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Jerry Seger: Good to see you all again. Let's see if that comes up. This is our functional design meeting. Um. Just a sec while my PowerPoint comes up. Et voila. Okay. Mm um we put the fashion in electronics. Let's start. Okay, our agenda today um just check the time, it's twelve thirteen. Um. I'm gonna do an opening, talk about um did you all get the minutes? I e-mailed them to you. I'm also
Walter Zander: Yep.
Jerry Seger: putting 'em them in the shared folder. So
Thomas Stewart: Right.
Jerry Seger: um then I we'll talk about our general objectives and have your three presentations. Um I'll talk about the new project requirements I've just received, and then we have to make a decision on our remote control functions. Finally we'll just close. We're starting this meeting at approximately twelve thirteen and we have forty minutes. So First of all the functional design objectives. Uh we need to keep in mind the user requirement specification, what needs and desires are to be fulfilled, the functions design, what effects the apparatus should have, and the working design, how the apparatus actually works to fulfil its function. Okay, three presentations, um you can go in any order you choose um.
Freddy Holtz: Mm shall we go in the that you just did it?
Jerry Seger: Sure, please do.
Freddy Holtz: I dunno. How do I hook my screen up?
Thomas Stewart: I think you might have to disconnect.
Jerry Seger: Yes I do.
Jerry Seger: Yeah.
Walter Zander: Well there's a wee
Freddy Holtz: Where
Walter Zander: a
Freddy Holtz: does
Walter Zander: wee
Freddy Holtz: it go?
Walter Zander: plug just
Freddy Holtz: Mm-hmm.
Walter Zander: that one there
Freddy Holtz: Hmm, I'm not supposed to move this, but
Walter Zander: Ah that's it, yep.
Walter Zander: And then you have to press function F_ eight I
Jerry Seger: Function,
Walter Zander: think it
Jerry Seger: F_
Walter Zander: is
Jerry Seger: eight,
Walter Zander: on
Jerry Seger: yeah.
Walter Zander: your laptop.
Freddy Holtz: Where's
Jerry Seger: The
Freddy Holtz: function?
Jerry Seger: blue one, F_N_.
Freddy Holtz: No signal.
Jerry Seger: Is it plugged in all the way and you screwed it in and
Freddy Holtz: Ah,
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Freddy Holtz: wait, 's screw in.
Thomas Stewart: I I
Freddy Holtz: Push
Thomas Stewart: think
Freddy Holtz: the screw.
Thomas Stewart: you just have to push it in really hard.
Walter Zander: That's it.
Thomas Stewart: Oh, got it.
Jerry Seger: Mm 'kay.
Freddy Holtz: Mm alright
Jerry Seger: It's taking it a little bit
Freddy Holtz: I've never attached to anything.
Thomas Stewart: Mm, neither have I.
Jerry Seger: 'Kay there you go.
Freddy Holtz: Alright,
Thomas Stewart: Alright.
Freddy Holtz: so, I don't know if you guys are able to get access to um the report that was online or if I'm the only who is. But, I don't even know how to play this. No.
Jerry Seger: Press the little presentation. It's the um it looks like a Y_ kind of over there above Draw. There, that one, there you
Freddy Holtz: Alright.
Jerry Seger: go.
Freddy Holtz: So we're just gonna talk a little bit about the functional requirements that people specified when they were asked. Um I guess Real Reaction did some market research. They had a hundred subjects and their usability lab and they watched them watch T_V_ and recorded the frequency that they used particular buttons and the relevance that those buttons had. What they found was they analysed people's desires and needs. Focusing on their desires, um people specifically said that they thought remotes were ugly, seventy five per cent of the a hundred subjects noted that and that they more importantly though, eighty per cent said that they would be willing to pay more for a fancier looking remote. I don't know anything
Thomas Stewart: Hmm.
Freddy Holtz: beyond what fancy means, but that's particularly of use to us, I think. Um also they did some questions on voice recognition and found that the desire for voice recognition was inversely related to age, so younger people were more inclined to want something with voice recognition, whereas the older people in the like sixty and above segment or so did not really think that they would pay more money for voice recognitions. Um
Thomas Stewart: 'Kay.
Freddy Holtz: people also had certain frustrations, that I think that we could try to take into consideration with our design. That being people k um frustrated with losing their remotes. I think, over fifty percent of the people mentioned that that was their biggest frustration. People are also frustrated with the difficulty it is to learn how to use a remote and I think that ties back to what you were saying before
Thomas Stewart: Hmm.
Freddy Holtz: just that there's too many buttons, it just needs to be easy to use. It also mentioned something called R_S_I_ and I was hoping someone might be able to inform Freddy Holtz as to what R_S_I_ is, because
Walter Zander: Repetitive
Freddy Holtz: I don't know.
Walter Zander: strain injury.
Freddy Holtz: What?
Walter Zander: Repetitive strain injury.
Freddy Holtz: Ah. There we go. Wow.
Walter Zander: So
Freddy Holtz: People
Walter Zander: if
Freddy Holtz: do
Walter Zander: you
Freddy Holtz: not like that. So I guess sort of the carpal tunnel type thing, people do not like that, um the repetitive use, I guess, caused a strain. Um looking at the needs people specified, the problem right now is that people's remotes are not matching their operating behaviour. People are only using ten per cent of the buttons that they have offered to them on their remote. And what people do most often is changing the channel and changing the volume. People also zap like to change the channel, about um sixty five per cent during an hour of use. So we really just need to focus in on those volumes and channel changers rather than things like the audio settings, the screen settings and the channel settings, because they're used much more infrequently and probably just complicate what's going on. So I think that some things that we might wanna think about, the idea of an L_C_D_ screen was brought up although they didn't have any details on what people's preferences on that were, so I dunno know if that's coming to Freddy Holtz later, or something like that. But something for us to consider also just the phenomenon that less is more when it comes to the buttons on the remote or what we wanna make easiest to use, make sure that, you know, something like an audio setting isn't given as much importance and visibility on the remote as something like channel changing that's used a lot more often. And basically in order for us to win over to the consumer we just need to focus on what it looks like, that it has a fancy appeal and that it's not ugly and that it feels like the way they're gonna use it, so it doesn't give them any hand injuries or things like that.
Thomas Stewart: Hmm.
Jerry Seger: Thank you very much. That was that was great.
Thomas Stewart: Mm 'kay.
Jerry Seger: Um 's move on to the next presentation um on effects. Was that
Freddy Holtz: Hmm.
Jerry Seger: you? Great.
Freddy Holtz: Yeah, have I unscrewed it?
Jerry Seger: Push. User interface, right. Interface.
Freddy Holtz: Here we go.
Walter Zander: Cheers.
Freddy Holtz: Mm-hmm. And I think that's in the shared, if I did it right, if anyone wants to look at
Jerry Seger: Mm
Freddy Holtz: it.
Thomas Stewart: Okay,
Jerry Seger: 'kay, thank you.
Thomas Stewart: great.
Jerry Seger: Okay.
Walter Zander: Here we go. Right so I'm gonna talk about the technical technical functions design of the remote control um. We need to start by considering what a remote control actually is. It's a device that allows us produce certain effects on, so i it's basically a communication device. We we tell the remote control what we want to do, it sends a message to the television saying change the channel, change the volume, uh yeah, adjust these settings, adjust the brightness. Um how do we actually go about designing a new television remote control? First thing to do is to come up with the design specifications. We need to know what our final product is gonna be like, so we need a a clear idea of exactly what this product does, uh how it works, and what the end-user is gonna want from this product. Um. Oh, a way I'd suggest that we could go about this is by designing uh several different prototypes of user interfaces for this product, um and then uh trying to get some feedback uh about h how well these particular prototypes work, uh sorta find out what people think of 'em. Um using a remote control is is quite a subjective experience. Um,
Jerry Seger: Hmm.
Walter Zander: and different different people sort of prefer different things. Um we should remember that remote controls are a a fairly standard piece of equipment. When a users using a remote control, he or she expects the buttons to be in certain places. So in some sense we're gonna we're gonna have to aim for a device which is fairly conventional in design uh so that we're not completely shocking people. But I think within that there is also room for us to introduce novel ideas uh and to make something that's that's perhaps a little bit different, something that stands out. Um also in in designing the user interface we need to consider practicalities. Uh the first of these is is technological ye uh what can we do with the current state of technology as it is. The second is is economic, uh we need to find a balance between features and price. So as you mentioned things like voice recognition would would add to the price uh but it would also im
Jerry Seger: Hmm.
Walter Zander: improve the design of the product. So I had a look on the on the web uh to see if I could find a few examples of existing television remote controls. In analysing these we can consider what what things what's good about them, uh what things do they get right, what's bad about them, what's wrong with 'em, um how we can improve on the designs that that that I found and what can we do to make our product stand out from from the large majority of remote controls. Here's two examples uh probably at the extreme ends of the spectrum. Um on the left here we've got uh an engineering-based design for a remote control, so it's one that's got lots of buttons, it's it's fully featured, everything you might possibly want to do is there, you know, it's got forward, backwards, up, down, channel numbers, volume, uh freeze frame. Yeah, it's it's fully featured and it might take a while to get to learn to use it, but once you've learned it you can you can do whatever you want with your T_V_. The one on the right is a lot more basic. It's just got the essential functions of the T_V_ changing the channel, play, stop, volume. It would be a lot quicker to learn to use it, but again th it's it's swings and roundabouts. There are disadvantages, you can't use it say to to freeze the television picture. Uh there's a lot of features that are missing from that remote control. So we've got to to find our find a way of striking a balance between the two. Um as I said before, remote controls are subjective, different people want want different things. Um personally wa what I want from a remote control is a device that's simple, it it's easy to use, uh it's got big buttons for doing the things I do most often, changing the volume, changing the channel. It it does everything that I need it to uh, as I said before, I'm quite lazy, I don't wanna walk across the room just to adjust my television. I also want something that that looks cool, um and that that feels good, that's ergonomically designed.
Jerry Seger: Mm 'kay. Thank you very much. That was very useful. It's funny to see the drastic difference between those two remotes.
Thomas Stewart: Hmm.
Jerry Seger: Um. And neither of them were very pretty, you know?
Freddy Holtz: No.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah. I think that could be our selling point.
Jerry Seger: Mm.
Freddy Holtz: A fashion fashion remote.
Walter Zander: I
Thomas Stewart: Right.
Walter Zander: think there's there's certainly a market for technology that looks cool.
Jerry Seger: Mm.
Freddy Holtz: Mm-hmm.
Walter Zander: And I think that's that's why companies like Apple've 've 've
Thomas Stewart: Hmm.
Walter Zander: made
Freddy Holtz: Yeah.
Walter Zander: a lot of progress.
Thomas Stewart: Right, I really can't see what I'm doing, so does anyone have a
Jerry Seger: You there it is.
Thomas Stewart: Ah-ha, look at that, showing up already.
Jerry Seger: Lovely.
Freddy Holtz: So wait, did it let you go on the Internet or was that just what it let you see?
Walter Zander: Uh that was just on the d on
Freddy Holtz: Okay.
Walter Zander: the company web site, yeah.
Freddy Holtz: 'Cause I was like
Jerry Seger: Hmm.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah
Freddy Holtz: googling and then I'm like wait it won't let Freddy Holtz google.
Thomas Stewart: Alright um No, how do I play again?
Jerry Seger: Um the it's right above Draw. There are three thingy if it's way at the bottom.
Thomas Stewart: Ah.
Jerry Seger: Under three icons and it's the one that looks like a desk. Yeah, that one. There are
Thomas Stewart: Okay.
Jerry Seger: Y_s.
Thomas Stewart: So this is our working design presentation. Um I had a bit of some issues with this, because I wasn't able to find everything I needed, but I guess that's we're still in early stages. Um so, yeah, this is this. Though th the thing about working design is the what we're trying to do as a working design is figure out how the aparata apparatus can fulfil its function. Um one of the examples that kept coming up for Freddy Holtz is that a coffee grinder. It works because it converts electrical energy to grinding the beans and then you put the bean through a filter and that filters out, and then you get coffee at the end that's nice and hot because of the combination of electrical energy and then the other things that are brought in to make it work. Don't know if I'm explaining that very well, but how do I get to the next s ah. So h the method as um working designers figure out what you need to make it fulfil this practical function, what what needs to be done and how do we convert all the elements to make that done. So wha the easiest thing to do is to break down all the points at which you need something to happen. So you make a schematic of the way that the the energy is converted tsh towards this practical function. And then I think the easiest thing to do is gonna be work on each task separately. So um Uh.
Jerry Seger: You just press yeah, just
Thomas Stewart: Uh.
Jerry Seger: click. That'll be fine.
Thomas Stewart: So the findings that I got uh very just very briefly is that you have a choice of the way that the information is projected to the receiver and in my opinion infra-red is the best way to do that 'cause you don't need a sight line. So that's one thing we're gonna work on. Um the user interface is critical here, because a lot of the things that happen in a remote control happen through the chip that controls that converts the electrical energy into data, which then goes through the infra-red, so the the chip that uh I think Ian is designing, is gonna be crucial. And really it all comes down to the to the user, because they're the one that's controlling most of the working design. So the components that we find here are the energy source, you know the battery or whatever that's gonna m make it work, then the chip, which converts the data, the user that's controlling the chip, and the infra-red bulb that's gonna let us move the data to the receiver. So you have four main components and they are designed sort of like this. You have your energy source right there which then um brings uh energy or information to the chip, which is also controlled by the users. You have energy going to the user who's controlling the chip ooh 's not what I wanted to do uh uh.
Jerry Seger: Um yeah use that thing you can go back, previous.
Thomas Stewart: Previous. Sorry about that, guys.
Jerry Seger: Pardon.
Thomas Stewart: Oh.
Jerry Seger: Oh,
Thomas Stewart: No, no,
Jerry Seger: well.
Thomas Stewart: no, no, no.
Jerry Seger: Okay.
Thomas Stewart: Okay, let's just get back to my schematic here.
Jerry Seger: Ye Double click on it. With the right with the left
Thomas Stewart: W
Jerry Seger: hand one.
Thomas Stewart: yeah, yeah. I think it's frozen. Here. Don't show Freddy Holtz that tip again.
Jerry Seger: There we
Thomas Stewart: There we are.
Jerry Seger: are.
Thomas Stewart: Sorry about this, guys. I'm kind of pathetic with things like this. Um alright. So you have your energy source, your user interface who's controlling the chip, the chip also uses the energy, and the chip through the use of the user interface is gonna control the switch which will work your infra-red bulb, which will then bring the data to the receiver. So hopefully that makes sense for everyone in my kind of garbled way. This
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Stewart: is the the parts of the working design that need to be figured out. And personal preferences, besides the fact that I can't spell, we need a long-lasting energy source, people don't wanna be changing it a lot. We need a chip that works well with the user interface, that isn't too complicated. We need a straightforward interface, like Ian was saying, simple, not overwhelming it with information and we need a reliable and clear infra-red signal, so that you're not waving your remote around and
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Stewart: having to get frustrated and go do it by hands. So that's pretty much it for the working design.
Jerry Seger: Excellent.
Jerry Seger: So, um.
Thomas Stewart: Rose, do you think you can give Freddy Holtz a hand with this?
Jerry Seger: Yes, absolutely.
Jerry Seger: Ah I can never tell which way to turn these things.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: Lefty loosey, righty tighty, right?
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Walter Zander: What's up? Lefty
Jerry Seger: Lefty loosey,
Walter Zander: loosey.
Jerry Seger: righty tighty.
Walter Zander: Uh. Never heard that before, that's good.
Jerry Seger: Oh yes.
Walter Zander: I'll think of that every time now.
Thomas Stewart: It's
Freddy Holtz: Yeah,
Thomas Stewart: gonna
Freddy Holtz: that's
Thomas Stewart: stick
Freddy Holtz: a good
Thomas Stewart: in your
Freddy Holtz: one it'll
Thomas Stewart: head.
Freddy Holtz: stick with you.
Jerry Seger: Mm 'kay.
Jerry Seger: Um I have nothing on my screen. Just a sec.
Thomas Stewart: Mm.
Jerry Seger: Here we are.
Thomas Stewart: Ooh, no signal.
Jerry Seger: Okay, yeah, it's fine. Okay, requirements. We have a couple new requirements that I was just e-mailed right before the meeting and
Thomas Stewart: Okay.
Jerry Seger: that we have to keep in in um in mind as we're creating this. We didn't bring it up yet, or at all in the meetings so far, but we're not gonna work with teletext because um well it that's been taken over by the internet, so we're not gonna worry about um we're not gonna worry about that.
Freddy Holtz: What's teletext?
Jerry Seger: Um.
Thomas Stewart: Uh, it's a British thing.
Freddy Holtz: Oh.
Walter Zander: You don't
Freddy Holtz: Oh,
Walter Zander: have
Freddy Holtz: so
Walter Zander: it in the States?
Thomas Stewart: No.
Jerry Seger: It no. W d
Walter Zander: Oh,
Jerry Seger: could
Walter Zander: I didn't
Jerry Seger: would
Walter Zander: realise.
Jerry Seger: you care to explain it?
Walter Zander: Um yeah, it's like a Um you have like you have uh numbers on your remote control,
Freddy Holtz: Mm-hmm.
Walter Zander: uh y and you type in the page number you want, so like you type a hundred on your remote control and this this kind of index appears on the television screen with just some some text and some very blocky looking graphics on it. And you just type numbers to go to different pages and it gives you information, mostly rather boring
Thomas Stewart: S
Walter Zander: stuff like what's on T_V_ next and share prices and that kind of thing.
Thomas Stewart: Lottery numbers and sport scores.
Walter Zander: Yep, news headlines.
Thomas Stewart: But if you ever see the T_V_ saying like go to page one sixty on Ceefax now, that's what they're talking about.
Jerry Seger: How?
Freddy Holtz: Oh.
Walter Zander: It's earl it's pretty old technology. It's like
Jerry Seger: Okay.
Walter Zander: nineteen eighties.
Freddy Holtz: That explains a lot.
Thomas Stewart: I have no idea why we don't have it, but
Freddy Holtz: That's good.
Jerry Seger: Interesting. Okay um, well, we're not gonna the management has decided we're not gonna work with that. Um Okay um and we're also gonna w like your question earlier um whether this is going to be t for television, video, or etcetera. Just for television. That's
Walter Zander: Right.
Jerry Seger: what we're focused on. Um otherwise becomes to complex, we wanna get this out um very quickly. We only have a a short amount of time.
Thomas Stewart: 'Kay.
Jerry Seger: Um and finally there's more marketing, I think, um, our corporate image has to be recognisable. So while we're gonna make it
Thomas Stewart: Mm.
Jerry Seger: look pretty we need to use our colour and our slogan i in the new design.
Walter Zander: So what's our corporate image like? It's It's kind of yellow colour with uh
Jerry Seger: Looks
Walter Zander: we
Jerry Seger: like,
Walter Zander: put
Jerry Seger: yeah,
Walter Zander: fashion
Jerry Seger: kind of
Walter Zander: in
Jerry Seger: a yellow
Walter Zander: electronics.
Jerry Seger: and black and we have that the emphasis on the R_s in
Walter Zander: It's like
Jerry Seger: um
Walter Zander: double R_.
Jerry Seger: mm-hmm.
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: But it's, yeah, we put the um fashion in electronics. So we gotta keep that in that in mind.
Thomas Stewart: Okay, so we want something that looks good
Jerry Seger: Yep. Yep.
Thomas Stewart: and is yellow.
Jerry Seger: Yeah, or ha maybe some buttons could be yellow.
Thomas Stewart: Okay.
Jerry Seger: Like, we can we can play around with it a little bit. Um. Okay, we need to talk about our functions and our target group. We need to decide who our target group is. You um in your analysis of different market um of the marketing,
Freddy Holtz: Mm-hmm.
Jerry Seger: you identified that different groups wanted different things or had certain preferences, for example that um that older people didn't really care for um voice recognition,
Freddy Holtz: Mm-hmm.
Jerry Seger: but younger people did. Um and so?
Thomas Stewart: Well if we're gonna say that function um fashion we put the fashion in in electronics then you automatically, I think, a sort of younger group that that's who's gonna be attracted to this.
Freddy Holtz: Yes, I do think, who's gonna have the money to buy that also,
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: that one?
Jerry Seger: It's gonna be twenty five Euro remember, so um it has to be avai marketable to um whomever it is.
Thomas Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Walter Zander: Is it is it something that's gonna be sold separately from the television or is it something that comes w with a television? 'Cause that would affect the way that we market it.
Jerry Seger: Well at least right now what we're doing is um deciding on just the remote itself, so it
Walter Zander: Right.
Jerry Seger: will probably be sold separately,
Walter Zander: Right, okay.
Jerry Seger: twenty five Euro by itself.
Freddy Holtz: The only break-down that I was given in terms of age was the voice activation and basically there's a big jump, after thirty five people don't really care if it has voice, so it's like basically fifteen to thirty five that
Thomas Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: think that that's a good idea. I'm gonna be given any other numbers broken down in terms of age later, but if that's sort of the only quality that we have that is divided into age then we would wanna stick between the fifteen and thirty five range.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah, that's probably uh a population w quite a little bit of disposable income for use on technology anyway, so
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Thomas Stewart: that might be a fairly good target group for us.
Jerry Seger: Now, those are that's all specific for speech recognition. Are we gonna use that as one of our functions?
Walter Zander: Um.
Thomas Stewart: Mm.
Walter Zander: I I would say no, because it's gonna add too much to the price. Especially if we are marketing it as a separate
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Walter Zander: product, people are gonna be paying uh, well, uh we've got a price limit
Jerry Seger: Mm.
Walter Zander: of was it twelve twelve and a half Euros for
Thomas Stewart: To produce it,
Jerry Seger: To
Thomas Stewart: yeah.
Jerry Seger: produce
Walter Zander: to produce
Jerry Seger: it, yes.
Walter Zander: it? And I wonder if we can get voice recognition into that
Jerry Seger: Mm.
Walter Zander: twelve and a half Euros without having to make too many other compromises.
Freddy Holtz: But what else are we gonna put, I mean not that I'm really gung-ho about it, I don't know what else you can put in a remote to make it technologically advanced though. So like other than just making
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Freddy Holtz: it look good,
Thomas Stewart: Hmm.
Freddy Holtz: how is it I mean it can look really great and still have the same up-n-down
Thomas Stewart: But
Freddy Holtz: buttons and why's anyone
Thomas Stewart: right.
Freddy Holtz: gonna buy a new remote?
Thomas Stewart: Well but why are we why are we aiming for a technological advancement? Everything we're talking about is ease of use and simple and that doesn't necessarily mean
Freddy Holtz: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Stewart: more technology, in
Jerry Seger: That's
Thomas Stewart: fact
Jerry Seger: a good
Thomas Stewart: it
Jerry Seger: thing
Thomas Stewart: could
Jerry Seger: to
Thomas Stewart: use
Jerry Seger: keep in mind.
Thomas Stewart: it could mean, not. If they might be overwhelmed with with remotes that have too many buttons and too much technology.
Freddy Holtz: If someone's looking to buy a new remote, don't they want like an upgrade? I dunno.
Jerry Seger: Upgrade? Well, we can look for we can look at upgrade or we can look at um user-friendly.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah, simplification.
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: Simplification,
Freddy Holtz: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Stewart: They could have a crap
Jerry Seger: so
Thomas Stewart: remote that came with their T_V_ that's just impossible to use, or maybe it broke, or maybe
Freddy Holtz: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Stewart: they're just missing it.
Jerry Seger: Uh-huh, mm. And we also need to talk about if we're only gonna have the very simple ones or also have the other ones just separate somehow or
Thomas Stewart: Hmm.
Freddy Holtz: Can you like
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Freddy Holtz: I mean this may be too complicated, but, I wish I had something to explain it, like if it was just a simple, either this way or this way, that had like the main buttons and then you could like pull something out, kind of and like you got the rest
Thomas Stewart: Ooh.
Freddy Holtz: the buttons, but the rest of them like went in.
Walter Zander: The
Freddy Holtz: Do you know what I'm saying?
Walter Zander: remote There
Jerry Seger: Kind
Walter Zander: are
Jerry Seger: of
Walter Zander: remote
Jerry Seger: pull out
Walter Zander: controls
Jerry Seger: of the side.
Walter Zander: like that, yeah. Like some T_V_s they have a sort of uh a sliding screen on the remote control of it
Jerry Seger: Mm.
Walter Zander: that hides all the complicated buttons.
Thomas Stewart: Ooh.
Walter Zander: So if you wanna do something complicated like programme your television or re-tune it, then you you open up this little hatch or or slide the
Freddy Holtz: Mm-hmm.
Walter Zander: screen down and there's
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Walter Zander: all the all the special buttons.
Freddy Holtz: 'Cause then 's like people who don't wanna ever look at them, never even have to see them
Thomas Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: and
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: if you like
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Freddy Holtz: get the instruction manual that comes with it and you just don't even read it then you'll never even know that those things can pull out.
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: And you're a happy person and everyone else doesn't have to have like two remotes, one that has the easy ones and one that has
Thomas Stewart: Yeah,
Freddy Holtz: more complicated
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: ones,
Thomas Stewart: that's a good
Freddy Holtz: but
Thomas Stewart: idea.
Freddy Holtz: 's all still
Walter Zander: I think
Freddy Holtz: in
Walter Zander: that's
Freddy Holtz: one.
Walter Zander: a good idea, yeah.
Thomas Stewart: Mm.
Jerry Seger: Um we have to be careful that that that doesn't impede um the chip transmitting information,
Freddy Holtz: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: but
Thomas Stewart: Good
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: um
Thomas Stewart: point.
Jerry Seger: that's gonna be mostly technological thing.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: Um. Okay um, so what are we emphasising? I what in this
Walter Zander: Si
Jerry Seger: project?
Walter Zander: simplicity and fashion.
Freddy Holtz: I think simplicity,
Jerry Seger: Simplicity
Thomas Stewart: Yeah
Jerry Seger: and fashion.
Freddy Holtz: fashion.
Thomas Stewart: mm.
Jerry Seger: Okay, those are very good goals, I think, um that we have to keep in mind in with everything we do. Simplicity and fashion and, yeah, or usability speci however you wanna say that, which includes um an emphasis on making the infra-red very functional,
Freddy Holtz: Mm-hmm.
Jerry Seger: so that you don't
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: have to travel around a lot.
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Freddy Holtz: What can
Jerry Seger: Um.
Freddy Holtz: you do to like make the infra-red more functional, like why would it not be? I'm just wondering.
Jerry Seger: I think it's a lot to do with battery,
Freddy Holtz: Okay.
Jerry Seger: but that's just my
Thomas Stewart: The battery and that I think that the chip takes the data and presents it well, without sort of scattering.
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: So 's just the quality of the chip.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah. I think so.
Freddy Holtz: Okay.
Thomas Stewart: The quality uh quality of all the components really, I mean, we can't really do anything shoddy work, 'cause it's
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Thomas Stewart: gonna be visible down the line.
Jerry Seger: So our target group, we're saying, fifteen to thirty five?
Freddy Holtz: Well, I dunno how useful that number is if we're not doing
Jerry Seger: S voice recognition,
Freddy Holtz: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: which I kind of I kind of feel like voice recognition is not necessary in a remote control,
Freddy Holtz: Yeah. I don't.
Jerry Seger: like it might be necessary for a T_V_ but not for the remote
Walter Zander: It's,
Jerry Seger: c, you
Walter Zander: yeah,
Jerry Seger: know.
Walter Zander: it's
Thomas Stewart: Mm-mm.
Walter Zander: pretty
Jerry Seger: Seems
Walter Zander: it's pretty
Jerry Seger: a little bit
Walter Zander: high-tech.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm. Yeah, and it might be too expensive.
Freddy Holtz: And if the whole idea is you're using a remote then why would you have voice, like you know what
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: I mean and then it's like you wouldn't need a remote you'd just talk to your T_V_.
Jerry Seger: Yeah.
Walter Zander: It's for,
Thomas Stewart: Ooh.
Walter Zander: like, the ultimately lazy people, who can't even be bothered to pick up the remote.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Freddy Holtz: Mm yeah. Maybe
Thomas Stewart: I
Freddy Holtz: I mean if I get m more numbers, I'll e-mail you before the next meeting in terms of ages. But this doesn't divide up anything and there was only a hundred subjects also,
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: which isn't, I mean, really isn't that representative, especially if it's a hundred subjects that th they then can subdivide into age groups that means there's very few in each age group, so
Thomas Stewart: Yeah, but I th I think regardless we're we're aiming for the under sixty five or something.
Jerry Seger: Under sixty five,
Walter Zander: Yep.
Jerry Seger: okay, that's a good start. Um. I'd say we're uh can we narrow it down to maybe um teenagers and families? 'Cause that would go
Thomas Stewart: Or
Jerry Seger: up
Thomas Stewart: like
Jerry Seger: to like fifty?
Thomas Stewart: single professionals or something.
Freddy Holtz: Twenty
Jerry Seger: Okay, single
Freddy Holtz: to like fifty five.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Freddy Holtz: I dunno.
Jerry Seger: It's it's hard to
Thomas Stewart: It's
Jerry Seger: narrow
Thomas Stewart: really hard
Jerry Seger: it down.
Thomas Stewart: to figure out right now.
Walter Zander: I think the product appeals across a quite a broad range of ages.
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Walter Zander: I mean, we we said simplicity is is one of the features, so it's going to appeal to people, maybe people who have problems with technology, you know, people who get
Jerry Seger: Okay.
Walter Zander: scared by having lots of buttons, and that might be older people,
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Walter Zander: but then we've also got fashion, which is something that definitely appeals
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Walter Zander: to younger people.
Freddy Holtz: Well maybe we don't have to defi define the target group by the demographic of age, maybe we
Jerry Seger: Right.
Freddy Holtz: can define it by like the demographic of like h t how much money they have to spend
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Freddy Holtz: or something like that,
Walter Zander: Yeah
Freddy Holtz: like,
Thomas Stewart: That's
Walter Zander: aim
Thomas Stewart: a
Walter Zander: for
Thomas Stewart: good
Freddy Holtz: well
Thomas Stewart: point.
Walter Zander: a
Freddy Holtz: obviously
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: it has to
Walter Zander: an
Freddy Holtz: be
Walter Zander: income
Freddy Holtz: someone who
Walter Zander: group.
Freddy Holtz: owns a television,
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: and like
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Freddy Holtz: how recently have they bought their television like that sort of thing.
Thomas Stewart: Mm.
Jerry Seger: So maybe it's more useful to d d to define objectives like fashion and
Thomas Stewart: Yeah,
Jerry Seger: simplicity than
Thomas Stewart: t probably.
Jerry Seger: to find specific target group as far
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: as age is because, yeah, things so different will appeal to different people, but Okay. Um oh, there're a couple functions do we want something so that do we want some kind of thing to find it if it's lost?
Thomas Stewart: Mm.
Freddy Holtz: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: Like a button on a T_V_ you can press and it'll ring or something, I don't know like or
Freddy Holtz: H
Jerry Seger: beep?
Freddy Holtz: I mean, like I said before, fifty per cent of of the fru f like frustration someone can have that was the biggest one and half the people said that happened and we all mentioned it before we
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: knew about it.
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Freddy Holtz: And if we're talking about making something easy that sort of goes along with it so it wouldn't be like a random thing to sort of add in.
Thomas Stewart: Mm.
Freddy Holtz: It would be relevant to like the overall goal
Jerry Seger: Mm.
Freddy Holtz: I think,
Thomas Stewart: Yeah,
Freddy Holtz: so
Thomas Stewart: that'll probably be good.
Jerry Seger: Okay, we have to we have about four minutes left to define our functions. So let's do that quickly. Um so we want something to keep it from getting lost.
Walter Zander: Yep.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: And we want um we want large buttons for the essential things.
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: Large, accessible buttons for the essentials. We want a possibility to um to get um a possibility to get the extra functions.
Thomas Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Walter Zander: Yeah. Which are kind of hidden away in some way or well not hidden but they're uh they're not as prominent as the main features.
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: Hmm.
Jerry Seger: Um, yeah, hidden way. And we also want it to be fashionable, which I'm not sure if that's a function so much as a um yeah
Freddy Holtz: on your coffee table, it's not like an eye sore, that kind
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Freddy Holtz: of thing.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah. Alright.
Jerry Seger: Okay, do it. Any other essential functions that we need? Battery? Do we need a
Thomas Stewart: Battery
Jerry Seger: long-life battery?
Thomas Stewart: battery use. Yeah, but
Freddy Holtz: Yeah.
Thomas Stewart: I think that goes in with simplicity and ease of use really.
Jerry Seger: But
Freddy Holtz: So
Jerry Seger: we might
Freddy Holtz: you
Jerry Seger: as well.
Freddy Holtz: never have to change the battery.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Walter Zander: We should maybe investigate whether it needs a battery at all. I suspect the remote control does need a battery, but
Jerry Seger: Yeah,
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: I would imagine.
Walter Zander: I dunno if you can
Jerry Seger: Just 'cause it is an electronic device, the
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Thomas Stewart: Mm. It I think it does. I don't I don't think of a way you can operate a chip and convert that much data without without
Walter Zander: Yeah,
Thomas Stewart: one.
Walter Zander: without the energy,
Thomas Stewart: But you
Walter Zander: yeah.
Thomas Stewart: could maybe have it in a little charging station like a mobile phone, or like a little cradle for your iPod.
Walter Zander: Yeah, that's
Thomas Stewart: You
Walter Zander: that's
Thomas Stewart: could
Walter Zander: possible.
Thomas Stewart: we could maybe
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Thomas Stewart: do that instead. So you don't
Jerry Seger: Charging.
Thomas Stewart: ha you got like a rechargeable battery.
Walter Zander: Yeah.
Thomas Stewart: I dunno, that might contribute to less people losing it too if
Jerry Seger: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Stewart: it it stays in one place.
Freddy Holtz: Mm.
Jerry Seger: We have to think about um space in living-rooms, too, like
Thomas Stewart: Mm.
Jerry Seger: 'cause they're I mean, would you put it on top of the T_V_? I don't know, just think okay, that's that's a good idea, we'll keep it.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: Think it's
Thomas Stewart: That's just off the top of my head.
Jerry Seger: And maybe fun. Okay. Um 'kay we're gonna conclude now, has everyone said their functions and
Walter Zander: Yep.
Jerry Seger: 'kay. Um after the meeting we're gonna each complete a sks um a questionnaire and a summaries summary. I don't know what summarisation. Um and then we'll have our lunch break. After that we have thirty minutes of individual work. Um I'll make sure to put up um the minutes and the project documentation and including these PowerPoint slides. If everyone could do that as well, that'd be great. Um you each have individual actions, I_ um I_D_ Industrial Design you've your components concept, User Interface, the user interface concept, market trend wa watching. And as as per last time you'll get specific incrat instructions from your personal coach e-mailed to you. And hopefully, I hope, next time you'll be able to access more of the web site that they they seem to tell you that you could.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah,
Jerry Seger: It's kinda
Thomas Stewart: who knows.
Jerry Seger: frustrating, but um Be sure to note any frustrations or any um issues that come up in your um in your um summary.
Thomas Stewart: Okay
Jerry Seger: Mm 'kay?
Thomas Stewart: Sounds good.
Jerry Seger: Great seeing y'all.
Freddy Holtz: It's good. Did you um were you able to like put yours in the group folder?
Thomas Stewart: Yes, I
Freddy Holtz: Okay.
Thomas Stewart: just did that. Hopefully it is there for people.
Freddy Holtz: Yep.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah?
Jerry Seger: Looks like there are um looks like there's a second one kind of of mine
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: that's that I didn't do, it's from like an earlier project, I think so
Thomas Stewart: Okay.
Jerry Seger: um
Freddy Holtz: Where is that? Yours is
Jerry Seger: Under the shared folder, I don't know it might not
Thomas Stewart: Technical.
Jerry Seger: even be under yours
Thomas Stewart: So
Jerry Seger: as well.
Thomas Stewart: in there we
Jerry Seger: Projects.
Thomas Stewart: have technical functions presentation, working design presentation and the functional requirements. At least that's
Freddy Holtz: I
Thomas Stewart: what I
Freddy Holtz: only
Thomas Stewart: have
Freddy Holtz: have
Thomas Stewart: in.
Freddy Holtz: three, I just have like our three.
Thomas Stewart: Yeah,
Freddy Holtz: Yeah.
Thomas Stewart: that's what I have as well, R
Jerry Seger: Okay.
Thomas Stewart: Rose So.
Jerry Seger: You don't have mine?
Freddy Holtz: No, but that's 'cause I think yours is in the e-mail separate, like it's not on the server.
Jerry Seger: S
Thomas Stewart: Yeah.
Jerry Seger: Mm.
Freddy Holtz: But if I open it and then save it, probably will be there. Oh wait, never mind you can't save it to the
Jerry Seger: Okay. Well I'll figure that out in the meantime.
Thomas Stewart: Okay.
Freddy Holtz: Okay.
Jerry Seger: Okay. | Jerry Seger opened the meeting and stated the agenda. Freddy Holtz discussed user preferences in terms of the appearance and use of remotes, finding that users wanted fancier looking remotes, disliked losing their remotes, wanted remotes with fewer buttons, frequently use the channel changing and volume buttons, and that younger users wanted speech recognition. Walter Zander described how a remote works and how to go about designing one. He presented two remotes currently on the market and the advantages and disadvantages to each design. Thomas Stewart described the interior workings of a remote. Jerry Seger briefed the team on some new requirements and led them in a discussion about their target group, the option to include speech recognition, how to find a remote when lost, and batteries. | 1 | amisum | train |
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Julian Tindle: Mm yeah.
William Park: Okay. I g yeah. Time it?
Roland Brown: Fourteen twenty six.
William Park: Okay. Lovely to see you all again. Um it's our conceptual design meeting and it's starting at approximately fourteen twenty five and so we have forty minutes for this one again and so we'll go just after three o'clock. Um okay our agenda, we're gonna do an opening, I'm gonna review the minutes of the last meeting, then we'll have your three presentations um and then we'll have to make a decision on the remote control concepts, and we'll close.
Julian Tindle: Okay.
William Park: So opening. Um these are our minutes from r the functional design. We decided our target group is the focus on who can afford it, because we have international appeal and we said it's for all age groups, different um functions of it. Our main objectives were simplicity and fashion. And s um in specific functions are something to keep the remote from getting lost, large buttons for the essential functions, a possibility for extra functions, like a sliding a sliding piece and a long-life battery or a charging station. Okay, now three presentations. I'd like to do it in this order, first do the conceptual specification of components, properties and materials um
Julian Tindle: That would be Roland Brown.
William Park: and then the conceptual specification of user interface
Basil Phipps: Yep.
William Park: and finally trend watching.
Julian Tindle: Alright. Well.
William Park: Mm. 'kay.
William Park: Function F_ eight it. There we go.
Julian Tindle: Alright. Um I'm very excited by this one actually guys I uh had a lot of fun doing it. Components design. This is where you look at what does it take to make a remote control and what should we make our specific remote control out of. Um. So, we need to examine each element separately, but we're designing a full thing, so you wanna keep it integrated as a whole. The main elements of remote controls in general, and therefore ours as well, are the case, the buttons, the circuit board with the chip and the battery. These are all things that we had sort of addressed before, but I'm gonna take each one a little bit separately here as we figure out what they should be made of and what they should look like. The case, uh the options that I've gotten from headquarters about what we can do, um there's there's the shape of a case, we could do a flat sh a flat case, a curved case or maybe even a double double-curved case. I haven't seen any pictures of what this exactly looks like yet, just keep that in mind, but these are the options that we have from manufacturing and we can make our case out of plastic, the m the main base will be plastic, but we have all these sort of fashion and technological elements we can add in, wood, latex, titanium, rubber or other coloured types of plastic. That would be our case. Um buttons, for buttons we have um pushbuttons, which is what Real Reaction uses the most often, but we also have scror scroll wheels, which can
William Park: Mm.
Julian Tindle: have integrated pushbuttons, or we could go all high-tech and have an L_ L_C_D_ screen. Um circuit board and chip we can have a simple one, a regular one or an advanced one, depending on what our other needs are. And then battery I think is where things get most exciting. We're talking about long-life batteries here. Um we can we can have your sort of basic double A_ batteries, but we also have these options of um using a kinetic battery, like are used in high-tech watches, where you just have to move it a little bit to get it to power up. Um so simple movements like pushing buttons would recharge the battery. Or a solar battery, although there are slight um complications with solar batteries as in we can't use a latex case if we have a solar battery.
William Park: Hmm.
Julian Tindle: Or um something they only described as the type of battery you find in torches from about fifty years ago, flashlights. Not quite sure what that is, but that's the description that I received, so that's what I'm passing on to you. So those are our options. Um personal preferences that I was thinking through here's what we've been talking about all through, fashion and simplicity. So if we're going for fashion in our cases, I think that what we're gonna wanna look at is a curved or a double-curved case, probably with a variety of design elements. Maybe titanium, maybe some wood. We're gonna have to investigate that better when I get specifics of the actual materials, but that's sort of what I have in mind. And we wanna go for simplicity. Probably pushbuttons, but I'm sort of intrigued by the idea of a scroll scroll
William Park: Mm.
Julian Tindle: wheel, if anyone has anything any ideas on that? I mean I know the iPods and things right now have touch scroll um buttons which are exactly like what they're describing, so that might be something we wanna look into. And I'm really intrigued by the idea of a kinetic battery. Solar I don't think would be such a good idea, because how often are you sure that your remote control will get a certain amount of light. But this idea of the kinetic, that you don't have to replace, and that a simple just shaking it around will make it work, I think that that m would be a very interesting thing. But I think we'd also wanna go for e a simple chip or regular chip to keep our costs down. Uh we really only need a regular or advanced chip t if we're gonna start using an L_C_D_. So I think we want to be aware of not making things overly t technological if they don't need to be, 'cause that'll keep our manufacturing price way down. That's what I have for options. Um I'd appreciate anyone's input, but that's what I'm seeing for the future of the the look of this thing.
Roland Brown: Is double-curved like would be like two hands kind of thing?
Julian Tindle: I'm not sure. I haven't received any specific
Roland Brown: Okay.
Julian Tindle: visuals
Roland Brown: 'Cause I'm
Julian Tindle: of
Roland Brown: imagining
Julian Tindle: this yet.
Roland Brown: like double-curved is like, you know, like two sides that curve
Julian Tindle: This is
Roland Brown: and
Julian Tindle: what
Roland Brown: then like
Julian Tindle: I'm sort
Roland Brown: one
Julian Tindle: of
Roland Brown: curve would just be like a single vertical-ish kind of looking
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Roland Brown: thing, but I've
Julian Tindle: I'm
Roland Brown: no idea.
Julian Tindle: not sure, but I'll let you know as soon as I get any pictures.
Roland Brown: Sounds good.
William Park: Yeah, I wonder
Julian Tindle: I know if we do have a double-curved case, it can't have any titanium in it. But the titanium, they were quite they're marketing quite hard to us as being used in the space programme, so that could be quite interesting. Space-age remote.
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Julian Tindle: Just all things
William Park: Just
Julian Tindle: to
William Park: an interesting
Julian Tindle: keep in mind.
William Park: marketing kind of
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
William Park: element.
Julian Tindle: That's about all I have to do, guys. quickly.
William Park: Uh just a real quick question um the weight of these different elements,
Julian Tindle: Yeah,
William Park: have
Julian Tindle: n
William Park: you
Julian Tindle: no
William Park: no
Julian Tindle: idea,
William Park: idea, okay.
Julian Tindle: no idea. Um I'm assuming that a kinetic battery isn't gonna take up that much weight,
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Julian Tindle: and that a tita titanium is very light, I know,
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Julian Tindle: um but other than that's really basic, I mean, that's all I have gotten so far.
William Park: Okay.
Julian Tindle: Alright? Any other questions?
Basil Phipps: Uh-huh. Don't think so.
Julian Tindle: No? Okay.
William Park: Mm 'kay.
Julian Tindle: I have save this in the uh shared projects, if anyone wants to look
William Park: Thank you, perfect.
Julian Tindle: and
Roland Brown: Thanks.
Julian Tindle: I have c considerable notes on the topic as well, if anyone needs any more information. Uh
William Park: Um if you made notes yourself you can put those on our um underneath our
Julian Tindle: Just in
William Park: oh,
Julian Tindle: my notebook,
William Park: uh in your book, then don't worry about
Julian Tindle: but if
William Park: that.
Julian Tindle: anyone has any specific questions, don't hesitate to email Roland Brown or something. Alright? Uh I guess I can
William Park: 'Kay now we're um concepts concepts of user interface. Yeah, um. This one's so much tighter than the other one.
Julian Tindle: I know.
William Park: Okay. Nope. There we go. Here you are.
Basil Phipps: Jess.
Julian Tindle: G oh, geez.
Basil Phipps: Alright, so I'm gonna describe the the concept of the user interface of this des device. Um we've talked about uh the two essential properties of the user interface. We want it to be simple and we want it to be fashionable. Um other we've also got to remember that this is a device that serves as a useful purpose. Uh we want people to be able to use it s as a remote control, so we need determine what the essential functions of the d of the device are and make sure that we include that we've included all of those and that we actually end up with a device that is going to be useful to people. We have a number of different choices for a design concept um and s that's that's something that that I'll show you some examples of um, but essentially we need to choose how how is this device going to work, how how what kind of model is there going to be for user interaction with this device. Uh once we've chosen a a concept for it, we can then design the features around the concept, making sure that we get all the essential functions in the device and uh the extra functions and the more advanced features. And of course we also have to make it look cool. So basically, that's what we don't want. M we don't want lots of buttons, uh complicated features. We want something that looks nice and simple. Here's a
Julian Tindle: Hmm.
Basil Phipps: a fairly simple device. This is an an iPod from Apple. Um I think the main thing to notice about it is it just has four buttons. It's very minimalistic in its design. Uh you use these four buttons to m to move around a range of settings on the small L_C_D_ screen. Um the thing I like about this is that it's very very quick to access the main features. Uh you can just about make out uh that the button three buttons are uh previous track, next track and play pause. They're the main the main features of the iPod, the things you will use a all the time. Um then if you want to do anything more advanced, you go into the little menu on the L_C_D_ screen and you use the buttons just to scroll around and and find the more advanced features that you want. So I think that's that's a good a good kind of model that we could have. Um here's a another example. This is uh it's an interesting idea and I think i it looks pretty cool. Um it's certainly got novelty value. Uh
William Park: Mm.
Basil Phipps: it's nice and colourful, it's nice and bright. Uh it's also something that you can kind of feel your way around. The buttons are are different shapes and and you can sort of yeah if you're watching T_V_ in the dark or whatever, you can work out which button's which and basically, yeah it's ith it's fun. So I I like I like this idea of just having buttons for the features that you use most often. So you'd need a few buttons to select your favourite channels. I mean most people, when they watch T_V_, they have two hundred and fifty channels on their T_V_ and they watch of 'bout four of them at the most. So, you have buttons for your favourite channel, changing the volume, which is something you do all the time when you're watching T_V_, and the button to switch it off, in case you get bored. Um other features, things like adjusting the brightness, tuning the T_V_, uh I don't know what else you do with a T_V_. Um but these are these are all necessary functions. Uh you can't have a t there's no point having a television that you can't tune or that you can't set the contrast, so we need to find a way of including these somehow. Um and one other suggestions I'd make is to in is to include in a menu system, a bit like on the iPod. So we'd either have a small L_C_D_ display on the device itself, or uh have a dis a menu display that comes up on your television and can b be controlled through the device.
Julian Tindle: Hmm.
Basil Phipps: And that would allow you to access access the advanced features uh whilst keeping a very small and simple set of buttons for the features that you use most often.
William Park: Okay.
Julian Tindle: So you'd be advocating an L_C_D_ then?
Basil Phipps: I think that's that's one way to go, yes.
Julian Tindle: Okay.
Basil Phipps: Um I mean there are there are advantages and disadvantages if you if you have an L_C_D_ display, it's it's nice, because it's it it lets you just sort of sit there and st and control your television from your armchair.
Julian Tindle: Mm-hmm.
Basil Phipps: There are disadvantages, an an L_C_D_ display would have to be quite small, 'cause we're
Julian Tindle: Right.
Basil Phipps: we're I well we're I assume we're gonna be making quite a small device. Um it would also have to have uh a kind of backlighting in it, 'cause you ten you tend to watch
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Basil Phipps: T_V_ in the dark,
Julian Tindle: Right.
Basil Phipps: but you need to be able to see your L_D_D_ L_C_D_ display. The alternative is to have a an on-screen display on your television that you control through your remote control. Uh have these um digital boxes where you you press the buttons and it comes up with your this thing of watch lo what's
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Basil Phipps: on each channel. I mean
Julian Tindle: Okay.
Basil Phipps: that that's also a good idea. It's it can it does have it's problems as well, if you've got a small T_V_ and you're sitting on the other
William Park: Mm.
Basil Phipps: side of a room, it's hard to read the little text that comes up.
Julian Tindle: Mm-hmm.
Basil Phipps: Uh but that's a that's a design decision that we can make.
Julian Tindle: 'Kay.
William Park: I do think that um one of the important features for a remote is seeing a menu and seeing what's on. Um
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
William Park: and so like favourite channels is is applicable, but I think th that you do need to have some kind of function where it's um you have t you can see
Julian Tindle: Well
William Park: the title of the show or possibly a description of it.
Julian Tindle: Are you
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
William Park: Like
Julian Tindle: are you
William Park: I
Julian Tindle: tak
William Park: I know I use
Roland Brown: Wait,
William Park: that
Roland Brown: but is
William Park: often
Roland Brown: that separate
William Park: enough.
Roland Brown: from what he was saying?
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
William Park: Well if it if it was a L_ L_C_D_ on th on the remote, I don't know that you could f that you'd
Julian Tindle: No,
William Park: be able to
Julian Tindle: I
William Park: see
Julian Tindle: think
William Park: a
Julian Tindle: I think we're talking menu like contrast and
William Park: Okay.
Julian Tindle: tuning the V_C_R_ or something if I've understood you correctly,
Basil Phipps: Yeah, that
Julian Tindle: rather than
Basil Phipps: that
Julian Tindle: menu
Basil Phipps: would be one
Julian Tindle: as
Basil Phipps: of the
Julian Tindle: what's
Basil Phipps: features,
Julian Tindle: on.
Basil Phipps: yes.
William Park: Okay.
Basil Phipps: But it's
William Park: 'Cause that would
Basil Phipps: it's
William Park: be more specifically
Basil Phipps: it's
William Park: a
Basil Phipps: something
William Park: digital
Basil Phipps: to bear
William Park: box,
Basil Phipps: in mind is that
William Park: mm-hmm.
Basil Phipps: if we put a display on the remote control the c uh communication is one way, so you can't have the televisions and information back to the remote control,
Julian Tindle: Oh,
Basil Phipps: at
Julian Tindle: good
Basil Phipps: least
Julian Tindle: point.
Basil Phipps: I
William Park: Mm.
Basil Phipps: don't think you can. Um I'm not sure.
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
William Park: Okay, now
Roland Brown: Should
William Park: we're
Roland Brown: I plug
William Park: moving
Roland Brown: that
William Park: on
Roland Brown: in?
William Park: to market. Marketing.
Basil Phipps: Is that going on? Okay.
Roland Brown: Maybe it's just not
Basil Phipps: Uh that should
Roland Brown: Is it
Basil Phipps: be
Roland Brown: on?
Basil Phipps: alright, actually.
Roland Brown: Ri What F_ do you have to press, five?
William Park: Eight.
Roland Brown: I just keep pressing lots of 'em. Well, I don't know how relevant all of this gonna be. If anything, the that they gave Roland Brown.
Julian Tindle: No
William Park: Oops,
Julian Tindle: signal.
William Park: it's not plugged in, quite
Roland Brown: Alright.
William Park: in well enough. There we are.
Julian Tindle: Oop, there we go.
William Park: Mm 'kay.
Roland Brown: Oh yeah. Okay, so we're gonna look a little bit at trend watching. Basically, I was given um an executive summary that was a market investigation on remote controls that was recently conducted, and then also some fashion watchers in Paris and Milan commented on some things that are gonna be going on this year. So first um they had people they ranked um the important aspects of r remote controls, and right now i d they're saying that currently there's a functional look and feel preference, but that really, over the next year it it that's gonna be switching to fancy look and feel remotes, so that just goes back to the whole desire of our c Real Reaction company wanting to focus on fashion and so, even though we're stressing, when we're talking, we've all been talking about this like simplicity and easy to use idea, they're sort of wanting us to remember that the number one thing for everyone is that it's fancy look and feel. And as these are ranked, the top one is doubly important to the second one, which is doubly important to the third one, so
Julian Tindle: Okay.
Roland Brown: just to take that weight into account. The second thing that was mentioned as important was the technological innovations. That would be like if we use something like the space material or the L_C_D_ screen, things like that. And then ease of use was the third most important, whi so really, no matter what, we need to focus the most on fancy look and feel, according to this. I don't know how much we agree with that. And then the fashion watch talks about that this year's top trend for clothes, shoes and furniture is fruits and vegetables and tha that there's a preference
William Park: S sweet.
Roland Brown: for spongy, tight material. And so that brings us to my personal preferences. Who wants a spongy remote or one with fruit and vegetable padding. Personally, I don't really think that I want one that's gonna go out of style or go stale, excuse the pun, um in a year, so even though this is coming from us as, you know, trend watch, market research, I don't know how much of it we necessarily wanna take away. Also, considering that the d research b has been carried out by Real Reaction, I'm a little hesitant as to like, how these questions may have been worded, and if necessarily this whole fashion to technology y edas ease of use is necessarily the right ranking. Personally, like I might reverse it, but if we're working for this company then I guess no matter what, we have to stress fashion the most. But it
Julian Tindle: Mm.
Roland Brown: doesn't necessarily need to be a spongy material.
Julian Tindle: That there's all kinds of scope for imagination in that one though.
Roland Brown: Yeah. I don't have a lot of notes to share if you want them, that pretty much sums it up. So yeah.
William Park: Okay, do we have any s some questions for this, let's
Roland Brown: Yeah,
William Park: see um.
Roland Brown: what can I possibly enlighten on?
William Park: Um do you have any ideas how to possibly use these? Um how to how to use a fruit or vegetable or um or the spongy material at all? Like could we make a s like could we make a spongy remote? It would be easier
Julian Tindle: If
William Park: on
Julian Tindle: it's
William Park: the hands.
Julian Tindle: latex if it's latexy
William Park: It's kind of
Julian Tindle: Um,
William Park: and then it
Julian Tindle: mean
Basil Phipps: A kind of
William Park: we
Basil Phipps: thing
William Park: would have to
Basil Phipps: that
William Park: find a way to protect like the chip and all that, I dunno.
Julian Tindle: An
William Park: But
Julian Tindle: uh I if th my understanding of a latex case is that it's in fact hard to protect stuff inside, but that
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Julian Tindle: it's covered with the latex, which is spongier and softer on your hands. It's there's something to be said, I mean we we got that thing earlier from you about um not wanting it to R_ R_ repetitive stress injuries
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Julian Tindle: and
Roland Brown: Mm-hmm.
Julian Tindle: things
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
Julian Tindle: and and Yeah,
Roland Brown: Yeah, so something, m
Julian Tindle: something
Roland Brown: m instead of
Julian Tindle: grippable,
Roland Brown: a necess
Julian Tindle: I mean
Roland Brown: yeah,
Julian Tindle: we don't
Roland Brown: grip,
Julian Tindle: we don't
Roland Brown: I'm thinking
Julian Tindle: we don't wanna go
Roland Brown: grip
Julian Tindle: spongy,
Roland Brown: more than
Julian Tindle: maybe.
Roland Brown: like sinking into your hands,
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
Roland Brown: you know, i and I
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
Roland Brown: think I'm envisioning more like,
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Roland Brown: you know, the material that you have when you sit on like a bicycle, so
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Roland Brown: that it doesn't hurt when
Julian Tindle: Mm-hmm.
Roland Brown: you're sitting down for a long time, like I'm imagining that sort of thing, I don't know what th that
Julian Tindle: Yeah,
Roland Brown: material's
Julian Tindle: I think
Roland Brown: called.
Julian Tindle: that given the list of materials I w I was forwarded it's that seems doable. could we go in fruit and vegetable colours? We could colour-co-ordinate
William Park: F for
Julian Tindle: them,
William Park: sure, or maybe
Julian Tindle: li
William Park: like um couple main ones being like, I dunno, lemons or strawberries or something.
Julian Tindle: The buttons could be fruit-shaped.
William Park: Could they be smelly?
Basil Phipps: I
Julian Tindle: Oh
Roland Brown: Oh God.
Basil Phipps: Is it supposed to be shaped like a vegetable? Uh
William Park: I
Basil Phipps: like
William Park: don't
Basil Phipps: uh
William Park: know.
Basil Phipps: I dunno, like uh carrots or something.
Julian Tindle: well it's
William Park: Or
Julian Tindle: quite easy
William Park: carrot
Julian Tindle: to s
William Park: shaped,
Julian Tindle: shape thing
William Park: mm.
Julian Tindle: like carrot isn't it?
Basil Phipps: Maybe,
Julian Tindle: Or maybe the
Basil Phipps: or
Julian Tindle: buttons could be shaped
William Park: Like large
Julian Tindle: like different
William Park: button,
Julian Tindle: fruits.
William Park: that's what I was thinking of, yeah.
Roland Brown: What about the idea of like a round remote? Instead of like a vertical up and down one. Like
Basil Phipps: Kind
Roland Brown: in
Basil Phipps: of
Roland Brown: terms
Basil Phipps: like a
Roland Brown: of
Basil Phipps: potato.
Roland Brown: holding it. Like that's a f shape
Julian Tindle: be yeah.
Roland Brown: of a fruit.
Julian Tindle: It'd
Roland Brown: Just
William Park: Might
Roland Brown: to
William Park: would you
Roland Brown: tie
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
William Park: think you
Roland Brown: it
William Park: you
Roland Brown: in a little.
William Park: do you think you'd be able to hold it? 'Cause I think the reason they're long
Julian Tindle: be harder
William Park: is
Julian Tindle: to f bu uh buttons
William Park: yeah.
Julian Tindle: I think. It'd be harder to press
Basil Phipps: Depends.
Julian Tindle: button.
William Park: Harder to push.
Basil Phipps: When you when you use a remote, do you press the buttons with your thumb, usually?
Roland Brown: Yeah.
Basil Phipps: Or your fingers?
Julian Tindle: Um
William Park: I usually hold it in one hand. Maybe
Basil Phipps: Or maybe
Julian Tindle: I
Basil Phipps: you want something that's shaped like a mobile phone, so you you hold it in one hand, and you press the buttons
Julian Tindle: Yeah,
William Park: But then
Basil Phipps: with
William Park: the buttons
Basil Phipps: your thumb.
William Park: would
Julian Tindle: that's
William Park: have to be very small.
Julian Tindle: ts how I tend to do it.
Roland Brown: Yeah,
William Park: Don't
Roland Brown: 'cause
William Park: you think?
Julian Tindle: No
Roland Brown: otherwise
Julian Tindle: just
Roland Brown: your
Julian Tindle: thumb-sized.
Roland Brown: fingers can't move around.
Julian Tindle: Jus
Roland Brown: But
William Park: But
Roland Brown: I like
William Park: I mean
Roland Brown: i
William Park: in order to get to all of them,
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
William Park: you know.
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
William Park: They would have to be within
Basil Phipps: Maybe.
William Park: a certain amount
Julian Tindle: That's
William Park: of
Basil Phipps: But
Julian Tindle: true.
William Park: space
Basil Phipps: if you've only
William Park: with
Basil Phipps: got
William Park: each other.
Basil Phipps: like four or five buttons anyway, then it's it's not
Julian Tindle: Right.
Basil Phipps: so much a problem, perhaps.
Julian Tindle: I When I'm when I'm pressing buttons on my iPod, that's how I do it, hold it and press
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Julian Tindle: the
Basil Phipps: So
Julian Tindle: four.
Basil Phipps: you hold it in one hand
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Basil Phipps: and you press you press the buttons
Julian Tindle: Yeah,
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Basil Phipps: with
Julian Tindle: or
Basil Phipps: your thumb
Julian Tindle: in and use
Basil Phipps: and
Julian Tindle: my thumb or my pointer finger on the touch scroll wheel.
Basil Phipps: And
Roland Brown: I
Basil Phipps: you find
Roland Brown: love
Basil Phipps: that works
Roland Brown: the idea
Basil Phipps: quite well?
Roland Brown: of the
Julian Tindle: Yeah
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Roland Brown: wheel like the iPod.
Basil Phipps: Is
Roland Brown: 'Cause
Basil Phipps: that
Roland Brown: th
Basil Phipps: The button on an iPod, is it what is it, is it just four buttons or is it
Roland Brown: It's
Basil Phipps: li
Roland Brown: like
Basil Phipps: more
Roland Brown: five,
Basil Phipps: like
William Park: It's a
Basil Phipps: a
William Park: scroll,
Basil Phipps: scroll
Roland Brown: 'cause
Basil Phipps: thing?
Roland Brown: there's
Julian Tindle: It
William Park: yeah,
Roland Brown: one
Julian Tindle: wel
William Park: it's
Roland Brown: in the
William Park: a
Roland Brown: middle.
William Park: wheel.
Julian Tindle: well yeah, it would I mean each version of it has been a little bit different,
William Park: The one I have
Julian Tindle: but
William Park: doesn't have the four on i like
Julian Tindle: Oh yeah,
William Park: around
Julian Tindle: you had
William Park: it,
Julian Tindle: one
William Park: I don't
Julian Tindle: of the
William Park: think.
Julian Tindle: in-between ones, when they weren't doing that anymore.
Julian Tindle: Ts
Basil Phipps: Right.
Julian Tindle: and you press the centre button, that's that's
Basil Phipps: Oh,
Julian Tindle: your all-purpose
Basil Phipps: I see,
Julian Tindle: select
Basil Phipps: right, yeah.
Julian Tindle: button right there.
Basil Phipps: Oh, okay.
Julian Tindle: Since it's the
Basil Phipps: Yeah,
Julian Tindle: one
Basil Phipps: that's
Julian Tindle: in the
Basil Phipps: quite
Julian Tindle: centre
Basil Phipps: a good
Julian Tindle: that's
Basil Phipps: design.
Julian Tindle: not marked, yeah.
Roland Brown: I think why it would be good for us is 'cause like you could have the same wheel sort of effect for like channel flipping and then the other
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Roland Brown: one could be like for volume. Like just the idea of like those so few buttons
Julian Tindle: Uh
Roland Brown: for main
Julian Tindle: uh t
Roland Brown: things, but then how you could go back to the menu and like, I dunno if we would want it on the screen there or on the actual T_V_. I kind of am wanting
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Roland Brown: to say on the T_V_, 'cause if you're changing
Julian Tindle: Hmm.
Roland Brown: the brightness, don't you wanna see it happening, kind
William Park: Mm.
Roland Brown: of?
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Roland Brown: And then
Julian Tindle: Yeah, I
Roland Brown: you
Julian Tindle: think
Roland Brown: could still
Julian Tindle: an
Roland Brown: have
Julian Tindle: L_C_D_
Roland Brown: that available.
Julian Tindle: screen might be good in theory, but not as useful
Basil Phipps: I think
Julian Tindle: in
Basil Phipps: it
Julian Tindle: practice.
Basil Phipps: could be difficult in practice, yeah.
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Basil Phipps: Also z yeah, 'cause you would be z looking down at the L_C_D_ screen, than
Julian Tindle: Right.
Basil Phipps: back up at your T_V_ and
Roland Brown: Mm-hmm.
Basil Phipps: people
Julian Tindle: Um
Basil Phipps: don't wanna do that.
William Park: Okay um
Julian Tindle: Oh we
William Park: we
Julian Tindle: probably have
William Park: have
Julian Tindle: to get going, don't
William Park: we've
Julian Tindle: we?
William Park: about fifteen minutes left, so I'm I'm gonna
Roland Brown: Uh-huh.
William Park: continue with my pres presentation. Um I've one more slide before we close, but in that slide is when we need to make decisions about this these kinds of things, so I'll just
Julian Tindle: 'Kay.
William Park: bring that up and show you all before we move on. Um
Roland Brown: If I get
Julian Tindle: Could
Roland Brown: any more information of fruits and vegetables,
Julian Tindle: Could we
Roland Brown: I'll let
Julian Tindle: uh
Roland Brown: you know.
Julian Tindle: could we have changeable covers like for your mobile?
Basil Phipps: Like,
Julian Tindle: In different
Basil Phipps: to
Julian Tindle: fruit
Basil Phipps: make
Julian Tindle: and
Basil Phipps: it
Julian Tindle: vegetable
Basil Phipps: different fruits.
Julian Tindle: colours, yeah.
Basil Phipps: Yeah, it's possible.
William Park: Yeah, and then like the the covers could be spongy latex
Julian Tindle: Exactly.
William Park: wherea but the actual model could be titanium.
Julian Tindle: And you could co-ordinate with your house or whatever.
Basil Phipps: I
Julian Tindle: All
Basil Phipps: think
Julian Tindle: these
Basil Phipps: maybe
Julian Tindle: options.
Basil Phipps: th the packaging, it should be like a lemon and the the packaging is like the peel. So
Julian Tindle: Ooh.
Basil Phipps: instead of opening the box you just kind of peel it, and the remote control's inside.
Roland Brown: Well, there we
Julian Tindle: Oh.
Roland Brown: go.
Basil Phipps: Don't know.
William Park: Ah hmm
Roland Brown: The
William Park: hmm
Roland Brown: iPod packaging
William Park: hmm.
Roland Brown: is Roland Brown like was so that was like half the fun. It's
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Roland Brown: like the way it all comes all cute.
Julian Tindle: Mm.
Roland Brown: Lemons?
Julian Tindle: Options.
William Park: Okay, um components concept. Energy, chip
Julian Tindle: Uh-hu oh,
William Park: on print.
Julian Tindle: oh yes. Right,
William Park: G
Julian Tindle: I had sort of skipped over that hoping it wouldn't get be necessary but um
William Park: That's th th this is the agenda they gave Roland Brown. So
Julian Tindle: Alright,
William Park: can you just explain
Julian Tindle: so
William Park: what that
Julian Tindle: um
William Park: is real quick?
Julian Tindle: decisions, what the okay deci decisions on energy I'm thinking is based on the battery.
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Julian Tindle: Um I dunno, what do people think about this kinetic battery idea?
William Park: I think it's awesome. I
Julian Tindle: Am
William Park: think
Julian Tindle: I
William Park: it's really cool.
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Roland Brown: Yeah, I mean, it would t totally take care of our problem of not wanting to change batteries.
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Basil Phipps: Yeah, um I think it's good, as as long as we consider the the cost and the uh how reliable it is, but
Julian Tindle: Right,
Basil Phipps: as far
Julian Tindle: I haven't
Basil Phipps: as I know,
Julian Tindle: gotten
Basil Phipps: the technology
Julian Tindle: any
Basil Phipps: is good.
Roland Brown: Costs.
Julian Tindle: yeah, any more information on cost other than it's more expensive than a regular battery, but um
Roland Brown: But over time
Julian Tindle: but if we're using a an i a cheaper chip, then it'll even out, I think. Um circuit boards. Um yeah, I got a whole bunch of information on how circuit boards are produced. They're they're thin fibreglass with copper wires etched on to them, and di I think they're quite easily printed on by machine, which is chip on print is where the machine prints on the wires and solders it all together for us. I don't really know what to tell you as far as decisions. I wasn't really given any options, I was just given that this is how they're done.
William Park: Okay.
Julian Tindle: Um yeah, I can't can't really tell you. I can I can tell you a whole lot about how it works. But I don't know any decisions on
William Park: If they're if they're really options.
Julian Tindle: Yeah. I'm sorry, I did
William Park: Okay.
Basil Phipps: Al
Julian Tindle: f
Basil Phipps: all circuit boards are pretty much the same, I think. Uh it's fairly fairly standard.
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
William Park: then we'll move on to the case. Um oh bu I guess maybe if we decided on like a simple, a regular, or an advanced
Julian Tindle: Right.
William Park: chip,
Julian Tindle: Well
William Park: maybe.
Julian Tindle: okay, here's the here's the thing on the chips that I that I got. Um simple, regular, advanced chip on print. The chip on print includes an infrared sensor, so we don't have to worry about that. Um, 'kay, the pushbutton if we're gonna have pushbuttons, they require a simple chip, but a scroll wheel requires a regular chip, and an L_C_D_ requires advanced. Do we want a scroll wheel, or do we just want pushbuttons?
Basil Phipps: Um I don't think we ne really need the scroll whe wheel. I mean it might be nice for changing the volume.
Julian Tindle: Oh.
William Park: It would
Basil Phipps: Uh
William Park: be nice for changing
Basil Phipps: but
William Park: the volume, but I don't know how useful it'd be for changing the channel.
Basil Phipps: I don't
William Park: 'Cause
Basil Phipps: think
William Park: you
Basil Phipps: it
William Park: don't
Basil Phipps: would
Roland Brown: Yeah,
William Park: have
Roland Brown: it's
Basil Phipps: really
William Park: control
Basil Phipps: work.
Roland Brown: a
William Park: over numbers or
Basil Phipps: Yeah, you
Julian Tindle: Yeah,
Basil Phipps: really need buttons
Julian Tindle: th
Basil Phipps: for
Julian Tindle: it'd
Basil Phipps: changing
Julian Tindle: be
Basil Phipps: a channel.
Julian Tindle: it'd be handy for going through if there was an on-screen menu of your channel choices,
Roland Brown: But
Julian Tindle: than
Roland Brown: if
Julian Tindle: you
Roland Brown: you
Julian Tindle: can
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
Julian Tindle: scroll
Roland Brown: c if you
Julian Tindle: down
Roland Brown: could scroll
Julian Tindle: on the scroll.
Roland Brown: through the channels, and then
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Roland Brown: the volume would just
William Park: We have
Roland Brown: be
William Park: five minutes left for the meeting, so.
Roland Brown: and the volume would just be like the same way,
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Roland Brown: forward and backward as I'm just thinking like it would make it much like sleeker sort of looking.
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
Roland Brown: And
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
Roland Brown: otherwise, no matter how may buttons we have, we're gonna have like, you know, black with red sticking out and th no it's gonna inevitably sort of start looking like
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
Roland Brown: those group of sort of ugly ones that we saw stacked up.
Julian Tindle: Hmm.
William Park: So, have a scroll for volume?
Julian Tindle: F or for all those secret
William Park: F
Julian Tindle: functions? When you get on the on-screen menu of all your functions that your remote could do for you without the buttons and you could have a scroll wheel to go through those menus.
Basil Phipps: I think yeah, I think a scroll wheel would be nice, but it's not necessary.
Julian Tindle: Right.
Basil Phipps: Um
Julian Tindle: So we could either go with a simple or a regular chip, depending and maybe we could table that decision for later.
William Park: Um.
Julian Tindle: I don't know.
William Park: I think w well I think when we go on to the une userface, we're gonna have to decide the interface we're gonna have to decide
Julian Tindle: Okay.
William Park: um whether we're gonna have a scroll or not.
Julian Tindle: Well, let's think about that while we talk about the case.
William Park: Okay, let's do case.
Julian Tindle: Uh I'm kinda liking the idea of latex, if if spongy
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
Julian Tindle: is the in thing.
William Park: I'm a little um I'm a little hesitant about it, because I'm worried about protecting the stuff on the inside.
Julian Tindle: Okay.
William Park: Um
Roland Brown: Oh could it be hard, and then
Julian Tindle: Uh yeah,
Roland Brown: something around
Julian Tindle: everything
Roland Brown: it?
Julian Tindle: I've
William Park: Yeah, I would be more okay with like a titanium actual thing and then maybe
Julian Tindle: N oh
William Park: like
Julian Tindle: wha
William Park: a mobile phone
Julian Tindle: what I've
William Park: kind of thing.
Julian Tindle: what I've seen, just not related to this,
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Julian Tindle: but of latex cases before, is that there's uh like a hard plastic inside, and it's just covered with the latex.
William Park: Okay.
Julian Tindle: Not too thick a layer
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Julian Tindle: of latex, just enough to be grippable,
William Park: Okay.
Julian Tindle: like bike handles or or anything that you've seen like that. The inside is hard. I don't think we need to worry about protecting
William Park: Ge o
Julian Tindle: the circuit board, I think that that's done for us.
William Park: Okay.
Basil Phipps: 'Kay. Yeah.
William Park: So we uh we do want latex.
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
William Park: Okay. Latex. Um and probably in colours, maybe fruity, vegetable colours.
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
William Park: Fruity colours. Okay um let's go to the ufe user interface then we'll come back to the chip I suppose.
Julian Tindle: Oh and we want a curved case, yeah? Or a double-curved?
William Park: Well, we don't really know what the difference is, right?
Roland Brown: I'm thinking curved of some sort.
William Park: Yeah.
Julian Tindle: Yeah,
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
Julian Tindle: okay. We don't really know what the difference
William Park: Um okay, interface, the type and the supplements. So
Basil Phipps: Um
William Park: push or scroll, right?
Basil Phipps: Yep.
William Park: Or both?
Basil Phipps: Um And I think if we wanna keep our costs down, we should just go for pushbuttons, 'cause then we can have a a simple chip and it's simpler, it's it's cheaper to make pushbuttons than it is a scroll button.
Julian Tindle: Good point.
Basil Phipps: So in terms
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Basil Phipps: of uh in terms of uh economics it's probably better to have pushbuttons.
William Park: And if we had a sc an on-screen um kind of thing that you could scroll through, like you can use your buttons to scroll through things.
Basil Phipps: Yeah, yeah, it's uh
William Park: I think
Basil Phipps: it's
William Park: that
Basil Phipps: it's fairly simple.
William Park: yeah. For channel surfing I think a scroll an actual like an iPod's kind of scroll thing would be too fast,
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
William Park: I dunno.
Julian Tindle: I say pushbuttons at least unless we get any information but I have no idea how much more expensive a scroll wheel is than than a pushbutton, but it's gotta be some more expensive, so
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
Julian Tindle: I think it might be better to put our money into the stuff like the kinetic battery and the cool case
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
Julian Tindle: because
William Park: Is that okay
Basil Phipps: Interesting.
William Park: with you? How you feeling?
Roland Brown: Yeah. And let's like see if we get anything else. I mean I'm not like hard-sold on the scroll wheel, it's more just to give it a different kind of look,
William Park: Mm-hmm.
Roland Brown: but if it's gonna be in a latex type thing
William Park: It might
Roland Brown: and that's
William Park: be cool
Roland Brown: gonna look
William Park: enough.
Roland Brown: cool, then that's probably gonna have a bigger impact than the scroll wheel.
Julian Tindle: Yeah.
William Park: Okay, so we're gonna go with um type pushbuttons,
Basil Phipps: Yep.
William Park: and then supplements, how are we gonna do that?
Basil Phipps: Uh what do you mean by supplements, exactly?
William Park: Um I assume that's what else we're gonna like h ha the um the additional buttons we can use.
Basil Phipps: Um
Julian Tindle: Oh.
William Park: So we're gonna have like a menu button,
Basil Phipps: Yep.
William Park: so that we can access on-screen things
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
William Park: then? Okay, um
Julian Tindle: Alright.
William Park: so
Basil Phipps: Um
William Park: we're
Basil Phipps: in
William Park: doing an on-screen menu
Julian Tindle: So what
William Park: that
Julian Tindle: are
William Park: we
Basil Phipps: Yeah.
William Park: can
Julian Tindle: what
William Park: scroll
Julian Tindle: are our
William Park: through.
Julian Tindle: buttons gonna be? On off
Basil Phipps: On off, uh volume, favourite channels, uh
Julian Tindle: So like one
Basil Phipps: and
Julian Tindle: through
Basil Phipps: menu.
Julian Tindle: five, or
Basil Phipps: Yeah,
Roland Brown: Like a
Basil Phipps: yeah
Roland Brown: radio
Basil Phipps: about
Roland Brown: type sorta situation?
Basil Phipps: yeah like yeah, a bit like radio presets. Um
William Park: Pre-set channels and then we're gonna need um numbers one through zero, right?
Basil Phipps: Uh we wouldn't even need
Julian Tindle: No.
Basil Phipps: the numbers. I think maybe numbers seems is kind of
William Park: Well,
Basil Phipps: old-fashioned.
William Park: but in order to pre-set a cha oh I guess you can just hold it down
Basil Phipps: Yeah,
William Park: when you get
Basil Phipps: yeah,
William Park: to one
Basil Phipps: you can just
Julian Tindle: Mm.
William Park: when you're scrolling through.
Basil Phipps: and you need some kind of, I dunno, sort of up down kind of button,
Julian Tindle: Yeah,
Basil Phipps: but
Julian Tindle: up
Basil Phipps: the volume
Julian Tindle: down.
Basil Phipps: control could double for that, for example.
William Park: Mm-hmm. Okay, um finishing the meeting now. Um our next meeting starts in thirty minutes, um you each have things to do, look and feel design, user interface design, product evaluation, and you two are going to work together on a prototype using modelling clay. You'll get specific
Julian Tindle: Ooh.
William Park: instructions
Basil Phipps: Cool.
William Park: from your personal coach.
Roland Brown: Wow.
William Park: Um did we decide on a chip? Let's go with a simple chip?
Julian Tindle: Simple chip.
Basil Phipps: Yep.
William Park: Okay. We are done. Thank you everyone. Oh I di these are already in our shared folder,
Julian Tindle: Okay, cool.
William Park: so.
Julian Tindle: Clay.
Basil Phipps: Clay. I wasn't expecting that. | William Park recapped the decisions made in the previous meeting. Julian Tindle discussed possible materials to use in making the case for the remote, options for buttons, and options for batteries. The interface specialist presented two existing products which incorporate features the team is seeking to embed in their remote. The interface specialist also discussed other features to possibly incorporate into the design of the remote, such as an LCD screen. Roland Brown discussed recent findings from trend watching reports and how to incorporate these findings into the remote design with respect to what materials to use and the overall appearance of the product. The team then discussed other options for how they could incorporate a fruit and vegetable theme into the appearance of their product. The team then discussed other options for batteries, chips, buttons, and materials for the case, as well as the option to have a menu function. | 1 | amisum | train |
Robert Pruett: Okay um, welcome to our detailed design meeting I'm. pretty excited. Let's start it's approximately fifteen forty or something like that. Okay um the agenda we're gonna do an opening and then um I'll talk about the minutes from the last meeting, what we d discussed um, then we'll have the prototype presentation and a look at the evaluation criteria. We'll look at the finances and finally a do a production evaluation and close. So, starting off with the um last the last one, oh I don't have it here um, but we talked about energy, we're gonna use a kinetic battery um, we want to use a simple chip, because we're not gonna need a a shuffle um, we're gonna need a scroll um, we're choosing a latex case w in fruity colours that's curved and um we're using push buttons uh with a supplement of an on-screen menu. And it sounded like we had set um like eight or nine buttons, including five pre-set channels. Okay? Let's do the look and feel design presentation first.
Ismael Myers: Right, do you wanna start?
Henry Simoneau: Right, well we made three different prototypes and I guess we'll start with with this one. Um we have our colours not are not fixed, but this is the general shape. Um it's you hold it sort of either like like this in your left hand or you switch it over and uh it's easily adaptable to either hand. You can push the buttons with your thumb like a mobile phone, or you can push them with your index finger of your other hand, or even mean there's whole variety, you can hold it like this and press it with your same index finger. Uh we have the on off button at the tip, very visible, very big. We have our up and down buttons, which are also gonna be our channel selectors, and we have our little menu button here. If you push if you're just pushing these normally, they're the menu buttons, if uh the volume buttons rather. If you press select once, they become channel changing buttons. If we press select three times, the menu with the other features and pro possibly also with your T_V_ channel choices shows up, and you have your five presets down here. Um if people wanna grab hold of that, see how it feels in your hand. That's our number one prototype. Um do you wanna present the potato,
Robert Pruett: like a little
Henry Simoneau: or
Robert Pruett: lightning
Henry Simoneau: shall I
Ismael Myers: Okay,
Henry Simoneau: present
Robert Pruett: in it.
Henry Simoneau: the Martian?
Ismael Myers: um
Robert Pruett: The little lightning bolt in it,
Ismael Myers: What
Robert Pruett: very cute.
Ismael Myers: We call that one
Jerry Wilburn: I could
Ismael Myers: the rhombus, uh
Robert Pruett: The v the rhombus
Ismael Myers: the rhombus.
Henry Simoneau: That's
Robert Pruett: rhombus?
Henry Simoneau: the rhombus, yep.
Ismael Myers: Um this one is known as the potato, uh it's it's a how can I present it? It's an ergonomic shape, so it it fits in your hand nicely. Um it's designed to be used either in your left hand or or in your right hand. Um I've gone here just for just for four buttons on this one. Um two here for adjusting. So you've got volume up and volume down on the other side here. Um the red ones are for uh changing channels, channel up and channel down and that's um moves between your favourite channels that you've selected. Uh this middle button here brings up the on-screen menu and when you're working in the on-screen menu you use the other four buttons to navigate around the menu system and the middle button uh to select and that's basically it, that's the potato.
Robert Pruett: Um on, off?
Ismael Myers: Uh that would be one of your channels, basically, so
Robert Pruett: Okay.
Ismael Myers: like channel zero would be t to switch
Robert Pruett: Yeah we turn
Ismael Myers: switch
Robert Pruett: it off.
Ismael Myers: the machine off, yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: Could the middle button of the on-screen menu function as a power button?
Ismael Myers: Um not really, it would make it hard to turn
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Ismael Myers: the machine off, to turn your T_V_ off.
Henry Simoneau: If you pressed and held it maybe.
Ismael Myers: Yeah
Jerry Wilburn: If you like
Ismael Myers: yeah,
Jerry Wilburn: held
Ismael Myers: that
Jerry Wilburn: it down,
Ismael Myers: that'd be one
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Ismael Myers: way of doing it, yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: that would be
Ismael Myers: That'd
Jerry Wilburn: on
Ismael Myers: work,
Henry Simoneau: On
Jerry Wilburn: off.
Henry Simoneau: off, that's
Ismael Myers: yeah.
Henry Simoneau: a possibility, yeah.
Robert Pruett: Okay.
Henry Simoneau: And then finally we have um the Martian or the pear, either way. Um it's a bit different, just a little bit more of a creative feel. Uh you have the on off toggle stem on the top. We have the five preset seeds. And then you have on the sides to make it a little bit more three-dimensional, you have your channel changing, volume changing buttons and your menu button right here in the middle. So, that's for your consideration as well,
Ismael Myers: Let's pass.
Henry Simoneau: plus it's an interesting talking point to have standing up. We figured it could stand up like this on your table,
Robert Pruett: Uh-huh.
Henry Simoneau: if you wanted it to, if I made the bot the bottom flat.
Jerry Wilburn: Sorry, what's the yellow one in the middle, I forgot.
Henry Simoneau: Uh the menu select button.
Robert Pruett: Very interesting. I
Ismael Myers: So that's
Robert Pruett: think that one's my favourite.
Ismael Myers: So that's our three prototypes. Um basically, in terms of making decisions, what we'd need to do is first of all decide on a form uh which of the three different shapes we want, then decide what kind of button layout we want, how many buttons, and then to choose what colours we want to make the buttons and if we wanna put any text on the device, like label on the buttons or put a brand name or or
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Ismael Myers: a logo on it or whatever.
Henry Simoneau: We were we were thinking that normally we'd go for fruity colours, but maybe we're also thinking that your sort of middle aged man, for an example customer, might not want a fruity coloured remote, so m maybe we'd have one version that's a bit toned down,
Robert Pruett: Mm 'kay.
Henry Simoneau: maybe with with less contrasts on it. Yeah,
Ismael Myers: Would
Henry Simoneau: something still a little bright to make it
Ismael Myers: Yeah,
Henry Simoneau: hard to lose, but
Ismael Myers: but we don't want it to look like a kids' toy.
Henry Simoneau: yeah.
