io stimavo un bordello j ax era il mio idolo!!!ma ora s'è rovinato di
brutto nn è più il j ax serio degli articolo ormai è solo il dio degli
zaretti e ed è diventato seriamente troppo commerciale!!ax torna quello di
prima
MA KI KAZZO E' KE FA QUL OOOOH ACCANTO ALLA TELECAMERA?!NON LO HAI SPACCATO
APPENA SENTIVI KE FACEVA KOSI' ??XD MA BRUTTO MONGOLO (quello ke faceva
ooohhh come un mongolo) ke kazz credi di fare ridere??ma vai a nanna
coglione!
boy: let’s watch a movie girl: ok what movie!? boy: a horror movie the
grudge girl: um…ok *after the movie* ... ... girl: i noticed… you were
watching me most of the time … boy: *laughs* i watched the movie yesterday
girl; what….. boy: i just wanted to hug you and protect you. ♥ :)
Timothy Prestero thought he'd designed the perfect incubator for newborns in the developing world -- but his team learned a hard lesson when it failed to go into ...
What you describe is also not good, but it would at least encourage people
to start to think. We have to give trust in their thinking, else we would
stamp them as immature. And we are not allowed to do that. We must believe
in the intelligence of a homo sapiens, else we would either deny ourselves
as intelligent human beings OR and this is much worse: make ourselves more
intelligent than others and THINK that the others cannot be as intelligent
as we are. But they can, because they are humans!
On a very broad philosophical level, you are right. But, I am not sure how
that would translate into product design. What exactly are you suggesting?
I was just trying to explain my understanding of the phrase " there are no
dumb users", i.e. have in mind that the device might be used by people, who
are not professionals in a particular field, consider many possible
difficulties in the field use. It does not have anything to do with
evaluating users' intelligence relative to one's own.
Of course it's much easier said than done. If it was easy, I'd do it,
instead of leaving comments on a youtube video about people who are
actually doing the work to fight the problem. :> If I had the answers to
your excellent questions, I would send these people schematics of my idea.
I can only hope that people with more intelligence than I have look into
such things and consider the possible option of a portable blanket that can
help these babies. If it's not feasible, then so be it.
A blanket is definitely a feasible initial design concept and against the
portability offered by the design in this video, it would fare better in
the market (to the best that my judgement can foresee). I mean if it works
to kill the jaundice bacteria, it might be better but we simply can't tell
until you prototype it and for the same reason, you won't know if it's a
design that can be implemented. I say follow up with your idea and who
knows? You might save 1.8m lives annually =)
That's because, 1) Mothers don't carry such blankets all the time. 2)
Essentially you would need to convince both the healthcare professionals
AND ALL the mothers for it to work creating more complexity in the sales,
manufacturing and distribution process and finally 3) You would need
portable power (and thus chargers) to run those blankets increasing the
cost. Simply placing light at the bottom seems to be the most
cost-effective, fast and the most ergonomical design possible.
That guy is exposing his opinion in the subject, not dictating anything.
Same way you are exposing yours, and no one is comparing you to Nazis. It's
easy to talk crap over the internet about how it should be done, not so
easy exposing the idea to the world to criticism in order to see see if it
would be accepted, and it is hard as hell to make anything work. The point
is, he is trying something. Everything starts with an idea and he is
exposing it. What have you done?
All excellent points. I suppose mothers could carry those blankets all the
time if it was a treatment. I did mention the portable power issue in an
earlier comment, not knowing how much power might be needed to run such a
blanket. The most interesting point is #2, which is a strong one, more
complexity in sales, manufacturing and distribution. I don't see convincing
the mothers and professionals to use the item as a problem, but with more
units comes more complexity.
Hmm.... I have to disagree about users being immature. To me it means that
the users are not expected to know every little detail in science and
medicine to be able to use the product as intended. We ALL (even the
smartest and most mature person) have gaps in our knowledge. The users base
their assumptions on the common knowledge. Good design takes into
consideration most common assumptions. Good product should not come with
encyclopedia to be able to use it well.
The video suggests that mothers blanket babies, seeing them vulnerable. I'm
certain it's not a matter of keeping the baby warm as much as it is keeping
them exposed to the blue light. Wrap them in a blanket and not only is it
more difficult to regulate temperature which may cause discomfort to the
babies, blankets can also house ticks or other creatures/bacteria that
operators may otherwise easily detect if the baby was only expose to light.
