Good Design: The VODA Heat Powered Stove Fan

A common deficiency in heating a room with a wood stove is that the heated air accumulates around the ceiling or dissipates off of the exhaust pipe instead of spreading out to fill the room. Stove top fans solve this problem by blowing hot air next to the stove into the rest of the room. Let’s look into the relationship between the fan, the stove, and the consumer for design principles we can apply to our future projects.

Connecting the Dots Backwards: Not Knowing What We Don’t Know, Part 1

Because we have so much information at our fingertips via smart devices and the internet many students complain at having to learn (especially memorize) anything. The common response by students is that this is a waste of time and that these things can always be looked up in the future. Well they certainly can. That isn’t the point I am debating. The problem is that you can only look up things that you know you don’t know.

Designing Goals

With the start of the new year come new year’s resolutions and goals that often fall by the wayside within the first few months. Maybe you have fitness goals or career goals or a new hobby you want to pick up. Here are some tips that I think could be helpful for you in setting goals that you can achieve.

Designing Your Year

It’s that time when many of us reflect on what we have accomplished and what we might like to change in our lives. Whether or not you set new year’s resolutions there are important parts of the design process that can help you design a better year for yourself.

The Sixth Face of Innovation: The Director

Directors bring their own set of experiences, styles, and personality to the studio but they all concurrently support the show’s mission and want to make a great product. Thus, an organization or team can have multiple directors even if there still is team leader (or executive movie producer on set). You might not be the leader on your design engineering team but there may still be opportunities to take on the role of Director.

Verification Versus Validation

There are two general types of tests that can be done to observe the design’s strengths and weaknesses. They are called verification tests and validation tests. The differences between these tests can be confusing because the words seem and sound similar, and because some people use them interchangeably without thinking deeply about what they mean. This article describes the difference between them.