Robert Pruett: Now that was one thing that we brought up over email. I don't know if you picked up your email,
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: but um the f the um feature that we considered for it not getting lost.
Henry Simoneau: Right. Well we were we were talking about that a little bit when we got that email and we think that each of these are so distinctive, that it it's not just like another piece of technology around your house. It's gonna be somewhere that it can be seen.
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: So we're we're not thinking that it's gonna be as critical
Jerry Wilburn: But if it's like under
Henry Simoneau: to have
Jerry Wilburn: covers
Henry Simoneau: the loss
Jerry Wilburn: or like in a couch you still
Robert Pruett: It's
Jerry Wilburn: can't
Robert Pruett: really
Jerry Wilburn: see it.
Robert Pruett: Would it be very difficult to um just have an external device that like I dunno, you tape to your to your T_V_ um that when you press it you ha a little light beep goes off? Do you think that would be conceptually possible?
Ismael Myers: I
Henry Simoneau: I think
Ismael Myers: think it would be difficult technologically,
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Ismael Myers: because if your if your remote's lost it's probably under the settee and in that case you can't you can't send an infrared sing signal to it to
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Ismael Myers: find it, s so it's I'm not quite sure
Robert Pruett: That's true,
Ismael Myers: how it
Robert Pruett: mm
Ismael Myers: would work
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Ismael Myers: and
Robert Pruett: 'kay.
Ismael Myers: then I wonder if it's if it's more just a gimmick then anything else. Uh I mean ho how many times do you really, seriously lose your remote control and would would a device like that actually help you to find it?
Henry Simoneau: There might be something that you can do in the circuit board and the chip to make it make a noise or something, but it would take a lot more development
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: than we have this afternoon.
Robert Pruett: Okay, that's a fair evaluation. Getting lost. Um we so we do we've decided not to worry about that for now. Okay 'cause well, the designs are very bright, so you're right, they're gonna stick out, but um
Henry Simoneau: So d do people have a preference as far as feel and functionality? Um.
Jerry Wilburn: I feel like this is simil or it's sort of what already exists so if we're trying to think of something sort of like new and fun, even though this what you're init I'm initially drawn to, just 'cause it's like comfortable and like not different. I sort of like this one, like I I don't know why, it just it's like small but still sort of like cute looking, I dunno. But I also like the b the side buttons on that one,
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Jerry Wilburn: like I think that's kind of neat. But I dunno how much any of this has to do with the fashionable, sort of cool looking thing that we also need to focus on.
Robert Pruett: Could we maybe have like an extra button on the top for on off? So then w we wouldn't
Henry Simoneau: Mm
Jerry Wilburn: Ah,
Ismael Myers: Yeah,
Robert Pruett: have to
Ismael Myers: it's
Robert Pruett: have like
Ismael Myers: possible,
Robert Pruett: a dual
Henry Simoneau: yeah,
Robert Pruett: function?
Henry Simoneau: that's
Jerry Wilburn: there we
Ismael Myers: yeah,
Jerry Wilburn: go.
Henry Simoneau: good, that's good.
Ismael Myers: yeah.
Henry Simoneau: Here, stick it on.
Ismael Myers: Put an extra the
Robert Pruett: Sure.
Ismael Myers: button on.
Robert Pruett: Um uh why don't we do a product evaluation using your criteria, if you've
Jerry Wilburn: Well
Robert Pruett: developed
Jerry Wilburn: do we w
Robert Pruett: some?
Jerry Wilburn: like I think we're supposed to have one that we do it for.
Robert Pruett: Oh okay. Okay.
Jerry Wilburn: That was
Henry Simoneau: So where
Jerry Wilburn: I was a little vague on what exactly I'm supposed to do, but let Jerry Wilburn I have to like write something on
Robert Pruett: Okay.
Jerry Wilburn: the whiteboard, so.
Robert Pruett: Do you need this or just write on the white
Jerry Wilburn: No,
Robert Pruett: board?
Jerry Wilburn: I actually don't have like a PowerPointy thing,
Robert Pruett: Okay.
Jerry Wilburn: 'cause
Henry Simoneau: Right.
Jerry Wilburn: I think it would be redundant.
Henry Simoneau: Okay.
Jerry Wilburn: I dunno.
Robert Pruett: It's kind of like uh
Henry Simoneau: Ooh.
Robert Pruett: like a joystick kind of thing, you know, kinda push it.
Ismael Myers: Cool.
Henry Simoneau: Hey.
Robert Pruett: 'Kay. Maybe a little smaller than that.
Henry Simoneau: No, I kinda like it. That's hard to miss.
Ismael Myers: It makes look more fruity as well.
Robert Pruett: Oh it does, it's kind of like
Ismael Myers: It's like a deformed foot, I dunno.
Robert Pruett: There it could have a stem like that, 'cause I do l kind of like the stem.
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Henry Simoneau: Like
Robert Pruett: Yeah. It almost helps you ge keep a grip too, 'cause it goes
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: in between
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: fingers.
Henry Simoneau: Interesting.
Robert Pruett: I like this one.
Henry Simoneau: Okay, is that
Robert Pruett: Variety
Henry Simoneau: where people
Robert Pruett: of colours
Henry Simoneau: are leaning
Robert Pruett: are
Henry Simoneau: then,
Robert Pruett: nice.
Henry Simoneau: the potato? I like the idea
Robert Pruett: I think
Henry Simoneau: of the
Robert Pruett: I'm leaning towards the potato.
Henry Simoneau: I mean that's really gotten the simplicity of the buttons down, that one.
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm. I am worried about like um using a menu. Um in that like i withing menus there are submenus,
Henry Simoneau: Hmm.
Robert Pruett: and so how do you
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: get back to the main menu?
Henry Simoneau: Well that on the iPod, for example, you just every time you wanna go back you hit the menu button again and it brings you back one level.
Robert Pruett: But that has a menu button separate from a select button, whereas if
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: this one's both the
Henry Simoneau: Good
Robert Pruett: menu
Henry Simoneau: point.
Robert Pruett: and the select button?
Ismael Myers: This is, it's the up and down buttons are used for scrolling up and down for a list of choices.
Robert Pruett: Okay.
Ismael Myers: You find the choice that you want and you press uh you press the right button uh.
Robert Pruett: Could these
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: be used for going to
Ismael Myers: Yeah,
Robert Pruett: submenus
Ismael Myers: so they're used
Robert Pruett: or
Ismael Myers: for going into and
Henry Simoneau: Maybe
Ismael Myers: out of your submenus,
Henry Simoneau: yeah,
Ismael Myers: yeah.
Henry Simoneau: maybe it can
Robert Pruett: Okay.
Henry Simoneau: be one of those, if you press down and hold for two seconds, then it brings you back one level or something.
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm. Okay. Well, as long as we have that in mind as we're designing it still, mm 'kay.
Jerry Wilburn: Okay, so which one are we sort of roughly looking at to address whether or not it meets our s um necessities, the yellowy one is that
Henry Simoneau: The potato? Are we leaning
Ismael Myers: Potato.
Henry Simoneau: towards the potato?
Robert Pruett: I think so.
Jerry Wilburn: Okay, well we can obviously change it after we go through each different
Henry Simoneau: Okay.
Jerry Wilburn: one. So basically what we need to do is some of the things that we've talked about before we need to make sure that that remote actually does
Henry Simoneau: Okay.
Jerry Wilburn: conform to the things that we said it was going to. So what we sort of wanna do is that we each need to separately rank each of the following things and then I'll tabulate an average just to make sure
Henry Simoneau: Okay.
Jerry Wilburn: that it does meet that. So we'll just go through them one at a time and we'll just go around and each of you can tell Jerry Wilburn on a scale of one to seven with one being really extremely true and seven being not true at all, or false, if the remote that we've created conforms to the following criteria. So we can do this one first. First we wanna know if it meets the fancy look and feel um objective. So like in my opinion the for now at least, the yellow one is probably somewhere in the middle so I'm gonna say it's like a three. That's just my opinion.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: What does each of you
Robert Pruett: I I kind of think it's it's unique enough that I'd give it a one or a two.
Jerry Wilburn: Okay, well give it a number,
Robert Pruett: Okay.
Jerry Wilburn: sorry.
Robert Pruett: I will give it a one.
Henry Simoneau: Um I dunno if it's it's creative. I dunno if fancy is the word I would use. I dunno if any of them are fancy in I'd say two, because
Jerry Wilburn: Okay.
Henry Simoneau: c unique.
Jerry Wilburn: And
Ismael Myers: I'll go for two.
Jerry Wilburn: two, awesome. Alright, and same sort of scale for functionality, is it functional? I think it's extremely functional, I'm gonna give it a one.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah, one.
Jerry Wilburn: One?
Ismael Myers: I think it's it's functional, it's also pretty basic, so I'll give it a two.
Jerry Wilburn: Okay.
Robert Pruett: Um functional. I think it'll get everything done, I think it might be a little confusing at first, um,
Jerry Wilburn: Okay. Well there's some
Robert Pruett: I
Jerry Wilburn: other
Robert Pruett: don't know if that's
Jerry Wilburn: ones,
Robert Pruett: gonna
Jerry Wilburn: I
Robert Pruett: be
Jerry Wilburn: will
Robert Pruett: a later
Jerry Wilburn: address
Robert Pruett: one.
Jerry Wilburn: that, yeah.
Robert Pruett: Okay, then I'm gonna give it a two.
Jerry Wilburn: Awesome, okay. Um we wanna know next if it's technologically innovative.
Robert Pruett: Did you give a functional?
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah, she said it was one.
Robert Pruett: Okay.
Jerry Wilburn: Um is it technologically innovative? Mm. Not really, I mean not so much, 'cause we we don't have the L_C_D_ screen, we don't have fancy chip. Other than what it looks like, I dunno if it's
Robert Pruett: Well, the kinetic
Jerry Wilburn: really
Robert Pruett: battery.
Henry Simoneau: In the battery,
Jerry Wilburn: I
Henry Simoneau: that's it.
Jerry Wilburn: kinetic battery is a big one, so.
Henry Simoneau: How many people
Jerry Wilburn: Mm.
Henry Simoneau: would notice that, though?
Jerry Wilburn: But it
Robert Pruett: But
Jerry Wilburn: but
Robert Pruett: they'll notice
Jerry Wilburn: we know
Robert Pruett: it after
Jerry Wilburn: it's there.
Robert Pruett: like a year, they'll be like hey, I have never changed the battery.
Jerry Wilburn: And if it's made of like latex, that whole
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Jerry Wilburn: idea, that's pretty cool. I'll
Robert Pruett: Just
Jerry Wilburn: give it
Robert Pruett: the
Jerry Wilburn: a
Robert Pruett: material.
Jerry Wilburn: three. 'Cause it we could've picked a lot of features that would've made it really
Henry Simoneau: Yeah. I I would say that it's Yeah, like fancy versus creative it's it's different. But does that equal innovative? I dunno. I'll give it a three.
Jerry Wilburn: Alright. Everyone else?
Ismael Myers: I'd say it's technologically it's not it's not unique, I mean it's it's just it is just pushbuttons um, so I I'd give it a four.
Robert Pruett: Think I'm gonna go with the four as well.
Jerry Wilburn: Mm 'kay.
Robert Pruett: I really like that kinetic battery though.
Jerry Wilburn: Next, is it easy to use? Just so you know, easy to learn will be separate,
Robert Pruett: Mm
Jerry Wilburn: so don't
Robert Pruett: 'kay.
Henry Simoneau: Okay.
Jerry Wilburn: overlap them. I think it's really easy to use. I'll give it a two.
Henry Simoneau: Um I'll give it a one. Pretty hard to mess up.
Ismael Myers: I'll say one.
Robert Pruett: Uh let's say two.
Jerry Wilburn: Alright. Um we next wanna see if it has a spongy quality and if indeed it's made of latex or rubber I it's spongy all the way.
Robert Pruett: Give it a one.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Ismael Myers: I wonder if it bounces when you drop it.
Henry Simoneau: Ooh,
Jerry Wilburn: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: that you couldn't it'd be harder to break, harder to lose.
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: 'Cause there would be less impact maybe,
Jerry Wilburn: Iain, what
Henry Simoneau: Mm.
Jerry Wilburn: do you give
Ismael Myers: Yeah
Jerry Wilburn: it?
Ismael Myers: I'd I'd give it a one.
Jerry Wilburn: Alright and the next is, does it integrate some notion of fruits and vegetables?
Ismael Myers: Uh um.
Jerry Wilburn: Well, is it gonna be yellow?
Henry Simoneau: It it might be, 'cause that's our corporate colour, isn't it?
Robert Pruett: That's right, yeah, corporate
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: colour, we didn't keep that in
Henry Simoneau: We might
Robert Pruett: um
Henry Simoneau: wanna keep it yellow.
Robert Pruett: well if we I know it would make it a little less c a little more confusing, but if we had all the buttons in black, and a design in and the outside in yellow, that'd be our corporate one and we could also have alternative colours, one a more conservative one, one
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah,
Robert Pruett: that's
Jerry Wilburn: but if
Robert Pruett: more
Jerry Wilburn: you had
Robert Pruett: fruity.
Jerry Wilburn: like a silvery kind of white or something.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Ismael Myers: Yeah,
Robert Pruett: Um and
Henry Simoneau: If
Robert Pruett: can
Henry Simoneau: we
Robert Pruett: we
Henry Simoneau: had
Robert Pruett: have
Henry Simoneau: a yellow
Robert Pruett: like an R_R_ inscribed on the bottom or something?
Henry Simoneau: Sure.
Robert Pruett: Okay.
Jerry Wilburn: Oh,
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: yeah. Alright, so
Robert Pruett: Fruity,
Henry Simoneau: So,
Jerry Wilburn: I think it
Robert Pruett: so
Jerry Wilburn: it's
Robert Pruett: fruity.
Henry Simoneau: so I think
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah.
Henry Simoneau: it's pretty
Robert Pruett: I
Henry Simoneau: fruity.
Robert Pruett: think i it's kind of mangoey too.
Henry Simoneau: Oh,
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah.
Ismael Myers: Mangoey
Henry Simoneau: mango
Jerry Wilburn: I
Ismael Myers: is
Jerry Wilburn: okay,
Ismael Myers: better,
Robert Pruett: Yes.
Ismael Myers: yeah.
Henry Simoneau: that
Jerry Wilburn: I'm giving
Ismael Myers: I
Jerry Wilburn: it a one
Henry Simoneau: that
Jerry Wilburn: the mango
Ismael Myers: like mangoes.
Jerry Wilburn: put Jerry Wilburn over.
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Henry Simoneau: That's a much more trendy than a potato
Jerry Wilburn: What are what's everyone's numbers?
Henry Simoneau: one.
Ismael Myers: Uh two.
Robert Pruett: One.
Jerry Wilburn: Alright um, and does the design match the appropriate behaviour? Remember earlier we discussed that people don't use a lot of buttons, that they use the channel flipping and the volume the most. I think we really took that into account a lot, so I'm gonna give it a one.
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah, Jerry Wilburn too.
Ismael Myers: Uh one.
Jerry Wilburn: Did you say one, Rose?
Robert Pruett: Yes.
Jerry Wilburn: Okay um, also we talked earlier about R_S_I_ and wanting to prevent um any sort of like Carpal Tunnely kind of thing. Do we think that the latex sort of grip appropriately takes that into account? I think I'll give it a two, matter what you do, something
Robert Pruett: It's gonna
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: is
Robert Pruett: be
Jerry Wilburn: gonna
Robert Pruett: hard.
Jerry Wilburn: happen.
Ismael Myers: Yeah, yeah.
Robert Pruett: And if it's repetitive movement it is gonna be only four buttons that you're constantly pushing, but um
Jerry Wilburn: Um um worth the risk,
Robert Pruett: I
Jerry Wilburn: I
Robert Pruett: like
Jerry Wilburn: think.
Robert Pruett: how it fits in the hand though
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: I'd go with a two.
Henry Simoneau: I'll I'll say two as well. Because older people that aren't used to like texting with the thumb might find it a bit
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Jerry Wilburn: 'Kay.
Henry Simoneau: at first, but
Ismael Myers: Yeah I'll I'll say two.
Jerry Wilburn: Alright, awesome. And the ease of learning it. I know you were saying that you're a little bit nervous about that, I dunno. It sort of reminds Jerry Wilburn of the iPod. I just got mine, I still haven't read the instruction book and I'm doing okay,
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Jerry Wilburn: so and I'm not good at learning technology. So I'll give it a two.
Henry Simoneau: The menu system and the the fact that multiple buttons are used for different things might be a bit confusing, but I think if it's one it's one of those things that it might take you five minutes to figure out, but you'll have it afterwards.
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: So I'd I think I'd give it a two I guess.
Ismael Myers: I think it it's probably a little harder then most remotes to learn, because you have to you have to use the menu system and you have to tell it what your favourite channels are and
Henry Simoneau: Oh,
Ismael Myers: that
Henry Simoneau: good
Ismael Myers: could
Henry Simoneau: point.
Ismael Myers: take a bit of learning at first,
Jerry Wilburn: Mm-hmm.
Ismael Myers: but once you've, yeah once you'd learned how to use it, I think it is a lot easier. So I'd I'd give it a four.
Jerry Wilburn: Okay.
Robert Pruett: I think I'd give it a four too. It's a pretty high learning curve, it'll be easy once you've done it, but
Jerry Wilburn: Mm-hmm.
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: Alright, um also earlier we had something about losing it and so now we're not addressing that at all, so
Robert Pruett: We we I think we can kind of say we addressed it with colour,
Jerry Wilburn: Okay, so
Robert Pruett: but
Jerry Wilburn: in terms of not losing it, do you think that on a scale of one to seven, how easy or hard is it to lose? I'm gonna I'm gonna give it a four, 'cause I think that you can still if it's in between somewhere where you can't see it, you're kind of not gonna find it, but
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Jerry Wilburn: anywhere
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: else it's gonna stand out.
Henry Simoneau: Um I'd say I'd give it uh a three, I guess it depends on how tidy you are normally.
Robert Pruett: Mm I'd give it a four.
Ismael Myers: Um I'll give it a five 'cause i it would be easy to lose something like
Robert Pruett: Small
Ismael Myers: that,
Robert Pruett: too.
Ismael Myers: yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: Alright, we also said simplicity, how w how well does it address just being simple?
Henry Simoneau: Simple to use or simple in design? Do you
Jerry Wilburn: I
Henry Simoneau: know?
Jerry Wilburn: think overall, 'cause we had said before our two main things were simplicity and fashion, so those are the next two things we're gonna look at. Separate from fancy, like
Henry Simoneau: Right.
Jerry Wilburn: that sort of thing. Um it like wants to be simple but it's not like totally totally simple, so I'm gonna give it a two.
Henry Simoneau: I'm give it a three I guess.
Ismael Myers: I'll give it a two.
Robert Pruett: Three.
Jerry Wilburn: Alright, and fashionable?
Robert Pruett: It's totally fashionable.
Jerry Wilburn: It's
Robert Pruett: I'd
Jerry Wilburn: hot,
Robert Pruett: give it a one.
Jerry Wilburn: I mean it's a mango, come on.
Robert Pruett: Mango.
Jerry Wilburn: I mean how fashionable can you make a remote? I think it's bringing technology and fashion together real really well.
Henry Simoneau: I dunno. I don't think it's quite as fashionable as my robot remote
Robert Pruett: I do like uh the little
Henry Simoneau: or
Robert Pruett: Martian
Henry Simoneau: alien
Robert Pruett: one.
Henry Simoneau: or whatever he was.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah, the toggle on off switch, it's really appealing. Number.
Henry Simoneau: Um two.
Ismael Myers: Three.
Robert Pruett: One.
Jerry Wilburn: And does it meet our like demographic need sort of for international appeal, that whole thing? Just that it would se serve our audience. I don't see why not.
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm. I think as long if we offer in a in at least three different colour arrangements. Um
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: yeah,
Jerry Wilburn: Mm-hmm.
Robert Pruett: that's good. So I'll give it a a two.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah, I'll say two.
Jerry Wilburn: Alright, did anyone have any other features that they think were important that we didn't talk about?
Robert Pruett: Well um we didn't we didn't address the fact that it does need to b have a corporate logo, so let's let's make sure we keep that in mind that we ha that one of our colours concepts is
Henry Simoneau: Shall
Robert Pruett: corporate
Henry Simoneau: we uh
Robert Pruett: and has an R_R_ on it.
Henry Simoneau: Well I think all of them
Robert Pruett: All
Henry Simoneau: should
Robert Pruett: of them
Henry Simoneau: have
Robert Pruett: should
Henry Simoneau: an
Robert Pruett: have
Henry Simoneau: R_R_.
Robert Pruett: R_R_, yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: And so we're gonna do that, so it will address
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Jerry Wilburn: it,
Robert Pruett: Mm
Jerry Wilburn: fine.
Robert Pruett: 'kay.
Jerry Wilburn: Okay. That's
Robert Pruett: Lovely.
Jerry Wilburn: Jerry Wilburn.
Robert Pruett: Okay, now we're gonna look at finances. Um I have an Excel sheet that we're actually gonna calculate the cost um, so let Jerry Wilburn exit out of this first. Okay um
Jerry Wilburn: Whoa.
Henry Simoneau: Oh my.
Robert Pruett: I know. Let Jerry Wilburn one more space. Gonna zoom in real quick. Okay. Hand dynamo. We're using
Henry Simoneau: Uh
Robert Pruett: kinetic
Henry Simoneau: we're
Robert Pruett: battery,
Henry Simoneau: n using
Robert Pruett: right?
Henry Simoneau: kinetic, yeah.
Robert Pruett: Um and we're having one per
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: One, okay. Um electronics.
Henry Simoneau: Single. Simple,
Robert Pruett: Simple.
Jerry Wilburn: Simple.
Henry Simoneau: simple rather.
Robert Pruett: Mm 'kay. Um the case.
Henry Simoneau: Uh uh uh
Ismael Myers: Guess
Henry Simoneau: double-curved.
Ismael Myers: it's double-curved. It is pretty curvy.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: It's very curvy, so okay.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah I never did get a picture of those so I don't really know. Our case material supplements oops, we just skipped
Jerry Wilburn: Well
Henry Simoneau: by
Jerry Wilburn: don't
Henry Simoneau: them.
Jerry Wilburn: we need plastic, and
Henry Simoneau: No, we we the plastic is the plastic for the inside is assumed.
Jerry Wilburn: Provided,
Henry Simoneau: The
Jerry Wilburn: okay.
Henry Simoneau: supplement is
Robert Pruett: The wood?
Henry Simoneau: Oh, I guess it was rubber rather
Robert Pruett: I mean
Henry Simoneau: than
Jerry Wilburn: It was
Robert Pruett: the
Jerry Wilburn: rubber
Henry Simoneau: latex.
Robert Pruett: rubber.
Jerry Wilburn: and special colour, right?
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm, okay.
Jerry Wilburn: Do we have more than one special colour?
Robert Pruett: Yeah,
Henry Simoneau: Uh
Robert Pruett: we're using
Henry Simoneau: well
Robert Pruett: we're gonna
Ismael Myers: Special colours,
Robert Pruett: need at least
Ismael Myers: isn't
Robert Pruett: two
Ismael Myers: it?
Robert Pruett: special colours. Um.
Henry Simoneau: I don't know what
Jerry Wilburn: Per
Henry Simoneau: the se the basic colour
Robert Pruett: I
Henry Simoneau: is
Robert Pruett: dunno
Henry Simoneau: though.
Robert Pruett: where it yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: Well, but we know that we're having at least three colours,
Robert Pruett: So
Jerry Wilburn: so
Robert Pruett: let's y say
Henry Simoneau: Well,
Robert Pruett: three.
Henry Simoneau: are we talking about on each colour combination or are we, you know, we'll like we'll have yellow and black. Is that two special colours?
Robert Pruett: Yeah, I dunno.
Henry Simoneau: Or
Robert Pruett: That
Henry Simoneau: or
Robert Pruett: I thi
Henry Simoneau: is
Robert Pruett: I
Henry Simoneau: white and
Robert Pruett: thought
Henry Simoneau: black,
Robert Pruett: that would be under
Henry Simoneau: then
Robert Pruett: yours.
Henry Simoneau: two more or Uh. I guess it's three,
Robert Pruett: We'll just say three.
Henry Simoneau: three three.
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Jerry Wilburn: Right.
Henry Simoneau: Alright.
Robert Pruett: Maybe the R_R_ will be in colour as well, so yeah. Interface, we're doing push buttons.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: And how many buttons do we
Jerry Wilburn: We
Robert Pruett: have?
Jerry Wilburn: have
Ismael Myers: We've got
Jerry Wilburn: six.
Ismael Myers: five.
Jerry Wilburn: Oh
Henry Simoneau: Six,
Jerry Wilburn: no,
Ismael Myers: Oh
Robert Pruett: Six.
Jerry Wilburn: five.
Ismael Myers: six.
Henry Simoneau: with the power. Yeah.
Robert Pruett: Anything else?
Henry Simoneau: No. Oh, we'll do we wa Are the buttons in special colour, special f I didn't get information on
Jerry Wilburn: Oh wait.
Robert Pruett: Oh, buttons oh, so um. So the case material will just have one colour, right, but
Henry Simoneau: Well,
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: then the buttons
Henry Simoneau: does it
Robert Pruett: will be in special colours?
Henry Simoneau: but if we're making multiple varieties of this is where I'm getting confused.
Robert Pruett: We're saying per unit.
Henry Simoneau: per unit,
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah, per
Henry Simoneau: okay,
Jerry Wilburn: unit.
Robert Pruett: Okay,
Henry Simoneau: okay.
Robert Pruett: so each unit will only have one colour
Henry Simoneau: Alright, and each
Robert Pruett: on their
Henry Simoneau: button
Robert Pruett: but the case is
Henry Simoneau: s
Robert Pruett: could have up to thr I mean the buttons could ea could be up to three colours, 'cause that
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: how it's designed there.
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: I like
Henry Simoneau: Yeah,
Jerry Wilburn: it like that.
Robert Pruett: So
Henry Simoneau: okay.
Robert Pruett: Special form? They're all kind of just push button,
Henry Simoneau: No, I think
Robert Pruett: right?
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Henry Simoneau: they're fine.
Robert Pruett: Special material?
Henry Simoneau: Material, we want them rubber as well probably, yeah.
Robert Pruett: Uh. Oh do I have to do it per button, do I?
Henry Simoneau: No, I don't think so. I think they're if they're all
Robert Pruett: Okay.
Henry Simoneau: gonna be rubber then it that's what it matters.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah, 'cause
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: it wouldn't make sense
Robert Pruett: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: otherwise, 'cause for the whole mat case material it's only one.
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: It's I mean it's two to make it rubber.
Henry Simoneau: Okay.
Jerry Wilburn: Oh wait, so maybe.
Robert Pruett: Thirteen point seven.
Henry Simoneau: Oh oh.
Robert Pruett: Yeah, what can we reduce?
Henry Simoneau: Okay, let's have our buttons all be one colour.
Jerry Wilburn: Mm, I kind of like
Robert Pruett: Let's
Jerry Wilburn: the
Robert Pruett: see
Jerry Wilburn: buttons.
Robert Pruett: what that would do. It's only gonna bring us down to thirteen point three anyway.
Henry Simoneau: Alright.
Robert Pruett: Okay um,
Henry Simoneau: Uh.
Robert Pruett: are we sure this is double-curved? Maybe it's single-curved,
Henry Simoneau: We have no idea.
Robert Pruett: we have no idea.
Henry Simoneau: I dunno, I didn't get any pictures.
Jerry Wilburn: It's
Henry Simoneau: It's single curved.
Jerry Wilburn: single curved.
Henry Simoneau: Why not?
Robert Pruett: Well it's not the yeah. Okay, it's the kinetic battery that's kind of expensive, but we have a simple chip, single curve, case material is rubber and it's a special colour,
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: but that's important.
Henry Simoneau: That is important.
Robert Pruett: Six buttons
Henry Simoneau: How did
Robert Pruett: we
Henry Simoneau: it get
Robert Pruett: have
Henry Simoneau: more
Robert Pruett: to
Henry Simoneau: expensive,
Robert Pruett: have six buttons.
Henry Simoneau: what did you just change?
Robert Pruett: What?
Henry Simoneau: It was it was thirteen and now it's fifteen.
Robert Pruett: No, okay, maybe not. I don't know what just happened. Now it's
Jerry Wilburn: We
Robert Pruett: twelve.
Ismael Myers: What was our target price again?
Henry Simoneau: Twelve
Robert Pruett: Twelve
Henry Simoneau: point five.
Robert Pruett: point five.
Henry Simoneau: Hey
Ismael Myers: Twelve
Henry Simoneau: hey.
Ismael Myers: point five. So we're just
Robert Pruett: So we're
Ismael Myers: just
Robert Pruett: okay,
Ismael Myers: about there.
Henry Simoneau: We're all
Robert Pruett: I think.
Henry Simoneau: set then.
Robert Pruett: Yeah.
Henry Simoneau: Ish.
Robert Pruett: Okay,
Henry Simoneau: Alright.
Robert Pruett: we're all set. Um save. I saved that to our um our big shared folder, so you know. Um okay, back to agenda. Um are the are the costs under twelve fifty Euro?
Henry Simoneau: Yes.
Robert Pruett: Yes.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah,
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: they are.
Robert Pruett: Let's move on to the project evaluation. Project process. Satisfaction with for example the room for creativity, leadership, teamwork, the means, any new ideas found. So I guess what we're gonna talk about here is just evaluating how we created this project, the information we got on the news, how we used it, if we were able to um, you know, use our creativity with the information, um how how well I guess I led it, um the how well we worked together as a team, um the digital pens, the whiteboard.
Henry Simoneau: Well.
Robert Pruett: Okay.
Henry Simoneau: I felt very creative. I enjoyed making the prototypes.
Ismael Myers: I think we've been successful in that we've achieved almost all of the design goals that we've set
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Ismael Myers: and we've come up with a finished project and we just about got cost.
Henry Simoneau: I think we could've done even better with a little bit more information, like
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: what's a single-curved case, how many colours, what do colours count
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: things, but given given what we had I think that we did we did really well. Um I think we worked together pretty well.
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah, I mean if I'd had more market research on the fruits
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: and vegetables, maybe we could've taken that into account.
Henry Simoneau: But the fruits and vegetables, they really my creativity, so.
Jerry Wilburn: I know, I really did, the the whole mango idea was great. No, I mean
Henry Simoneau: Do you think we
Jerry Wilburn: I
Henry Simoneau: could
Jerry Wilburn: thought the pen was a little distracting for Jerry Wilburn personally, like its heaviness, and like just being so conscious of like turning the pages, I dunno. That was a bit of a distraction.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: That was the last one, like I chose not to do a PowerPoint 'cause I didn't think it made sense to, so I liked that I had the option to do that and just to take my own notes and
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Jerry Wilburn: that whole sort of thing.
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: I think we all made um very significant contributions, I don't think anybody dominated it, which I thought was really good, like each of us was able to um like each of you had your information and I uh I tried to facilitate it without like taking over, um
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: I like our little finished products.
Jerry Wilburn: They're funny.
Robert Pruett: Really cute.
Jerry Wilburn: I kind of want one.
Henry Simoneau: Can we market this as the mango remote? Should we have that somewhere on the packaging? I have a little
Jerry Wilburn: I'm
Henry Simoneau: R_R_.
Jerry Wilburn: trying to think of a good pun that I could add there.
Robert Pruett: I know, let's think of it like a little jingle. Um.
Jerry Wilburn: I like the R_R_, that's gonna be etched in.
Henry Simoneau: Yes. Hopefully not with just my fingernail at some point but um it's quite a useful little gadget. All thanks to Iain for the design of that one.
Robert Pruett: Okay um
Henry Simoneau: Mm. What did we
Robert Pruett: new
Henry Simoneau: find
Robert Pruett: ideas
Henry Simoneau: for new ideas?
Robert Pruett: found?
Henry Simoneau: People should really base their remotes on fruits and vegetables.
Robert Pruett: Definitely.
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: Or or at least be c p creative enough to think of toggle switches mm
Henry Simoneau: I
Robert Pruett: etcetera.
Henry Simoneau: I am really into the idea of kinetic batteries now
Robert Pruett: Oh, I'm
Henry Simoneau: after
Robert Pruett: so
Henry Simoneau: reading
Robert Pruett: excited.
Henry Simoneau: about them.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah,
Henry Simoneau: That
Jerry Wilburn: I didn't
Henry Simoneau: was
Jerry Wilburn: even know they existed.
Henry Simoneau: I I knew you can get watches that had them, like really quite expensive watches that just never need a battery, 'cause you're always moving your wrist.
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: But in other things, I think it'd be really good.
Robert Pruett: I thi yeah, that's awesome. Um okay, closing. Are the costs within the budget? Is the project
Henry Simoneau: Yes.
Robert Pruett: evaluated? Now there's the final questionnaire and meeting summary. Um so, this is the great product kids, I think we've created something really interesting and that we have a market for it, um
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: especially if we can produce it at twelve point three which we hope um yeah. Make sure in your questionnaire to put down criticisms of both the process and the um the final results and.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah, Real Reaction.
Robert Pruett: I do like the Martian remote. If we could choose more than one, that would be my second choice.
Jerry Wilburn: Oh, that would definitely be my second choice.
Ismael Myers: Mm.
Robert Pruett: Although the tog toggle I'm afraid
Ismael Myers: That's
Robert Pruett: I
Ismael Myers: cool.
Robert Pruett: would
Ismael Myers: Let's
Jerry Wilburn: I
Ismael Myers: all
Jerry Wilburn: would break
Ismael Myers: let's all
Jerry Wilburn: it.
Ismael Myers: go for
Robert Pruett: It's
Ismael Myers: the
Robert Pruett: cool.
Ismael Myers: yellow
Jerry Wilburn: I would break it.
Robert Pruett: I think I would break it.
Henry Simoneau: It
Ismael Myers: Break
Henry Simoneau: started
Ismael Myers: the stem
Henry Simoneau: because
Ismael Myers: off.
Henry Simoneau: I wanted to have it as st as a stem and then alright, so
Jerry Wilburn: Oh that's funny.
Henry Simoneau: Is it started as a pear, but then it started looking more and more like a Martian when I put
Jerry Wilburn: Kind
Henry Simoneau: the
Jerry Wilburn: of looks like a penguin, like with no eye.
Robert Pruett: Oh
Henry Simoneau: Take
Robert Pruett: yeah, it's
Henry Simoneau: Jerry Wilburn
Robert Pruett: kind of a
Henry Simoneau: to
Robert Pruett: penguin.
Henry Simoneau: your leader.
Jerry Wilburn: I like that it stands up.
Robert Pruett: Mm-mm.
Henry Simoneau: Wow, maybe I should market it to some remote control company now. So are are
Ismael Myers: That was
Jerry Wilburn: Oh,
Ismael Myers: bound to happen
Jerry Wilburn: sad.
Henry Simoneau: poor little thing.
Robert Pruett: Mm 'kay, congratulations. Um. Anything else to say?
Jerry Wilburn: Nothing will come up until after our meeting's supposed to be over,
Robert Pruett: Alright.
Jerry Wilburn: its all timed.
Henry Simoneau: Oh.
Robert Pruett: Um anybody
Jerry Wilburn: Oh.
Robert Pruett: have I got more master classes, anybody else wanna like take a master's class?
Henry Simoneau: It's really funny that you got spam in your work emails.
Robert Pruett: Yeah, but check it out. So like there are all these like links, they don't go anywhere. But all that you need to keep in mind your knowledge management. Um just wanna make sure you do.
Jerry Wilburn: No the first one that you sent like I didn't realise that it was a joke and I was like why did she send this
Robert Pruett: Oh
Jerry Wilburn: to us? It's very it's very work relevant, 'cause people
Robert Pruett: It is.
Jerry Wilburn: send spam a lot.
Robert Pruett: Yes definitely I'm very sad that I didn't get any links to the corporate website.
Jerry Wilburn: Oh here you can
Henry Simoneau: Let's see,
Jerry Wilburn: you can
Henry Simoneau: what
Jerry Wilburn: view.
Henry Simoneau: did I get through the corporate website? It's
Jerry Wilburn: You can
Henry Simoneau: just
Jerry Wilburn: just see what's
Henry Simoneau: inspiration
Jerry Wilburn: up.
Henry Simoneau: about circuit boards.
Robert Pruett: Wow.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah it's it's really deep. Hold on. Takes a little while to get excited to load. That the Excel thing is pretty cool.
Robert Pruett: Yes.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah, that
Jerry Wilburn: Here,
Robert Pruett: I
Henry Simoneau: is
Robert Pruett: love
Jerry Wilburn: like,
Henry Simoneau: pretty
Robert Pruett: Excel,
Henry Simoneau: neat.
Robert Pruett: it's
Jerry Wilburn: basically
Robert Pruett: one of my favourite programs.
Jerry Wilburn: it's like inspiration, basically I'm gonna give you two sentences on fashion and that kind of thing, see. You didn't miss
Robert Pruett: I
Jerry Wilburn: out
Robert Pruett: see,
Jerry Wilburn: that much.
Robert Pruett: mm.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah, my inspiration from from last time
Robert Pruett: Spongy.
Henry Simoneau: is the in interior of a remote control being taken apart bit by bit, talking about circuit boards. I learned a lot actually.
Ismael Myers: Mm.
Jerry Wilburn: Oh wow.
Henry Simoneau: I could probably take apart a remote control now if I really needed to.
Jerry Wilburn: This one was cooler. I got a whole table and everything.
Henry Simoneau: Now I have all about circuits and chips and transponders and I wrote it all down, because I thought it would be relevant, like all the different parts of the inside of a remote control, but then they're like, you don't actually need this you just
Jerry Wilburn: That's
Henry Simoneau: need
Jerry Wilburn: like
Henry Simoneau: to
Jerry Wilburn: mine
Henry Simoneau: talk
Jerry Wilburn: it
Henry Simoneau: about
Jerry Wilburn: was like,
Henry Simoneau: the case.
Jerry Wilburn: would you prefer an L_C_D_ screen or a multifunction remote control? And then it didn't have like any kind of table, like awesome, I'm glad they asked that question and didn't report the result.
Henry Simoneau: It's really
Robert Pruett: I
Henry Simoneau: interesting though.
Robert Pruett: I thought it was a little tricky having to hand around this thing.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah.
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: We had a lot of the um
Ismael Myers: I
Robert Pruett: otherwise
Ismael Myers: think.
Robert Pruett: the technology today was kinda cool.
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Henry Simoneau: That was really neat how I got emails
Ismael Myers: We didn't
Henry Simoneau: and
Ismael Myers: we didn't
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Ismael Myers: use the whiteboard that much.
Robert Pruett: No.
Henry Simoneau: No.
Robert Pruett: Although I don't see how we could have very l at least for Jerry Wilburn I
Henry Simoneau: I yeah. If I'd gotten pictures of the different parts of the case, the different looks of the case, I would have probably drawn them up, but
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Jerry Wilburn: 'Cause we weren't like voting on anything and I think usually, like whiteboards are good, you know like crossing out ideas, or like if we had had like a brainstorming
Henry Simoneau: Yeah, we could've
Jerry Wilburn: period.
Henry Simoneau: put our brainstorming stuff up there rather than just talking about it, but
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Jerry Wilburn: But I thought we were good orally.
Henry Simoneau: with only four people it doesn't really make sense.
Jerry Wilburn: Get
Henry Simoneau: I think if you
Robert Pruett: And
Henry Simoneau: had
Robert Pruett: with
Henry Simoneau: a larger
Jerry Wilburn: crazy.
Robert Pruett: and
Henry Simoneau: group
Robert Pruett: with the PowerPoint that we can all look at, like you
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: can do all those things pretty much on PowerPoint
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: as that's
Jerry Wilburn: And
Robert Pruett: not
Jerry Wilburn: these
Robert Pruett: as necessary
Jerry Wilburn: might've
Robert Pruett: to have.
Jerry Wilburn: made us more willing to like take notes than to like
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Jerry Wilburn: write up them here, 'cause we all needed them separately, kind of on the whiteboards in
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Jerry Wilburn: this room.
Henry Simoneau: Because we're all gonna be working in different places.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah.
Henry Simoneau: We if we were all gonna stay in here all the time, then
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: having the notes up on the whiteboard would've been alright, but everyone needs their own, like specific notes, I guess.
Robert Pruett: Now when you were um creating your um prototypes here, did you work together or did you like do separate projects?
Ismael Myers: Uh we we worked together,
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Ismael Myers: um but we were making like we sort of made different shapes and then discussed how the how the buttons might work,
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah. So it was a bit of both really, we just kind of started out by each taking a colour of clay and just fooling around with it and I came up with that rhombus shape and he came
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: up with the sort of potatoey, mangoey shape, and then just went from there really.
Robert Pruett: Cool.
Henry Simoneau: It was fun.
Henry Simoneau: So well done with the management, I felt well managed.
Robert Pruett: Oh thanks.
Ismael Myers: I think we did well in
Robert Pruett: It's kinda fun.
Ismael Myers: first of all giving our meetings the time, and second we actually we we did a good job of making firm decisions at the ends of the meetings.
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Jerry Wilburn: Sorry.
Ismael Myers: And I
Henry Simoneau: That happened to Jerry Wilburn all the time though.
Ismael Myers: I know what happens sometimes is that you tend to sort of have meetings and then people sorta drift away without anything actually really being decided.
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Ismael Myers: But I think here we got we got clear and and decisive decisive points at the end of the meetings, so that we we knew where to go on from there.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah, I was quite worried at the end of the last meeting that we weren't getting we didn't really have enough information to make firm decisions,
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: but we were able to do it regardless, so. I'm not usually a very decisive person, so it helped to have people say this needs
Robert Pruett: This
Henry Simoneau: to
Robert Pruett: is
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Henry Simoneau: be
Robert Pruett: what
Henry Simoneau: done
Robert Pruett: we'll do.
Henry Simoneau: in five minutes.
Robert Pruett: I found that we did we could have used another five or ten minutes sometimes
Ismael Myers: Yeah, for
Henry Simoneau: Especially
Ismael Myers: some
Robert Pruett: in
Ismael Myers: of
Robert Pruett: the
Ismael Myers: the
Robert Pruett: meetings.
Ismael Myers: meetings,
Henry Simoneau: last
Ismael Myers: yeah.
Henry Simoneau: time,
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: yeah.
Robert Pruett: Yeah I think the last time we had a lot of information,
Henry Simoneau: Yeah,
Robert Pruett: but at the same time not quite enough,
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: you know what I mean,
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: like we
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: we couldn't answer every single question.
Henry Simoneau: Right.
Robert Pruett: Um but
Henry Simoneau: And I I felt the first two meetings, that I was coming in with no information, and not sort
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Henry Simoneau: of made Jerry Wilburn really like, ooh I don't know, throwing together PowerPoint out of no no information and then last time it was like the opposite. I had so much information and so much to talk about.
Robert Pruett: It was interesting what came out like later, like as I was doing
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: the when I was doing the breakdown on the agenda that they gave Jerry Wilburn um, that more points came out from your
Henry Simoneau: Mm.
Robert Pruett: presentation even. Um. I'm a little I am a little disappointed that we didn't do a um something for losing the remote, because
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: that was kind of a big point.
Henry Simoneau: that was something like in order to talk about that we would've had to have actual knowledge about circuit boards
Robert Pruett: About
Henry Simoneau: and
Robert Pruett: yeah.
Henry Simoneau: things
Jerry Wilburn: Well the problem
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Henry Simoneau: like
Jerry Wilburn: was, even when we just were creating from the Excel file, there wasn't like a option to select to somehow
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: have it included, so there was no we could be like yeah, it
Henry Simoneau: I
Jerry Wilburn: has
Henry Simoneau: think
Jerry Wilburn: it
Henry Simoneau: we
Jerry Wilburn: included.
Henry Simoneau: were
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Jerry Wilburn: There was no way for us to have
Robert Pruett: Considered
Jerry Wilburn: written
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: down
Robert Pruett: the re
Jerry Wilburn: that
Robert Pruett: yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: it was really there.
Henry Simoneau: I think we were just getting overenthusiastic with the task.
Robert Pruett: Well it's interesting
Henry Simoneau: I think we really
Robert Pruett: that
Henry Simoneau: got
Robert Pruett: they
Henry Simoneau: into it, I mean I got into it as the day went on and I got really like, ooh I'm designing a remote control, I dunno if that's just
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm,
Henry Simoneau: Jerry Wilburn, but
Robert Pruett: yeah. It was interesting though that they put that fifty percent of people say they have frustration with losing their remote and yet they didn't provide us with information to
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: um
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: we weren't provided with information to discuss that. I know that like people people have like things they can put on their keys that you press it and it'll beep,
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: but I but I'm sure that would require some kind of technology that I just don't know what it is,
Henry Simoneau: I think
Robert Pruett: but
Henry Simoneau: there are some of those like infomercial remotes that have things so you won't lose them.
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Henry Simoneau: I dunno. I mean we were talking about it and like i in my household at least, there's only about two places that the remote is ever
Robert Pruett: Hmm.
Henry Simoneau: 'cause there's only one T_V_ and there's
Jerry Wilburn: That's
Henry Simoneau: only
Jerry Wilburn: like
Henry Simoneau: like
Jerry Wilburn: saying
Henry Simoneau: three
Jerry Wilburn: you're never
Henry Simoneau: chairs.
Jerry Wilburn: gonna lose your keys, and I always do, anyway. You'll lose 'em in your pocket, like you
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Jerry Wilburn: just will forget that or you like put it down somewhere that like made sense and then
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Jerry Wilburn: not remember, there's always ways to lose things.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: It d yeah, it depends on how organised you are personally, but
Henry Simoneau: Yeah, or like I guess what the setup of the house is too.
Robert Pruett: Mm-hmm.
Henry Simoneau: But, I mean I am notorious for losing my keys, I just I guess I've just never lost the remote. I put my keys in the refrigerator the other night and couldn't find them. 'Cause I was putting groceries away.
Jerry Wilburn: That's funny.
Robert Pruett: Oh.
Henry Simoneau: You you're taking stuff from a bag and putting them in the refrigerator and then go back to my room.
Robert Pruett: Can't get in.
Henry Simoneau: Can't get in, look all around the kitchen. Definitely in the vegetable drawer.
Jerry Wilburn: That's funny.
Henry Simoneau: So.
Jerry Wilburn: I always do that, leaving it in my coat, and then like using a different coat.
Henry Simoneau: Mm.
Robert Pruett: Yep.
Henry Simoneau: But I guess it's 'cause we don't carry remotes around that much.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah. Can't really take it into the other room.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah. Maybe with our little robot one we could've had him have a robot, alien, pear, whatever he is, have a little voice like, I am located Oh a G_P_S_ system, internal G_P_S_.
Jerry Wilburn: Oh man. Here you go.
Henry Simoneau: Although if it's sitting still for
Robert Pruett: We
Henry Simoneau: too
Robert Pruett: should
Henry Simoneau: long.
Robert Pruett: make one that walks by itself.
Henry Simoneau: Yes
Jerry Wilburn: That really
Henry Simoneau: I
Jerry Wilburn: could get up and walk away.
Robert Pruett: Or or like some crazy like electro-magnet, that you push
Henry Simoneau: Or
Robert Pruett: it and it'll
Henry Simoneau: little
Robert Pruett: go zoom to the T_V_ and stick there.
Henry Simoneau: Or just just a wheel, you know. Just if you like you'd have a remote for your remote, that'll.
Ismael Myers: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: Well, but if you could attach
Henry Simoneau: zoom
Robert Pruett: them to the T_V_, then you can.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah. Hmm. All
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Henry Simoneau: kinds of possibilities.
Robert Pruett: Okay. Sorry, I'm just um trying to update my minutes. I decided to you know how I sent you the email saying that PowerPoint minutes will be complimentary,
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Robert Pruett: rather than like repeating them. Just gonna make I'm making full minutes, so that it'll
Henry Simoneau: Oh.
Robert Pruett: include all of the agenda and all that.
Henry Simoneau: Wow.
Robert Pruett: 'Cause that seems a little more useful.
Henry Simoneau: 'Cause you've had like the most typing and organising to do.
Robert Pruett: But I didn't have like information to sloth
Henry Simoneau: Yeah,
Robert Pruett: through either, so
Henry Simoneau: I guess How much of your PowerPoint was already done for you, every meeting.
Robert Pruett: Most of it, mm-hmm. I added slides, um
Henry Simoneau: Oh.
Robert Pruett: I added a couple slides each time, but that was about it.
Henry Simoneau: Okay. Yeah, I didn't even think about adding slides, 'cause I would just get slides with titles on them and
Robert Pruett: Mm.
Henry Simoneau: fill them all in w didn't even think about adding more.
Robert Pruett: Well, the thing was they would provide y an agenda with s like several points, but it wouldn't have a slide for each point.
Henry Simoneau: Ah
Robert Pruett: And that's the only
Henry Simoneau: yeah..
Robert Pruett: way I remember that I need to go other that point. I know personally when I do PowerPoint, that's what I do and so I had it once, even if it was just like the title of it, like the three presentations, and I would do your
Henry Simoneau: Right.
Robert Pruett: three.
Jerry Wilburn: You have you have to have the slogan on it or can it just be like
Robert Pruett: The slogan
Henry Simoneau: No,
Robert Pruett: on it?
Henry Simoneau: no,
Robert Pruett: No
Henry Simoneau: definitely
Robert Pruett: no
Jerry Wilburn: Okay
Robert Pruett: no.
Jerry Wilburn: good.
Henry Simoneau: not. We
Jerry Wilburn: 'Cause I was like, it could go around the outside.
Henry Simoneau: No, I don't think we need to I
Robert Pruett: I think
Henry Simoneau: think
Robert Pruett: we just
Henry Simoneau: the
Robert Pruett: need
Henry Simoneau: R_
Robert Pruett: the
Henry Simoneau: and R_,
Robert Pruett: um
Henry Simoneau: especially
Robert Pruett: the R_R_,
Henry Simoneau: if
Robert Pruett: yeah.
Henry Simoneau: the yellow and black one.
Jerry Wilburn: Is it yellow and blue?
Henry Simoneau: Or yellow and blue. Lemme go to the web page.
Robert Pruett: Yeah, I was just kinda going by the web page, 'cause they didn't give Jerry Wilburn any clear, like yellow,
Jerry Wilburn: Oh
Robert Pruett: grey,
Jerry Wilburn: I guess it is black,
Robert Pruett: or.
Jerry Wilburn: grey. Grey is better than black, doesn't look so bumblebeeish.
Robert Pruett: I don't really like yellow in general.
Jerry Wilburn: Hey now I understand the
Robert Pruett: But
Jerry Wilburn: random
Robert Pruett: it
Jerry Wilburn: like newsclippings.
Henry Simoneau: Finish meeting now.
Robert Pruett: Wasn't it interesting that um I thought it was interesting that our market marketing um expert did not agree with the marketing um the marketing choices, you know, like
Jerry Wilburn: Yes. I will I just feel
Robert Pruett: that
Jerry Wilburn: like
Robert Pruett: was
Jerry Wilburn: if you're
Robert Pruett: a bit
Jerry Wilburn: really
Robert Pruett: of a conflict.
Jerry Wilburn: doing like a a really big market evaluation, you wouldn't just have like one set of source, it's kind of an they were so not backed up, it would just be a sentence like we did a survey, this is what people said.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah.
Jerry Wilburn: S mm, I dunno.
Robert Pruett: People are stupid.
Henry Simoneau: I guess it i it sort of a grey, isn't it? Yellow and grey, but then the slogan's in blue.
Jerry Wilburn: Well we got some grey and we got some blue buttons, we're good.
Henry Simoneau: Yeah. Well we don't have the right colour clay anyway.
Robert Pruett: Maybe, like I don't know. That could always be.
Henry Simoneau: Well we're not, sadly, going to actually be producing this, so.
Robert Pruett: Oh.
Jerry Wilburn: If they ever come out with potato
Henry Simoneau: Potato mango shaped remotes.
Jerry Wilburn: I'm gonna
Robert Pruett: I'm
Jerry Wilburn: have
Robert Pruett: claiming
Jerry Wilburn: to
Robert Pruett: it intellectual property.
Jerry Wilburn: Yeah.
Henry Simoneau: I can't believe a whole day is gone.
Jerry Wilburn: I know.
Henry Simoneau: I don't feel like it's been that long. Get sucked in. Mm I haven't gotten questionnaire eight yet. | Robert Pruett recapped the decisions made in the previous meeting and two team members presented three prototypes which differed primarily in shape. The team felt it was not necessary to include a feature to prevent the remote from getting lost as the prototype designs were quite bright. The team conducted a product evaluation of the prototype the team liked the most. They rated the prototype on the basis of its appearance, functionality, technological innovativeness, sponginess, usability, learn-ability, its ability to be found when misplaced, simplicity, and its ability to meet the appropriate demographic. The team then discussed the production costs of the remote and what features they should retain or lose in order to maintain their target cost. Robert Pruett then led the team in a project evaluation in which the team evaluated how they created the project, the information they found and used, their creativity, their teamwork, and the materials they had at their disposal. The team was generally quite satisfied. After Robert Pruett's closing, the team discussed their personal preferences in terms of the prototypes. They also further evaluated the project process and discussed what they had learned. | 1 | amisum | train |
Richard Woodward: All set? Okay. Cool. Right. So um basically I'm just gonna go over real quickly um some news I've just got from the board on how we're supposed to do with this um remote control. And then I'm gonna turn over to you guys to make brief presentations um on what you've found and then we'll have a bit of discussion. So basically uh what I've just found out from the board I dunno if you guys got this email as well but it needs to be television only. So no we're not doing D_V_D_,
Forrest Burdick: Okay.
Richard Woodward: we're not doing anything else, it's just gonna be a television remote. Um it also needs to have the company colours included in it. Um so that's red and black. And it has to have the slogan, case you guys forget the slogan it's, we put fashion in electronics. Um and no teletext. I'm not sure what teletext is but I'm assuming you guys do, so we don't wanna include that um in this particular design. For reasons that I don't really know. There's but it's the board so there you go. So basically um given those guidelines which will have some effect on how we design we'll discuss it later I mean 'cause it's television only we'll be able to change our uh um well we can s sacrifice more function for a better television remote. Anyway. So I'm gonna turn over to Franklin Urbina uh to go ahead and make a presentation on
Franklin Urbina: Okay. So do I unplug
Forrest Burdick: Gotta
Richard Woodward: Oh,
Forrest Burdick: plug
Richard Woodward: right yeah.
Forrest Burdick: you in.
Franklin Urbina: this bit here?
Richard Woodward: Yep.
Richard Woodward: Might have to hit function F_ eight but it looks like it's gonna come up. Yep. Cool.
Franklin Urbina: Okay. Right. That's page one of my presentation.
Richard Woodward: Brilliant.
Forrest Burdick: Very nice For. your first PowerPoint it's lovely.
Franklin Urbina: So the uh method. We're gonna have to understand how remote controls work and res uh successfully complete this project. Um remote control works as follows. This is all pretty basic stuff you guys. Um sends message to another system, so there's an energy source involved in that like a battery or solar power, something along those lines, there's an integrated circuit, which is the microchip, actually compose the messages and usually the way a a remote control works is it sends infrared bits to another system. A user interface controls the chip, basically that's the casing and the buttons and um accordingly the messages as well. So my findings, um I just did a preliminary study here and uh I found that too much metal in remote design could potentially cause interference with the ability of the remote to send commands. And too much metal can cause remotes to behave unexpectedly by receiving false signals. Um too much metal is used sometimes and people pick up radio signals and the like, and there's also the possibility of the remote catching on fire and injuring the customer, just think of those lawsuits, that'd be really bad. Therefore I suggest primarily plastic construction.
Richard Woodward: 'Kay.
Franklin Urbina: Um, components. Just some ideas that I had, um, energy source, it's kinda hip to be eco friendly so I thought maybe we could do something with solar power with an alkaline battery backup. Um the user interface, I was since we can't use metal I was thinking maybe a high grade recycled plastic.
Richard Woodward: Mm.
Franklin Urbina: The chip, um, silicon based chip I don't really see any way around that, we can't really be different in that respect. Um, the sender well I'm thinking infrared 'cause it is the industry standard, multi channel, that's a word I made up, I don't really know what it means.
Richard Woodward: 'Kay.
Franklin Urbina: Uh PAL
Richard Woodward: Fair enough.
Franklin Urbina: and N_T_S_C_ compatible and uh probably a two hundred foot range.
Richard Woodward: 'Kay.
Franklin Urbina: Uh and the receiver of course is any number of electronic devices. Um but in this case it'll only be T_V_s. Um personal preferences, I really think that we should use plastic as opposed to metal, um, the company simply
Forrest Burdick: Fine.
Franklin Urbina: can't afford this kinds of lawsuits which adm admittedly is gonna come at the cost of a certain aesthetic value, 'cause we were thinking
Richard Woodward: Is is there a way that we can use um modern types of polymers, or mo modern types of plastics that maybe do have some kind of aesthetic value um like if a white like if we talk about like well like on the lapt on these laptops and other
Franklin Urbina: Right.
Richard Woodward: ones
Forrest Burdick: It
Richard Woodward: they
Forrest Burdick: needs,
Richard Woodward: use a
Forrest Burdick: yeah.
Richard Woodward: a pretty nice, you can do i is there some kind of nice colo der quality plastic that we can work with?
Franklin Urbina: Yeah that shouldn't be a problem. Um for example the plastic they have on your laptop there is something that's perfectly possible for
Richard Woodward: Okay,
Franklin Urbina: us to do.
Richard Woodward: okay.
Forrest Burdick: Cool.
Franklin Urbina: That's
Richard Woodward: Great.
Franklin Urbina: the end of my presentation.
Richard Woodward: Thank you very much Nathan. Um if next we can have the um User Interface Developer go ahead and make a brief presentation that'd be great as well. S plug yourself in here.
Richard Woodward: Mm. Um hit function F_ eight real quickly, hold down Mm.
Forrest Burdick: Looks like you're in okay.
Franklin Urbina: Is it plugged in well? There it goes. Computer
Wayne Gregory: Th
Franklin Urbina: adjusting.
Forrest Burdick: There you go.
Richard Woodward: There you go. Sweet.
Wayne Gregory: Well so. Here we have a functions design presentation. Um so a few of the requirements we need here. Uh we n basically need to operate an electronic device, it needs to be universal um and possibly uh operate several different types of devices although we now uh find that
Richard Woodward: Yeah
Wayne Gregory: uh
Richard Woodward: sorry I
Wayne Gregory: that
Richard Woodward: couldn't get that g to use before.
Wayne Gregory: that's no problem. Um so some of my findings. Um basically wanna send messages uh to a television set.
Wayne Gregory: I think we're all quite uh quite uh intelligent and know know what a normal remote control does. Um now some of the other things I found is a a complicated remote control sorry that we can't quite
Richard Woodward: Oh yeah
Wayne Gregory: see
Richard Woodward: look
Wayne Gregory: my
Richard Woodward: at
Wayne Gregory: red
Richard Woodward: that.
Franklin Urbina: Mm.
Wayne Gregory: there very well but uh this remote control has many functions um so it can do a lot of things but it uh it is quite complicated and most
Richard Woodward: Mm-hmm.
Wayne Gregory: users will find it uh find that they won't use most of the functions because they don't know how to use them and don't wanna take the time to learn how to do it. As you also notice it's quite a boring design. Um. Another remote control, slightly different, it's a simpler remote control uh many less buttons but uh has many fewer functions, um m much easier for the user to manipulate and use. Um it also has a bit of a cheap look and it's also quite boring. So my personal preferences. Revolutionise
Richard Woodward: Nice.
Wayne Gregory: the idea of uh a remote control. Um so attain the functionality of a complicated device but use a simple formatted display uh for the user to to work with. And I was gonna add another uh slide here but I didn't quite have time there. Um.
Richard Woodward: Okay.
Wayne Gregory: Just incorporating some of the ideas that we had previously like uh having multiple face but it's uh.
Richard Woodward: Great. Thanks for that Ron.
Forrest Burdick: Right. Does that mean I'm
Richard Woodward: 'Kay
Forrest Burdick: up?
Richard Woodward: yep that's you.
Forrest Burdick: I think so. Okay.
Wayne Gregory: I can plug you in.
Forrest Burdick: Oh that would be perfect. Thank you. Slide show up and running. Or not.
Richard Woodward: Give it a little
Forrest Burdick: Uh.
Richard Woodward: bit.
Forrest Burdick: Oh there we go. Perfect. Okay. So this is Forrest Burdick. Um basically I was looking through some marketing reports that we've got we had a usability test where we were actually sort like watching a hundred people use T_V_ remotes and see what it is that they're using and then they filled out a questionnaire about what they like and what they don't about their general T_V_ remote control practices. Um pretty much through testing we were finding out that most of the time, everybody's used to using changing the channel, turning it on, using the volume, m the majority of the time that's all that's going on, the other functions happen, for some people they're important, but the primary uses are really really basic. Um and so big complicated remotes like one we saw in the last presentation are really not the general public's use, they're not using a lot of it, they don't need it, they even find it frustrating when there are all those buttons that they don't know what to do with. And um we also found out that uh fifty percent of our people, their the worst thing about a remote is how often they lose it. And then they can't find it in the room. So I think what we were talking about with a pager or something, will really come into play with a lot of these people. Um there's also a survey about what they liked about remotes, and pretty much they all think they're hideous and not very useful, and the younger demographics are all really interested in voice recognition options. I don't know if that's something we're ready to look into technically, that's up to the design people, but it is s something worth thinking about, especially since the younger demographic's obviously the one that's gonna keep growing, so if that's the direction we're headed in it's something to think about. Um but basically it really is the primary functions and getting it to look nice, which are the standards. So it's a good start for us.
Richard Woodward: That's great. Thank you Sarah. Right.
Forrest Burdick: Need to unplug
Richard Woodward: So
Forrest Burdick: this?
Richard Woodward: um yep I'll just uh switch that
Forrest Burdick: Need it
Richard Woodward: back
Forrest Burdick: back.
Richard Woodward: here. I'll finish up with just a bit of discussion
Forrest Burdick: There you go.
Richard Woodward: plan on for the next phase.
Richard Woodward: Right so I think we've covered most of these important questions through this um through you guys's presentations um we've got uh y Franklin Urbina suggests uh or pretty much emphatically suggested that we need to go with plastic. Um Sarah, she's recommended that we go for simpler functions, so fewer functions um but we need to decide who are we selling this to, you s your stats suggested that seventy five percent of people under thirty five wanted,
Forrest Burdick: Oh right.
Richard Woodward: thought about voice control, um so do we wanna go for that, or do we want to go for an older demographic, and my thought is um we've got w if we're gonna go for a sleek look I mean we are putting the fashion in electronics um.
Forrest Burdick: We're not catering to the pensioners of the world
Richard Woodward: Yes.
Forrest Burdick: I don't think so.
Richard Woodward: So maybe this we should look into this younger demographic. Um.
Forrest Burdick: Right.
Richard Woodward: So uh we need to wonder ah h about how we make it better and smaller and faster um think we're constrained to plastics very well, we've got this idea, Ron was saying we need to think about uh revolutionising the way it's looking
Forrest Burdick: Right.
Richard Woodward: um, which might be easier given that we're going for simpler function and that we're
Forrest Burdick: Uh.
Richard Woodward: only going for a telly. Um so um. How th this voice operation thing is I think is a good idea um assuming that it's doable, um at least for the basic controls, maybe we can balance
Forrest Burdick: Right.
Richard Woodward: it that way, you
Franklin Urbina: Mm.
Richard Woodward: know we can see. Okay you can't say record alias tonight at seven P_M_ but we might be able to say um volume up.
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Franklin Urbina: Right. I think it would be possible to uh combine the locator device and the voice recognition technology.
Richard Woodward: Mm.
Forrest Burdick: Oh. That could work. I like that.
Franklin Urbina: With a simple command like locate.
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Franklin Urbina: And then
Forrest Burdick: Something very basic.
Franklin Urbina: it could start to beep
Forrest Burdick: Right.
Franklin Urbina: and
Richard Woodward: Right.
Franklin Urbina: therefore be found.
Wayne Gregory: Sounds
Forrest Burdick: Is that only
Wayne Gregory: good.
Forrest Burdick: gonna be within our two hundred foot range then?
Franklin Urbina: Oh yeah I think that's
Forrest Burdick: Okay.
Franklin Urbina: very doable.
Richard Woodward: The difficulty wh would be in um I think like i you couldn't speak into the remote that you're trying to find. 'Kay you have something that picks up
Franklin Urbina: Mm.
Richard Woodward: a voice
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Richard Woodward: from far away
Franklin Urbina: It's a good point.
Richard Woodward: If it's hidden under the couch but then again you have this wee this wee thing you know that's just a little chip or whatever that has the page button, maybe that could be voice activated too.
Wayne Gregory: A little
Forrest Burdick: Mm.
Wayne Gregory: sticky pad to stick on top of your uh television. And
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Wayne Gregory: you just say something to into that and it
Richard Woodward: Yeah.
Franklin Urbina: Yeah.
Wayne Gregory: finds
Forrest Burdick: K
Wayne Gregory: your
Richard Woodward: Or an isolated magnet or something like, or you know something that wouldn't interfere I don't know that'd
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Richard Woodward: be the technical thing but yeah I like that, I like that, the voice recognition for the paging system.
Wayne Gregory: The other thing is we might be able to handle the simplicity of a remote control and kind of put the more complicated things into a voice control. So it could be sold to both the younger market
Forrest Burdick: True.
Wayne Gregory: and the older market. And the younger market could use kind of the voi voice control method and the older market
Forrest Burdick: Making
Wayne Gregory: might
Forrest Burdick: it just
Wayne Gregory: might
Forrest Burdick: an option?
Wayne Gregory: k
Franklin Urbina: Mm.
Wayne Gregory: exactly
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Wayne Gregory: and might consider the older market could use the simpler design with
Forrest Burdick: Right.
Wayne Gregory: the traditional buttons and what not.
Franklin Urbina: I
Richard Woodward: Yeah.
Franklin Urbina: was thinking
Forrest Burdick: Are we still
Franklin Urbina: uh
Forrest Burdick: thinking about this screen sorry.
Franklin Urbina: Oh
Forrest Burdick: Go
Franklin Urbina: go
Forrest Burdick: ahead.
Franklin Urbina: ahead.
Forrest Burdick: The uh if we're gonna do this touch pad screen thing, it would be
Richard Woodward: Mm-hmm.
Forrest Burdick: still, do we know if that's an option technically right
Wayne Gregory: 'S
Forrest Burdick: now
Wayne Gregory: definitely
Forrest Burdick: to that?
Wayne Gregory: an option technically.
Forrest Burdick: Okay.
Wayne Gregory: I've looked into uh costs of uh touch screen methods
Forrest Burdick: Okay.
Wayne Gregory: and what not, they seem to be uh you know almost
Forrest Burdick: We're doing okay.
Wayne Gregory: as cheap as a button method at this point.
Forrest Burdick: 'Cause
Richard Woodward: Okay.
Forrest Burdick: it seems like an interesting option especially because then you could have like your primary screen just be these you know four or five basic functions, you can have
Richard Woodward: Mm.
Forrest Burdick: menu
Franklin Urbina: Yeah.
Forrest Burdick: options or something to have all these other complicated voice recognition, settings, things that you're not gonna use every day and that a lot of people aren't gonna use but it is an option there for this hi-tech market that sort of re is the sleek thing we're going for.
Franklin Urbina: Gotta wonder though, if we're adding so much technology to this one remote, are we still gonna be able to meet out twelve pou our twelve
Richard Woodward: Mm-hmm.
Franklin Urbina: fifty
Forrest Burdick: True.
Franklin Urbina: Euro you
Forrest Burdick: Worth
Franklin Urbina: know
Forrest Burdick: looking
Franklin Urbina: goal
Forrest Burdick: into.
Franklin Urbina: for selling these things.
Richard Woodward: Mm-hmm.
Franklin Urbina: It
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Franklin Urbina: seems
Richard Woodward: Mm-hmm.
Franklin Urbina: like, we're not gonna be able to handle all these functions with just one microchip. The microchip is probably the most expensive part of
Forrest Burdick: True.
Richard Woodward: Okay.
Franklin Urbina: the the whole mechanism.
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Franklin Urbina: So
Richard Woodward: Okay.
Franklin Urbina: it's just something to consider.
Richard Woodward: Absolutely. um well yeah I guess we'll cross that bridge um in a la slightly later stages of development um but yeah I know, that's perfectly viable question. Mm 'kay um so I'm seeing that we're gonna just basically focus on this young demographic group, aim it at them, but then in a sense that its bells and whistles are available for anybody who wants them but basically we'll make a sleek simple
Forrest Burdick: Mm-hmm.
Richard Woodward: functioned um uh remote control. Um I think this voice recognition thing is a we've got a market for it uh I don't think there's too
Forrest Burdick: Mm.
Richard Woodward: many, we'd more or less be cornering the market on it as well, we don't have many um.
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Richard Woodward: I appear to have lost my microphone. Mm. Right um we don't have many people or there's not very many competitors out there that do that so cool. Um right. I guess we've c we've touched on most of this. The idea of a paging function, a touch screen, and face plates. Um. The thing with I see would there not be a we'd have to maybe sacrifice the face plates for a touch screen?
Wayne Gregory: Um I'm not sure that's sincerely correct, I think
Richard Woodward: Okay.
Wayne Gregory: if you kind of take the example of a mobile phone that uh trying to pass a portion of the device is not interchangeable whereas the surrounding portions
Forrest Burdick: Mm.
Wayne Gregory: are interchangeable.
Richard Woodward: Okay.
Forrest Burdick: Just the casing.
Wayne Gregory: We could have the casing, the the face plates.
Richard Woodward: Okay.
Franklin Urbina: Back to the uh the cost the material. We have to ask whether we're going to include a certain number of face plates with the package? That's something I w for say we're including
Forrest Burdick: Mm.
Franklin Urbina: three or four face plates, it's gonna drive the cost up.
Richard Woodward: Mm.
Franklin Urbina: And
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Franklin Urbina: the other question is, if we do include them are we really in a position to evaluate that market? We haven't done any tests on face plates and whether
Forrest Burdick: Right.
Franklin Urbina: See
Richard Woodward: Okay.
Franklin Urbina: if there if there's even interest out there.
Richard Woodward: Okay. Right.
Franklin Urbina: Off the top of my head it sounds kind of like a gimmick that wouldn't really go anywhere.
Richard Woodward: Yeah 'cause then ha you
Forrest Burdick: Mm.
Richard Woodward: would have to who all it's not like with cell phones like where you have a you know Nokia model X_ and then ten people make face plates for it, we'd
Forrest Burdick: Right.
Franklin Urbina: Yeah.
Richard Woodward: be just our model of pho of t remote control.
Forrest Burdick: Well in the publicity of a face plate on a phone is you have it out and around, it is sort of emblematic whereas
Richard Woodward: Mm-hmm.
Forrest Burdick: you're just sit at home, so unless somebody comes
Richard Woodward: Mm.
Forrest Burdick: over
Richard Woodward: Mm-hmm.
Forrest Burdick: to watch T_V_
Richard Woodward: Yeah.
Wayne Gregory: Well hopefully some people have people coming t over to w
Forrest Burdick: True.
Wayne Gregory: to hang out at
Forrest Burdick: True.
Wayne Gregory: your house and most people
Forrest Burdick: True.
Wayne Gregory: have their televisions in the living room. Uh.
Richard Woodward: Alright well we can
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Richard Woodward: we can discuss that one further when we think about
Forrest Burdick: Oh yeah.
Richard Woodward: um whether th when we do costs
Wayne Gregory: Sure.
Richard Woodward: and so forth, um. True, if plastic is dead cheap and if we're making the whole thing out of plastic anyway um yeah we'll cross that bridge later um but yeah we will have to evaluate what's most important. Um I think we've had a bit of discussion already on this thing, n s there any other questions comments that came up in these presentations?
Wayne Gregory: Well have we confirmed that we're gonna go ahead with a uh touch screen um
Richard Woodward: Yeah yeah
Wayne Gregory: Interface?
Richard Woodward: okay. Um Yeah I think that would be best. Let's based on what sh on what you guys have all said to Forrest Burdick let's go for a plastic built or uh b plastic cased 'cause tha tha that's easy on the cost, try to look for some kind of high quality recycled plastic as you recommended and I think that's a great idea. With a touch screen for the basic functions. Um And we'll yeah tha let's provisionally let's go for a touch screen one with several submenus um for possible extra stuff that one basically put the channel and the on and off switch on the touch screen. Um do we have Mm wait a minute it occurs to Forrest Burdick that if we have a touch screen people are going to have to recharge their remote controls. Yet
Forrest Burdick: True.
Richard Woodward: at the same time that might help for this whole complaint of it being lost.
Forrest Burdick: 'Cause it would have a docking base?
Richard Woodward: Mm-hmm. But then again that costs as well.
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Richard Woodward: Hmm.
Wayne Gregory: So these new lithium batteries they last twenty years even with the touch screen?
Richard Woodward: Do they?
Wayne Gregory: Those
Richard Woodward: Okay.
Wayne Gregory: new ones.
Forrest Burdick: Can we afford
Franklin Urbina: Can we
Forrest Burdick: that?
Franklin Urbina: afford to include one of those?
Forrest Burdick: And will somebody buy it if we don't?
Richard Woodward: Well I I don't think yeah I can't see anybody buying a lap a remote control that they have to plug in so we'd have to see some kind of new
Forrest Burdick: Right.
Richard Woodward: battery technology. Okay so let's go with a um touch screen with um some kind of you know with with some kind of cutting edge battery technology
Forrest Burdick: For twelve Euros?
Richard Woodward: Yeah well hey you know well it's it's worth looking into, if not we can always
Forrest Burdick: It is.
Richard Woodward: default to just doing a a well
Forrest Burdick: Fair enough.
Richard Woodward: presented plastic simple you know so
Forrest Burdick: The
Richard Woodward: you
Forrest Burdick: basics.
Richard Woodward: know. Well yeah I mean you can put the we could I I dunno I mean I suppose we could put the the basics on the centre easiest you know, you know people know the channel and volume function make them large and easy to get at and then the the other the other bits and bobs
Forrest Burdick: Mm.
Richard Woodward: you know go through menu um w we'll do the aesthetics. Okay so we'll touch screen and the battery,
Forrest Burdick: 'Kay.
Richard Woodward: focus on um uh presentation. Um it's th uh with this voice recognition option as well um just as for the simple functions the um the on off, channels, volume,
Franklin Urbina: Right.
Richard Woodward: um and um a small paging function. Even if you can't do voice recognition for the paging you know just some kind of simple button that's just a I guess another infrared signal to the remote control and while to emit some kind of paging. Just
Franklin Urbina: Okay.
Richard Woodward: a beep. Um right so any comments? Thoughts before we break into go into the next round of individual work on this.
Franklin Urbina: Since we're doing uh touch screen, do we wanna look into the possibility of people being able to input different types of skins for the you know the actual interface part of it and things like that? Or is it just gonna be one touch screen for everybody.
Wayne Gregory: Be interesting.
Forrest Burdick: Mm.
Franklin Urbina: What what would be on that touch screen? 'Cause you said earlier that we have to think about company colours and um logo or
Forrest Burdick: And
Franklin Urbina: something or motto,
Forrest Burdick: oh.
Franklin Urbina: I can't remember exactly
Forrest Burdick: Yeah the
Franklin Urbina: what you said.
Wayne Gregory: We put fashion
Forrest Burdick: the fashion
Wayne Gregory: into
Forrest Burdick: do.
Wayne Gregory: electronics.
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Richard Woodward: W it's my understanding that if you were going to do a skin you'd need to have some way for people to download or import skins
Forrest Burdick: Right, and then you're
Richard Woodward: into
Forrest Burdick: dealing
Richard Woodward: the remote
Forrest Burdick: with ports
Richard Woodward: control.
Forrest Burdick: and cords and
Richard Woodward: Yeah I think perhaps
Franklin Urbina: 'S too much.
Richard Woodward: good idea
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Richard Woodward: but yeah I think that that one m might just be um and they just yeah I think that one might just be out of the range for this particular
Forrest Burdick: For now.
Richard Woodward: a P_D_A_ would they would makes a lot of sense for a P_D_A_ 'cause you're gonna be using it to connect up to things anyway but I dunno, what do you guys think?
Franklin Urbina: Think we just need to come up with a nice black and red
Forrest Burdick: Yeah. Nice.
Franklin Urbina: interface on the touch screen. That'd
Wayne Gregory: Yeah.
Franklin Urbina: be okay.
Wayne Gregory: Uh I I'm I'm in agreement with that, I'm wondering
Forrest Burdick: Um.
Wayne Gregory: how we're gonna get uh we put fashion into electronics
Forrest Burdick: Well but
Wayne Gregory: onto
Forrest Burdick: if we're
Wayne Gregory: this
Forrest Burdick: gonna
Wayne Gregory: device.
Forrest Burdick: use a touch screen where it's gonna come on like on your cell phone it'll have your
Richard Woodward: Hmm.
Forrest Burdick: your carrier provider name come up first like while it's loading and then it goes away, perhaps it could be like a temporary
Richard Woodward: Mm.
Forrest Burdick: Comes on every time you turn it on and then that's it 'cause it is a bit much to have it like engraved
Franklin Urbina: Mm.
Forrest Burdick: on the back or
Richard Woodward: Yeah.
Forrest Burdick: something
Franklin Urbina: True.
Forrest Burdick: I think.
Richard Woodward: Yeah.
Wayne Gregory: I'm hoping for a subliminal maybe half a millisecond
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Wayne Gregory: as it turns on.
Forrest Burdick: Y
Richard Woodward: Yeah. Yeah I know I d it seems like it would suffice to have just the R_R_ on there.
Wayne Gregory: Mm-hmm.
Forrest Burdick: Yeah
Richard Woodward: Jus
Forrest Burdick: you would think. But.
Richard Woodward: But apparently not.
Forrest Burdick: If it
Franklin Urbina: People
Forrest Burdick: comes
Richard Woodward: So.
Forrest Burdick: from
Franklin Urbina: aren't gonna
Forrest Burdick: above.
Franklin Urbina: want their remote to boot up and to see flashing things come on. They just want it to be on and ready to go.
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Richard Woodward: Yeah. Well fair enough. Um and yeah that would help the battery life too and if it the remote they do have to press a button for the remote to turn on. But then again who wants to turn on a remote control.
Wayne Gregory: Well
Richard Woodward: Kind
Wayne Gregory: all
Richard Woodward: of
Wayne Gregory: you
Richard Woodward: if
Wayne Gregory: have to
Richard Woodward: i
Wayne Gregory: do is touch the screen and it automatically
Forrest Burdick: Mm.
Richard Woodward: Oh
Wayne Gregory: goes
Richard Woodward: to wake
Wayne Gregory: on.
Richard Woodward: up okay
Wayne Gregory: Yep.
Richard Woodward: or go into like
Wayne Gregory: Goes
Richard Woodward: a dormant
Wayne Gregory: into a
Richard Woodward: mode.
Wayne Gregory: sleep mode.
Richard Woodward: Okay. Oh yeah I like that I like the idea of um putting the logo in the boot up screen, nice. Um. Um cool so any last things before we break? Alright. Fair enough.
Forrest Burdick: We're
Richard Woodward: Sounds
Forrest Burdick: good?
Richard Woodward: good. I'm gonna save th a copy of this in case you guys need any reminders. I'm gonna save a copy of this and the minutes that I'll do it in a second and put them in the shared folder for later reference.
Wayne Gregory: I've put my files in the shared folder as well.
Richard Woodward: Brilliant.
Forrest Burdick: Yeah.
Richard Woodward: That's fab guys. Cool. | Richard Woodward went over new requirements for the project: that the device was solely to control television, and that there would not be a teletext component. Franklin Urbina gave his presentation on the basic components of a remote control device, and advised the group to use plastic for the casing material instead of metal. Wayne Gregory presented the technical functions of remote controls and compared the interfaces of two existing remote control products. Forrest Burdick made a presentation of the needs and the desires of the consumer and emphasized simplicity as one of the most desired features. The group discussed in more detail the features that will be added to the device: the possible applications of voice recognition, the touch screen menu interface, faceplates, and the look of the company logo. | 1 | amisum | train |
Carmen Brooks: That went well, thank you.
Marvin Eaton: That's great.
Carmen Brooks: Perfect.
Donald Bell: 'Kay.
Marvin Eaton: Alright, let Carmen Brooks just PowerPoint this up.
Marvin Eaton: Right so um this meeting will be about the conceptual design, don't ask Carmen Brooks s precisely what conceptual design is, it's just something important that we need to do. Um, think of it 's kind of uh turning the abstract into slightly more concrete. In this meeting ideally we'll come to some final decisions on what we're gonna do for the prototype. Um. Right so um, apologies for the last meeting, it was brought my attention that I did not make the roles clear enough, um, so I will attempt to do so more accurately in this particular meeting. Um, fair enough, thanks for the input, 's always good. Um. So, basically all we're gonna do is have some presentations again much like last time, um, and gonna go through you, uh whoever wants to go first is f fine by Carmen Brooks um and we'll collate what we know about um what we discussed in the last meeting, possible directions. And then we'll make some more decisions on um basic uh firm up our idea on how we want this remote control to look and work. So, perfect. So, without th further ado, whoever wants to go first is free to.
Donald Bell: I'll go first.
Carmen Brooks: Go ahead.
Marvin Eaton: Alright Nathan, take it away.
Marvin Eaton: It is Nathan right? I'm not calling you the wrong name over
Donald Bell: No
Marvin Eaton: and over
Donald Bell: Nathan's
Marvin Eaton: again?
Donald Bell: fine.
Marvin Eaton: Good.
Donald Bell: It's either Nathan or participant two.
Monte Heil: Mister
Donald Bell: Uh.
Monte Heil: participant two that is.
Carmen Brooks: Nice.
Donald Bell: Okay.
Marvin Eaton: Nice.
Donald Bell: Um, basically what I'm gonna have to talk to you about today is um component design and it's been brought to my attention that we may be somewhat limited as to what we can do because of what our manufacturer offers, so
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Donald Bell: Basically what I'm gonna be doing is talking to you about that. Um, components of a remote control, okay. We've already kind of gone over this but we're gonna have to get into more detail and probably have to reach some conclusions some time soon. Energy source, um, our manufacturer offers a variety of energy sources, your standard battery, solar cells. Our manufacturer didn't say anything about lithium so we might have to look if we do go that route, we might have to look elsewhere. Um, and also there's a kinetic energy possibility. Basically, it's like a um the idea of moving the remote would create enough energy to keep it running. So that's one possibility but I don't know whether that would be powerful enough to illuminate a touch screen.
Marvin Eaton: Hmm.
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Donald Bell: So we'll have to look into that. Um, the case, we have a few options, plastic, rubber or wood. Um and then as far as the way it's shaped, we can do standard boring flat, which we probably don't wanna do, curved or very sexy double curved.
Marvin Eaton: What kind of th thickness are we looking at?
Donald Bell: Um, I imagine that we could specify. Um, I don't see any reason to go outside of the convention of three or four millimetres.
Marvin Eaton: Okay,
Donald Bell: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: brilliant.
Donald Bell: Um, the buttons, there are multiple scroll buttons available from our manufacturer, but to use those we'd have to use more chips, um and that would cost us more. And if we do go with the rubber doubled curved case um we'll have to use rubber push buttons because the other buttons aren't compatible
Marvin Eaton: Hmm.
Donald Bell: with that.
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Donald Bell: Um and just a little note there, touch screen equals many chips which equals many Euro.
Carmen Brooks: Right. Nice.
Donald Bell: Um, one thing that I noticed was that most remotes operate on a infrare on the infrared part of the spectrum. So you notice when you push a button on a remote you can't see anything coming out of it but in fact there is light coming out of the remote and you know the television can detect that. And if you were to record if you were to make a video recording you could actually see the light. Uh one thing that I thought might be interesting was to use part use visible light coming out of the remote, just kind of as a fun gimmick.
