@[email protected] to Solarpunk [email protected] • 2 years agograceful degradation: the opposite of planned obsolescenceslrpnk.netimagemessage-square91fedilinkarrow-up11.56K
arrow-up11.56Kimagegraceful degradation: the opposite of planned obsolescenceslrpnk.net@[email protected] to Solarpunk [email protected] • 2 years agomessage-square91fedilink
minus-squareForestOrcalinkfedilink4•2 years agoConsider the term Wabi-Sabi. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wabi-sabi https://www.omaritani.com/blog/wabi-sabi-philosophy-teachings
minus-squareChaoticNeutralCzechlinkfedilink3•2 years agoTL;DR: Beauty in imperfection. Not too relevant.
minus-squareForestOrcalinkfedilink3•2 years agoThings will degrade, it’s natural. Is this not about designing things that degrade functionally? Seemed related to me.
minus-squareChaoticNeutralCzechlinkfedilink2•edit-22 years agoThe philosophy is tangentially relevant but there’s nothing wonky or antique about this flashlight so it’s not wabi-sabi.
minus-squareForestOrcalinkfedilink1•2 years agoLoL, not yet. ;-) I guarantee it will be an antique in someone’s junk drawer in record time. I like good design, and this one strikes me as specious.
Consider the term Wabi-Sabi.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wabi-sabi
https://www.omaritani.com/blog/wabi-sabi-philosophy-teachings
TL;DR: Beauty in imperfection. Not too relevant.
Things will degrade, it’s natural. Is this not about designing things that degrade functionally? Seemed related to me.
The philosophy is tangentially relevant but there’s nothing wonky or antique about this flashlight so it’s not wabi-sabi.
LoL, not yet. ;-) I guarantee it will be an antique in someone’s junk drawer in record time. I like good design, and this one strikes me as specious.