Or you could swaddle the baby and wrap it tighter than a sausage. :> Yup,
my reaction was to the mothers covering the children with blankets, denying
the children the blue light therapy. A blanket generating blue light would
solve that issue, but I took it to the next level with replacing the
machine with the blanket. there would be issues, as many have brought them
up, but it seems like it would be better than what we have now.
Good points. Still, even if it's just a part-time thing when the baby needs
covering, it would help them instead of preventing a lot of the blue light
from getting to their skin. Occasional comfort for the mothers when they
are visiting their children while still delivering therapy to the babies.
Fiber optics? LEDs? A fabric mix to prevent infestation? I'm sure some
bright people could figure it out.
You're wrapping a baby in it, not using it as a tarp in a war zone. Per
unit cost would be significantly lower, full body immersion, extreme
portability, depending on power needs it might only need a 9v battery to
run it. Worst case, you keep them at a hospital to plug it in. I don't know
all the ins and outs of what would be needed to make this work, but I don't
see material as a stumbling block.
And the incubator and the light contraptions need to be lifted up, if the
mother wants to hold the baby, *or* the mother could just take the baby out
and hold the baby without any of that. The incubator and contraptions have
cables attached to them, also. If they make electric blankets with LEDs in
them, then they'l have electric blankets with lights in them.
whenever you have moving parts, it's gonna cause accelerated wear and tear.
. all the wires running through the blanket, the blue light source
technicalities, believe me they thought about it all, how comfortable would
that bulky thing be... too much you dont know . we dont know enough tech
limitations to be making judgements like that.
I know this sounds harsh, but these babies shouldn't exist in a setting
where they will probably(99%) struggle for survival every single day...
Let's make the world a better place for them first. And yes, if I was
living there I wouldn't want to bring a child to that kind of world. Look
at baby fish, it's how nature works :)
Comfort could be a factor, and it's true I don't know the limitations of
the technology, but the blanket would be a design on which I would focus
simply because it seems it would work best. However, part of the point of
this talk was that what works best isn't necessarily what people want. Buck
Rogers over practicality.
Lights with specific spectrum requirements are expensive. My Seasonal
Affective Disorder light cost over $200, and it has only a single fixture.
I am doubtful that a blanket with many lights can be cost effective, AND
cover as much skin as this design. Great idea though. Keep thinking outside
the box.
Yup, this was addressed in an earlier comment. The blanket could be a
part-time thing, or a supplement to the larger blue light if the blanket
can't be used all the time, but there are blankets out there that claim to
cool you down, so who knows, maybe that innovation can be incorporated into
it.
Great questions, thing is this may only be a different perspective to see
through a design, it may not be 100% agreeable... People will never be
prepared to accept something new, but what they do is they indirectly adapt
to it (and eventually realise what hypocrites they are, silly)
Am I being trolled? I think I just saw... no.. no no... an intelligent
comment on Youtube? Top comment?!? Thanks, now I have brain cancer... Oh
wait. Your mum joke, something questioning your sexuality and a little bit
of racism. There we go, normality restored :D
This guy comes off like he is helpful. That's like Hitlers Doctor showing
concern for the Jewish people who they haven't killed yet! How about fair
trade? How about paying the poor countries what we pay here in the states
for their goods?
Business tries to make as much money of old design before the sale the new
products. Like cell phones. The old technology is given to you with a
contract at a lower price. It's like the evolution of insects.
with that wavelength and that amount of power with the mobility of a
blanket... that would weigh a lot.. not to mention it being a hazard to put
the electronics directly onto the baby.
Learning from your failures is important. They never would have built a
successful second part without bombing part one. We need MORE stories of
failures leading to success.
Google images "baby sleep positions" - I have newborn at home - it is all
true :) As he said, need to create items for reality that is not what you
want it to be.
I, for one, am glad that somebody is the comments is helping me skip the
intro because it's ludicrously annoying, not because I don't want to wait
15 seconds.
Who was this guy designing has product for, if has initial plans did not
account for any market factors, i guess he thought people would be forced
to buy it.
Elisa Autografi al WIND MUSIC AWARDS
La dolce Elisa mentre rilascia autografi ai suoi fans.