Marvin Eaton: Hmm.
Donald Bell: So you
Carmen Brooks: Interesting.
Donald Bell: could actually see something coming out of the remote when you pushed it. Course it'd have to be a part of the spectrum that wouldn't damage the human eye or anything
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Donald Bell: like that.
Carmen Brooks: Good call.
Marvin Eaton: M Maybe is there an option that we can have that off or on so a person can select like
Carmen Brooks: Choose
Donald Bell: Yeah.
Carmen Brooks: it.
Donald Bell: I am sure that we could do that. Um, of
Marvin Eaton: Yeah
Donald Bell: course
Marvin Eaton: I like the idea, it's a good idea.
Donald Bell: Yeah, just as a fun gimmick.
Marvin Eaton: Yeah.
Donald Bell: Just to set us apart a little bit. Um, and then on to the circuit board that we're gonna use, also known as the chip. Uh, we really don't have any way around the T_A_ one one eight three five. Um findings, okay, we're very limited by what our current manufacturers can offer, um and my question to all of you is, should we look to other manufacturies or should we just make do with what we have available?
Monte Heil: Interesting question.
Donald Bell: 'S a bit of a challenge question.
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Carmen Brooks: Well
Monte Heil: Yes.
Carmen Brooks: I'd say shop around but with our time constraints, is that really a feasible option?
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Donald Bell: Right, that's my concern too. Um, if we do go the lithium battery route then we'll have to go outside our current manufacturer. My personal preference is I'll just throw my cards on the table, uh I think we should probably go the solar battery route, just to kinda keep with the environmentally friendly theme that we have going on. Uh, I like the idea of the visible light signalling, that's something to set us apart and uh I was thinking about I was thinking of ways that we could produce the remote in a variety of different case materials to suit different tastes. So we're not so confined by one style and say some
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Donald Bell: you know, say our the one if we just go with one and it doesn't go over well then we're in a bad situation.
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Marvin Eaton: Can we do marketing piloting too? Try to see what kind before we launch can we see
Carmen Brooks: Um
Marvin Eaton: how they're received?
Carmen Brooks: It's an option, uh but actually there's I've got some research already on like what we're looking at and trends
Marvin Eaton: Okay.
Carmen Brooks: in casing right now
Marvin Eaton: Okay.
Carmen Brooks: which actually might even come into play beforehand,
Marvin Eaton: Okay,
Carmen Brooks: it
Marvin Eaton: perfect.
Carmen Brooks: may help us decide for now.
Marvin Eaton: Great, thank
Carmen Brooks: Temporarily
Marvin Eaton: you very much
Carmen Brooks: anyway.
Donald Bell: Oh yeah,
Marvin Eaton: Nathan. That's
Donald Bell: you're
Marvin Eaton: perfect,
Donald Bell: welcome.
Marvin Eaton: so I guess that makes sense for you to take it from here.
Carmen Brooks: I guess so, 'cause I found some interesting things. You
Marvin Eaton: Fascinating,
Carmen Brooks: waiting
Monte Heil: Did
Marvin Eaton: compelling
Monte Heil: you?
Carmen Brooks: for Carmen Brooks?
Marvin Eaton: even.
Carmen Brooks: I know, what a teaser ain't it. Um. Right. So current market trends. Screen. Um, basically I was looking at what's going on in the remote control market right now and what's going on in other design fields, to see sort of what's what's trendy, what's new, what's happening. Um, remote control right now basically everybody says they want newer, fancier, more exciting they're sick of this boring, normal, functional, um that we need innovative design options and there needs to be an easy user interface. Um the challenge is that current trends right now, across the board in fashion, in furniture, in technology, is a very organic fruit and vegetable kind of thing. Now I'm not saying we should have, you know, tomato shaped remote controls or anything, but I think it is possible maybe to use um natural colours, like if wood is an option,
Donald Bell: Mm.
Carmen Brooks: that whole organic, sleek, clean, v line thing may be something we can look into. Different skin options, or if we can't afford this touch plate thing, or touch face screen interface um, maybe having the b images be specific, like you could choose your menu bullets to be
Marvin Eaton: Tomatoes.
Carmen Brooks: a different shape or okay, not the example I would choose, but you know what I mean to t sort of and th apparently the feel of the next couple of years is spongy,
Donald Bell: Mm.
Carmen Brooks: uh not
Monte Heil: I
Carmen Brooks: something
Monte Heil: like
Carmen Brooks: I
Monte Heil: it,
Carmen Brooks: I've
Monte Heil: I like
Carmen Brooks: come
Monte Heil: it.
Carmen Brooks: up with a though if we can get around to getting piloting, I thought maybe a casing option like uh not like a skin, but like a holder almost
Donald Bell: Hmm.
Carmen Brooks: if you could do like um, leather options or wood options or something
Donald Bell: I should have mentioned this um. As far as the rubber that we can use
Carmen Brooks: Mm-hmm.
Donald Bell: we can use a rubber as part of the case, it has a consistency of those stress balls.
Monte Heil: Yes.
Carmen Brooks: Mm. Might be an
Monte Heil: Fabulous.
Carmen Brooks: interesting
Marvin Eaton: Slick,
Carmen Brooks: way to go.
Marvin Eaton: slick.
Carmen Brooks: Um, yeah so something to sit on for now. So overall I think we should stick with what we're finding, everyone's looking for easy to use, technologically innovative and this fancy new I think perhaps the double curve thing and maybe this rubber
Donald Bell: Mm.
Carmen Brooks: option is our best way to go for right now. Um.
Marvin Eaton: Interface, oh the interface graphics for
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: the um
Carmen Brooks: Um. Well I d but then if the touch screen thing isn't
Marvin Eaton: Yeah.
Carmen Brooks: gonna work out for us that's really a non-issue.
Donald Bell: I like the idea of of rubber too because it's tends to be associated with being durable, something that you can drop and it doesn't
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Donald Bell: matter.
Carmen Brooks: True.
Donald Bell: 'Cause so many you go to so many houses these days and you see broken remote controls.
Carmen Brooks: Very true.
Marvin Eaton: Yeah,
Carmen Brooks: Very
Donald Bell: Taped
Marvin Eaton: it's
Carmen Brooks: true.
Marvin Eaton: like,
Donald Bell: with duck tape
Marvin Eaton: yep
Donald Bell: and
Carmen Brooks: Very
Donald Bell: what have
Carmen Brooks: much
Donald Bell: you,
Carmen Brooks: so.
Donald Bell: you wouldn't have that problem
Carmen Brooks: Um
Marvin Eaton: it's
Donald Bell: if
Marvin Eaton: ubiquitous
Donald Bell: you used rubber.
Monte Heil: We can
Marvin Eaton: isn't
Monte Heil: have a
Marvin Eaton: it?
Monte Heil: duck tape casing.
Carmen Brooks: We could. I think that goes against the whole fancy something, a new line, but worth a shot.
Monte Heil: It could go with the granola crowd.
Carmen Brooks: Ah, it could be, it could be, um. Yeah that's what I know.
Marvin Eaton: Great, thanks for that Sarah.
Carmen Brooks: No problem.
Marvin Eaton: Ron?
Monte Heil: Phew.
Monte Heil: Computer's adjusting. One moment please. So interme interface concept by your faithful user interface designer. So yur user interface, guys, is basically aspects of a computer system that can see or hear otherwise uh perceive. Uh, commands and mechanisms, that basically user uses to control the operator operating system. Here's a d series of different remote controls that are out on the market today. I think we're definitely trying to get away from this kind of a look.
Marvin Eaton: Yeah
Monte Heil: Um, so the following are a bunch of different uh interface uh concepts. Uh voice recognition, we we um actually have some new uh information from our research design team but uh I'll get to that in a moment. Um, so current voice recognition starts up to about eighty speech samples, um and basically you record your own verbal labels c and connect them to the remote control. Now our design team, research team, has been able to uh set up a system in which uh you can teach the remote control voice c recognition system to respond to um with standard responses. Like you could say good morning uh remote control and it'll say in a sexy female voice, Good morning Joe. Um. In fact we already have
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Monte Heil: this for a coffee maker line
Marvin Eaton: Lot of single people on the um on the re on the remote control
Monte Heil: On the remote
Marvin Eaton: research
Monte Heil: control
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: team at the
Monte Heil: right.
Carmen Brooks: Very true, very true.
Monte Heil: Um, another concept is what uh Apple has come up with, the spinning
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Monte Heil: wheel with uh L_C_ display like on the uh iPod which I am sure most of you know about.
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Monte Heil: Um and then we have the scroll button with integrated push-button, kind
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Monte Heil: of like a modern a bit
Donald Bell: Mm.
Monte Heil: bulky, a bit crazy, I don't think that's we're necessarily going for.
Donald Bell: No.
Monte Heil: And uh some special components, uh ideas like uh blocking, having the ability to block channels from your for your children um and uh dedicated buttons for for commonly used uh channels and even uh ideas like secured or hidden programming but uh I again if we go with touch screen I don't think that's a big issue. Um and uh this is kind of the uh the big daddy
Carmen Brooks: Hmm.
Monte Heil: of remote controls here. Uh the jumbo universal remote control is almost impossible to misplace or
Marvin Eaton: Yeah,
Monte Heil: lose.
Marvin Eaton: I can see.
Monte Heil: Um, again probably not what we're going for so I I mean my ideas here and kind of where I think we're heading is something slightly larger than a regular iPod uh with a hard cla
Carmen Brooks: Okay.
Monte Heil: c uh plastic casing although I think some of the suggestions we've come up with are definitely uh very good ideas. Uh changeable casings uh our design team was possibly talking about including one extra face plate with the package to kind of set the idea that you can
Carmen Brooks: Mm,
Monte Heil: change
Carmen Brooks: right.
Monte Heil: it and you can try changing it and kind of get used to thinking about maybe buying another one which can add value to our uh bottom line. Uh touch screen interface, um possibly having go-to buttons being uh stuck into the system so those don't move away from the screen, uh, the important ones like power, volume and jump between channels. Um, and of course our voice command system which I've talked a little bit about already
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Monte Heil: and uh the use of recognisable colours and shapes to aid recognition of the features um that are around so red for power, um
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Monte Heil: arrows for different volume ups and downs and channels ups and downs and what not. And uh perhaps even adding in some stupid little jokes with the voice recognition idea like perh mm for instance my toastie maker that I got from my bank has jokes when it's ready.
Carmen Brooks: Nice.
Marvin Eaton: Great.
Monte Heil: And uh that is about it.
Marvin Eaton: Great, wonderful Ron, cool. Lot of good ideas, good facts to have.
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Marvin Eaton: That's what they need, it's like a little dongle it just sticks up this further so you don't have to stand up every time, just
Donald Bell: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: connect
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Marvin Eaton: it, my kingdom. Right so, good to know all that stuff, thanks guys, um. Now we kind of have to come to some decisions, um, I figure we can just go down the line and all three of us can have a chat about it. Um. Based on what Nathan presented as far as the um various costs and benefits um I think, I dunno, what do you guys think about the touch screen at this point?
Carmen Brooks: I think it's our most marketable feature just because it's so new and it's something that is showing up in other places.
Marvin Eaton: 'Kay. 'Kay.
Carmen Brooks: But can we really afford it 'cause it looks like they would be, that would be a really main cost source then
Marvin Eaton: Mm-hmm.
Carmen Brooks: right?
Donald Bell: My estimate is that in order to incorporate touch screen technology it's gonna cost us upwards of seventeen fifty Euro
Marvin Eaton: To produce
Carmen Brooks: Per?
Donald Bell: per remote,
Marvin Eaton: each one.
Donald Bell: yeah that's just an estimate
Carmen Brooks: Piece.
Donald Bell: though.
Monte Heil: Oh you guys are always the dampers on these projects.
Carmen Brooks: I know
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Monte Heil: You industrial designers.
Donald Bell: I know. It's
Marvin Eaton: Hmm.
Donald Bell: fun.
Carmen Brooks: And our goal was to be under twelve fifty or we have to be under twelve fifty?
Marvin Eaton: Well.
Carmen Brooks: Do we remember?
Donald Bell: I thought there was some flexibility with that.
Carmen Brooks: Okay.
Marvin Eaton: There is, it's just, it is a question
Carmen Brooks: Can
Marvin Eaton: of
Carmen Brooks: we justify it?
Marvin Eaton: and how much ca o does that mean we're gonna have to increase the price to make money. Um, from twelve fifty if we d wanna get our fift uh hundred per cent profit margin um that would mean selling it from twenty five. If you multiply seventeen fifty by two that's thirty five.
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Marvin Eaton: So
Monte Heil: Where do you guys come up with these numbers?
Donald Bell: That's just off the top of my head, it is pending further emails.
Marvin Eaton: From the board,
Donald Bell: Right.
Marvin Eaton: um, well
Carmen Brooks: Though I think that's what people would pay for, I mean if you're gonna pay for an expensive high class remote, you're gonna expect it to do something
Marvin Eaton: That's true, I mean
Donald Bell: It is the new it would be in a class of its own.
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: And that's to be fair the um the per cent of the market we're not going for mass any you know, mass sales anyway, we're gonna make I mean we we're not talking about selling eight zillion of these things, we just couldn't,
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Marvin Eaton: not for twenty-five Euros, so we could probably maybe shrink the profit margins rather than selling for twenty five, sell 'em for thirty, but that's something that we can have finance deal with.
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: Um, I say that we provisionally go with the touch screen or wh y wh what was your thought on the matter Ron?
Monte Heil: I'm thinking that's uh definitely a good idea and I also think that we could probably come up with some sort of a cheaper uh means to to go about this kind of production,
Carmen Brooks: See if we can cut
Monte Heil: my
Carmen Brooks: some corners.
Monte Heil: my team in the uh on the third floor suggested that uh
Carmen Brooks: Right. Well and we can look into this other manufacturing option, and maybe we can get 'em somewhere else cheaper.
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Monte Heil: Yeah.
Donald Bell: It's true. We could initially go with what we have and
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Donald Bell: if we can find them
Carmen Brooks: It's
Donald Bell: cheaper
Carmen Brooks: a starting
Donald Bell: later
Carmen Brooks: point
Donald Bell: on
Carmen Brooks: anyway, so.
Marvin Eaton: No we could have a s very simple touch screen, you know, there's always the opportunity, if it's gonna be about the size of the iPod or whatever, you know, w we yeah, I guess we can play around with it a bit. Alright, let's
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Marvin Eaton: let's say that okay so the touch screen will be our um our main selling point here.
Monte Heil: I
Marvin Eaton: So
Monte Heil: mean I think that we really have two main selling points,
Carmen Brooks: Yeah 'cause
Monte Heil: I think
Carmen Brooks: with voice
Monte Heil: that our casing
Carmen Brooks: recognition
Monte Heil: and the voice recognition
Carmen Brooks: I mean really this is pretty bells and whistles kinda remote.
Donald Bell: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: The voice rec thing, I mean, if if we're looking at bottom line, now we're looking at upping the cost to seventeen to get the touch screen on, I think we might have to drop the voice rec.
Carmen Brooks: I think we'd have to decide between 'em definitely.
Marvin Eaton: Yeah.
Monte Heil: To be honest, we
Carmen Brooks: Price-wise.
Monte Heil: have the capa we have the design in-house, I mean we've we've come up with this, with
Carmen Brooks: True.
Monte Heil: this new voice we're
Carmen Brooks: We've
Monte Heil: using
Carmen Brooks: already got
Monte Heil: it for
Carmen Brooks: it.
Monte Heil: our coffee machines already. I can pass you on that email from my uh guy in uh guy down the hall. Sounds good.
Marvin Eaton: Hmm. voice rec?
Donald Bell: I think if we we do both the obviously production costs are going to go way up um but it does put it into it'd become the Rolls Royce of remote controls basically.
Carmen Brooks: Pretty much.
Donald Bell: It would be very nice.
Monte Heil: I mean we we have to r reflect back on what our market research did say.
Carmen Brooks: Right and they said they wanted voice recognition. Course, maybe they hadn't thought of this whole touch screen option, but definitely we know the market is there for voice recognition so to say we have the technology and we're not gonna use it even though we know it'll sell is a call I don't think I can give the highs ups.
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Carmen Brooks: Like really I can't go in and say no we're gonna just ignore everything we know.
Marvin Eaton: Yeah.
Monte Heil: Does having both really up our costs?
Marvin Eaton: I can't see how it wouldn't, I mean, there's you know the old aphorism, you can have it fast, you can have it cheap or you can have it quality, pick two of three. You know, you can't
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: you can't have all three.
Donald Bell: Yeah, 'cause you
Marvin Eaton: It's
Donald Bell: you
Marvin Eaton: just
Donald Bell: just
Marvin Eaton: impossible.
Donald Bell: upping the number of chips that you need to deal with each different
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Donald Bell: function.
Marvin Eaton: Well if we're gonna pick betwe e alright so we have to pick between one of the two. Um. Otherwise, yeah, we just it just becomes cost prohibitive. What which, which do we suspect we should hold o we should hold on to?
Carmen Brooks: Well, we already have research backing voice recognition as you know fiscally solvent. But uh I I I personally would tend to another direction but if that's what's gonna sell I think that's what we need to go with and maybe we can table this touch screen for our next model.
Donald Bell: I would have to side with that, I think
Marvin Eaton: 'Kay.
Donald Bell: the voice recognition is simpler, we already have the all the technology in-house, it's ready to go, it's packaged, it's
Marvin Eaton: What does the cost look like Ron? Is it cheaper to do the V_R_ or to do the uh touch screen? Nathan?
Monte Heil: Well my p
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Monte Heil: is
Donald Bell: Um, this is just off the top of my head keep in mind, but I think the voice recognition would they're both mm they're both gonna push the costs up, but um, since we already have the technology
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Donald Bell: in-house for the voice recognition we're not gonna have to do as much
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Donald Bell: design work and sometimes the design work is what push the costs up,
Marvin Eaton: Right.
Donald Bell: if you know what I mean.
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Monte Heil: Um, I definitely have to agree with that last
Carmen Brooks: And
Monte Heil: comment.
Carmen Brooks: we're still not then we don't have to deal with this battery issue nearly as much either,
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Carmen Brooks: we can stick with what we've already got. In a lot other ways too.
Marvin Eaton: Okay. So I'm getting alright so more or less you guys think that o o of the two of 'em, the voice recognition will be better. Okay.
Carmen Brooks: I think it's our lower risk option which
Marvin Eaton: Yeah.
Carmen Brooks: for right now we can have it on the market sooner which is all in all our best option.
Marvin Eaton: Okay. Sorted. We will omit the touch screen in favour of voice recognition.
Monte Heil: It's you and Carmen Brooks outside a little here.
Carmen Brooks: So and when are we gonna have basic prototypes coming up next that's you guys's next step right?
Marvin Eaton: Yeah, well we'll we'll sic we'll sort out what it what f what else we're gonna talk about
Donald Bell: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: for
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Marvin Eaton: the prototype but yeah that's our next step, it'll
Carmen Brooks: Okay.
Marvin Eaton: be a developing
Donald Bell: Are
Marvin Eaton: of
Donald Bell: we
Marvin Eaton: prototype.
Donald Bell: going to talk now about um the materials that we're gonna use for
Marvin Eaton: Yes.
Donald Bell: the case and
Carmen Brooks: Mm-hmm.
Marvin Eaton: We'll
Donald Bell: all
Marvin Eaton: just
Donald Bell: those
Marvin Eaton: run
Donald Bell: things?
Marvin Eaton: through it yeah,
Donald Bell: Okay.
Marvin Eaton: yeah, um. You discussed either a lithium or a solar power. Would the solar power be enough to fuel a voice recognition? Or this kinesthetic one, would that be enough to fuel a voice recognition remote
Donald Bell: Um,
Marvin Eaton: control?
Donald Bell: the solar power definitely would be but I think just to keep people from getting annoyed, 'cause sometimes solar power fails and there's no way round that, we should install a small backup battery.
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Donald Bell: Just to cover those moments when for whatever reason, the remote hasn't
Carmen Brooks: Well what
Donald Bell: been
Carmen Brooks: of
Donald Bell: exposed
Carmen Brooks: people with like
Donald Bell: to
Carmen Brooks: the T_V_ in their basement,
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Carmen Brooks: like what if
Marvin Eaton: Yep.
Carmen Brooks: wha we can't guarantee sunlight everywhere so having a
Donald Bell: It's
Carmen Brooks: secondary
Donald Bell: true.
Carmen Brooks: source is probably
Donald Bell: Yeah, it works about the same as a solar powered calculator,
Monte Heil: Calculator.
Donald Bell: and you know
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Donald Bell: how those those don't really
Carmen Brooks: True.
Donald Bell: require that much light,
Carmen Brooks: True.
Donald Bell: um, but obviously a little more light than a calculator, but we're not talking about a lot of light. Doesn't have to be out taking a sunbath for
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Donald Bell: a few
Marvin Eaton: Right.
Donald Bell: hours a day or anything.
Carmen Brooks: Okay.
Marvin Eaton: Okay. What do you think Ron?
Monte Heil: I'm willing to agree with everything that's been said.
Marvin Eaton: Okay.
Monte Heil: Uh I have to say though that um another idea's come up in my head. idea of having a hand-held remote control and maybe kind of have a round remote control that kind of looks like a paperweight or something like that, kind of
Carmen Brooks: Uh
Monte Heil: a sleek little uh
Marvin Eaton: Hmm.
Monte Heil: neat
Donald Bell: Hmm.
Monte Heil: thing that sits on your table or something.
Carmen Brooks: Interesting.
Donald Bell: Why,
Monte Heil: Just a thought.
Donald Bell: why
Marvin Eaton: Yeah.
Donald Bell: moving away from hand-held, why? What's the uh
Monte Heil: Well
Donald Bell: idea?
Monte Heil: if you don't need to pick it up it could kind
Carmen Brooks: I
Monte Heil: of
Carmen Brooks: if
Monte Heil: be
Carmen Brooks: it's
Monte Heil: a selling
Carmen Brooks: got voice
Monte Heil: point.
Carmen Brooks: recognition it can be technically anywhere in your room and
Donald Bell: Hmm.
Carmen Brooks: still do its job.
Donald Bell: Do you think people that are people that buy a remote, are they always gonna wanna use the voice recognition or is it just something that they do sometimes.
Carmen Brooks: True, and i probabl I think we're banking on selling it to more than just voice recognition people, like we want it to work fundamentally
Marvin Eaton: Well
Carmen Brooks: as
Marvin Eaton: we have
Carmen Brooks: a basic
Marvin Eaton: to have buttons
Carmen Brooks: manual
Marvin Eaton: on it too
Carmen Brooks: too,
Marvin Eaton: as well.
Carmen Brooks: right.
Marvin Eaton: But that's done, that's no bother I mean if you look at the catalogue from places like with sharper image or whatever you know they might have or like um who is it, Apple makes these really pretentious speakers with the th sub-woofers you know like clear and glass
Carmen Brooks: Mm-hmm.
Marvin Eaton: and you know and
Donald Bell: Right.
Marvin Eaton: then they got these little
Carmen Brooks: Yep.
Marvin Eaton: pyramidal type of um speakers.
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: I mean, why not have a little rounded kind of thing, it could still have the basic buttons on it. Um, 'cause we're going for basic functionality primarily as well.
Carmen Brooks: With the bu yeah.
Marvin Eaton: And maybe a menu button and so forth, you know um use a channel button to scroll through the menu d if they want to record programmes or whatever you know I mean we
Donald Bell: I
Marvin Eaton: can
Donald Bell: think,
Marvin Eaton: sort
Carmen Brooks: Mm-hmm.
Marvin Eaton: that
Donald Bell: I think
Marvin Eaton: out.
Donald Bell: you're on to something because
Marvin Eaton: Yeah.
Donald Bell: we need to escape the traditional shape of a remote. Maybe something
Carmen Brooks: True.
Donald Bell: that looks nice on a table is would be good,
Carmen Brooks: Way
Donald Bell: even
Carmen Brooks: to go.
Donald Bell: though and hand-held the same time.
Monte Heil: I think it's all about following Apple's lead on a lot of these
Carmen Brooks: Yeah
Monte Heil: things.
Carmen Brooks: I'm thinking of the airport
Monte Heil: Mm-hmm.
Carmen Brooks: portal, you know
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Carmen Brooks: like that little pod looking thing?
Donald Bell: Yeah,
Monte Heil: Exactly.
Donald Bell: those are nice.
Marvin Eaton: Yeah, I mean a nice although we do um wh uh is I'm recalling that she mentioned that we n need to get away from the surgical white kind of brushed
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Marvin Eaton: aluminium thing
Donald Bell: Mm.
Marvin Eaton: and get back to it but you could have a very tasteful um wood coloured or earth
Carmen Brooks: That would
Marvin Eaton: tone
Carmen Brooks: be kinda
Marvin Eaton: kind
Carmen Brooks: neat.
Marvin Eaton: of um
Carmen Brooks: Terracotta bowl or something.
Marvin Eaton: Still, I mean, yeah, along those lines.
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Marvin Eaton: Yeah I like that, I like that idea a lot. Um, let's see what we can do as far as that goes.
Donald Bell: Okay.
Marvin Eaton: And the uh the material like the plastics and so forth, we were discussing that being uh using like a rubber kind of softer feel,
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Marvin Eaton: um you know li lik if you feel the the tip on this pen it's a bit gives just a bit.
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: You know something where it's uh a a more advanced f form of plastic that has some kind of a tactile response to it.
Donald Bell: Right. Just kind of the squishy feel.
Carmen Brooks: Yeah, which is the next big thing, so that's not gonna hurt us either.
Marvin Eaton: Mm 'kay. Yeah let's see if we can do a squishy non-remote control-looking remote control. But to be fair, yeah, I mean, you just c you could just put it literally put it on the the ni the coffee table next to the telly and say
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Marvin Eaton: volume up. Yeah
Carmen Brooks: Handy.
Marvin Eaton: I like it, I like the idea, that's good. Um and we've sorted of discussed costs, um. I guess we'll a that's gonna be uh a thing, if we run a bit over-budget, that might be okay, um.
Donald Bell: Sorry about the uh lack of information on cost, I just haven't been provided that information by our manufacturers
Carmen Brooks: Okay.
Donald Bell: and
Marvin Eaton: We'll have more
Donald Bell: I'm just
Marvin Eaton: of an
Donald Bell: having
Marvin Eaton: idea when
Donald Bell: to
Marvin Eaton: the
Donald Bell: guess.
Marvin Eaton: prototype have more of a we'll have more of an idea later on. Um. And we just yeah go from there. Um, so we've revisited the touch screen and more or less ruled that out, um, I think so we're more or less con we wh wh we're more or less in agreement that we want to have a um a simple kind of function, you
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Marvin Eaton: know, not too complex.
Carmen Brooks: Right. Well when the majority of people are only using the most primary functions on a daily basis, although I'm not saying we should completely rule out major functions, they should be secondary, at least if not functionally then visually, like those shouldn't be
Donald Bell: Right.
Marvin Eaton: Like maybe have menu
Carmen Brooks: Take precedence,
Marvin Eaton: things.
Donald Bell: If,
Carmen Brooks: yeah.
Donald Bell: if we're not going the touch-screen route then we can um just incorporate maybe something that folds out like what
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Donald Bell: you often see
Marvin Eaton: Mm.
Donald Bell: on these kinds of remotes is the most basic functions up here and
Carmen Brooks: And
Donald Bell: something
Carmen Brooks: they slide.
Donald Bell: that slides down to reveal the you know more complicated things.
Marvin Eaton: Yes.
Carmen Brooks: Well and do we wanna consider like an iPod screen which isn't a touch screen but you're still scrolling through menu options, in p
Monte Heil: Think then we're hitting our cost issue again.
Carmen Brooks: True, we're
Marvin Eaton: Yeah
Carmen Brooks: still
Marvin Eaton: we've
Donald Bell: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: also
Carmen Brooks: not making
Marvin Eaton: got the
Carmen Brooks: it easier
Marvin Eaton: Carmen Brooks
Carmen Brooks: then.
Marvin Eaton: the thing of, if we're gonna have a non-remote-looking remote,
Carmen Brooks: True.
Marvin Eaton: how do we yeah.
Carmen Brooks: Fair enough.
Marvin Eaton: B But no I mean we could do a slide or a compartment, you know, like if it say it's
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: a lit little vaguely ovoidal type of thing, it'd be easy to have a compartment in there. Or you know, a b a b a a series of you know three or four buttons with a menu button and then a side an s up and down type of thing, like on um like on a D_V_D_ player. You
Carmen Brooks: Mm-hmm.
Marvin Eaton: know you see the modern D_V_D_ players'll just have um a menu button on the side and then
Carmen Brooks: Yeah it's
Marvin Eaton: four
Carmen Brooks: just a
Marvin Eaton: buttons
Carmen Brooks: scroll.
Marvin Eaton: around them and you
Donald Bell: Right.
Marvin Eaton: can just kind of manoeuvre
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: through the menu like that.
Donald Bell: So are we gonna are we talking we need to figure out what kind of buttons we're going to use, are we going to use scroll buttons? Rubber buttons? Um
Marvin Eaton: Well it seems like I dunno it seems to Carmen Brooks that we could just do the um stick with the rubber 'cause since we're probably gonna be using
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: some kind of um rubber for the outside case we
Carmen Brooks: Probably.
Marvin Eaton: might as well stick with that um.
Donald Bell: Right.
Monte Heil: I think to a certain extent we have to stick with uh kind of uh a little bit traditional in terms of the buttons and then
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Monte Heil: and then make our unique feature our casing and what not
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Monte Heil: and our voice command.
Carmen Brooks: Well no it's basic just like four directions that are that can use as menu or channel and volume or however you wanna do it, are really versatile and everybody's already got them to some extent on the remotes they already own so it's not like we're dealing with everybody relearning things 'cause that's not something anybody's gonna wanna buy a new for.
Donald Bell: Right.
Marvin Eaton: Mm 'kay, um. We've already kind of covered this as well. That seems to be selling um and we we've more or less agreed that we want to kar target this youth market,
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Marvin Eaton: um. Especially now with eighteen to thirty five year olds being such a large quantity of the population.
Carmen Brooks: Right, particularly in technological fields, so
Marvin Eaton: Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
Carmen Brooks: that's exactly where we're headed.
Marvin Eaton: Okay. Um. Yeah alright, well, more or less covered what we need to cover I think fi an an any final thoughts before we think about doing the protot moving on to the prototype.
Monte Heil: Well what are we actually doing? What
Marvin Eaton: Right.
Monte Heil: were
Marvin Eaton: I was just gonna step on to um
Carmen Brooks: Uh. Oh it wasn't in the way but
Marvin Eaton: I wasn't?
Carmen Brooks: yeah,
Marvin Eaton: Oh, my
Carmen Brooks: whatever.
Marvin Eaton: bad um sorry.
Carmen Brooks: No, don't worry about it.
Marvin Eaton: The um, yeah okay I was just gonna assign tasks in the next
Monte Heil: Sure.
Marvin Eaton: b anyth any oth any other
Carmen Brooks: Okay.
Marvin Eaton: final thoughts before we go ahead and cool?
Donald Bell: So
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Donald Bell: have we decided that we are gonna go with different style cases for different people? Or are we just
Marvin Eaton: Um.
Donald Bell: going to go with one? ..It's very, it's very hard thing to predict because
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Donald Bell: you have different cases and that might open up your market a little bit obviously, but if you have just one case and it doesn't go very well mm.
Marvin Eaton: Yeah.
Carmen Brooks: Right.
Donald Bell: It's a tough situation, but obviously having more cases also costs more so
Marvin Eaton: Well then again colours wouldn't be so hard to do, you could have uh
Donald Bell: There's an idea.
Marvin Eaton: a, you know, a um uh kind of a natural wood colour, like a stained wood and
Carmen Brooks: Mm.
Marvin Eaton: um, I don't know, olive green or something.
Carmen Brooks: Yeah.
Marvin Eaton: That wouldn't be so much of a problem to incorporate into the colour of the thing.
Monte Heil: And again copying iMac's kind of for iPod Mac
Carmen Brooks: Yeah,
Monte Heil: Apple's
Carmen Brooks: get
Monte Heil: uh
Carmen Brooks: in there.
Monte Heil: colour scheme.
Carmen Brooks: Yeah, totally.
Marvin Eaton: Yeah, I think that's probably a good Donald Bell okay so let's work on uh multiple case colours. But yeah, stick with the same kind of kinda yeah, the same basic non-remote kind of remote design. Cool. Alright, so we'll have the next meeting about half an hour, um. I want the uh I'd like Nathan, I'd like you to work on just the basic look and feel, what can we accomplish, um, given these parameters that we're just gonna sort of have this kind of uh non-remote remote. Um,
Donald Bell: Right.
Marvin Eaton: what are our broad constraints before we deve design a prototype. And um Ron if you can figure out how probably best to lay out this idea of this simple design with the voice recognition built in and also this kind of drop down or s on the side kind of menu options simple. Somehow work out how we can get this all s in the same place. Um, and if you can check product evaluation with m some pilots and stuff. Um I need you guys to work together on making a prototype, um using um prototype building materials um. And also um specific instructions will be sent to you by your coaches as
Donald Bell: Oh
Marvin Eaton: well.
Donald Bell: excellent yeah.
Marvin Eaton: So that's what to start with for now, is that alright,
Carmen Brooks: Cool.
Marvin Eaton: you guys feel
Donald Bell: That
Marvin Eaton: clear
Donald Bell: sounds
Marvin Eaton: about this?
Donald Bell: good.
Monte Heil: Fabulous.
Marvin Eaton: Alright. I guess we'll just hit the bricks. Thanks guys.
Carmen Brooks: Cool. | Donald Bell presented an analysis of cost and the manufacturing options that were available to the group. Carmen Brooks presented market trends and the organic trend that this project would adopt. She discussed materials that could be used to follow this trend. Monte Heil presented several interface concepts including voice recognition, a spinning wheel design, and a touch screen interface. The group then discussed the features of the device. They discussed the costs and benefits of using either voice recognition or the touch screen interface, and decided on voice recognition based on their marketing data that favored it. They decided to use solar power to power the device. The group discussed the non-traditional look the device could have since the voice recognition would allow it to be stationary. They discussed using rubber for the case. The group talked about hiding the complicated functions from the main interface, using rubber for the buttons, and having different cases to suit different tastes. Marvin Eaton reiterated that the product was being marketed towards the youth market, and then gave out assignments and instructed the group to work together to build the prototype. | 1 | amisum | train |
Frederick Nixon: Okay. Oh I totally Yeah 'cause I moved it. 'S put it over here. Then we don't have to worry about it.
David Williams: Ready for this?
Jack Wagster: All set? Cool. Alright, it is PowerPoint time. I've done more PowerPoints in this particular experiment than I've ever done in my life before this experiment
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: which is kind of fun.
David Williams: Oh man.
Jack Wagster: So uh here we have our detailed design meeting where we will um look at the prototype and um right so um, I finally figured out what this whole second bullet point is about in my that my coach was sending to Frederick Nixon. It means I'm supposed to read the minutes from the previous meeting.
Fred Thompson: Oh really? Okay.
Jack Wagster: I think.
Frederick Nixon: Huh.
Jack Wagster: I don't know. Otherwise it's just saying I'm the secretary and I'm therefore I'm taking the minutes, s so just to go um just real briefly to go over minutes from last meeting, uh, I will open them slowly, no? Wait for it, wait for it.
Frederick Nixon: Yeah that's not you.
Jack Wagster: No. That's how the Wait. This is, this is very high-powered stuff here, double-clicking, there we go. So um basically the moral of the story from our last minute uh last meeting was that um we that we had meetings from uh we had presentations done by Fred Thompson, uh or from Nathan, and Ron and from Sarah about what we can do here um and what sort of limitations we're operating with um uh excuse Frederick Nixon what limitations we're operating under, what kind of risk we'd be looking at with some of the various approaches we were discussing and we essentially came to the conclusion that we should develop a remote with uh voice recognition, I_E_ that had a vaguely non-remote like shape um because you didn't really need to use it as a remote since you could just use your voice. That would include some mostly just the simple design features for a television operation but with a slide or a fold-out bay for more advanced functions for users. Um, and uh the uh uh the U_I_D_ and the I_D_ were asked to go ahead and start developing a prototype for us to look at. So. That's sorted, back to the main meet here, um, go ahead and take it away guys.
Fred Thompson: Well. Uh, we have assembled our prototype, um. What's to be said about it? Um, we took into account a lot of the things that we went over in the last meeting, um. Some of the most important things to consider are that we decided not to go for the touch screen which you can see
Jack Wagster: Mm-hmm.
Fred Thompson: and opted for some very large buttons for the primary functions, um. This is going to be the on off button and have these buttons to go through the channels um and then two volume buttons down here, d uh we decided those were the most important uh buttons. And then, for the more advanced uh functions there is a slide out panel here um and you can see that there are lots of other things going on. But this actually can slide back in and provides a very nice aesthetic when it's all put away, um. As far as the uh whole visible light thing, we decided to go with the
Frederick Nixon: Ah.
Fred Thompson: multiple colours coming out,
Jack Wagster: Nice.
Fred Thompson: why not?
Frederick Nixon: Fair enough.
Fred Thompson: Of course, if that's annoying for some people that function can be turned off.
Jack Wagster: Perfect.
Fred Thompson: Um.
David Williams: No
Fred Thompson: Go ahead.
David Williams: it's important to we talked a quite a bit about uh you know the the interchangeable uh faces
Frederick Nixon: Mm.
David Williams: and what we've done here is come up with a bit of a natural look here um f
Frederick Nixon: Right.
David Williams: we call it fruity if you will.
Frederick Nixon: Appropriate,
David Williams: Um.
Frederick Nixon: okay.
David Williams: Right, um, of course that's uh interchangeable and uh I think it would be desirable for the uh for the regular product in the in the in the
Frederick Nixon: Mm 'kay.
David Williams: in first to be something a little bit more subdued but this is kind of something that can be done
Frederick Nixon: It is an option.
David Williams: um and as you can see on the television there uh we have the uh voice detector device
Jack Wagster: Oh, right.
David Williams: um on
Fred Thompson: That's
David Williams: the
Fred Thompson: this
David Williams: top
Fred Thompson: here.
David Williams: there.
Frederick Nixon: Ah.
David Williams: Um.
Frederick Nixon: I see.
David Williams: So that that will work quite well with with regard to finding this uh contraption. Um, what other things do we see here, well, um if you give it a touch it does have actually a bit of a spongy feel, um, so I think that will work well with regards to our market. Um and uh let's see, well clearly there's gonna be some more colours and what not available. Um uh do you have anything else to add to that?
Fred Thompson: Um I worried about the materials, it is uh the entire thing is covered in a rubber coating so it's very durable uh, it's not gonna break like some types of plastic that's dropped. Um, and of course as you can see and if you touch it it does have that nice squishy feel.
David Williams: It's actually important to note that the television, uh you know if there's an earthquake or anything like that, that i it actually is edible inside.
Fred Thompson: Fact, I dunno if you noticed, but I wrote the uh the company's name
Jack Wagster: Oh
Fred Thompson: on the telephone
Jack Wagster: well
Fred Thompson: screen,
Jack Wagster: done
Frederick Nixon: Nice.
Fred Thompson: I thought
Jack Wagster: yeah,
Fred Thompson: that was kinda
Jack Wagster: yeah
Fred Thompson: nice.
Jack Wagster: oh
Fred Thompson: This
Jack Wagster: ok
Fred Thompson: was actually an apple on the inside.
Frederick Nixon: Do we need
Fred Thompson: This
Frederick Nixon: to worry about um rot factors?
David Williams: Um it's encased in a new uh type of uh
Frederick Nixon: Oh okay, there's preservatives
David Williams: polymer
Frederick Nixon: involved,
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: we don't
David Williams: yeah.
Frederick Nixon: need to worry,
David Williams: It's
Fred Thompson: We
David Williams: fine.
Frederick Nixon: okay.
Fred Thompson: got a bit ahead of ourselves, I know we're not
David Williams: Hmm.
Frederick Nixon: Fair
Fred Thompson: talking
Frederick Nixon: enough.
Fred Thompson: about making televisions at this point
Jack Wagster: Edible
Fred Thompson: or anything
Jack Wagster: televisions,
Fred Thompson: like
Frederick Nixon: No
Fred Thompson: that, but
Jack Wagster: it's a
Frederick Nixon: but
Jack Wagster: wave of the future.
Frederick Nixon: It's a
David Williams: It's
Frederick Nixon: couple
David Williams: pos
Frederick Nixon: years off at least.
David Williams: a possible new
Frederick Nixon: Okay.
David Williams: product. Um, but I think that's I think that sums up the main features of our of the remote, um
Jack Wagster: Brilliant.
Fred Thompson: Right.
David Williams: I dunno if you guys have any questions or f whether that uh whether we need to worry about any uh other marketing areas or anything of that nature. Um, did we come in under budget?
Fred Thompson: Uh we did, yeah. This cost well to put this into um production, we're looking at about what was our goal? It was twelve fifty Euro um and this actually came in at about eleven ninety nine. Um, so I was quite pleased with that.
David Williams: Mm-hmm.
Fred Thompson: One thing that we didn't do um obviously we had a choice with the buttons whether to use scroll buttons or standard rubber buttons, but we just went for a classic rubber button
Frederick Nixon: Mm.
Fred Thompson: and um since we did that we didn't have to use as many microchips which was quite nice and that's what helped keep the cost down.
Jack Wagster: Brilliant.
Fred Thompson: So even though it has
Frederick Nixon: Mm.
Fred Thompson: a lot of modern technology, um for example the voice recognition, in a lot of ways it's just a simple remote
Frederick Nixon: Okay.
Fred Thompson: and um
David Williams: Mm.
Fred Thompson: I think if we shopped around for other manufacturers um we might be able to get even cheaper.
David Williams: Did
Fred Thompson: And
David Williams: we talk about the voice recognition uh option?
Fred Thompson: Oh no, we haven't talked
David Williams: So
Fred Thompson: about that yet
David Williams: uh
Fred Thompson: have we?
David Williams: so uh yeah on the back here you all noticed this area here which is actually the voice recognition uh
Frederick Nixon: Okay.
David Williams: uh console and uh I think it's nicely designed into the into the overall
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
David Williams: look. Um, but basically the voice recognition uh incorporates um the latest designs that our research team has been able to cufw uh come up with. Basically uh quite similar to the coffee maker
Frederick Nixon: Mm
David Williams: um
Frederick Nixon: 'kay.
David Williams: design that we were talking about earlier and um, I think that uh has given a proven um ease of use and
Fred Thompson: Hmm.
David Williams: what not.
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
David Williams: And uh allows features like the remote actually talking back to the user
Frederick Nixon: Right.
David Williams: um, so.
Jack Wagster: Cool.
Fred Thompson: Any questions?
Jack Wagster: No, no I think that's
Frederick Nixon: Do we have um other, for lack of a better word, skins? Covers? In play now or are those ones gonna be developed later once we see how the couple we have g go or?
Fred Thompson: Um, do you
Frederick Nixon: Do
Fred Thompson: wanna
Frederick Nixon: we
Fred Thompson: answer
Frederick Nixon: know
Fred Thompson: this
Frederick Nixon: where we
Fred Thompson: one
Frederick Nixon: stand
Fred Thompson: or do you want
Frederick Nixon: on
Fred Thompson: Frederick Nixon to
Frederick Nixon: that
Fred Thompson: answer
Frederick Nixon: yet?
Fred Thompson: it?
David Williams: Well we didn't quite have enough material uh.
Frederick Nixon: Oh I wasn't expecting a prototype
Fred Thompson: Yeah,
Frederick Nixon: I just
David Williams: Oh
Frederick Nixon: didn't
David Williams: I see,
Frederick Nixon: know if you
Fred Thompson: yeah.
Frederick Nixon: guys had any in mind
David Williams: right,
Frederick Nixon: yet.
Fred Thompson: Um,
David Williams: um.
Fred Thompson: well as you can see this is just a most superficial layer and um it'd be very easy to
Frederick Nixon: Okay.
Fred Thompson: put another layer
Frederick Nixon: Just
Fred Thompson: of
Frederick Nixon: veneer
Fred Thompson: something else
Frederick Nixon: really, yeah.
Fred Thompson: like
David Williams: Right.
Frederick Nixon: Okay.
David Williams: Actually this bottom red ring here just unclips
Frederick Nixon: Mm-hmm.
David Williams: and then you put
Frederick Nixon: And the
David Williams: a
Frederick Nixon: whole
David Williams: a new
Frederick Nixon: thing
David Williams: a new uh
Frederick Nixon: Okay.
David Williams: a new plate on top of that.
Frederick Nixon: Right.
David Williams: So I mean there are I we definitely
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
David Williams: priced out
Frederick Nixon: There's
David Williams: a spongy even spongier non-natural look
Frederick Nixon: Okay.
David Williams: um materials which I think worked out fine. We also continued
Frederick Nixon: Mm 'kay.
David Williams: on with the ideas that f following uh Apple's colour schemes
Frederick Nixon: Okay,
David Williams: with the kind of the
Frederick Nixon: very
David Williams: uh
Frederick Nixon: cool.
David Williams: light orange and
Fred Thompson: It's
David Williams: the
Fred Thompson: not
David Williams: green.
Fred Thompson: it's not quite a a face plate, it's more like a pseudo-face plate
Frederick Nixon: Okay.
Fred Thompson: because it's simple enough that in the factory it could we could very easily put a different one on it, it locks into place such that, you know, it's pretty permanent but at the same time, if we wanna go the other way it's just a matter of a couple of adjustments and we could go
Frederick Nixon: Okay.
Fred Thompson: the face plate way if you know what I mean.
Frederick Nixon: Yep. It's still an option if we
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: need it. Very cool, nice job.
Jack Wagster: Right, yeah thanks guys that's very, very good work. I like it, brilliant. Um, what we need to discuss now is the finance of it, um I got Frederick Nixon you've got you provided a number that actually sounds quite nice. Um the trouble is I was just given this by finance.
Fred Thompson: Oh.
Jack Wagster: Um, it's a spreadsheet of the parts and I've just tentatively put in what it's going to
Fred Thompson: Ooh.
Jack Wagster: look like um. I'm just gonna clear this out real quickly, but it looks like So we'll just if we can just itemize what's in here, we've got this it's a solar cell thing right?
Fred Thompson: Right uh
Jack Wagster: With
Fred Thompson: we
Jack Wagster: a
Fred Thompson: didn't
Jack Wagster: back-up
Fred Thompson: really touch
Jack Wagster: battery?
Fred Thompson: on that but it it's in there, yep.
Jack Wagster: With the ba okay. Um and
David Williams: The voice recognition area actually doubles as uh as the solar cell area.
Jack Wagster: Clever,
David Williams: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: clever, well done. Um so I guess that would mean we've got a bit of a um It's a s a speaker and a sensor at the same time isn't it?
Fred Thompson: Yeah, yeah. It's just making use of the same space and
Frederick Nixon: Mm-hmm.
Fred Thompson: the same materials,
Jack Wagster: Okay.
Fred Thompson: but
Jack Wagster: Um and the case, it's more of a single-curved case, I guess would be that be the general
Fred Thompson: Yeah, one big
Frederick Nixon: Mm-hmm.
Fred Thompson: curve I guess you could say.
Jack Wagster: Um and we've got a rubber skin material basically throughout. Um. Push button interface um with this other drop-down so maybe we've got two push button interfaces don't
Fred Thompson: Yeah,
Jack Wagster: we?
Fred Thompson: mm-hmm.
Jack Wagster: Um. And um a special I guess it's uh we've got a sort of a wood materi a rubbery type material
Fred Thompson: Yeah, special.
Jack Wagster: that throughout, yeah.
Fred Thompson: And s I guess you have to mark special colour and special form as well, don't you? 'Cause it i it is very unconventional,
Jack Wagster: Yeah, it's it's
Fred Thompson: I like
Jack Wagster: quite
Fred Thompson: to think
Jack Wagster: unique.
Fred Thompson: of it as
Jack Wagster: I
Fred Thompson: unconventional.
Jack Wagster: like it, yeah it's So it looks like
Frederick Nixon: M come in at sixteen?
Jack Wagster: a bit over
Fred Thompson: Oh.
Jack Wagster: budget,
Fred Thompson: Huh,
Jack Wagster: um.
Fred Thompson: doesn't match up does it?
Jack Wagster: So what we could do perhaps, a simple fix would maybe to switch away from the solar cells um or take out the back-up battery.
Fred Thompson: How do
Jack Wagster: Uh
Fred Thompson: you feel about that?
David Williams: I mean I think that uh if we're talking about it being one of our main selling features, being environmental and without the batteries and what not, although it does still have a battery so I'm not sure that
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
David Williams: you know what the sell is on that.
Fred Thompson: I mean we could take we could take the battery out of it you see and it'd probably work ninety nine per cent of the time but you're gonna have to set up a call centre for that one per cent of the time when people are calling and saying oh look my remote isn't working what
Jack Wagster: Mm-hmm.
Fred Thompson: am I
Frederick Nixon: Mm
Fred Thompson: gonna do?
Frederick Nixon: k.
Jack Wagster: Mm-hmm.
Fred Thompson: People'd be real upset. I
Frederick Nixon: True.
Fred Thompson: think in the long-run it's better to keep the battery, it's hard to scrap the whole cell battery idea 'cause that's so integral to the theme that we have.
Jack Wagster: Hmm.
Jack Wagster: What's difficult, we have all these things integral to the um to the design
Frederick Nixon: Nah.
Jack Wagster: of it that we just can't back out of now, it would have to be seems like we'd have to go back to square one in a way. Um if we were gonna try to undo one bit we'd probably have to undo most of it,
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: um
Frederick Nixon: Although we don't wanna get rid of the whole environmental I mean obviously the solar cell is a big piece of the way we're marketing this as like a natural, new thing, but honestly if we cut that one piece out we're actually coming in under budget if I've done my math correctly.
Fred Thompson: Hmm.
David Williams: I mean you might
Frederick Nixon: I mean
David Williams: be able to sway Frederick Nixon on the idea that we our main selling point could be already this voice recognition thing I mean that's
Frederick Nixon: Which,
David Williams: what sets
Frederick Nixon: it's
David Williams: us apart right?
Frederick Nixon: yeah that's what setting us into this young market, I mean that's where we started from, so I don't know, and I mean you know perhaps when the cell technology comes down in price we can bring that back into the game but it looks like at this point that may be out of our league.
David Williams: And the reality
Fred Thompson: Right.
David Williams: is you know, for Frederick Nixon from an ideological stand point, I'd like to stick with the uh the solar cell, but I h kind of have to throw myself
Frederick Nixon: Right.
David Williams: in the in the business structure model
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
David Williams: here and
Fred Thompson: Right.
David Williams: uh you know I think
Jack Wagster: It's either or.
David Williams: I think that
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
David Williams: I think that we need to come to a compromise here and maybe move ahead with the project, without the solar cell.
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: I think
Fred Thompson: I guess
Frederick Nixon: unfortunately
Fred Thompson: we might have to
Frederick Nixon: that's
Fred Thompson: do
Frederick Nixon: our best
Fred Thompson: that.
Frederick Nixon: option.
Fred Thompson: It's the only way we're gonna get below our uh goal isn't it?
Frederick Nixon: Mm.
Fred Thompson: Of twelve fifty.
Jack Wagster: 'Cause we can't remove the push buttons 'cause they're
Fred Thompson: Yeah,
Frederick Nixon: It kind
Jack Wagster: um
Frederick Nixon: of yeah.
Jack Wagster: and we can't get rid of the uh I mean removing the changing the case wouldn't be so much of a
David Williams: Savings.
Jack Wagster: mm-mm, um,
Frederick Nixon: Mm-mm.
Jack Wagster: nor would changing the case materials. Um. So yeah that looks like to be the only thing.
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: So that would be the it's a major change but Yeah.
Fred Thompson: Gotta
Jack Wagster: Alright,
Fred Thompson: do what you gotta do.
Jack Wagster: so we're in agreement on that.
Frederick Nixon: Unfortunately I think we are.
David Williams: No, I think that was a good compromise you brought forward Sarah.
Jack Wagster: Right. Moving along swiftly. Um, so I guess now we just go to the project evaluation which I will allow Sarah to take
Frederick Nixon: That
Jack Wagster: over.
Frederick Nixon: would be Frederick Nixon. Um cord?
Jack Wagster: Ah of course, sorry.
Frederick Nixon: No problem.
Jack Wagster: Whoosh.
Frederick Nixon: Can you reach, that
David Williams: Yep.
Frederick Nixon: would be great, thank you.
Jack Wagster: That'd be great
Frederick Nixon: I didn't even do that one on purpose either, damn. Okay, um, basically I was just evaluating um from what we know of how our product's working right now with the criteria that we set at the beginning of these are the things we needed to do, these are the things that look like we feel they're important. Um so I was looking at basic design things, does it fulfil its functions as a remote? Is the design what we wanted it to do? I are technologies up to where we hoped they would be and does it fulfil the aesthetic qualities that our original market research was looking for? Um. Basic questions like, you know, does it turn on? Does it respond to voice recognition? And overall, in general, it looks like it's coming up to par.
Fred Thompson: Mm.
Frederick Nixon: Um, the only thing is with with the pull-out panel, that is, can it take some adjusting because it's a new sort of interface, um that looked like it was coming up rough, but then, once you get used to it, it does make a lot of sense. So I think overall we're headed in the right direction.
Fred Thompson: Really good.
Frederick Nixon: So.
David Williams: They like that spongy feel.
Frederick Nixon: Yeah. It looks like it's going over well,
David Williams: And
Frederick Nixon: so
David Williams: the paging
Fred Thompson: Six?
David Williams: function works well, that's
Frederick Nixon: we're
David Williams: good to hear,
Frederick Nixon: we're good
David Williams: we
Frederick Nixon: yeah.
David Williams: worked hard on that one.
Fred Thompson: We
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Fred Thompson: did.
Frederick Nixon: It's I think eventually if we do um branch out with this product maybe we do have a higher budget options and if it goes over with this model we can look into um wider range voice recognition like from other rooms of the house and stuff, but for now, what we've got is working in the range we need it for, so it's all good.
Jack Wagster: Brilliant.
Fred Thompson: I am bit
Frederick Nixon: That's
Fred Thompson: disappointed
Frederick Nixon: everything from
Fred Thompson: about
Frederick Nixon: Frederick Nixon.
Fred Thompson: losing the solar panel
Jack Wagster: Hmm.
Fred Thompson: but
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Fred Thompson: it's okay. Mm.
Frederick Nixon: Yeah, it is a set-back, but Okay, do you need the cord back?
David Williams: W we might
Jack Wagster: Um
David Williams: have
Jack Wagster: yeah,
David Williams: uh
Jack Wagster: I was just
David Williams: we
Jack Wagster: go on.
David Williams: might have lost that granola market again that
Fred Thompson: I
David Williams: we're
Fred Thompson: know.
Jack Wagster: Well they don't own tellys anyway do they?
David Williams: I guess
Fred Thompson: True.
David Williams: that's true.
Jack Wagster: Right. So, um, this one's a bit unclear to Frederick Nixon to be perfectly fair, um. I got this slide from the coach and I'm not sure what it's connected to. Um so I guess we are going to discuss um our project process um and that is gonna go into my report. So I guess this is the point where we go um uh out of role it looks like and talk about our satisfaction for room for creativity and so forth and
Fred Thompson: Okay.
Jack Wagster: how that all worked, I guess, um.
Frederick Nixon: As in within the team
Jack Wagster: I think
Frederick Nixon: or?
Jack Wagster: so yeah.
Fred Thompson: Right so it's
Frederick Nixon: Okay.
Fred Thompson: just kind of a
Jack Wagster: I think
Fred Thompson: open
Jack Wagster: it's
Fred Thompson: mic kind of thing or
Jack Wagster: I mm-hmm, I think so.
Fred Thompson: 'Kay.
Jack Wagster: I think
Frederick Nixon: It is now, you're in charge
Jack Wagster: hope
Frederick Nixon: so there you go.
Jack Wagster: I'm not screwing up an experiment. But I trust that she would jump in if I was so okay fair enough.
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: Whatever.
Jack Wagster: Um right, um so any thoughts?
Fred Thompson: Are we considering
Frederick Nixon: Um.
Fred Thompson: these points here?
Jack Wagster: Yeah.
Fred Thompson: Okay.
Frederick Nixon: I think they're starting blocks yeah.
Jack Wagster: What do you guys feel about the process?
Frederick Nixon: Um, you know I think in general, for a day's worth of work we actually were relatively productive, considering the little amount of input we had going in.
Jack Wagster: Mm-hmm.
Frederick Nixon: Um, and the technology has definitely been a help, it's really been interesting to try out all this new stuff.
David Williams: We didn't use the whiteboard at all.
Fred Thompson: No.
Jack Wagster: No,
Frederick Nixon: No,
Jack Wagster: no
Frederick Nixon: we
Jack Wagster: whiteboard.
Frederick Nixon: didn't. We could now if that'd make up for it but really
David Williams: And
Frederick Nixon: and I feel like if you guys had been designing in here perhaps that would have changed but because of room constraints, doesn't really matter.
David Williams: Um, also had I not been intrigued about the pen, I don't think I woulda used it at all, I didn't write barely anything.
Frederick Nixon: Yeah I think I was taking notes more often than usual just 'cause
Fred Thompson: Yeah,
Frederick Nixon: I liked the pen,
Fred Thompson: it's true.
Frederick Nixon: yeah.
David Williams: Uh.
Fred Thompson: Mm.
Jack Wagster: Was pretty cool tack though.
David Williams: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: Mm.
Fred Thompson: Definitely.
Frederick Nixon: I am disappointed I didn't get a note back from my personal coach.
Fred Thompson: As you write your personal coach.
Frederick Nixon: Yeah, but I didn't get a response so we'll see.
Fred Thompson: What if you get a response two or three months from now?
Frederick Nixon: Okay
Fred Thompson: That'd
Frederick Nixon: that
Fred Thompson: be
Frederick Nixon: would
Fred Thompson: weird.
Frederick Nixon: be kinda creepy.
Jack Wagster: Attempts to contact coach ineffective.
Frederick Nixon: Well what kind of coaching is that really? What if I really needed something.
David Williams: I so I don't n I think there was a lot of room for creativity, we could do whatever basically
Frederick Nixon: I think so.
David Williams: what we wanted until the budget came down on us, um.
Frederick Nixon: And even then we did get a decent product turned out although it's not everything we wanted it to be.
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
David Williams: With the natural look.
Fred Thompson: That's very natural.
Jack Wagster: Very natural look.
Frederick Nixon: Organic, really.
Jack Wagster: That's the brilliance of they had a p they had a peeler in here.
Frederick Nixon: And highly resourceful team mates might I add
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: which is always a plus.
Jack Wagster: Yeah, I think, yeah re I thought it was like really creative actually, I mean.
Frederick Nixon: Mm yeah,
David Williams: I
Frederick Nixon: I'm impressed.
David Williams: think the teamwork was good
Fred Thompson: And to
David Williams: as
Fred Thompson: prove
David Williams: well.
Fred Thompson: that we weren't wasteful we didn't waste a single bit of Play-Doh, we used every bit.
Frederick Nixon: Nice. All four of those little containers.
Fred Thompson: Yeah,
Jack Wagster: Including
Fred Thompson: I guess
Jack Wagster: the s the multi-coloured wave pattern.
Fred Thompson: My one my one criticism is that we didn't have enough colours to work with, we only had four,
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Fred Thompson: wasn't enough.
Frederick Nixon: You could have developed multiple skins really had
Fred Thompson: I know
Frederick Nixon: you had
Fred Thompson: it
Frederick Nixon: more colours.
Fred Thompson: could have been amazing.
Frederick Nixon: Oh well.
Jack Wagster: What did you guys think about the the the roles?
Fred Thompson: Hmm.
Frederick Nixon: They were good.
Fred Thompson: Yeah it's f kind of fun,
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Fred Thompson: it was I think it was pretty clever 'cause we were never able to get too far off track because the information came in at the right time and
Frederick Nixon: True.
Fred Thompson: kind of filled in the gaps enough. At the same time you had enough room to kind of just make things up,
Frederick Nixon: Do your own.
Fred Thompson: which was kind of fun.
Frederick Nixon: Though I did feel like th the level of information dropped off severely over the course of the day.
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: I mean maybe it's just Frederick Nixon but I didn't actually get any information for the last presentation at all.
Jack Wagster: That's true,
Frederick Nixon: Nothing,
Jack Wagster: I I got this spreadsheet.
Frederick Nixon: I didn't even get an email, like that was it. So, yeah, I feel like that was slightly lacking but then you know, fill in the blanks on your own, level of creativity upped.
David Williams: Well
Frederick Nixon: Whatever.
David Williams: I think that was I think that was an issue I kept finding with regard to
Jack Wagster: Of what to do.
David Williams: well no but also yeah when I was reporting about what each of us was doing I was often
Fred Thompson: Mm.
Frederick Nixon: Mm-hmm.
David Williams: confused as to what you were doing
Frederick Nixon: Uh-huh, that wasn't very much.
Fred Thompson: You know
David Williams: felt
Frederick Nixon: Mm.
David Williams: like you know a lot of our discussion would centre around n specifically what my task was because that was kind of the interface
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
David Williams: portion which was what
Frederick Nixon: Yes.
David Williams: the whole project was about
Jack Wagster: Mm, mm.
David Williams: uh
Frederick Nixon: Hmm, very much so.
David Williams: but and then in the end I think our jobs kind of melded together a
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
David Williams: little bit more,
Fred Thompson: That was fun.
David Williams: which
Fred Thompson: I think
David Williams: was fine.
Fred Thompson: the most helpful thing out of everything was getting the the PowerPoint slides already put together
David Williams: Mm-hmm.
Fred Thompson: for you
Frederick Nixon: Yeah,
Fred Thompson: 'cause if
Frederick Nixon: already
Fred Thompson: we didn't
Frederick Nixon: having
Fred Thompson: have
Frederick Nixon: the
Fred Thompson: that
Frederick Nixon: formatted stuff
Fred Thompson: there's
Frederick Nixon: helped
Fred Thompson: no way
Frederick Nixon: a
Fred Thompson: we
Frederick Nixon: lot.
Fred Thompson: could have got all that done in time.
Frederick Nixon: Very much so.
Jack Wagster: Cool.
David Williams: And I think your leadership was quite good.
Fred Thompson: It was
Frederick Nixon: Hmm.
Fred Thompson: really good yeah.
Jack Wagster: She said I I I she actually made a comment off boy you're getting into this and I really I think it's true I did get I I
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: felt like I got way too into it.
Frederick Nixon: That's kind of a good thing though,
Jack Wagster: I felt like I
Fred Thompson: It's
Jack Wagster: slipped
Fred Thompson: kinda fun.
Frederick Nixon: you
Jack Wagster: into
Frederick Nixon: know,
Jack Wagster: it a lot.
Frederick Nixon: give the rest of us some structure to work with so hey.
Jack Wagster: I dunno.
David Williams: An so is that the first time you've taken on that kind of role?
Jack Wagster: The first time I've ever done anything like yeah project project management. I usually
Frederick Nixon: Hmm.
Jack Wagster: organise crap, it's one thing to do, you know set up a party with your friends,
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: you know?
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Fred Thompson: Little different.
Jack Wagster: But you guys felt that you could keep the, yeah, suspension of disbelief kind of like like the role
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: and the okay?
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: I except for a couple moments where it just got out of hand and I knew we were
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: all lying through our teeth, other than that
David Williams: I had to admit, as soon as w we started I mean as soon as we got the Play-Doh,
Frederick Nixon: I could only imagine.
David Williams: th you know the whole concept of really trying to stick with reality went out the window.
Jack Wagster: Yeah, yeah. Maybe in in Legos you know?
David Williams: Possibly.
Jack Wagster: Be fun with Legos too, like make a remote control or spaceship, we used to have spaceship Legos did you guys ever used to build spaceships
David Williams: Oh yeah,
Jack Wagster: with Legos
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
David Williams: still
Jack Wagster: everybody
David Williams: have 'em.
Jack Wagster: knows
Frederick Nixon: Totally.
Jack Wagster: best spaceships ever. Um you guys felt like there was enough teamwork in all?
Fred Thompson: Yeah?
Frederick Nixon: I think so.
David Williams: Yep.
Jack Wagster: Hmm.
Fred Thompson: You
Jack Wagster: No
Fred Thompson: don't.
Jack Wagster: I, no I dunno, I d I I dunno, I don't I I was just
Frederick Nixon: Though
Jack Wagster: I
Frederick Nixon: we didn't actually I mean other than minor discussion at meetings there wasn't except for the actual building,
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: but
Jack Wagster: It's true
Frederick Nixon: I feel
Jack Wagster: huh?
Frederick Nixon: like if this was a team project there actually would have been much more of the collaborative like brainstorming, use the board well and this would have been six months' worth of work, not like
Jack Wagster: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: three hours' worth of meetings.
David Williams: I mean I think had the issue been more serious we probably woulda brainstormed more during our meetings as
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: That's
David Williams: a
Frederick Nixon: true.
David Williams: team.
Jack Wagster: Yeah. Course I'm I'm conscious of the idea of Jack Wagster asking if you guys feel like there's a team you know it's like, kind of like, like hmm. It
Frederick Nixon: Yeah
Jack Wagster: d
Frederick Nixon: that is kind of
Jack Wagster: But yeah. Interesting. It's kind of fascinating wasn't it? I mean the whole process of
Fred Thompson: Wonder why is there anything about the way that we got so much inform what was it that kept us from going to the the board?
Jack Wagster: I don't know. I I don't know if there was a ri I th
Frederick Nixon: Mine was the mics. I didn't feel like getting up and down and dealing with all these wires,
Fred Thompson: Yeah,
Frederick Nixon: I was afraid
Fred Thompson: that's
Frederick Nixon: I was gonna
Fred Thompson: it
Frederick Nixon: break
Fred Thompson: 'cause
Frederick Nixon: something
Fred Thompson: the
Frederick Nixon: actually.
Fred Thompson: mics are loose and each
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Fred Thompson: time you get up it's s a possibility
Jack Wagster: Mm.
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Fred Thompson: of tripping over something or getting tangled or.
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
David Williams: Well I dunno what I woulda shown on that board.
Frederick Nixon: True, but it didn't even occur to Frederick Nixon as an option, I mean I don't
Jack Wagster: Nor
Frederick Nixon: know that
Jack Wagster: I.
Frederick Nixon: I would have but I know that I consciously didn't.
David Williams: I mean it's just like the paper I don't know what I really needed the paper for.
Frederick Nixon: True.
David Williams: Um, because I've got this laptop.
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
David Williams: Standard, I just used it 'cause it's literally right in front of Frederick Nixon.
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: I wanna see the output files
Frederick Nixon: Well
Jack Wagster: from
Frederick Nixon: it looks
Jack Wagster: these
Frederick Nixon: really professional.
Jack Wagster: um, from the digital paper. I wanna see wh
Frederick Nixon: I know.
Jack Wagster: wh what my my handwriting looks like digitized because my handwriting is crap.
Fred Thompson: Yeah,
Jack Wagster: I mean,
Fred Thompson: that's
Jack Wagster: just
Fred Thompson: it.
Jack Wagster: to see what it looks like in P_D_F_ format or something.
Fred Thompson: Usually I would do a lot more doodling too but I didn't because
Frederick Nixon: I know, I felt like I needed to be professional so I didn't like draw all over my paper and stuff. Okay, well not entirely, but still, I doodled less than I usually do.
Jack Wagster: T I I'm curious about what the de-briefing is gonna be like. You know, like what is the uh what exactly we're looking for here.
David Williams: So is this all we need to get through?
Jack Wagster: I dunno, I'm not sure
Frederick Nixon: I
Jack Wagster: what the
Frederick Nixon: guess.
Jack Wagster: new ideas found i is about.
Frederick Nixon: Um.
Fred Thompson: New ideas.
Frederick Nixon: It
David Williams: Is it
Frederick Nixon: did it just say in an email that we need to discuss that?
Jack Wagster: Well, that's the thing I got i in the email I got this PowerPoint file but this slide was just
Frederick Nixon: That slide
Jack Wagster: there,
Frederick Nixon: was like that?
Jack Wagster: mm-hmm. I didn't change this one at all.
Fred Thompson: Hmm.
Frederick Nixon: Well.
Jack Wagster: Um
Fred Thompson: I guess
Jack Wagster: ch
Fred Thompson: we're on the right track.
Jack Wagster: Yeah well.
David Williams: Any new ideas with regard to
Jack Wagster: W
David Williams: remote control concepts?
Fred Thompson: No,
Jack Wagster: I kinda
Fred Thompson: none.
Jack Wagster: like
Frederick Nixon: Uh
Jack Wagster: th
Frederick Nixon: I think they still do their job.
Fred Thompson: I
Jack Wagster: Yeah
Fred Thompson: think
Jack Wagster: you
Fred Thompson: they're
Jack Wagster: can't
Fred Thompson: fine actually.
Frederick Nixon: I am thinking outside the little square box though, with literally
Jack Wagster: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: in like form I don't
Fred Thompson: Yeah, maybe a s a circle would be alright,
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Fred Thompson: different.
Jack Wagster: Does kinda make you wonder, I mean, how much can you do with a remote control? It's like inventing a new car. Yeah
Frederick Nixon: It's still
Jack Wagster: yeah, you
Frederick Nixon: gotta
Jack Wagster: can
Frederick Nixon: be technically car shaped or it won't fit on the road, you know?
Jack Wagster: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: Don't know.
Jack Wagster: Hmm. Um.
David Williams: What is
Jack Wagster: 'Kay.
David Williams: that? Our limited
Frederick Nixon: Kind
David Williams: ability
Jack Wagster: So
Frederick Nixon: of.
Jack Wagster: this
David Williams: to
Jack Wagster: was
David Williams: think outside
Jack Wagster: other
Fred Thompson: Are we back
Jack Wagster: costs.
David Williams: the box?
Fred Thompson: into
Jack Wagster: I dunno.
Fred Thompson: project
Jack Wagster: I think this
Fred Thompson: mood?
Jack Wagster: is
Frederick Nixon: Oh, how long was our meeting supposed to be? How much time
Jack Wagster: forty
Frederick Nixon: do we have left?
Jack Wagster: ish I I I mm we should go on a bit yeah about the project eval, um. I dunno about you guys but I felt like a bit under-stimulated on the whole thing. Like,
Frederick Nixon: Mm.
Jack Wagster: what like you know what am I really doing, you know what is
Frederick Nixon: Yeah, at the beginning it started out and I felt actually like under pressure like the first couple
Jack Wagster: Yep.
Frederick Nixon: were taking a lot of work and I was like had like all
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: this brainstorming I was doing and then suddenly I was like well it's just another two minute presentation that you guys don't really care about
David Williams: Why?
Frederick Nixon: anyway so
Jack Wagster: Hey.
Frederick Nixon: type away.
David Williams: Huh
Frederick Nixon: You
David Williams: I think it was the real.
Frederick Nixon: know, you know what I mean like we all sort
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: of knew where we were headed with it so it didn't feel
David Williams: Yeah.
Fred Thompson: Definitely when
Frederick Nixon: like it mattered anymore.
Fred Thompson: when I first filled out the questionnaire I was marking it probably higher in terms of how much I had to
Frederick Nixon: Mm-hmm.
Fred Thompson: how much I stressed over it and then by the time I got to the last one I was like, you know, not
Frederick Nixon: Whatever.
Fred Thompson: very much.
Jack Wagster: Mm.
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
David Williams: Think it was also realisation of you basically just copy and paste what's given to
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
David Williams: you into
Frederick Nixon: Very
David Williams: your presentation
Frederick Nixon: much, yeah.
David Williams: which uh wasn't so clear to Frederick Nixon at the beginning.
Jack Wagster: I actually
Fred Thompson: Mm-hmm.
Jack Wagster: didn't do that at all though, every single one I a all the presentations I either added slides or edited 'em. I
David Williams: Oh
Jack Wagster: di
David Williams: I added like five slides
Jack Wagster: Oh.
David Williams: too,
Frederick Nixon: See I only got
Fred Thompson: Did
David Williams: but
Fred Thompson: you
Frederick Nixon: blank
David Williams: I
Fred Thompson: really?
Frederick Nixon: ones.
Fred Thompson: I just got blank ones and
Jack Wagster: What? Really?
Frederick Nixon: My slides were all blank, they'd have a title maybe
David Williams: Yeah, mine
Frederick Nixon: and
David Williams: too.
Frederick Nixon: they were just empty.
Fred Thompson: Frederick Nixon too.
Jack Wagster: Did they not have they didn't like uh mine yeah they didn't come like this? Like with this was what it looks like.
Frederick Nixon: Like
Jack Wagster: This is
Frederick Nixon: with
Jack Wagster: what
Frederick Nixon: those
Jack Wagster: that
Frederick Nixon: words
Jack Wagster: looked
Frederick Nixon: already
Jack Wagster: like,
Frederick Nixon: on it?
Jack Wagster: literally, just
Frederick Nixon: No.
Jack Wagster: like
David Williams: No.
Jack Wagster: that. Interesting.
Frederick Nixon: I wondered why yours always looked so more complicated.
Jack Wagster: Uh-huh huh huh.
Fred Thompson: I deleted slides.
Frederick Nixon: I think I added a slide one time.
David Williams: I added many slides every time
Frederick Nixon: Hey with the whole new background
David Williams: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: being innovative,
Fred Thompson: That
Frederick Nixon: yeah
Fred Thompson: was pretty cool,
Frederick Nixon: that was
Fred Thompson: it
Frederick Nixon: class.
Fred Thompson: was a high moment of
Frederick Nixon: Mm.
Fred Thompson: the whole experiment.
David Williams: Um.
Jack Wagster: Interesting. Any other thoughts come to mind?
Frederick Nixon: I wanna know how our product would fare. I
Fred Thompson: I
Frederick Nixon: can't
Fred Thompson: think
Frederick Nixon: just
Fred Thompson: it
Frederick Nixon: leave
Fred Thompson: would fail,
Frederick Nixon: it there.
Fred Thompson: I think it'd be a
Frederick Nixon: I
Fred Thompson: huge
Frederick Nixon: think
Fred Thompson: disaster,
Frederick Nixon: it would take extensive
Fred Thompson: especially
Frederick Nixon: marketing,
Fred Thompson: if it looks like that.
Frederick Nixon: okay, an apple with a red button on top, even I am sceptical. But you know the whole
David Williams: Even you.
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Fred Thompson: I don't we kind of designed it to look little bit like a face.
Frederick Nixon: I know it
Jack Wagster: Yeah but
Frederick Nixon: is.
Fred Thompson: It's a happy face.
David Williams: Actually that looked a lot
Frederick Nixon: Mm.
David Williams: more like a tongue from previous to uh fr
Jack Wagster: Builds.
David Williams: some other design uh modifications.
Jack Wagster: Mm.
David Williams: I hope you appreciate the uh incorporation of some tin foil from a uh
Frederick Nixon: I
David Williams: random Kit-Kat
Frederick Nixon: I noticed
David Williams: bar that
Frederick Nixon: that.
David Williams: happened to be consumed.
Frederick Nixon: By accident.
Jack Wagster: Interesting.
Frederick Nixon: Well huh. An interesting day all in all
Jack Wagster: Uh,
Fred Thompson: Yeah,
Frederick Nixon: I
Jack Wagster: yeah,
Frederick Nixon: would
Fred Thompson: it's
Frederick Nixon: say.
Jack Wagster: I'd
Fred Thompson: uh
Jack Wagster: say so.
David Williams: So again I reiterate my question of how different we are comp compared to the other groups, especially between culture groups and
Frederick Nixon: I
David Williams: what not.
Jack Wagster: Mm,
Frederick Nixon: know.
Jack Wagster: I know.
David Williams: Mm.
Jack Wagster: It
Fred Thompson: I
Jack Wagster: seemed
Fred Thompson: wanna
Jack Wagster: like
Fred Thompson: see
Jack Wagster: everything
Fred Thompson: a
Frederick Nixon: I
Jack Wagster: flowed pretty logically. You know from the the the basics
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: to the conce although the whole concepts thing, the whole concepts phase, I don't think I really understood like the concept. Well Fred Thompson okay
Frederick Nixon: 'Cause
Jack Wagster: the notion
Frederick Nixon: it's such a
Jack Wagster: of
Frederick Nixon: functional item.
Jack Wagster: yeah I mean i it's not like I have a concept of a mug's material, it's just it is what it is.
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: You know, maybe i rather than concepts i it should be th thought of we sh I I thought of I thought of rather than in terms of concepts I thought of it in terms of um like proposed idea. And
Frederick Nixon: Mm.
Jack Wagster: then the final would be like th the actual specified prototype or whatever, I dunno. But.
Fred Thompson: Hmm.
Jack Wagster: All in all it's kinda interesting.
Frederick Nixon: Mm.
Fred Thompson: So we have more slides or?
Jack Wagster: No just this closing one. No we've established that the costs weren't really within budget, but we could s you know
Frederick Nixon: We
Jack Wagster: do
Frederick Nixon: got
Jack Wagster: it
Frederick Nixon: it to be.
Jack Wagster: We
Frederick Nixon: Like
Jack Wagster: did
Frederick Nixon: cutting corners.
Jack Wagster: the project evaluation based on um Sarah's evaluation of on
Frederick Nixon: Kind
Jack Wagster: off switches
Frederick Nixon: of, though it was
Jack Wagster: and
Frederick Nixon: really technically an evaluation of the product, not the project in general.
Jack Wagster: Mm.
Fred Thompson: Mm.
Frederick Nixon: Which
Jack Wagster: True.
Frederick Nixon: I'm not sure is the same thing, at the time that just i made more sense, but I could see if they were really asking about us.
Jack Wagster: Yeah. 'Cause we di we had a thu think about it. Um. Yeah. And it's all recorded, woo-hoo. Yeah
Frederick Nixon: Yay.
Jack Wagster: what
Fred Thompson: Hmm.
Jack Wagster: I'm gonna I'm gonna put um I'm supposed to do this final report thing at the end so I'll put all that into the final report as well, or as much as seems like maybe not like the articles and stuff, like
Fred Thompson: I
Jack Wagster: because and if and so forth, but I'll put most of it in the reports.
Fred Thompson: It'd be so cool
Frederick Nixon: Make
Fred Thompson: if
Frederick Nixon: it
Fred Thompson: we
Frederick Nixon: sound
Fred Thompson: get
Frederick Nixon: eloquent.
Fred Thompson: a copy of the recording.
Frederick Nixon: Oh, I have to done I've I've done
Jack Wagster: Nice.
Frederick Nixon: transcription before and it's really ridiculous how many words people say like
Jack Wagster: Oh
Frederick Nixon: just
Jack Wagster: yeah.
Frederick Nixon: in the middle of their sentences like that that mean nothing.
Jack Wagster: There's a whole branch of psychology that looks into that, psycholinguistics.
David Williams: What
Fred Thompson: Really.
David Williams: the uhs
Frederick Nixon: There's a guy
David Williams: and
Frederick Nixon: studying
David Williams: the
Frederick Nixon: it here, yeah, he's studying ums
Fred Thompson: Filler
Frederick Nixon: and
Fred Thompson: words
Frederick Nixon: ahs
Fred Thompson: or?
Frederick Nixon: or something.
Jack Wagster: Yep, they're called
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: um disfluencies.
Fred Thompson: Disfluencies.
Frederick Nixon: That's a good word for it.
Jack Wagster: Yeah we like our fancy phrases and terminologies for things.
Frederick Nixon: Just add some prefixes, sounds classier.
Jack Wagster: Exactly uh I will save this into the project
Fred Thompson: I find
Jack Wagster: documents.
Fred Thompson: myself hitting the send and receive button on the email a lot,
Frederick Nixon: I,
David Williams: Mm.
Fred Thompson: just
Jack Wagster: Yeah.
Frederick Nixon: yeah,
Fred Thompson: out
Jack Wagster: Oh
Fred Thompson: of boredom,
Jack Wagster: yeah.
Frederick Nixon: pretty compulsively
Fred Thompson: like c come on
Frederick Nixon: during
Jack Wagster: Yeah
Frederick Nixon: meetings,
Jack Wagster: I know.
Frederick Nixon: like,
Fred Thompson: gimme something.
Frederick Nixon: yeah.
Jack Wagster: Come on give Frederick Nixon some information. Well to be fair we're we're hooked we're all hooked on the internet,
Frederick Nixon: Yeah,
Jack Wagster: so I mean I
Frederick Nixon: we
Jack Wagster: do the
Frederick Nixon: are addicts.
David Williams: That's scary yeah?
Fred Thompson: It is scary.
Frederick Nixon: Mm.
David Williams: Well just around that eight or or
Jack Wagster: I
David Williams: nine
Jack Wagster: know, imagine
David Williams: people
Jack Wagster: we went
David Williams: that
Jack Wagster: the
David Williams: are
Jack Wagster: first ten y fifteen years of our lives without the internet. It's only in the last ten that we're like where's
Frederick Nixon: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: the internet? I mean, you know, it just in the past five we've gone
Frederick Nixon: I yeah.
Jack Wagster: from twenty eight eight modems to broadband all the time.
David Williams: Dude,
Frederick Nixon: True.
David Williams: I think we've had internet for like eighteen years.
Jack Wagster: No we have
Frederick Nixon: I
Jack Wagster: but I not in the sense
Frederick Nixon: yeah.
Jack Wagster: that it's so un you know
Fred Thompson: Yeah.
Jack Wagster: uh ubiquitous
Frederick Nixon: But it's not regular I mean my grandparents had it in the eighties and I got it in ninety four, but still.
Fred Thompson: It's crazy.
Frederick Nixon: Uh-huh.
Fred Thompson: So
David Williams: In the eighties?
Frederick Nixon: My um grammy does computer science back in the States and so they had um an E_D_U_ and gov network.
Jack Wagster: Mm.
Frederick Nixon: There's basically the fundamental structures, but it wasn't uh household to household yet
David Williams: Right.
Frederick Nixon: because it hadn't been
David Williams: Yeah, it was to the like seven
Frederick Nixon: partitioned
David Williams: universities
Frederick Nixon: off and stuff,
David Williams: or something.
Frederick Nixon: yeah that was him.
David Williams: You guys ready to celebrate?
Jack Wagster: Yeah that's
Frederick Nixon: Apparently,
Jack Wagster: our last step.
Frederick Nixon: does that include
Jack Wagster: Celebration.
Frederick Nixon: like champagne or something exciting?
Fred Thompson: Should.
Frederick Nixon: I
Jack Wagster: 'Kay
Frederick Nixon: think
Jack Wagster: I guess
Frederick Nixon: so.
Jack Wagster: we can probably call that meeting to an end
Frederick Nixon: I
Jack Wagster: for
Frederick Nixon: think
Jack Wagster: the most
Frederick Nixon: that's
Jack Wagster: part.
Frederick Nixon: a closer.
Jack Wagster: Cool.
Fred Thompson: Has it been forty minutes or whatever? this has been long enough.
David Williams: Celebrate.
Jack Wagster: Where do you find that?
Frederick Nixon: I have no idea.
Fred Thompson: Is that the only song you have?
David Williams: There is another one.
Jack Wagster: Is this one of those media player?
David Williams: Huh? Yep.
Jack Wagster: W oh.
Fred Thompson: That's awesome.
Jack Wagster: The default track.
Fred Thompson: Maybe I have
Jack Wagster: I
Fred Thompson: a
Jack Wagster: thought
Fred Thompson: different
Jack Wagster: it was
Fred Thompson: one.
Jack Wagster: David Burns, look into the eyeball. That's one that seems to be shipping with it uh shipped with for a while, maybe this is the new version.
Frederick Nixon: So is that a close?
Jack Wagster: Yeah, I guess we'll call that
Frederick Nixon: Okay,
Jack Wagster: a a
Frederick Nixon: that's
Jack Wagster: doner.
Frederick Nixon: the end of the meeting.
