Apple's Brooklyn Event Part 2: New iPad Pro Features Edge-to-Edge Liquid Retina Display, 12X Bionic chip and More

Elf

New 11-inch and 12.9 inch iPad Pro Models Revealed Today Feature New All‑screen Design, a Liquid Retina display with ProMotion technology, a A12X Bionic chip, and Face ID, Along with a New Apple Pencil and Smart Keyboard Folio

Image via Apple featuring James Jean’s artwork

Image via Apple featuring James Jean’s artwork

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

New iPad Pro Features:

• Fluid, brilliant iPhone X-like design
• Powerful functionality with A12X Bionic chip better than most PCs
• Face ID to unlock iPad with a glance
• Gorgeous, edge-to-edge liquid Retina screen design
• Easier typing with the Smart Keyboard
• Fast, responsive Apple Pencil movements
• Magnetically connecting Apple Pencil
• New USB-C connector
• 1 TB of storage
• Improves upon the world’s most popular tablet

With its edge-to-edge liquid Retina screen design for 11-inch and 12.9-inch displays, Apple’s latest iteration of the iPad Pro is its best yet, and also the world’s best tablet. Sales of Apple’s iPad Pro have surged, becoming the most popular notebook worldwide, overtaking laptops as well. The newest version launched this past Tuesday in Brooklyn features greater security features including FaceID to unlock iPads with a glance, enhanced performance with the A12X Bionic chip with a new neural engine, new USB-C connector, Gigabit-class LTE and 1 TB of storage that helps mobile workflows. The new iPad Pro also offers a larger canvas for Multi-Touch, enabling more direct work for apps like Photoshop CC on iPad that is coming in 2019.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

The new iPad Pro’s Liquid Retina display curves into the corners to mirror the curved housing of Apple’s iPhone X, iPhone XR, iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max and Apple Watch Series 4. The new iPad Pros also offer advanced cameras and sensors for AR, better four-speaker audio with woofer and tweeter pairs on each side and faster wireless. The new iPad Pros also are thinner, lighter and have all-day battery life.

Apple offered the new iPad Pro, for sale online on Tuesday and in stores as of yesterday November 7. The new iPad Pro comes in two sizes, 11-inch starting at $799 and 12.9-inch starting at $999. Both are available in LTE and Wi-Fi.


Stunning Edge-to-Edge Liquid Retina Display

The new iPad Pro’s Liquid Retina display is gorgeous to behold with precision-milled glass, a new backlight design, advanced pixel masking and sub-pixel antialiasing. This is the most color accurate of all iPads with bright and wide color support and anti-reflective coating for a natural viewing experience. ProMotion technology also automatically adjusts the display refresh rate up to 120Hz for smooth, fast scrolling and responsiveness.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple


Powerful Apps Shine on the new iPad Pro

Powerful apps from companies like Adobe, Autodesk and Procreate offer intricate details and enhanced productivity, leveraging the new iPad Pro’s better processing power, touch capabilities and gorgeous display.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple


New Apple Pencil and Smart Keyboard Folio

Apple has also designed two new accessories for the new iPad Pro, a new Apple Pencil and Smart Keyboard Folio, to be purchased separately, for more precision. The new Apple Pencil to magnetically attach to the iPad Pro and charge up wirelessly at the same time. There is a new touch sensor on the Apple Pencil that quickly detects taps, enabling more touch interaction with apps. The Apple Pencil offers intuitive drawing capabilities and a natural feel that is unsurpassed.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

In addition, there is a new Smart Keyboard Folio with an adjustable, streamlined, thin and light design. The Smart Keyboard Folio protects the front and back of the iPad Pro with a full-size keyboard that does not require separate charging or pairing. Ideal for multitasking and writing down notes, the new Keyboard Folio enables more productivity out of the iPad akin to a laptop, and as Apple’s sales indicate, laptops are second runner to the popular iPad.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple


New Powerful A12 Bionic Chip and Neural Engine

The new A12X Bionic chip built for the new iPad Pro, a faster version of the A12X Bionic chip in the latest iPhones. Apple has suggested that this powerhouse computing chip enables the new iPad Pro to compete with Microsoft’s Xbox One S. This suggestion is clearly a push to attract bigger gaming developers and companies that create for Sony’s Playstation and Microsoft’s Xbox.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

While this assertion has yet to be proven in the market by new gaming and entertainment apps, the A12X Bionic chip definitely launches the iPad Pro light years ahead of tablet competitors to become the fastest and most powerful consumer tablet available today. The A12X Bionic has 10 billion transistors, 8 cores and has speeds similar to mid-range notebook computers, offering a 90 percent increase in CPU performance. This enables fast graphic performance for AR experiences.

