dang i want one of these…turns out i can only call and order it from a store in NY.  i DO have a birthday soon…**hint hint**

tmblg:

The Muji Chronotebook

I love this concept—a sort of open-ended day planner.  Rather than constraining you into a certain way of planning your time, Muji’s Chronotebook simply has a small clock graphic in the center of every page, leaving room for the user to develop whatever system they like to organize their day.  This product is a great example, in many ways, of the benefits of the “worse is better” school of design—the simpler and more general a product design is, the more free the end user is to evolve their own uses for it, many of which could not be anticipated by the designer (other great examples I like to point to: del.icio.us, Twitter, and the HTTP protocol’s “rule of least power”).

dang i want one of these…turns out i can only call and order it from a store in NY.  i DO have a birthday soon…**hint hint**

tmblg:

The Muji Chronotebook

I love this concept—a sort of open-ended day planner. Rather than constraining you into a certain way of planning your time, Muji’s Chronotebook simply has a small clock graphic in the center of every page, leaving room for the user to develop whatever system they like to organize their day. This product is a great example, in many ways, of the benefits of the “worse is better” school of design—the simpler and more general a product design is, the more free the end user is to evolve their own uses for it, many of which could not be anticipated by the designer (other great examples I like to point to: del.icio.us, Twitter, and the HTTP protocol’s “rule of least power”).

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I'm a designer from Greenville, SC.

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