Jack Wagster: Fab.
Frederick Nixon: Thank you gentlemen. I feel like I'm signing off. | Jack Wagster opened the meeting by reviewing the decisions from the previous meeting (to use voice recognition instead of the touch screen, to hide the complicated features, and to start building the prototype). David Williams and Fred Thompson then presented the prototype that featured voice recognition, interchangeable cases, visible light, and a soft casing material. Jack Wagster presented what each component cost, which showed that the project was going over the alotted budget; the group decided to remove the solar panel. Frederick Nixon presented an evaluation of the prototype and showed that the prototype had met many of the initial goals. The group then evaluated the project process and discussed their effectiveness as a group. Jack Wagster summarized the proceedings of the meeting which will go into a final report, along with comments made during the project evaluation. | 1 | amisum | train |
Gary Fontaine: Okay. Hi Team. Hope you had a good. Okay we're back for the conceptual design meeting. Um let's get started. 'Kay, here is the agenda for today's meeting. Um we're gonna open it and I'm gonna keep the minutes as Project Manager. We're gonna have three presentations, one from each of you again. And then we are going to come to decision on the remote control concepts and then we're gonna close it up. And we have forty minutes again. 'Kay, just to reiterate after meeting team will reach a decision on the concepts of the remote control. Okay. Let's go ahead and start off with your presentations. Who would like to go first?
Chris Stephens: Just trying to move mine right now.
Gary Fontaine: Okay. Um Courtney would you mind starting us
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: off? Okay. Trend watching?
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: 'Kay.
Dane Dobkins: Okay, so trend watching. Uh since we do put the fashion in electronics, it is kind of important how our product looks. So I guess we can go ahead and go to the next. So what they want. Right now customers want fancy versus functional. Um basically about fifty eight percent of what they like of the product that they want, describing like the in order of how much they want, fifty per of the decision of what it should look like, fancy versus functional, and then it has to also be technologically innovative, and yet easy to use. So the customer basically is confused. They don't know exactly what they want. They want us to tell them.
Chris Stephens: They want everything, but
Dane Dobkins: Yes.
Chris Stephens: simply.
Dane Dobkins: Exactly.
Chris Stephens: Okay.
Dane Dobkins: So we can go to next.
Gary Fontaine: Mm 'kay.
Dane Dobkins: Okay. So in Milan and Paris recently the trends have been showing that clothing, shoes and furniture are basically just covered with fruits and vegetable patterns. So I don't know if we want to go with that um and also the spongy feel is in in contrast to last year. I don't know really, I mean I guess the spongy could relate to the buttons
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Dane Dobkins: if we want to rather
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Dane Dobkins: than like a hard clicky button that you find on like some mobiles and stuff, you'd want like a softer touch. I mean do you guys know what I mean.
Gary Fontaine: Right.
Chris Stephens: Yeah
Gary Fontaine: Yes.
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: th
Dane Dobkins: Um. But as for the fruits and vegetable patterns, I don't know if we really want to go with that, because it is just a trend, and
Gary Fontaine: Right.
Dane Dobkins: our product we want to stay around for much longer than just a few months,
Gary Fontaine: Right.
Dane Dobkins: because
Gary Fontaine: People
Chris Stephens: I
Gary Fontaine: don't
Chris Stephens: I
Gary Fontaine: buy
Chris Stephens: can
Gary Fontaine: a new remote
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: every
Dane Dobkins: I mean
Gary Fontaine: so
Dane Dobkins: that could
Gary Fontaine: often.
Dane Dobkins: just be a Spring thing right now.
Chris Stephens: I can address some of that issue, I think, with uh my presentation.
Dane Dobkins: Okay. Awesome.
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Dane Dobkins: Um so design preferences, um we need easy to read like large buttons, clearly labelled so that, I mean 'cause we talked about that being a problem. Um and then also buttons illuminating upon touch, you said that in your design, with the bulb. Um and that could also tie in with the colour scheme. Uh we need the Real Reaction logo and colour scheme obviously. That's one of our key goals, we wanna promote our product. And I was thinking about different types of designs and I came up with something. Actually right here. So what we could do is something like an old-fashioned telephone like this, where we put the buttons around, like we'd put a big on-off button or something else in the middle, I mean it could be the arrows or whatever for channel up and down, and then put the numbers around in like an old-fashioned dial shape. 'Cause then it'll appeal to older generation and like said retro's cool. So it's classically retro.
Gary Fontaine: Hmm.
Dane Dobkins: So I mean that's just an idea if
Gary Fontaine: Very
Dane Dobkins: you guys
Gary Fontaine: good. I like
Dane Dobkins: like
Gary Fontaine: it.
Dane Dobkins: it.
Gary Fontaine: Okay,
Dane Dobkins: And,
Gary Fontaine: ready for the next slide?
Dane Dobkins: yep. And that's it.
Gary Fontaine: Op mm 'kay.
Chris Stephens: Okay.
Gary Fontaine: Great. Great presentation. Ready?
Billy Jory: Okay hang on.
Gary Fontaine: 'Kay.
Billy Jory: See if it's there.
Gary Fontaine: Which one is it?
Billy Jory: I don't know. Hang on. Interface concepts, no?
Gary Fontaine: Interface concepts new.
Billy Jory: Either refresh it, or it sh Oh
Gary Fontaine: Y
Billy Jory: wait, maybe I didn't put it there. Hang on.
Gary Fontaine: 'Kay.
Chris Stephens: Mine will always read copy of something or other.
Gary Fontaine: Sorry?
Chris Stephens: I I copied mine before I sent it over.
Gary Fontaine: Oh okay.
Billy Jory: Sorry, hang on. Don't know.
Gary Fontaine: Oh there we go.
Billy Jory: Okay.
Billy Jory: Okay, um looking at the interface concept, it's gonna be mostly examples of possibilities of where we can go with this. Uh if you wanna start the next slide.
Gary Fontaine: Sure.
Billy Jory: uh can't really see there's two possible, on the r left, if you see on th on the sides of of the remote, you have the sort of scroll down, so you have that option right there. And then also there's the idea of the base. That's sort of like an idea there. And then on the right, we have what's really big trend right now, it's the iPod. It's becoming really and so you have this sort of very very simplistic menu section uh with the round buttons, and it's sort of like you have the both kind of trendy and hip, but also very sleek and um and very simple, but technologically advanced. So if you wanted to do that th if we could find a way of sort of like using that idea in a remote control then sort of look into it, but Anyway,
Gary Fontaine: Mm 'kay.
Billy Jory: next. Um there's the idea of like being able to do it by feel as well as by um by sight. You'd you know you're in the dark, you don't wanna be looking at the remote control. And the picture particularly is pointing out if you look at the top volume button it's a V_, and so yo you're kind of feeling a V_ like volume up. What it really is is a V_ and what it you think it is is down, because the down arrow.
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Billy Jory: And so it's like a sort of a criticism you'd probably turn that o the other way up. Um but then you have you could either do it by raised type, which could be you know, iffy, um sort of old-fashioned in a way.
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Billy Jory: Either that or just have it by shape, for example you have a specific triangular shape that you know you're looking at the up and down arrow. And then the round ones you sort of feel by, you know, that's the second one down, that sort of thing. So it's sort of looking into how we wanted t to do it by feel.
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Billy Jory: Okay. Um this is sort of an example of going for a s certain demographic. Um this is particularly geared towards children.
Dane Dobkins: That's cute.
Billy Jory: Um it's very cute, and we could probably change it to yellow, bright yellow for like a the for the company logo. Um and you have the shapes and it's very simplistic and friendly looking. Um and then the other thing that it would be able to do is just to pro be ab you program certain channels that only these children would watch, so it's like they ch watch, you know, the C_ Beebies or something like that, uh keep them away from other channels. So that's like another ar
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Billy Jory: Um, I mean, these are three examples sort of looking at it. You have the wider section for the main controls there. Uh you could see how many buttons there are. And then on the left you have an example of the round buttons, and a simpler design. On the bottom we probably wouldn't need that, because it's more for like a D_V_D_ function which we are not gonna be using. Um. So again it's sort of like just give you ideas and then down at the bottom you have the logos and that's where you could put the R_R_, Real Reaction.
Gary Fontaine: 'Kay.
Billy Jory: And then finally these are like the sort of same examples, but also some more, just possibilities that we could go with. None of them I'm particularly keen on by the way.
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: Hmm.
Gary Fontaine: No.
Billy Jory: But it's sort of like just taking aspects out of that and saying, well out of this one we like, you know the round section of um, b or we'd like the
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Billy Jory: the button size on this.
Gary Fontaine: Or I like, you know, the black finish or the silver finish or whatever.
Billy Jory: Right.
Dane Dobkins: I have four of those remotes.
Gary Fontaine: Good lord. Okay. Ready?
Billy Jory: That's it.
Gary Fontaine: Oh, yeah. Okay. Great job.
Chris Stephens: Okay, my turn.
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Dane Dobkins: Okay.
Chris Stephens: Whoo.
Gary Fontaine: What's the title?
Chris Stephens: It'll be copy of component design.
Gary Fontaine: Got it.
Chris Stephens: Yeah. Th that looks like it. 'Kay. So basic remote runs as follows, press button makes connection with the power source and the rest of the circuit, chip senses the connection, chip produces a morse code infra-red signal, specific to that button. So you press the button, it produces uh a signal that's encoded specifically for that button. Transistors amplify that signal and it goes to the T_V_'s centre, which interprets the signal response accordingly, changes channel etcetera. So that being said Next slide, please. Findings oh which were the required materials for the basic internal construction, so all the really simplistic functions that we just discussed, we need rubber for buttons, aluminium for battery y contacts, integrated circuit which consists of a diode, transistor, resonator, resistors, and a capacitator, all those basic things that make a circuit function. Um fibreglass and thin copper wire to create the actual circuit board itself. An L_E_D_, which is a light emitting diode, um contact discs for the buttons, plastic for the casing, and a power-source, whatever power-source we've actually determined we want. Next slide, please. Thank you. Uh personal preferences, uh to save money for the components, the remote should be mass-produced and basic materials should be bought en masse. Um if we find another company who can produce the required chips, casing, L_E_D_, any additional materials we decide we require at a less expensive rate than we ourselves are producing, we should go for it. Next slide, please. Um just talking to the um manufacturing division. They suggested power options, solar cells, hand dynamo, and kinetic power, so you shake it and it increases the power. Um I'm not sure how the hand dynamo works, they have yet to get back to Dane Dobkins on that. So
Gary Fontaine: Hmm.
Chris Stephens: next slide, please.
Gary Fontaine: Interesting.
Chris Stephens: Suggested casing options. Okay. We can offer options for casing such as straight, curved, double-curved, you know, very specific to the customer. Options for materials, plastic, rubber, titanium, wood. I don't think anyone's gonna go for a wood one, because splinters
Dane Dobkins: That would be amazing, though, yeah. No,
Chris Stephens: Yeah.
Dane Dobkins: splinters would
Chris Stephens: Um certain restrictions do apply here though. Uh latex, you can't do solar power with a latex one. So, if they want some a soft squishy rubber, they can't have the solar powered option. Double-curved, you can't
Dane Dobkins: What
Chris Stephens: do titanium.
Dane Dobkins: is that?
Chris Stephens: Um that would be two curvatures, so it would actually, if you the shape of your hand, you curve here and you curve here,
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Chris Stephens: so you could have two curves that match the shape of your hand to make it more comfortable to hold.
Dane Dobkins: Mm.
Chris Stephens: Now if you wanted that, you can't do titanium. And uh so you functions what for the buttons, scrolling
Billy Jory: Right.
Chris Stephens: function could be very beneficial to us instead of actual buttons themselves. I think
Gary Fontaine: 'Kay.
Chris Stephens: I have one more slide. No, I
Gary Fontaine: No,
Chris Stephens: didn't.
Gary Fontaine: okay.
Chris Stephens: Um the manufacturing division also has said that um they have several types of chips and they've just developed a sample sensor or sample speaker chip, which we could utilise. Um push button requires a simple chip and scroll requires more complicated chip. So depends on what we decide we wanna do. In addition to that if we're offering all those different options to the customer for producing their remote, we're going to have to have multiples of each type, like a double-curved in rubber, um you know, each option should have a certain select number produced with all those options. So we'll have to mix it up, make sure we produce enough of everyone. But that could also drive up the price of the
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Chris Stephens: actual remote itself if they know that we only produced five thousand, you know, double-curved
Dane Dobkins: Right.
Chris Stephens: wooden remotes.
Dane Dobkins: Okay.
Gary Fontaine: Hmm.
Chris Stephens: And
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Chris Stephens: that's all I got.
Gary Fontaine: Alright, well thank you for those informative presentations. Let's go back to um Now we have to make some decisions. Where were we?
Billy Jory: Let Dane Dobkins just add one more thing that I couldn't say before,
Gary Fontaine: Sure.
Billy Jory: and that's just that there's the new technology that they've developed on the voice recognition. Um.
Dane Dobkins: Oh this the thing we were talking about earlier.
Billy Jory: Right except that it's sort of odd, and I'm no not exactly sure why they are explaining it in the way they are, um there's a sample sensor and there's a sample speaker unit for So, you would say like, good morning, coffeemaker, and it would respond, good morning, Jill, but I'm not sure exactly how it's gonna work, 'cause do you programme do we program the responses and the questions. So does that mean that the user then has to ask the specific question, and can't change it
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Billy Jory: in order for it to be recognised, or can it be altered in a certain way, or does the actually user program it, to
Gary Fontaine: Right.
Billy Jory: say a channel means this.
Dane Dobkins: Yeah, like
Gary Fontaine: Right.
Dane Dobkins: using the menu to be like, enter your name into the screen like on the menu options. So
Billy Jory: Right,
Dane Dobkins: that way the
Billy Jory: so it's got
Dane Dobkins: remote
Billy Jory: like a limited
Dane Dobkins: reads it.
Billy Jory: memory and programme it. So it's sort of iffy,
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Dane Dobkins: I feel like voice recognition would be, I don't know,
Gary Fontaine: Hmm.
Dane Dobkins: w it would be too hard to really
Gary Fontaine: Programme.
Dane Dobkins: I mean we could do it, but
Gary Fontaine: If it's within our price to get that kind of chip that
Dane Dobkins: Technology.
Gary Fontaine: would, you know, technology
Chris Stephens: Well, we are making the chip.
Gary Fontaine: Hmm.
Chris Stephens: So, I mean But, I guess, we have to look at w what our production cost is for the chip itself
Dane Dobkins: And
Chris Stephens: anyway.
Dane Dobkins: it is a growing trend,
Chris Stephens: Yeah.
Dane Dobkins: the
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Dane Dobkins: higher technological, like the, I mean just like the more advanced it is,
Chris Stephens: Yeah.
Dane Dobkins: the better it'll
Chris Stephens: I
Dane Dobkins: sell.
Chris Stephens: I thought offering some of those options for different materials that it could be made of different, you know I think we'd have to decide on the power options, maybe.
Gary Fontaine: Hmm.
Chris Stephens: So
Dane Dobkins: Yeah,
Chris Stephens: that
Dane Dobkins: 'cause
Chris Stephens: we
Dane Dobkins: we
Chris Stephens: could
Dane Dobkins: need to
Chris Stephens: reduce
Dane Dobkins: know how big
Chris Stephens: cost.
Dane Dobkins: it's gonna be
Chris Stephens: Yeah.
Dane Dobkins: and how heavy.
Gary Fontaine: Okay, that kind of brings us to this, let's let's see
Chris Stephens: Okay.
Gary Fontaine: if we can decide what kind of energy source we want to have first and foremost. Um. Do we wanna go for batteries or a stand like the one that we saw illustrated earlier?
Dane Dobkins: Oh the base, yeah.
Gary Fontaine: The base, the charging base
Chris Stephens: I
Billy Jory: I
Chris Stephens: think
Billy Jory: always
Chris Stephens: the
Gary Fontaine: with
Billy Jory: feel
Chris Stephens: p
Gary Fontaine: rechargeable
Billy Jory: like first
Gary Fontaine: batteries?
Billy Jory: I wanna know what it looks like, before 'Cause
Gary Fontaine: Hmm.
Billy Jory: if it's something really really small, then it's sort of harder to imagine a base for it, that was p quite a s substantial size sort of standing up
Gary Fontaine: Yeah,
Dane Dobkins: W
Gary Fontaine: and we don't have multiple things that it has to control, it just has to control the T_V_. It's not gonna be a huge universal remote.
Dane Dobkins: We
Billy Jory: Right.
Dane Dobkins: need to decide, well so we can figure how big it's gonna be, like
Gary Fontaine: What
Dane Dobkins: exactly
Gary Fontaine: size battery
Dane Dobkins: what
Gary Fontaine: and
Dane Dobkins: buttons we want and exactly
Billy Jory: Well, the other thing is like even if it's got a few buttons, so we want
Dane Dobkins: It could
Billy Jory: it to
Dane Dobkins: be
Billy Jory: be
Dane Dobkins: like
Billy Jory: bigger
Dane Dobkins: this.
Billy Jory: than this,
Dane Dobkins: Yes. I'd, well
Billy Jory: 'cause
Dane Dobkins: uh
Billy Jory: it still fits in your hand, so you still wanted something that's comfortable and substantial, but not necessarily full of buttons.
Dane Dobkins: This one is really comfortable, like I like the sides whatever,
Billy Jory: Are you gonna
Dane Dobkins: because
Billy Jory: lose it easier?
Dane Dobkins: But if we have the um, the locator, then we don't have to worry about that.
Chris Stephens: That's true.
Dane Dobkins: So we can make it small if we have a l locating device.
Chris Stephens: If
Billy Jory: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: we do a voice-activated locator, though, we're gonna be looking at a more substantial chip. So
Dane Dobkins: Hmm.
Billy Jory: So i That's the other thing, it's like You know Are we gonna have certain chips that are gonna require bigger size period?
Dane Dobkins: Two double A_s, for this size.
Billy Jory: But like, you know, if we get more complicated then it's gonna v be
Dane Dobkins: Right.
Billy Jory: have to be bigger to just accommodate the chip size.
Chris Stephens: Honestly, I think the customer would be kind of irritated by the fact that it has a base if we did do a nice small, compact
Gary Fontaine: Right. I agree,
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: it's
Billy Jory: So
Gary Fontaine: either gonna
Billy Jory: we
Gary Fontaine: be
Billy Jory: sh
Gary Fontaine: bigger with a base or smaller
Dane Dobkins: Smaller,
Gary Fontaine: with
Dane Dobkins: without
Gary Fontaine: just
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: A battery like
Billy Jory: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: Mm
Gary Fontaine: this
Chris Stephens: yeah.
Gary Fontaine: guy. Alright, so what direction do you want to go in? You wanna vote?
Dane Dobkins: I think if we had a a locating device with the small one, I think that seems way more advanced.
Gary Fontaine: I'm kind of
Chris Stephens: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: I'm kind of
Billy Jory: I'm
Gary Fontaine: leaning in the
Billy Jory: a
Gary Fontaine: direction
Billy Jory: away
Gary Fontaine: of this
Billy Jory: from
Gary Fontaine: kind of
Billy Jory: the base.
Gary Fontaine: bigger and
Billy Jory: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: the
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: base.
Chris Stephens: 'Kay
Gary Fontaine: That just
Chris Stephens: so
Gary Fontaine: seems so clunky and
Dane Dobkins: Yeah, because I mean if even looking at cellphones right now, those trends the smaller
Billy Jory: Smaller
Dane Dobkins: the
Billy Jory: and smaller, yeah,
Dane Dobkins: hotter
Billy Jory: yeah, yeah.
Dane Dobkins: it is, yeah
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Chris Stephens: The only problem with that is if you forget to take it out of your pocket and it goes in wash.
Dane Dobkins: Oh.
Billy Jory: You're kidding.
Chris Stephens: You know it happens.
Gary Fontaine: Hmm.
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: I've had three watches go that way too.
Billy Jory: Oh watches
Dane Dobkins: Ouch.
Billy Jory: I've but I've never washed a cell
Dane Dobkins: A phone,
Billy Jory: phone.
Dane Dobkins: whoa, that would wow, that would hurt.
Gary Fontaine: Okay,
Chris Stephens: Pieces
Gary Fontaine: so
Chris Stephens: everywhere.
Gary Fontaine: what kind of material do we want to be made out of?
Chris Stephens: Well, we have lots of options. I don't think wood is a viable
Dane Dobkins: Yeah
Chris Stephens: option.
Dane Dobkins: wood.
Gary Fontaine: No.
Billy Jory: Well, titanium
Gary Fontaine: Oh what did you Oh sorry,
Billy Jory: s
Gary Fontaine: go ahead.
Billy Jory: I was saying that titanium, if we're being restricted then I would probably lean away from that.
Dane Dobkins: Yeah, 'cause if it's gonna cost us more to produce a chip, titanium will be more expensive.
Gary Fontaine: Right.
Chris Stephens: However,
Gary Fontaine: What would you recommend?
Chris Stephens: well,
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: we only wanna sell it for twenty five Euro right?
Billy Jory: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: 'Cause I was thinking if we wanted to get the high in market
Billy Jory: That'll
Chris Stephens: then
Billy Jory: Yeah,
Chris Stephens: you could
Billy Jory: exactly.
Chris Stephens: produce a few in titanium,
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Chris Stephens: make them a rarity
Billy Jory: The selling
Chris Stephens: so to
Billy Jory: point,
Dane Dobkins: We
Chris Stephens: speak.
Dane Dobkins: could
Billy Jory: yeah.
Dane Dobkins: do that, because all our research shows that people are definitely willing to spend more
Billy Jory: Are we
Chris Stephens: Yeah.
Billy Jory: restricted
Dane Dobkins: if
Billy Jory: by this?
Chris Stephens: Well the
Gary Fontaine: I
Chris Stephens: original
Billy Jory: Twenty five
Gary Fontaine: I think
Billy Jory: Euros
Gary Fontaine: we should just focus on one design and one concept right now.I'm
Chris Stephens: Okay.
Gary Fontaine: not sure that we'll have the time and money to produce a whole array of remotes. If this was a successful remote, we might then produce a higher end version of it, I think.
Chris Stephens: Yeah.
Dane Dobkins: Good plan.
Chris Stephens: Good plan.
Gary Fontaine: Okay, so we wanna go for plastic, or what would you recommend for materials?
Chris Stephens: Honestly I'd
Gary Fontaine: Hmm.
Chris Stephens: recommend like um uh since we're going with batteries instead of solar power, I'd recommend maybe a uh soft like latex, because we could produce, you know how cellphones have those overlays that you can change the colour. We could
Dane Dobkins: Oh.
Gary Fontaine: Mm-hmm.
Chris Stephens: do uh one that fits
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Chris Stephens: in with the trends of the year so, because this year is all fruit, God only
Dane Dobkins: Yeah,
Chris Stephens: knows why,
Dane Dobkins: who knows.
Chris Stephens: um we could do f a cherry cover for this year and then i if next year is stripes or solids, you know
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Billy Jory: So you're talking about like when it leaves our salesroom then it's all gonna be cherry-coloured or is it gonna be the kinda thing where people come
Dane Dobkins: O
Billy Jory: back
Dane Dobkins: or we
Billy Jory: and
Dane Dobkins: could
Billy Jory: swap
Dane Dobkins: like take
Gary Fontaine: They could
Billy Jory: it?
Dane Dobkins: off
Chris Stephens: They could
Gary Fontaine: buy
Chris Stephens: come
Dane Dobkins: this.
Chris Stephens: back.
Gary Fontaine: cases, maybe,
Chris Stephens: And buy the extra case.
Billy Jory: Okay.
Gary Fontaine: if they wanted. I think it's good to sell a basic thing and then sell
Chris Stephens: So we could do like
Gary Fontaine: options.
Chris Stephens: a b a hard base plastic, and
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: then we could give
Billy Jory: The
Chris Stephens: two
Billy Jory: what the
Chris Stephens: latex
Billy Jory: top face,
Chris Stephens: covers
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Billy Jory: right?
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Chris Stephens: to start.
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Dane Dobkins: Yeah, because the soft latex definitely is squishy. That's in. Well I mean squishier than like,
Gary Fontaine: Right.
Dane Dobkins: yeah,
Gary Fontaine: Right.
Dane Dobkins: just a hard plastic.
Gary Fontaine: Okay, and what kind of chip would we need for this guy?
Chris Stephens: How complicated Are we gonna go with the
Billy Jory: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: voice activated
Gary Fontaine: I don't think we should do voice, I think we should just do um the recognition for when it's lost, you know.
Billy Jory: A
Gary Fontaine: could we
Billy Jory: tracker, yeah.
Gary Fontaine: Yeah.
Dane Dobkins: 'Cause that uh what it type of, yeah, like a certain term what we would say like,
Gary Fontaine: Hmm.
Dane Dobkins: because people could just be talking and we don't want it going off all the time.
Gary Fontaine: Right.
Dane Dobkins: So uh
Chris Stephens: Well, we could give it a specific code, you know, remote missing.
Dane Dobkins: Ooh. Uh see I'm uh I'm strangely attracted to it, because I know that's it's definitely gonna be big, because it's, I don't know, it's
Billy Jory: Well,
Dane Dobkins: just so high-tech.
Billy Jory: my little sister got for Christmas she got one of those key finders that's like a key-ring, and you have to whistle in a certain frequency for it to work.
Chris Stephens: Yeah, see that
Billy Jory: And
Chris Stephens: would
Billy Jory: then
Chris Stephens: just
Billy Jory: she
Chris Stephens: irritate
Billy Jory: would laugh
Chris Stephens: Dane Dobkins.
Billy Jory: and it would start going off in her purse, and you couldn't turn it off.
Gary Fontaine: Oh dear.
Dane Dobkins: Oh,
Billy Jory: So
Dane Dobkins: then
Billy Jory: it became
Dane Dobkins: maybe voice
Billy Jory: highly irritating.
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Dane Dobkins: maybe voice
Chris Stephens: So
Dane Dobkins: activation
Chris Stephens: I think
Dane Dobkins: won't
Chris Stephens: having
Dane Dobkins: be good.
Chris Stephens: a key-phrase is much better.
Gary Fontaine: Okay. Alright. But it's not gonna be voice activated in the fact that you would say, channel up, and it would work, right?
Dane Dobkins: Yeah, n n no, we
Billy Jory: But
Dane Dobkins: just
Billy Jory: then
Gary Fontaine: Just
Chris Stephens: No.
Billy Jory: it
Dane Dobkins: want it to
Gary Fontaine: a
Dane Dobkins: be a finder.
Gary Fontaine: Okay, alright.
Billy Jory: Hmm. Okay.
Dane Dobkins: But do can your can the department make
Chris Stephens: That would be like a mid-class um
Dane Dobkins: Oh,
Chris Stephens: Yeah.
Dane Dobkins: brilliant then.
Chris Stephens: So we don't actually have to go for Well, if they've just developed the sample sensor, sample speaker, it's a brand new chip. Why not introduce
Gary Fontaine: No.
Chris Stephens: it in this way?
Dane Dobkins: Yeah,
Gary Fontaine: Mm 'kay.
Dane Dobkins: good point.
Gary Fontaine: Uh and what size batteries, double A_, triple A_?
Dane Dobkins: I think triple A_, it'll be lighter.
Gary Fontaine: Two? Could
Dane Dobkins: I
Gary Fontaine: it
Dane Dobkins: mean
Gary Fontaine: run
Dane Dobkins: more
Gary Fontaine: off of two
Dane Dobkins: more
Billy Jory: Well,
Dane Dobkins: come
Billy Jory: that
Dane Dobkins: in
Billy Jory: depends
Dane Dobkins: a package.
Billy Jory: on what the energy is needed.
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: I think, well, we could d r do two or we could do one small lithium, 'cause you know the lithium batteries are doing quite well in most other electronic products, right? So they're more widely available now. And they also have a longer battery life than most batteries.
Gary Fontaine: They're more expensive though, too.
Chris Stephens: But if you only have to replace it every five years.
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Dane Dobkins: That's a good
Gary Fontaine: Thoughts
Dane Dobkins: point.
Billy Jory: As
Gary Fontaine: anybody?
Billy Jory: long as we sell it with it.
Chris Stephens: Well, how about a initial, you get one battery when you buy it, 'cause
Billy Jory: Right,
Chris Stephens: I'm pretty
Billy Jory: that's
Chris Stephens: sure
Billy Jory: what
Chris Stephens: we can
Billy Jory: I meant.
Chris Stephens: get them
Dane Dobkins: We
Chris Stephens: pretty
Dane Dobkins: could think
Chris Stephens: cheap
Dane Dobkins: about
Chris Stephens: on bulk.
Dane Dobkins: it and
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Dane Dobkins: come back to it next meeting.
Gary Fontaine: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: Yeah.
Dane Dobkins: We still have one more meeting.
Gary Fontaine: Alright.
Gary Fontaine: Okay. So we've covered that first category, User Interface Concept, meaning design.
Billy Jory: What's it gonna Yeah, what's it gonna look like.
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Billy Jory: Um.
Gary Fontaine: I ki I kind of like your idea about the retro phone dial, and that the central button could have, maybe our logo on it? It might be the four way scroll, too.
Dane Dobkins: Yeah,
Gary Fontaine: I mean
Dane Dobkins: it could
Gary Fontaine: if
Dane Dobkins: be whatever,
Gary Fontaine: Yeah.
Dane Dobkins: as long as there's something big in the middle, because like the old phones,
Gary Fontaine: Yeah.
Dane Dobkins: there's like that just like piece of metal
Gary Fontaine: Mm-hmm.
Dane Dobkins: or like
Billy Jory: Well,
Dane Dobkins: a picture or something in the
Billy Jory: my
Dane Dobkins: middle.
Billy Jory: issue with that is if it got too big though, 'cause if you have the circle and the button in the middle, then is it gonna get wider
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Billy Jory: than
Dane Dobkins: Oh, that's
Billy Jory: your
Dane Dobkins: true.
Billy Jory: your hands are, because w And then would the buttons be too small if it was enough to fit on it?
Dane Dobkins: Good point.
Chris Stephens: In the sample ones that you showed us there was one that had the scroll buttons on the side,
Gary Fontaine: Yeah.
Billy Jory: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: which I think if we make it curved like a hand like a hand-shape like if we put the the scroll-button on the side,
Gary Fontaine: Oh, I see what
Chris Stephens: that
Gary Fontaine: you mean.
Chris Stephens: could be particularly useful.
Gary Fontaine: I think so.
Dane Dobkins: So scroll buttons on the side and
Gary Fontaine: Yeah,
Dane Dobkins: then buttons
Gary Fontaine: I like
Dane Dobkins: on
Gary Fontaine: that.
Dane Dobkins: top?
Gary Fontaine: 'Kay.
Dane Dobkins: But we definitely If we have scroll things on the side, we definitely have to have 'em labelled.
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Dane Dobkins: Yeah, like
Chris Stephens: Well,
Dane Dobkins: on
Chris Stephens: if it's
Dane Dobkins: the side
Chris Stephens: just up
Dane Dobkins: of
Chris Stephens: and
Dane Dobkins: it.
Chris Stephens: down
Dane Dobkins: Oh if it's just up and down.
Billy Jory: But is that for
Chris Stephens: Volume or channel.
Billy Jory: Which?
Chris Stephens: I don't know.
Dane Dobkins: Well, you could do
Billy Jory: Do we
Dane Dobkins: some
Billy Jory: have both
Dane Dobkins: on both
Billy Jory: sides?
Dane Dobkins: sides.
Gary Fontaine: Can
Chris Stephens: Mm
Gary Fontaine: we?
Chris Stephens: yeah. We should probably make it that you have to depress it to activate it then,
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: So that you're
Chris Stephens: 'cause
Gary Fontaine: just
Chris Stephens: oth
Gary Fontaine: not holding
Chris Stephens: otherwise
Dane Dobkins: That's
Gary Fontaine: it and
Dane Dobkins: squishy.
Chris Stephens: you're
Gary Fontaine: it
Chris Stephens: not
Gary Fontaine: changes
Chris Stephens: just
Gary Fontaine: the chan
Chris Stephens: holding
Dane Dobkins: That's
Chris Stephens: it
Dane Dobkins: squishy.
Chris Stephens: and going like this,
Billy Jory: Well,
Chris Stephens: you
Billy Jory: the
Chris Stephens: know.
Billy Jory: other option is in instead of a scroll you just have
Dane Dobkins: have
Billy Jory: the buttons
Dane Dobkins: buttons.
Billy Jory: up on the side which
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Billy Jory: are on the side.
Chris Stephens: Okay.
Gary Fontaine: Yeah.
Dane Dobkins: Yeah, that.
Gary Fontaine: Hmm.
Gary Fontaine: 'Kay any other ideas?
Billy Jory: Um what colour?
Gary Fontaine: Oh, yeah. Latex covers.
Chris Stephens: We
Gary Fontaine: W
Chris Stephens: have to make sure that logo always sticks out when we put the latex covers on, so we'll have to like have a little square or something, so that the
Billy Jory: Well
Chris Stephens: our logo's
Billy Jory: I sort
Chris Stephens: available.
Billy Jory: of like having the a yellow strip at the bottom with the R_R_ like that.
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Billy Jory: And that's at the bottom of it.
Gary Fontaine: I think maybe we should do it on a b button itself though, because if people are able
Billy Jory: Which
Gary Fontaine: to
Billy Jory: button?
Gary Fontaine: change the covers, maybe the on-off button, something, some the menu button, I don't know, but you know if we're gonna put our company logo on there and somebody could just get another one. Are they all gonna have our company logo on them? Every cover?
Chris Stephens: Yeah, I don't think we should do that, because that would just be icky.
Gary Fontaine: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: So I think maybe putting it on a button is probably a good idea.
Gary Fontaine: If we want it to be visible and Um are all those those one that you showed where they were um s met silver-metallic looking?
Billy Jory: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: But those are plastic, right?
Billy Jory: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: They're not titanium. I kind of like that look. Uh but, or if
Chris Stephens: For
Gary Fontaine: it was
Chris Stephens: our base
Gary Fontaine: really
Chris Stephens: one?
Gary Fontaine: Yeah, for the base or if we're going for the retro look, I think, like a really shiny black would be cool.
Dane Dobkins: Yeah,
Gary Fontaine: What
Dane Dobkins: or like
Gary Fontaine: are your
Dane Dobkins: a
Gary Fontaine: thoughts?
Dane Dobkins: gun-metal grey,
Gary Fontaine: Gun-metal
Dane Dobkins: 'cause then
Gary Fontaine: gray.
Dane Dobkins: it combines the silver and the black.
Gary Fontaine: There you go, gun-metal gray.
Billy Jory: I'm just really wary of the putting anything on a button.
Gary Fontaine: Why?
Chris Stephens: It'll wear off.
Billy Jory: What's the
Dane Dobkins: Yeah,
Billy Jory: button
Dane Dobkins: buttons wear
Billy Jory: Well,
Dane Dobkins: off.
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Billy Jory: w w then what's the button do, and how do you know that that is what the button does? I guess. Just looking at examples, y you just don't ever see the logo on a button, it's always on the actual casing.
Gary Fontaine: Right.
Dane Dobkins: Hmm.
Chris Stephens: There's nothing saying that we have to put the logo on the front
Dane Dobkins: But
Gary Fontaine: On
Chris Stephens: of
Billy Jory: But
Dane Dobkins: we
Chris Stephens: the
Gary Fontaine: the
Dane Dobkins: want
Billy Jory: you
Chris Stephens: actual
Billy Jory: don't
Gary Fontaine: back?
Dane Dobkins: it to be seen.
Gary Fontaine: It d visible
Billy Jory: But uh,
Dane Dobkins: We
Billy Jory: yeah,
Dane Dobkins: need it
Billy Jory: you
Gary Fontaine: Visibility
Dane Dobkins: to
Billy Jory: don't
Dane Dobkins: be seen.
Billy Jory: see it.
Gary Fontaine: though 'Cause if it was only on the back really the only time you're gonna see it is
Billy Jory: Well,
Gary Fontaine: when you drop it or
Billy Jory: hang
Gary Fontaine: when
Billy Jory: on.
Gary Fontaine: you're changing the battery.
Billy Jory: The other option is, I don't know if you can see it but it's like if
Gary Fontaine: I can find it again.
Billy Jory: Yeah, it's like the second to last slide.
Gary Fontaine: Okay. And yours was called Interface
Billy Jory: Interface,
Gary Fontaine: Concept?
Billy Jory: yeah.
Gary Fontaine: This one?
Billy Jory: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: Well,
Billy Jory: Um.
Gary Fontaine: for some reason I can't get it to just go to that slide directly.
Billy Jory: Okay, it's the very right one. You see at the bottom, it's kind of difficult to see, but you have like a d sort of s division between the bottom like, where the logo is, and if we have the replaceable section, it's like the top. It doesn't necessarily replace the entire top.
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Billy Jory: And so you have that one piece that stays and the rest just sort of clips in.
Gary Fontaine: Okay,
Billy Jory: If
Gary Fontaine: yes
Billy Jory: c you envisioning it? And so
Gary Fontaine: yes.
Billy Jory: that stays the same when you have the logo, and then you have this s slip that kinda clips in and that's the bit that changes.
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Chris Stephens: The only problem is we're using a latex overlay so it actually would go over top of everything and have
Billy Jory: Hmm.
Chris Stephens: holes for the buttons, so I was thinking maybe instead of doing that what we could do is leave a space for where
Billy Jory: Yeah.
Chris Stephens: the logo should
Billy Jory: Yeah, yeah.
Chris Stephens: be.
Gary Fontaine: Like a little cut-out kind
Chris Stephens: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: of
Billy Jory: Right. That's
Gary Fontaine: Okay.
Billy Jory: like, you know, a a cellphone it's like the the screen
Dane Dobkins: Right.
Billy Jory: is always just left opened. And so, what we are gonna do it like bright yellow with the R_R_?
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Dane Dobkins: Some
Gary Fontaine: Anybody
Dane Dobkins: of tho
Gary Fontaine: see anything that they liked in
Dane Dobkins: Well,
Gary Fontaine: these
Dane Dobkins: some
Gary Fontaine: ones?
Dane Dobkins: of those buttons though are blue-based. Um
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Dane Dobkins: well, a lot of those buttons are blue-based. Well, kind
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Dane Dobkins: of. Um and then if v we do have them illuminate upon contact,
Billy Jory: Yellow.
Dane Dobkins: they could illuminate yellow.
Gary Fontaine: Yellow,
Billy Jory: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: I like that idea.
Dane Dobkins: Like if we like the one all the way on the left, uh you ca you can see it on your computer better.
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Dane Dobkins: Um where the button is actually blue, but the number itself is clear or white or whatever so if you pressed it would illuminate yellow.
Gary Fontaine: Mm.
Dane Dobkins: So we'd have blue and yellow for the touch
Billy Jory: Oh,
Dane Dobkins: buttons.
Billy Jory: that one.
Gary Fontaine: I like
Dane Dobkins: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: the yellow illumination idea, very good. Okay. Any other ideas or thoughts? We
Billy Jory: Um.
Gary Fontaine: all seem to be fairly in agreement about what we wanna
Billy Jory: Ha hang on
Gary Fontaine: do with this project so
Billy Jory: Let
Dane Dobkins: Mm
Billy Jory: Dane Dobkins
Dane Dobkins: yeah.
Billy Jory: catch up.
Gary Fontaine: 'Kay.
Billy Jory: Did we finalise what buttons we're including or we just everything that we said before?
Gary Fontaine: I think there will be time for that later. I'm guessing. 'Kay, well we're gonna wrap this up. Um next meeting is gonna start in thirty minutes, and here's what we're each of us going to do. The I_D_ is going to do the look and feel design, the U_I_D_ the user interface design. I think you're going to get a lot of, I mean, the final say on what buttons get put We'll all talk about it, but I think, that's pretty much what you're gonna do, right?
Billy Jory: Yeah.
Gary Fontaine: I guess. 'Kay. And you're gonna do some product evaluation. Okay, and right now, the I_D_ and U_I_D_, you two are going to work together on a prototype using modelling clay.
Chris Stephens: Great.
Billy Jory: Fun.
Chris Stephens: Play Doh.
Gary Fontaine: Yeah. Okay, and you should all be getting an email pretty soon. Alright. Well,
Chris Stephens: Wonderful
Gary Fontaine: thank you for a very productive meeting.
Chris Stephens: Ooh. | Dane Dobkins presented more information on user requirements which showed that users wanted the look of a high-tech device that was still simple to use. She presented the fruit and vegetable fashion trend that the group will integrate into their design. Billy Jory presented several ideas for the interface design taken from existing product designs. Chris Stephens discussed the necessary internal components and presented options for energy sources and materials. Billy Jory also presented the sample speaker technology recently developed by the company. The group had a discussion to finalize the prototype features. It was decided that the device will be small with a locator function instead of having a charging stand. Voice recognition will not be included outside of the locator function. It will be covered by interchangeable latex casings. To incorporate the company logo and color, the buttons will be illuminated yellow when pressed and the logo will be displayed through the latex casings. Gary Fontaine instructed Billy Jory and Chris Stephens to build the prototype, with Billy Jory deciding which buttons will be included. Dane Dobkins will prepare a prototype evaluation. | 1 | amisum | train |
Ralph Harvey: I wanna find our if our remote works.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Ralph Harvey too.
Ralph Harvey: Oh.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Okay.
Ralph Harvey: Whoohoo.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Um here's the agenda for our last meeting. Um after the opening we're going to have a prototype presentation, then we're going to discuss the evaluation criteria and the financing of our remote. Then we're going to evaluate the product and I think the whole production process, and then we're gonna close it up, and we have forty minutes, so let's get started. Oh, no, let's have the prototype presentation.
Jacob Dunlap: Mm 'kay, you ready?
Sung Wilson: Um sure. You or Ralph Harvey?
Jacob Dunlap: Y you read that stuff, since
Sung Wilson: Okay
Jacob Dunlap: you wrote it.
Sung Wilson: Well. since
Jacob Dunlap: I'll
Sung Wilson: our
Jacob Dunlap: be the Vanna.
Sung Wilson: materials aren't exactly what we were going for, I'm just gonna translate what this all means for you. The base is gonna be gunmetal gray, which is what we had decided, and it's gonna be plastic. Um then there's the latex cover, which is what you see as red. Um because it can be replaceable, we just kinda went with the colour.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Right.
Sung Wilson: Um and then the top. Um and the buttons will be a l much lighter blue, almost see-through.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Hmm.
Sung Wilson: It's just sort of a very pale blue and a
Ralph Harvey: That's
Sung Wilson: light-up
Ralph Harvey: nice.
Sung Wilson: yellow.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Yeah.
Sung Wilson: The whole thing lights up if you press any button, rather than it just that one button will light up.
Ralph Harvey: Good.
Sung Wilson: Um and then at the bottom we have our logo. Um bright yellow sort of design with the R_R_ which will actually look like our logo.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Great.
Sung Wilson: And then on the side you have the buttons. They're one button, but they kind of push up and down.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Okay.
Sung Wilson: I don't think they're scrolling.
Jacob Dunlap: No. They're just buttons.
Sung Wilson: Right, yeah. And then yeah, the buttons.
Jacob Dunlap: On off switch will be here and as you've noticed on our prototype um they've ended up with a curvature kind of, by concave sort of thing, except for, you know, can't see underneath.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jacob Dunlap: So I'm hoping that when we get to production we can actually make them like that, because they're very nice to stock you know, stick your finger in
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jacob Dunlap: Um.
Sung Wilson: Thumb-shaped.
Jacob Dunlap: the two squared buttons are are two probably least used, menu, mute, and then these are the numbers, so our channel and our volume will be on either side.
Sung Wilson: Yeah. And then the last thing is just that it'll be black labelling on top, just which we didn't do.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Okay. And did you determine um the curvature of the bottom part of it for the hand, is it gonna be a single or a double?
Jacob Dunlap: I'd say a single.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Single.
Sung Wilson: Single.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Single sounds good, 'cause it's not
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: big enough to really constitute a double.
Sung Wilson: Right.
Jacob Dunlap: Yeah, it's only actually the size of my hand.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Great. Great. I think you did an awesome job.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah, I think it's a beautiful
Jeffery Hayhoe: It is beautiful, and it's everything that we discussed.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah. Good job, you guys.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Good job.
Sung Wilson: Oh thank
Jacob Dunlap: Whoohoo.
Sung Wilson: you.
Ralph Harvey: Those are really good.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Alright what's next in our agenda? Um we're gonna discuss the evaluation criteria, and that's with Courtney.
Ralph Harvey: Okay, it's a PowerPoint presentation. I don't really know exactly what we should uh talk about. It's under evaluation.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Right.
Ralph Harvey: Alright. Um so these are the criteria we're gonna ask, is it easy to use, is it fashionable uh I guess we should down so we can
Jeffery Hayhoe: Mm.
Ralph Harvey: reference them.
Sung Wilson: Feel good meaning what?
Ralph Harvey: Like does it feel good,
Sung Wilson: Physically,
Ralph Harvey: like yeah, physically.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Right.
Sung Wilson: okay.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Sqi
Ralph Harvey: That's just for current trend.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Right.
Ralph Harvey: It doesn't really count, you guys.
Jacob Dunlap: Yeah, it was a little difficult to incorporate the cover with the cherry fruit on it.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah. But it's so we do have removable covers, right?
Jeffery Hayhoe: Right.
Jacob Dunlap: Yes.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah, well then that's covered. And so
Jeffery Hayhoe: 'Kay.
Ralph Harvey: we n k everybody have that?
Jeffery Hayhoe: I'll wait.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah, she's got it. It's
Sung Wilson: Yeah.
Ralph Harvey: good. Yeah. Okay so, we're using the criteria uh for a seven point scale, and so we need to discuss how we feel. It falls within this range, so for easy to use, do we feel it's very easy to use?
Jeffery Hayhoe: Are we
Sung Wilson: True
Jeffery Hayhoe: going
Sung Wilson: or false,
Jeffery Hayhoe: to indi
Sung Wilson: easy
Jeffery Hayhoe: I say
Sung Wilson: to use.
Jeffery Hayhoe: we individually rate what
Ralph Harvey: You
Jeffery Hayhoe: do you
Ralph Harvey: guys
Jeffery Hayhoe: say? Just
Sung Wilson: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: orally. Why not? We have okay.
Ralph Harvey: Okay.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Um easy to use. I vote six.
Ralph Harvey: Oh wait, that's false.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Oh, two.
Ralph Harvey: Okay.
Jacob Dunlap: I'd say two as well.
Sung Wilson: Yeah, two.
Ralph Harvey: Two.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Uh
Ralph Harvey: That's what I say.
Jeffery Hayhoe: hello, we're great.
Ralph Harvey: Okay, fashionable?
Jeffery Hayhoe: Um
Jacob Dunlap: At the
Jeffery Hayhoe: one.
Jacob Dunlap: moment, no.
Ralph Harvey: No.
Jeffery Hayhoe: No.
Ralph Harvey: I mean like no, I think it's very
Jeffery Hayhoe: Ralph Harvey
Ralph Harvey: fashionable.
Jeffery Hayhoe: too, very chic.
Ralph Harvey: I thi I would give it a one.
Jacob Dunlap: Okay.
Jeffery Hayhoe: One, I give it
Jacob Dunlap: I'll
Jeffery Hayhoe: a one.
Jacob Dunlap: give it a two, because at the moment it's not looking that way.
Ralph Harvey: Well,
Jeffery Hayhoe: Oh,
Ralph Harvey: that's
Jeffery Hayhoe: and
Ralph Harvey: that's
Jeffery Hayhoe: ma it's
Ralph Harvey: just
Jeffery Hayhoe: a
Ralph Harvey: like
Jeffery Hayhoe: prototype,
Ralph Harvey: that's a clay, it's
Jeffery Hayhoe: right.
Ralph Harvey: a prototype. What do you
Sung Wilson: Mm
Ralph Harvey: think?
Sung Wilson: I don't think it's that fashionable. I'd give it like three or four.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Well,
Ralph Harvey: Okay.
Jeffery Hayhoe: now I'm. So, the average is about a two.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah, it's a two.
Sung Wilson: But then I'm not
Jeffery Hayhoe: Two
Sung Wilson: fashionable,
Jeffery Hayhoe: or three.
Sung Wilson: so don't
Jeffery Hayhoe: Two
Sung Wilson: use
Jeffery Hayhoe: point
Sung Wilson: my opinion.
Jeffery Hayhoe: five.
Ralph Harvey: That's okay. Yeah.
Jacob Dunlap: Neither
Ralph Harvey: Um
Jacob Dunlap: are all o all the customers we have, either.
Ralph Harvey: does it feel good?
Jeffery Hayhoe: Imagine, since we obviously don't
Ralph Harvey: I
Sung Wilson: Does
Jeffery Hayhoe: have
Sung Wilson: it
Ralph Harvey: feel
Sung Wilson: feel
Jeffery Hayhoe: that.
Ralph Harvey: like
Sung Wilson: good?
Jacob Dunlap: Uh the shape of it actually does uh.
Jeffery Hayhoe: And it's i it is very ergonomically designed. It's gonna be curved.
Sung Wilson: Yeah, it's gonna be thicker.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Yeah.
Sung Wilson: Depth.
Ralph Harvey: I think it feels good.
Jeffery Hayhoe: I think so too.
Ralph Harvey: I'll give it a two.
Jeffery Hayhoe: 'Kay. Two.
Sung Wilson: I'll give it a one.
Ralph Harvey: What do you say?
Jacob Dunlap: I'd say a two.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Alright,
Ralph Harvey: Okay.
Jeffery Hayhoe: average is two. Is it technologically innovative? Oh sorry I'm taking over your job
Ralph Harvey: Oh
Jeffery Hayhoe: here.
Ralph Harvey: no, it's fine, you're
Jeffery Hayhoe: Go right
Ralph Harvey: I mean
Jeffery Hayhoe: ahead.
Ralph Harvey: you're Project Manager. Um yeah, I mean and it does it have voice I mean the phrase recognition on it?
Jeffery Hayhoe: Yes. Right? We were able to do it with that kind of
Sung Wilson: Oh right, the
Jeffery Hayhoe: chip.
Jacob Dunlap: We could do it with the chip, yes. It wasn't we have no
Ralph Harvey: And
Jacob Dunlap: reflection
Ralph Harvey: there's no way you can
Jacob Dunlap: of
Ralph Harvey: represent
Jacob Dunlap: it on the
Ralph Harvey: it on
Jacob Dunlap: prototype,
Ralph Harvey: here.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Yeah,
Jacob Dunlap: but that's
Jeffery Hayhoe: right.
Jacob Dunlap: because
Ralph Harvey: Y
Jacob Dunlap: it's
Jeffery Hayhoe: That
Jacob Dunlap: only
Jeffery Hayhoe: was
Jacob Dunlap: two dimensions,
Jeffery Hayhoe: 'kay.
Jacob Dunlap: really.
Jeffery Hayhoe: And we discussed that
Ralph Harvey: Yeah,
Sung Wilson: Right.
Jeffery Hayhoe: being
Ralph Harvey: so.
Jeffery Hayhoe: included.
Ralph Harvey: Then yes, then I would well it isn't what else would it need
Jacob Dunlap: It
Ralph Harvey: for it to be technologically innovative?
Jeffery Hayhoe: Well we don' have the you know, we can't say channel, and it changes the channel,
Ralph Harvey: And
Jeffery Hayhoe: channel
Ralph Harvey: it doesn't
Jeffery Hayhoe: eight.
Ralph Harvey: cover anything other then T_V_, so
Jeffery Hayhoe: Right.
Ralph Harvey: I'd probably give it a three.
Jacob Dunlap: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Okay.
Ralph Harvey: Even though it is for just a T_V_ remote it's uh very advanced. But it is just a T_V_ remote.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Yeah. I'd go for a three or four on that one, so
Sung Wilson: Yeah I go four.
Jeffery Hayhoe: okay, let's go for a three point five.
Jacob Dunlap: Three and an half.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Alright, and the last criteria is it is it um
Sung Wilson: Squishy and fruity.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Well,
Ralph Harvey: Well
Jeffery Hayhoe: we've covered that with
Sung Wilson: It's
Jeffery Hayhoe: the
Sung Wilson: just trendy, basically.
Jeffery Hayhoe: trendy.
Ralph Harvey: yeah, so I'd give it a two.
Jacob Dunlap: It's
Jeffery Hayhoe: Sure.
Jacob Dunlap: capable of being
Jeffery Hayhoe: Capable.
Jacob Dunlap: squishy
Ralph Harvey: Oh, it's very
Jacob Dunlap: and
Ralph Harvey: capable
Jeffery Hayhoe: Very
Jacob Dunlap: fruity.
Jeffery Hayhoe: capable.
Ralph Harvey: of being squishy and fruity.
Sung Wilson: Okay.
Jeffery Hayhoe: And it's very important.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: 'Kay, there we go.
Ralph Harvey: Okay,
Jeffery Hayhoe: So.
Ralph Harvey: next.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Next.
Ralph Harvey: So um our re model slightly resembling a giant delicious cookie appears to be a winner, and uh hopefully we'll sell millions. Good job, team.
Jacob Dunlap: How did you get that in there?
Ralph Harvey: What?
Jacob Dunlap: The slightly resembling a giant delicious cookie.
Ralph Harvey: It it does.
Jeffery Hayhoe: It does.
Jacob Dunlap: That was good.
Ralph Harvey: Thanks.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Very good. Alright, let's go back to this No, that's it. Hmm. Oops. Okay, so now uh we're moving on to finance, okay. I'm gonna show you an Excel spreadsheet and we're going to fill it in together based on what components we're including in our remote and see if it's under twelve fifty Euro. If so, we can proceed, if not, we need to go back to the drawing board a little bit. 'Kay? So let Ralph Harvey bring that up. Here we go. Alright. Um it's not hand dynamo, it's powered by battery,
Jacob Dunlap: Yep.
Jeffery Hayhoe: so we give it a
Ralph Harvey: Two.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Number of components you plan to use. Do I just put quantity being one battery, or
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Yeah.
Jacob Dunlap: Mm 'kay.
Jeffery Hayhoe: But if it's a do you wanna go for this is where we need to make a final call on if it's a lithium or do we wanna go triple A_s, 'cause triple A_s we're gonna have t do more than one battery. Oh, let's just go for a lithium. What do you say?
Ralph Harvey: Yeah, let's
Jacob Dunlap: Yeah,
Ralph Harvey: let's do a lithium.
Jeffery Hayhoe: I think
Jacob Dunlap: it's.
Jeffery Hayhoe: uh I think
Ralph Harvey: We're gon
Jeffery Hayhoe: the people
Ralph Harvey: that's gon
Jeffery Hayhoe: who purchase this are gonna be technologically
Ralph Harvey: Nologically advanced,
Jeffery Hayhoe: right.
Ralph Harvey: yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Okay, down to the electronics um section. We're gonna need this kind, correct,
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: if we do
Jacob Dunlap: Yep.
Jeffery Hayhoe: the voice sensor, so one of those. It is a single-curved, so one of those.
Ralph Harvey: Uh.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Oh. What's that? Yeah, that's
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: correct. 'Kay, down here,
Sung Wilson: It's
Jeffery Hayhoe: case
Ralph Harvey: We
Sung Wilson: plastic.
Jeffery Hayhoe: material.
Ralph Harvey: plastic.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Plastic.
Ralph Harvey: And
Sung Wilson: And
Ralph Harvey: special
Sung Wilson: special
Ralph Harvey: colour.
Sung Wilson: colour.
Jeffery Hayhoe: 'Kay. Down here, interface type. We're gonna have the integrated scroll scroll
Sung Wilson: No, we
Jeffery Hayhoe: wheel.
Sung Wilson: don't have the scroll.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Isn't oh those are just regular
Ralph Harvey: But
Jeffery Hayhoe: buttons.
Ralph Harvey: it's
Jacob Dunlap: Well,
Sung Wilson: Buttons.
Jacob Dunlap: that's the push-button too, right there.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah, but i
Jeffery Hayhoe: This?
Ralph Harvey: so
Jacob Dunlap: Integrated
Ralph Harvey: i
Jacob Dunlap: scroll-wheel or push-button. We're really having just push-button interface.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Okay, so we can just go um.
Ralph Harvey: But will we w actually we'll need two, won't we? One for the top and then one for the s one e for each side.
Jacob Dunlap: But it that just covers the type of button we're having. Because we're not doing a scroll on the side, it's still push-button.
Sung Wilson: Oh like the twenty nine means like you have both scrolls and
Jacob Dunlap: Push-button.
Sung Wilson: push-buttons.
Ralph Harvey: Okay.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Right
Jacob Dunlap: But we just
Jeffery Hayhoe: I
Sung Wilson: But
Jeffery Hayhoe: think
Sung Wilson: we
Jacob Dunlap: have
Sung Wilson: don't
Jeffery Hayhoe: she's
Sung Wilson: have
Jacob Dunlap: push
Sung Wilson: any scrolls.
Jeffery Hayhoe: I think what Courtney's talking about is do we need to put two
Ralph Harvey: Like
Jeffery Hayhoe: here?
Ralph Harvey: because there's like one interface right here and then because it's not gonna be on the same plane when you press the button. There's
Jeffery Hayhoe: Right.
Ralph Harvey: gonna have to be
Jacob Dunlap: Yeah.
Ralph Harvey: additional signals on the sides. So
Jacob Dunlap: Okay.
Ralph Harvey: is that gonna be an extra one on each side?
Jeffery Hayhoe: I don't know, they might put us well, let's
Sung Wilson: Two interfaces,
Jeffery Hayhoe: just.
Sung Wilson: is that what w should we
Jacob Dunlap: Let's
Jeffery Hayhoe: Two
Sung Wilson: s
Jacob Dunlap: call
Sung Wilson: say?
Jeffery Hayhoe: or
Jacob Dunlap: it th
Jeffery Hayhoe: would
Ralph Harvey: Or
Jeffery Hayhoe: it
Ralph Harvey: three,
Jeffery Hayhoe: be three?
Ralph Harvey: because of one on each side and
Sung Wilson: Okay,
Ralph Harvey: one on
Sung Wilson: fine.
Ralph Harvey: top.
Sung Wilson: Yeah.
Ralph Harvey: I mean it's fine 'cause it comes out the same as twenty nine. Well less than twenty nine even.
Jacob Dunlap: Okay.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Okay and we're gonna button supplements the buttons are no
Ralph Harvey: They're
Jeffery Hayhoe: uh
Ralph Harvey: a special colour.
Jeffery Hayhoe: okay.
Ralph Harvey: Um they're uh they're a special form, 'cause
Jeffery Hayhoe: Are
Ralph Harvey: they're
Jeffery Hayhoe: they?
Ralph Harvey: indented.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Oh, right.
Sung Wilson: And
Ralph Harvey: And,
Sung Wilson: then
Ralph Harvey: they're
Sung Wilson: s
Ralph Harvey: a special material.
Sung Wilson: yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Mm. Well, we're under cost then. Alright.
Sung Wilson: We're over?
Jeffery Hayhoe: No,
Jacob Dunlap: Grand.
Ralph Harvey: We're
Jeffery Hayhoe: we're
Ralph Harvey: under.
Jeffery Hayhoe: under. Twelve
Sung Wilson: Okay.
Jeffery Hayhoe: point five is our limit.
Sung Wilson: Oh,
Jeffery Hayhoe: We've
Sung Wilson: I see.
Jeffery Hayhoe: got eleven point two.
Jacob Dunlap: So
Jeffery Hayhoe: Alright.
Jacob Dunlap: we can go to production.
Jeffery Hayhoe: We can go to
Jeffery Hayhoe: I dunno what I just did. Okay. Now we're gonna talk about the project process um and whether or not we're satisfied with the whole process and the result. Um did we have a lot of room for creativity? Did we have a lot of room for individual leadership, um teamwork, and the means, meaning the technology that we used to produce our little guy there, we found any new ideas. Now, question is, how do we do this?
Jacob Dunlap: Go back.
Ralph Harvey: I think we just discuss it.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Discuss,
Jacob Dunlap: Previous.
Jeffery Hayhoe: sure. Alright. Who want who would like to go first?
Jacob Dunlap: We think
Sung Wilson: We didn't
Jacob Dunlap: we got
Sung Wilson: have
Jacob Dunlap: stifled
Sung Wilson: a whiteboard.
Jacob Dunlap: for cri creativity by the company itself, in restricting us only to using a T_V_ remote,
Jeffery Hayhoe: Hmm.
Jacob Dunlap: initially.
Sung Wilson: Yeah.
Ralph Harvey: Oh
Jeffery Hayhoe: Hmm.
Ralph Harvey: that's true.
Sung Wilson: And no internet.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah. No, yeah, that's a good point. 'Cause I'd forgotten that that wasn't our decision, yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: And how did you feel about the whole the whole process though?
Ralph Harvey: Oh, overall I mean I thought we did a good job like We got to choose basically we had control over minus it being just merely a T_V_ remote we got to choose what we wanted to do with it.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Right, and we got say over what how technologically advanced it should be and also how fashionable, which I kind of
Ralph Harvey: And we're a fashion forward
Jeffery Hayhoe: like
Ralph Harvey: technology
Jeffery Hayhoe: we
Ralph Harvey: company.
Jeffery Hayhoe: yep. You
Jacob Dunlap: right.
Jeffery Hayhoe: know it. Um what about um the teamwork aspect? How did you guys enjoy making the model, the prototype?
Sung Wilson: I think we did well.
Jacob Dunlap: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: I think ya' did. Did you work well together in there, and
Sung Wilson: Yep.
Jacob Dunlap: Well,
Jeffery Hayhoe: 'kay.
Jacob Dunlap: no, there
Ralph Harvey: Minus
Jacob Dunlap: was
Ralph Harvey: that one
Jacob Dunlap: there
Ralph Harvey: fight.
Jacob Dunlap: was scratching and fighting,
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jacob Dunlap: but
Jeffery Hayhoe: Oh my
Jacob Dunlap: no.
Jeffery Hayhoe: God,
Sung Wilson: Gouges.
Jeffery Hayhoe: and we've all been a pretty congenial team here, I think.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: We hadn't
Ralph Harvey: I
Jeffery Hayhoe: had any ma
Ralph Harvey: mean
Jeffery Hayhoe: fallings
Ralph Harvey: minus you
Jeffery Hayhoe: out.
Ralph Harvey: guys being wha what is it, the survey, annoying or
Jacob Dunlap: Irritating.
Ralph Harvey: what is it?
Jeffery Hayhoe: Irritating.
Ralph Harvey: Irritating,
Sung Wilson: Irritating.
Ralph Harvey: yeah. Wow that's a it's definitely a strong one.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Okay.
Jacob Dunlap: The means, the whiteboard didn't work.
Sung Wilson: And
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Yeah.
Sung Wilson: no internet.
Jeffery Hayhoe: I have to knock that one down a couple
Ralph Harvey: Yeah,
Jeffery Hayhoe: notches.
Ralph Harvey: and no internet.
Jacob Dunlap: A and our friend here really feels
Sung Wilson: Misses.
Jacob Dunlap: strongly about the internet.
Sung Wilson: I do.
Ralph Harvey: And the digital
Sung Wilson: There's so much available.
Ralph Harvey: the
Sung Wilson: Like
Ralph Harvey: digital
Sung Wilson: it's information
Ralph Harvey: pens
Jeffery Hayhoe: Yeah, digital pens.
Ralph Harvey: were they
Jacob Dunlap: I
Ralph Harvey: were pretty
Jacob Dunlap: really
Ralph Harvey: cool.
Jacob Dunlap: appreciated
Jeffery Hayhoe: They were fine.
Jacob Dunlap: those, yeah.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah they were fun, even though I'm not really sure what I could do with them, but they are awesome.
Jacob Dunlap: The use of the laptops for receiving everything. It
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Right,
Jacob Dunlap: was
Jeffery Hayhoe: laptops are
Jacob Dunlap: wireless
Jeffery Hayhoe: extremely handy,
Jacob Dunlap: too, so.
Jeffery Hayhoe: wireless.
Ralph Harvey: And these things
Jeffery Hayhoe: And
Ralph Harvey: whoa.
Jeffery Hayhoe: that we have a shared network where we can put all of the
Sung Wilson: Yeah.
Jacob Dunlap: And let's not forget the sexy dual microphones everyone gets
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jacob Dunlap: to wear.
Ralph Harvey: And Big Brother.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Big brother.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: 'Kay, have we found any new ideas through this process?
Ralph Harvey: Um we are really gonna sell this. Ta-da.
Jeffery Hayhoe: For something that looks cool and also has what I want it to b do technologically.
Sung Wilson: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: And that's your right brain taking over, w wanting the artistic, the fashionable, the hip,
Ralph Harvey: Mm-hmm.
Jeffery Hayhoe: you know. If we all just went out and bought useful things, I don't think I mean that's not
Sung Wilson: Well,
Jeffery Hayhoe: what
Sung Wilson: that's
Jeffery Hayhoe: technology.
Sung Wilson: why I don't like uh Macs or Apples, just 'cause I look at it, and I know it's probably a very good computer, but I look at it, and I'm taken back to elementary school, 'cause they look the same.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Mm.
Sung Wilson: They
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Sung Wilson: look like they did when I was in elementary school,
Ralph Harvey: Yeah,
Sung Wilson: and
Ralph Harvey: 'cause
Sung Wilson: that's
Ralph Harvey: they're
Sung Wilson: so old-fashioned
Ralph Harvey: pretty and
Sung Wilson: to
Ralph Harvey: just
Sung Wilson: Ralph Harvey.
Ralph Harvey: like
Jacob Dunlap: The Toronto
Jeffery Hayhoe: Yeah.
Jacob Dunlap: district school would only use his Macs with their kids.
Sung Wilson: Exactly, so I associate them with like really low-tech,
Jeffery Hayhoe: Yeah.
Sung Wilson: really cheap,
Jeffery Hayhoe: Just the Mac
Sung Wilson: bad
Jeffery Hayhoe: font bothers
Ralph Harvey: Uh yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Ralph Harvey
Sung Wilson: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: even. But I do like iPods, go figure.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah, no, iPods They want all those words for
Jeffery Hayhoe: Yeah.
Ralph Harvey: presentation,
Jacob Dunlap: Well,
Ralph Harvey: even
Jacob Dunlap: i
Ralph Harvey: the
Jacob Dunlap: iPods
Ralph Harvey: plugs.
Jacob Dunlap: are now quite trendy, and
Jeffery Hayhoe: Mm-hmm.
Jacob Dunlap: they come in different colours.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Colours. Exactly.
Jacob Dunlap: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: I mean how many people went out and bough a Nokia phone, back when we were like in high school, just so they could get the changeable face
Ralph Harvey: Oh
Jeffery Hayhoe: plates.
Ralph Harvey: yeah, everybody.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Okay. Anyway,
Jacob Dunlap: Not Ralph Harvey.
Jeffery Hayhoe: so
Ralph Harvey: Mine
Jeffery Hayhoe: that
Ralph Harvey: is
Sung Wilson: But the
Jeffery Hayhoe: is
Jacob Dunlap: I
Sung Wilson: my
Jacob Dunlap: didn't
Jeffery Hayhoe: definitely
Ralph Harvey: amber.
Jacob Dunlap: have a phone
Jeffery Hayhoe: at work.
Jacob Dunlap: 'til university.
Sung Wilson: but my
Ralph Harvey: Oh.
Sung Wilson: one issue is just like the whole it's for T_V_ only. I was like who's gonna buy a remote just for the T_V_ unless they've lost theirs.
Ralph Harvey: Look at
Jeffery Hayhoe: Yeah.
Ralph Harvey: it. That is a piece
Jeffery Hayhoe: Fashionable
Sung Wilson: You're kidding.
Ralph Harvey: of
Jeffery Hayhoe: chic
Ralph Harvey: work.
Jeffery Hayhoe: people
Ralph Harvey: Wow.
Jeffery Hayhoe: will.
Sung Wilson: No,
Ralph Harvey: Marketing Director says yeah. Fashionable
Sung Wilson: no.
Ralph Harvey: people
Sung Wilson: No, marketing
Ralph Harvey: will buy
Sung Wilson: has
Ralph Harvey: it.
Sung Wilson: to actually create the desire for it.
Ralph Harvey: Oh, I will create
Jacob Dunlap: That's okay.
Ralph Harvey: desire.
Jacob Dunlap: We can create a commercial where they think that all their needs will be met. This
Sung Wilson: Ri
Jacob Dunlap: will help them find
Jeffery Hayhoe: Hmm.
Jacob Dunlap: the one.
Sung Wilson: They'll be sexy with it.
Jacob Dunlap: That's right.
Ralph Harvey: that's the fig-leaf.
Sung Wilson: Oh right.
Ralph Harvey: Mm. That'll sell.
Jeffery Hayhoe: There you
Sung Wilson: Let
Jeffery Hayhoe: go,
Sung Wilson: you
Jacob Dunlap: And
Jeffery Hayhoe: marketing.
Sung Wilson: loose.
Jacob Dunlap: so the serpent says, use our remote.
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Alright.
Sung Wilson: Yeah,
Ralph Harvey: Yeah.
Sung Wilson: no.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Okay, we're gonna wrap this up now. Um the costs are within the budget, we evaluated the project, and now we're gonna complete the final questionnaire and meeting summary, and then we're going to have a big giant party, apparently, according to this, so.
Jacob Dunlap: Whoohoo.
Jeffery Hayhoe: Alright, thank you team,
Jacob Dunlap: Margaritas
Jeffery Hayhoe: you did a great
Jacob Dunlap: for everyone.
Jeffery Hayhoe: job, it was lovely working with you.
Sung Wilson: Good.
Ralph Harvey: You too.
Jacob Dunlap: Yay. Thanks to the Project Leader. Now we know w | Sung Wilson and Jacob Dunlap presented the prototype and displayed its gunmetal color, removable casing, buttons, logo, and ergonomic design. Ralph Harvey gave an evaluation of the prototype using the group's initial criteria for the remote. The group decided that enough of their initial ideas and criteria for the remote were satisfied to be able to continue with the project. Jeffery Hayhoe analyzed the final production cost; the cost was lower than initially projected, at 11.2 Euros. The group decided to use one lithium battery instead of several triple A alkaline batteries. Jeffery Hayhoe then led a discussion on the project process. The group felt that they worked well together and were pleased with the prototype. They complained, though, that they felt constrained by the management's directives, that they had difficulties using the meeting-room equipment, and that they did not have internet access during the project. All participants were instructed to fill out a final questionnaire. | 1 | amisum | train |
Brandon Boggs: Here we go. Welcome everybody. Um, I'm Abigail Claflin. You can call Frankie Green Abbie. 'S see. PowerPoint, that's not it. There we go. So this is our kick off meeting. Um and I guess we should all get acquainted. Let's shall we all introduce ourselves?
Frankie Green: Hi I'm Chiara, I'm the um Marketing Expert Um. would you like Frankie Green to talk about my aims at the moment, or would you like Frankie Green to just say my name and then we can talk about business
Brandon Boggs: I think
Frankie Green: later?
Brandon Boggs: we'll get around to that, yeah.
Frankie Green: We'll
Brandon Boggs: So
Frankie Green: get
Brandon Boggs: this
Frankie Green: round
Brandon Boggs: is
Frankie Green: to
Brandon Boggs: just
Frankie Green: that later.
Brandon Boggs: introductions
Frankie Green: My
Brandon Boggs: yeah.
Frankie Green: name is Chiara and I'm Frankie Green.
Brandon Boggs: Okay. I forgot to s say I'm Brandon Boggs but I figured you all knew that already, um so.
Ronald Arbogast: I'm Stephanie I am Ronald Arbogast.
Steve Perrucci: I'm Krista and I'm Steve Perrucci.
Brandon Boggs: Okay. Um so f here's our agenda for today. Um we're gonna do some tool training, project plan and discuss then close. Um so. So our aim is to produce a remote control that is original, trendy and user friendly. And to do this, we have to um there's certain things we have to consider about functional aspects and conceptual design of the thing. So. We'll get to that. Oh there it is. Right. Functional design, conceptual design and detailed design. So throughout our next couple of meetings we'll we'll be covering these things. Um so we're gonna try out our white board. If we'll all draw our favourite animal, to sum up the characteristics of that animal.
Ronald Arbogast: So
Brandon Boggs: Okay.
Ronald Arbogast: you want us to draw it and then talk about it? Or just draw it?
Frankie Green: I think both.
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: Okay. Why don't
Brandon Boggs: Both.
Ronald Arbogast: we do both.
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Frankie Green: Who starts?
Ronald Arbogast: Right.
Frankie Green: We ought to decide who starts and all that. No?
Brandon Boggs: Any
Frankie Green: Uh-huh.
Brandon Boggs: volunteers? Does anyone know what they wanna draw?
Ronald Arbogast: Mm, I gotta think about it for a second like. Uh Does it have to be functional, trendy and user friendly?
Brandon Boggs: I don't think so.
Ronald Arbogast: Um. Okay, I'll draw. I'll draw one. Make sure my things here.
Ronald Arbogast: Uh-oh.
Ronald Arbogast: Right.
Ronald Arbogast: Okay, my favourite animal is see.
Ronald Arbogast: Oops.
Brandon Boggs: A dolphin.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah, it's
Brandon Boggs: 'S like playing Pictionary.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah, I guess it has a fin on top too, yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: It's my dolphin.
Brandon Boggs: So what characteristics do you like about your animal?
Ronald Arbogast: I like its tail. Um, no, I think dolphins are really uh I dunno, they're smart and they they're cute and they like swimming and that's cool, like
Brandon Boggs: They're graceful.
Ronald Arbogast: they're graceful yeah, and they're so
Brandon Boggs: Sleek.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah they're sleek and they look intelligent and I don't know, they're I guess it's the whole like binocular
Brandon Boggs: I don't know how
Ronald Arbogast: vision
Brandon Boggs: intelligent
Ronald Arbogast: thing.
Brandon Boggs: that one looks.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah he he doesn't look that smart. He's a I dunno um they're I think it's cool the the um the interaction that or the th things that the reasons people seem to like you know you get ex you know people are sitting on the beach and p they're like oh look there's dolphins and it's kinda like but they're you know they jump around in the water and they're happy and they're mammals, but they
Brandon Boggs: Yes. Does
Ronald Arbogast: swim.
Brandon Boggs: anybody else wanna draw their animal?
Steve Perrucci: Suppose I can draw an animal, yeah.
Brandon Boggs: Uh-oh there goes the ten. It's a cat.
Steve Perrucci: Yeah. I don't know. They sleep all day, they're easy to draw.
Brandon Boggs: Do you wanna
Frankie Green: Uh yeah.
Brandon Boggs: anything? I dunno
Frankie Green: Well
Brandon Boggs: if
Frankie Green: I
Brandon Boggs: the
Frankie Green: had
Steve Perrucci: I think the pen is
Brandon Boggs: the
Steve Perrucci: running out of
Brandon Boggs: ah.
Frankie Green: spare one. So I'll use the spare one. Um but it's harder to draw
Ronald Arbogast: And
Frankie Green: um.
Ronald Arbogast: the pen's dying.
Frankie Green: Um.
Brandon Boggs: A
Frankie Green: Uh.
Brandon Boggs: horse.
Ronald Arbogast: Horse.
Frankie Green: Um I don't really know
Brandon Boggs: That's
Frankie Green: how
Brandon Boggs: very
Frankie Green: the legs
Brandon Boggs: good.
Frankie Green: go, but anyway I will do that. Um, and the main reason is they're pretty. I think they're very pretty and they go well with the environment, and I like the way they run and I used to do horse riding and they're just very sort of sturdy and nice animals. And I like the way um they feel, sort of under under the hand, I think that's pretty much it. Um
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Brandon Boggs: This cord's
Brandon Boggs: Uh. Right. Actually I haven't thought of anything yet. Uh
Brandon Boggs: It's a pig. So I'm thinking we should design a remote control that's water resistant, strong and furry. What do you think, yeah?
Ronald Arbogast: And furry.
Brandon Boggs: This is yeah, well like a cat, you know,
Ronald Arbogast: Textile
Brandon Boggs: soft yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: tactile, tactile remote
Brandon Boggs: Although
Ronald Arbogast: control.
Brandon Boggs: uh I'll just put there. Right.
Ronald Arbogast: You're dragging a you have a tail.
Brandon Boggs: Oh my gosh, this is disastrous. Sorry about that. Okay. So moving on. Our selling price goal is twenty five Euro and profit aim is fifty million Euro. So I'm guessing that we're not actually in Scotland, we're in some European country. Um, and we will hope to sell this internationally.
Ronald Arbogast: Sorry can you just say that what's the what are our price goals again?
Brandon Boggs: Um selling price is twenty five Euro.
Ronald Arbogast: Okay.
Brandon Boggs: Profit aim fifty million Euro.
Frankie Green: How many should we sell then? Um, a lot,
Brandon Boggs: Anyone
Frankie Green: two
Brandon Boggs: a mathematician?
Frankie Green: two two million, two mi no, more f four million.
Steve Perrucci: Two million.
Frankie Green: Four million. And it well it's the profit so if a profit for each is twelve
Steve Perrucci: Oh,
Frankie Green: fifty,
Steve Perrucci: yeah.
Frankie Green: that'll do four million.
Frankie Green: It is a lot. Uh.
Brandon Boggs: So f that's a fifty percent um uh. Um, I don't know what these mean because I didn't actually make the slide-show. Experience with remote control. So I guess we have to reflect on our experiences with remote controls to decide what um we would like to see in a convenient, practical, nice remote control. Um so do we have any initial ideas for uh how this remote control should be designed or formatted or the the buttons
Frankie Green: Um,
Brandon Boggs: it should have.
Frankie Green: I think one thing is that it should be easy to find
Ronald Arbogast: I was
Frankie Green: bec
Ronald Arbogast: thinking that too.
Frankie Green: yeah
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: I
Frankie Green: bec
Ronald Arbogast: think we should design something that has like a so you can like somehow like you I mean you always know where your T_V_ is, so just have a call button, I've always wanted that,
Frankie Green: Yeah,
Ronald Arbogast: so
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Frankie Green: yeah
Ronald Arbogast: like
Frankie Green: yeah
Ronald Arbogast: you
Frankie Green: yeah
Ronald Arbogast: can push
Frankie Green: yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: a button
Brandon Boggs: I mean
Ronald Arbogast: on your
Brandon Boggs: you have
Ronald Arbogast: T_V_
Brandon Boggs: it for the portable
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah,
Brandon Boggs: phone, so
Ronald Arbogast: yeah
Brandon Boggs: why not
Ronald Arbogast: yeah
Brandon Boggs: yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: yeah, so you should have a call button on your television to
Frankie Green: Yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: be able to find your remote control.
Frankie Green: And even I think a little light. Um or even a maybe a vib a vibrating thing. I dunno but someth because it's usually under the sofa.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah.
Frankie Green: In which case
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah.
Frankie Green: you're going to be l but if it has a sort of signal which isn't any sound I don't know
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah.
Frankie Green: if it's expensive maybe to
Ronald Arbogast: I don't yeah I mean it
Frankie Green: Maybe call is enough. But yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: but like I mean just I mean like your phone even just has so
Frankie Green: Yeah
Ronald Arbogast: like
Frankie Green: yeah
Ronald Arbogast: it
Frankie Green: yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: can vibrate, it can light up and make
Frankie Green: Yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: noise and I dunno.
Brandon Boggs: What if it had something like um just like a magnet on the back of it and you could I mean j just to have some place to put it besides like a base.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah.
Brandon Boggs: You know like a portable
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah,
Brandon Boggs: phone
Ronald Arbogast: or if it
Brandon Boggs: has
Ronald Arbogast: had a
Brandon Boggs: a base,
Ronald Arbogast: yeah.
Brandon Boggs: like just to have a home for it.
Frankie Green: Yeah yeah yeah yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah, I mean
Brandon Boggs: 'Cause people just stick it on top of their T_V_, but the point of having a remote is not to have to walk over to the T_V_,
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah.
Brandon Boggs: so
Steve Perrucci: Well that's why it's always in the couch.
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah, in in the couch. I dunno, it seems like though that that would be hard, 'cause
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: you not you're not gonna be lazy
Brandon Boggs: Maybe
Ronald Arbogast: anyway
Brandon Boggs: we should
Ronald Arbogast: and
Brandon Boggs: design couches that have the remote control
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah
Brandon Boggs: in
Ronald Arbogast: so we
Brandon Boggs: the side
Ronald Arbogast: the project
Brandon Boggs: arm.
Ronald Arbogast: is now couches and
Frankie Green: But
Ronald Arbogast: remote
Frankie Green: even
Ronald Arbogast: controls.
Frankie Green: just a thing to attach it to the w you know if you had a thing, a pretty object attached to the wall. But that would really
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah.
Frankie Green: make it more expensive. But it's only a plastic thing, r
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah.
Frankie Green: really,
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Frankie Green: the thing on the wall. Something like that. And the other
Brandon Boggs: Do you
Frankie Green: thing
Brandon Boggs: think it
Frankie Green: is
Brandon Boggs: needs to be bigger to not lose, or does that
Ronald Arbogast: Bigger.
Brandon Boggs: not factor
Frankie Green: Not
Brandon Boggs: in?
Frankie Green: well it needs
Brandon Boggs: Like
Frankie Green: to be sort of
Brandon Boggs: Hand
Ronald Arbogast: Hand-sized.
Brandon Boggs: hand held
Frankie Green: Yeah.
Brandon Boggs: size, yeah.
Frankie Green: I don't think you need a
Brandon Boggs: Not not huge, but
Frankie Green: But definitely not well I don't know.
Ronald Arbogast: It can't be that hard to put some kind of a noise on it.
Frankie Green: No, it can't be,
Steve Perrucci: No it really
Ronald Arbogast: Or
Frankie Green: uh-uh.
Ronald Arbogast: like
Steve Perrucci: wouldn't
Brandon Boggs: Huh.
Steve Perrucci: be.
Ronald Arbogast: or like a light thing. You know. I dunno.
Frankie Green: Like spaceship.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah.
Frankie Green: Right. Um
Ronald Arbogast: Or make it mobile so it runs around and comes come find you yeah. That would be really I'm sure we could do that for twenty five
Brandon Boggs: Little
Ronald Arbogast: Euros
Brandon Boggs: homing
Ronald Arbogast: a pop.
Brandon Boggs: device.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah. Uh.
Brandon Boggs: Um. Okay. So what do we think this remote control should Five minutes.
Frankie Green: Oh dear.
Brandon Boggs: Till the meeting oh right. This is what we have left.
Ronald Arbogast: I also
Brandon Boggs: Um,
Ronald Arbogast: think though that
Brandon Boggs: oh
Ronald Arbogast: it shouldn't
Brandon Boggs: we just
Ronald Arbogast: have too many buttons, 'cause I hate
Steve Perrucci: Yeah,
Ronald Arbogast: that
Steve Perrucci: I
Ronald Arbogast: when
Steve Perrucci: agree.
Ronald Arbogast: they have too many buttons and
Frankie Green: Yeah,
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Steve Perrucci: button
Frankie Green: yeah yeah.
Steve Perrucci: and the
Ronald Arbogast: I
Steve Perrucci: F_
Ronald Arbogast: mean I know
Steve Perrucci: button,
Ronald Arbogast: it has
Steve Perrucci: they
Ronald Arbogast: to
Steve Perrucci: don't
Ronald Arbogast: have
Steve Perrucci: do
Ronald Arbogast: enough
Steve Perrucci: anything.
Ronald Arbogast: functions but like, I don't know you, just have like eight thousand buttons and you're like, no, you never use half of them.
Brandon Boggs: You
Ronald Arbogast: So.
Brandon Boggs: what if um may be a little fancy but what if it had like a little screen, so it has less buttons but it still has all the functions.
Ronald Arbogast: That would be cool.
Brandon Boggs: Like the
Frankie Green: Yeah.
Brandon Boggs: way a mobile phone does.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah. I mean it just seems like
Brandon Boggs: So you could like
Ronald Arbogast: yeah.