The new iPad Pro also features Apple’s latest Neural Engine that uses advanced machine learning to accelerate performance for all kinds of activity ranging from Face ID recognition, AR app plane detection and photography tasks. With the Neural Engine that improves Core ML performance, developers can build apps and design new iPad workflows that leverage powerful machine learning.


Thinner and Lighter with a Bigger Display

At just 5.9 mm in width, both new iPad Pro models (11-inch and 12.9 inch) offer bigger displays while reducing volume and only weighs one pound.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple


Adjusts to Viewer

The display of iPad Pro easily adjusts content to the orientation of the viewer.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple


Face ID

The new iPad Pro utilizes Face ID technology, designed to work while you hold the iPad Pro or while seated and use the Smart Keyboard Folio. Face ID uses the TrueDepth camera system to map and recognize the face, thus securely unlock iPad Pro. Face ID can also be used to enable Apple Pay in apps and online and to access secure apps. Also, the TrueDepth Camera on iPad Pro enables Animoji and Memoji.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple


Group FaceTime

Group FaceTime now available via iOS 12.1 lets you chat with friends, family and work colleagues simultaneously. You can add a new guest or join as a participant yourself at any time, joining via audio or video with your iPhone, iPad or Mac. You can also use the new Animoji and customizable Memoji for more personality in both FaceTime and Messages.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple


USB-C Connectivity to Larger Displays

Apple’s new iPad Pro's USB-C offers new connectivity so that you can connect your iPad Pro directly to an external 4K or 5K high resolution display, along with cameras, musical instruments, docks and other peripherals. The new USB-C connector replaces the Lightning connector.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

The new iPad Pro enables you to connect to both data storage and transfer devices via USB 3.1 Gen 2 high-bandwidth data transfers (suitable for cameras and musical instruments) and high resolution displays at the same time. The USB-C also has an "alternate mode" protocol that supports DisplayPort 1.3 that connects to 5120 x 2880 resolutions on monitors that support it.

The new iPad Pro can even be used to charge an iPhone via the new USB-C.


Powerful AR and Photoshop Capabilities

With its new processing power via the A12X Bionic chip, advanced cameras and sensors, better four-speaker audio and large viewfinder, the new iPad Pro offers the best AR experience of any tablet or notebook today. When combined with Adobe’s new Photoshop through its Project Aero AR design tool (coming 2019), you can edit high fidelity images in Photoshop via the new Apple Pencil that offers greater touch capabilities and then develop new immersive AR experiences. The new iPad Pro enables AR experiences such as measuring the reflection on real-world objects, navigating buildings in 3D and exploring entire universes.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple


Additional Announcements - New Mac Mini

In addition to its powerful new iPad Pro and redesigned MacBook Air, Apple also shared an update about the Mac mini. Apple has redesigned the Mac mini fo greater productivity. The new Mac mini has new eighth-generation 6 core and quad core processors, high performance 2666MHz DDR4 memory up to 64GB, up to 2TB flash storage, Thunderbolt 3, HDMI 2.0 and available 10Gb Ethernet.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

The new Mac mini comes with macOS Mojave and starts at $799. Like the new MacBook Air, the new Mac mini has a 100 percent recycled aluminum enclosure and a smaller carbon footprint. The Mac mini has a larger, faster I/O to connect to practically anything, with 4 Thunderbolt 3 ports, an HMDI 2.0, 2 USB-A ports, an audio jack and Gigabit Ethernet, as well as a 10Gb Ethernet option.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

The Mac mini features the Apple T2 Security Chip  that has an SSD controller with on-the-fly data encryption so that everything saved on the SSD is automatically and fully encrypted.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple


Students from California Institute of the Arts use Mac mini to power live art performances.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Apple also revealed how Mac minis power apps all over the world at the MacStadium Las Vegas facility that manages 8,000 Mac Mini systems for data centers for developers all over the world, creating apps for startups to Fortune 500 companies. Popular apps and games like Candy Crush, Shopify and Day One all run on Mac mini.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Mac minis also help to power musical concerts such as Dierks Bentley and theater performances such as Peter Pan.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

View our prior coverage of the Brooklyn Event - Part 1 here. You can also view related content by searching for Apple News, WWDC or by product name.