Brandon Boggs: um like if you have I dunno if you have satellite if you have a hundred channels, you can the way you do it on your radio is that you uh what do you call
Frankie Green: Select.
Brandon Boggs: it s y yeah but you
Frankie Green: Uh.
Brandon Boggs: can programme, so you can programme like your favourite channels, so like if you had a s
Frankie Green: But, would you have the screen on the thing, or would you have it on the telly transmitting the screen.
Brandon Boggs: That's something we could decide.
Ronald Arbogast: I
Frankie Green: Because
Ronald Arbogast: guess
Brandon Boggs: Mm.
Ronald Arbogast: they would go together somehow? I dunno.
Frankie Green: Because, I don't know if it's I think it's e expensive, if you have if you use the telly screen, 'cause the telly's
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Frankie Green: already a screen, then you can pro sort of have a programming function, really easy sort of arrow up and down, on
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Frankie Green: the remote, and then use the telly as a screen.
Brandon Boggs: Right.
Frankie Green: But um
Ronald Arbogast: I'm thinking
Frankie Green: But
Ronald Arbogast: kind
Frankie Green: yeah for
Ronald Arbogast: of
Frankie Green: sure. Something like not it's not on the button but it's telling you what to do,
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Frankie Green: is that what you mean?
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Frankie Green: Right. Mm.
Ronald Arbogast: Or like you h you see those you know people I'm thinking of like celebrity cribs kind of things when like they have all those these things that at their house you know their their entire house is so electronic, and they have like this one master control that and it's like a hand held like turns on everything sort of control and it has like a screen and like so I think it should be possible to have some kind of a screen, I don't know
Frankie Green: Yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: if it must be it would probably must be ex too expensive though t like I dunno.
Frankie Green: But like
Brandon Boggs: Mm.
Frankie Green: mobile phones have screens
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah,
Frankie Green: and they're cheap.
Ronald Arbogast: yeah. Yeah
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: that's true.
Brandon Boggs: I mean, we have to remember our budget is twelve point
Frankie Green: Yeah.
Brandon Boggs: twelve fifty for to actually make the device.
Ronald Arbogast: Mm.
Brandon Boggs: Um
Ronald Arbogast: Well, I guess
Brandon Boggs: but it's
Ronald Arbogast: we have
Brandon Boggs: something
Ronald Arbogast: to get to
Brandon Boggs: to
Ronald Arbogast: that
Brandon Boggs: think
Ronald Arbogast: later,
Brandon Boggs: about, yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: yeah.
Brandon Boggs: I mean we'll have to see how much that would be.
Frankie Green: Or some it i we can find out probably on the
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Frankie Green: internet how much it's Um. Yeah, and the other thing you said that thing about robust and water um What was the word?
Ronald Arbogast: Furry.
Frankie Green: Water resistant. No but it's I thought, ah,
Brandon Boggs: was
Frankie Green: spot on.
Brandon Boggs: just
Frankie Green: Good feel, tact tactile,
Brandon Boggs: Yeah.
Frankie Green: good tactile feel, maybe something didn doesn't make your hands sweat lot.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah. Mm, mm.
Frankie Green: That's quite annoying.
Brandon Boggs: Maybe um just like a simple thing to have a clip on it, like so you can clip it to your
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah.
Brandon Boggs: like that's another
Frankie Green: Yeah, clip. Ooh. Um.
Brandon Boggs: Um. We should probably start wrapping up, um we've got some initial ideas that we can all look into. Um, and come up with some new ones for the next meeting, which will be in another thirty minutes. Um. So. Yeah. Steve Perrucci, what does that stand
Steve Perrucci: Yeah
Brandon Boggs: for,
Steve Perrucci: I think
Brandon Boggs: I_D_,
Steve Perrucci: so.
Brandon Boggs: yeah um is going to be looking more into the working design. So I guess you'd be looking at lots of the things we discussed about screen and um that sort of thing. The something, what is the U_I_?
Steve Perrucci: User.
Ronald Arbogast: That's Frankie Green.
Brandon Boggs: Yeah, what does it stand for again?
Ronald Arbogast: Uh, User Interface
Brandon Boggs: User
Ronald Arbogast: design.
Brandon Boggs: Interface Designer. So that's gonna be more technical. I guess that maybe the working design has also to do with like the physical feat like just
Ronald Arbogast: So
Brandon Boggs: the way
Ronald Arbogast: technical
Brandon Boggs: it looks
Steve Perrucci: The
Ronald Arbogast: function.
Steve Perrucci: working
Brandon Boggs: and
Steve Perrucci: design
Brandon Boggs: the way
Steve Perrucci: is
Brandon Boggs: it w
Steve Perrucci: the structure.
Brandon Boggs: Yeah, yeah.
Ronald Arbogast: What is technical functions exactl I I don't really know what
Brandon Boggs: Um, I guess you'd have to find out.
Frankie Green: It says
Steve Perrucci: Um.
Frankie Green: on that email
Steve Perrucci: It
Frankie Green: but
Steve Perrucci: was
Ronald Arbogast: It
Steve Perrucci: in
Ronald Arbogast: does
Frankie Green: it
Steve Perrucci: the email.
Ronald Arbogast: but it I just don't really
Steve Perrucci: I wrote down what
Frankie Green: It
Steve Perrucci: mine
Frankie Green: said
Steve Perrucci: were.
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah.
Frankie Green: um It said
Ronald Arbogast: What effect should the thing ha should it have, okay. Alright.
Frankie Green: Yeah like
Ronald Arbogast: And working design. Okay.
Frankie Green: Be a medium between you and the telly
Ronald Arbogast: Yeah,
Frankie Green: I think,
Ronald Arbogast: yeah.
Brandon Boggs: Mm.
Frankie Green: that's uh
Ronald Arbogast: Alright. And how it works, okay. Right. I'm I'm on task.
Brandon Boggs: And the M_E_, what does that stand for? M
Steve Perrucci: Marketing.
Brandon Boggs: Marketing,
Frankie Green: Marketing.
Brandon Boggs: right.
Frankie Green: Oh it's written
Brandon Boggs: Um.
Frankie Green: here, but um.
Brandon Boggs: So we'll be working on the user requirements, um Yeah.
Frankie Green: Okay.
Brandon Boggs: So I guess that wraps it up. I'll see you all in thirty minutes. I just did. | The group introduced themselves to each other. Brandon Boggs discussed the goals for the project and gave an agenda for the project as a whole. The group practiced using the meeting-room equipment by drawing on the whiteboard. Brandon Boggs presented the projected profit and price point. The group discussed their experiences with remote controls. They complained that remotes got lost too easily, and suggested using a locator function. They also complained that remotes had too many buttons, and suggested incorporating a screen to simplify the interface but retain all of the functions. They also suggested making the remote water-resistant and including a clip. Brandon Boggs instructed Steve Perrucci to research the working design and components, Ronald Arbogast to research the technical functions, and Frankie Green to research user requirements. | 1 | amisum | train |
Douglas Basham: Okay.
Ben Stephens: 'Kay so we'll try to zip through this, since we're short on time. Welcome everybody. Um hope your sessions went well. Um so this is our functional design meeting, we're going to consider um user needs, technical effects, and the working design of our remote control. Um I've been taking meetings on the minute minutes on the meetings, and I'll be putting them in the shared documents folder so if there's anything you need to refer to you can find them in there. Um I'll get the ones up for next time, um they're not finished yet. Right. Um so can we have updates from everyone from what you've worked on just kind of a quick summary of anything interesting that you'd like to share
Douglas Basham: And I can
Ben Stephens: or discuss
Douglas Basham: start if
Ben Stephens: in
Douglas Basham: you
Ben Stephens: this
Douglas Basham: want.
Ben Stephens: sure.
Douglas Basham: Is there an order? No. We haven't
Ben Stephens: Hm?
Douglas Basham: decided on an order.
Ben Stephens: No,
Douglas Basham: First.
Ben Stephens: any any order's fine.
Douglas Basham: Okay.
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: Um, how do I put this
Wendell Steele: Just
Douglas Basham: I'll just
Wendell Steele: uh
Douglas Basham: put the cable in.
Ben Stephens: Oh yeah, sorry.
Douglas Basham: Is that it? Can you see? Oh, here. Okay. So what happens it doesn't work?
Ben Stephens: It sh it takes a few seconds I think.
Wendell Steele: You may need to
Anthony Woods: Who's that?
Douglas Basham: No. Is it in the
Wendell Steele: But
Douglas Basham: right
Wendell Steele: sometimes
Douglas Basham: thing?
Wendell Steele: you have to do it it's like a three set setting cycle, so press it a couple times, hold down function and then press
Douglas Basham: Oh wait,
Wendell Steele: F_ eight.
Douglas Basham: um. Uh. You need to help Douglas Basham.
Ben Stephens: Uh-huh, and then press function.
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: and F_ eight.
Anthony Woods: Could you just plug it back into hers because
Douglas Basham: Oh,
Anthony Woods: she had
Douglas Basham: wait.
Anthony Woods: oh.
Douglas Basham: is that it?
Wendell Steele: Adjusting.
Ben Stephens: Here we are.
Wendell Steele: The cable might be a little loose or something.
Douglas Basham: Right
Wendell Steele: Oh,
Douglas Basham: here we
Wendell Steele: you got
Douglas Basham: are.
Wendell Steele: it.
Ben Stephens: Oh. Is it on?
Douglas Basham: We're here.
Ben Stephens: Okay.
Douglas Basham: Okay, um. In order to see what the functional requirements were to be found, um a hundred people were tested in a usability laboratory through just their habits to n know their habits were observed and questionnaires were given out. Um, the findings in in some cases matched what we were talking about. Custome Customers and users don't like the way remote controls look, they don't like the way they feel, they don't think they match their operating behaviour, and an example is what we were talking about, the buttons, they only use ten per cent of the buttons, so later on there's a study of the buttons that they use most and I think we should design according to these buttons. Easy to lose, and R_S_I_. I don't know what R_S_I_ means. Um the person that did the questionnaire obviously did, I don't have a
Ben Stephens: Hm.
Douglas Basham: clue. Um, according to the frequency of use and the relevance of each buttons, I have made a list of the buttons that we should focus on in order of importance. So the most important buttons are those to do with channel selection. They're used about a hundred and sixty times per hour. And um yeah so and and people like to zap a lot apparently, so this is the order. Channel selection, teletext, volume, and power. The other ones are the settings, and they're used less than you know zero point eight to zero point five times per hour, and this means that I think we can we could have like a a button for all the settings, and then, just one, and then from there go on to the audio on the screen, either on the remote or on the television. Um, about the screen, and speech recognition, some people are more willing than others to actually pay for that. And if we look at the market, f people from well from fifteen to thirty five year old year olds, I don't really know how to describe this, um ninety one to seventy six percent of people in that age range are willing to pay more for this sort of product, while people that are above thirty five years ol um years old go from thirty five percent to eight percent, so people that are sixty five for example wouldn't actually pay for this sort of thing. Um I don't I don't know um what the decision to be made is, but I think that the people that actually do buy remotes m more are those like teenagers and young professionals and um, most likely, but we should discuss this together. And that's all I have to say about the matter,
Ben Stephens: 'Kay.
Douglas Basham: um. Shall I what do I do? Do I give this to someone else?
Ben Stephens: Yeah. Just move right on.
Anthony Woods: Right. So get this.
Anthony Woods: Okay so now I need to press F_ eight, what is it?
Ben Stephens: Uh function
Douglas Basham: Function
Ben Stephens: F_
Douglas Basham: F_
Ben Stephens: eight.
Douglas Basham: eight.
Anthony Woods: 'Kay. What's function?
Ben Stephens: It's the little blue w it's
Anthony Woods: Oh
Ben Stephens: the
Anthony Woods: function,
Ben Stephens: one
Anthony Woods: I
Ben Stephens: th
Anthony Woods: see
Ben Stephens: yeah.
Anthony Woods: it. There we go.
Ben Stephens: Yeah should be It should be yeah.
Anthony Woods: Okay. Um. This my presentation about the uh technical functions design and I basically just tried to focus on um just what what functions we need and how to make that the best function for the user. So uh and I just sort of like thought about it myself and looked on the internet. And okay so basically um I think i uh like it is really important that we sort of get this done in a user friendly and fashionable way. Um so I think things like uh you know keeping buttons together that like close together that um are used in the same way, uh or um maybe that making 'em the same colour, keeping the number of buttons the uh leas you know to a minimum, and also things like is it is it um is it uh can you c y small enough large enough I'm not sure we c I guess we would need to do some research about, I would, about what size is appropriate and that sort of thing, um but basically we need to make sure that it turns on and off the T_V_. Does it have like capacity to change the channels? Um does it do or do we need to have like functions for cable or V_C_R_? And then, is it findable, and uh how do we wanna do that? And um I just thought that these two remotes were pretty boring, um I dunno if this will work but And I think we can find something that's more fun to look at and use than either of those. Just I mean I like the one on the right better, just because it does have fewer buttons, uh but I mean I think we sh can sort of think about things like um like colour and you know size, shapes, that sort of thing, to best fit the user. That concludes my presentation. Okay. You need the little thingy.
Anthony Woods: Ooh.
Wendell Steele: How do I um
Douglas Basham: S
Douglas Basham: That's on view. Oh.
Wendell Steele: Right. Okay so this is on the working design, which is sort of the uh mechanical functions of the remote, um and the method I used was to basically look at and incorporate ideas from our last meeting. Um so I think we need two basic functions which is just the basic remote functions, the user can input a channel or volume setting and it will be output to the T_V_. And also we talked about um a location function where maybe you could press a button on the T_V_ and it would send sort of signal to the remote where it would beep or flash or vibrate or whatever to tell you where the remote is. So the components we need are an energy source to power the remote, um input which would probably be buttons, although um we just talked about voice recognition, processor to take the information, um something to transmit it to the T_V_, and we also need something on the remote that would receive the location signal and have an output, like possibly a beep or a vibration. And also you need a sender for location signal, which would probably be a separate um thing that we'd have to sell with the remote and people could stick it on their T_V_ or stick it on their wall. And this is just sort of an overview of how the remote works. Power comes from the battery, goes to the chip, um and then it is sent from there to an infrared bulb which is probably the easiest way to send to the T_V_. And then for the location function, you would have a sender on the T_V_ which would output some sort of signal, um we could use I_R_ but we'd probably wanna use radio instead. That signal would go to a receiver which it would process it, and it would be output in the form of a buzzer or a light lighting up. Um so my personal preferences for how to build the remote would probably be uh, battery for the energy source, that way you wouldn't have to plug it in, um a button pad for input, um we can purchase a pre-made chip which will handle all the processing stuff, I_R_ transmitter to communicate to the T_V_, that's just sort of standard, um so most T_V_s have an I_R_ receiver. Probably a radio receiver to send out location function and to receive it and I'd probably say a buzzer for the location function on the remote itself. So that concludes my presentation.
Ben Stephens: 'Kay.
Anthony Woods: Do you know about like I dunno,
Wendell Steele: Mm?
Anthony Woods: you seem like you know about
Wendell Steele: Yeah, uh I d I was an engineer
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Wendell Steele: before I came here.
Anthony Woods: Cool.
Ben Stephens: Okay. Well thank you everybody. Um we have we'll discuss that and then I just wanna mention some new project requirements that came in. Um, teletext is apparently outdated, so due to internet popularity, so that's off the list. Um, also our remote should be used only for television, um, no extra internet kinda fancy things, just the remote and the television. Um and also we need to incorporate our corporate image onto this, so um the phrase is, we put fashion in electronics, so let's be fashionable I guess. Um if we have something I mean silver and and gold or yellow are our colours, so if we had a like a kind of silver one like you saw, and yellow writing, something like that. Okay. Um. So we need to make some decisions on the remote control functions. Um, yeah. Do Let's I guess we should yeah make some kind of brainstorming,
Anthony Woods: Like
Ben Stephens: see
Anthony Woods: in terms
Ben Stephens: what we can
Anthony Woods: of
Douglas Basham: How it looks
Anthony Woods: how
Douglas Basham: or
Anthony Woods: it looks, or like what
Ben Stephens: wha
Anthony Woods: it does?
Ben Stephens: what um well probably our target group and how it's gonna going to appeal to our target group
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Ben Stephens: and I dunno the the s the buttons and what it does and
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: that sort of thing.
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Ben Stephens: So.
Anthony Woods: So Is our target group then people so do we wanna go ahead and design this thing with the finder button? So
Ben Stephens: I think that
Wendell Steele: It's
Ben Stephens: seems
Wendell Steele: easy to
Ben Stephens: to
Wendell Steele: implement.
Ben Stephens: yeah.
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Ben Stephens: Mm.
Anthony Woods: So
Douglas Basham: the the
Anthony Woods: the
Douglas Basham: buzzer you
Anthony Woods: yeah,
Douglas Basham: mean,
Anthony Woods: yeah,
Douglas Basham: yeah,
Anthony Woods: yeah.
Wendell Steele: Locator.
Douglas Basham: for sure,
Anthony Woods: So
Douglas Basham: yeah.
Anthony Woods: then our target age group would be the nineteen to thirty five range,
Ben Stephens: Yeah,
Anthony Woods: what
Ben Stephens: teenagers
Anthony Woods: was it?
Ben Stephens: and young professionals.
Douglas Basham: Well that's for speech recognition.
Anthony Woods: Oh.
Wendell Steele: Well
Ben Stephens: Oh,
Douglas Basham: And screen.
Ben Stephens: uh.
Douglas Basham: That's only for
Wendell Steele: I
Douglas Basham: speech
Wendell Steele: was thinking
Douglas Basham: recognition
Wendell Steele: about
Douglas Basham: and
Wendell Steele: that
Douglas Basham: screen.
Wendell Steele: but uh I mean speech recognition is really hard to programme, and also,
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: if the T_V_ is on it's making sound and the people on the T_V_ are talking, and if somebody says like one, then the T_V_'s gonna switch itself to channel one,
Douglas Basham: Yeah yeah
Wendell Steele: or
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: Mm.
Douglas Basham: yeah.
Wendell Steele: it
Douglas Basham: I
Wendell Steele: seems
Douglas Basham: mean
Wendell Steele: like a silly,
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: I'm not sure how you would implement it.
Douglas Basham: I just put the values in.
Ben Stephens: And
Douglas Basham: But
Ben Stephens: if
Douglas Basham: um
Ben Stephens: if you
Douglas Basham: the
Ben Stephens: consider
Douglas Basham: screen
Ben Stephens: our
Douglas Basham: is
Ben Stephens: budget,
Douglas Basham: the same as
Ben Stephens: it
Douglas Basham: what,
Ben Stephens: probably
Wendell Steele: It's a cool idea
Ben Stephens: if you consider
Wendell Steele: but
Ben Stephens: our budget, to
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: h have speech recognition programmed in every single remote might be a little
Douglas Basham: Yeah, I'm
Ben Stephens: pricey.
Douglas Basham: happy with
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: that. Completely.
Anthony Woods: Hu yeah.
Ben Stephens: Right so um
Anthony Woods: Okay so are we gonna have just some kind of a like we'll have the buzzer
Ben Stephens: yeah.
Anthony Woods: on the som like on the T_V_ itself.
Wendell Steele: Well you would have to have a button on a T_V_
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: or on your wall or some place
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: since the T_V_ already has power.
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: Yeah you click the button, it's gonna send out a signal, and I was thinking, I_R_ is line of sight, so unless the remote is like actually in front of the T_V_ it's not gonna work, um so probably like a radio signal like on a
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Wendell Steele: on a
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: cell phone.
Douglas Basham: Okay.
Anthony Woods: Alright.
Ben Stephens: Okay.
Wendell Steele: Sends out a signal and then the the remote hears the signal and so it beeps probably.
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Ben Stephens: So you you'd need like a separate base for that or like something
Wendell Steele: It would have
Ben Stephens: you
Wendell Steele: to
Ben Stephens: can
Wendell Steele: be sold separately because
Ben Stephens: right.
Wendell Steele: if the sender's on the remote then you'd have to find the remote first to click the button to
Ben Stephens: Yeah,
Wendell Steele: find the remote.
Ben Stephens: yeah.
Douglas Basham: So do you plug it in the T_ you plug it in T_V_, this
Wendell Steele: Yeah, it'd
Douglas Basham: thing?
Wendell Steele: probably just stick it on your T_V_ so
Douglas Basham: Okay.
Wendell Steele: if you need to find the remote, click
Douglas Basham: Okay.
Wendell Steele: the button.
Anthony Woods: So it's now like a two-part
Wendell Steele: Yeah,
Anthony Woods: thing.
Wendell Steele: so it would be
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Wendell Steele: a two part package.
Anthony Woods: Alright.
Douglas Basham: Okay.
Anthony Woods: So we get to design that too. Make it fashionable. Um, okay.
Ben Stephens: So do you think even though we're not talking about speek speech recognition our target group should still be teenagers and young professionals.
Wendell Steele: Yeah I think
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: so.
Ben Stephens: Huh.
Douglas Basham: Just there.
Ben Stephens: Okay.
Douglas Basham: Mm. Are we um should that thing be on the thing to put the you s you talking about a home for it. Do you
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: still want to build a little thing next to the telly or to p hang on the wall or shall we leave that for now?
Ben Stephens: We probably leave that. I mean I guess one takes care of the other,
Douglas Basham: Okay.
Ben Stephens: like
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: um if you can yeah if you can call it then it's
Anthony Woods: Then it can live anywhere.
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: Okay.
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: For the so you have that button, that so there's is there a light or shall we leave just have a radio?
Wendell Steele: Um
Douglas Basham: Are we just
Wendell Steele: on the
Douglas Basham: having
Wendell Steele: T_V_
Douglas Basham: a radio?
Wendell Steele: or on the phone?
Douglas Basham: On the phone.
Wendell Steele: Um
Anthony Woods: T
Wendell Steele: it seemed
Douglas Basham: You don't
Wendell Steele: like a
Douglas Basham: need a light.
Wendell Steele: a beep seemed the most
Douglas Basham: Yeah
Wendell Steele: reasonable
Douglas Basham: yeah
Wendell Steele: to Douglas Basham,
Douglas Basham: yeah.
Wendell Steele: I think
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: that's what the phone
Douglas Basham: Yeah
Wendell Steele: has,
Douglas Basham: yeah.
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: I mean when you need to find your phone, you just have someone call it and it starts ringing somewhere and then you can figure out
Ben Stephens: And
Wendell Steele: that it's
Ben Stephens: like
Wendell Steele: in the
Ben Stephens: if
Wendell Steele: couch
Ben Stephens: the
Wendell Steele: or
Ben Stephens: if
Wendell Steele: wherever.
Ben Stephens: the phone's under the couch, you
Douglas Basham: You
Ben Stephens: might
Douglas Basham: can
Ben Stephens: not
Douglas Basham: hear
Ben Stephens: see the
Douglas Basham: it's
Ben Stephens: light,
Douglas Basham: under the
Ben Stephens: so
Douglas Basham: couch yeah.
Ben Stephens: yeah.
Anthony Woods: So
Douglas Basham: Um,
Anthony Woods: i Yeah.
Douglas Basham: So need the other buttons. So we have this
Ben Stephens: So
Douglas Basham: mm.
Ben Stephens: I mean the two remotes that you had shown r I don't remember
Douglas Basham: Mm-hmm.
Ben Stephens: who
Anthony Woods: That
Ben Stephens: showed
Anthony Woods: was
Ben Stephens: them,
Anthony Woods: that
Ben Stephens: yeah
Anthony Woods: was Douglas Basham.
Ben Stephens: you you did um, they're I mean one looked like it was for V_C_R_ type thing, and the other looked like just
Anthony Woods: I
Ben Stephens: television.
Anthony Woods: think w I think they're both sort of just like general remo they're both general
Ben Stephens: Oh really.
Anthony Woods: remotes. And
Ben Stephens: 'Cause that
Anthony Woods: uh
Ben Stephens: that is something we have to decide, is whether we want to have V_C_R_ capabilities.
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: Does anyone know if V_C_R_s are the same across international?
Ben Stephens: They're not
Douglas Basham: They're not,
Ben Stephens: no.
Douglas Basham: no.
Wendell Steele: Okay, so you'd
Anthony Woods: S
Wendell Steele: need like a whole different
Ben Stephens: Yeah,
Wendell Steele: set of buttons
Ben Stephens: that's
Douglas Basham: It
Wendell Steele: for
Ben Stephens: right,
Wendell Steele: everybody's
Douglas Basham: not
Ben Stephens: yeah.
Douglas Basham: V_H_S_
Wendell Steele: V_C_R_s.
Ben Stephens: But
Douglas Basham: here?
Ben Stephens: D_V_D_ probably is.
Wendell Steele: Yeah, other than that region and coding thing.
Anthony Woods: Um
Douglas Basham: But V_C_R_s
Ben Stephens: And and if we're if we're targeting young professionals and teenagers, I mean it's gonna be D_V_D_ type,
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: that's
Douglas Basham: Yeah,
Ben Stephens: the
Douglas Basham: for
Ben Stephens: the
Douglas Basham: sure.
Ben Stephens: technology
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: Mm-hmm.
Ben Stephens: these days.
Anthony Woods: So. Okay, let's see if I can I think still though, it shouldn't be that hard to take like just reduce the number of buttons you know,
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Anthony Woods: like 'cause if you just have like one menu button, that works like with a you know, or you can just kind of scroll through the
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Anthony Woods: options u
Douglas Basham: Well
Anthony Woods: that
Douglas Basham: for
Anthony Woods: come
Douglas Basham: sure
Anthony Woods: up
Douglas Basham: we
Anthony Woods: on the
Douglas Basham: need
Anthony Woods: T_V_.
Douglas Basham: the um I think we can just design the channels? I mean power's
Ben Stephens: S
Douglas Basham: just a button,
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: Mm-hmm.
Ben Stephens: Huh.
Douglas Basham: and it's not used that much, s and
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: it's usually that red
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: and I think it's quite nice to keep it like
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: red.
Ben Stephens: You know, I've seen some remotes that where you just hold one, like if you hold one down it's it's a different colour than the other buttons but that turns it on. So you don't actually have a separate power button,
Douglas Basham: Oh
Ben Stephens: it's
Douglas Basham: okay,
Ben Stephens: just
Douglas Basham: yeah.
Anthony Woods: It seems like that would be
Ben Stephens: But
Anthony Woods: hard though. I mean, like because unless you
Ben Stephens: It might
Anthony Woods: know
Ben Stephens: be confusing.
Anthony Woods: yeah.
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Anthony Woods: Just 'cause I wouldn't I would probably pick it up and just
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Anthony Woods: be like uh why is there no on
Ben Stephens: Besides
Anthony Woods: button.
Ben Stephens: you like to be able
Wendell Steele: Yeah,
Ben Stephens: to go
Wendell Steele: I never
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: power.
Wendell Steele: think to hold something
Ben Stephens: I
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: down.
Anthony Woods: B
Ben Stephens: have the power
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: I guess. So we definitely want a power button and numbers.
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: Right.
Douglas Basham: Well even um iPod thing, like um, I don't know if people like this
Anthony Woods: That
Douglas Basham: scrolling
Anthony Woods: sort of like
Douglas Basham: I
Anthony Woods: joystick
Douglas Basham: don't know.
Anthony Woods: flat
Ben Stephens: Mm.
Anthony Woods: touch
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Anthony Woods: thing, yeah.
Douglas Basham: Because people li seem now the iPod's out people seem to like this thing that there's no Know you don't have one two three
Anthony Woods: Yeah,
Douglas Basham: four
Anthony Woods: yeah.
Douglas Basham: five
Anthony Woods: I think that's an interesting idea, 'cause
Ben Stephens: Mm.
Anthony Woods: it's cool, it's it's funny like you f like I just I don't have an iPod but like I, you know, I just like started messing around with one of my friend's the other day, and you just sort of and it's funny how you pick it up and you just figure out how to use it quite easily, like it's not that hard,
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Anthony Woods: you know.
Douglas Basham: Yeah yeah, it's just and it's one thing
Anthony Woods: Yeah,
Douglas Basham: which has
Anthony Woods: and
Douglas Basham: everything.
Anthony Woods: it is yeah. It is really but do you need a screen then, do you have to have a screen then?
Douglas Basham: Well can't it tell the like can't you
Wendell Steele: Yeah, you
Douglas Basham: if
Wendell Steele: can
Douglas Basham: you
Wendell Steele: have the number going
Douglas Basham: you
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: can
Wendell Steele: around
Douglas Basham: have the number
Wendell Steele: in the corner.
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Douglas Basham: on the telly going
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: like one two three four five
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: once you scroll
Anthony Woods: Okay
Douglas Basham: and then
Anthony Woods: so we
Ben Stephens: Oh
Anthony Woods: have
Ben Stephens: that's
Anthony Woods: this
Ben Stephens: gonna
Anthony Woods: like scrolling sort of button.
Ben Stephens: Is that like on
Anthony Woods: Like a
Ben Stephens: on
Anthony Woods: disc.
Ben Stephens: a mouse pad where
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: like kind
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: of
Anthony Woods: It's
Ben Stephens: okay.
Anthony Woods: like it's just like the same
Ben Stephens: I've
Douglas Basham: It's
Ben Stephens: never
Douglas Basham: like
Anthony Woods: technology
Ben Stephens: used
Douglas Basham: l
Ben Stephens: one.
Anthony Woods: as a mouse
Douglas Basham: this
Ben Stephens: No.
Anthony Woods: pad.
Douglas Basham: like that, and
Ben Stephens: Okay.
Douglas Basham: then you do that.
Ben Stephens: Okay.
Anthony Woods: Yeah. Yeah
Douglas Basham: And
Anthony Woods: and
Douglas Basham: then
Anthony Woods: then.
Douglas Basham: you can have um if you actually just want to zap, you can have like a thing like that, and that, and then it can just be plus and minus.
Anthony Woods: Okay. So like it's like a little part of the circle that Or it
Douglas Basham: Yeah,
Anthony Woods: oh
Douglas Basham: you can
Anthony Woods: so it's just
Ben Stephens: Well
Anthony Woods: a region
Ben Stephens: i
Anthony Woods: of the circle that you can
Douglas Basham: Yeah, click
Anthony Woods: zap.
Douglas Basham: o actually
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Douglas Basham: click
Ben Stephens: We could
Douglas Basham: on to
Ben Stephens: we could
Douglas Basham: have
Ben Stephens: even have four buttons, like, if that's the if that's the mouse, you could have the volume
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: and the channel changers
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: just like on that as well.
Anthony Woods: be like the top it and the bottom So do you need to
Wendell Steele: Doesn't
Anthony Woods: okay.
Wendell Steele: it rotate though, so it'll be
Anthony Woods: Well
Wendell Steele: moving
Anthony Woods: y you
Wendell Steele: around.
Anthony Woods: have to you have to like be able to change the function of it to like
Douglas Basham: What do you mean the function?
Anthony Woods: I mean like okay, 'cause so I dunno, I guess Okay so when you g scroll your thumb like around it, it'll s like say you're go you're going clockwise. That that means you're gonna go up the channels, and then you
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Anthony Woods: scroll the other way and it'll go down.
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: Mm-hmm.
Anthony Woods: But then so if you wanna switch to the to u do you have to switch to a function where like y so you're either in that mode or you're in the mode where like it just has like the four like you know this is channel that way, that's that way and volume is up and down.
Douglas Basham: Yeah but it knows for some
Anthony Woods: It
Douglas Basham: reason.
Anthony Woods: just
Douglas Basham: The iPod knows.
Anthony Woods: It just kno the iPod knows. S
Wendell Steele: If it works on an iPod then it works.
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: Huh.
Anthony Woods: So you just you just
Wendell Steele: I don't
Anthony Woods: can
Wendell Steele: have
Anthony Woods: either
Wendell Steele: one.
Anthony Woods: do this or like you can just touch it if you want.
Douglas Basham: Well for the volume you have to press the middle,
Anthony Woods: Okay. That's
Douglas Basham: and
Anthony Woods: what
Douglas Basham: then
Anthony Woods: I mean. Okay.
Douglas Basham: go up.
Anthony Woods: Okay so you have to like
Wendell Steele: Oh.
Anthony Woods: press this middle region and then you can scroll up, go up
Douglas Basham: And
Anthony Woods: and down.
Douglas Basham: then
Ben Stephens: So
Douglas Basham: well
Ben Stephens: it's like
Douglas Basham: if you
Ben Stephens: holding
Douglas Basham: do that it goes, but if you like that makes more sense 'cause there's already ones with up and down
Ben Stephens: You can
Douglas Basham: here,
Ben Stephens: o
Douglas Basham: that I've seen.
Ben Stephens: And you you is there an extra actual button? Or are you actually you're just using the mouse to go up and down.
Douglas Basham: Well what you
Ben Stephens: Like
Douglas Basham: for the
Anthony Woods: It's
Douglas Basham: iPod
Anthony Woods: like a b
Douglas Basham: you press an w right if you're on the channel let's
Ben Stephens: Mm-hmm.
Douglas Basham: say, then you press on the middle
Ben Stephens: Mm-hmm.
Douglas Basham: and then if you do that again the volume goes up, and
Ben Stephens: Right.
Douglas Basham: if you do that it goes down.
Ben Stephens: Mm-hmm.
Douglas Basham: But if you wanna keep it with volume here and here, I'm pretty sure
Ben Stephens: this for channels, right,
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: then y wouldn't the volume need to be separate somehow? Like you could just have
Douglas Basham: I don't know, you
Ben Stephens: Oh,
Douglas Basham: could click
Ben Stephens: like
Douglas Basham: and then have it up and
Anthony Woods: Like
Douglas Basham: down,
Ben Stephens: Oh
Douglas Basham: but
Ben Stephens: you
Douglas Basham: I think
Ben Stephens: could actually
Anthony Woods: I think we can go on the fact that it does just work with the
Douglas Basham: Yeah
Anthony Woods: iPod.
Douglas Basham: yeah
Wendell Steele: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Anthony Woods: But
Douglas Basham: yeah.
Anthony Woods: the only thing is like, iPods are so expensive, like, it has to be is that part of
Ben Stephens: Is that what makes them
Anthony Woods: yeah,
Ben Stephens: expensi I think
Anthony Woods: I
Ben Stephens: it's
Anthony Woods: dunno,
Ben Stephens: all of they
Anthony Woods: I dunno.
Ben Stephens: have
Wendell Steele: I don't
Ben Stephens: so
Wendell Steele: think
Ben Stephens: much
Wendell Steele: so.
Ben Stephens: memory though,
Anthony Woods: You don't
Ben Stephens: that's
Anthony Woods: think so?
Ben Stephens: it's
Wendell Steele: I
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Wendell Steele: don't think it's the
Douglas Basham: I think
Wendell Steele: wheel
Douglas Basham: it
Wendell Steele: dealy.
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: I think
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Ben Stephens: it's the uh h it's their capabili I mean they it can hold what like five thousand
Wendell Steele: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: songs
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: or something.
Anthony Woods: I'm thinking we could if if we're hav So ba I mean but an iPod
Wendell Steele: re-programmable
Anthony Woods: just has that
Wendell Steele: aren't
Anthony Woods: circle
Wendell Steele: they? You
Anthony Woods: thing
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: can put
Anthony Woods: you
Wendell Steele: on
Anthony Woods: know.
Wendell Steele: your songs and then put on a
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: different set, that's
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: probably why they're expensive,
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: they're like little
Ben Stephens: S
Wendell Steele: computers.
Anthony Woods: Yeah. Well like since it just has the circle thing, you could make it a qui a kind of cool shape, like it could be a cool
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Anthony Woods: sort of
Wendell Steele: Mm-hmm.
Anthony Woods: you know, because it could be circular,
Douglas Basham: Yeah
Anthony Woods: you
Douglas Basham: yeah
Anthony Woods: know,
Douglas Basham: yeah.
Anthony Woods: or something weird like
Douglas Basham: Well
Anthony Woods: that,
Douglas Basham: it could
Anthony Woods: just
Douglas Basham: just be simple instead of being a l mass. Because, the other thing, I didn't tell you all my presentation, is that people find it find that it's a big waste of time to have to learn how to use your remote
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: and that's
Ben Stephens: Mm.
Douglas Basham: another thing they complained about.
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Douglas Basham: Um, what other buttons were there? Volume oh we've ts just said that.
Anthony Woods: So okay.
Douglas Basham: Channel selection.
Anthony Woods: This is just for T_V_, it's not for or it is does need to be compatible with
Wendell Steele: I
Ben Stephens: Um
Wendell Steele: A D_V_D_ is simple, you just have play,
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: pause,
Anthony Woods: So
Douglas Basham: Menu.
Anthony Woods: how do
Ben Stephens: You
Wendell Steele: eject,
Anthony Woods: you
Ben Stephens: know
Anthony Woods: switch
Ben Stephens: actually our our new project requirements,
Wendell Steele: and
Ben Stephens: I'm
Wendell Steele: menu
Ben Stephens: not sure
Wendell Steele: maybe.
Ben Stephens: if they meant o onl use only for television as in not for D_V_D_ or just not
Wendell Steele: Oh yeah.
Ben Stephens: internet type things. So I'll I'll
Anthony Woods: Okay.
Ben Stephens: check that and update you on the next
Anthony Woods: So like if we had
Ben Stephens: But
Anthony Woods: that
Ben Stephens: we'll hold off on that 'cause
Anthony Woods: Yeah.
Ben Stephens: But s yeah
Douglas Basham: But
Ben Stephens: uh.
Douglas Basham: D_V_D_ players usually have their own remote.
Anthony Woods: That's true, yeah.
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Anthony Woods: So, I know I'm not c really
Wendell Steele: But it's
Anthony Woods: clear
Wendell Steele: cool
Anthony Woods: on
Wendell Steele: to have
Anthony Woods: what
Wendell Steele: it all on one, because
Douglas Basham: Yeah,
Wendell Steele: you
Anthony Woods: Yeah,
Wendell Steele: wanna turn
Douglas Basham: yeah,
Wendell Steele: it
Anthony Woods: yeah.
Douglas Basham: yeah.
Wendell Steele: on then you wanna turn up the volume, and then you wanna go to
Ben Stephens: Mm.
Wendell Steele: the menu,
Douglas Basham: Yeah.
Anthony Woods: So
Wendell Steele: so
Anthony Woods: you'd have
Ben Stephens: Mm.
Anthony Woods: to have like
Wendell Steele: you don't
Anthony Woods: I
Wendell Steele: wanna
Anthony Woods: think
Wendell Steele: switch.
Anthony Woods: you would have to have like a function switch button, you know somewhere so like you can you're either on T_V_, you're on D_V_D_ or you're on V_C_R_,
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Anthony Woods: or you're like.
Wendell Steele: Well
Anthony Woods: So
Wendell Steele: but D_V_D_ is only like four buttons.
Douglas Basham: Yeah, it
Anthony Woods: Yeah,
Douglas Basham: is
Anthony Woods: but
Douglas Basham: only
Anthony Woods: I mean
Douglas Basham: fun
Anthony Woods: like to switch
Ben Stephens: But
Anthony Woods: the fun
Ben Stephens: i
Anthony Woods: so like to switch the function of the little circle disc, the touch
Wendell Steele: Oh.
Anthony Woods: pad.
Ben Stephens: Yeah.
Wendell Steele: But I think the circle only does channel isn't applicable to D_V_D_ really 'cause you don't wanna
Anthony Woods: Yeah but it it
Wendell Steele: but
Anthony Woods: would
Wendell Steele: volume
Anthony Woods: be
Wendell Steele: is and volume is actually controlled on the T_V_ so you don't have to switch.
Anthony Woods: So but I'm saying like, does it make sense to have like some kind of a button, so like you're if you're on T_V_, like you can switch channels, but then if uh if you're on D_V_D_ then like the channel bu like the the region of the disc that was for channels is for like switching to different tracks or s you know, to different I mean do we need to think about that, that like
Ben Stephens: Um,
Wendell Steele: Yes we
Ben Stephens: yeah,
Wendell Steele: can try
Ben Stephens: let's
Wendell Steele: that.
Ben Stephens: think about it 'cause we need to wrap up. Um
Douglas Basham: Okay.
Ben Stephens: let's see. Um so everyone's gonna go finish their questionnaire, uh then when we come back after lunch we'll have thirty minutes of individual work, um yeah, so think about the things we've discussed and bring some new ideas to our next meeting. See you soon. | Douglas Basham gave a presentation about user requirements as shown through a usability study and demonstrated that only a small number of functions on a remote were used with frequency. She suggested focusing the interface design on the most frequently used functions. Anthony Woods presented some questions that should be considered in making the device user-friendly and displayed two existing remote controls for comparison. Wendell Steele discussed the necessary internal components and how they operated together, and presented her preferences for the type of each component to be used. Ben Stephens gave the group several new requirements for the project. The group discussed several product features and decided that the remote will feature a locator function and will not feature speech recognition. The group discussed whether or not the remote should control multiple devices. They discussed important button functions to include and increasing usability by incorporating a scroll wheel in the design. Ben Stephens instructed the other participants to fill out a questionnaire and to work on their individual presentations for the next meeting. | 1 | amisum | train |
Kelly Kowalski: Hi everyone, hope you had a nice lunch Um. Alright we're moving on to conceptual design.
George Perez: 'Scuse David Campbell.
David Campbell: Bless you.
Kelly Kowalski: Um, I'll just review what we did in our last meeting. Um, under marketing we targeted our audience, and Um, yeah. That was generally how helpful that was. Um, then we considered some design options with how it should look, um, we discussed an iPod-like button system which, uh, we haven't concluded but we're Right, um So if, you all have presentations to do, we can see what where you've come from our last time. Does everyone have
Adolfo Tanner: Hmm.
Kelly Kowalski: presentations?
David Campbell: Yeah.
George Perez: Yes.
Kelly Kowalski: Okay.
Adolfo Tanner: Yes.
Kelly Kowalski: Would anybody like to go first?
Adolfo Tanner: Sure.
Kelly Kowalski: Okay.
Adolfo Tanner: So I've been looking at the components design. Um. Mostly by consulting remote control diagrams from the internet and also by incorporating design ideas from the last project meeting. Um, so we need some custom design parts, and other parts we'll just use standard. Um, I assume we'll be custom designing our case, probably a hard plastic or some other material case, to protect the remote and the locator. And we'll need to custom desi design a circuit board, because the board has to take the button input and send it to the output so you have to design that each time. But once we come up with a design we'll send it to the circuit people and they'll just print it out. Um, standard parts include the buttons and the wheels, um the iPod-style wheel. The infrared L_E_D_ is actually gonna be included in the circuit board that comes with it. Um, we need a radio sender and receiver, those are standard. And al we also need a beeper or buzzer or other sort of noise thing for locating the remote. So we have some material options. Um, we can use rubber, plastic, wood or titanium. Um, I'd recommend against titanium because it can only be used in the flat cases and it's really heavy. Um, and the rubber case requires rubber buttons, so if we definitely want plastic buttons, we shouldn't have a rubber case.
Kelly Kowalski: And
Adolfo Tanner: And,
Kelly Kowalski: why not wood?
Adolfo Tanner: hmm?
Kelly Kowalski: And why not wood?
Adolfo Tanner: Uh, well we can use wood. I don't know why we'd want to. Um and also we should note that if we want an iPod-style wheel button, it's gonna require a m qu slightly more expensive chip. We can't use the minimal chip, we need the next higher grade, which is called regular. I don't think it's much more expensive, but it is more expensive. So that's what I've got on design.
Kelly Kowalski: 'S good.
David Campbell: Um, can I do next? 'Cause I have to say something about the
Kelly Kowalski: Hmm.
David Campbell: material
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: which is quite shocking.
David Campbell: Ha. Mm.
David Campbell: Right, um, I have been searching the current trends, um, both on the web and via fashion-watchers, and the findings are that the first thing to aim for is a fashion uh, fancy look and feel. Um. Next comes technologic technology and the innovations to do with that. And th last thing is the easy to use um factor Um. fancy look and feel goes far beyond the functionality of the thing, but I suppose that is included in in the ease of use. Um, our fashion-watchers in Milan and Paris have decided, well noticed, that f the fruit and vegetable theme is the is the current trend and and therefore um we need to go for that if we want, you know, wh whatever our motto is. Um. For fashion,
Kelly Kowalski: Mm.
David Campbell: we go for fashion. The fashion in electronics. So we want to put the fashion electronics, we need to go fruit and vegetables. And also go for a spongy feel, so the the question of our technology whate is Industrial Designer. As to the material should be limited to I don't know how spongy it can be, should discuss this together, I don't know how spongy can be achieved but apparently that's the way to go. Um. I I have been thinking about this fruit and vegetable thing and I prefer fruits to vegetables, but that's just a personal opinion. I think I think people like to have a fruit instead of a vegetables in their sitting room. Uh those are just suggestions and also we need to decide whether this should be printed, so that still has to do with the material discuss should we print the fruit stuff, or should the actual remote look like a fruit? Um, and finally again with the spongy. It has to be technologically innovative so maybe again our Industrial Designer should look into that or find come up with a solution that's better than mine. Um, yeah, to summarise these are the points that need to be um, touched in order to get a good decision, and hopefully our User Interface has more to say about the matter.
George Perez: Mm-hmm.
David Campbell: Thank you for your attention.
George Perez: So.
Kelly Kowalski: I think it's the next
George Perez: Oh,
Kelly Kowalski: it's
George Perez: uh,
Kelly Kowalski: the blue one,
George Perez: there
Kelly Kowalski: yeah.
George Perez: we go. Uh. Okay. Um. Well so that fruit and vegetables thing huh. I actually wasn't aware of the new trends in electronics and
David Campbell: Neither was I. Well
George Perez: and
David Campbell: it's
George Perez: uh
David Campbell: a trend in fashion, in clothing and um
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah but
David Campbell: fabrics.
Kelly Kowalski: you're not gonna wear your remote control.
George Perez: So so okay, let David Campbell get this right. Okay, uh Okay, alright anyway. Um here we go. Conceptual User Interface. Trying we're gonna to about, um what kind of uh how people are actually going to be using this iPod-ish remote control, based on fruit vegetable design. And, um, basically, so, this is a touched ba a touch-based graphical interface system. Uh, so people are going to be looking at this little screen. Um, kind of I mean I assume, are we still on the screen idea?
Kelly Kowalski: Oh we s hadn't discussed it last
George Perez: 'Cause if
Kelly Kowalski: time.
George Perez: we're gonna have to ha if we have this it just seems like in order to have someone going around and using the um the wheel
Kelly Kowalski: You need a screen
George Perez: you
Kelly Kowalski: for
George Perez: it seems
Kelly Kowalski: it?
George Perez: like you would need a screen.
Adolfo Tanner: You need a screen with music because you're looking for a specific song, like you know that band or whatever.
George Perez: But like if you
Adolfo Tanner: With
George Perez: think
Adolfo Tanner: T_V_
George Perez: about
Adolfo Tanner: channels
George Perez: it
Adolfo Tanner: it's, you know, one two three.
George Perez: yeah
Adolfo Tanner: So
George Perez: but if so is it just okay. So, b you you're gonna have to switch to like D_V_D_ and like other things like that, aren't
Kelly Kowalski: We're,
George Perez: you?
Kelly Kowalski: um, we're
George Perez: Are
Kelly Kowalski: actually
George Perez: we
Kelly Kowalski: not having D_V_D_, that was
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: one of th I
George Perez: Okay.
Kelly Kowalski: I was sorry, I I
George Perez: Alright.
Kelly Kowalski: meant to update you on that.
George Perez: Okay.
Kelly Kowalski: Um.
David Campbell: But the screen can come up on the telly, the
George Perez: Okay.
David Campbell: she said. That
George Perez: Okay.
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah.
David Campbell: correct?
George Perez: So anyway if well we just we need to Okay so if we're not gonna have a screen I think I was thinking okay. So basically it's just gonna be a wheel then? And you're just gonna I mean I think you're gonna have to have some kind of a
David Campbell: Graphical
George Perez: right.
David Campbell: interface?
George Perez: Yeah
David Campbell: Uh
George Perez: like you're
David Campbell: on
George Perez: g
David Campbell: the you can have it on the telly though.
George Perez: yeah
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: like you're gonna have to be able to switch to like a mode where you can okay we're not choosing that, I guess. But like choose channel control, like if you wa Because people aren't gonna be able to have like, um, you know, channels one two three four five six seven eight nine.
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: So that people seems to be
Kelly Kowalski: You've Yeah,
George Perez: well
Kelly Kowalski: I know what you're saying,
George Perez: You know.
Kelly Kowalski: you have
George Perez: But
Kelly Kowalski: to
George Perez: you're gonna have to scroll to get channels. So um I guess that's wh why I was thinking you may need to have some kind of a screen because So that people can go arou go back and forth and choose if or or then again if you just I guess I c I can see like some kind of a thing where like you sort of have like the number come up on the T_V_
David Campbell: Yeah,
George Perez: like what channel you're on.
David Campbell: yeah,
George Perez: You can
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah.
George Perez: just
David Campbell: yeah.
George Perez: scroll and
David Campbell: Yeah,
George Perez: you can just get
David Campbell: yeah.
George Perez: to like five or like twelve or
Kelly Kowalski: But
Adolfo Tanner: My flatmates
Kelly Kowalski: but imagine
Adolfo Tanner: actually
Kelly Kowalski: someone
Adolfo Tanner: had
Kelly Kowalski: with
Adolfo Tanner: one with
Kelly Kowalski: s
Adolfo Tanner: a wheel, and it it did show up
George Perez: I
Adolfo Tanner: on the T_V_.
George Perez: oh yeah?
Kelly Kowalski: But i what if you have satellite and you have like two hundred channels. Then to
George Perez: 'Cause
Kelly Kowalski: get to channel
George Perez: you'll
Kelly Kowalski: one
George Perez: have
Kelly Kowalski: eighty
David Campbell: Yeah.
George Perez: to
Kelly Kowalski: nine
George Perez: like
Kelly Kowalski: you have to
Adolfo Tanner: They have to
George Perez: but
Adolfo Tanner: r
George Perez: you can
Adolfo Tanner: wheel
George Perez: quickly
Adolfo Tanner: really fast.
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: s you can
Adolfo Tanner: But I think the wheel goes through like a hundred
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: Yeah,
Adolfo Tanner: channels,
David Campbell: yeah, yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: at least on theirs.
George Perez: Yeah if you do, it w so it would have to be you I mean so you basically just kinda need to figure out like what kind of, you know, range we need to have on the wheel, and um So you're either you're you know, th you're either doing this motion to like control the channels or like once once you stop that, you know, you can like tap for, um,
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: different uh, whatchamacallits, different um, you know, functions like volume or, like you can tap just to get to different channels. Like if you just wanted to go to like from five to six you could tap or someth
Kelly Kowalski: Right.
George Perez: And then there's also the concern about you know um how do you get to the menu if you wanna change the brightness of your television, or if you want to um you know switch around, I don't know, like, these different modes like turn on the timer or like
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah
George Perez: something something like that, like
Kelly Kowalski: I mean with that many options, you'd uh I'd think that the screen would be better, because
George Perez: I would think
Kelly Kowalski: you
George Perez: so
Kelly Kowalski: could have
George Perez: too,
Kelly Kowalski: that
George Perez: like
Kelly Kowalski: menu option, sort of
George Perez: So I mean and it seems it w it does seem a little silly to have this screen if you hardly are ever using it, you know, because
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: but then again it would it does make kind of if the screen's sort of just like an option that, like, is just there and you're not really using it, that's kind of
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: It's
George Perez: m
Adolfo Tanner: more expensive
George Perez: yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: according to the design
Kelly Kowalski: Uh.
Adolfo Tanner: people.
George Perez: Yeah, that's the only
Adolfo Tanner: You have
George Perez: thing
Adolfo Tanner: to
George Perez: though.
Adolfo Tanner: get a an advanced chip if you wanna have a screen in, which is more expensive than the regular chip, which is more expensive than the
George Perez: Yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: minimal.
George Perez: So then basically
Kelly Kowalski: Mm.
George Perez: it has to have some way to get to get to a mode on the television where you're doing, um You can get to you know, you can Like maybe it'll be that central button
David Campbell: Yeah,
George Perez: that,
David Campbell: yeah,
George Perez: like,
David Campbell: yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: Mm-hmm.
George Perez: then
Kelly Kowalski: Mm.
George Perez: you hit that and then you can it brings up like the menu on the T_V_
David Campbell: Yeah.
George Perez: and you can just
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: scroll around,
Kelly Kowalski: So
George Perez: like,
Kelly Kowalski: the T_V_
George Perez: to do
Kelly Kowalski: is
George Perez: the timer,
Kelly Kowalski: the screen,
George Perez: to do the
Kelly Kowalski: that
George Perez: yeah,
Kelly Kowalski: yeah
George Perez: yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: So it would have all these different options
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: of changing
George Perez: But the remote
Kelly Kowalski: to
George Perez: itself isn't really
David Campbell: Look
George Perez: cluttered
David Campbell: it even
George Perez: up.
David Campbell: has settings.
Kelly Kowalski: Okay.
George Perez: Hmm?
David Campbell: On the
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
David Campbell: you can just
George Perez: Yeah,
David Campbell: take theirs
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: well we
David Campbell: and
George Perez: don't want the
David Campbell: just
George Perez: screen I guess, but um 'cause that just it does seem like, it that would be, like, incredibly expensive, but I dunno, and then so, it just im really all you need is, like, this little wheel then, and you can control everything. So
Kelly Kowalski: Um, right. What if I mean, if you're thinking of the design of it now, like the a you know, physical attributes,
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: um, and you just have this, it's like just a long silver thing, or whatever we're thinking. I mean are you you gonna have any buttons on that besides power and this thing? Or
George Perez: It doesn't seem that you would need anything besides pow I mean and the power button could even be like hold down the menu button for like
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: longer than one second and it turns on the T_V_.
Kelly Kowalski: So can we imagine that this would be smaller than the remote controls that you showed us before. I
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: mean
George Perez: Yeah definitely. Like,
Kelly Kowalski: okay.
George Perez: I think we're looking at something that could be, like like even maybe like a cir I'm f I'm seeing almost like a circular sort of like handheld like thing.
David Campbell: Yeah
George Perez: I mean
David Campbell: but
George Perez: it
David Campbell: should
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
David Campbell: be
George Perez: it
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah.
David Campbell: comfortable.
George Perez: needs to be easy
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: to somehow it needs to be easy to like manipulate and use your
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: I mean how do how do I'm not really Like when I use an iPod, I end up just kind of using my index finger to like control it.
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah, I've
George Perez: So
Kelly Kowalski: seen some people just going like that
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: with their
David Campbell: Yeah
Kelly Kowalski: thumb,
George Perez: Or your thumb
David Campbell: I use
Kelly Kowalski: yeah.
George Perez: or something.
David Campbell: it like that.
Adolfo Tanner: W
George Perez: So
Adolfo Tanner: when we had the wheely remote control, we it was on the top I think, if you held it like that.
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: Yeah.
George Perez: Yeah,
Kelly Kowalski: But,
George Perez: so
Kelly Kowalski: were there buttons on there as well?
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah well it had the wheely thing and then it had those eighteen different buttons
Kelly Kowalski: Mm.
Adolfo Tanner: that I don't know what they do.
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: Mm
Adolfo Tanner: So
George Perez: yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: we just used the top part.
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: Yeah,
David Campbell: Uh.
George Perez: so but I mean I think it could be pretty small. Like, I d I mean, you you want it to be large enough that you can
Kelly Kowalski: What if, um, you had like a b a cover that went over buttons that you don't use very much? Like you so you could slide it up if you needed to like change the contrast or something like that? So the options are there but they're not in interfering with the design and the practicality of it.
George Perez: But can't you just
Kelly Kowalski: Do do
George Perez: get
Kelly Kowalski: you know what I'm talking
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: about though? Like, uh, yeah just
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah
Kelly Kowalski: something
Adolfo Tanner: like
George Perez: K
Adolfo Tanner: maybe something on the side
David Campbell: Well you
Adolfo Tanner: where
David Campbell: can
Adolfo Tanner: you
David Campbell: have it on
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah,
David Campbell: the settings,
Adolfo Tanner: slip a
Kelly Kowalski: that
Adolfo Tanner: panel
Kelly Kowalski: you can flip
Adolfo Tanner: down
David Campbell: no?
Adolfo Tanner: and it's
Kelly Kowalski: over,
Adolfo Tanner: got a
Kelly Kowalski: yeah,
Adolfo Tanner: whole
George Perez: Yeah,
Adolfo Tanner: bunch of
Kelly Kowalski: yeah.
George Perez: But, I mean, do you need that? If if you can get to, you know if so long as you're able to bring up the menu on the T_V_ screen.
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah I mean I guess
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: that's the
George Perez: That
Kelly Kowalski: thing
George Perez: keeps
Kelly Kowalski: is
George Perez: it
Kelly Kowalski: is if w I
George Perez: really
Kelly Kowalski: if we can do this, that'd probably
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: be
George Perez: Uh you wouldn't I don't I just don't think you would even need it.
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah, yeah.
George Perez: So
Kelly Kowalski: So I
George Perez: Mean
Kelly Kowalski: guess we have to look into the, um, like, the programming, how this how they actually programme these things,
Adolfo Tanner: Oh
Kelly Kowalski: and if
Adolfo Tanner: how they
Kelly Kowalski: that's
Adolfo Tanner: make the menu show up on
Kelly Kowalski: yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: the T_V_?
George Perez: I mean
Adolfo Tanner: I
George Perez: you can
Adolfo Tanner: don't
George Perez: do
Kelly Kowalski: I
Adolfo Tanner: know.
George Perez: it,
Kelly Kowalski: mean
David Campbell: They already
Kelly Kowalski: it would
David Campbell: do
Kelly Kowalski: y
David Campbell: it.
Kelly Kowalski: would
George Perez: you it's
Adolfo Tanner: I
George Perez: it
Adolfo Tanner: believe
George Perez: doesn't
Kelly Kowalski: that
Adolfo Tanner: it's
George Perez: seem
Kelly Kowalski: would
Adolfo Tanner: ins
George Perez: that
Kelly Kowalski: be
George Perez: hard.
Adolfo Tanner: it's gotta be inside the T_V_, not inside the remote.
George Perez: I mean I've never bought
Adolfo Tanner: I'm
George Perez: a
Adolfo Tanner: not
George Perez: remote.
Adolfo Tanner: sure.
George Perez: It sounds like this remote's going to be purchased separately from the television, which
Adolfo Tanner: Well
George Perez: is a little
Adolfo Tanner: they usually are. Well
George Perez: My I've never bought just a remote, like, so
David Campbell: No.
George Perez: I don't I don't really
Kelly Kowalski: Huh.
George Perez: know. But um
Adolfo Tanner: I guess that's right. It always comes with the T_V_.
George Perez: So, um but I mean it's I've never had a hard time with like my remotes, like bringing up the menu screen if you need to like change the date or whatever, you know. And I don't think that should uh that should be too hard.
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah, it most of the ones we've had have had the menu button, 'cause it's not like you need to have a button access to like change the contrast or something.
George Perez: Yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: 'Cause it just doesn't come up every day or something.
George Perez: Yeah. Well so So, do we need I dunno. Well I guess we have to you know think about But I mean you just basically need the output signal
Adolfo Tanner: Mm-hmm.
George Perez: you know to
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: be able to bring it up.
Kelly Kowalski: Okay.
George Perez: That's what it does anyway.
David Campbell: But also if you have it on the screen you can actually write everything out, because the problem with buttons is you like, they have these sort of abbreviations and
George Perez: Yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah.
David Campbell: codes
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah,
David Campbell: that you're supposed
Kelly Kowalski: you
David Campbell: to understand,
Kelly Kowalski: don't know they mean,
David Campbell: and
Kelly Kowalski: yeah,
David Campbell: I never
Kelly Kowalski: it's
David Campbell: get
Kelly Kowalski: like
David Campbell: it.
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: Never
Kelly Kowalski: yeah.
David Campbell: ever. So
George Perez: So, but oh, you mean if we have this screen like the iPod screen?
David Campbell: Well on the telly.
Adolfo Tanner: Or on the T_V_
George Perez: On the
Adolfo Tanner: too.
George Perez: telly, okay, yeah. So yeah I think, I mean, I think I think the touch-based graphical interface is a really uh cool idea because you know it is so obnoxious to like have to push those like okay now I hit this you know, you have your little guide out and you're like, hit this button twice, like
Kelly Kowalski: Mm.
George Perez: to
David Campbell: Mm.
Kelly Kowalski: And it is technologically
George Perez: activate the date.
Kelly Kowalski: innovative in a way, so
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: that
George Perez: I guess.
Kelly Kowalski: fits with the
George Perez: And it is trendy,
Kelly Kowalski: B
George Perez: the iPods are
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: really hot right now,
David Campbell: Did you
George Perez: so
David Campbell: did you get that pc picture on did they provide you with that picture
George Perez: Um,
David Campbell: on the web?
George Perez: yeah, by web research, yeah, so
David Campbell: That's quite interesting. What are we going to do about this vegetable thing that I'm dreading?
Kelly Kowalski: Oh
George Perez: Oh.
Kelly Kowalski: god.
Adolfo Tanner: Oh, I was gonna say. You said uh people want spongy. Um,
David Campbell: Yeah.
George Perez: Yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: one of your one of the material options is a sort of rubber that's in like those stress ball things. So,
George Perez: Oh, okay, that
David Campbell: Yeah.
George Perez: would
Kelly Kowalski: Ah.
George Perez: be cool.
Adolfo Tanner: that would be spongy.
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
David Campbell: Yeah.
George Perez: Mm.
David Campbell: Just nice feel, but I hate spongy.
George Perez: Yeah, c
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: that's e that would be kind of oh, you know, usually like the touch pad things are kind of a hard plastic typ mouse type,
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: you know, thing. But what if
Kelly Kowalski: I
George Perez: we
Kelly Kowalski: mean
George Perez: ha
Kelly Kowalski: definitely the area
George Perez: what if
Kelly Kowalski: round
George Perez: we had like
Kelly Kowalski: it.
George Perez: a spongy sort of like stress balley kinda so you're like
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah I think it could work.
George Perez: Or what
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: if we integrated the the uh the f what if the whole thing about the fruit and vegetables we somehow made it tactilely fash you know, we c tapped into that, so like it feels like
David Campbell: Well
George Perez: a vegetable.
David Campbell: it could be
Kelly Kowalski: An
David Campbell: like
Kelly Kowalski: orange.
Adolfo Tanner: Don't think
David Campbell: mobiles
Adolfo Tanner: I'd want it to feel
David Campbell: that just
Adolfo Tanner: like a banana.
David Campbell: you just put a cover.
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: If it's a small thing, you c instead of creating an object for it that looks like a banana, which frankly I'm not particularly fond of, um you could just have covers and then your mobile f it's like a mobile phone thing. You know you
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: had
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
David Campbell: there was a time when they had all these different covers
George Perez: Yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: You
David Campbell: for
Adolfo Tanner: could
David Campbell: mobiles.
Adolfo Tanner: do like the computers where they have like the grapefruit, apple machine and they have like the blueberry,
David Campbell: Yeah,
Adolfo Tanner: like all
David Campbell: yeah,
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: the colours
David Campbell: yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: are named after fruits.
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
David Campbell: Yeah.
George Perez: You could name it after fruits and vegetables,
David Campbell: And
George Perez: or
David Campbell: it could the colour can fit your sitting room, so if you have red sitting room you can have strawberry, and then if you have a green one you can have well I don't know.
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: Um.
Kelly Kowalski: So
George Perez: So
Kelly Kowalski: what
George Perez: I think
Kelly Kowalski: if what
George Perez: yeah, colours.
Kelly Kowalski: this is I'm just forming this idea in my head of how this thing is looking. If you have like that stress ball material kind of as what you're actually holding in your hand, so like what you're feeling is comfortable, and then there's more of a hard plastic thing
David Campbell: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: where that thing is.
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: And on that hard plastic thing you can change either the colour or the fruit or vegetable that's on there.
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: Is that kind of I 'cause I I'm thinking of silver because those are our company colours.
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: Um
George Perez: Unfortunately they don't have silver fruits and vegetables. I do I dunno. Um
Kelly Kowalski: I mean how are you how are you all envisioning by what we've just the feedback we've just got about the
David Campbell: Maybe a ball.
Kelly Kowalski: A ball?
David Campbell: Know, a squashy ball. A relaxing squashy ball.
George Perez: That's in the shape of a fruit, like a
David Campbell: That you can p well I see you're thinking, it's weird, you're thinking the opposite of David Campbell 'cause you're thinking you change the the hard bit
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
David Campbell: and I'm thinking how do you change the hard would you put a um sticker sort of? Because I was thinking if you have a cover for the squashy bit, like a
Kelly Kowalski: This is just Okay.
David Campbell: Oh,
Kelly Kowalski: Say
David Campbell: okay,
Kelly Kowalski: that's the s say that's
David Campbell: yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: the squashy bit. Squashy.
David Campbell: Yeah I was thinking of getting a cover for
Kelly Kowalski: That see I was thinking
David Campbell: Which is
Kelly Kowalski: this
David Campbell: cheaper.
Kelly Kowalski: s sorry
David Campbell: Well I don't know if it's cheaper
Kelly Kowalski: I was
Adolfo Tanner: Oh.
Kelly Kowalski: thinking
David Campbell: actually.
Adolfo Tanner: Mm.
Kelly Kowalski: this bit here would be the cover and like that's your actual
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: thing. And like this
George Perez: Oh I like
Kelly Kowalski: you
George Perez: that
Kelly Kowalski: could have
George Perez: shape.
Kelly Kowalski: like you could have like cherries and
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: things around there. Um
Adolfo Tanner: I was thinking
Kelly Kowalski: but
Adolfo Tanner: sort of a single ball shape.
Kelly Kowalski: I
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: was thinking if
Adolfo Tanner: So
Kelly Kowalski: it
Adolfo Tanner: you're
Kelly Kowalski: was
Adolfo Tanner: holding
Kelly Kowalski: like this
Adolfo Tanner: a
Kelly Kowalski: 'cause
Adolfo Tanner: squishy
Kelly Kowalski: the way
Adolfo Tanner: ball
Kelly Kowalski: you were
Adolfo Tanner: and
Kelly Kowalski: describing
Adolfo Tanner: then it has a
Kelly Kowalski: the the iPod and the thi the roll thingy
George Perez: It's like it
Adolfo Tanner: Mm-hmm.
George Perez: has to be s yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: It's almost like your thumb is farther up,
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah I guess so.
Kelly Kowalski: it lower
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: then
David Campbell: Yeah. So it wouldn't be very big in either like how big? This big, and then you just do that,
George Perez: What
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah,
George Perez: if, yeah,
Kelly Kowalski: I
David Campbell: I
Kelly Kowalski: know
David Campbell: suppose.
Kelly Kowalski: what
George Perez: what
Kelly Kowalski: you
George Perez: if
Kelly Kowalski: meant,
George Perez: the squishy,
Kelly Kowalski: yeah.
George Perez: oh so so you're saying the squishy part's like detachable, and you can so so maybe one you know you can have like the broccoli squishy thing, and then you could have like the banana squishy thing and you could get you could have your choice, you know?
David Campbell: Well just a li I can't des like condom thingy, like a a cover. But well the question is, which one's easiest to change can just
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
David Campbell: contact our relevant department for that, and
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: just see what the cost is for covering that or covering
George Perez: Yeah,
David Campbell: that,
George Perez: yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: Mm.
David Campbell: and for now we can do two prototypes maybe and then
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: hi try and ask users
Kelly Kowalski: Okay.
David Campbell: what the best is, and
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: No.
Kelly Kowalski: Okay.
George Perez: Oh.
David Campbell: Um. That's nicer. I think it's
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: nicer to have a drawing 'cause it's neater.
Kelly Kowalski: Hmm.
David Campbell: Um.
Kelly Kowalski: Well that's not very neat, but
George Perez: Yeah. I mean I think uh and I think the handhe I think the handheld part is definitely So you could make that into the fruit and vegetable part.
David Campbell: If it's a bit like those juggling balls, you can change shape according to your to the way you hold
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah
David Campbell: it.
Kelly Kowalski: Mm-hmm.
David Campbell: If
Adolfo Tanner: you could
David Campbell: it's
Adolfo Tanner: squish
David Campbell: got sand
Adolfo Tanner: it.
David Campbell: in it maybe, or something,
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
David Campbell: you it it just moulds to your hand.
George Perez: Yeah. So where are the fruit and vegetables now?
David Campbell: We
George Perez: Fruits
David Campbell: we don't
George Perez: and veg.
Adolfo Tanner: I
David Campbell: know.
Adolfo Tanner: guess they would be either in the colour of that plastic
George Perez: Yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: face on
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: the front, or in the colour of the squishy thing underneath.
David Campbell: Yeah.
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: And the rest is the company the company colour's silver?
Kelly Kowalski: It was, yeah, silver and yellow. It l it looks like I don't
George Perez: We could
David Campbell: Okay.
George Perez: promote the banana one.
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: Like mm.
Kelly Kowalski: I mean that's another question, where are we gonna we we should have the logo somewhere on it.
George Perez: Mm.
David Campbell: Mm-hmm. Should also fit the batteries, which we haven't
George Perez: Oh
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
George Perez: yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: I think the batteries would have to go right under the plastic
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah,
Adolfo Tanner: case.
George Perez: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: th and that would
David Campbell: Okay.
Adolfo Tanner: Especially if
Kelly Kowalski: that
Adolfo Tanner: you're switching out the squishy part. Then you need to have the other part just be sort of a single unit that you can snap off.
David Campbell: Mm-hmm.
Kelly Kowalski: Mm-hmm.
George Perez: Yeah, I think, um it'd be interesting to have the b the squishy bit. The part that you, yeah, can change into the different, you know, trendy vegetables and fruits. But uh
Adolfo Tanner: Well I dunno.
George Perez: it
Adolfo Tanner: You'd spend so much time like squishing it to your own personal hand. Then you'd get a new one and you'd have to do it all over again.
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: No but it does it automatically. Does it automatically?
George Perez: Yeah.
David Campbell: I don't know.
Kelly Kowalski: I don't know what the rest of my notes mean because they were made for David Campbell.
David Campbell: Okay.
Kelly Kowalski: But if someone components concept. Question mark. Energy. Question
Adolfo Tanner: That was David Campbell.
Kelly Kowalski: mark. Was that you?
Adolfo Tanner: Yes.
Kelly Kowalski: Okay. Oh right right. Yeah. Um, so what d but what do we know about energy? I mean we're gonna use batteries right? And
Adolfo Tanner: which is something I don't know what it is. Something
David Campbell: Oh,
Adolfo Tanner: to
David Campbell: a dynamo
Adolfo Tanner: do with torches.
David Campbell: is ah, it's a bicycle. It's a bicycle mechanism. It's the en it's like if if something moves,
Adolfo Tanner: Oh
David Campbell: when
Adolfo Tanner: okay.
David Campbell: it moves,
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah,
David Campbell: it
Adolfo Tanner: the other
David Campbell: stores
Adolfo Tanner: one was
David Campbell: energy.
Adolfo Tanner: the other one was a kinetic thing where you'd basically have to wind it yourself. So
David Campbell: It's quite sweet.
Adolfo Tanner: I sort of picked battery. We could have talked about doing a wind-up or a dynamo or a solar power. Um but I think solar power's not available with the rubber case anyways.
Kelly Kowalski: I think batteries
Adolfo Tanner: It
Kelly Kowalski: sound good. What does
Adolfo Tanner: it
David Campbell: No.
Kelly Kowalski: everyone
Adolfo Tanner: seems
Kelly Kowalski: else
Adolfo Tanner: a little
Kelly Kowalski: think?
Adolfo Tanner: weird for
George Perez: The dynamo
Adolfo Tanner: a living room
George Perez: would
Adolfo Tanner: anyways.
George Perez: be interesting.
David Campbell: But dynamo the the fact with dynamo is, the moment you move it, it c it creates energy on its own.
George Perez: Oh.
Kelly Kowalski: What about Kryptonite?
David Campbell: Which is quite cool. So if you throw it, it's gonna store loads of energy, and you don't need to buy a battery 'cause they're quite f I find them annoying. But we need to find cost.
Kelly Kowalski: Yeah.
David Campbell: Don't know the cost.
Adolfo Tanner: Didn't have
David Campbell: Does
Adolfo Tanner: enough
David Campbell: anyone
Adolfo Tanner: data
David Campbell: have
Adolfo Tanner: to actually
David Campbell: costs on the on the
Adolfo Tanner: All
David Campbell: web?
Adolfo Tanner: it said was it gave sort of relative, some chips are more expensive than others, sort of things. It didn't give David Campbell any actual
David Campbell: Okay.
Adolfo Tanner: cost.
David Campbell: Right.
George Perez: Hmm.
David Campbell: Mm.
Adolfo Tanner: Most of the stuff is pretty cheap though bought in bulk. So I don't think it's that much of a problem. Like the chip is probably the most expensive part.
Kelly Kowalski: What does chip on print mean?
Adolfo Tanner: Um, for things like remote controls, um, they stamp out a chip,
Kelly Kowalski: Uh-huh.
Adolfo Tanner: calculators too I think. Um, so you can mass produce 'em pretty cheap.
Kelly Kowalski: Okay.
Adolfo Tanner: But it's not like a computer, you can't like reprogramme your remo remote controls, it's like
Kelly Kowalski: Right.
Adolfo Tanner: stamped onto the chip.
Kelly Kowalski: So, chip on print is just means like that they're mass-produced.
Adolfo Tanner: Yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: Okay. And case? Uh I guess
Adolfo Tanner: Case
Kelly Kowalski: that's
Adolfo Tanner: is
Kelly Kowalski: what
Adolfo Tanner: what
Kelly Kowalski: we've
Adolfo Tanner: we
Kelly Kowalski: been
Adolfo Tanner: were
Kelly Kowalski: talking
Adolfo Tanner: discussing
Kelly Kowalski: about, yeah.
Adolfo Tanner: yeah.
Kelly Kowalski: Casing. Yeah. thinking of like syntactic case and thi um let's see. Is there anything else we need to
George Perez: Hmm.
Kelly Kowalski: talk about? Oh when we move on, you two are going to be playing with play-dough. Um, and working on the look and feel of the design and user interface design. And you're gonna be doing protu product evaluation. So you'll get mm m more instructions from your personal coach.
David Campbell: Oh, thank
Kelly Kowalski: Mm.
George Perez: Cool.
David Campbell: you.
Kelly Kowalski: See you soon. Does it matter that I end early?
David Campbell: I it's strange because
Kelly Kowalski: How how early is it? I didn't get a pop-up thing that said | Kelly Kowalski reviewed the minutes from the previous meeting. Adolfo Tanner gave her presentation on components and discussed which would have to be custom-made and which were standard. She also discussed the various materials and chips available. David Campbell presented current trends in the market and in fashion. She discussed the current fruits and vegetables trend and the trend toward softer, spongier materials. George Perez discussed the look of the remote with the group. They discussed including a touch-based graphical user interface but noted that it was unnecessary and costly. They discussed using the menu function on the television instead. The group discussed how the menu function would be programmed. The group then talked about the casing of the device, and decided that there would be a changeable outer casing. They discussed including fruit colors in addition to the company colors. Some part of the casing will be made of a spongy material. The group also discussed energy source options and chips. Kelly Kowalski instructed George Perez and Adolfo Tanner to construct the prototype and David Campbell to work on the prototype evaluation. | 1 | amisum | train |
Antonio Cooper: 'Kay. Hmm. Okay everybody. Welcome to the design meeting. Um Let's see. Our agenda. Last time we discussed the squishy fruitiness of our remote controls and how we might pursue that. Um and I think looks like we've come up with some ideas. Um and we also talked about materials we'd use and what kind of chip would be necessary. Um so for later in the meeting I've done a a spreadsheet of production costs so we'll take a look at that. and see it's changed all when we last discussed it. Um so actually I think Yeah um f you guys wanna give a prototype presentation of
Johnny Carpenter: Okay well um. So our design looks something like this. This being the wheel that you use to uh change channels or volume or whatever. This is a button, serves as the power button if you hold it down, and if you just tap on it I think it brings up the menu. And uh the base of the remote control, which has a squishy spongy rubbery feel, is interchangeable. So you can change the colour, according to your to suit your living room or whatever. And
Richard Lynch: You could
Johnny Carpenter: it comes
Richard Lynch: change the vegetable,
Johnny Carpenter: yeah, I can change
Richard Lynch: or fruit.
Johnny Carpenter: the vegetable.
Antonio Cooper: Oh is that broccoli?
Johnny Carpenter: This
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: one's broccoli. So this snaps off and you can put on whichever one you want. This is not to scale 'cause it would have the battery inside it. This is a mango. The it's trendy fruit, it's not just ordinary fruits. You don't have orange, you have mango. Um I guess strawberry's not as
Antonio Cooper: 'S
Johnny Carpenter: trendy,
Antonio Cooper: a very
Johnny Carpenter: but
Antonio Cooper: bright strawberry.
Johnny Carpenter: So we'll come up with a variety of trendy and exciting fruit designs for the remote control.
Richard Lynch: It's
Johnny Carpenter: And then
Richard Lynch: been
Johnny Carpenter: people
Richard Lynch: a
Johnny Carpenter: will
Richard Lynch: l
Johnny Carpenter: be encouraged to buy three or five of them, because they'll need to switch 'em out.
Richard Lynch: It's been a little bit difficult to um make sure that it's hand-holdable, and that the user can use it, you know, it's not too big. Uh but we think that this you know, this size will be okay and we will have to fit the battery case in there
Johnny Carpenter: Mm-hmm.
Richard Lynch: somehow.
Antonio Cooper: Oh
Richard Lynch: And
Antonio Cooper: yeah.
Richard Lynch: I guess the only other thing that we really didn't talk about was or design actually, would be the thing the locator. How how so
Johnny Carpenter: Well the locator is just chip that's inside there.
Richard Lynch: Okay so that's just
Johnny Carpenter: And the beeper's also inside there too somewhere.
Richard Lynch: So you have to have a button on your on your you have to attach the button to the
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah we didn't design that.
Richard Lynch: Yeah we have that that has yes yet
Johnny Carpenter: But
Richard Lynch: to
Johnny Carpenter: it
Richard Lynch: be
Johnny Carpenter: would
Richard Lynch: designed.
Johnny Carpenter: be coordinating with that of course.
Richard Lynch: Yeah that c
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: hey that that could you know match the handset.
Johnny Carpenter: Mm-hmm.
Richard Lynch: You could have a broccoli, or you could have a mango. So. Tada.
Antonio Cooper: Oh. Um if you wanna look in your project documents folder, there's an Excel spreadsheet. Um the only one that's in there, production costs. And if you open it up. Um I've just stuck the numbers in, it was a real challenge there. But if I missed anything that we've gone over, or if you see something that has changed I mean, we decided on batteries, and the regular chip would be necessary for the more advanced iPod-like button. Um I said uncurved or flat. I think that's what you have there, is that right? For the for the plastic part would be
Johnny Carpenter: My impression was that flat meant like like one of those square remotes. But it's
Antonio Cooper: Oh.
Johnny Carpenter: really not very
Antonio Cooper: Okay.
Johnny Carpenter: clear, because you got single curve and double curve and
Antonio Cooper: Right.
Johnny Carpenter: d I dunno what that means. One side is curved and then the other side is curved.
Antonio Cooper: Well yeah. If we're talking about the area just oh I d I dunno. I guess we'd have to contact the company that makes them and see. Um so what else? There's plastic for that area around the button. Um and then rubber would be the squishy like thing right?
Johnny Carpenter: Mm-hmm.
Antonio Cooper: Um and lots of special colours actually. Uh scroll wheel. Do you see anything that I've missed?
Johnny Carpenter: No I think that's alright.
Antonio Cooper: Okay so that would make our total of eleven point nine, which is even less than twelve point five, which means we'd be making even more of a profit. And if we sold a lot of squishy things.
Richard Lynch: Mm.
Antonio Cooper: Boo yeah. Okay. S So Mm.
Antonio Cooper: Did y what did you work on? The
David Fox: Um evaluation criteria.
Antonio Cooper: Okay. Do you wanna
David Fox: I've got a presentation
Antonio Cooper: Okay. I think
David Fox: So I need
Antonio Cooper: that's
David Fox: where's the cable?
David Fox: Right what happens is we have to um decide whether this this whole this whole project we've been working on actually um meets the standards we were set at the start. Um. Right. This doesn't okay. Um the method is we well I've analysed the user requirements and integrated them to the trends found in marketing reports and in our company strategy marketing. And um findings were that we need it a way, a way, and this is everything's listed down. Um, look in a certain way, feel in a certain way, it has to be technologically innovative and it has to be easy to use. These are all things we looked at at the start, um and criteria that have to be met. We have to use a table, I'll show you that later, together to decide whether it meets the standards. And we we have therefore in total um We have five we have eleven points according to which this should be evaluated. And um the cri well basically the findings are the same as the evaluation criteria. I would like to show you the table we have to use. Um. No. This is the table. Can you see this here?
Johnny Carpenter: Mm-hmm.
David Fox: Um so the que the questions I've given you c could you write that down? True is one and and false is seven. And we'll just go through each point together, hopefully. Um. I think if each of us gives an opinion then they can be mixed somehow. I dunno how it works exactly, I haven't
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
David Fox: been told.
Richard Lynch: Is it possible that we can bring this up on our own
David Fox: Yeah it's in the um it's in the project documents.
Richard Lynch: Is it meeting three minutes? No it's not
David Fox: It's
Richard Lynch: minutes.
David Fox: called evaluation criteria.
Richard Lynch: Okay.
David Fox: And it's under evaluation.
Antonio Cooper: Huh, the PowerPoint
Johnny Carpenter: Hmm?
Antonio Cooper: one?
David Fox: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: Okay. Cool.
David Fox: You've found it all?
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
David Fox: So it was um Yeah true's one.
Richard Lynch: True's one and false is seven.
David Fox: Do you want us to discuss this together or do you want us to do it singly?
Antonio Cooper: Um we can do it separately and then discuss
David Fox: Yeah okay.
Antonio Cooper: it if if that's what people wanna do.
Richard Lynch: So it's actually a scale.
Antonio Cooper: Wait, one is true and
David Fox: Um,
Antonio Cooper: so these are the questions we're answering.
David Fox: yes
Antonio Cooper: And
David Fox: it's
Antonio Cooper: one is
David Fox: if it's fancy you put one,
Antonio Cooper: One, right
David Fox: if
Antonio Cooper: okay.
David Fox: it's really unfancy it's seven.
Antonio Cooper: If it's somewhere in between you put four.
David Fox: Yeah, something.
Richard Lynch: Okay.
Antonio Cooper: Okay.
Richard Lynch: Does it feel fancy?
Johnny Carpenter: Feels like play-dough.
Richard Lynch: No.
David Fox: They shouldn't really be questions. Should be more like
David Fox: Are the batteries easy to insert?
Johnny Carpenter: I'm gonna say yes.
David Fox: Yes? Very very true. Okay.
Johnny Carpenter: I imagine they're somewhere on the front. We have a little case that you slip 'em in.
David Fox: Okay.
Antonio Cooper: Are we just about ready?
David Fox: Apparently I'm supposed to use the whiteboard. Do we um is it necessary?
Antonio Cooper: I don't think so. It's
David Fox: We'll just do
Antonio Cooper: yeah
David Fox: um
Antonio Cooper: the the marker thing kinda stopped working last time
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: we
Richard Lynch: Okay.
David Fox: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: Our animals
David Fox: Okay.
Antonio Cooper: will forever be there. Un unless you feel you need it t to
David Fox: I don't feel any
Antonio Cooper: okay okay. We'll
David Fox: right um Right so one point one? We'll just go in a circle.
Richard Lynch: One.
Johnny Carpenter: 'Kay Five.
David Fox: Right. Ooh I don't know. Right. One?
Johnny Carpenter: Five.
Antonio Cooper: Five.
David Fox: Five. Two. Okay so do we just add it up and divide it by four? Is that what the company does?
Antonio Cooper: I I think we should
Johnny Carpenter: It's four if you wanna do that.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
David Fox: Yeah?
Johnny Carpenter: It adds
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: to sixteen, so that's four.
David Fox: Oh no. It adds to thirteen. One five five two.
Johnny Carpenter: Oh I thought she said five.
Richard Lynch: Hmm.
David Fox: One five five two is thirteen, over four for now. I think that's um next?
Richard Lynch: Um three.
Johnny Carpenter: Six.
Antonio Cooper: Six.
David Fox: Really?
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
David Fox: Two.
Antonio Cooper: I wasn't
David Fox: Uh-oh.
Antonio Cooper: cheating I swear.
David Fox: Right. One point three is
Richard Lynch: So it's a one was true and seven was false?
Johnny Carpenter: Huh?
Antonio Cooper: Uh.
David Fox: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: Okay, so you guys really didn't like it?
David Fox: I
Antonio Cooper: Oh
David Fox: really
Johnny Carpenter: Wait
Antonio Cooper: I thought
Johnny Carpenter: a minute.
Antonio Cooper: it was the other way round.
Johnny Carpenter: I thought it was the other way round too.
David Fox: Well
Antonio Cooper: So we do have about
David Fox: uh
Antonio Cooper: the
Johnny Carpenter: Sh
Antonio Cooper: same thing, we just have it the other
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah
Antonio Cooper: way
Johnny Carpenter: I
David Fox: Yeah yeah. It was
Johnny Carpenter: I was
David Fox: one
Johnny Carpenter: thinking
David Fox: is
Johnny Carpenter: one
David Fox: true
Johnny Carpenter: means no
David Fox: and
Johnny Carpenter: points, you know,
David Fox: false
Johnny Carpenter: all the way
David Fox: is
Johnny Carpenter: up
David Fox: seven.
Johnny Carpenter: to the top.
David Fox: I should've kept the table up.
Antonio Cooper: Oh
Johnny Carpenter: I'll just
Antonio Cooper: gosh. Okay.
Johnny Carpenter: I'll just
Antonio Cooper: Well
Johnny Carpenter: reverse them all. It's no problem.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
David Fox: Right, well I'm glad this came out.
Richard Lynch: I was like, why did you guys design it that
David Fox: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: way if you hated
Johnny Carpenter: I thought
Richard Lynch: it?
Johnny Carpenter: you guys hated it.
David Fox: No.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
David Fox: Oh that's quite funny.
Johnny Carpenter: Okay.
David Fox: Okay.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
David Fox: Okay. So, starting again, one point one?
Richard Lynch: One.
Johnny Carpenter: Say two.
Antonio Cooper: Three.
David Fox: Two. Okay, one point two?
Richard Lynch: Uh three.
Johnny Carpenter: Two.
Antonio Cooper: Two.
David Fox: Two. Okay. Um, one point three?
Richard Lynch: One.
Antonio Cooper: One.
Johnny Carpenter: One.
David Fox: Ha. Two point one?
Richard Lynch: Uh
Antonio Cooper: Two.
Richard Lynch: two.
Johnny Carpenter: Uh two.
Antonio Cooper: Two point I think I missed two. Wait, is that two point one?
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah I put it
David Fox: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: down as one point four
Antonio Cooper: One
David Fox: Oh
Johnny Carpenter: for
Antonio Cooper: point
Johnny Carpenter: some
David Fox: dear,
Antonio Cooper: four,
Johnny Carpenter: reason.
Antonio Cooper: one point five.
David Fox: okay.
Antonio Cooper: Okay right
David Fox: Sorry.
Antonio Cooper: that's I have two of them.
Johnny Carpenter: Mine has all kinds of
David Fox: Two
Johnny Carpenter: problems.
David Fox: and one. Sorry about that. T two point two, which is one point five.
Antonio Cooper: One.
Johnny Carpenter: Uh three. Wait why did I put three?
Richard Lynch: Uh one.
Johnny Carpenter: I meant
David Fox: Okay.
Johnny Carpenter: one on mine too.
David Fox: Three point one. Is that correct on my
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
David Fox: slide?
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
David Fox: Yeah?
Richard Lynch: Uh one.
Johnny Carpenter: Three point one. I have four.
Antonio Cooper: Three.
David Fox: One, four, three, three, three point two?
Johnny Carpenter: Three.
Antonio Cooper: Three.
Richard Lynch: Uh. One.
David Fox: Three point three.
Richard Lynch: One.
Johnny Carpenter: One.
Antonio Cooper: Two.
David Fox: Four point one?
Richard Lynch: One.
Johnny Carpenter: Two.
Antonio Cooper: Five.
David Fox: Two. Four point two.
Richard Lynch: Two.
Johnny Carpenter: Three.
Antonio Cooper: Four.
David Fox: Two and four point three.
Johnny Carpenter: Two.
David Fox: One, two.
Richard Lynch: One.
Antonio Cooper: Two.
David Fox: Right so I put one on that. Okay I'll um I'll just do the calculations now if you want to continue.
Antonio Cooper: Okay.
David Fox: Or is
Antonio Cooper: Um
David Fox: it tedious? I'm I'm sorry this was so tedious
Antonio Cooper: No
David Fox: for
Antonio Cooper: no
David Fox: everyone.
Antonio Cooper: that's um
David Fox: I didn't
Antonio Cooper: I
David Fox: know
Antonio Cooper: think
David Fox: how
Antonio Cooper: we
David Fox: else
Antonio Cooper: should
David Fox: to do
Antonio Cooper: look at
David Fox: it.
Antonio Cooper: the ones that like where s where people said four, where um it looks like we might wanna discuss changing an aspect of the remote.
David Fox: Okay. Well the worst ones were three point one.
Johnny Carpenter: Mm-hmm.
David Fox: Do does every ones have the slide? Three point
Antonio Cooper: The
David Fox: one.
Antonio Cooper: that was material.
David Fox: Slide show. Material technologically innovative, okay.
Antonio Cooper: Mm.
David Fox: Um, do you want to change it? What are the suggestions? I don't know, anyone?
Antonio Cooper: Um
Richard Lynch: Which one is that again sorry? Three point one?
Antonio Cooper: Mm-hmm.
David Fox: Yeah that it's three point one was not that good. Four point one.
Antonio Cooper: Does the shape
David Fox: The shape.
Richard Lynch: I think
David Fox: Four point two?
Antonio Cooper: See I'm having I'm having trouble imagining the is it uh gonna be the size, like the the controller? It
Johnny Carpenter: I think
Antonio Cooper: or
Johnny Carpenter: the
Antonio Cooper: bigger?
Johnny Carpenter: wheel would probably be mm.
Antonio Cooper: Because
Richard Lynch: What if we just smash all the vegetables down flat? And like then it you could hold it in your hand better.
Johnny Carpenter: I think the base would definitely be larger, 'cause some of these are not as easy to hold. They're
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: kinda smallish.
Antonio Cooper: No but I imagine even if it was bigger, like if it's round and it's big then you you can't get
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: that's why remote controls
Richard Lynch: The
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: flat
Antonio Cooper: are long
Richard Lynch: one.
Antonio Cooper: because
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: you have that thumb kind of so c they could all be bananas and cucumbers.
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: Um but I don't s I I personally don't think this is comfortable
Richard Lynch: I didn't
Antonio Cooper: to to
Richard Lynch: yeah.
Antonio Cooper: sit there, like it's
Richard Lynch: But
Antonio Cooper: an
Richard Lynch: like
Antonio Cooper: awkward
Richard Lynch: if if
Antonio Cooper: position.
Richard Lynch: you just squash them flat like and you made it flat
Johnny Carpenter: Well if they're that s uh stress ball stuff they would be pretty squishable.
Richard Lynch: But it's
Johnny Carpenter: Mm.
Richard Lynch: still too big I think, in your
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: hand. Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: And would it even resemble fruit that way? I mean
Richard Lynch: Yeah like certain ones you'd have to limit the fruit selection,
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: like you could probably do a strawberry still.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: I think the broccoli would be out. You could do, although the broccoli is quite comfortable, I have to say, like sorta
Antonio Cooper: Yeah
Richard Lynch: like
Antonio Cooper: that
Richard Lynch: a joystick.
Antonio Cooper: I I when you were holding
David Fox: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: that before, it
David Fox: That
Antonio Cooper: actually
David Fox: looked
Antonio Cooper: looked
David Fox: really good.
Antonio Cooper: yeah.
Richard Lynch: I don't know. So
David Fox: Are there any fruits that look like broccoli, no?
Richard Lynch: Uh.
Johnny Carpenter: Not that I can think of. Rhubarb.
Richard Lynch: Rhubarb. These obscure
David Fox: I think
Richard Lynch: fruits.
David Fox: that broccoli is my favourite actually.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
David Fox: Uh despite the
Richard Lynch: I think we
Antonio Cooper: What
Richard Lynch: needn't
Antonio Cooper: if um the it was just patterns on like we we chose the shape or the sh shape could be whatever we wanted and then it would just be like a design on the rubber.
Richard Lynch: Huh?
Antonio Cooper: You
Richard Lynch: Oh
Antonio Cooper: know
Richard Lynch: okay.
Antonio Cooper: like like
Johnny Carpenter: So
Antonio Cooper: just
Johnny Carpenter: it's just
Antonio Cooper: a
Johnny Carpenter: colour,
Antonio Cooper: printed
Johnny Carpenter: and not
Antonio Cooper: yeah
Johnny Carpenter: necessarily
Antonio Cooper: or
Johnny Carpenter: the shape
Antonio Cooper: coloured
Johnny Carpenter: of a strawberry.
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: yeah.
Richard Lynch: That could work.
David Fox: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: Or I mean we could even have fruit like around
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: I mean
Richard Lynch: Yeah. I dunno.
Antonio Cooper: But
David Fox: Yeah
Antonio Cooper: if
David Fox: and
Antonio Cooper: we
David Fox: just
Antonio Cooper: if
David Fox: have the
Antonio Cooper: we
David Fox: colour
Antonio Cooper: need
David Fox: match or something.
Antonio Cooper: yeah. And if we wanna incorporate the fruit thing somehow, there might be I mean if it if it in if it uh conflicts with the comfort of actually holdi holding
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: the
Richard Lynch: 'Cause yeah no-one wants to hold a remote that's uncomfortable obviously.
Antonio Cooper: Mm.
David Fox: Mm.
Richard Lynch: Or like I dunno, some of 'em you can kind of think see as like like you could if it was only this you know, if it was shaped like that, and it just had that. But you see the problem
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: is you have to attach that, and this has to be detachable.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: So like maybe that's just too
Antonio Cooper: Well
Richard Lynch: big
Antonio Cooper: see th
Richard Lynch: because
Antonio Cooper: the reason the broccoli works is you can kinda hold it like that,
Richard Lynch: Yeah
Antonio Cooper: which is
Richard Lynch: it's
David Fox: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: a
Richard Lynch: sorta
Antonio Cooper: nice
Richard Lynch: like
Antonio Cooper: kind
Richard Lynch: a joystick.
Antonio Cooper: of yeah. But
Richard Lynch: I dunno. I guess
Antonio Cooper: I mean is there some way we could make it this kind of shape? 'Cause like
Johnny Carpenter: We
Antonio Cooper: kind
Johnny Carpenter: could make
Antonio Cooper: of
Johnny Carpenter: it that shape but just have different colours,
Antonio Cooper: Yeah,
Johnny Carpenter: and call
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
David Fox: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: 'em the
Antonio Cooper: yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: different fruits.
Antonio Cooper: Or
Richard Lynch: Dif
Antonio Cooper: like
Johnny Carpenter: We
Antonio Cooper: even
Johnny Carpenter: went with shape because we were having
Antonio Cooper: Or
Johnny Carpenter: fun
Antonio Cooper: even
Johnny Carpenter: with the play-dough.
Antonio Cooper: like Yeah like you said, like a joystick like that.
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: You know?
Richard Lynch: Yeah. Like uh we could do I'm trying to think of other sha like fruits that are oddly shaped.
Antonio Cooper: 'Cause that, I think I mean that fits the whole round iPod idea.
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: Mm-hmm.
Antonio Cooper: And
David Fox: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: you still have the comfort of holding it like that.
Richard Lynch: Mm.
Antonio Cooper: And you could like if it's like this, you could put fruit designs and stuff on
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: that
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: part.
Richard Lynch: Alright.
Antonio Cooper: But I mean it do we have any other ideas about that?
David Fox: Um
Richard Lynch: We could tr I don't know.
David Fox: Think the critical ones came out to be yeah that one. Batteries easy to insert for some reason, which can be easily I think that's not a problem
Antonio Cooper: The
David Fox: any
Antonio Cooper: batteries are
Johnny Carpenter: That
Antonio Cooper: going
David Fox: more.
Johnny Carpenter: everyone gave that a one or a two.
Antonio Cooper: in the back?
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah
David Fox: No.
Johnny Carpenter: they'd probably be either on the front or the side of
Antonio Cooper: The reason
Johnny Carpenter: the remote.
Antonio Cooper: I I ga I didn't give it a one I think I gave it a three because I thought you'd have to like unc
Johnny Carpenter: No
Antonio Cooper: clip no
Johnny Carpenter: I imagine
Antonio Cooper: you could
Johnny Carpenter: there'd be sort of a hatch
Antonio Cooper: Just
Johnny Carpenter: door,
Antonio Cooper: like any other one.
Johnny Carpenter: yeah um
Antonio Cooper: Okay.
Johnny Carpenter: like on a normal remote.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah. Right.
Johnny Carpenter: So it would probably either in the f no it can't be in the front 'cause the I_R_'s right there, but it'd be on one of the sides probably.
Antonio Cooper: Okay.
David Fox: I think everyone's under three anyway.
Antonio Cooper: Mm.
David Fox: So I think it's yeah those are the only two points.
Richard Lynch: Cool. Well Yeah the broccoli I guess wins.
David Fox: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah I'd agree with changing the shape. Um,
Antonio Cooper: Okay.
Johnny Carpenter: I was just having fun making strawberries and stuff.
Richard Lynch: We were a bit off task. Um so uh I can't think of any So we'll have to like Mm. Yeah I dunno. You could make the touch pad in th in different shapes, but then that kind of re-designs the whole project like, but you could do
Johnny Carpenter: It might
Richard Lynch: like
Johnny Carpenter: also sort of annoy people if we get used to having the buttons
Richard Lynch: Yeah
Johnny Carpenter: in
Richard Lynch: that's
Johnny Carpenter: one shape.
Richard Lynch: true.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: And it would probably cost more to produce,
Richard Lynch: Yeah that's
Antonio Cooper: 'cause
Richard Lynch: true.
Antonio Cooper: they're irregular.
Richard Lynch: Mm.
Johnny Carpenter: I bet having different colours is a lot cheaper than having different shapes too.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah. Which is why printing might be like just printing the fruit on fruit.
Richard Lynch: Hmm.
Antonio Cooper: Mm.
Antonio Cooper: Not really Well we've done finance evaluation criteria, production evaluation. Um so project evaluation.
David Fox: Do you want this and we can all No.
Antonio Cooper: I guess we're supposed to discuss um the prod the process of the project and how satisfied oh, oh it's alright. Uh.
David Fox: It's alright yeah?
Antonio Cooper: Yeah. Um Did you feel there was a lot of room for creativity in the sort of
Johnny Carpenter: Sure.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: I did.
David Fox: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: I mean fruit and squishiness. How c more creative
Johnny Carpenter: Sponginess.
Antonio Cooper: can you get?
Richard Lynch: The prototype making was very creatively stimulating and I think we've come up with a product that's fun and meets all the criteria.
Antonio Cooper: And how was our leadership and teamwork?
Johnny Carpenter: I think it was good. We knew what we were doing. It was a very democratic process and everyone got to contribute.
Antonio Cooper: Well I thought my leadership was crap personally. Excuse David Fox,
Johnny Carpenter: Well
Antonio Cooper: am
Johnny Carpenter: you
Antonio Cooper: I allowed
Johnny Carpenter: told
Antonio Cooper: to
Johnny Carpenter: us
Antonio Cooper: say
Johnny Carpenter: when
Antonio Cooper: that?
Johnny Carpenter: to start and when to end, and that's all
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: that matters.
Antonio Cooper: Um.
Richard Lynch: I think you were fine. You did
Antonio Cooper: Yeah,
Richard Lynch: a good job leading.
Antonio Cooper: well I'm never gonna do a management position, I know that now. Um yeah, I thought we all worked very
David Fox: Yeah
Antonio Cooper: well
David Fox: we didn't
Antonio Cooper: together.
David Fox: we uh it all c sort of blended
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
David Fox: quite
Richard Lynch: Yeah
David Fox: well.
Richard Lynch: I think it more than anything we didn't really have our set roles so much, as we just would be like
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: I don't know, all had ideas
Antonio Cooper: Very democratic.
Richard Lynch: about it but yeah.
Antonio Cooper: No spats, that was good.
Richard Lynch: No.
Antonio Cooper: Um and the means for like the materials we used, how convenient were they? Like the the pens, the whiteboard, I mean
Johnny Carpenter: Well I'm not
Antonio Cooper: we
Johnny Carpenter: a
Antonio Cooper: used
Johnny Carpenter: big fan of any Microsoft, PowerPoint or any
Antonio Cooper: Are you
Johnny Carpenter: of
Antonio Cooper: a
Johnny Carpenter: this
Antonio Cooper: Mac
Johnny Carpenter: stuff.
Antonio Cooper: person?
Johnny Carpenter: No no I never touch Macs either. I just use the Unix or the off market, sort of WordPerfect and all these other things.
Antonio Cooper: Huh.
Richard Lynch: Hmm.
David Fox: Which isn't very user-friendly
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah.
David Fox: though.
Johnny Carpenter: Well the problem is if you don't like my new computer never has WordPerfect so I have to go track someone down who has an old disk and then I have to reinstall it. So I have all these documents I can't use now. But yeah I mean I guess it's okay.
Richard Lynch: I felt like my I dunno if it was just my role, but l but uh I di I thought that my the information that was available to David Fox was kind of just like or maybe it was just the idea that we had. But there's kinda it was kinda like okay, I don't really think I dunno what I'm doing here.
Antonio Cooper: Mm.
Richard Lynch: So I didn't really think it was helpful. So I kind of just made up my own stuff and I
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: didn't really like the PowerPoint presentations, so I kind of wrote a lot of notes instead. But
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: yeah I d I don't really like PowerPoint personally, think it's kinda
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: stupid.
Johnny Carpenter: I never use it.
Richard Lynch: Yeah but uh
Antonio Cooper: I can't say I found everything particularly helpful.
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: Like
Richard Lynch: It didn't
Antonio Cooper: I
Richard Lynch: really
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: yeah.
Antonio Cooper: It
David Fox: I
Johnny Carpenter: My first
David Fox: though it
Johnny Carpenter: bit
David Fox: was
Johnny Carpenter: of information
David Fox: brilliant
Johnny Carpenter: was
David Fox: no?
Johnny Carpenter: like
Antonio Cooper: Really?
Johnny Carpenter: this child's drawn picture of how a remote works.
David Fox: No mine was really helpful as in my stuff was quite helpful I think.
Richard Lynch: So
Antonio Cooper: I
Richard Lynch: like
David Fox: I
Antonio Cooper: mean
Richard Lynch: a f
David Fox: think it
Antonio Cooper: m my
David Fox: depends
Antonio Cooper: problem
David Fox: on the role no?
Richard Lynch: Yeah
Antonio Cooper: yeah,
Richard Lynch: I
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah
Richard Lynch: think so.
Johnny Carpenter: it probably does.
Antonio Cooper: yeah. 'Cause my problem was, you guys had access to like they'd put send you to sites and stuff right?
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: See I couldn't do that, so I didn't really know what you guys were doing. And when you were talking about it I was just like you know that's wh that's why I seemed so ignorant when when you were j explaining things, 'cause I
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah well mine was mostly made up except when they told David Fox like you know titanium costs more than
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: wood to make a remote control.
David Fox: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: you'd
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: wanted to.
David Fox: But it must have been quite difficult for them to build a whole um
Antonio Cooper: System.
David Fox: a whole system,
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
David Fox: 'cause of course they can't give you uh uh anything comparable to the internet for
Richard Lynch: Yeah
David Fox: the
Richard Lynch: I mean,
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: Well I think
Richard Lynch: it
Johnny Carpenter: it's interesting how it all went together, like I had the stuff about how David Fox how rubber's cheap, and you have how
David Fox: Yeah,
Johnny Carpenter: people
David Fox: yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: want it to be spongy, and
Antonio Cooper: Yeah, huh.
Johnny Carpenter: It seems planned you know.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: Yeah I kinda thought that um I felt like I would go and like try to use my information, stupid little presentation and then like I just would end up talking about something completely unrelated because I dunno
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: I felt like I was off-task all the time. But um
Antonio Cooper: Well I mean we really got into talking about like personal practicalit like it wasn't necessarily what was like we would never have thought of fruit or sponginess
David Fox: No.
Antonio Cooper: you know?
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: So
Johnny Carpenter: If
Antonio Cooper: it's
Johnny Carpenter: I hadn't been told that fruit was
David Fox: But I think that it it might be to see whether people actually all come up with the same
Antonio Cooper: Oh
David Fox: thing.
Antonio Cooper: right. given certain information or
David Fox: Yeah,
Antonio Cooper: Just
David Fox: like
Antonio Cooper: yeah.
David Fox: if everyone's given the same input I don't have a clue,
Antonio Cooper: Mm,
David Fox: anyway. Um
Antonio Cooper: mm.
David Fox: what's next? Looks like oh no that's not um It's
Antonio Cooper: What
David Fox: quite
Antonio Cooper: do you guys think of the pens? It asks
Johnny Carpenter: They're
Antonio Cooper: about
Johnny Carpenter: pretty
Antonio Cooper: that.
Johnny Carpenter: cool.
Antonio Cooper: Mm.
Johnny Carpenter: They're
Richard Lynch: I
Johnny Carpenter: kinda
Richard Lynch: wanna s
Johnny Carpenter: hard to write with though.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah
David Fox: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: and I I've f forgotten once or twice to check the box.
Richard Lynch: I I'd like to see what what it looks like on the
Johnny Carpenter: They're nicer than the pen that I'm using, because like your stuff actually shows up here, rather than having to look at the screen and write.
Antonio Cooper: Mm.
Johnny Carpenter: But even so, I dunno.
Antonio Cooper: And new ideas found?
David Fox: Yeah it's all very new,
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
David Fox: no? It's all very new.
Richard Lynch: Yeah I think I'd like to um I dunno. Like
David Fox: Sorry.
Richard Lynch: it was the I think the microphones are okay when you're sitting down, but like they're kinda clumsy I guess
Johnny Carpenter: Oh
Richard Lynch: when
Johnny Carpenter: yeah.
Richard Lynch: you're like when you're s going up to the whiteboard like.
Johnny Carpenter: Well they drop off if you like move too much.
Richard Lynch: Yeah I dunno. But they're
Johnny Carpenter: But I don't
Richard Lynch: they're
Johnny Carpenter: think
Richard Lynch: okay.
Johnny Carpenter: we're supposed to be testing these microphones. Maybe we are. I don't
Antonio Cooper: Mm.
Johnny Carpenter: know.
Richard Lynch: Uh I think, and I think that uh all this technology like I guess some people must be interested in using it but I can't imagine finding it any more useful than like looking at someone's
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: notes,
Johnny Carpenter: Well
Richard Lynch: or
Johnny Carpenter: the
Richard Lynch: like
Johnny Carpenter: thing is,
Richard Lynch: I
Johnny Carpenter: like
Richard Lynch: dunno.
Johnny Carpenter: I actually worked in a company, and I had a role and I had to go to meetings. And like the last thing I would have wanted would be to have to watch a video 'cause I missed a meeting. Like usually I missed meetings deliberately. There's just there's really not that much information that actually goes through a real meeting,
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: like when you're actually at a real meeting in a real company.
Richard Lynch: Hm.
Johnny Carpenter: It's mostly like rehashing old stuff. And you're sort of going over general stuff that
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: anybody who's sort of on task should already know. It's like the there's just really not a lot of information
Antonio Cooper: Seems
Johnny Carpenter: that goes
Antonio Cooper: kind
Johnny Carpenter: through.
Antonio Cooper: of like an excessive
Johnny Carpenter: It
Antonio Cooper: reiteration.
Johnny Carpenter: seems like way overkill.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: Like if I missed a meeting I could probably get it summed up in like one sentence.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: I wouldn't need to have to watch like a t two hour video with the sound and the transcript and
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: I guess it would be it's gotta be worth it to I 'cause I'm just mostly curious about like what kind of person or like company would would really find it useful, 'cause can't really imagine, dunno. How about a p a? Um I dunno.
Antonio Cooper: Well does anyone wanna talk about fruit more while we still have time? Any other
David Fox: What
Antonio Cooper: ideas
David Fox: what's
Antonio Cooper: for
David Fox: the end? Are we are we supposed to um you supposed to write a report? Or we ending?
Antonio Cooper: Um
David Fox: Is that the end?
Antonio Cooper: we still have time if there's any other input. I mean the I think we did really well personally, which is why we've you know, gone through this so quickly. 'Cause I mean we've all we all kind of agreed our product is satisfactory, it fits the budget, and it's trendy.
Richard Lynch: Yeah.
Antonio Cooper: So. Um.
David Fox: End of meeting. You have to tell her, she
Antonio Cooper: So I think that's all for today.
David Fox: Okay we have to fill in all this stuff. Stuff stuff
Richard Lynch: M
David Fox: stuff.
Richard Lynch: meeting adjourned.
Antonio Cooper: Meeting adjourned.
David Fox: Yeah.
Johnny Carpenter: I think I've learned not to bring play-dough to meetings.
Antonio Cooper: Yeah.
Richard Lynch: I think it would be a good idea, I like it.
Johnny Carpenter: It's hard enough to get people actually paying attention. Especially if you have food.
Antonio Cooper: So I guess we're supposed to write final reports. 'Cause
Johnny Carpenter: All of us?
Antonio Cooper: I don't know.
David Fox: Well there's al eight,
Antonio Cooper: Hmm.
David Fox: nine. Ooh. Oh ooh.
Antonio Cooper: Hmm. Or is that just David Fox? | Antonio Cooper reviewed the minutes from the last meeting. Richard Lynch and Johnny Carpenter presented the prototype and displayed the changeable fruit- and vegetable-shaped covers. They discussed the locator function that will be designed at a later time. Antonio Cooper discussed the final production cost for the device, which totaled 11.9 Euros. David Fox led an evaluation of the prototype. Each participant rated the prototype according to the original criteria for the project. The group discussed the areas in which the prototype did not meet these goals. The group felt that the changeable fruit and vegetable shapes were uncomfortable to hold. The group decided to make changeable covers in fruit colors and designs and to use one uniform shape. The group discussed their experience on the project. They felt they worked well together and were creative. They complained that the meeting-room materials were difficult to use, and some complained that there was not enough information provided to them. Antonio Cooper instructed all participants to write a final report at the end of the meeting. | 1 | amisum | train |
Robert Guercio: Right w welcome to the the first meeting of uh Real Reaction's uh um development meetings for our our new television remote control. Uh this follows our very successful entry into the the consumer market over the last year or so um which we want to to build on, taking advantage of the uh the the latest developments in in technology and the uh the latest uh uh feelings in in consumer design and and demand and uh we want to make this the the very best product th that's possible for everybody, uh one that everybody wants, uh at a good price for the consumer and at a good price for the company. Uh and to that end we need all to work together uh to do that. Um and uh b in no particular order because ev everybody is uh just
Harold Seman: Mm.
Robert Guercio: as vital to this project um I'll just go round th the table, Andrew, marketing, um m Kendra with the uh um designing the the the User Interface uh uh and Kate with the the industrial design. Um. What's uh the the th th project is is here to do, is is to to get this this project up and moving, ev everybody is is free to uh say wh whatever they want, uh everybody has a contribution to make and uh everybody feel free to interrupt Harold Seman at any time to to say what you want to say. Um in in terms of the immediate meeting the uh um everybody knows everybody else, everybody's worked for the the company for a while, if if an anybody feels that they need to say more about themselves please do, if if if anybody wants to b briefly give their their background so that everybody's quite clear what everybody uh uh everybody's experience is please do so. Uh in fact I'd I'd I'd welcome anybody to uh say something briefly about themselves, in fact we will do that by by going round the table quickly and and saying what what contribution you you're looking to make. So we'll start with Andrew.
Harold Seman: Oh my name's Andrew I'm a I'm Market Research person for this uh for this meeting and uh project for this new remote control and uh yeah I'll be uh presenting information statistics on what people want to want to uh get from this new design, what people want to like and from a fashion point of view and the practicality point of view.
Robert Guercio: Right Kendra.
Daniel Kennedy: I'm Kendra and I'm Us User Interface and um I haven't had a whole lot of experience in this kind of thing before but I'm m so I'll be working on the design.
Robert Guercio: Right at least means you haven't got any preconceived ideas so.
Daniel Kennedy: Right. Yep, I'm just open to being creative.
Robert Guercio: Yep, good.
Michael Futrell: Uh I'm Katie, I'm Michael Futrell I'll just be I guess presenting about the the inter workings of our little remote control and uh yeah.
Robert Guercio: Okay, very very quickly, um this I don't want to make this meeting too structured because the the whole idea is that it's a um you know a think tank. Everybody says what they what they want to say, uh and we don't want to be constrained by uh kind of convention or uh uh slides on screens or or anything else um but um briefly um th th this is what we want to do. The the remote control needs to be original, there has to be something about it that uh other remote controls don't have so that as soon as people see it they think um yes that's different, uh I want one, um and that goes along with being trendy, uh uh you know the I want it uh scenario. User-friendly as as we all know, remote controls can be uh uh very user-unfriendly so we want to make ours one that people can pick up and think oh yes that's it's obvious how that works, uh and they also want to look at the price and think oh yeah that's something that I may not need another remote control but uh it's such a nice one I'm gonna have one. And last but not least, or indeed first of all, it it must make the company money, and we make the company money by producing what the consumer wants. The uh the further work to be done is i the um the functional design, uh what it uh what it must actually do, the uh conceptual design, uh how we actually present that to the consumer and th the the detailed design i is uh how we get that into production. Uh now th the main design tool that we have available to us at the moment is is the white board and uh uh let us very quickly do what i what it says in the in the in the prompt slide here, um In fact I suggest to avoid everybody untangling themselves from the uh the the wires, that we don't do that, um So I I everybody knows what whiteboard is so we'll um uh we'll do a virtual drawing on the on on the whiteboard of of your your own uh uh favourite animal, but le let's go round the table, your favourite animal.
Harold Seman: Um, badger.
Robert Guercio: Mm and why?
Harold Seman: Uh it's it's got nice contrast with
Robert Guercio: Uh-huh.
Harold Seman: black and white and uh and
Robert Guercio: Oh
Harold Seman: they're,
Robert Guercio: right uh my
Harold Seman: the
Robert Guercio: my wife says my beard looks like a badger's arse 'cause of the the white streaks in it. Kendra.
Daniel Kennedy: Um probably a duck I just I li I like the way they look and they're just nice animals and I like how they can fly or swim or walk around
Robert Guercio: Uh-huh.
Daniel Kennedy: or whatever.
Robert Guercio: Right, okay.
Michael Futrell: Uh 's horses, no particular reason why.
Robert Guercio: Uh-huh, fair enough yeah. I'm not sure that I've got any favourite animal to be quite honest, I think homo sapien because of their their uh overall ability to uh uh
Harold Seman: Make mobile phones and T_V_ remotes
Robert Guercio: Sorry?
Harold Seman: to make T_V_ remotes.
Robert Guercio: Indeed absolutely yes, tha that's um Okay and uh w we need to keep in mind here that the uh we want to sell this for for twenty five Euro um, we want to m make an overall profit for the the company of fifty million Euros so we're we're looking at selling a lot of these um ag across the the entire planet and and we're looking at a gross profit of fifty percent. It needs to cost twelve Euros fifty to make Um. so we're not only looking at a a very trendy original product, we're looking at making it at a very good price. Um, okay, um would anybody like t like to to start by giving their o um sort of quick views of of current remote controls.
Daniel Kennedy: Well to use with all the different buttons and uh it's handiest when you have one that works both the D_V_D_ player or whatever and the T_V_ as well. Um, but that it's easy to if you can switch back and forth instead of
Robert Guercio: No.
Daniel Kennedy: having to press a bunch of different buttons and so I think it's is best when they're clearly labelled and you can see which buttons you're supposed to use, you know.
Robert Guercio: Any any thoughts about buttons or any oth other way of approaching the p the uh the problem? Or anybody else, strong feelings about remote controls? Are there you know, bad ones they've used or good ones they've used or ones
Michael Futrell: Um
Robert Guercio: that they've lost and never found again?
Michael Futrell: I think it's important that you should be able to when you when you press the buttons it'll actually pick up the signals from kind of anywhere and you shouldn't have to like contort yourself
Harold Seman: Yeah.
Michael Futrell: the signal.
Daniel Kennedy: Yeah.
Harold Seman: Think a lot of the time, remotes that come with T_V_ players and T_V_s and D_V_
Michael Futrell: Mm.
Harold Seman: players, like they aren't like an area that's put a lot of effort into, they're very boring, very plain. Like it's
Michael Futrell: Mm.
Harold Seman: very a very like um making a a stylish remote control would be a very like Easily put us one step ahead of the current competition.
Robert Guercio: Um what so wh what's in in what particular style features are you thinking about?
Harold Seman: Um. Something that looks looks doesn't look like remote control. So if you want, something that looks like uh something that makes you think oh what's this? Like this pen doesn't really look like a pen, but it makes
Robert Guercio: Uh-huh.
Harold Seman: you think oh. So, sorry that's a bit vague.
Robert Guercio: Yeah d no I mean do you think there's a risk if it doesn't look like remote control, people won't see it as a remote control um and uh
Harold Seman: Uh I suppose suppose that's up to the marketing to to make make people aware of the product.
Robert Guercio: Uh-huh. Any other thoughts about um th the physical appearance of a of remote controls?
Daniel Kennedy: I think something that's comfortable to hold because sometimes you get the remote controls that are just those
Michael Futrell: Mm.
Daniel Kennedy: big, rectangular
Harold Seman: Mm.
Daniel Kennedy: things and uh they're kind of awkward to hold onto, so something that's more comfortable that fits in a person's hand better.
Robert Guercio: I mean th the thing that i immediately comes to mind is computer mouses which
Michael Futrell: Mm.
Robert Guercio: um
Daniel Kennedy: Yeah.
Harold Seman: Yeah.
Robert Guercio: I mean y you get all sorts of shapes
Michael Futrell: Mm.
Robert Guercio: in the shops and s you know some quite fancy ones
Daniel Kennedy: Yeah.
Robert Guercio: um than the some from personal experience which look nice but aren't particularly comfortable.
Daniel Kennedy: Yeah.
Robert Guercio: Um any thoughts about buttons or flat screens or uh uh
Harold Seman: Well from the mouse idea you could, remote is a piece of plastic with the big rubber buttons sticking out of it which you press, whereas if you want could all be flat and the buttons are very kind of almost subtle that instead of being raised out of the device uh you push into device you see, like a mouse button.
Robert Guercio: Yes, I mean the only thing is if if you're watching television in a in a a darkened room
Michael Futrell: Mm.
Harold Seman: I suppose.
Robert Guercio: um you need to be able to uh fi
Harold Seman: Easily, yeah
Robert Guercio: find
Harold Seman: yeah.
Robert Guercio: the button buttons easily.
Daniel Kennedy: But maybe they could be concave instead of sticking up to have them be kind of down so you could feel them
Harold Seman: Mm.
Michael Futrell: Mm.
Daniel Kennedy: better.
Robert Guercio: Yeah, that's uh must admit I don't think I've ever seen one with concave buttons, that's uh certainly be different. Um do we need it to uh I can't think of any re remote controls that I know of that actually light up at all. Do we
Daniel Kennedy: Oh yeah.
Michael Futrell: Mm that
Robert Guercio: do
Michael Futrell: would
Robert Guercio: we
Michael Futrell: be
Robert Guercio: want
Michael Futrell: good.
Robert Guercio: uh
Daniel Kennedy: Like a like a mobile phone?
Robert Guercio: Yeah.
Michael Futrell: Mm.
Daniel Kennedy: Yeah.
Harold Seman: Mm,
Michael Futrell: Mm.
Harold Seman: yeah that would be good.
Robert Guercio: Okay. So, Andrew have you had any thoughts yet about how we might market something which there are already millions out there and that we want to uh uh uh t take over the entire um the planet with?
Harold Seman: Mm-hmm, um especially if we try to sell, what two million of them. Oh sorry, four million of 'em, but uh I think if w if we market it as as not as not well this you c you could either market it as the point of view we could have the two we could have parallel marketing s schemes where you've got one where it appeals to people that want to have the new device that looks cool,
Michael Futrell: Mm.
Harold Seman: is fashionable and like you just it's it's like uh it's one that rather than ra I wan I want rather than a kind of a need relationship
Robert Guercio: Mm-hmm.
Harold Seman: with the device, but that might considering the act what the device is for and the nature of some people might not like respond to having a device that they just looks nice, therefore they want it so make it practical at the same time. I think it's this is gonna have to appeal to people that want device that can enhance their living room uh
Robert Guercio: Mm-hmm.
Harold Seman: but also a device that uh is practically sound.
Robert Guercio: Mm-hmm.
Harold Seman: So um, I dunno we'll have to decide which which angle we're gonna go to or both.
Robert Guercio: Okay,
Harold Seman: If you.
Robert Guercio: yeah, yeah, well I d I think an any uh any facets that we identify w we aim need to aim for for all of.
Harold Seman: Mm.
Robert Guercio: Um okay well first thoughts on um the the industrial design side.
Michael Futrell: Oh I think it's it's remote controls are kind of a unique object 'cause it's you depend on them so much, but you don't i i it's you sort of just assume they're always gonna work, you don't think of them as a comp like a computer can break down and you're kinda like oh well fair enough there's all these complex things going on, it's gonna something's gonna get messed up eventually. They they just need to be very very dependable because people sort of take them for granted and then if your remote control breaks it's God forbid you actually get up and manually change the channel
Robert Guercio: Indeed.
Michael Futrell: it just it needs to be very effective, very always dependable. Uh I don't think we should make it too small I 'cause I think it needs to it can't be too big like you were saying big an and huge and um awkward, but also if you make it too small kinda like you know how mobile phones are getting smaller and smaller um, it's just gonna end up under a couch cushion somewhere
Robert Guercio: Yeah.
Michael Futrell: and um yeah. But so yes dependable, and have a good medium range size.
Robert Guercio: Okay, and um colours, materials? Kendra, anyone?
Daniel Kennedy: Well, most I think most of the remote controls now are either just black or grey, so maybe we should go with something different or be able to I was just thinking of um what they're doing with mobile phones now how you can get the different um what are they called? Like the face-plates
Robert Guercio: Yeah.
Michael Futrell: Mm,
Daniel Kennedy: that you change
Michael Futrell: mm-hmm.
Daniel Kennedy: so we could have maybe I don't know if it would be feasible to do something with that, where you can change the face-plates or have kind of a
Robert Guercio: Uh-huh.
Daniel Kennedy: variety so people can get different different things. Have it kind of look how they want to, different colours, things like that,
Robert Guercio: Right.
Daniel Kennedy: probably just plastic because that's always the lightest.
Robert Guercio: Yeah. Okay that's uh Again I don't think that's ever been done before, it's uh
Michael Futrell: Mm-hmm.
Robert Guercio: the sort of the sort of thing that would get people uh thinking yes that's something that I haven't got and uh might need so. Uh Andrew, any thoughts about uh how we might market interchangeable fronts on on the remote control?
Harold Seman: Um, well we could either market it together by getting control in a set colour or with like you buy it with several uh like you ge you get the f uh the face-plates with it when you buy or as a separate thing, but uh maybe thinking of that, it's considering the nature of the device, maybe a second thing like a second campaign to market
Michael Futrell: Mm.
Harold Seman: new facials for your to your might go a bit astray since
Robert Guercio: Yeah.
Harold Seman: it is the kind of thing where y you generally get one and then forget about it. Unless
Robert Guercio: Yeah.
Harold Seman: you were trying to
Michael Futrell: Well you could come
Robert Guercio: I
Michael Futrell: up
Robert Guercio: think
Michael Futrell: with like novelty ones, like they've done with the the mobile phones, you can get like different you know scenes from different movies and stuff
Harold Seman: Mm.
Michael Futrell: on
Daniel Kennedy: Yeah.
Michael Futrell: the remote control
Harold Seman: Oh it's
Michael Futrell: and
Harold Seman: that's
Michael Futrell: sorta
Harold Seman: a that's a good idea.
Michael Futrell: stagger the release of them and get people like oh I want that cover on it now and
Daniel Kennedy: Yeah.
Michael Futrell: that'll keep them
Robert Guercio: Mm-mm.
Harold Seman: Mm.
Michael Futrell: spending money.
Robert Guercio: Right,
Harold Seman: Yeah true.
Robert Guercio: okay I think we've got um a good idea now. We uh meeting is uh Needs to be k uh wrapped up fairly quickly. So uh um we've got thirty minutes to start looking at the um at the design in more detail. Um then we'll we will reconvene in in thirty minutes and try to get some of these ideas uh uh more formalised. Uh thank you very much indeed.
Daniel Kennedy: Okay.
Michael Futrell: Thank you. | Robert Guercio opens the meeting by welcoming everybody and saying they will be developing a new television remote control. Then each group member states his/her name and role in the group. Robert Guercio states that the remote needs to be original, trendy, and user-friendly. The further work will be on the functional, conceptual, and detailed design. Since they all know what a whiteboard is, they do a virtual drawing by each stating their favorite animal. Robert Guercio tells them the project budget. They proceed to discuss problems with current remotes as well as preferable styles and looks, such as using face-plates so the look is changable. Robert Guercio closes the meeting. | 1 | amisum | train |
Joel Blum: Okay, welcome to the second meeting of this group. Um I'll briefly go through the uh notes of the of the last meeting uh just done in in note form and I haven't attributed anything to individuals, because we're working strictly as a team here and uh n nobody's working
Donald Collins: Sorry.
Joel Blum: equally, so uh. Um we we s we saw that the the problems with existing remote controls were the uh b a boring shape and boring colour. Um and and we we saw that the what we needed to to to make sure the device um controls several items, that switching was easy, that you shouldn't need to point the thing at uh anything in particular, um that it need to be contoured to make it interesting, that the keys might be concave, simply because that hasn't been done before that we know of. Um should have interchangeable fascias so people can personalise it, um illuminated so that people can see it in dark rooms. Um and that people might want it as as in addition to their existing remote controls. Um and that it sh it should just always work, whenever you uh um mm uh use it. And that it shouldn't be too small, mm that it it gets lost. Um.
Joel Blum: Now uh uh I'll shortly ask for for three three presentations. Uh before I do that, however, I will go through some new project requirements that um the the management have placed on us and uh will be challenging in terms of what we discussed at the first meeting. Um the uh the ma the management has had it's own thoughts on this and uh the they don't necessarily agree with with what we uh we thought. Um and and then we'll as a result of that we will then talk through the the functions that we see the the device um actually b carrying out, and we have uh forty minutes to do this in and I uh
Joel Blum: Anyway. Okay. Now, the n the new requirements are um the the management team see that um teletext is no longer of any importance given the uh the rise of the internet. Um and and they want it only to cover televisions. Um now, what is not q quite clear from their directive is whether they mean th they don't want it to cover teletext or whether they don't want it to cover, you know, videos, D_V_D_s, um satellite boxes, which uh I mean we saw as being fundamental to the uh to the exercise. The um the actual wording of the directive is that it should cover television only. Um and on that basis um I I think we we need to bear that in mind, um but possibly uh keep at the backs of our minds that the reality that people even when they uh no longer they don't look at teletext anymore, they certainly do look at other things. Um the device has to incorporate the company logo and colours. Um the the logo uh being at b the bottom of the screen there, the the the two R_s in grey against uh a yellow background. Um now this doesn't necessarily mean that we have to give up some of our ideas about making it attractive to the t to the market. But uh do do introduce some some constraints as to how we might do that. Um it also has to be simple, which to some extent goes along w with the first one, and that we've already said that it must be simple 'cause that's what people want anyway. Um but they also want it to be simple to get it to the market quickly, which um mm uh is is is their choice, but uh um we we need to talk that through. Um okay, so uh after the meeting it'll be summarised and uh um notes sent out and uh etcetera. Okay, so we'll first of all mm have individual reports from everybody. Um again I there is no order of precedence here um so I I I'll leave it up to you to who who who thinks they would like to go go first?
Noel Atkinson: Uh I don't mind.
Joel Blum: P fine.
Noel Atkinson: Uh can I the cable?
Joel Blum: Oh sorry, you can indeed.
Noel Atkinson: Cheers.
Noel Atkinson: I got a how do I start there?
Joel Blum: Oh, if you click on the um uh the one that that looks like a projection screen, no the one to the right of that.
Noel Atkinson: That one.
Joel Blum: That one.
Noel Atkinson: Cool. Well these are functionality requirements from the our our guys down in the the research lab. Took hundred people and covered all the aspects of what um is needed by people and what they want to see. Um everything kinda and how individual functions are how how how often they're used how much their and stuff. And general opinions about current current remotes. See that, as we kinda noticed, seventy five percent of people find their remote controls ugly. So some kind of a new style should be incorporated that's less ugly. Uh along with um looking less ugly, if it looks better, eighty percent of people said they'd spend more money on it. Which is a a plus for us, if we can make it look better, it'd be uh more cost effective and we can put the price up. Current remote controls do not match the operating behaviour of the user. I can empl I kinda take that to mean as um they they don't uh they, yeah, they only use they only work for the television or yeah like as in in my flat I've got six remote controls for a stereo system, a digital box, a D_V_D_ player, a video player and T_V_. If it was uh I mean th my behaviour is to use multiple things at the same time and multiple remotes aren't really matched well to my behaviour. Uh again, seventy five percent is seventy five percent of users say they zap a lot. I took to mean that they just they use it a lot, they use it regularly rather than standing up and manually change channels or volume. And uh yeah, uh I think the big issue is fifty percent users only use ten percent of the buttons, 'cause uh wh if we got a remote that like well we'll have some buttons taken off by the lack of teletext, but uh oh and we're going to see uh on the uh that some of the functions like audio settings aren't h hardly ever used and used very aren't considered relevant by the user. So I think maybe fewer buttons, which also make the design look sleeker, I dunno. Uh um yeah and uh frustrations of like people losing remote control. I dunno
Joel Blum: Mm.
Noel Atkinson: maybe some kind of system of you press a button on the T_V_ or maybe that's b it would have to incorporate, but like some kind of system where you can f use something else to find the remote control. Maybe like it'll beep or something. And um, yep, the uh time taken to learn new remote controls is Uh don't want to make it too complicated, easy to use for uh new like first time users and stuff. And uh repetitive strain injury, I suppose we should make it more comfortable and make ma possibly even use have to make it, yeah, fewer buttons, like I was saying about the whole mice the mouse idea of it feels more comfortable. Maybe don't even
Joel Blum: Mm.
Noel Atkinson: have to hold it as such.
Joel Blum: Gosh, must be some telly addicts out there if they get R_S_I_ from their television remote, is all I can say.
Noel Atkinson: But uh yeah. It also asked um if we would if people would pay more for speech recognition and younger people say they would. And uh there was another section on our on the report for uh L_C_D_ displays, but the data wasn't there, so. I
Joel Blum: Mm. Right.
Noel Atkinson: don't actually know what the results for that were,
Joel Blum: Mm.
Noel Atkinson: so. May be incrementally emitting, but yeah.
Joel Blum: Yeah, I must say that um the uh I c can't remember what um f you know phone service I was using the other day, but that had sorta speech recognition which worked uh remarkably well, so that is indeed a uh um
Noel Atkinson: And
Joel Blum: a thought
Noel Atkinson: uh
Joel Blum: and it it cuts out uh
Noel Atkinson: it would cut out the R_S_I_
Joel Blum: I was was
Noel Atkinson: as
Joel Blum: gonna
Noel Atkinson: well
Joel Blum: say, you
Noel Atkinson: if
Joel Blum: can't
Noel Atkinson: you
Joel Blum: get a lot of R_S_I_, j just get jaw ache. Okay, sorry.
Noel Atkinson: Yeah, um oh yeah, so possibly the speech recognition is possibly something could add into the design. Oh, I've got some other things I couldn't fit onto this presentation. Um. You see this okay? Almost no? It's sorry it's a bit. I'll read out to you. Uh functionality, uh like people's opinions on functionality, the relevance to the remote and how often they're used. So um like the power. Using the using the d swi the power switch to switch on T_V_ is a high relevance of nine, but it's not frequently used. You see what I mean? Whereas
Joel Blum: Yeah.
Noel Atkinson: channel selection, which is very high relevance
Joel Blum: Mm-hmm.
Noel Atkinson: is used the most. So m we can maybe even start to cut down on or I was possibly even thinking of a design that maybe some of the buttons are hidden from everyday use. Maybe like uh a folding ledge or something. So that we can maybe
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Noel Atkinson: go into the channel settings and the audio settings, which are low relevance and rarely used. And keep the v volume selection and channel selection very easily
Joel Blum: Mm-hmm.
Donald Collins: It could
Joel Blum: I mean
Donald Collins: be oh uh was gonna say uh like the phones that they use? Have you seen
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Donald Collins: the new mo mobile phones that
Joel Blum: Yeah.
Donald Collins: flip out and they have the
Noel Atkinson: Oh yeah.
Donald Collins: like texting, and then the numbers on one side, so you could have
Joel Blum: Mm.
Donald Collins: the most used buttons on top and
Joel Blum: Hmm,
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: hmm.
Donald Collins: flip
Noel Atkinson: Yeah,
Donald Collins: it out
Noel Atkinson: like the one
Donald Collins: or
Noel Atkinson: that
Donald Collins: something.
Noel Atkinson: like slides back
Joel Blum: Uh.
Noel Atkinson: and the buttons are concealed
Donald Collins: Yeah.
Joel Blum: Should
Noel Atkinson: underneath.
Joel Blum: we
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: actually bite the bullet here? If people really don't use those buttons to any extent at all um
Noel Atkinson: Just remove them completely?
Joel Blum: remove them altogether.
Donald Collins: That might be the
Joel Blum: I wonder whether we could get the remote control with no buttons at all if we went for voice recognition, given that um the Um now the the age structure we were looking at um I mean w we had usage by age structure, what we didn't have was what proportion of people using remotes were in those particular age groups. Now
Noel Atkinson: Uh yeah.
Joel Blum: do we know whether they Forty no sorry for forty five to fifty five age group, uh to put myself right in the middle of it, um u use remote controls to a great extent. Yes we
Noel Atkinson: Um no this is for
Joel Blum: That would 've
Noel Atkinson: pay
Joel Blum: speech
Noel Atkinson: more for
Joel Blum: recogn
Noel Atkinson: speech recognition.
Joel Blum: right. So, we're looking at um well again, we don't know the relative proportion the relative numbers in the age groups.
Noel Atkinson: Yeah, that's true.
Joel Blum: If we wanted something different, truly different, then the buttonless
Herbert Goh: P
Joel Blum: remote control
Herbert Goh: Well the only
Joel Blum: w would
Herbert Goh: problem
Joel Blum: be it.
Herbert Goh: I can think of with that is if you've got a lot of people that don't wanna be bothered learning how to use new rem remote controls. If you just kind of take away everything that they're used to knowing, that's gonna be quite a change.
Joel Blum: But if you just
Herbert Goh: It
Joel Blum: lift
Herbert Goh: might
Joel Blum: it up and say, channel one or
Noel Atkinson: Or even
Joel Blum: B_B_C_
Noel Atkinson: I mean you could even just have it left on. You
Donald Collins: Maybe
Noel Atkinson: could just
Donald Collins: i
Noel Atkinson: put it down once on top your T_V_ and never have to
Donald Collins: Yeah, have a big kind of like the satellite box or the cable box and then it doesn't matter where in the room you are, you won't
Noel Atkinson: Yeah.
Donald Collins: lose
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Donald Collins: it.
Joel Blum: It c well it I can I can see technical problems
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: with that in terms
Donald Collins: No.
Joel Blum: of the, you know, the sound from the television, because if somebody actually on the television says
Herbert Goh: Yeah.
Joel Blum: uh
Noel Atkinson: B_B_C_
Donald Collins: Oh.
Noel Atkinson: one.
Joel Blum: uh, you know, I_T_V_ and you're watching B_B_C_ then
Herbert Goh: Yeah.
Joel Blum: then it might um change itself, so it probably needs to be um
Donald Collins: Yeah, that's true.
Joel Blum: possibly actually need a button on it just
Noel Atkinson: yeah.
Joel Blum: to activate it. Or or something just to identify that you've lifted it up and it's use. And and then
Donald Collins: Yeah.
Joel Blum: just say, oh I don't know, a thought and and then uh I mean that that would certainly be uh truly different. Um 'cause uh you know audio settings, nought point eight percent. I mean if they weren't there,
Noel Atkinson: Mm-mm.
Joel Blum: would people miss them?
Herbert Goh: But look at the importance of them. The volume settings.
Noel Atkinson: Relevance of two out of ten, yeah.
Joel Blum: Vol volume,
Herbert Goh: Yeah.
Joel Blum: yes um
Herbert Goh: They're not used often
Joel Blum: th
Herbert Goh: but they quite important when they're
Joel Blum: w
Herbert Goh: used.
Joel Blum: we need to s identify
Herbert Goh: Yeah.
Joel Blum: things that people actually need and and it's a function of frequency and relevance. And um I would say ignoring ig ignoring power for the moment, um the channel and volume
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: and th w w given given that we've been told to ignore teletext.
Noel Atkinson: Yeah.
Joel Blum: Uh channel and volume are the only ones that
Noel Atkinson: Stand
Joel Blum: uh
Noel Atkinson: out.
Joel Blum: would appear to be essential. Um. So we if we can design something that that looks interesting, know, or looks different, um incorporates the the logo and and the colours and um we can still have our interchangeable fascias even if it's the yellow and grey, um and uh I dunno, buttons or or buttons as an option.
Noel Atkinson: Uh I just had a thought actually, sorry to interrupt.
Joel Blum: Do,
Noel Atkinson: Uh
Joel Blum: please.
Noel Atkinson: you were saying about um it could technical problems of like uh someone on the television saying a channel
Joel Blum: Mm-hmm.
Noel Atkinson: number and it changed we could maybe have like an activation word. 'Cause I've seen
Joel Blum: You
Noel Atkinson: I've
Joel Blum: cer
Noel Atkinson: seen this used
Joel Blum: certainly
Noel Atkinson: on computers
Joel Blum: could.
Noel Atkinson: before, where you just you address the
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Noel Atkinson: remote, you address the computer, and then
Joel Blum: Depe
Noel Atkinson: give it
Joel Blum: uh
Noel Atkinson: a command.
Joel Blum: i depends whether um if we want to make this so simple that anybody can walk into the room and lift it up and say
Noel Atkinson: Oh I see. Oh yeah, I see.
Joel Blum: B_B_C_ one. Um okay, I mean you could print actually print it on the uh
Noel Atkinson: Mm-hmm,
Joel Blum: device
Noel Atkinson: yeah.
Joel Blum: itself. Um.
Noel Atkinson: I mean I'm just thinking of the point of view of peop you could still like lose this remote.
Joel Blum: S th this I th that's always gonna be a problem
Noel Atkinson: Mm.
Joel Blum: I think. Um and I I I s so I suppose one um could make it so desirable that if people lose it they immediately go out and buy another one. Anyway, sorry, carry on. Do you want to just carry on with
Noel Atkinson: Oh no I I interrupted
Joel Blum: or no
Noel Atkinson: you, sorry.
Joel Blum: no, no uh b I was in the middle of
Noel Atkinson: Oh okay.
Joel Blum: in the middle of your report there.
Noel Atkinson: Um well, I was just kinda wrapping up there. Yeah, I was thinking
Joel Blum: Mm okay.
Noel Atkinson: um, yeah, maybe such things are relevant. We could make things much more f I think the the eighty percent of people would spend more on uh a remote uh that looks better, combined with uh decrease the or take out the limited functio functions that we don't really use much. alright take out teletext, but as for channel settings and stuff it might it might um turn people somewhe peop some people that want the whole functionality away. But, since if we're marketing a more kind of fashionable approach
Joel Blum: Mm-hmm.
Noel Atkinson: then it'd it would be fashion and fashion over practicality.
Joel Blum: S s we could we could make it dual function voice recognition and still
Noel Atkinson: Oh, we
Joel Blum: have
Noel Atkinson: could, yeah.
Joel Blum: buttons on it
Noel Atkinson: We c
Joel Blum: um
Noel Atkinson: yeah, we could even
Joel Blum: 'cause we're
Noel Atkinson: have it as like a yeah the buttons control this and the voice functions control the f things that you would do all the time, so.
Joel Blum: Certainly could.
Noel Atkinson: So uh
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: Yeah,
Noel Atkinson: yeah, if we could
Joel Blum: yeah.
Noel Atkinson: uh power on and channel selection and and volume selection, wouldn't have to really
Joel Blum: The I mean the the advantage of doing away the buttons altogether is it makes the thing cheaper.
Noel Atkinson: Yeah and probably it would look better as well.
Joel Blum: No, it cou certainly opens up the possibility for making it uh, you know, visually very distinctive.
Noel Atkinson: Yeah.
Joel Blum: Um
Noel Atkinson: yeah.
Joel Blum: 'cause you know, it does not have to be a oblong box.
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Noel Atkinson: Lined with numbered buttons
Joel Blum: Mm, yeah.
Noel Atkinson: and
Joel Blum: Okay, who sorry, have you have you finished
Noel Atkinson: Uh yeah,
Joel Blum: there Andy?
Noel Atkinson: yeah,
Joel Blum: Yep,
Noel Atkinson: that's
Joel Blum: yep.
Noel Atkinson: everything.
Joel Blum: Um given that we've already had a extensive discussion uh.
Donald Collins: Okay well, I can
Herbert Goh: Hmm.
Donald Collins: do mine.
Noel Atkinson: Do you want the cable?
Donald Collins: Yeah, let's see if I can make this work. Um.
Herbert Goh: Oh, you have to hit like function and F_ something.
Donald Collins: Oh.
Noel Atkinson: F_ eight.
Herbert Goh: F_ eight.
Donald Collins: Is it doing
Herbert Goh: Dunno.
Noel Atkinson: Uh, give it about twenty seconds, or so.
Donald Collins: Okay.
Joel Blum: Ah,
Herbert Goh: Oh yeah,
Donald Collins: Oh
Joel Blum: there
Donald Collins: okay.
Joel Blum: we
Herbert Goh: it's going.
Joel Blum: go.
Donald Collins: Okay, so this is just about the technical functions.
Joel Blum: Alright.
Donald Collins: So the method, I looked online for examples of other similar products and then just kind of was trying to brainstorm some possible design ideas and um identify what the necessary things are, what people are what you really wanna have a remote control do. Um and then there are two different kinds that I found. There's a user centred one and an engineering centred one which I will have pictures of and
Joel Blum: Mm-hmm.
Donald Collins: then we kinda have to decide which one this should be. So these are the two different ones. This one um this is the user centred, it has uh quite a few mm uh um fewer buttons and then this is the engineering centred, which has a lot more buttons,
Joel Blum: Mm-hmm.
Donald Collins: and probably this is one that people complain about, about having too many buttons that you don't use. So basically, what a remote control is is you it's to send messages to the television set, you know, turn on, off, switch the channels and the volume and things such as that. And so for this product it's gonna be television only, and then it has to have the uh logos for the company and the colours. And so, for my personal preferences, I think this one is easier to use and has quite a you know, fewer buttons. Um we want something that sends messages easily to the television and I was kind of wondering about this example that they have. It looks kind of narrow at the top, and I was thinking maybe if it were wider
Joel Blum: Mm,
Donald Collins: at the top,
Joel Blum: yeah.
Donald Collins: then that would be easier. Um and so we have to decide what's gonna make our product different. E the unique style, maybe have it light up so it's visible in the dark, um the changeable face-plates, and the lighting up and visible I was when we were talking about havi losing it, maybe to have a button on the television that you press and it maybe if it makes a noise or lights up or something like that, so it's easier to find if someone has hidden under the couch or something like that. So that's my presentation. Yeah.
Joel Blum: Okay, can I um I'm actually gonna use the um it's gonna cause great technical problems over here. I'm actually gonna use the
Donald Collins: F they probably clip
Herbert Goh: Oh yeah, they might be
Noel Atkinson: Yeah.
Herbert Goh: movable.
Donald Collins: to
Herbert Goh: Oh
Donald Collins: you.
Herbert Goh: yeah, they're all they're not connected to anything on the table, you just leave 'em on and walk around with 'em.
Joel Blum: Yes, rather than the uh the the traditional in fact, um I won't even go that far. Um something like this shape, you know, sort of something that you can that's sort of a more vertical shape, um that you you sort of hold in your hand, um, well I'm trying to think uh uh uh l uh l such as I mean um something you hold up like that, possibly with a couple of buttons like that, but with the
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: the entire top with the, you know, the uh the infrared or whatever source. Uh so that you know, it's flying
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: off in all directions, so that uh um uh again the n need to look at the the the technicalities of um actually achieving that in terms of whether the, you know, the power requirements of the uh such a source, um you know, compromise the our our need for uh you know, it it being um mm permanently uh you know, available. Uh whether whether different technology um I mean th all all these remotes are presumably infrared, and like they have been for a long time. Uh we we possibly need to be looking at at at something different, um you know, short range, not like the old uh radio remote controls where you'd change next door's telly when you change yours. Um but uh uh I think basically i if we're going for i if minimum number of buttons is our priority, then we should, as I say, r know, really bite the bullets and and reduce the buttons to absolute minimum, you know, possibly with backup channel and volume buttons and on off. Um and nothing else. Um so that it can al it could uh almost end up like that, but again, except that um you know the risk of losing it. Um anyway okay um so Kate,
Herbert Goh: Yes,
Joel Blum: wh what
Herbert Goh: mm.
Joel Blum: are your uh your
Donald Collins: Oh.
Joel Blum: thoughts on this?
Herbert Goh: Which one does this plug into?
Donald Collins: Hmm I think it's all there.
Herbert Goh: That one.
Donald Collins: H
Herbert Goh: I can't did you could you see it on you screen when it
Donald Collins: Oh yeah. That's kind of strange.
Herbert Goh: That's not cool. Oh well. Anyways. Um alright, yeah, so um I'll just do my presentation on the working design uh. Oh there we go. Okay um just at the m yeah the whole sort of method of how the remote control works. Uh the basic function of the remote control is to send messages to another sh system, the the T_V_ or the D_V_D_ player or whatever. Um and it does this uh by well, you need to start off you need an energy source and this energy source will feed into an integrated circuit chip and the circuit chip is the part that actually composes the different messages uh within the remote um which will then be sent to the uh the television, the D_V_D_ to tell that what to do. Um and you need a user interface, which controls the chip and thus the messages and uh the user interface is that's basically just you kn the s sorta design of the actual remote which you hold in your hands and what buttons will be on it. Um Oh shoot. Okay. Uh just general findings. Uh what we need uh technically speaking for the remote control is some sort of energy source, uh some sort of user interface, which I think we've mostly been talking about the user interface and the design of that. Um a circuit chip within that to uh control and send the messages and um a sender and receiver. And um oops. Uh-huh. This is just sort of a little schematic diagram of what we're looking for. Uh this
Noel Atkinson: Hmm.
Herbert Goh: just kinda represents the energy source which feeds into the circuit chip uh which maybe then we could have that feed into a switch which would send signals f to um a subcomponent and on to a light bulb between so it'll light up once we start once you start pressing buttons. Um also send signals to the um infrared bulb, which will be the part that actually what? Sends signals to the the television. And then you've got your happy little T_V_ watcher there. And so my personal preferences I I just think we need sorta big uh energy source that won't die out, uh perhaps some sort of rechargeable battery or a battery dock you could place it in, so it'd constantly be charged, so you wouldn't have to uh be worrying about it running out of batteries and not changing channels for you. Uh a wide range uh sender-receiver, so that you can hit the buttons from basically anywhere in the room, and the channel'll still be changed. Uh also definitely a user-friendly interface um and I think we've all sort of mentioned adding a a locating device on it, so when it does get stuck under the couch cushions, as they inevitably do, you can find them easily. And that's pretty much it.
Joel Blum: Okay. Uh it seems seems to Noel Atkinson there are a number of fundamental decisions to make
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: before we um I think your point about the the big energy source is uh
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: a very valid one. Um I don't suppose we've got any statistics on the the life expectancy of uh remote controls, particularly sort of independent ones. Um given you know, the number of things you buy these days, which you know, have a a a lithium whatever battery in, that's uh, you know never needs replacing. Um perhaps we should have the the disposable remote control, uh um you know, one some sort of typical usage. You know, the the the battery will last know, five, ten years. By which time I mean when all's said and done, the digital television will be taking over
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: in that time scale.
Noel Atkinson: Mm-hmm.
Joel Blum: Um uh uh p perhaps we should, know, reduce the uh, you know, the sort of moving parts even more by not even having a battery compartment and uh
Herbert Goh: Just having one that's guaranteed to last five to ten years?
Joel Blum: Yeah, and
Herbert Goh: Oh,
Joel Blum: if if anybody
Herbert Goh: cool.
Joel Blum: manages to run it down, we'll we'll give 'em a new one.
Herbert Goh: Yeah, fair enough.
Joel Blum: Um it's, you know, it's what it saves in cost and you know there there's a well, it's actually a marketing gimmick. I mean it's hardly a gimmick, it's uh it's totally practical. Uh so I th think you know the idea of a rechargeable one is um uh unless you're really high tech and it sort of just recharges itself if it's n by, you know, magnetic waves or whatever, if
Noel Atkinson: It could
Joel Blum: if
Noel Atkinson: have
Joel Blum: it
Noel Atkinson: like uh know like a cordless phone in your house it s got like a base that
Joel Blum: Yeah.
Noel Atkinson: sits
Herbert Goh: Mm,
Noel Atkinson: there all
Herbert Goh: mm.
Noel Atkinson: the time.
Joel Blum: Are are people really gonna use it though?
Noel Atkinson: I
Donald Collins: Yeah, people
Joel Blum: Um.
Noel Atkinson: suppose,
Donald Collins: are pro
Herbert Goh: Mm
Noel Atkinson: yeah.
Donald Collins: I
Herbert Goh: yeah.
Donald Collins: would think that people might forget I mean
Joel Blum: I
Donald Collins: people
Joel Blum: I th
Donald Collins: forget
Joel Blum: I think
Donald Collins: to put their cordless phones back on there,
Herbert Goh: Mm-mm.
Donald Collins: so.
Joel Blum: Yeah, it's
Noel Atkinson: Yeah.
Joel Blum: um I mean I know that somei times my my wife goes out in the morning and says oh I should have put the phone on
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: to charge and then then she's had those for so long that if she hasn't worked that out by now. Um.
Herbert Goh: 'Cause I only remember to charge my cell phone uh when battery dies. And that's pretty
Donald Collins: Yeah.
Herbert Goh: much
Joel Blum: When it yeah, wh
Herbert Goh: yeah.
Joel Blum: when it's died is a problem.
Herbert Goh: Yeah, when it turns itself
Joel Blum: Yeah,
Herbert Goh: off, that's
Joel Blum: yeah,
Herbert Goh: when I plug it in,
Joel Blum: yeah,
Herbert Goh: yeah.
Joel Blum: so uh um what so wh what what do we think about the um the the permanent mm battery?
Herbert Goh: Yeah, think that's
Noel Atkinson: Uh. That
Herbert Goh: a good
Donald Collins: No.
Herbert Goh: idea.
Noel Atkinson: sounds pretty good, yeah.
Joel Blum: Is the uh you know, we we
Donald Collins: Um.
Joel Blum: we are really going for the ultimate in ex uh external simplicity
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: here. Um you know, cut cost within the manufacturing and uh you know, if we have a high tech interior, then then that that sh may well be cost effective.
Donald Collins: Do they make batteries that last that long?
Joel Blum: I mean th th certainly. Um I can't think of anything off the s top of my head, but there are certainly things that you buy. I mean calculators for example.
Herbert Goh: They usually have the little light uh source, I dunno
Donald Collins: Yeah, they
Herbert Goh: what
Donald Collins: have
Herbert Goh: the
Donald Collins: that
Herbert Goh: heck
Donald Collins: little
Herbert Goh: they're called,
Donald Collins: solar
Herbert Goh: the but yeah, the little cells that
Joel Blum: Som well some do, I mean th th but
Herbert Goh: Yeah.
Joel Blum: there are battery ones that um
Noel Atkinson: Mm-hmm.
Joel Blum: are
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: you know, sort of permanently sealed.
Donald Collins: Yeah.
Joel Blum: In in fact I'd
Herbert Goh: Most of them, don't they have sort of a combination of the two, like when there is light, they'll work off the light, and if
Joel Blum: Yeah,
Herbert Goh: there isn't, they'll
Joel Blum: uh uh
Herbert Goh: kick into this battery, so we can maybe do something like that whereas there is a battery, but if there's enough light, then it's using the light, so that it's not actually draining the battery all the time,
Donald Collins: Mm.
Herbert Goh: but you will have the battery there for
Joel Blum: Yeah,
Herbert Goh: when
Joel Blum: I
Herbert Goh: you need
Joel Blum: I mean
Herbert Goh: it.
Joel Blum: th th this needs going t into the technology
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: a bit. I mean the the actual time that a remote control is actually operating
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: I would think is i is is probably, you know, no more than minutes in its entire life.
Herbert Goh: Oh,
Joel Blum: Um.
Donald Collins: Yeah, some people are
Joel Blum: If, but I say
Herbert Goh: clicking,
Joel Blum: if if people are getting
Herbert Goh: yeah.
Joel Blum: R_S_I_ from it then
Herbert Goh: Yeah,
Joel Blum: uh then
Donald Collins: Yeah.
Herbert Goh: then they're
Joel Blum: uh
Herbert Goh: clicking
Joel Blum: then
Herbert Goh: a lot,
Joel Blum: then
Herbert Goh: yeah.
Donald Collins: Yeah.
Joel Blum: perhaps we're looking
Noel Atkinson: W
Joel Blum: at the wrong market
Noel Atkinson: like
Joel Blum: n
Noel Atkinson: like this um this uh market research thing says number of times per hour that it's used, channel selection a hundred and sixty eight times per
Joel Blum: Right.
Noel Atkinson: hour.
Herbert Goh: Yeah.
Donald Collins: Per hour? Wow.
Noel Atkinson: Yeah.
Donald Collins: That's a lot.
Herbert Goh: Yeah.
Joel Blum: Oh, I must admit I hadn't um I'd I'd missed that. That does sound excessive.
Noel Atkinson: But then again, if you think it of the amount of, you know amount of use it's like
Joel Blum: Yeah.
Noel Atkinson: That's it's less
Herbert Goh: Yeah.
Noel Atkinson: than a second,
Donald Collins: Yeah.
Herbert Goh: Yeah.
Noel Atkinson: um.
Joel Blum: Well that's right, and and I I don't I don't even know whether the I don't even know whether the s the signal lasts as long as
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: you actually keep the button pressed, or whether it's just a
Noel Atkinson: Yeah.
Joel Blum: sorta tenth of a second, no matter how long you press it for, I don't know I don't actually know.
Donald Collins: Though
Joel Blum: Um.
Donald Collins: I think with digital T_V_, like I know on my cable box, you're not supposed to do that because the channel can't keep up with it if
Joel Blum: Yeah.
Donald Collins: you just
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Donald Collins: press it like that, so you're supposed to use the menu and go through the
Joel Blum: Mm-hmm.
Noel Atkinson: Mm-hmm.
Donald Collins: different channels that way instead of
Joel Blum: Mm. Right, so I've got a message to say five minutes, I dunno how long ago that appeared. Um
Donald Collins: Uh-oh.
Joel Blum: 'cause we're we're getting um right, so I'd I need to sum up very quickly here um. We're looking at extreme simplicity. We're looking at a radically different shape. Possibly no buttons at all um, but if you can incorporate um channel change and volume buttons um in into the design, then then that's fine. Um in the I mean the the role of the of the um the user interface des designer becomes b you know more important here, because, you know, shape is no longer an a uh um a serious constraint. But we clearly only need th the main buttons, although, uh if clearly only need the main functions. Um I don't see why we shouldn't go for voice recognition um and the the only buttons that I think we need are channel control, volume control and on off. Um it needs to incorporate the corporate logo, uh the the grey and yellow colour scheme and there's no reason why we can't introduce um interchangeable uh covers. Um uh d so does that accurately summarise what we've discussed?
Noel Atkinson: Yeah.
Donald Collins: Yeah.
Herbert Goh: Yep. Hmm.
Joel Blum: Right.
Donald Collins: Um
Joel Blum: So uh
Donald Collins: Oh I just have one question.
Joel Blum: Yeah.
Donald Collins: So are we doing just the television or are we doing
Joel Blum: We are doing just the television.
Donald Collins: so not D_V_D_
Joel Blum: No.
Donald Collins: players, we okay, okay.
Joel Blum: I think that's quite clear from the the information
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: that we've been given, no?
Donald Collins: Okay.
Noel Atkinson: Yeah, like in the email of television only. In fact they're in the constraints email that I got.
Joel Blum: Right.
Noel Atkinson: Didn't you mention the teletext, just television
Joel Blum: Oh yeah
Noel Atkinson: only?
Joel Blum: well
Herbert Goh: Mm.
Joel Blum: th that's
Donald Collins: Yeah.
Joel Blum: one I s that's one I sent you, which which was my interpretation
Noel Atkinson: Oh okay.
Joel Blum: of uh
Herbert Goh: Yeah.
Noel Atkinson: Oh yeah.
Joel Blum: of the
Donald Collins: Oh
Joel Blum: uh
Donald Collins: okay.
Joel Blum: what came down
Herbert Goh: Okay.
Joel Blum: from from head office. Um That's that that that that's their uh their view. Okay, so uh we can all give some thought to that uh for for the next meeting, thank you
Donald Collins: Okay.
Joel Blum: very much indeed.
Herbert Goh: Cool. | Joel Blum opens the meeting by going through notes from the last meeting, recapping the topics covered. He tells them some new project requirements given by management. Noel Atkinson presents, talking about user functionality requirements taken from research of 100 people. They discuss the possibility of making a remote that hides less frequently used buttons, one that uses voices recognition to eliminate buttons altogether, or one that combines the two functions. The interface specialist presents, showing examples of two different products- one that is user-centered and another that is engineering-centered and giving personal preference to the simpler one because it is easier to use and has fewer buttons. Next Herbert Goh presents, explaining how a remote control works and giving personal preference to a remote which has a large energy source such as a rechargable battery or battery dock. The group discusses using a battery that will last 5-10 years or a solar combined with a battery. They briefly review their discussions and close the meeting. | 1 | amisum | train |
Peter Moss: Right well. Welcome to the what should be the last of these meetings and uh it looks like we've uh done a good job here and uh we'll just go through the the final uh the final details. Um okay, oh the um th the the minutes of the last meeting uh I think we'll take those as read, um Okay the um th the the next uh thing we we we'll have a look at the uh th have a look at the prototypes and uh look at the uh evaluation and finance and then uh uh just tidy up with production and um and then we can close. Um So f if if you'd like to uh present your your proposals.
Kevin Sorg: Uh okay we basically have the same kinda here it's just um you hold it like this and it gets kinda moulded to the to the shape of your hand, basically. Um on the left we've got the scroll for the volume, on the right we have buttons for the channels up and down and that kinda so you can hold it and scroll, or you can hold it and and push. Uh this is the power key, um it's kinda like the biggest
Peter Moss: Uh-huh.
Kevin Sorg: Uh that's the little menu key. This is the infra-red section so you g it'll be sending rays and if you're you know pointing it like that it can send it,
Peter Moss: Yep,
Kevin Sorg: or if you hold it up
Peter Moss: yeah,
Kevin Sorg: like that it'll send
Peter Moss: good,
Kevin Sorg: it.
Peter Moss: good.
Kevin Sorg: Uh we got a microphone there which for all the voice commands so you can
Peter Moss: Uh-huh.
Kevin Sorg: you know talk to it like that and it'll still
Peter Moss: Yep,
Kevin Sorg: understand.
Peter Moss: right.
Kevin Sorg: Um the logo is down down there
Peter Moss: Uh-huh.
Emory Coll: Mm.
Kevin Sorg: um
Emory Coll: S
Kevin Sorg: and has the cover on it and you can see like it just kinda goes the red bit's the cover and it kinda goes over everything
Peter Moss: Yep,
Kevin Sorg: and then there's holes
Peter Moss: yep,
Kevin Sorg: for the buttons to
Peter Moss: mm-hmm.
Kevin Sorg: come through. Um.
Emory Coll: And so we figured it be of you know light, just
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Emory Coll: kind
Peter Moss: Uh-huh.
Emory Coll: of a light
Peter Moss: Yep yep.
Emory Coll: non-descript grey so that people'll wanna buy the covers
Peter Moss: Yep.
Emory Coll: and then the covers will be that sort of rubbery material like they make iPod covers, so they kinda just stretch over.
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Peter Moss: showing Elmer Leal age, I don't know what i c iPod covers are like.
Emory Coll: Yeah, well I
Peter Moss: Yeah
Emory Coll: I didn't know that but
Peter Moss: yeah.
Emory Coll: yeah they're kind of it's just kind of a rubbery
Peter Moss: Uh-huh.
Emory Coll: and that way
Kevin Sorg: Yeah.
Emory Coll: you know spongy
Peter Moss: Okay,
Emory Coll: like is something that people
Peter Moss: yep,
Emory Coll: wanted
Peter Moss: right.
Emory Coll: and it just sort of stretches over and
Kevin Sorg: Mm-hmm.
Emory Coll: that way I think probably helps protect it a little bit too as well
Kevin Sorg: But
Emory Coll: and
Kevin Sorg: it's also
Peter Moss: Okay.
Kevin Sorg: e e easier to put on versus like mobile covers you actually have to screw them on and stuff and you kinda sometimes have to get someone to do that for you. This is very much you should be
Peter Moss: Yep.
Kevin Sorg: able
Emory Coll: just
Kevin Sorg: to stretch
Emory Coll: kinda
Kevin Sorg: it over
Emory Coll: stretch it
Kevin Sorg: yourself
Emory Coll: over
Kevin Sorg: and it'll be fine.
Peter Moss: Okay,
Emory Coll: and
Kevin Sorg: Yeah.
Peter Moss: good
Emory Coll: it'll just stay
Peter Moss: yeah.
Emory Coll: on and then the
Kevin Sorg: Yeah.
Emory Coll: buttons come through and so and then the each one of 'em on the very end will have the logo with the yellow
Peter Moss: Yep,
Emory Coll: circle
Peter Moss: right.
Emory Coll: and the R_R_.
Kevin Sorg: Li that'll be the covers as well,
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Peter Moss: Yeah,
Kevin Sorg: yeah
Peter Moss: yeah.
Kevin Sorg: yeah.
Peter Moss: I mean tha it's it's a detailed point, I just wondered I mean h how will people put these down I wonder?
Emory Coll: Like that.
Peter Moss: Right. Okay for some strange re reason I had it in my mind that they'd put them
Kevin Sorg: Yeah
Peter Moss: down
Kevin Sorg: it could
Peter Moss: vertically
Kevin Sorg: stand,
Peter Moss: but
Kevin Sorg: yeah.
Peter Moss: uh
Emory Coll: Oh.
Peter Moss: uh
Kevin Sorg: Well we could broaden the broaden it out a bit so it would stand
Peter Moss: Yeah,
Kevin Sorg: like
Peter Moss: uh no
Kevin Sorg: that.
Peter Moss: because particularly if they've dif if they're gonna have it as a you know as a fashion item
Kevin Sorg: Yeah,
Peter Moss: uh
Kevin Sorg: standing.
Peter Moss: I mean it it's uh it it's just I mean it's just a minor detailed point, but um as you say you can just make the base a little bit bigger
Kevin Sorg: Yeah,
Peter Moss: and
Kevin Sorg: we could
Peter Moss: uh
Kevin Sorg: just widen it out uh
Peter Moss: Yeah and uh it just needs another uh another logo somewhere is is is is all it gives gives people the option
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Peter Moss: and if if say if they've got them
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Peter Moss: um because actually have several upon the uh
Elmer Leal: Could have one for your
Kevin Sorg: Mm,
Elmer Leal: stereo, one
Peter Moss: Yeah,
Kevin Sorg: yeah,
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Kevin Sorg: yeah.
Peter Moss: well.
Elmer Leal: your D_V_
Kevin Sorg: Have
Elmer Leal: player.
Kevin Sorg: to if we just lengthen
Emory Coll: Yeah,
Kevin Sorg: it I guess so it comes
Peter Moss: Yeah
Emory Coll: just
Kevin Sorg: down
Emory Coll: kind
Kevin Sorg: to the
Peter Moss: but
Kevin Sorg: base
Peter Moss: that
Emory Coll: of
Kevin Sorg: of
Peter Moss: that's
Kevin Sorg: the hand and then
Peter Moss: uh
Kevin Sorg: flatten
Peter Moss: but
Kevin Sorg: it out
Peter Moss: uh
Kevin Sorg: and
Peter Moss: no
Kevin Sorg: could
Peter Moss: the
Kevin Sorg: sit there.
Peter Moss: the the overall
Emory Coll: Or
Peter Moss: uh
Emory Coll: just make
Kevin Sorg: Yeah,
Emory Coll: it little.
Peter Moss: the
Kevin Sorg: mm.
Peter Moss: overall concept is uh
Emory Coll: Somewhere
Kevin Sorg: Yeah.
Emory Coll: like that
Peter Moss: yeah yeah,
Kevin Sorg: Yeah.
Peter Moss: no no, I mean that's
Emory Coll: so it just
Peter Moss: these
Emory Coll: sort
Peter Moss: uh
Emory Coll: of
Kevin Sorg: We might
Elmer Leal: Yeah I kinda
Kevin Sorg: have to
Elmer Leal: had
Kevin Sorg: lengthen
Elmer Leal: a
Kevin Sorg: it so it kinda your
Elmer Leal: a kinda
Kevin Sorg: hand still
Elmer Leal: a natural
Kevin Sorg: holds it and have
Elmer Leal: kind
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Kevin Sorg: it
Elmer Leal: of
Kevin Sorg: there,
Elmer Leal: a idea where
Kevin Sorg: yeah,
Elmer Leal: it's like
Kevin Sorg: yeah, yeah
Elmer Leal: more
Kevin Sorg: like
Elmer Leal: of
Kevin Sorg: that,
Elmer Leal: a kind
Kevin Sorg: like
Elmer Leal: of
Kevin Sorg: that.
Elmer Leal: like
Kevin Sorg: Yeah.
Emory Coll: Bu
Elmer Leal: a kinda maybe slightly like thinner, yeah, kinda
Peter Moss: Yeah.
Elmer Leal: like that kinda like a flower
Peter Moss: But uh
Elmer Leal: or a plant
Peter Moss: yeah
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Elmer Leal: for
Peter Moss: but
Elmer Leal: the more
Peter Moss: no
Elmer Leal: natural
Peter Moss: th but
Elmer Leal: kinda
Peter Moss: the yeah the the the Yeah, yeah, yeah, I mean it it's uh
Emory Coll: fall
Peter Moss: wouldn't
Kevin Sorg: The final
Emory Coll: over.
Kevin Sorg: product
Peter Moss: wouldn't do
Kevin Sorg: would
Peter Moss: that,
Kevin Sorg: actually
Peter Moss: indeed
Kevin Sorg: stand
Peter Moss: yeah.
Kevin Sorg: up, yeah.
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Peter Moss: But th th but th yeah th b the these were all minor minor
Kevin Sorg: Yeah,
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Peter Moss: uh minor
Kevin Sorg: yeah.
Peter Moss: details, I think the uh the basic
Kevin Sorg: Yeah.
Peter Moss: concept
Emory Coll: 'S a little
Peter Moss: i i
Emory Coll: longer.
Peter Moss: is is absolutely bang on
Kevin Sorg: Wee
Peter Moss: and the i it certainly meets our criteria of being uh
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Peter Moss: of you know looking different.
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Peter Moss: Um, so good that's that that's excellent. Um right let us um What's on the next one? Oh right yes, let's have a look at the um f finance. Um, now we're given a a clear design brief, uh if I get the uh spreadsheet up. Oh.
Elmer Leal: Uh yeah, just click there. Uh the the maximise button.
Peter Moss: Oh right. Ah. Good, this is why we need to make these things simple so that the uh the the the boss can understand. Now I've um this is the company's uh uh costing for for various uh uh aspects of design and I I I've treated some of these slightly uh liberally given the constraints placed on us, um I wouldn't know for in for instance if if they require us to have it in the corporate colours, then that is not a special colour, that's a that's a standard colour. Uh, so we're just simply on batteries, the the one th the one decision I've had to make is that um we're we will have to find a s a regular standard chip to to do this with and I I um I'm I'm I'm certain that they they are around so, um that I don't think is a a serious problem. The uh the the voice sensor is is expensive but we we made a a basic decision that that was absolutely fundamental to the to the design so that that has to stay. Um then again the the the the shape of the case means that it's it's expensive to uh um l to make 'cause of the the th the double curves but on the other hand because of our overall fashion concept um we we should exceed the the sales targets. Um it's simply made of plastic so th that's uh that's no problem and uh um just because the whole the colour of the the whole thing that's uh uh there's some cost there. Um and uh we haven't actually got a scroll wheel we we we got push buttons and and a simple uh um slider so um and the and the the buttons are uh uh well I do don't know that they're special colour. Anyway the the costings uh come in at exactly on target at twelve point five uh but I thi I think we have a a very strong case to argue that uh what what we've got is is so in innovative and uh and different that um any any slight compromise we have to make on on cost is is offset by the uh you know the uh you know the the
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Peter Moss: the the concept of it being a a fashion accessory and and having the the interchangeable covers so uh um you know the if if
Peter Moss: they have to accept that we we can't operate absolutely
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Peter Moss: within uh the constraints that they give, so uh we we we present this as the uh the company's uh the the company's way forward and uh uh I I think we can argue that we we have uh come in on on budget. Um. Okay, uh. So um. Does anybody want to uh uh Andrew do you want what do you want to say about um the uh
Elmer Leal: Evaluation.
Peter Moss: yeah the evaluation where where you know well where where we're where where we're at?
Elmer Leal: The the product or the project?
Peter Moss: The the the well the I meant the product.
Elmer Leal: Um, well well my presentation just now
Peter Moss: Yeah.
Elmer Leal: Sure? uh can I get the
Peter Moss: Oh sorry yeah um, mm.
Elmer Leal: Cheers.
Peter Moss: Mm. More loud clicks in the microphone.
Elmer Leal: There we go, oh. Method of evaluation testing the product was to just if it met all the criteria all the conditions that we set out to set out to solve, from the point of view of the the consumer and the management. So what I've been asked to do is, on the whiteboard um gauge our team response to these questions. So, on a scale of one to seven, one being true and seven being being false.
Peter Moss: Seven being a nice round number to work to.
Elmer Leal: Yeah. And then at the end just take an average
Peter Moss: Tr On for true and seven for flase.
Elmer Leal: Yes.
Peter Moss: Yes.
Elmer Leal: So uh.
Elmer Leal: So, look at these questions. Is the device f flashy and fashionable?
Peter Moss: Well I think most
Kevin Sorg: Yeah
Emory Coll: I
Peter Moss: definitely.
Emory Coll: think
Kevin Sorg: I'd
Emory Coll: it
Kevin Sorg: say
Emory Coll: is yeah.
Kevin Sorg: definitely a one yeah.
Elmer Leal: So uh and also uh technologically innovative?
Peter Moss: Yes
Kevin Sorg: Yeah,
Peter Moss: the
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Peter Moss: voice technology
Kevin Sorg: defi yeah,
Peter Moss: indeed.
Kevin Sorg: yeah
Elmer Leal: Easy to use?
Peter Moss: I don't see
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Peter Moss: we could've
Kevin Sorg: Yeah.
Peter Moss: made it any easier.
Elmer Leal: Uh suitable for the consumer? That was um
Peter Moss: Totally.
Kevin Sorg: Yeah definitely.
Emory Coll: Yeah I think it made we met all of the consumer
Kevin Sorg: Yeah.
Elmer Leal: Yeah.
Emory Coll: wants.
Elmer Leal: Uh is it complicated?
Peter Moss: No.
Emory Coll: No.
Elmer Leal: Doing pretty well so far aren't we? Uh functional?
Peter Moss: Yeah.
Kevin Sorg: Yeah
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Kevin Sorg: definitely.
Elmer Leal: Um. Where are we?
Peter Moss: found easily.
Elmer Leal: We've b
Peter Moss: yeah I mean
Elmer Leal: built in the
Kevin Sorg: Yeah.
Elmer Leal: the speech,
Peter Moss: that's
Elmer Leal: where
Peter Moss: that's
Elmer Leal: are
Kevin Sorg: Yeah.
Elmer Leal: you,
Kevin Sorg: Yeah,
Elmer Leal: function.
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Peter Moss: Yeah.
Kevin Sorg: mm-hmm.
Elmer Leal: Uh-huh.
Peter Moss: Does it take long to learn to use? Shouldn't.
Kevin Sorg: No, not at
Elmer Leal: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Sorg: all.
Elmer Leal: And uh, what else? The R_S_I_ compares to the current standards, well.
Peter Moss: Less buttons
Kevin Sorg: Uh
Peter Moss: so it must be.
Elmer Leal: We we uh yeah it
Kevin Sorg: Yeah
Elmer Leal: was our it was a we made
Kevin Sorg: it
Elmer Leal: an
Kevin Sorg: is
Elmer Leal: actual effort
Kevin Sorg: sorta
Elmer Leal: to
Kevin Sorg: the the handle more ergonomically correct as well.
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Peter Moss: So yeah,
Kevin Sorg: yeah.
Peter Moss: um um.
Elmer Leal: Um will device appeal to all age groups?
Peter Moss: I think it will
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Peter Moss: because
Emory Coll: I think so.
Peter Moss: I mean uh old older people who can't manage the buttons anyway will actually probably
Elmer Leal: Yeah,
Peter Moss: like the like
Elmer Leal: uh
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Elmer Leal: that's a good call, yeah.
Peter Moss: like the voice bit
Elmer Leal: Well
Peter Moss: so
Elmer Leal: we had the we had the data saying that old people will be less likely to pay extra money but the funct the increased functionality, the e ease of use of the device might make up for that.
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Peter Moss: And it's it's it's well I don't think we're actually charging a particular premium anyway, in
Kevin Sorg: I
Peter Moss: the
Elmer Leal: Mm.
Peter Moss: end,
Kevin Sorg: I I think
Peter Moss: so
Kevin Sorg: it
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Kevin Sorg: will tend to appeal more to younger aged groups just 'cause we have gone with the fashion
Peter Moss: Yeah.
Kevin Sorg: focus and the younger
Peter Moss: Yeah.
Kevin Sorg: people tend to would be more conscious of that aspect of it, but um I think it should still appeal on a certain level
Peter Moss: It will appeal
Kevin Sorg: to everybody,
Peter Moss: f for dif for
Kevin Sorg: yeah.
Peter Moss: different reasons
Emory Coll: Yeah
Kevin Sorg: Yeah,
Emory Coll: I
Peter Moss: but
Emory Coll: think
Peter Moss: it's
Kevin Sorg: yeah.
Emory Coll: just
Peter Moss: it's
Emory Coll: the
Peter Moss: uh
Emory Coll: simplicity of
Kevin Sorg: Yeah,
Emory Coll: it
Peter Moss: yeah
Kevin Sorg: yeah.
Emory Coll: and
Peter Moss: yeah so I I yeah I
Emory Coll: not having to learn to programme and not having you
Peter Moss: Yeah,
Emory Coll: know a
Peter Moss: so
Emory Coll: million buttons.
Kevin Sorg: Yeah.
Peter Moss: I think we can reasonably say it's another
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Peter Moss: another one, why not?
Elmer Leal: Uh can you just click the my mouse to move onto next page? Uh, yeah and what h did we make the management's
Peter Moss: in in in in my interpretation of management's instructions uh is that yes it it meets the requirement is t it's television
Kevin Sorg: Yep.
Peter Moss: only, it's
Kevin Sorg: Mm-hmm.
Peter Moss: it's simple to use, um it's
Emory Coll: Under
Peter Moss: it's
Emory Coll: the cost.
Peter Moss: it's within
Kevin Sorg: Mm-hmm.
Peter Moss: budget,
Kevin Sorg: Yep.
Peter Moss: um I it's uh yes an an any minor points we we we argue.
Elmer Leal: Um.
Peter Moss: So uh I I think we've
Kevin Sorg: Yep.
Peter Moss: done an amazing job in uh
Elmer Leal: Okay.
Kevin Sorg: Well done us.
Peter Moss: coming up with what
Elmer Leal: So uh one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven. Eleven divided by eleven's one so
Emory Coll: Yeah,
Elmer Leal: equals average of one.
Peter Moss: Need a need a calculator for that.
Elmer Leal: And that roughly concludes my evaluation of the
Kevin Sorg: Excellent.
Peter Moss: Okay,
Elmer Leal: of the product.
Peter Moss: nick
Emory Coll: I
Peter Moss: the
Emory Coll: mixed
Peter Moss: cable
Emory Coll: up the colours
Peter Moss: back
Kevin Sorg: Oh
Peter Moss: then.
Kevin Sorg: no
Emory Coll: a little bit.
Kevin Sorg: that's
Emory Coll: I think I all
Peter Moss: Ooh.
Emory Coll: wrong.
Peter Moss: Right do um either of you want to uh say anything?
Kevin Sorg: Uh.
Peter Moss: Mm.
Emory Coll: Mm.
Peter Moss: Before I uh
Emory Coll: Ps I don't think so, I mean
Peter Moss: No.
Emory Coll: I think we worked well together and
Peter Moss: Yeah.
Emory Coll: looked really at what the consumers wanted and what we
Peter Moss: Yeah.
Emory Coll: were trying to make and you know, seemed to discuss things pretty well and
Kevin Sorg: Mm-hmm.
Emory Coll: come to group consensus and
Peter Moss: Well that's right, I mean th this this slide here I mean the satisfaction with uh room for creativity,
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Peter Moss: I mean I think
Kevin Sorg: Yeah,
Peter Moss: we've allowed
Kevin Sorg: definitely.
Peter Moss: ourselves uh as much creativity as the uh the the the product
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Peter Moss: uh allows. Um I won't comment on leadership, uh teamwork I think we've uh I think everybody's uh
Kevin Sorg: Mm-hmm.
Peter Moss: worked pretty well together. Um we've just about coped with the whiteboard and digital pens, uh I think the results speak
Kevin Sorg: Mm.
Peter Moss: for itself and new ideas found, um, again gi no given relatively everyday product,
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Peter Moss: I think
Kevin Sorg: Yep.
Peter Moss: we've v very uh very effectively come up with a a new uh uh a new approach. Um are the costs within budget? Yes. Is the project evaluated? We're
Kevin Sorg: Yep.
Peter Moss: we're all happy that it it meets all the criteria, um Thank you very much indeed,
Kevin Sorg: Cool,
Peter Moss: I think
Kevin Sorg: thank
Emory Coll: Alright.
Kevin Sorg: you,
Peter Moss: that I think that's uh
Emory Coll: Yeah.
Peter Moss: I think we can go f for an early bath. So I call the meeting closed.
Emory Coll: Okay.
Peter Moss: Not sure how far ahead of schedule we were there. | Peter Moss opens the meeting by stating the agenda. Then Kevin Sorg and interface specialist present the prototype, showing where they placed each button, function, and the company logo. Then they talk about the material they chose, which is light gray colored and light weight plastic so that people will want to buy covers. Next they take a brief look at the finance by examining the materials used, chip required, shape, and color. They are exactly on target at twelve point five. Next Elmer Leal administers the product evaluation, and the group talks about whether the device is flashy and fashionable, technologically innovative, easy to use, suitable for the consumer, complicated, how long it would take to learn to use it, and its appeal to all age groups. They come up with an average of 1 for the evaluation. They briefly discuss the project process and agree that they worked well together, had excellent teamwork, and created an effective product that meets the budget cost. They close the meeting by thanking one another. | 1 | amisum | train |
Jose West: Is this okay?
Anthony Brown: Uh yeah. Fine now.
Anthony Brown: Oh, it's not liking us, it went that-a-way. Computer adjusting. Oh. Uh.
Anthony Brown: Okay. So. Right.
Anthony Brown: You ready back there? Uh okay. Welcome everyone. Um this is the kick-off meeting for the day. Um we're the new group uh to create a new remote control for Real Reaction. As you can see our agenda is to open up the meeting, um become acquainted with each other, um have a little training on tools, uh create a plan, discuss things and and we only have twenty minut twenty five minutes total. Okay. The new remote control is to be original, trendy and user-friendly. That, Steph, is your part, is the user-friendliness. The originality um is gonna take all of us. Um the trendiness we'll probably go look at for some marketing research information from you, Sarah. Um and we'll get on with it. Okay, so we'll have a functional design individual work um with meeting and then conceptual design t and then detailed design. Okay? Right. Everybody's supposed to try out the whiteboard. Kate, why don't you try it first, if you can either
Len Corbeil: Uh yeah, if
Anthony Brown: bring
Len Corbeil: I
Anthony Brown: your things with
Len Corbeil: pick with
Anthony Brown: you, I
Len Corbeil: all
Anthony Brown: guess
Len Corbeil: these bits and pieces, hang on.
Anthony Brown: And while you're doing that we'll try and figure out how to hook these things on as well, 'cause we're all gonna have to be able to walk around.
Len Corbeil: Uh right, so you want an animal and the characteristics of that animal. Do you have to be able to recognise what animal it is?
Anthony Brown: Uh I do not think so, I think it's just to try out the whiteboard.
Len Corbeil: Um
Jeffrey Morgan: Are we all gonna draw a cat?
Jose West: I know.
Len Corbeil: Only animal I could thin I could draw.
Anthony Brown: Ah.
Len Corbeil: Its a sort of bunny rabbit cat. You can tell it's not a bunny rabbit by the ears.
Anthony Brown: Uh-huh.
Len Corbeil: Um I suppose it should have a mouth as well, sort of
Anthony Brown: Okay.
Len Corbeil: Right, yeah.
Anthony Brown: Great. And the characteristics?
Len Corbeil: Um the favourite characteristics of the cat um the whiskers I think, um because they're the easiest to draw.
Anthony Brown: Uh-huh.
Len Corbeil: In fact, I'll give it some more Oh,
Anthony Brown: Okay.
Len Corbeil: and the tail
Anthony Brown: Fantastic. Since you're handy as well, why don't you do yours next, Steph.
Anthony Brown: I think it's to get us used to using the pen.
Len Corbeil: Yes. Um sure it's not to test our artistic
Anthony Brown: Uh no.
Len Corbeil: It's a mouse.
Anthony Brown: A mouse-y?
Jeffrey Morgan: That's not a mouse-y, no.
Len Corbeil: No it's not a mouse. It's a wombat.
Anthony Brown: Oh.
Jeffrey Morgan: It's a ratty.
Anthony Brown: Argh.
Len Corbeil: A what?
Jeffrey Morgan: A
Anthony Brown: Rat.
Jeffrey Morgan: ratty.
Anthony Brown: Not a mouse,
Len Corbeil: A
Anthony Brown: a
Len Corbeil: webbed
Anthony Brown: rat.
Len Corbeil: foot. Webbed f
Jeffrey Morgan: It's clothes. That's
Len Corbeil: Oh
Jeffrey Morgan: it's clothes.
Len Corbeil: right.
Jeffrey Morgan: It's a ratty with a with a with a very long tail.
Anthony Brown: And your
Jeffrey Morgan: I love
Anthony Brown: favourite
Jeffrey Morgan: whiskers.
Anthony Brown: characteristics of that animal.
Jeffrey Morgan: Uh they're intelligent and they're cheeky and uh fantastic pets and very
Anthony Brown: Oh.
Jeffrey Morgan: friendly.
Anthony Brown: Okay.
Jeffrey Morgan: And
Anthony Brown: Kate?
Jeffrey Morgan: they sit on your shoulder and whisper the answers to your homework in your ear when you're doing your homework.
Jose West: Thanks.
Anthony Brown: Oh, a fish.
Jeffrey Morgan: A shark?
Len Corbeil: Gosh, why didn't I think of fish? That's even easier to draw than cat.
Jose West: Mm this is very representational fish.
Anthony Brown: Oh, okay. Fine.
Jose West: Um I like
Anthony Brown: Favourite
Jose West: them
Anthony Brown: characteristics?
Jose West: because they're sleek and they have a lot of freedom but they also do n uh swim in groups, so.
Anthony Brown: 'Kay. So
Jose West: Do
Anthony Brown: they
Jose West: you
Anthony Brown: have
Jose West: have a favourite
Anthony Brown: team
Jose West: one?
Anthony Brown: elements. I'm afraid I'm with Steph. And I think your pen's running out of whatever. But I'm afraid I take the coward's way out, and the cat's looking the other way. He's hiding. Um cats are sometimes very independent. My parents had cats. Uh and they can mm decide for themselves what is best. Okay. Now um we have to get down to the nitty-gritty of how to make this and this remote control has to be sold um we're to sell it for twenty five Euros, with a profit aim ultimately of fifty million Euros. That tells you something about how many um we have to sell on an international scale. Um would be an awful lot of these, would be like what, a hundred million of them um to make twenty five Euros on each one and to make a total profit of fifty million. Um the production is to only cost twelve and a half Euros per item. Now if they cost twelve and a half, you're selling it for twenty five, you're making twelve and a half Euros each. Um and we're to make a profit of fifty million, that's t uh can you do the maths and how many are we selling?
Jose West: Uh yeah. I was just wondering if that's the um If fifty percent is normal
Anthony Brown: Mark-up?
Jose West: B yeah. Um I would think would be more like sixty percent. But um
Anthony Brown: Okay.
Jose West: let Jose West I have two thoughts. fifty percent. And and your question is how many do we have to sell?
Anthony Brown: Yes, 'cause our market um is international and your problem is has to do with marketing of you know, you gotta know how many we're going
Jose West: At twenty
Anthony Brown: to be selling
Jose West: five.
Anthony Brown: to know how big a market you have to target
Jose West: Mm-hmm.
Anthony Brown: and who is that.
Jose West: Yeah, that's um
Anthony Brown: To give you a pretty good idea of where you're looking.
Jose West: So that's four million of them?
Anthony Brown: Something like that? Okay.
Jose West: Yeah.
Anthony Brown: That's fifty million Euros. In order
Jose West: And if
Anthony Brown: to make
Jose West: we make
Anthony Brown: fifty million Euros, and you're only getting twelve and a half each
Jose West: Mm-hmm.
Anthony Brown: That's a lot of selling.
Jose West: Yeah.
Anthony Brown: Two four
Jose West: Four million.
Anthony Brown: To be fifty, be four million. You'd have to sell four million.
Jose West: Hmm.
Anthony Brown: Okay? Right. Experience with a remote control. Any of you use of remote control for a television or D_V_D_ or something?
Len Corbeil: That
Anthony Brown: You're
Jose West: Yeah.
Anthony Brown: both
Len Corbeil: that that's
Anthony Brown: nodding,
Len Corbeil: the sorta
Anthony Brown: all
Len Corbeil: product
Anthony Brown: three.
Len Corbeil: we're talking about, one that will work for a in a home environment, for a
Anthony Brown: Well
Len Corbeil: T_V_s and
Anthony Brown: I've seen some remote controls that are for more than one device at a time, but I also have heard about them not working well or not well co-ordinated and you wind up working with this one for thi this three and then this
Jeffrey Morgan: It
Anthony Brown: one
Jeffrey Morgan: is
Anthony Brown: over here
Jeffrey Morgan: true
Anthony Brown: for another.
Jeffrey Morgan: you know, you're sitting on your sofa and you wanna change something, there's five different remotes, and one for the D_V_D_ and one for the video and one
Jose West: Mm-hmm.
Jeffrey Morgan: for cable and one for
Jose West: Y yeah.
Jeffrey Morgan: whatever
Anthony Brown: And they don't
Jeffrey Morgan: else.
Anthony Brown: always
Jeffrey Morgan: But I presume
Anthony Brown: talk to
Jeffrey Morgan: this
Anthony Brown: each
Jeffrey Morgan: is
Anthony Brown: other.
Jeffrey Morgan: t I presume this is just for television.
Anthony Brown: Don't know. Okay. Are there any um ideas for the remote? What would it be for and what group would be be for? We have to think about that one.
Jose West: We could make a Hello Kitty themed remote.
Jeffrey Morgan: I think one in b bright colours would be good.
Jose West: Yeah. We
Len Corbeil: I
Jose West: could
Len Corbeil: think
Jose West: totally
Len Corbeil: one that works
Jose West: go for
Len Corbeil: would
Jose West: the
Len Corbeil: be good.
Jose West: Japan-a-mation. Well I mean there's also the cachet that um uh the Japanese make great products. Electrical their industrial design is very good.
Jeffrey Morgan: I think one that doesn't have lots of superfluous functions. Like I've got one at home that has well, apart from the obvious, channels, channel up, channel down, volume,
Jose West: Yeah.
Jeffrey Morgan: you know, subtitles, mute, there's a lotta buttons that I've got no idea what they do, like.
Jose West: Well, that's a really good point, because I think
Anthony Brown: Okay.
Jose West: one of the things that being somewhat computer literate, we tend to um go to menus and then make choices, you know, so if it's like an uh volume button, you know, you can go in and say mute or or volume. We don't need to have like the l the numbers if we also have uh
Jeffrey Morgan: Mm.
Jose West: uh channel up channel down.
Anthony Brown: Mm.
Jose West: Mm.
Anthony Brown: Okay.
Jose West: We can make it smart like an iPod, you know, make everything menus.
Jeffrey Morgan: Ooh, closing the meeting.
Anthony Brown: Yeah. Um
Jeffrey Morgan: That was quick.
Anthony Brown: I know this sounds like it was very quick, but the I think that's the industrial design
Len Corbeil: Mm.
Anthony Brown: is the first one, that's Kate,
Len Corbeil: Mm-hmm.
Anthony Brown: for the working design. And user, that's you S Steph, for the technical functions design, and for marketing the user requirements specification. I think there's going to be a lot of we have to help each other and work through this as a group, and I think we all, you know, we like our kitty-cat and our rat and our fish, but I think we all have to like each other um to get this done. says, we're gonna get individual instructions, but uh I don't think they allowed a lot of extra time, so I think a little bit of less of this and more at do will set us in good stead. Do you all agree?
Jeffrey Morgan: Mm-hmm.
Len Corbeil: Mm-hmm.
Anthony Brown: Alright. Um then I don't see any reason to prolong it and f we should finish this meeting at ni right now and go into other things. Alright, so this is the end of the first meeting.
Jose West: Okay.
Len Corbeil: 'Kay.
Anthony Brown: Thank you all. | Anthony Brown opened the meeting by stating the agenda and then introduced the upcoming project to the team members. The team members then participated in an exercise in which they each drew their favorite animal and discussed why they liked the particular animal. Anthony Brown briefed the team on the production and selling costs of the remote they are to create. Anthony Brown also briefed the team on the profit aim and discussed how many remotes must be sold in order to reach the profit aim of 50 million Euro. The team then discussed their experiences using remote controls and what features in terms of functionality and appearance to consider in making the remote. | 1 | amisum | train |
Kirk Alexander: Hi Kate.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Just just
Kirk Alexander: Okay,
Chad Saenphimmacha: carry
Kirk Alexander: carry
Chad Saenphimmacha: on.
Kirk Alexander: on Alright. um this is the beginning of the third meeting, the conceptual design meeting. Um our agenda should be um that we're opening the meeting, I have the minutes from the previous meeting are on the shared f drive at this point. Um and we should each have a presentation to make. Um we have certain decisions to make and we have forty minutes total. It's twenty five after two at the moment, so forty minutes is five after three um, which I'll be keeping an eye on the clock for us. Okay. Um there are the decisions we have to turn to, but we'll come back to them in a minute after I take us to the minutes of the previous meeting. Right um as we remember, I opened the meeting, the four of us were present, the meeting the first meeting's minutes were reviewed and approved. Um Sarah, you presented a marketing research report um which pretty much rep represented that fifteen to thirty five year olds uh it has to be hand-held, power, channel, volume, number keys, possibly a speech recognition. And then Steph did a second presentation um that those functions plus streamlining them with big user-friendly keys that were easy to use. I think all of us agreed with those things. Kate presented a working design of going after going over the basics on the whiteboard um that it should be a simple mass-produced device, because of the twelve and a half Pence cost. Um but we did talk about possibly using rechargeable batteries and having a docking place as a selling point. Um and the new requirements that it for be for T_V_ only um and that it include the l so slogan and colour of the uh corporate design be included. Um the corporate image. So we agreed that the target market would be fifteen to thirty five with more money than sense, that were decision makers. Alternatively it would be a manufacturer to enclose it with the T_V_, but it still should meet those parameters. Um and that the function we agreed was volume, power, numbers, enter, channels, a way to move between channels, easy to use and hand-held. Um at that point we agreed that Sarah would look at the current cost of competition, what what do the current ones sell for. Um and Steph was gonna look at ec ergonomics. Kate was gonna look at cost and feasibility of the various possibilities that we discussed. And I was to type up these minutes and work on the final report. Is this a fair presentation of
Thomas Horton: Yeah.
Kirk Alexander: what our last meeting was?
Thomas Horton: Yes.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Mm-hmm.
Kirk Alexander: Okay. Right. So we're ready to close that and go back to our That one. Right. We're up to the point of the Go back. Um the three presentations. So we're going to pull the plug on Ike Clemens and turn to Sarah. Is that okay? Is that alright with everybody else?
Thomas Horton: Yep.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Mm-hmm.
Kirk Alexander: Especially since Kate asked to be last. Sarah, I'm sorry if I misspelled your name, I didn't know whether it was S_A_R_A_ or S_A_R_H_.
Ike Clemens: I respond to either. No
Kirk Alexander: You respond
Ike Clemens: worries.
Kirk Alexander: to whatever you get, huh? Okay.
Kirk Alexander: Um, did you do your
Thomas Horton: Yeah,
Kirk Alexander: Hit Ah, there it is. Ta-da.
Ike Clemens: Okay, first thing I want to address is um one of the points that Florence brought up, which was uh current cost of the competition devices, similar to the ones that Stephanie uh showed us and and they're uh twenty to sixty Euros, depending on uh branding.
Thomas Horton: Right
Ike Clemens: Some of them that have a higher brand recognition are on the more expensive end. But I think that with the current um price that we're searching for, we're well within, even on end, of the uh of the market.
Kirk Alexander: Mm 'kay.
Ike Clemens: But I'm going to move on to more interesting um more vibrant things. So, I investigated the remote control market in greater detail, and my uh the theme of what I was to work on was uh trend watch. And
Kirk Alexander: 'Kay.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Sorry. I'm glad to see the marketing budget is being so well spent on.
Ike Clemens: I know that you all are a distance from cutting edge marketing research, so you know, I'm just gonna try to cloak it in really professional terms here. What's hot, fruit and veg. Spongy. And this is all over the catwalks, Paris, Milan, and I'm talking about clothing, furniture, shoes. This is really interesting change from past years, because
Kirk Alexander: Mm.
Ike Clemens: it is much more organic, um some would say approachable. And I think if we're to refashion our view of what we want in a remote control, we should perhaps think about incorporating technologically interesting fabrics and some of the bold colours into a simple handset. So. I also did a little research on um what again are the most important priorities in uh decision making about uh purchasing. Fancy. Functional is out. And f the fancy, and that's exactly the term, I'm I'm thinking polished, elegant, you know, kind of innovative, but a cut above. This is twice as important as the next finding, which is technologically innovative. This is interesting, 'cause I think in the last meeting we were talking about technology as being so important, but maybe what's innovative is having it simple with um with uh technologically superior fabrics or uh, you know, designed in interesting substances. Ease of use. Again, pretty low, I mean it's the top three, but each of the uh fancy and technologically innovative are far more important. So I think we should cloak the streamlined remote control device in a series of fruit fruit themed sleeves.
Chad Saenphimmacha: I think that's a good idea. Don't
Ike Clemens: Y
Chad Saenphimmacha: you?
Ike Clemens: yeah,
Thomas Horton: Yes.
Kirk Alexander: It
Ike Clemens: you know
Kirk Alexander: sounds like the the uh covers that they use for the
Ike Clemens: Exactly.
Kirk Alexander: remote, you know, your t your cell phone.
Ike Clemens: Exactly. I was thinking though that instead of having something uh like patterned, you know, so, you know, something similar to a summer dress. you know, it would
Kirk Alexander: Mm.
Ike Clemens: have like fruit and veg, is that we actually make these spongy. They could be ini initially I thought we could start with kind of um fruit that would suit kind of uh a long uh hand-held, so banana, pineapple and pear. Um it could actually the sleeve could take up a lot of the development and the remote control, we'd just need to get reductionist on it. They could be interchangeable, they're spongy, that goes back to ergonomic, and the youngsters love 'em, fun for the whole family, everyone can have their own. So what we're talking about is changing. this concept. Everyone has a T_V_ remote, but then we add in the fact that they could each have their own individual fruit. That's what's hot on the catwalks. So, this is my This is what I'm thinking.
Kirk Alexander: Hmm. Uh-huh mm. In most families, don't isn't the remote is a remote.
Ike Clemens: Y yeah, but I think I think what this would allow is perhaps a person in the family who had the most opinion about it we all need a remote, but
Kirk Alexander: Mm.
Ike Clemens: the person who is really perhaps active in personalising, I'm thinking the teenager, the someone fifteen to thirty five would go out and get this additional thing the same way as you mentioned that people would get the cell
Thomas Horton: So
Ike Clemens: phone covers.
Thomas Horton: when your dad's sitting there, overriding your decision, going no we're gonna watch this, you can bring out your own remote and be like zap, no we're gonna watch this.
Ike Clemens: Yeah. W and
Kirk Alexander: Mm.
Ike Clemens: plus I think
Kirk Alexander: Well actually some households do have three and four
Ike Clemens: Uh yeah.
Kirk Alexander: T_V_s
Ike Clemens: Yeah.
Kirk Alexander: and they would have a remote for each one, so.
Ike Clemens: Yeah. So this is an idea and I I you know, this is exactly what the research has uh has shown. So I really open this up to uh any other feedback. This spongy fruit and veg.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah,
Ike Clemens: Thanks.
Chad Saenphimmacha: I I think we're gonna have some trouble when we get down to the component design
Ike Clemens: Alright.
Chad Saenphimmacha: on this.
Thomas Horton: Yep.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Spongy
Kirk Alexander: Hmm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: is gonna be difficult, I'm afraid.
Kirk Alexander: Hmm.
Thomas Horton: And as for as for um well budgeting as well, if we're gonna have lots of different interchangeable components.
Ike Clemens: I I just have my ear to the market,
Thomas Horton: Is this
Ike Clemens: guys.
Thomas Horton: to the market?
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah, I mean basically we can make these things out of wood, titanium, plastic or rubber. I rubber is the closest
Ike Clemens: Is spongiest,
Chad Saenphimmacha: to spongy, yeah.
Ike Clemens: yeah. That would add
Chad Saenphimmacha: I was thinking titanium
Thomas Horton: I was
Chad Saenphimmacha: myself.
Thomas Horton: titanium I was thinking it's just I have been influenced by pictures of iPods,
Ike Clemens: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Horton: and they're also minimalist and shiny.
Ike Clemens: They are and they they would fulfil the uh first um priority, which is fancy. I think many of us would associate those with fancy. Something else we could do is uh call it something that's fruit and veg oriented. We could call it uh
Kirk Alexander: Are we talking about the
Ike Clemens: The name.
Kirk Alexander: device itself or the c or a cover for the device that would be an interchangeable cov cover as a separate product?
Ike Clemens: Well it would be uh a a very simple product that would have a spongy sleeve that would be interchangeable.
Kirk Alexander: Perhaps
Ike Clemens: So
Thomas Horton: Yeah, but it's kind
Kirk Alexander: perhaps
Thomas Horton: of pointless,
Kirk Alexander: that desi
Thomas Horton: isn't
Kirk Alexander: that
Thomas Horton: it?
Kirk Alexander: particular suggestion needs to go back to management and perhaps go to another group to actually design as a
Thomas Horton: Yeah.
Kirk Alexander: separate product.
Ike Clemens: That, you know, that
Thomas Horton: Let's
Ike Clemens: might be
Thomas Horton: delegate.
Kirk Alexander: Wo would
Ike Clemens: And
Kirk Alexander: that
Ike Clemens: then
Kirk Alexander: be
Ike Clemens: we could
Kirk Alexander: agreeable?
Ike Clemens: keep it
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah.
Ike Clemens: titanium.
Chad Saenphimmacha: W w would it be helpful if um I described the components a bit, because I think it would give you um maybe bring this discussion back to Earth of what we can actually physically do.
Thomas Horton: Yeah, maybe. Or
Kirk Alexander: Do you wanna be next or you want Kate to go next?
Thomas Horton: I think possibly it might be more useful if Kate went next.
Kirk Alexander: Okay, we'll move the
Thomas Horton: Um
Thomas Horton: You can even have them in different flavours as well. So that if you just wanna sit there and chew on the remote, it could be like
Ike Clemens: Yeah.
Thomas Horton: pear
Ike Clemens: Or
Thomas Horton: flavour,
Ike Clemens: s or smelly.
Thomas Horton: yeah.
Ike Clemens: Scratchy
Thomas Horton: Scratch and sniff.
Ike Clemens: Uh well I was really thinking a lot about the I_ uh the iMac kind of gel gem tone. It's hot on the streets,
Chad Saenphimmacha: Right,
Ike Clemens: guys.
Chad Saenphimmacha: well I I I think some of this um you're gonna be a little disappointed with some of the things I have to tell you, but I'm afraid this is the real world. So um I've been looking at the the basics of how these devices actually have to work in order to operate, and I've had some discussions with the ma manufacturing division, who have told Ike Clemens what's actually available, you know, what the current state of the art in components is, and some of the exciting new things they've got, but I'm not sure that it's quite what you want um. Now this isn't a very good overhead, but this is just to show you, this is the innards of a remote control um. I really need a pen or something but uh does my mouse work? No. Um oh yeah, can you see my little mouse pointer?
Kirk Alexander: Mm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Right. This is this is the a a a remote that's been opened up
Kirk Alexander: Mm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: and that's the the back of the interface. And this is a push-button one, so you see these little little buttons here, they're little rubber rubber buttons that go through onto the the board at the back and they push these buttons here. Um and we that's the basic construction that we've got to got to accommodate. We got to have something that pushes the little buttons that um talk to the chip that encodes the message that sends the the message to the receiver. So um I wan I wanna go through not not just addressing the um uh the the points that you made, Sarah, but um doing my presentation in the order I wrote it. So first of all um I wanna talk about what possibilities we've got for the energy source. Um we can have your bog standard double double A_ batteries in a replaceable um little compartment. We can have a hand sorry
Thomas Horton: A wind-up.
Chad Saenphimmacha: a wind-up, yeah, which I think is quite an interesting concept for a sorry for a remote control, but i it maybe is doesn't quite go with the um the fruit and veg. Um
Kirk Alexander: Alright.
Chad Saenphimmacha: one that one that I think is quite interesting is the
Kirk Alexander: Remember,
Chad Saenphimmacha: kinetic
Kirk Alexander: we only
Chad Saenphimmacha: energy
Kirk Alexander: have
Chad Saenphimmacha: source,
Kirk Alexander: forty minutes
Chad Saenphimmacha: where um
Ike Clemens: Mm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: you you actually get the energy by moving the device, which is quite
Kirk Alexander: Hmm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: a ni a nice and neat one. You have to it means that if it's sitting there for a long time it probably won't work, but you have to sort of throw it between your hands every now and then, it'll work.
Ike Clemens: Hmm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Or we we had talked about solar power, but I thing that we agreed that that's not so good in the dark.
Kirk Alexander: Mm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Now I'm afraid this is the options we've got on on the case. It can be made of plastic, rubber, wood o if you like, or titanium.
Ike Clemens: Hmm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Um and the nearest we've got to st to spongy there I guess is rubber, but um
Ike Clemens: Hmm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: I'm gonna come back to the advantages of titanium, and basically it can have a flat surface, a curved surface or a double curved surface, but I think if we wanna use standard components, we're gonna have difficulty with anything much beyond that.
Ike Clemens: Hmm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Okay, what does the interface look like? Um well push button, that's that's the one we're all familiar with. Um we can have scroll buttons and the the scroll button
Kirk Alexander: Hmm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: can incorporate a push, so you can have it like on a mouse where you can use it to go up and down, change volume or channel or something like that and push to select something. Um you can have multiple scroll buttons, um this is maybe getting a little bit complicated, but um it's it the technology is there. And we can also incorporate an L_C_D_ display in the remote, but this will increase the cost. Um the electronics that actually makes the device work, we've basically got three, simple, regular, advanced, and the price goes up as we choose each of this. If we want the nice cheap one, the simple, then we can only have push buttons. All the other fancy interface designs go out the window, I'm afraid. Um pay a little bit more for a regular chip and you can have scroll buttons. If you want the advanced chip it obviously costs more, the L_C_D_ display. And the manufacturing devision tell Ike Clemens that they have recently developed um sample sensor sample speaker devices. Now I don't know what that is, but I think they think it's quite important and we might want to incorporate it somewhere. Um ou our real expertise is in push buttons, I have to say, but maybe you think that's old technology.
Ike Clemens: Mm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: And well I I think we've got two options. We can either go for a really cheap model, keep all of the costs down, um which means a flat plastic case with an ordinary battery and simple push buttons. Or we can have something that looks a bit nicer, I think it, um won't necessarily l uh look like a pineapple, but um that may or may not be a good thing. Sorry. Um but it could have an L_C_D_ screen and it could have multiple scroll buttons, and it could have the the company's new development of the um sample sensor and speaker. So, thank you.
Ike Clemens: That sounds good. Any idea you you mentioned that there would be a cost difference. Um do you have any idea if if this could if the fancy model could be done in twelve Euros fifty?
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah, I'm afraid I don't have that information available. Um manufacturing didn't actually give attach any prices to any of this, I'm afraid.
Kirk Alexander: Hmm.
Ike Clemens: Hmm. Because, you know what, I'm being quite serious when I say that that um the things I mentioned are hot. But I think the important thing might be to choose one. You know, if
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah
Ike Clemens: if what you're telling
Chad Saenphimmacha: mm-hmm.
Ike Clemens: Ike Clemens is is um some of these things aren't just f aren't feasible, maybe we could something about naming, we could call it, you know, Blackberry. That's
Thomas Horton: Bear
Ike Clemens: uh
Thomas Horton: bear in mind it has to be the colours and styles of the company, so what I had been thinking was something chunky and yellow and plastic with black buttons with
Chad Saenphimmacha: Banana?
Thomas Horton: a logo on it.
Ike Clemens: Alright, well let's see then.
Thomas Horton: But um I I don't know how important that is
Ike Clemens: Yeah.
Thomas Horton: to keep it exactly the colours of the Real Reaction company. It's just what I'd understood
Ike Clemens: Yeah.
Thomas Horton: we'd be doing. That's before I heard about all this hot tips about the future, fruit-wise.
Ike Clemens: But yeah, I'm trying
Chad Saenphimmacha: We
Ike Clemens: to
Chad Saenphimmacha: we
Ike Clemens: streamline
Chad Saenphimmacha: could we could
Ike Clemens: mine
Chad Saenphimmacha: do
Ike Clemens: a little
Chad Saenphimmacha: um
Ike Clemens: bit.
Chad Saenphimmacha: a double curved rubber one, which would allow um say a banana, but um unfortunately I see from my notes that if we do that, we have to have a push button as
Ike Clemens: Yeah.
Chad Saenphimmacha: the interface, we can't do anything fancier.
Ike Clemens: Hmm.
Thomas Horton: Shall we wait 'til I've
Ike Clemens: Yeah.
Thomas Horton: 'til I've showed you what well, my extensive presentation on what sort of interfaces are available.
Ike Clemens: Mm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yep.
Ike Clemens: Thank you, Kate.
Kirk Alexander: Thank you, Kate.
Ike Clemens: Mm.
Thomas Horton: You did seem to include just in more detail what I've got though. So so mine's a bit pointless. Right. F_N_ and F_ eight, did you
Kirk Alexander: Yes.
Thomas Horton: say?
Kirk Alexander: There we go.
Thomas Horton: I don't have it on mine though.
Ike Clemens: Oh I think um Florence resolved it by
Chad Saenphimmacha: I If you do F_
Ike Clemens: F_ eight
Kirk Alexander: Do
Ike Clemens: again.
Kirk Alexander: it again.
Chad Saenphimmacha: uh F_N_ F_ eight again, it's it'll
Kirk Alexander: Keep doing it until you get it in both you get it
Chad Saenphimmacha: I think
Kirk Alexander: there,
Chad Saenphimmacha: it
Kirk Alexander: you get it
Chad Saenphimmacha: yeah,
Kirk Alexander: yours
Chad Saenphimmacha: you
Kirk Alexander: without
Chad Saenphimmacha: you will do
Kirk Alexander: that
Chad Saenphimmacha: an
Kirk Alexander: one, and then you get it with both.
Thomas Horton: Should I do it again?
Ike Clemens: Maybe.
Kirk Alexander: Yeah. This time it should come up both.
Thomas Horton: Right then. I don't actually have a huge amount of different information then what
Kirk Alexander: Okay.
Thomas Horton: Kate says, just that my method was to look at the, well, my my inspirations, which was a big collection of lots of different models of
Kirk Alexander: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Horton: remote controls and other things that use a similar sort of thing, including M_P_ three players, uh like you know, hi-fi remotes, not
Kirk Alexander: Mm.
Thomas Horton: just television and these things. Uh having a think about the feature of ea the features of each ones, um what functions we actually need, and then how to group and arrange these on the actual the actual plastic or rubber hand-held piece. Uh I've been especially interested in the iPod style scroll wheel, which Well, I couldn't find a the picture of the iPod w only linked to a web browser, so I couldn't copy and paste it, but it had a similar thing to this thing on the right. It has uh scroll wheels without without a display, but they they scroll like a computer mouse.
Kirk Alexander: Hmm.
Thomas Horton: So I was thinking
Chad Saenphimmacha: Hmm.
Thomas Horton: that uh um a really simple a really simple interface with just a couple of scroll things on it um and then instead of a display the display could appear on the television screen. Like I guess an existing Sky or cable one does. Like, you know, you press enter and it comes up with what's showing on that channel at the moment, and you can do you can scroll along and it'll show you what's on in the next half hour, and you scroll up and you can see what's on the other channels while you're watching the same channel on the screen. Uh but I'm also equally taken with this chunky plastic kiddie remote,
Ike Clemens: Mm.
Thomas Horton: um which is really nice and fun and good to hold and nice, big, easy buttons to press, but still quite simple and quite cost effective. So what seems kind of ideal for Ike Clemens would be to just have a fairly simple, uh not fancy but not totally minimalist, I mean just pretty simple plastic, probably, I was thinking, yellow and black, just because that's the company's colours, with very very few buttons, but that would correspond to a screen that would appear on the television screen, like, you know, just small along the bottom instead of instead of having the iPod style display screen on the actual remotes, which is far too expensive.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Hmm.
Thomas Horton: And when
Kirk Alexander: Mm.
Thomas Horton: you've got a screen sitting there in front of you, you might as well have it appearing uh on the screen in front of you, it doesn't obscure much of the actual picture you're watching.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah.
Thomas Horton: And so on that you can, just much in the same way as an existing Sky remote, scroll along, scroll up and
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah, I'd I'd certainly
Thomas Horton: down.
Chad Saenphimmacha: support
Thomas Horton: And
Chad Saenphimmacha: that
Thomas Horton: uh
Chad Saenphimmacha: idea.
Thomas Horton: and I definitely support uh the use of plastic and or rubber. I mean titanium would be great, but I think it might be a bit too expensive and too kinda spacey. If we're k trying to keep it colourful and slightly organic, then I think titanium's too futuristic.
Chad Saenphimmacha: It's difficult to make fancy shapes in it as well, we can't for example
Thomas Horton: Yeah.
Chad Saenphimmacha: have a double curved case in titanium unfortunately.
Thomas Horton: Whereas a plastic's so cheap and easy and mouldable and everything else.
Ike Clemens: Hmm.
Thomas Horton: Uh then
Chad Saenphimmacha: And the the having the the the screen on the television screen I think is a good idea, 'cause um otherwise we're we're putting up the price not only for putting building the L_C_D_ in, but for the electronics as well.
Thomas Horton: And it's a little bit pointless as well I think.
Ike Clemens: It's
Thomas Horton: Like
Chad Saenphimmacha: There
Ike Clemens: a
Chad Saenphimmacha: is
Ike Clemens: duplication.
Thomas Horton: when
Chad Saenphimmacha: that.
Thomas Horton: when when you've got when you've got the screen there, it doesn't have to be anything fancy just, a little menu showing yeah, a menu, you go into one menu and then it can have your different options, whether you wanna change the settings or the
Ike Clemens: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Horton: you know, your information about programme that's on at the moment. I don't think that's to taxing to uh s engineer. Um. But as for actually arranging them let Ike Clemens go back to the to the picture of the kiddie one. And I quite like it, 'cause it's just smooth and hand-held and it's got these easily reachable buttons that quite nicely uh spaced out, so something a bit like that with buttons arranged in a kind of circle.
Ike Clemens: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Horton: Up, down, left, right.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Do you want scroll buttons in that as well?
Thomas Horton: I I was thinking not actually scroll, like a like mouse scroll, but you know, a I can't quite d uh describe it. you see on the one on the right, down at the bottom, is the mouse. Yeah, see where the mouse is, like
Chad Saenphimmacha: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Horton: this s style thing where you c have up, down, left and right.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Right.
Thomas Horton: And enter in the middle, so you pick your menu and then your different options and when when you click on each one, it you can go into a new menu for that. I'm getting a bit uh specific here. Really we'd have to
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah.
Thomas Horton: use
Chad Saenphimmacha: I think
Thomas Horton: something
Chad Saenphimmacha: I think
Thomas Horton: to
Chad Saenphimmacha: that's
Thomas Horton: show
Chad Saenphimmacha: a g
Thomas Horton: you,
Chad Saenphimmacha: nice clean
Thomas Horton: but
Chad Saenphimmacha: design, it's playing to our strengths which are in push button technology.
Ike Clemens: To uh
Thomas Horton: If I don't think I
Ike Clemens: m
Thomas Horton: can get it up on
Ike Clemens: make
Thomas Horton: the screen.
Ike Clemens: it.
Thomas Horton: Ah here we go. Right.
Ike Clemens: Oh nice. Um
Thomas Horton: Well, the iPod
Ike Clemens: Hmm.
Thomas Horton: spinning wheel is uh really complicated.
Kirk Alexander: Huh.
Thomas Horton: It does
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah.
Thomas Horton: scroll, but it is hugely complicated.
Ike Clemens: Mm.
Thomas Horton: What else have we got?
Ike Clemens: Wow.
Thomas Horton: Them, they're terrible. But they all have this this feature of this uh It's not quite a scroll wheel, but
Kirk Alexander: It's a selection wheel.
Thomas Horton: it's a kind of selection in this circle, which I think is a really good idea.
Chad Saenphimmacha: But we can implement it with simple push buttons,
Thomas Horton: Yeah,
Chad Saenphimmacha: which is much cheaper.
Thomas Horton: like up, down, left and right. Which is good. And then and then Yeah, so I mean either a channel up and down, volume up and down, next appearing programmes up and down, uh and then also when you get into the different menus on the screen, it's got your things like settings and contrast
Kirk Alexander: Okay.
Thomas Horton: up and down. So all you really need is these four buttons with the enter in the middle.
Kirk Alexander: Okay.
Thomas Horton: And that's it.
Chad Saenphimmacha: In fact
Thomas Horton: Look at look at this one.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Oh that's really nice.
Thomas Horton: Almost impossible to misplace or l or lose.
Ike Clemens: Do you think with
Thomas Horton: Might
Ike Clemens: um
Thomas Horton: take up your whole living room.
Ike Clemens: It seems that that uh you guys are quite keen on the plastic, perhaps the something reminiscent of the child's remote. Do you think we could put it in a in a fruit colour? And have it abstract. You know, we could call
Thomas Horton: Possibly.
Ike Clemens: like a fruit
Thomas Horton: Yeah.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Hmm.
Ike Clemens: name, but it would be a little more abstract.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Mm.
Thomas Horton: That also
Chad Saenphimmacha: We we
Thomas Horton: is
Chad Saenphimmacha: could
Thomas Horton: possible.
Chad Saenphimmacha: actually do it in rubber instead of
Ike Clemens: Mm-hmm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: plastic if you'd rather
Ike Clemens: I'm
Chad Saenphimmacha: if
Thomas Horton: Just
Ike Clemens: just
Chad Saenphimmacha: you feel
Ike Clemens: just
Chad Saenphimmacha: if you
Ike Clemens: throwing
Kirk Alexander: Or
Chad Saenphimmacha: like
Kirk Alexander: call
Chad Saenphimmacha: the
Ike Clemens: out
Chad Saenphimmacha: spongy
Ike Clemens: ideas.
Kirk Alexander: it a or call it a banana and have
Chad Saenphimmacha: Hmm.
Kirk Alexander: it in yellow.
Ike Clemens: Yeah. I'm thinking maybe we need to be a little bit more abstract if the design
Kirk Alexander: Okay.
Ike Clemens: constraints
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah.
Ike Clemens: are so
Thomas Horton: Uh just something else I need to bring to your attention is have you have you seen these on a remote? This is actually the volume up and down, but
Kirk Alexander: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Horton: they both say V_ on them,
Kirk Alexander: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Horton: which, when you first look at it, you expect that to be the down, because
Ike Clemens: Mm-hmm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah.
Thomas Horton: it looks like a downward pointing arrow, but it's
Kirk Alexander: Hmm.
Thomas Horton: actually the V_ to indicate that it's the volume,
Ike Clemens: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Horton: so uh we do need to avoid little ambiguities like these.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah.
Kirk Alexander: Hmm.
Ike Clemens: Nice. Good point.
Thomas Horton: But we wouldn't have a specific volume up and down. If we're having the scroll wheel, then it's gonna double up as all the other up and down functions.
Kirk Alexander: Mm 'kay.
Thomas Horton: But then, that's complicated.
Kirk Alexander: I wanna thank you all for all your presentations. We have about ten minutes left, in which time we have to make some decisions on the remote control concepts. Um and I think you all have been self-stimulating of working together. Um we need to come up with some specifics of
Kirk Alexander: the interface type things. So let's Mm. Right. They want us to decide what form of energy are we going to use, which the choices that we've discussed were pretty much battery, kinetic or solar. Um this is where Kate's expertise comes in, and our decision making will be a little bit guided by Kate at this point. The You were saying that the kinetic would be useful, that is you just have to move it some and you'd be able to use it um as opposed to a battery that you have to either put it in a recharger or um keep replacing the batteries. Um or solar that you'd have difficulty with it if it's a dark day, that it'll die on you, and no way to do it. That's the day you wanna use the T_V_.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Mm.
Kirk Alexander: Um so what's our pleasure here, what would be the cost consequences of each of the three?
Chad Saenphimmacha: Oh unfortunately I don't have costing information.
Kirk Alexander: Okay.
Chad Saenphimmacha: I i in terms of workability, I I think the the two front-runners are the standard battery or the kinetic, but I'm
Kirk Alexander: Mm 'kay.
Chad Saenphimmacha: sorry I don't figures on the difference in cost.
Kirk Alexander: What's the uh feelings of the group on the kinetic?
Ike Clemens: I've used kinetic in terms of watches and it's very very uh handy, you don't even notice um
Thomas Horton: It sounds
Ike Clemens: that it's
Thomas Horton: great.
Ike Clemens: there.
Thomas Horton: I've never come across it before, but it sounds fantastic. Sounds
Ike Clemens: It's
Thomas Horton: like it could be g a really good economical
Ike Clemens: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Horton: it would make the whole thing a lot lighter, more convenient.
Kirk Alexander: Hmm.
Ike Clemens: It could tie in with the fanciful design as
Kirk Alexander: Hmm.
Thomas Horton: Yeah.
Ike Clemens: uh,
Thomas Horton: 'Cause
Ike Clemens: you
Thomas Horton: it's really a quite attractive
Ike Clemens: know, throw
Thomas Horton: thought,
Ike Clemens: the banana,
Thomas Horton: isn't it?
Ike Clemens: you
Thomas Horton: It's
Ike Clemens: know,
Thomas Horton: like
Ike Clemens: just gotta keep it moving.
Thomas Horton: yeah, a good
Kirk Alexander: So
Ike Clemens: Be
Thomas Horton: selling
Kirk Alexander: the consensus
Thomas Horton: point.
Kirk Alexander: seems to be use the kinetic if it's at all possible.
Thomas Horton: But it does depend how much
Kirk Alexander: It costs.
Thomas Horton: I mean how much it costs and how much more development and research it needs.
Ike Clemens: Yeah.
Kirk Alexander: Mm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: And and how much you do have to keep it moving,
Kirk Alexander: Mm.
Ike Clemens: Yeah.
Chad Saenphimmacha: 'cause I'm conscious that watching T_V_ can be quite a sed sedentary activity.
Ike Clemens: Mm-hmm. But I could
Kirk Alexander: Mm.
Ike Clemens: market that as a um as a
Thomas Horton: Do your exercises while you're watching
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah.
Thomas Horton: the
Ike Clemens: a
Thomas Horton: T_V_.
Ike Clemens: I was thinking actually a a cost saver down the road, in terms of battery,
Kirk Alexander: Hmm.
Chad Saenphimmacha: True,
Ike Clemens: you know.
Chad Saenphimmacha: yeah, m more more environmentally friendly.
Thomas Horton: Yeah,
Ike Clemens: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Horton: that's what I
Kirk Alexander: Yeah.
Thomas Horton: was thinking as
Ike Clemens: You
Thomas Horton: well.
Ike Clemens: know, kind of the
Kirk Alexander: Thanks for the reminder for five minutes to finish, thanks. Um the next thing that they wanted us to do was look at chip on print as a decision.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Oh right, okay, I'd that that's something I maybe should have covered. Um chip on print is just a manufacturing technique
Kirk Alexander: Oh.
Chad Saenphimmacha: um and I would certainly recommend it, I think, because I'm not sure I have an alternative.
Kirk Alexander: Okay.
Chad Saenphimmacha: I i it it's
Kirk Alexander: What
Chad Saenphimmacha: just
Kirk Alexander: about
Chad Saenphimmacha: the way
Kirk Alexander: the ca
Chad Saenphimmacha: that
Kirk Alexander: yeah.
Chad Saenphimmacha: the the the
Kirk Alexander: Oh,
Chad Saenphimmacha: uh
Kirk Alexander: the way we
Chad Saenphimmacha: th the way it's ac it's actually
Kirk Alexander: uh-huh.
Chad Saenphimmacha: built and you you print onto the circuit board like you might print onto paper.
Kirk Alexander: Oh, okay. Um what about the case? I think they're talking there about do we want wood, plastic, titanium or rubber, and I think we've discussed not having titanium. One, it's too expensive, um and second, it won't do this double um curves. Um we've sort of eliminated wood. We said plastic or rubber. What's the pleasure?
Chad Saenphimmacha: Well if if Sarah's keen on a spongy feel, the the rubber that we're talking about is the same as you have in those little stress balls,
Ike Clemens: That's
Chad Saenphimmacha: so
Ike Clemens: exactly
Chad Saenphimmacha: it's
Ike Clemens: what I was thinking.
Chad Saenphimmacha: yeah.
Ike Clemens: I'm sold.
Kirk Alexander: What about you?
Thomas Horton: Do you not think it might need like a kind of a hard plastic inner shell with the actual delicate workings inside, and then a
Ike Clemens: Mm.
Thomas Horton: kind of spongy
Ike Clemens: Kind of like an internal egg.
Kirk Alexander: Cover.
Thomas Horton: Yeah, s thick
Kirk Alexander: Uh-huh.
Thomas Horton: spongy cover, so it feels like the whole thing's spongy, but actually you're not damaging anything by
Kirk Alexander: Plastic inside.
Thomas Horton: squeezing it.
Ike Clemens: Yeah.
Thomas Horton: Because
Chad Saenphimmacha: Yeah.
Thomas Horton: I mean you could just
Chad Saenphimmacha: I'd
Thomas Horton: get
Chad Saenphimmacha: I'd
Thomas Horton: carried
Chad Saenphimmacha: need
Thomas Horton: away
Chad Saenphimmacha: to talk
Thomas Horton: with
Chad Saenphimmacha: to manufacturing
Thomas Horton: the with the tac
Chad Saenphimmacha: again about whether that's actually possible, but I agree, it's uh sounds
Thomas Horton: Yeah.
Chad Saenphimmacha: like a nice
Thomas Horton: Well
Chad Saenphimmacha: idea if it
Thomas Horton: you
Chad Saenphimmacha: is.
Thomas Horton: do get a bit carried away with things that are tactile, you just wanna
Kirk Alexander: Hmm.
Thomas Horton: stroke them and squeeze
Ike Clemens: And with sports
Thomas Horton: them,
Kirk Alexander: Okay.
Thomas Horton: and
Ike Clemens: on television. You know.
Kirk Alexander: Um the
Ike Clemens: I
Kirk Alexander: next
Chad Saenphimmacha: I
Ike Clemens: su
Chad Saenphimmacha: should
Kirk Alexander: part
Chad Saenphimmacha: I should
Kirk Alexander: they want
Chad Saenphimmacha: r
Kirk Alexander: is the user interface concept. I'm sorry to push you, but we only have a couple minutes to finish with.
Ike Clemens: Then I'll just say I support either from a marketing point of view I support either decision that the designers make on that.
Kirk Alexander: Okay, and it says interface. What type and what supplements?
Thomas Horton: Just copy the one on the left. No um a scroll Well, like four buttons, up, down, left and right with enter in the middle, that will correspond to a menu on the screen.
Chad Saenphimmacha: Which I think technically is just push button and uh I'd certainly support
Thomas Horton: Yeah,
Chad Saenphimmacha: that that
Thomas Horton: I'd
Chad Saenphimmacha: that
Thomas Horton: like
Chad Saenphimmacha: brings
Thomas Horton: push
Chad Saenphimmacha: the cost
Thomas Horton: buttons
Chad Saenphimmacha: down quite
Thomas Horton: with
Chad Saenphimmacha: a lot and it's something that we're an ex the company's an expert on.
Thomas Horton: So push buttons
Kirk Alexander: Okay, um that's that. Um this is gonna sound weird, but the next meeting starts in thirty minutes. Whew. And they actually want a look and feel design, user interface design, you can look and see this as well as I can. Marketing they want product
Thomas Horton: No,
Kirk Alexander: evaluation.
Thomas Horton: it's
Ike Clemens: No
Thomas Horton: still
Ike Clemens: we can't, actually.
Thomas Horton: it's still
Kirk Alexander: Oh.
Thomas Horton: plugged in on mine
Kirk Alexander: Oh
Thomas Horton: actually.
Kirk Alexander: my, I'm sorry.
Ike Clemens: That's why I was looking over your shoulder
Kirk Alexander: Oh, okay. Sorry about that. missed that one. This ought to be fun trying to get this thing to work. Ah, ta-da.
Thomas Horton: Now it's gone again.
Kirk Alexander: Ah.
Chad Saenphimmacha: You know, I think the the company's s next project should to design a better overhead device that
Kirk Alexander: Yes,
Chad Saenphimmacha: switches immediately.
Kirk Alexander: because I can't even see mine. Next meeting starts in thirty minutes,
Thomas Horton: Oh yes.
Kirk Alexander: these are the individual actions. Yeah, right. Um
Ike Clemens: Mm.
Kirk Alexander: the look and feel design is for Kate, uh Steph gets the user interface design, you get product evaluation. Um the two of you get to play with a Pla modelling clay
Thomas Horton: Great.
Kirk Alexander: um to do a prototype. Uh and everybody gets individual instructions in the usual way.
Ike Clemens: Sounds good.
Kirk Alexander: Anything else we need to do?
Thomas Horton: I don't think so.
Kirk Alexander: Go to it.
Thomas Horton: Play-Doh.
Kirk Alexander: And that's the end of this meeting. That's for her benefit.
Ike Clemens: That's really all I got, guys. | Kirk Alexander opened the meeting and went over the minutes of the previous meeting. Ike Clemens presented findings from trend watching reports and discussed her personal preferences in how to incorporate the results of the trend watching reports into the appearance of the remote. The trend watching reports indicated that products need to reflect a fruit and vegetable theme, sponginess, fanciness, and technological innovation. The team then discussed their target group and whether to use titanium or a spongy material in their design. Chad Saenphimmacha discussed options for energy sources, materials, case shapes, and interface components such as buttons and LCD screens. Thomas Horton examined the interfaces of existing products and discussed using menus within an interface using push buttons which operate like a scroll wheel. The team then discussed and made decisions on what energy sources, chips, case materials, and buttons to use. | 1 | amisum | train |
Donald Krawiec: Okay uh Agnes, you
James Phillips: Yep.
Donald Krawiec: can help Ryan Bradley for the
James Phillips: Sure.
Donald Krawiec: when okay. Okay, welcome back. I hope uh you have a fresh head and a fresh time. How t now the meeting actually we gathering here to discuss about the functional design meeting. Okay, and uh we'll issue some information from uh all of you. And it's in the, I think uh, in the sharing folder. And uh I will invite uh the Christine and the Ed and uh Agnes to discuss about on the various subjects. So can you go to the next slide? Yeah uh the agenda of the meeting is opening. Then uh I'm going to talk about uh the project management, what I'm going to do, and uh, of course, I'm doing the project management and secretary both, okay, to take the minutes of the meeting. And there are three presentations. One is uh new project requirements. And the second one about uh decision on remote control functions. And uh finally we are closing. Uh and the meeting time will be uh forty minutes, so you have to be very quick. And I have come up with the management come with the new proposal, okay, and I have to discuss a few points on this. Uh both says new insights in the aim of your project. Uh the one is uh the teletext becomes uh outmoded, okay because if uh because of the computer systems and the new technology. So we don't need to consider really about the teletext all in our new project design. And the second one is about uh the remote control. Should be used only for the T_V_. That's what our uh management says. And the third point, it's very very important to establish our uh marketing or uh corporate image, okay, with this new project or new product. Okay. So I will invite uh Agnes, can you go to the third slide?
James Phillips: No, this is the third.
Donald Krawiec: Okay, So, I'll invite uh Christine to discuss about uh the functional design.
Mark Lee: 'Kay, do you wanna
James Phillips: Sure.
Mark Lee: open the
James Phillips: Um. You're participant s
Mark Lee: I'm number.
James Phillips: Two?
Mark Lee: That's it.
James Phillips: Do you want the mouse, or do you want Ryan Bradley to
Mark Lee: I'll do the notes. Yeah, thanks. So um well I I figured uh we should um identify some user requirements, and from my experience, I wanna uh, and from research I did, uh the the device has to turn the television on and off the first time you press on the big button, you can't uh can't have like uh waffling on this point, you know. Really have It needs to be able y y have to be able to find it. Because one of the biggest problems with remote controls is finding them. So uh, I also, since we have to establish our corporate image on the basis of this new product, thought we better look at things that are popular and um ex go beyond those, and, as I said in the first meeting, um and then uh we might wanna talk eventually about the materials that are appropriate to use in uh in the construction, especially in the the uh the outside of the product so that it gives the appearance, and it is reliable, and so forth. I did a little history on uh the the uh remote controls and when they were invented and so forth, so, I guess this guy Zenith uh created the Flashmatic, which I kinda like the idea, 'cause it made Ryan Bradley think of um um maybe the remote control made a big flash when uh you turn the T_V_ on and off, that might be interesting. And um so it was highly directional flash light that uh you could turn the picture on and off, and the sound on and off, and change channels c so I think um those are still requirements we have today, uh
James Phillips: Mm-hmm.
Mark Lee: fifty years later. And uh it was really a pioneering innovation, but it was uh sensitive to the sun, so that uh it would get would start off by the you'd get it would easily cause um problems. So, uh I in addition to uh looking at the um uh the functional requir so all these devices are examples of where uh mm they represent examples that are available today which I think the one in the middle is r
Ryan Bradley: Fantastic.
Mark Lee: um really uh something to keep in mind. It'd be easy to find. And um it would uh y you'd you could throw it at things if if the T_V_ didn't turn on and off, you could use it for something else. And since I'm not really um Industrial Designer, I didn't really know what to do with this slide. But um I just took some different uh schematics and I put them into this, and I guess this is what a slide might look like if you were drawing a circuit board. I don't know why um we were asked to do this. So, uh personal preferences, um I think we could uh I I'm really thinking outside the box here, and I think that we should consider perhaps having an an an a a size uh a remote control that changes in size depending on the user preference. So something that's very very flexible and inflatable and then you could shrink it. I think um it could either be you could go either one extreme, be very colourful, or you could make it clear, and um kind of blend in with things, so you didn't have to um uh have a problem with the th the decoration of the of the user's home. Um I think uh it needs to be waterproof, because uh sometimes they fall into cups and, you know, it might be out by the swimming pool or something like that. Um if you uh mi one of one of my requirements was about needs t to tell you when it's done its job or not, because half the time, I keep pushing on the remote control, and I don't know if it's actually understood my message, so I think it should give you some sort of an oral cue. And uh, course I never wanna replace the battery. So, that's those are my f preferences, and that's my presentation.
Donald Krawiec: Yeah, let Ryan Bradley uh interrupt you uh if you can add other facility, other feature, like uh unbreakable.
Mark Lee: Yes.
Donald Krawiec: Okay, because uh especially today, you know, you have the family and the kids, okay, and the kids throw it and they they play with their remotes
Mark Lee: Run over
Donald Krawiec: and.
Mark Lee: it with a car.
Donald Krawiec: Yes. Okay, so if you can add the feature, okay, for your uh fabric whatever in your outline design okay, with unbreakable, okay, I think that will give a lot of advantage for our product,
Mark Lee: Good
Donald Krawiec: if I'm
Mark Lee: idea.
Donald Krawiec: not wrong.
Mark Lee: Good idea, I'll I'll uh um
Donald Krawiec: Maybe you can uh add it in that.
Mark Lee: Yes, very good.
Donald Krawiec: Okay, uh thank you Christine, and uh uh any questions or uh clarifications, or any discussion on the functional design?
James Phillips: Do you have any preconceived ideas in terms of materials? 'Cause, for example, in the unbreakable thing, doing something plastic would be harder, whereas
Mark Lee: Hmm.
James Phillips: having something like, I dunno, steel or titanium
Mark Lee: Titanium.
James Phillips: isn't really
Mark Lee: Titanium
Ryan Bradley: Titanium.
Mark Lee: would be
James Phillips: economically viable.
Mark Lee: be heavy, too, wouldn't
James Phillips: Yeah.
Mark Lee: it? No, I haven't really um I wanted feedback, I think we need to rate rank these,
James Phillips: Yeah.
Mark Lee: but we'll see what your uh personal
James Phillips: Sure,
Mark Lee: preferences
James Phillips: yeah.
Mark Lee: are and your
James Phillips: No, I
Mark Lee: thoughts.
James Phillips: just that you had any sort of
Mark Lee: I like titanium. It's light.
James Phillips: Yeah.
Ryan Bradley: Expensive.
Mark Lee: Uh yeah
James Phillips: The
Mark Lee: but
James Phillips: marketing comes
Mark Lee: uh who
James Phillips: out.
Mark Lee: who said who said
Donald Krawiec: Yes.
Mark Lee: we were, you know, nobody told Ryan Bradley how mu what our financial objective is, so um
Donald Krawiec: Yeah
Mark Lee: It'd
Donald Krawiec: so
Mark Lee: be hard to inflate something ou made out
Donald Krawiec: Yeah
Mark Lee: of titanium
Donald Krawiec: the the
Mark Lee: though.
Donald Krawiec: I'm sorry because uh the last meeting we supposed to discuss about the financial thing. Uh let Ryan Bradley go quickly, maybe if I can go back. I know the project plan and the budget. So I can close this, not sure. Was in uh
Donald Krawiec: S This.
Donald Krawiec: So let Ryan Bradley see where is this file.
James Phillips: That's Christine's.
Donald Krawiec: This is Christine.
James Phillips: And that's mine,
Donald Krawiec: That's
James Phillips: I think.
Donald Krawiec: yours, okay. Saving.
James Phillips: In modified.
Ryan Bradley: I don't know, I think verbally
Donald Krawiec: Okay,
Ryan Bradley: we
Donald Krawiec: uh
Ryan Bradley: can
Donald Krawiec: I will I
Ryan Bradley: we
Donald Krawiec: will
Ryan Bradley: can
Donald Krawiec: send
Ryan Bradley: pretty
Donald Krawiec: you
Ryan Bradley: much
Donald Krawiec: a mail,
Ryan Bradley: sell.
Donald Krawiec: okay? The project may be the the project aim, okay. At the end of the day, the company uh wants to make at least uh the fifty million Euro. Okay, and uh of course the price will be very reasonable on the the sales side. Okay, that maybe Eddie will talk to you about uh how much uh the price and uh what's uh how much its cost for the manufacturing and how much it's going to be we sell in the market. Okay. Then uh you can come back with your feedback. And I I have one maybe the suggestion or opinion. This remote control, okay, it can be for like universal, to use for any T_V_. Okay, and it will be slim, okay, and uh
Mark Lee: Not fat?
Donald Krawiec: Not fat.
Mark Lee: Not fat, huh.
Donald Krawiec: Okay.
Mark Lee: Might be hard to find, though.
Donald Krawiec: Yep.
Ryan Bradley: Hmm.
Donald Krawiec: But let's try it, okay,
Mark Lee: Oh,
Donald Krawiec: with
Mark Lee: okay.
Donald Krawiec: the different uh the designs, okay, the functional designs. Okay? So any other questions?
Ryan Bradley: Uh from her side, I don't think uh there's too many more questions.
Donald Krawiec: Okay.
Ryan Bradley: If you can
Donald Krawiec: Thank
Ryan Bradley: come
Donald Krawiec: you
Ryan Bradley: to
Donald Krawiec: Christine
Ryan Bradley: the
Donald Krawiec: for uh time being, so then uh Ed, so
Ryan Bradley: Okay,
Donald Krawiec: can you
Ryan Bradley: from
Donald Krawiec: tell
Ryan Bradley: the
Donald Krawiec: about
Ryan Bradley: marketing yeah, from the marketing side, just to to give an idea what the management is looking for, I was looking for a a remote control to
James Phillips: S
Ryan Bradley: have a
James Phillips: 'scuse
Ryan Bradley: s
James Phillips: Ryan Bradley for one sec.
Ryan Bradley: I have a sales price of twenty-five Euro with, a production price of uh twelve and a half Euro. For what uh I think from what we're trying to find, we're tr we're looking for, I don't think that price is exactly in the market. Okay?
Donald Krawiec: Mm-hmm.
Ryan Bradley: I'll explain myself here now in the sense that uh in a in the recent surveys, uh from the ages fr from fifteen to thirty-five, eighty percent are willing to spend more money for something as fancy as trendy. Twenty-five Euros, uh that's that's a preson reasonable price. That's a market price right now. Now if we're gonna take a risk,
Donald Krawiec: Yep.
Ryan Bradley: and push this up a bit, make it more expensive, but give them added things that they don't have now,
Donald Krawiec: Yep.
Ryan Bradley: then it w it could possibly sell. Obviously the risk is there. Too expensive, they're not gonna buy. But, I think uh there's one other thing interesting two things that are interesting is that uh from the fifteen to thirty-five year-old group, which always spends more money on trendy new things, speech recognition is requested. And we're talking between
Mark Lee: Speech recognition?.
Ryan Bradley: seventy-five to ninety percent of this group is willing to pay for speech recognition on a remote.
Donald Krawiec: Mm-hmm.
Ryan Bradley: Obviously, we can't make a remote into a computer, but maybe simple commands. I dunno, louder, softer, on, off. That might be a possibility, even though it costs more, to be the first on the market to produce this. Thirty-five percent say they're too difficult to use. So we have to figure out a way of making it um more user friendly. Uh fifty percent say they can't find the remote half the time. So maybe one word speech recognition commands, say remote, and there's a beep beep beep, and they can find it through, you know, ten tons of newspapers, magazines, whatever you have at home. But, in the cost that uh the management is looking for, that's not gonna be possible. But if it's trendy, if it's fancy, it's got some colour to it, if it's very easy easy to use, if it's got simple remote speech remote uh control, like I said, louder, softer, change channel, on, off, remote, it goes beep beep, I can find my my remote without spending half a day looking for it and getting all upset 'cause I can't turn the T_V_ on. So we're gonna have to look at it in a in this global idea, with the ideas of the industrial uh design. But, price obviously we have to talk about.
Donald Krawiec: Yep. So what do you think about uh the design? Do you think you can make it or uh
Mark Lee: D uh I'm sorry?
Donald Krawiec: What do you think about uh the design, uh what he was talking about
Ryan Bradley: Speech recognition.
Donald Krawiec: of the speech recognition?
Mark Lee: Well, uh training is always an issue with uh commands.
Donald Krawiec: Mm-hmm.
Mark Lee: So um might uh we can to spend some time in the training process, uh it could reduce th th uh the overall um cost. Not sure how. But um anyway, um I I think also that uh this might impact the battery life. And um so, maybe what we'll have to do is um add something where you can um recharge it wirelessly so that uh y you know sen send power to it. So uh or maybe uh set it out in the sun and it uh, you know, gets
James Phillips: Hmm.
Mark Lee: uh, from the light, um a a solar cell inside there so that uh you have enough uh juice to do all these fancy things.
James Phillips: It seems also like with the speech recognition, yeah, it's a great feature, but if you're watching T_V_, there's a lot of ambient sound, and it's words. It's not just, you know, noises like something hitting. It's actual speech, so then you have to make sure that the speech recognizer is good enough to filter out the T_V_ speech, and the the user's speech. Otherwise, you can say remote.
Mark Lee: Off.
James Phillips: But if someone on the screen is saying the same thing, all of a sudden, you have someone in a movie saying off and your screen dies, because they've triggered the remote control and it's turned off your T_V_. So, I think if we can find a speech recognizer that can handle those types of problems, then yeah, it'd be a really good
Ryan Bradley: Mm.
James Phillips: marketing gimmick. But, I think we seriously need to consider how that would impact the situation.
Mark Lee: Very good point.
Ryan Bradley: Because tha w with speech recognition uh th I'm not that good at that idea but th
James Phillips: Mm-hmm.
Ryan Bradley: if it's a one-word recognition, 'cause I know with telephones and cars and things I've
James Phillips: Yeah.
Ryan Bradley: seen in the States, a friend of mine says call Mom, and it calls up Mom.
James Phillips: Yeah.
Ryan Bradley: 'Kay the radio can be on and everything.
Donald Krawiec: Yep.
Ryan Bradley: Because I think s with speech recognition, if uh the the remote or like the telephone it has a exact word that
James Phillips: Mm-hmm.
Ryan Bradley: it has to hear. I don't think it would come through a sentence in a television. If somebody's speaking on the se the television, they're not gonna stop and say remote, okay.
James Phillips: Mm-hmm.
Ryan Bradley: So I think that uh something could be designed to recognise single word
James Phillips: Oh yeah. Yeah.
Ryan Bradley: Like
James Phillips: No, I think
Ryan Bradley: the t
James Phillips: it's
Ryan Bradley: like
James Phillips: a great
Ryan Bradley: the telephone.
James Phillips: idea if we can
Ryan Bradley: No because
James Phillips: design
Ryan Bradley: I
James Phillips: it
Ryan Bradley: this
James Phillips: to
Ryan Bradley: is this
James Phillips: to
Ryan Bradley: is
James Phillips: suit
Ryan Bradley: years
James Phillips: those
Ryan Bradley: ago
James Phillips: requirements.
Ryan Bradley: in the United States where we're driving down and he said call home, and the telephone called immediately
James Phillips: Yeah.
Ryan Bradley: so well, that's kinda cute.
Donald Krawiec: Well, what I can uh suggest to you, Christine, okay, uh if you need some uh the technical feedback, or some training, okay, about uh this facility, especially for the speech recognition, I can recommend you some companies like uh Intel or I_B_M_, okay, because they're already in this uh speech recognition part, okay. And uh you can maybe have some uh technical backup from them, some kind of a technical tie-up. Okay, and uh if okay, and uh you can uh let Ryan Bradley know, okay, so what kind of uh the details you require okay, to add this feature in this project. I don't think it's uh the difficult. And uh we need to know how much is the timeframe you need to develop, apart from uh what today.
Mark Lee: Okay, we'll find that out.
Donald Krawiec: Yep.
Ryan Bradley: From from your side uh, you're gonna have to go back the management and s
Donald Krawiec: Yes.
Ryan Bradley: be more s precise. What do they
Donald Krawiec: Yes.
Ryan Bradley: want? Uh, a risk, take a risk on the market? Something that's gonna cost more, but could very easily s
Donald Krawiec: Yes.
Ryan Bradley: make a boom in the market?
Donald Krawiec: Yep.
Ryan Bradley: Because it has to be something totally different, has to be total totally new. Something that nobody has right now.
Donald Krawiec: Yeah
Ryan Bradley: And it's
Donald Krawiec: but
Ryan Bradley: gonna cost.
Donald Krawiec: but end of the day, you're the sales guy, so I will come back and sit on your head because uh you are going to give your sales projection, okay. It's
Ryan Bradley: Mm-hmm.
Donald Krawiec: uh of course it's uh good to uh tell the management how much it's cost us and how much you are going to
Ryan Bradley: Sure.
Donald Krawiec: benefit,
Ryan Bradley: Sure.
Donald Krawiec: okay. And uh, so I don't mind to convince, okay, the management to spend some more money on the project, okay, if you can make out of
Ryan Bradley: Obviously.
Donald Krawiec: the money from this
Ryan Bradley: If the
Donald Krawiec: project.
Ryan Bradley: bottom line is positive.
Donald Krawiec: Yes, okay I don't mind to convince the the management,
Ryan Bradley: Mm.
Donald Krawiec: okay. The management says, okay, so they they don't want certain facilities, which it's already worked, okay, they want something uh new, okay. I think uh like uh speech recognit definitely they will agree, I don't think they'll say no for that, okay. And uh I hope I can convince the management on that, okay. So if you have any uh new ideas, okay, for uh your you can always come up and uh you can tell Ryan Bradley if you need any uh s special, okay, coordination, okay, between any uh technical companies, which you can uh hide their technology backup, okay, for your uh functional design or technical design, okay, then I am ready to do that. And uh what's your comments about uh
James Phillips: Um well, I mean, maybe if I go through my presentation, you can sort of see
Ryan Bradley: Mm.
James Phillips: what the user perspective is, and how it ties into the other two comments.
Donald Krawiec: Yeah, so you are finish, Ed, uh
Ryan Bradley: Yes.
Donald Krawiec: so I can
Ryan Bradley: Mm.
Donald Krawiec: uh Okay, I'll uh hand over to Agnes. Just gonna close this. T Uh where are you, here?
James Phillips: Mm participant three.
Donald Krawiec: Participant three.
James Phillips: Nope, here
Donald Krawiec: Okay, so I'll yep.
Donald Krawiec: Okay.
James Phillips: Good. Thanks.
Donald Krawiec: Is it okay? Alri
James Phillips: Yeah, and that's fine. Okay. So, basically, the method that we usually use in the user interface design is that we need to look at what people like and what people don't like about existing products. So, in our case, existing remote controls. And then, what the good ideas are, and what the bad ideas are, and why they're bad and good, which isn't always as obvious. We seem to have intuitions about why things are good or things are bad, but when you look, technically, at how it works, sometimes that's not the case. Then we need to decide what functionalities we really want to keep, 'cause that'll feed into both Ed's work and Christine's work. Um and then what the remote control should look like, obviously, once we've got a good idea of what the functionalities are. So, in terms of the functionalities that we need, you obviously need to be able to turn the T_V_ on and off. You need to change channels, both by directly going to a specific channel or by channel surfing. You need to be able to control the volume and then control any menus on the T_V_ to regulate contrast or whatever. So, the problems that people have expressed is that there's too many buttons on remote controls, in general. The buttons it's not clear what they're supposed to do. Um often, you need to know specific button sequences to get certain functionalities done, um which you don't necessarily always remember, especially if it's a functionality that you don't use very often. And that the buttons are too small. So, here we've got two examples where here on the left-hand side, you can see a remote control that has lots and lots of buttons. The buttons, in a lot of cases, are tiny. Um they're hard to see, and okay, they're labelled, but the labels don't necessarily tell you too much. Whereas, on the other side, you have a much simpler remote control that I think basically has the minimum functionalities that are needed. And it sort of looks simpler and just less imposing when you first look at it. So, I would be inclined to go sort of towards this, in terms of design, rather than this. And if there's specific functionalities that require more buttons, then we can figure out how to do it with existing um buttons. So my personal preferences are to keep the number of buttons to a limit, or to a minimum, sorry, make frequently used buttons bigger and more strategically placed, so like the on button being really obvious one, the channel changing and the volume, and to keep the design basically sleek
Donald Krawiec: Click
James Phillips: and simple.
Donald Krawiec: mm.
James Phillips: Which, I think ties into what Christine and Ed have both said fairly reasonably. Um so, that's pretty much it, an I don't know if you guys have any questions or
Mark Lee: Oh, it's um, seems very understandable. Clearly your research and uh and ours uh heading in the same direction,
James Phillips: Yep.
Mark Lee: and um uh the only thing that I saw missing from uh your your research that we found was this uh ability to find the doggone thing when you need it.
James Phillips: Yes, that's true.
Mark Lee: So uh,
James Phillips: Yeah.
Mark Lee: you know, but that's okay. That's why we're all here at the table, so that if we think of it and our research indicates certain things and um
James Phillips: Yeah.
Mark Lee: w we it's complementary. I also think that um uh th f the the feel of it is uh, when you hold it, is something that um uh was expressed more in in in in my uh design
James Phillips: Mm-hmm.
Mark Lee: and
James Phillips: Yeah.
Mark Lee: that's logical and normal 'cause those are the parameters that an Industrial Designer's more thinking about, th
James Phillips: Yeah.
Mark Lee: th the look and the feel, and uh,
James Phillips: Oh,
Mark Lee: you're First. Yep. Mm-hmm. Okay, so I don't have any questions. Sounds good.
Donald Krawiec: So for anybody need uh any help, for time being, on this
James Phillips: Oh
Donald Krawiec: uh subjects, okay, so please come back to Ryan Bradley, and uh Christine, maybe I can uh try to help you to get some uh the technical uh the companies to help you for uh make a design uh slim, okay, and to add some features, like we are talking about, the speech recognition and all.
James Phillips: Should we maybe make a decision about what features we actually want to
Donald Krawiec: Yeah.
James Phillips: include, 'cause we've thrown a lot of features onto the table, but do we actually want to incorporate all of them, or have we missed
Ryan Bradley: Hmm.
James Phillips: anything?
Mark Lee: Do you wanna go back and look at the closing slide, maybe that would provide some guidance?
James Phillips: Sure.
Mark Lee: Doesn't really tell us.
Donald Krawiec: So not really this
Ryan Bradley: Individual
Donald Krawiec: one
Ryan Bradley: actions.
Donald Krawiec: we are talk
Mark Lee: Well it
Donald Krawiec: ab
Mark Lee: says individual actions, it says
Donald Krawiec: Yep.
Mark Lee: user interf so I'm supposed to do the components concept, supposed to work on the
James Phillips: Mm-hmm.
Mark Lee: user interface concept, and you're supposed to keep watching the trends. Um and specific instructions will be sent by our our coach. I
James Phillips: I thought
Mark Lee: think we should do as many features as uh start with all of them right now and eliminate them later in the process, that's my suggestion.
Donald Krawiec: Okay, that will be great. And uh I'll send you the the minutes
Mark Lee: You can
Donald Krawiec: of
Mark Lee: object
Donald Krawiec: meet
Mark Lee: if you want to
James Phillips: No, I I'm just thinking in terms of time, like
Ryan Bradley: She's
James Phillips: if
Ryan Bradley: objecting.
Donald Krawiec: Yeah.
James Phillips: Yes, now I'm objecting. No, I mean, I was just thinking is it really practical to start designing something with features that we're just gonna end up throwing away? I mean, it takes a lot of time and effort for everyone to consider different features, um and s if we spend that time and effort on features that we're not gonna use, maybe it's better to spend it on the f thinking more about features that we actually do want, but
Ryan Bradley: Oh th
Mark Lee: I think we
James Phillips: guess
Mark Lee: should take
Ryan Bradley: we s
Mark Lee: that as
Ryan Bradley: we
Mark Lee: an
Ryan Bradley: still
Mark Lee: action
Ryan Bradley: have
Mark Lee: item for after the meeting, 'cause w
Ryan Bradley: Yeah.
Mark Lee: our meeting time has run
Ryan Bradley: Right.
Mark Lee: out. Somebody
James Phillips: Sure.
Mark Lee: else has go to use this room, and,
James Phillips: Yeah.
Mark Lee: you know, we can't hang out here and
James Phillips: Yeah.
Mark Lee: talk
James Phillips: Sure.
Mark Lee: about this, so
Donald Krawiec: Okay, what we'll do is now we'll take for lunch break, okay, then uh we can discuss furthermore, okay, with our areas, and uh then we will come back again in the in the next meeting. So thanks for coming and uh I'll send you minutes of meeting, and uh please put your all information in the sharing folder so everybody can share the information. Okay?
James Phillips: Okay.
Donald Krawiec: So let's go for lunch then.
Mark Lee: Thank
Ryan Bradley: Agreed.
Mark Lee: you very
Donald Krawiec: Thank
Mark Lee: much.
Donald Krawiec: you. | Donald Krawiec gave new requirements for the product: the remote will not include a teletext function, will only be used for television, and must show the corporate image. Mark Lee presented possible components to consider. The group then discussed hard materials to include in the design. Ryan Bradley presented an initial sales plan and showed that there is a demand for remotes featuring voice recognition and other capabilities; the group discussed how it could be integrated into the functional design. Donald Krawiec offered to help Mark Lee find companies to provide help in integrating this component. The designers expressed that they needed more information from the board on their expectations for the product. James Phillips gave a presentation on product design from the user's perspective and emphasized simplicity in design. She also suggested that the group make a decision on which features to include in the final product design, but the group decided to postpone it. The designers were given their assignments: Ryan Bradley will present the marketing concept; James Phillips, the user interface concept; Mark Lee, the components concept. | 1 | amisum | train |
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Frank Johnson: Right. Conceptual design meeting. Right. so Right well um from the last meeting I was trying to send you the minutes, but uh it didn't work out too well, so maybe in sort of um quick summary of the last uh meeting, I can quickly give you what we what we had. Uh right, so Wishing I hadn't closed the damn Right so we had the fact we're gonna have the the logo uh the company its uh colour incorporated the device the remote device We had uh made our decisions about uh made our decisions about uh the device itself, that it was gonna be simple to make it uh enable us to complete the project in time. We're gonna have uh effectively two pages, a front page which had the uh features that the uh the customers most wanted, and then the uh the backup features on the second page so that it could uh meet the technical requirements. And the customers wouldn't have to look at them too often, only as and when required. So. So basically what decisions uh have we uh made? Uh have there been any uh changes?
Brandon Artrip: I think we all have a presentation again, so
Frank Johnson: Right.
Brandon Artrip: if we go through
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: those and then um.
Frank Johnson: Three presentation,
Brandon Artrip: Shall
Frank Johnson: yeah.
Brandon Artrip: I
Frank Johnson: So
Brandon Artrip: go first again?
Frank Johnson: Yeah, fine.
Edwin Juckett: Okay.
Brandon Artrip: I see this a little more smoothly than the last one.
Brandon Artrip: Okay right, let's get started. Um basically the uh for the Um I'll back actually. For the components design, um next step is basically the the way the remote's gonna work is still the same idea as before. still have the user interface is all the buttons we're gonna incorporate. Then there is a chip and still the sender. So um yes including the power s supply as well. Um I'll go on to my findings in each of these areas. Uh first in the power supply, we have the option of just the standard battery, um. There's a dynamo. Any of you think of kind of like the the old torches which you wind up um. There's a kinetic option, which if any of you've seen those new watches which you kind of you power up by waving around, um it just requires a small amount of movement which would mean the batteries wouldn't have to be replaced. Um that's
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: one option, but I think that was gonna cost a little more. And then there's solar cells. Um as a final option. For the buttons, we have um an integrated push button, which is Oh just to say all all these are um supplied by Real Reaction. So I guess for the ease of for quickness and ease we should take them from at least like one of these options. Um
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Brandon Artrip: so for the buttons there's an integrated push button, which I guess is just the same as the standard ones. This says it's uh similar to uh the button on the mouse for a normal for like uh like modern computer. Um there's a scroll wheel which is you know the new mouse has just got like the centre section which you can scroll up and down, which may be for the volume. You could
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: do do that. Um one issue for the buttons is, depending on which material we use, if we use rubber buttons then it requires a rubber case, so we have to take that into consideration. Um moving on to the printed
Frank Johnson: What would
Brandon Artrip: s
Frank Johnson: be the cost do do we know?
Brandon Artrip: Um that's on the next I th I think the there wasn't too much difference in the cost, that that related to the actual buttons, but it does affect the printed circuit board. Um which is the next section. Basically for the circuit board which is the middle, it's just see it down there the chips like the
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: like the workings of the actual um of the remote. The firm supplies a simple, a regular and an advanced um circuit board. And there's different prices according to each. So if we've got the scroll wheel for one of the buttons, that would require a slightly more advanced circuit board
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: than if we just had a standard um push button. Um one final thing we came up with was some information on the speech recognition. There's a small unit available through the company um which obviously would be an extra cost, but it wouldn't affect the size of the remote too much. Um and I guess that would require a more advanced circuit board, so there is an extra price in that sense. There is th sorry an extra cost in that sense. Um going to my personal preferences, um I thought possibly for power we could use kinetic um which is the idea of the watches um that you move you move the remote around to power it up. And this would avoid batteries running out, having to replace batteries and such like. Um for the buttons, I thought we'd probably get away with just having the standard um push buttons rather than the scroll wheel. Um and for the circuit board, again depends on which features we want in the actual in the remote. So if we wanted the scroll wheel and wanted the voice recognition, um then we'd have to get a a more costly circuit board. And that's it.
Edwin Juckett: 'Kay.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Thanks.
Frank Johnson: with the printed circuit boards you were going for the
Brandon Artrip: Um i it kind of depends um if we're gonna have the speech recognition, we'd have to probably get an advanced one. I'm guessing.
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: Uh but I don't know, so that is something I'll have
Frank Johnson: But
Brandon Artrip: to look
Frank Johnson: are we
Brandon Artrip: into.
Frank Johnson: going f R right.
Brandon Artrip: Um that's a that's a decision for all of us. Um.
Frank Johnson: So are we able to make that decision
Brandon Artrip: Yeah
Frank Johnson: now
Brandon Artrip: yeah.
Frank Johnson: in a sense that this is the point at which
Brandon Artrip: We
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: decide.
Frank Johnson: we're discussing that issue, so
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: would it not be best to rather than I mean one way is to do each of the presentations and then make decisions going back to the various presentations as they were. The other way would be to do the presentation
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: and then make the decision at that point in time.
Brandon Artrip: Um.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah,
Brandon Artrip: Maybe
Kenneth Mcilvain: that's probably
Brandon Artrip: w
Kenneth Mcilvain: a better one, to discuss it straight away.
Frank Johnson: 'Cause at that point then you've got the details up there, so if we wanted to know for instance that the scroll wheel required the regular and what required advance. Then if we were
Brandon Artrip: Um.
Frank Johnson: able to see that down then we could make the decision at that point in time and then that would be the end of that issue. Does that
Brandon Artrip: Yes.
Frank Johnson: make sense?
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um I have a lot of the information there. It might not be very clear.
Brandon Artrip: Is there
Kenneth Mcilvain: Unless you want to plug it back in to yours.
Brandon Artrip: Um. We could do, yeah. Um yeah we should.
Brandon Artrip: As I say it only specified that we need a more advanced circuit board for the scroll wheel, it didn't
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: The voice recognition came as a separate piece of information. Um.
Frank Johnson: No the scroll wheel required the regular, so the
Brandon Artrip: Yeah if if you down um.
Frank Johnson: Hmm.
Brandon Artrip: It's just this bit at the bottom which I've highlighted, but the scroll wheel requires a mini m minimally a regular chip, which is in the higher price range.
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Kenneth Mcilvain: I think
Frank Johnson: The display
Kenneth Mcilvain: the scroll
Frank Johnson: requires
Kenneth Mcilvain: wheel
Frank Johnson: an
Kenneth Mcilvain: um
Frank Johnson: advanced chip the display requires an advanced chip which
Brandon Artrip: Also the
Frank Johnson: in
Brandon Artrip: display's
Frank Johnson: turn
Brandon Artrip: for something
Frank Johnson: is more
Brandon Artrip: else which
Frank Johnson: expense.
Brandon Artrip: we decided against. Um but that bit
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Brandon Artrip: And note that the push button just requires a simple chip, so that would keep the price
Frank Johnson: Down.
Brandon Artrip: down.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah, and if we're
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: going for sleek and sexy, I think a scroll wheel is maybe a bit kinda bulky? I I've got um pictures well I've seen pictures with it kind of sticking off the side of it, and
Frank Johnson: Right.
Kenneth Mcilvain: they don't really look great.
Brandon Artrip: 'Kay.
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Brandon Artrip: So maybe just a simple push button, and that would
Frank Johnson: So.
Brandon Artrip: cut costs on
Frank Johnson: So
Brandon Artrip: the
Frank Johnson: we're going for p Okay. So is um
Edwin Juckett: So are we going for the w are we going for the simple one, are we?
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah, a simple
Edwin Juckett: Okay.
Frank Johnson: Simple
Kenneth Mcilvain: pushbuttons.
Frank Johnson: push button.
Brandon Artrip: on the speech recognition? The um it was basically what we said before, the idea that you record in a set message, and then it picks up that message um
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: and replies to you. So it is basically the concept we discussed before. Um but then we don't know for sure whether it would require a more complicated circuit board. I'm guessing it would, but got like the definite information. Maybe we should go on what we're certain of rather than
Frank Johnson: So if we go for the simple push button, so effectively we're going for the simple printed circuit board are we? Or are we going for the regular?
Brandon Artrip: Um if it's just the push button then it just needs the simple circuit board.
Frank Johnson: Mm-mm. But is there any other I mean okay, that's true for the for for that element, but we have to take all el elements into consideration. And so if there is one element that requires the more expensive one, or say the regular one, or
Edwin Juckett: Mm.
Frank Johnson: the more advanced, then that would have to be the same for all of them.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Hmm.
Frank Johnson: S
Edwin Juckett: I suppose
Kenneth Mcilvain: But
Edwin Juckett: we need we need to find out what circuit board that requires, maybe before we m make a decision.
Kenneth Mcilvain: But
Frank Johnson: Right.
Kenneth Mcilvain: the way that I interpret that um it doesn't seem to send out a signal to the telly, it just it's like a parrot just rep reply
Edwin Juckett: Oh yeah,
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: replying
Edwin Juckett: I suppose
Kenneth Mcilvain: to your message.
Edwin Juckett: so, yeah.
Brandon Artrip: So maybe that would be something
Kenneth Mcilvain: So
Brandon Artrip: separate,
Kenneth Mcilvain: I don't think it
Brandon Artrip: yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: would effect our
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: circuit
Frank Johnson: No.
Kenneth Mcilvain: board.
Brandon Artrip: Okay, so we'd have a simple circuit board and that would be an extra that would be in addition
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: to it.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: And
Brandon Artrip: Oh
Kenneth Mcilvain: I don't
Brandon Artrip: that makes
Kenneth Mcilvain: think
Brandon Artrip: sense.
Kenneth Mcilvain: you could really perform any of the remote functions with it. 'Cause the example that they've given there is good morning coffee machine, good morning Jo.
Frank Johnson: Mm-mm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: It might be useful to say like where are you remote.
Brandon Artrip: Okay.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Here I am, Jo.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: But I think that's maybe as far as that one could go?
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: Yeah that makes sense, so we'd stick with the simple circuit board and then think of the speech recognition as an extra an extra
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah, just
Brandon Artrip: possibility.
Kenneth Mcilvain: as a fun way to find it.
Brandon Artrip: Okay. Um.
Frank Johnson: Simple circuit board. Simple push button. Okay. W
Kenneth Mcilvain: And it says that
Frank Johnson: w kinetic.
Kenneth Mcilvain: I think it said
Frank Johnson: You
Kenneth Mcilvain: the cost
Frank Johnson: were you
Kenneth Mcilvain: of that
Frank Johnson: were
Kenneth Mcilvain: isn't
Frank Johnson: wanting
Kenneth Mcilvain: too
Frank Johnson: to
Kenneth Mcilvain: much.
Frank Johnson: go for the kinetic power supply.
Brandon Artrip: Um yeah I I thought so just for just for ease of not having to replace the batteries.
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: Um.
Frank Johnson: And how does it get uh charged up?
Brandon Artrip: It's um I think it works on the basis they have some kind of ball bearings inside. It's um it's some on watches which you you kind of you shake to power it up. Somehow
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: the mechanism inside powers up through movement.
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Brandon Artrip: So you'd you'd move the remote around a little bit and then that powers it up to use it.
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: So the speech recognition was Are we going for speech recognition? No? 'Cause that required the advanced
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um I think it would be helpful to find it, but
Edwin Juckett: Just
Kenneth Mcilvain: I don't think it'd
Brandon Artrip: Uh yeah I
Kenneth Mcilvain: um
Brandon Artrip: think did we decide it didn't affect the circuit board, it just affected
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah,
Edwin Juckett: Just
Kenneth Mcilvain: I think so.
Edwin Juckett: just
Brandon Artrip: It was just
Edwin Juckett: for the call and
Frank Johnson: I had
Edwin Juckett: find
Frank Johnson: speech
Edwin Juckett: thing.
Frank Johnson: recognition requires advanced req
Brandon Artrip: Oh
Frank Johnson: require
Brandon Artrip: no th that's what that's what I thought, but maybe maybe it doesn't. Um
Frank Johnson: Oh.
Brandon Artrip: I think I might have got that wrong.
Edwin Juckett: 'Cause
Frank Johnson: So
Edwin Juckett: it's s it's
Frank Johnson: okay.
Edwin Juckett: separate isn't it, it's not part
Frank Johnson: Speech
Edwin Juckett: of the
Frank Johnson: recognition you reckon then is
Brandon Artrip: It's it's
Frank Johnson: s
Brandon Artrip: just an addition thing it's
Frank Johnson: simple.
Brandon Artrip: um yeah.
Frank Johnson: And so we would want it in as an extra because it doesn't appear to cost too much. Would
Brandon Artrip: 'Kay.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: that be
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: 'Kay shall I pass
Kenneth Mcilvain: I
Brandon Artrip: on
Kenneth Mcilvain: think
Brandon Artrip: to you now?
Frank Johnson: In fact, it wouldn't really cost anymore, would it?
Kenneth Mcilvain: I'll just just check what it said. Actually I don't think it really says anything about the cost, but it says that it's already in the coffee machines, so
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: like it's already kind
Brandon Artrip: I assume
Kenneth Mcilvain: of
Brandon Artrip: it would cost extra, but Maybe we maybe we'll find out how much that does cost and have to decide slightly
Frank Johnson: And
Brandon Artrip: later.
Frank Johnson: then have to change all change everything at the last minute. Okay.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um.
Frank Johnson: S
Kenneth Mcilvain: Oh, that was quick. Um okay, so very brief presentation, um. From looking at the remotes that are out there at the minute, none of them are particularly um sleek and sexy. Um I haven't actually got the examples of the scroll button there, um but there's some curved cases that you can see, uh a range of sizes uh. All of them have a lot of buttons there um they seem to just have the rubber buttons. Does that move it?
Frank Johnson: Sorry?
Kenneth Mcilvain: It just seems to be skipping on without
Frank Johnson: Yeah,
Kenneth Mcilvain: us doing
Frank Johnson: I've
Kenneth Mcilvain: anything.
Frank Johnson: found that try and get it back.
Brandon Artrip: If you right click and then go onto a previous slide.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Ah it's alright. Um.
Brandon Artrip: Okay,
Kenneth Mcilvain: There wasn't much more to say about that,
Brandon Artrip: right.
Kenneth Mcilvain: just rambling. Um some of the uh remotes that I looked at, one of the models da did actually have voice recognition where you could um where it was connected to the remote control functions. And uh it was quite uh a swish model, where it can control uh four devices, T_V_, cable, satellite, video, D_V_D_, audio. Um so that's a bit of competition there. So I mean maybe it's better not to try and compete with that sort of thing and just to market it as a completely different um like different viewpoint as
Brandon Artrip: Yeah,
Kenneth Mcilvain: a kind of
Brandon Artrip: yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: finding your lost control rather than trying to compete with the functions. Um the scroll buttons, as you've already mentioned, um there's examples of those, but they don't look as sleek as other models. And there's no real advantage and because it impacts on other
Brandon Artrip: On the price,
Kenneth Mcilvain: on the materials
Brandon Artrip: yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: and the price it's not great.
Frank Johnson: So
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um
Frank Johnson: you were saying the scroll buttons
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah. Th there was a specialist type of remote that we could think about, um. There was children's remote, where um they just had a very limited range of buttons and they were b uh bright and colourful and um you you could program them so that they could only look at certain channels.
Brandon Artrip: 'Kay.
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um but I don't know if that's really in our field? But
Brandon Artrip: I
Kenneth Mcilvain: that's
Brandon Artrip: guess
Kenneth Mcilvain: something
Brandon Artrip: I guess
Kenneth Mcilvain: that's
Brandon Artrip: we're going
Kenneth Mcilvain: out there.
Brandon Artrip: for the biggest market, maybe not, but Was it was it specified that we went for the biggest?
Frank Johnson: Well we're to go for the international market rather than a local market but that
Kenneth Mcilvain: Hmm.
Frank Johnson: that wouldn't necessarily preclude The one thing that you can often do with products is you can uh make small modifications. So you have your basic model which you would sell at whatever, and then you could have additional features in you know like a You'd have model one, model two and model three, and therefore you can sub-divide your market up. But that's really where your field is.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: So maybe the children's remote should be like a a next step, but maybe I dunno for ours, maybe
Frank Johnson: Anyway
Brandon Artrip: we should
Frank Johnson: you could add on for an extra package, but on this basic one I'm reckoning that we're going for the basic model to be discussed here and that uh you would have for future reference the possibility of adding in extra features at extra cost
Kenneth Mcilvain: Hmm.
Frank Johnson: to take
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: care of specialist market segments.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Okay. Right
Frank Johnson: Is that
Kenneth Mcilvain: well that's something that we can
Frank Johnson: So so
Kenneth Mcilvain: be
Frank Johnson: what
Kenneth Mcilvain: aware
Frank Johnson: are we deciding
Kenneth Mcilvain: of.
Frank Johnson: to do
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um.
Frank Johnson: here?
Kenneth Mcilvain: I think because there's already um very good voice recognition technology out there,
Frank Johnson: Right.
Kenneth Mcilvain: and because ours might not cover the same functions that the leading brands do, it might
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: be a good idea to market it as a um finder function.
Frank Johnson: Uh the fi Yeah, the finder function rather than as a speech function to find
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: your remote.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: So
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Brandon Artrip: you also said for going for the international market um that some some maybe older people might not like the speech recognition.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Oh
Brandon Artrip: S
Kenneth Mcilvain: yeah.
Brandon Artrip: s so um
Kenneth Mcilvain: Different languages
Brandon Artrip: Yeah,
Kenneth Mcilvain: might not
Brandon Artrip: yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: be compatible.
Brandon Artrip: It w it would make it quite complicated,
Frank Johnson: Hmm.
Brandon Artrip: where um ours at least keeps it fairly simple and then the
Kenneth Mcilvain: Hmm.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah, 'cause I think you program um this one yourself, like to say
Brandon Artrip: Yeah,
Kenneth Mcilvain: like
Brandon Artrip: yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: whatever you want to your question.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah and ours is quite a cheap device, so I don't know how much we'll be able to put into it.
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: So you'd have a finder feature rather than a voice recognition feature.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Hmm. Maybe
Frank Johnson: And you
Kenneth Mcilvain: unless
Frank Johnson: were talking
Kenneth Mcilvain: something else comes up.
Frank Johnson: Mm. And you were talking about scroll buttons?
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um yeah I think um I think we've decided that it's gonna increase the cost and give
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Kenneth Mcilvain: no real kinda extra
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: benefit
Frank Johnson: b
Kenneth Mcilvain: and it's gonna decrease from the sleekness of it.
Frank Johnson: was that
Brandon Artrip: Yes
Frank Johnson: right?
Brandon Artrip: yes.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Hmm um and just to be aware that there are kind of specialist functions and specialist remotes but we probably don't want to focus on those like such as the children's
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Kenneth Mcilvain: remote.
Frank Johnson: So not to be focused on.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah. Um there was a mention just as kind of a warning about button design. Um just to avoid ambiguity. So it gave the example of say your volume buttons for up and down, they might both have a V_ on for volume, Um let's think how they did this.
Frank Johnson: Good in in
Kenneth Mcilvain: I'm just
Frank Johnson: Flip
Kenneth Mcilvain: gonna check
Frank Johnson: it round
Kenneth Mcilvain: so I do
Frank Johnson: in ninety
Kenneth Mcilvain: this right.
Frank Johnson: degree a hundred and eighty degrees and have it up and down. An upside-down V_.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um.
Frank Johnson: So that would show
Kenneth Mcilvain: What
Frank Johnson: that
Kenneth Mcilvain: did they
Frank Johnson: volume
Kenneth Mcilvain: say?
Frank Johnson: was going up, whereas the one underneath would see the volume going down.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um I think the thing was that if you decide to do this, to have triangular buttons, um somebody might look at this one and say oh well this triangular button is pointing up, and that's the first thing that they see
Frank Johnson: Right.
Kenneth Mcilvain: right, can it? Oh well, no, they might see yeah, they might see this pointing down
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: and think right that's gonna turn the volume down, whereas the actual button's pointing up,
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: so the function is to turn the button up. So,
Brandon Artrip: So maybe we could have
Kenneth Mcilvain: be
Brandon Artrip: like
Kenneth Mcilvain: careful what you put on the buttons and be careful of the shape that you make them,
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: because they might be kind of two um contradicting
Brandon Artrip: Yeah
Kenneth Mcilvain: kind
Brandon Artrip: I I
Kenneth Mcilvain: of
Brandon Artrip: know
Kenneth Mcilvain: shapes.
Brandon Artrip: what you mean. So maybe we could have volume written on the side and then up and down on the on the buttons themselves.
Frank Johnson: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: You could have volume
Brandon Artrip: Possible.
Frank Johnson: up and volume Volume up, down and
Brandon Artrip: Mm.
Frank Johnson: Like that. And 'cause the idea was to have limited um it was to have sizable amount of information on it.
Brandon Artrip: Yeah
Frank Johnson: Limited
Brandon Artrip: yeah.
Frank Johnson: number of buttons.
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: 'Cause it was sixteen buttons, wasn't it that
Brandon Artrip: Yeah
Frank Johnson: were
Brandon Artrip: we got it down
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: to not too many.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um and I think that's all I had to say for that.
Edwin Juckett: Okay.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um so what was the decision on the um design of the volume button?
Brandon Artrip: Um Are we are we gonna go through the design of all the buttons at the moment, or are we gonna
Edwin Juckett: I've I've got
Brandon Artrip: t
Edwin Juckett: some things to say about possible design things
Brandon Artrip: Yeah,
Edwin Juckett: from
Brandon Artrip: maybe we
Kenneth Mcilvain: Oh
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Brandon Artrip: should
Kenneth Mcilvain: okay.
Brandon Artrip: see yours
Edwin Juckett: trend
Brandon Artrip: first.
Edwin Juckett: watching. Cool.
Edwin Juckett: Right, um I've been looking at some trends in in sort of basically fashion on top of doing the um research into the remote control market the the one that's the one I talked about last time, that we'd sort of asked people about remote controls and what what was good about them, what was bad, what they used. And we've also been looking at sort of fa sort of fashions and what people are wanting out of consumer goods at the moment. So we've had people in Paris and Milan watching the uh fashion trends.
Frank Johnson: You know
Edwin Juckett: So
Frank Johnson: yourself.
Edwin Juckett: So just to summarise the most important things which came out of the remote control market investigation. The most important thing was that the thing sort of look and felt fancy rather than just functional.
Brandon Artrip: 'Kay.
Edwin Juckett: And second, there should be some technological innovation. And then third and l less important than the other two, there should be an ease of use as well. And apparently, the fashion trends are that people want sort of clothes and shoes and things with a fruit and vegetables theme. Um but um the feel of the material should be spongy, which is contrary to last year, apparently. I presume it must have been not not spongy last year. So we need to emphasise the fancy design with on on our remote control above all else. And then also try and add in technological informat innovation which could be our sort of find the thing with a hand clap. And then we need to ma sort of make it easy to use that's as a third priority, so perhaps um fewer fewer buttons and functions as we've as we've discussed. And then maybe find a way to incorporate these trends so that we sort of capture people's imaginations. So maybe we could make the buttons shaped like fruit and veg, or the the buttons could be spongy, uh somehow. Maybe we could make them out of rubber rather than sort of hard plastic. And then sort of even wackier than that, we could maybe have a fruit or vegetable shaped remote, say in the shape of a banana or something like that. Right, so that'll be it. Maybe a banana or courgette or something. How how far we actually want to go along and sort of follow the trends, do we think the trends are particularly important for this type of gadget, or or you know, do they not matter that much?
Kenneth Mcilvain: I think if you start making the buttons fruit shaped, it might make it more complicated to use.
Frank Johnson: Well you were just talking about you've got to be careful how you shape your buttons, 'cause you're can mis-direct people. And I would've
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: thought
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: the functionality 'cause the people get cheesed off by things by having to read instructions et cetera, so. ...
Kenneth Mcilvain: Maybe just one button, say the standby button is quite kinda separate from all the other functions. Maybe that could be a little apple. And
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Kenneth Mcilvain: then that
Edwin Juckett: Maybe
Kenneth Mcilvain: wouldn't
Edwin Juckett: yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: get in the way of like kinda one
Frank Johnson: Now?
Kenneth Mcilvain: to nine, and it wouldn't confuse
Frank Johnson: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: the numbers.
Frank Johnson: Stand-by button. No th that that incorporates the trend whilst at the same time not confusing people,
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: if you're looking for functionality.
Brandon Artrip: Well I dunno I I guess maybe fruit and vegetables may be popular at the moment, but as we know
Frank Johnson: But
Brandon Artrip: how
Frank Johnson: what
Brandon Artrip: fickle
Frank Johnson: are they gonna be
Brandon Artrip: the
Frank Johnson: next
Brandon Artrip: fashion
Frank Johnson: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: markets
Frank Johnson: What are they
Brandon Artrip: are,
Frank Johnson: gonna be
Brandon Artrip: maybe
Edwin Juckett: Yeah
Frank Johnson: next year.
Edwin Juckett: yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Hmm.
Frank Johnson: But
Kenneth Mcilvain: S
Frank Johnson: but th but okay but you you can incorporate the tr If y if you change all the buttons
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: then you've got the problem that this year's fruit and veg, next year's uh I was gonna say animals or elephants
Edwin Juckett: Yeah,
Frank Johnson: or w whatever.
Edwin Juckett: I'm
Frank Johnson: That
Edwin Juckett: not
Frank Johnson: means you're constantly changing your production schedule, and you've gotta make different
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: moulds and everything else, so that's not a good idea
Edwin Juckett: I'm
Frank Johnson: I would
Edwin Juckett: not I'm not
Frank Johnson: I would
Edwin Juckett: sure
Frank Johnson: suggest.
Edwin Juckett: what what what the sort of timescale we're thinking of selling the product over is. I don't know.
Brandon Artrip: I mean it just seems realistic that the remote control market isn't the kind of thing which takes in those kinds of fashion
Edwin Juckett: Yeah,
Brandon Artrip: trends.
Edwin Juckett: yeah.
Brandon Artrip: to something which is maybe more universal.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: Well
Kenneth Mcilvain: But I suppose as long as it's quite a subtle design,
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: um
Brandon Artrip: We c
Kenneth Mcilvain: even
Brandon Artrip: maybe
Kenneth Mcilvain: if
Brandon Artrip: can
Kenneth Mcilvain: the design
Brandon Artrip: imply
Kenneth Mcilvain: kind
Brandon Artrip: a
Kenneth Mcilvain: of
Brandon Artrip: fruit
Kenneth Mcilvain: changes,
Brandon Artrip: shape possibly.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: Ah d d But
Brandon Artrip: Maybe
Frank Johnson: if
Brandon Artrip: the spongy feel is something we could think
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: about, um.
Frank Johnson: Well. Yep.
Brandon Artrip: Maybe still with a rubber design we could
Frank Johnson: Was that in the sort of fashion sense that this Or was the spongy feel was that uh sort of fashion? It was, wasn't it?
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: It
Frank Johnson: So
Kenneth Mcilvain: seems like you're
Frank Johnson: the
Kenneth Mcilvain: gonna have rubber cases, as well as buttons.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah. Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: Um.
Kenneth Mcilvain: And that you can make them curved or double-curved and that would be the kind of
Brandon Artrip: Oh
Kenneth Mcilvain: sleek
Brandon Artrip: yeah
Kenneth Mcilvain: and sexy
Brandon Artrip: yeah one of
Kenneth Mcilvain: look.
Brandon Artrip: the things were if you had rubber buttons then you had to have a rubber case.
Frank Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Oh
Brandon Artrip: Um
Kenneth Mcilvain: right, that
Brandon Artrip: oh
Kenneth Mcilvain: fits,
Brandon Artrip: no no
Kenneth Mcilvain: doesn't
Brandon Artrip: no sorry
Kenneth Mcilvain: it?
Brandon Artrip: it's if you use the uh rubber double curved case then you must use rubber buttons. That's the way round. If you have the rubber case then you have to have the rubber buttons to go with it. Which makes sense.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Right.
Brandon Artrip: Um.
Frank Johnson: Rubber buttons require rubber case.
Kenneth Mcilvain: And that would fit in with what we want, wouldn't it, for the
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: spongy feel, to have everything rubber.
Frank Johnson: Uh so, yeah. The m the main problem is how f how frequently do the fashions change? 'Cause in essence in the production you want things to stay you want
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: to basically mint them out 'cause if you've got fashion changes and that you're incorporating, then it means that your stock is um is
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: last year's stock and therefore you're selling it or having to sell it at a discounted rate which you wouldn't want
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: to do. Whereas if you kept the product the same but you could have a difference from year to year, uh it seems to Edwin Juckett that you could
Edwin Juckett: Okay.
Frank Johnson: incorporate a fashion statement if you like, rather than changing the whole kit and caboodle.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: You're just changing one aspect like like the standby button or something like that, and especially 'cause then you could make it something that
Brandon Artrip: I suppose we maybe
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: are limited in the fact that we still have to put the logo on the actual
Frank Johnson: Well,
Brandon Artrip: would
Frank Johnson: you might
Brandon Artrip: or
Frank Johnson: be limited
Brandon Artrip: not.
Frank Johnson: in space, that yes.
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: Well
Kenneth Mcilvain: Hmm.
Frank Johnson: you two are obviously gonna find that out fairly quickly when you move over to your kit modelling stage as
Brandon Artrip: Yes
Frank Johnson: to uh
Brandon Artrip: yes.
Frank Johnson: how much pl how much how much how pliable is Plasticine.
Brandon Artrip: Maybe we could think of the the cases like changing with the fashions like the Nokia phones where you could take the casing off the outside. But
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: whether that would be too much to incorporate in production, whether that would just increase
Frank Johnson: Hmm.
Brandon Artrip: the costs, make it more complicated.
Edwin Juckett: That's
Frank Johnson: So
Edwin Juckett: possibly
Frank Johnson: you're talking
Edwin Juckett: it.
Frank Johnson: there about uh changing changing the casing.
Brandon Artrip: Yeah the a the actual the sort of the look from the outside, so where the buttons would stay the same, and
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: the general function of the remote would stay the same, but you could change the the way it looked.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah and then you could have Oh but you still would have to have the logo on every new case,
Brandon Artrip: Yeah, that's
Kenneth Mcilvain: but you could have
Brandon Artrip: true.
Kenneth Mcilvain: like pink cases for girls and
Frank Johnson: Yeah
Kenneth Mcilvain: red
Frank Johnson: you
Kenneth Mcilvain: ones
Frank Johnson: you could
Kenneth Mcilvain: and
Frank Johnson: do a
Kenneth Mcilvain: things
Frank Johnson: colour
Kenneth Mcilvain: like
Frank Johnson: change, so therefore
Kenneth Mcilvain: that.
Frank Johnson: you would yeah yeah I mean that's effectively what they did with the with the mobile phones, was
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: to have some in blue, some in red, some in rather
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: than all in black or, you know, which
Kenneth Mcilvain: Hmm.
Frank Johnson: four do you want, as long as it's black? But uh so
Brandon Artrip: So it is a possibility, um.
Kenneth Mcilvain: But we are supposed to use the um company colour scheme, aren't we? We haven't
Frank Johnson: Yes
Brandon Artrip: Oh
Kenneth Mcilvain: really
Brandon Artrip: okay
Kenneth Mcilvain: seen
Frank Johnson: oh that's
Kenneth Mcilvain: that yet
Frank Johnson: true
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: yes
Frank Johnson: uh
Brandon Artrip: that
Frank Johnson: that
Brandon Artrip: is
Kenneth Mcilvain: It
Frank Johnson: might
Kenneth Mcilvain: might
Frank Johnson: no
Kenneth Mcilvain: and we might be able to do both but it might clash with certain things.
Frank Johnson: Well not necessarily, because you could have your company uh We're we're meant to be finishing up. You could have your company badge and logo. I mean a lot of um computers for instance like like on the one you've got
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: there, it actually has a sort of um stick on badge so what you would al all you would really need, whether it, you know, whether the casing be w any colour, could be any colour, but that badge would then have to stick out on top of it so that uh in a
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: sense, with a with a logo like that, because it's on a white background, the only colour that it might not stick out so well on would be a white casing. 'Cause you
Brandon Artrip: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: you know you're sort of you're badging it. And in fact a lot of companies get somebody else to make them and literally just badge them themselves with
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: their own uh badge over the top.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: And in fact the way they've got that there even if you had that on a white, which is the predominant colour of the uh the Windows badge, you'd still be able to see it clearly from
Brandon Artrip: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: you know a white casing
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: uh product. So.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Hmm.
Brandon Artrip: And whether we'd have a big enough market to have this kind of like secondary market of selling the cases might be something to consider.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Well if it's for young people, um
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: like the phone generation, that sort of
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: thing'd probably go down well, and the market research has been on that side of things, hasn't it?
Edwin Juckett: Yeah, I mean it's people say that it's the look, they want the fancy looking thing but I'm Yeah. I'm not convinced on whether having changeable covers would be something that people would buy into. I think with the mobiles, it's the, you know it's a communication device, people see you with it all about and
Brandon Artrip: Yeah I suppose,
Edwin Juckett: i if
Brandon Artrip: where you
Edwin Juckett: it
Brandon Artrip: you keep the remote hidden
Frank Johnson: It's
Brandon Artrip: under
Frank Johnson: uh in
Brandon Artrip: the sofa
Frank Johnson: in the
Brandon Artrip: most
Frank Johnson: house,
Brandon Artrip: of the time.
Frank Johnson: isn't it,
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: I suppose.
Edwin Juckett: I
Kenneth Mcilvain: Okay,
Edwin Juckett: think
Kenneth Mcilvain: so if we just went for one colour of a rubber case
Frank Johnson: So
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: don't change case. Change case colour. And we're sort of saying no to that.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Did we decide on the rubber case? The spongy feel, or did we think that that might go as a trend?
Edwin Juckett: Well, it was different last year. The trend was different last year apparently. It was not not spongy feel. But I don't know whether the trend will change. I don't know whether it's one of those things that like sort of having all fruit shaped keys, that that probably would go out of fashion very quickly, whereas
Frank Johnson: Yeah.
Edwin Juckett: just the fact that it was a rubber case is probably less less of
Brandon Artrip: Yeah,
Edwin Juckett: something
Brandon Artrip: less likely
Edwin Juckett: that
Brandon Artrip: to
Frank Johnson: Sounds
Edwin Juckett: y
Frank Johnson: reasonable.
Edwin Juckett: you're gonna end up hating in a year, you know.
Brandon Artrip: So then
Frank Johnson: If
Brandon Artrip: th th that
Frank Johnson: you're going
Brandon Artrip: would
Frank Johnson: for fashion trends like that they'll need t you'd have to have interchangeable cases so that you could or
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: 'cause otherwise someone's
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: gonna have to buy a complete new remote rather than just a case.
Edwin Juckett: Mm.
Brandon Artrip: it seems to make sense that we we'd just maybe stick with the standard rubber case, and then have the standard rubber buttons as well.
Frank Johnson: Okay.
Edwin Juckett: Okay.
Brandon Artrip: Um.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Uh we haven't really talked about uh the curvature of the case. There's flat, there's single-curved and there's double-curved.
Brandon Artrip: Um.
Kenneth Mcilvain: I'm
Brandon Artrip: Mayb
Kenneth Mcilvain: not exactly sure
Brandon Artrip: Maybe
Kenneth Mcilvain: what
Brandon Artrip: curves
Kenneth Mcilvain: these things look
Brandon Artrip: give
Kenneth Mcilvain: like.
Brandon Artrip: it like the slightly more aesthetic feel? But the double curve wouldn't require us to perform miracles with the Plasticine.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Well it says that
Edwin Juckett: When you say d when you say double-curved, what what exactly does that mean?
Kenneth Mcilvain: I'm not exactly sure.
Edwin Juckett: Okay.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um I'll show you the remotes that I've got. See how uh Let's just get that bigger. See how uh the one Oh I'm not plugged
Edwin Juckett: No you're
Kenneth Mcilvain: in, am
Edwin Juckett: not
Kenneth Mcilvain: I?
Edwin Juckett: connected
Kenneth Mcilvain: That doesn't
Edwin Juckett: to Edwin Juckett
Kenneth Mcilvain: help.
Edwin Juckett: anymore.
Frank Johnson: One one thing to
Kenneth Mcilvain: Shall
Frank Johnson: cons
Kenneth Mcilvain: I just turn it round for time?
Frank Johnson: one thing to consider is that in some ways you want um
Edwin Juckett: That should come up.
Frank Johnson: by having a fairly standard case it means they can all fit together on top of each other therefore for storage purposes in shops and the like and it makes it easier that you can if you can
Edwin Juckett: Mm.
Frank Johnson: store them up on top
Brandon Artrip: Mm-hmm.
Frank Johnson: of each other. Whereas if you do um fancy things with it, you then gotta put it in a ca a a packaging box that that does that. And the cost of packaging could be quite important vis-a-vis the total cost of the product.
Brandon Artrip: Yeah yeah.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Hmm.
Brandon Artrip: So shall we go through quickly and just work out what we've decide on, if we have to kind
Frank Johnson: So
Brandon Artrip: of
Frank Johnson: but
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um it's not very clear up there, but you
Frank Johnson: No.
Kenneth Mcilvain: can see some of them have got kind of bulges, like
Frank Johnson: Mm
Kenneth Mcilvain: the second
Frank Johnson: yep.
Kenneth Mcilvain: one and the end one
Edwin Juckett: Right.
Kenneth Mcilvain: uh where there's a curve there. I'm not exactl I don't know if a double curve is maybe it comes up slightly,
Edwin Juckett: That's
Kenneth Mcilvain: or?
Edwin Juckett: what I was trying to work out.
Kenneth Mcilvain: But um
Frank Johnson: Oh right.
Kenneth Mcilvain: it is a kinda sleeker look if you've got curves in there.
Edwin Juckett: Shall we
Frank Johnson: S so do you wanna go for curves, more curves? We're meant
Kenneth Mcilvain: Definitely
Frank Johnson: to be f
Kenneth Mcilvain: a single,
Frank Johnson: we're meant to
Kenneth Mcilvain: maybe
Frank Johnson: be finishing
Kenneth Mcilvain: a double.
Frank Johnson: this meeting in about a minute or so.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: 'Kay, so
Kenneth Mcilvain: Shall
Brandon Artrip: shall
Kenneth Mcilvain: we
Brandon Artrip: we
Kenneth Mcilvain: go for
Brandon Artrip: quickly
Kenneth Mcilvain: single curve, just to compromise?
Brandon Artrip: We'll go for single curve, yeah.
Edwin Juckett: Okay.
Frank Johnson: Okay,
Brandon Artrip: Single curve.
Frank Johnson: curved or double curved? So it's single curved.
Brandon Artrip: So did we did we decide on the kinetic power supply? The
Edwin Juckett: Yeah I think
Brandon Artrip: one
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: you move
Edwin Juckett: that
Brandon Artrip: around?
Edwin Juckett: think that's a
Frank Johnson: Yep.
Edwin Juckett: good
Brandon Artrip: Okay.
Edwin Juckett: idea.
Brandon Artrip: Um
Kenneth Mcilvain: And the rubber push buttons,
Edwin Juckett: Rubber
Kenneth Mcilvain: rubber case.
Edwin Juckett: Rubber buttons and case.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um and we don't really know much about the colour scheme or logo yet do we, but
Brandon Artrip: Oh we
Kenneth Mcilvain: possibly
Brandon Artrip: ca
Kenneth Mcilvain: a sticker.
Brandon Artrip: Yeah yeah, we'll still have the Are we gonna go for the simple circuit board just to keep the cost down? I th I think we can by
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: by not having anything too complicated.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: Um.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah and and the voice recognition, we can use that can't we, just to find it.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah
Kenneth Mcilvain: Without
Frank Johnson: Yes.
Brandon Artrip: Um.
Edwin Juckett: yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: affecting the circuit board.
Frank Johnson: Yep.
Brandon Artrip: And see we could always decide against it if something comes up that's just something to that we seemed to leave out.
Edwin Juckett: And then are we going for sort of one button shaped like a fruit.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah that
Edwin Juckett: Or
Kenneth Mcilvain: sounds
Edwin Juckett: veg.
Kenneth Mcilvain: like it wouldn't do too much harm in a couple of years. Uh what sort of shape do we want?
Edwin Juckett: Don't know, maybe
Frank Johnson: So
Edwin Juckett: just
Frank Johnson: we've got spongy feel buttons as well, have we? As well as or
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: w or was that
Edwin Juckett: That's ru rubber buttons, yeah.
Brandon Artrip: Yeah, it was
Frank Johnson: So
Brandon Artrip: just
Frank Johnson: it's rubber buttons, so it's not really spongy feel buttons, it's just rubber buttons.
Brandon Artrip: 'Kay.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: With a rubber
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah,
Edwin Juckett: Reasonably
Frank Johnson: case
Kenneth Mcilvain: so it's
Edwin Juckett: spongy
Kenneth Mcilvain: not
Frank Johnson: right?
Kenneth Mcilvain: too wacky.
Edwin Juckett: I guess, yeah.
Frank Johnson: And the standby button is gonna be different.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah okay.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Um I think an apple would be a good recognisable shape. If you start getting into kinda aubergines and things, it gets a bit weird.
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: Okay so what what shape are we making the standby button?
Edwin Juckett: Apple?
Kenneth Mcilvain: Vote?
Frank Johnson: A apple. Oh oh
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Frank Johnson: Sorry?
Kenneth Mcilvain: Shall we vote on it?
Edwin Juckett: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: We will go
Kenneth Mcilvain: Anyone
Brandon Artrip: for the a
Kenneth Mcilvain: got
Brandon Artrip: a
Kenneth Mcilvain: any
Edwin Juckett: Apple
Brandon Artrip: a
Kenneth Mcilvain: suggestions?
Brandon Artrip: apples
Edwin Juckett: apple
Brandon Artrip: apples.
Edwin Juckett: a
Kenneth Mcilvain: Right.
Edwin Juckett: a qu Quite a big one, as well.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Okay. Ah.
Edwin Juckett: A big apple. Uh
Kenneth Mcilvain: Well it could be red.
Edwin Juckett: Could be a red apple, yeah. Either, don't mind.
Frank Johnson: A red apple?
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah
Frank Johnson: Is it?
Kenneth Mcilvain: 'cause we wanna incorporate a bit of colour if we can, once we find out
Brandon Artrip: Okay.
Kenneth Mcilvain: um
Brandon Artrip: And then we're gonna are you gonna work on keeping the button design quite simple? Just like the Just working out what we're gonna do for the next time.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm.
Brandon Artrip: Um.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah. Yeah that seems pretty straight forward.
Brandon Artrip: Yeah.
Kenneth Mcilvain: 'Cause most of them will just be kind of mainly circular or like very plain.
Brandon Artrip: 'Kay.
Edwin Juckett: Mm-hmm. Okay.
Frank Johnson: Sorry what was that last thing again there?
Kenneth Mcilvain: Uh just to keep the shape of the buttons simple.
Frank Johnson: Right much option on that. I thought you were going for a single curve and
Kenneth Mcilvain: Ah just the uh shape of the buttons.
Frank Johnson: Alright.
Brandon Artrip: And j yeah, just keeping the sort of the labelling them labelling of them fairly simple as well.
Kenneth Mcilvain: Yeah.
Brandon Artrip: Fairly sort of self explanatory.
Frank Johnson: Right, so shape of buttons simple.
Frank Johnson: Okay. So that's that, I guess. We should now go away and get these things sorted out. I guess you two are on plasticine duty or whatever.
Brandon Artrip: Okay.
Frank Johnson: Okay, so um.
Brandon Artrip: Is that the end? Okay.
Edwin Juckett: Looks like it.
Frank Johnson: Okay. | Frank Johnson reviewed the minutes from the last meeting. Brandon Artrip discussed options for each of the internal components. He showed that the size of the chip was dependent on the type and number of additional features used. The group discussed incorporating speech recognition and other functions to be able to decide on chip size. They decided that using speech recognition for the locator function only would allow them to use a simple chip. Kenneth Mcilvain presented several existing products. She presented a specialized children's remote; the group decided to focus on a basic remote that would appeal to a wide market. She expressed that buttons are often ambiguously shaped and that their remote must have an easy-to-use interface. Edwin Juckett presented trends in the remote control market and the fruit and vegetable and spongy material trends in fashion. The group discussed ways to incorporate these trends. They decided to make the standby button shaped like an apple, to use a rubber case and buttons, and to use a single-curved shape. Frank Johnson instructed Kenneth Mcilvain and Brandon Artrip to construct the prototype. | 1 | amisum | train |
Robert Richardson: Is everyone ready to start?
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Yes.
Robert Richardson: Okay. Great Well. welcome to the third meeting of conceptual design. I'll just get the PowerPoint presentation up and running. Okay. Um, on the agenda for this, um, for this particular meeting, we'll have your three presentations on what you've done since our last meeting, after we came up with um some general ideas of our design. And, um, then we have to make some key decisions on, on our concept, how we're gonna make it, what uh materials we're gonna use, and that sort of thing. The meeting will be forty minutes long.
Brian Albrecht: Okay.
Robert Richardson: And um we will once again have Poppy as our first presenter.
Brian Albrecht: Okay.
Robert Richardson: Alright, and I will switch up PowerPoint.
Brian Albrecht: Thank you.
Robert Richardson: Okay.
Brian Albrecht: Should be just loading. Okay. Oh, although I can't see it on my screen. That says go here. Okay. I've been doing some research into the different components that we could use, um what's available to us f to actually make the remote control. Um, first of all we have to look at how the remote control is actually made, and what is it happens inside the casing, which is more your field. Um thes, main internal feature is a circuit board, which contains all the elec electronics and also the contacts with the power source. Which is not necessarily a battery, as we're about to see. Um, there are several components of, um, the circuit board that we need to consider, where we'll be getting them from, what they'll be made of. Um, including the integrated circuit, which is also known as the chip. Which is where all the main information is uh contained. Um, diodes, transistors, resonators, resistors, and capacit capacitors all need to be considered as well. Um, and
Robert Richardson: Um
Brian Albrecht: all their positioning in the circuit.
Robert Richardson: Are they all included, like mandatorily, or r are these different options?
Brian Albrecht: Uh, these, they're all different options, they're all separate, apart from the chip,
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: which we will probable decide whether we buy a simple, a regular, advanced. We can go into that later. Um, all the other things are individual components that we'd have to get in separately, and work out the most, like, effective um circuit, including all the wires and everything like that. And the L_E_D_ of course, that's a light emitting diode. So, we could, so we've got flex flexibility with colours and things,
Robert Richardson: Mm.
Brian Albrecht: with that as well. Okay, there are lots of different possibilities for the energy source. We could use a basic battery, but that brings with it, like they need to be recharged and the bulk, the size of it as well. And they're not so great to dispose of, environmentally. There's a hand-powered dynamo which is a sort of thing that was used for torches fifty years ago. A bit out of date. Kinetic energy is something
Robert Richardson: Um
Brian Albrecht: that's been recently developed.
Robert Richardson: What is a hand-powered dynamo?
Brian Albrecht: Um, where you manually charge up the power. Like you
Robert Richardson: Just
Brian Albrecht: wind
Robert Richardson: every,
Brian Albrecht: up
Robert Richardson: every
Brian Albrecht: something.
Robert Richardson: once in a while?
Brian Albrecht: Sorry?
Robert Richardson: Just every once in a while
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: or constantly?
Brian Albrecht: Every once in a while I think. But
Robert Richardson: Alright.
Brian Albrecht: it's
Robert Richardson: It'd be kind of strange to always be
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: cranking
Brian Albrecht: It would be like
Robert Richardson: it
Brian Albrecht: going
Robert Richardson: I think.
Brian Albrecht: a step back
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: in time. I don't think it would really be with kind of cutting edge technology.
Robert Richardson: No.
Brian Albrecht: Whereas kinetic energy is a new idea that's being used by some watches and other devices, where you just shake the device and it gives it power. I mean, the kinetic energy is transformed into power to make the circuit work. Um, or there's solar power, which we've been considering inside a building, which is where it's gonna be used, might not be quite so
Robert Richardson: Right.
Brian Albrecht: useful. But, good to look into, renewable energy, always the way. Um, lots of considerations for the case, like what sort of shape it would be, curved or flat. That's got a lot to do with the ergonomics. Like how it's comfortable and s sits in the hand. We don't want something that's huge and you can't pick up. Or too small. Or too slidy. I know I've had a remote control before which you couldn't tell which was the front and the back, 'cause it had so many buttons on, and the shape was so symmetrical that I'd be pressing like
Danny Schirmer: Mm.
Brian Albrecht: a volume button instead of the on button. Because you can't really see which way round it is.
Robert Richardson: Right.
Brian Albrecht: Um, we also can choose what materials um, the we could use metal, we could use rubber which might be more um ideal for the anti-R_S_I_. It's like the same sort of rubber that's used in stress balls and
Robert Richardson: Mm-hmm.
Brian Albrecht: things like that, so it's very like soft, not so stressful on your hands. Wood. Um, again, stepping back in time again there. I don't think that's quite up to date with what we're looking for here.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: Um, titanium is not gonna be possible, even though it just it beyond our budget really. But, would've been maybe for future projects. Um right our choice for buttons as well. We've developed some we've got some good advances in technology, with our research team have found some uh new multiple um option scroll buttons. I think that was brought up for, um, they're basically quite a flexible design, modern, you don't have to use individual buttons. You can just slide up and down. I'm sure we're all quite familiar with those on
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Mm-hmm.
Brian Albrecht: mobiles or computer laptop pads.
Robert Richardson: Um one thing with the scroll buttons though. It, it we would have to have an L_C_D_ um
Brian Albrecht: Yeah. That's true.
Robert Richardson: display, and
Brian Albrecht: And that would
Robert Richardson: the
Brian Albrecht: lead to
Robert Richardson: glow
Brian Albrecht: an advanced
Robert Richardson: in the dark thing
Brian Albrecht: yeah. If
Robert Richardson: might
Brian Albrecht: we have
Robert Richardson: be difficult.
Brian Albrecht: yeah. We're going on to that later with the advanc with the L_C_D_ that means we'd need a really advanced chip.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: And it's
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
Brian Albrecht: unlikely that that's gonna be in our budget. Um, also we've got the integrated pushbutton, which is what we're most familiar with. It's the most straightforward. But you can in like incorporate that with a scroll button as well. Got decisions to make there. this is what I was just saying before. Linked in the different depends on what type of buttons we have and the inputs. Um simple would go with the pushbutton. Um, regular you could link with the scroll button. And the advanced we'd have to go with a L_C_D_ s
Robert Richardson: Right.
Brian Albrecht: display. My personal preferences? I think we could go for the kinetic energy source. I don't, I think that's quite um an advanced kind of technology. It's not been seen before, so it could be quite a, a novelty factor, attractive as well. And also energy saving 'cause you're producing the energy, you don't need an external sort of battery supply or solar panels. You just give it a shake.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: Sounds brilliant to Danny Schirmer. Rubber
Robert Richardson: Uh.
Brian Albrecht: casing I thing would probably the best, if we're going for the anti-R_S_I_ and like more choice with um aesthetics. Like it could be pretty much any colour we want. Um, and gives you, yeah, more flexibility there. And probably the regular chip as opposed to the simple, then we could possibly have the scroll and the push, but no L_C_D_, 'cause we probably can't afford that one.
Robert Richardson: Yeah. Um, one concern with the rubber casing
Brian Albrecht: Mm-hmm.
Robert Richardson: is that it would be rubber encapsulating all of these chips and diodes and delicate technology as like as the exterior. This is the one thing that's protecting its innards.
Brian Albrecht: I think that would, uh there would be an in sort of more internal casing. And the rubber would just be the, what's in contact with the human.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Another thing is it might be more difficult if it's a rubber exterior talking about putting on interchangeable plates.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
Robert Richardson: Um, is it I don't see how a like a rubber plate going on top it would stay there. Like if it was sort of like a clip-on plastic plate. It would work that way.
Brian Albrecht: Maybe
John Reitano: W
Brian Albrecht: if the, um, if it was just kind of a, more of a rubber coating which was on to a case. So, it was kind of, the whole thing would be removable.
John Reitano: Like plastic with rubber, kind
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
John Reitano: of on top
Brian Albrecht: Like
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: I can't think of what.
John Reitano: Well, there's, there is a certain phone that has like a rubber casing,
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
John Reitano: b like a
Brian Albrecht: Or
John Reitano: Nokia
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
Brian Albrecht: like an you
John Reitano: it is.
Brian Albrecht: can get
John Reitano: It's
Brian Albrecht: sort of outer casing for
John Reitano: yeah.
Brian Albrecht: iPods and something, that's just
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Like the
Brian Albrecht: it's
Danny Schirmer: skin?
Brian Albrecht: protective as
Danny Schirmer: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: well. It, it stops it, I mean, it would reduce the impact if it was dropped or something,
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: as well, 'cause it wouldn't damage itself so easily.
Robert Richardson: Alright.
Brian Albrecht: I think
Robert Richardson: So maybe
Brian Albrecht: i maybe
Robert Richardson: the
Danny Schirmer: Okay.
Brian Albrecht: a mixture of both there,
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: maybe. Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: So the actual remote would be hard plastic and
Brian Albrecht: And
Danny Schirmer: the
Brian Albrecht: then
Danny Schirmer: casings
Brian Albrecht: yeah.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: rubber.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Okay. And the buttons
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: obviously are rubber.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Okay.
Robert Richardson: Yeah. That sounds good. I, um, is it possible to put designs onto this type of rubber?
Brian Albrecht: As far as I know. It should be.
Robert Richardson: Okay, we'll just say yeah.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Yes, just why
Brian Albrecht: Yeah,
Robert Richardson: not.
Brian Albrecht: yeah.
Robert Richardson: Alright. I like the kinetic energy source idea.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah. I
Robert Richardson: Um,
Brian Albrecht: thought that was
Robert Richardson: I don't know when people will, um, be moving a remote around a lot.
John Reitano: Yeah,
Robert Richardson: But
John Reitano: tha
Robert Richardson: I think
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
Robert Richardson: that it's worth it, kinetety, kinetic um energy source. It could
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: make an we could have any kind of style. It wouldn't be as heavy or bulky, and
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Yeah. Just for environmental reasons.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: I guess it's a bit scary 'cause it hasn't been done before.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: So it seems we'd have to do more research on it. Or I dunno
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: if you could have a battery pack.
Brian Albrecht: Like as a
John Reitano: Backup.
Brian Albrecht: backup
Danny Schirmer: Yeah
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: for
Danny Schirmer: so there's
Brian Albrecht: something.
Danny Schirmer: there is a one because most remotes use two batteries
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: I believe.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: So, if it was running off of one battery as
John Reitano: That
Danny Schirmer: a
John Reitano: would be good yeah.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah. Some alternative just in case
Danny Schirmer: Right.
Brian Albrecht: something went wrong.
John Reitano: Maybe we could you were saying about um solar power ma maybe not working indoors, but a lot of calculators,
Brian Albrecht: That's true.
John Reitano: yeah,
Brian Albrecht: I just thought
John Reitano: have
Brian Albrecht: of that.
John Reitano: solar power.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
John Reitano: So maybe could
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
John Reitano: be incorporated
Brian Albrecht: May
John Reitano: as
Brian Albrecht: maybe that could be the backup.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: Instead
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: of a battery.
Danny Schirmer: Although
Brian Albrecht: Like solar
Danny Schirmer: it needs
Brian Albrecht: backup.
Danny Schirmer: some light, doesn't it?
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
John Reitano: Do,
Brian Albrecht: I suppose
Robert Richardson: Yeah,
Danny Schirmer: So,
John Reitano: do
Robert Richardson: you
John Reitano: those
Brian Albrecht: s
Robert Richardson: can
John Reitano: calculators
Brian Albrecht: but
Robert Richardson: watch
Brian Albrecht: some
Robert Richardson: a T_V_
Danny Schirmer: if
Robert Richardson: in the dark
Danny Schirmer: we're doing
Robert Richardson: then.
John Reitano: yeah.
Danny Schirmer: yeah. If we're
Brian Albrecht: But
John Reitano: I
Brian Albrecht: thing
John Reitano: don't
Brian Albrecht: is, it's
John Reitano: know how
Brian Albrecht: not
John Reitano: it
Brian Albrecht: you don't
John Reitano: works.
Brian Albrecht: need the solar all the time. It can be stored. It can be like
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: you can
Danny Schirmer: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: have the solar energy and then it can store that energy and use it. It just needs to be in light for a certain
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: amount of time per day. Like a few
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: hours a day.
Robert Richardson: I think that might be a little impractical though.
Danny Schirmer: Yeah. I think sometimes it's just shoved under, under a cushion, and
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: That's true. It
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: could
Danny Schirmer: yeah.
Brian Albrecht: easily
Robert Richardson: Like people don't wanna have to worry about that.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: I suppose it would be really annoying if you get to think, oh no, I forgot to charge my remote today. Like
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: if the kinetic thing, I think what's
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: best about
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: that is that it's instant energy. You don't have to, you know, you can shake it a few times, or whatever.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: And
Robert Richardson: Or just like
Brian Albrecht: it
Robert Richardson: pick
Brian Albrecht: works.
Robert Richardson: it up when you're gonna
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
John Reitano: Yeah,
Robert Richardson: use
John Reitano: I
Robert Richardson: it.
John Reitano: suppose.
Brian Albrecht: Instead of you don't have to like make sure it's in the right place to charge and.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Alright. Cool.
Brian Albrecht: K okay.
Robert Richardson: 'S that the end of your presentation.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Alright. Thank you.
Brian Albrecht: There we go.
John Reitano: Thanks.
John Reitano: Oh.
John Reitano: It's not on my screen. Why?
Brian Albrecht: it wasn't on mine either. I don't know why. I think,
John Reitano: You
Brian Albrecht: I just,
John Reitano: don't know
Brian Albrecht: I
John Reitano: why?
Brian Albrecht: just used the mouse on there.
John Reitano: Oh okay. Is it that one?
Robert Richardson: Yeah. That's
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: um
John Reitano: Um, I'm just gonna go through the interface concept with yous now. Uh, first of all I'll explain what a user interface is. It's the aspects of a computer system which can be seen or otherwise perceived, for example, heard or felt maybe, or by the human user. And it's also the commands that the user uses to control its operation and to input data. Um, there are two types of user interfaces. There's the graphical user interface, which emphasises the use of pictures for output and a pointing device, for example a mouse for input control. So that's sort of like the scroll thing we were talking about.
Robert Richardson: Oh. Okay.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
John Reitano: I'm not really sure about the pictures that maybe that's on an L_C_D_ screen.
Brian Albrecht: Mm.
John Reitano: Or maybe it's the the buttons or pictures or something.
Robert Richardson: Hmm.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
John Reitano: Do you think
Brian Albrecht: So
John Reitano: it's
Brian Albrecht: I suppose sometime
Robert Richardson: Yeah, 'cause
Brian Albrecht: after you.
Robert Richardson: I'm sorry? Um, because command interface requires you to type textual commands and input at a keyboard, so the numbers are sort of like a keyboard.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: You're pressing the numbers
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: for,
Brian Albrecht: Mm.
Robert Richardson: um,
John Reitano: So you must,
Robert Richardson: for what you want.
John Reitano: for the graphical user you must need some kind of presentation for the graphics. Like an
Brian Albrecht: I
John Reitano: L_C_D_
Brian Albrecht: s I
John Reitano: screen.
Brian Albrecht: suppose where um mm on some buttons you would have like the power would be s some kind of symbol.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: And if you wanted to go onto teletext or, I know we're not having that, but
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: I mean a similar thing, you, they have there's a like little picture with a screen with lines across it, which
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: I suppose it's that sort of thing like the,
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: the symbol on the button. But if we're having a simplified display anyway, w that, we
Robert Richardson: Yeah,
Brian Albrecht: probably
Robert Richardson: we'll be
Brian Albrecht: won't
Robert Richardson: doing
Brian Albrecht: have to focus so much on that. It'll be more the on the numbers
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: and the
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: volume.
Robert Richardson: It'd be more a command interface,
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: and
Brian Albrecht: I suppose
Robert Richardson: then
Brian Albrecht: we need to think of symbols for like the volume, display, and
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: stuff like that.
Danny Schirmer: So it's just draf graphical for the pointing aspect? The infrared
Brian Albrecht: I
Danny Schirmer: is like, that's considered a
Robert Richardson: Hmm?
John Reitano: No I think it's to do with the actual symbols that are on the, that's on the buttons of the remote control, and
Danny Schirmer: Okay. So when it says
John Reitano: per
Danny Schirmer: pointing
Brian Albrecht: For inp
Danny Schirmer: device that doesn't include
John Reitano: Well it could be a wee scroller thing, and something could come up on the screen.
Robert Richardson: Yeah. I think they're talking about L_C_D_ type things.
Brian Albrecht: Mm.
Danny Schirmer: Okay.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Okay.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
John Reitano: But um I think we're gonna go with the command interface anyway, to make
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
John Reitano: it more simplistic.
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
John Reitano: But the, we could incorporate some of the graphical user um points, as in just to make it m um nicer to look at maybe.
Robert Richardson: What do you mean?
John Reitano: Like I can't think of an example, but Sort of like little pictures rather than
Robert Richardson: Oh yeah, like
John Reitano: Like
Robert Richardson: how
John Reitano: a little
Robert Richardson: the buttons
John Reitano: sound. Instead of saying volume, like a little speaker or something.
Robert Richardson: Yeah,
John Reitano: Yeah,
Danny Schirmer: Mm.
Robert Richardson: as
John Reitano: something
Robert Richardson: a button though.
John Reitano: y
Robert Richardson: So, it's a keyboard in the shape of it,
John Reitano: Yeah
Robert Richardson: right?
John Reitano: m perha yeah.
Robert Richardson: Okay.
John Reitano: Yeah. Maybe.
Robert Richardson: Yeah. I like that idea.
John Reitano: Um, the co uh we've decided that the command interface would be the most useful for a remote control. As it would be less complicated, and the controls would be more user-friendly. Um, the remote control would be cheaper to design, so that we'd have more money in the budget to, um, target the design area of the interface. You know, make it more trendy and original. We'll have more money if we keep it simple.
Robert Richardson: Yeah. I'm sure i like kinetic energy would probably dip into the budget.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: A bit more too,
John Reitano: Seeing
Robert Richardson: yeah.
John Reitano: as it's quite a new technology. Um We, we also have to keep in mind when we're designing our, um, more user-friendly remote control, that a lot of interfaces consist of a clutter of buttons, that, um, that their functions, colours and forms aren't always helpful.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah. That's true.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: That's in like the buttons with all the different like colours for different choices and things.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: It can be a bit, yeah, overwhelming.
John Reitano: And that all interfaces are different. So, um, that doesn't improve the use of the produ product, so we need to come up with something that's easy to understand. And maybe learn from the mistakes of other interfaces that can be too complicated for people to use.
Robert Richardson: Mm-hmm.
Brian Albrecht: Yep.
John Reitano: Does anyone have any questions?
Robert Richardson: Do you think that we should keep all the buttons to one same colour, just to keep it, give it a simplistic look.
John Reitano: Mm.
Danny Schirmer: I think if we go with the um design plate thing, we'll have to. Just because of colour clashing, and
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: if we
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: wanted to, so and, and we might, I mean, depending on what comes out of the design, we might have to stick to just black buttons.
John Reitano: But um
Robert Richardson: But what about the lighting up effect?
Danny Schirmer: You mean different colours for the lighting or
Robert Richardson: Um, well, um, I thought we had um decided that we would if you touched one of the buttons they'd all light up. And
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
Robert Richardson: so if they were black, it wouldn't be possible for them to light up.
Danny Schirmer: Oh I see what you're saying. Well y
Robert Richardson: If they were white they would glow, probably. If they were made out of rubber.
Danny Schirmer: Oh so you're picturing the light is coming from the back. I kinda pictured it as kind of coming from the sides and lighting it up frontwards.
Brian Albrecht: Oh.
Danny Schirmer: But,
Robert Richardson: Oh. Where
Danny Schirmer: but
Robert Richardson: would the
Danny Schirmer: I guess,
Robert Richardson: light
Danny Schirmer: you
Robert Richardson: come
Danny Schirmer: mean from
Robert Richardson: from?
Danny Schirmer: the back. Okay.
Brian Albrecht: I'd assume, like, an internal light,
Danny Schirmer: Okay.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: that comes through. So there would have to, have to be some parts maybe transparent around
Danny Schirmer: Right.
Brian Albrecht: the buttons,
Robert Richardson: Yeah,
Brian Albrecht: or something.
Robert Richardson: and well rubber is a more translucent
Brian Albrecht: Yeah, yeah.
Robert Richardson: product too, so
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
Brian Albrecht: It should be able
Robert Richardson: we
Brian Albrecht: to
Robert Richardson: have that taken care of.
Brian Albrecht: mm-hmm.
John Reitano: In the phone that I was thinking of as well, when you change the um covers of it, the, the little buttons that actually, you know, that contro
Brian Albrecht: Li yeah.
John Reitano: control stuff, are behind the rubber. So you can change the buttons when you're changing the faces. Do
Danny Schirmer: Oh.
John Reitano: you know what I mean?
Danny Schirmer: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Oh.
John Reitano: 'Cause
Danny Schirmer: They,
John Reitano: it's
Danny Schirmer: they
John Reitano: just
Danny Schirmer: insert
John Reitano: the wee control,
Danny Schirmer: over.
John Reitano: yeah,
Danny Schirmer: Okay.
John Reitano: thing that's behind it. So
Robert Richardson: Mm.
John Reitano: I mean, we don't have to decide on one colour. Each face could have its own colour of buttons maybe?
Brian Albrecht: Mm-hmm.
Robert Richardson: Well, if they're raised up buttons.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: So that you can feel them. We were talking about it being more um, a
Danny Schirmer: T
Robert Richardson: lot more tangible. Um, it might be more difficult to do.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: If they're, if they're sticking up. If it's flat then, like o like on a cellphone or a mobile phone, it's like all very flat, and you just have to sort of press down on these tiny little buttons, but
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: I think it would be possible. I don't think it would make that much difference. I mean, the uh the dimensions of it. 'Cause if it's just like constructed in the same way as like the front cover of a mobile phone. You can like take off the hard cover and then there's the like say the buttons. And then you get to the circuit. I don't think it would matter that the buttons were bigger through the, the top casing. I'm sure you could f work it out to fit in the casing, without
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: causing too much difficulty. I'm sure
Robert Richardson: Okay.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: that'd be fine.
Robert Richardson: Alright. If it's do-able we can do. Yeah, sounds good to Danny Schirmer.
John Reitano: So that's everything, then?
Brian Albrecht: Okay.
Robert Richardson: Alright, thank you.
Danny Schirmer: Okay is that my turn then?
John Reitano: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Alright. I have a shorter report for you today. Um, it took a while to get this, uh Uh.
Brian Albrecht: You're not plugged in yet.
Danny Schirmer: Oh. That's a very good point.
Danny Schirmer: Okay, so um, this report is about uh trend-watching. Um, basically so we can live up to our, our uh purpose of having a very fashionable remote control. Sorry. There we go. Um So, just so you know, my method was mainly web web-based research this time around. I also spoke with fashion experts in Milan, New York and Paris. And I looked at the design reports from previous years, here at Real Remote. Um, just so c we can work off of them, see how fashions have changed. Um, so I'll list the three most important aspects that I've come across. Um, and they, they're each more important than the one that comes after it. Uh, the first one is that there should be a fancy look-and-feel, instead of the current functional look-and-feel. Um, this should be our priority, as we've been saying. The second most important aspect is that a remote sh that the remote control should be technologically innovative. So, I think we've done a lot of talking about that, just with lighting and the buttons and the face-plates. Um, so it looks like we'll be able to keep on track with that. And the third most important aspect is that the remote control should be easy to use. So, pretty basic there. And the recent fashion update, uh, according to fashion-watchers in Paris and Milan, is that fruit and vegetables will be the most important theme for clothes, shoes and furniture. Um, also, in contra uh in contrast to last year, the feel of the material is expected to be spongy. Again, we've already discussed that with rubber versus hard plastic buttons. Um So, my personal preferences here, um of course, as we, we've already talked about the personal face-plates in this meeting, and I'd like to stick to that. The fruits and vegetable themes, I don't know if that's going to work for us. It sounds something that you'd use on kitchenware. I don't
Brian Albrecht: Mm.
Danny Schirmer: know if we wanna do it on remotes. It could be one of the options. Maybe
Robert Richardson: Mm-hmm.
Danny Schirmer: for the television that people have in their kitchen. Um, the temporary light-up idea, sounds like we're gonna stick to that. And then, uh, tying in a trendy look with user-friendliness.
Robert Richardson: Yeah. Yeah, it's the fruits and vegetables is the only area that I find rather jarring.
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
Robert Richardson: Everything
Brian Albrecht: It
Robert Richardson: else
Brian Albrecht: is
Robert Richardson: we
Brian Albrecht: strange.
Robert Richardson: can really, we can really um, do, according to our plans already, given the market. But fruits and vegetables seems a very strange
Danny Schirmer: It's,
Robert Richardson: idea
Danny Schirmer: it's
Robert Richardson: for
Danny Schirmer: a little
Robert Richardson: a remote
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: control.
Brian Albrecht: Well
Danny Schirmer: but it, it's everywhere. So maybe
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: we I've seen a lot of purses with olives on them, you know. But
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: I I think, I think if we stick to T_V_ based, you know, maybe T_V_ shows, or
John Reitano: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Or
Robert Richardson: But they
Danny Schirmer: colour
Robert Richardson: still
Danny Schirmer: schemes.
Robert Richardson: need to
Brian Albrecht: We
Robert Richardson: um fit into people's decor though.
Danny Schirmer: Right.
Brian Albrecht: I think we possibly could take a more abstract design. Like look at the basic shapes of different fruits and vegetables. And then just really like strip it down to like really basic shapes. I mean we don't have to make something in the shape of a strawberry, but it could have the curves of a strawberry,
Danny Schirmer: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: or something.
Danny Schirmer: The
John Reitano: Yeah,
Brian Albrecht: Or a strawberry seed
John Reitano: yeah.
Brian Albrecht: or
Danny Schirmer: The
Brian Albrecht: a leaf.
Danny Schirmer: essence of strawberry.
Brian Albrecht: Or just
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: like
Danny Schirmer: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: you know really make it a quite abstract, if that's fits in more with what we're doing. Instead
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: of fruits and vegetables, just
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: if you look at it straightforward, it's a bit yeah. It doesn't s quite fit in with the trendy well, obviously it does, if that's the current
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: theme. But may maybe we could go more directly, I don't know.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: But initially, I dunno. I think if we just sort of tone it down a bit.
Robert Richardson: Tone
Danny Schirmer: I guess,
Robert Richardson: it down.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah
Robert Richardson: Yeah,
John Reitano: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: yeah.
Robert Richardson: like more
Brian Albrecht: and
Robert Richardson: like
Brian Albrecht: like not,
Robert Richardson: photos
Brian Albrecht: not
Robert Richardson: of fruit,
Brian Albrecht: yeah.
Robert Richardson: on,
John Reitano: Or
Robert Richardson: on our product.
John Reitano: banana-shaped.
Danny Schirmer: One thing I was thinking though is I dunno if you all remember from our kickoff meeting, we talked about our favourite animals.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: So maybe there could be animal-based, you know. Because a lot of people have a house cat. Or, or a dog.
Brian Albrecht: Mm.
Danny Schirmer: Um, that might be getting, you know, too specific, and we should see what the success of the first face-plates are. But it's something to keep in mind.
Robert Richardson: Mm-hmm.
Danny Schirmer: And, did you have any questions? Pretty straightforward?
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Yeah um
Danny Schirmer: Okay.
Robert Richardson: Alright, given that information, we need to start making some more specific decisions. So I'll need to um hook up the PowerPoint again.
Danny Schirmer: There you go.
Danny Schirmer: Have you guys been saving your PowerPoint presentations to the
Brian Albrecht: I didn't for the first one.
Danny Schirmer: okay.
Brian Albrecht: But I have now.
Robert Richardson: But it's still around right?
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Okay.
Brian Albrecht: Uh,
John Reitano: Where
Brian Albrecht: hopefully.
John Reitano: do you have to save it to?
Brian Albrecht: Project documents I think.
John Reitano: Okay.
Robert Richardson: Okay. I'm just trying to make this pop up now.
Robert Richardson: Alright. Here we go. Okay so we have to uh decide now exactly what we are going to do. So
Brian Albrecht: Okay.
Robert Richardson: energy, we oh.
Brian Albrecht: 'Kay.
Robert Richardson: Oh no I can't write it in when it's in this setting. Does anyone know how to take it out of Um,
John Reitano: Just
Danny Schirmer: The PowerPoint?
John Reitano: escape
Robert Richardson: yeah.
John Reitano: I think.
Robert Richardson: Yeah. Okay. Um, so back to decisions. Energy, we've decided on kinetic,
Brian Albrecht: Kinetic
Robert Richardson: right?
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: yeah.
Robert Richardson: Okay, so that's good.
Brian Albrecht: Are we going to have a backup?
Robert Richardson: Hmm.
Brian Albrecht: Or do we just
Robert Richardson: But would a backup really be necessary? I mean will people just use the battery if there's no, if there's,
Brian Albrecht: I think maybe
Robert Richardson: if there is backup.
Brian Albrecht: we could just go for the kinetic energy, and be bold and innovative, and
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: hope this works, and well hope that it works.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: I think yeah.
Robert Richardson: There's
Brian Albrecht: I think
Robert Richardson: like no reason why it wouldn't work,
Brian Albrecht: no.
Robert Richardson: right?
Danny Schirmer: So
Brian Albrecht: I, I think we should just like take uh advantage of like using this to its full potential.
Robert Richardson: Yeah. It
Brian Albrecht: Go
Robert Richardson: could even
Brian Albrecht: for
Robert Richardson: be
Brian Albrecht: it.
Robert Richardson: one of our selling points.
Brian Albrecht: It could
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: be fully
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: kinetic energy.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Environmentally conscious
Brian Albrecht: Is
Robert Richardson: or something.
Danny Schirmer: So
Brian Albrecht: everyone
Danny Schirmer: if it's
Brian Albrecht: happy
Danny Schirmer: not working
Brian Albrecht: with that?
Danny Schirmer: they just have to shake it a bit and that revitalises
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: it?
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Okay.
John Reitano: Hope so.
Robert Richardson: Alright, the next um decision is chip on print. I don't exactly know what that means.
Brian Albrecht: Um, it was whether we went for the simple, the regular, or the advanced chip. And that linked in with what buttons we would gonna have, so
Robert Richardson: Right, and we were going for more simplistic style, right?
Brian Albrecht: Yeah, it
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: was so that was without the L_C_D_. So that means we're not
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: doing the advanced. So it depends on whether we wanted the scroll buttons or just the push buttons.
Robert Richardson: I think we decided on the pushbuttons, right?
John Reitano: Yeah. I
Brian Albrecht: Uh,
John Reitano: don
Brian Albrecht: so that's
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
John Reitano: yeah.
Brian Albrecht: the simple.
Robert Richardson: Yeah. Would we need a more advanced one for uh the lighting, the interior lighting system?
Brian Albrecht: Yeah possibly. So, it's
Robert Richardson: Yeah?
Brian Albrecht: probably gonna be the regular chip that we're going to need. So it's a
Robert Richardson: Okay.
Brian Albrecht: medium. So regular
Robert Richardson: That's called
Brian Albrecht: chip.
Robert Richardson: medium, or regular?
Brian Albrecht: Regular sorry.
Robert Richardson: 'Kay.
Brian Albrecht: Regular chip.
Danny Schirmer: Oh, is regular not simple?
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: Lighting. Yeah
John Reitano: It's for
Brian Albrecht: if
John Reitano: the lighting,
Brian Albrecht: we
John Reitano: yeah.
Brian Albrecht: because of the lighting that we've decided to put
Danny Schirmer: Right
Brian Albrecht: in as
Danny Schirmer: right
Brian Albrecht: well.
Danny Schirmer: right.
Robert Richardson: Okay, and cases. Um,
Brian Albrecht: So
Robert Richardson: does
Brian Albrecht: th
Robert Richardson: this, is this dependent on shape, or what it's made of, or what?
Brian Albrecht: I think this is just like gonna be the a very outer case, which we will decide on rubber.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Yeah. Well, I guess plastic and
Brian Albrecht: Rubber.
Robert Richardson: coated
John Reitano: Yeah
Robert Richardson: in rubber.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Plastic
Brian Albrecht: Plastic
John Reitano: plastic
Brian Albrecht: rubber
John Reitano: coat.
Brian Albrecht: coat.
Robert Richardson: with rubber coating and interchangeable
Brian Albrecht: Interchangeable,
Robert Richardson: um
Brian Albrecht: yeah. Still going for that.
Robert Richardson: yeah, interchangeable
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: plates. Okay. User interface concept. This is your time to shine.
John Reitano: We decided on the component. I, I I'm sorry, I've lost my um PowerPoint
Brian Albrecht: Your screen?
John Reitano: thing, so I can't remember what it's
Danny Schirmer: Think
John Reitano: ca
Danny Schirmer: it was
John Reitano: it's
Danny Schirmer: called
John Reitano: the
Danny Schirmer: command
John Reitano: component
Danny Schirmer: interface.
Brian Albrecht: Was it
Robert Richardson: Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Command interface,
John Reitano: The command
Robert Richardson: Command
John Reitano: inter
Robert Richardson: interface.
Brian Albrecht: Ouch.
John Reitano: The command line interface yeah.
Robert Richardson: Did you say command line?
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Okay. Line interface. Alright, and supplements. What's that all about?
John Reitano: Um, I think that is well we haven't really made any decisions about what we're gonna do about the cluster of button functions, colours and forms, in the in consistent use Like. what what are ideas to combat these problems?
Robert Richardson: Um
John Reitano: You know how um different interfaces are very different, and can be confusing because because of their difference, and because of
Robert Richardson: Mm-hmm.
John Reitano: the different clusters of buttons that they have. We haven't really decided what to do about that.
Robert Richardson: Um, what are our choices here?
John Reitano: Well it's just um w where where shall we locate the buttons. What kind of functions wi shall we have?
Robert Richardson: You mean like we'll have the numbers of the channels, and we'll have
Brian Albrecht: The power.
Robert Richardson: the channel-changer, and volume,
Brian Albrecht: Volume.
Robert Richardson: and power?
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
John Reitano: So pretty
Robert Richardson: Um
John Reitano: just just the basic
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
John Reitano: button
Robert Richardson: Like I
John Reitano: functions.
Robert Richardson: don't know if we should go into like adjusting light levels, things like that, because different televisions will have
Brian Albrecht: May yeah. Tone, contrast,
Robert Richardson: Um,
Brian Albrecht: and things.
Robert Richardson: yeah.
Brian Albrecht: That's a bit
Danny Schirmer: That was on, um one of my presentations. About how often it was used. Do you remember that?
Brian Albrecht: Yeah, it
Robert Richardson: Yep.
Brian Albrecht: was minima well,
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: it wasn't
Robert Richardson: Yeah,
Brian Albrecht: the
Robert Richardson: it was
Brian Albrecht: l
Robert Richardson: hardly ever used
Danny Schirmer: I w
Robert Richardson: really.
Danny Schirmer: Should I bring it up?
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah. That
Robert Richardson: And
Brian Albrecht: would
Robert Richardson: most televisions
Brian Albrecht: be good.
Robert Richardson: will come with a remote.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah, and surely that would be like quite specific to
John Reitano: Yeah,
Brian Albrecht: the
John Reitano: each
Brian Albrecht: individual
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
John Reitano: television.
Brian Albrecht: television, so
Robert Richardson: 'Kay, well we know we want numbers.
Danny Schirmer: The ch t Screen settings was used um zero point five times an hour. So tw twice every once every two hours. Um, and it was considered a one point five relevance, on a scale of ten. That's brightness, colour, tone,
Brian Albrecht: Mm.
Danny Schirmer: all that.
John Reitano: You don't change
Brian Albrecht: I think most
John Reitano: that
Brian Albrecht: of that comes
John Reitano: often,
Brian Albrecht: like on the
John Reitano: yeah.
Brian Albrecht: i individual television set itself, doesn't it? I'm sure it has
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
Robert Richardson: Yeah, it
Brian Albrecht: its
Robert Richardson: does.
Brian Albrecht: own buttons, so you don't necessarily need to have it on remote.
Robert Richardson: Yeah, and
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: different televisions. Like we, I don't know if we can make a remote that would be universal to all the different kinds
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: of
Brian Albrecht: So
Robert Richardson: changes
Brian Albrecht: we're just going
Robert Richardson: like that.
Brian Albrecht: for power, channels,
Robert Richardson: Volume.
Brian Albrecht: volume,
Danny Schirmer: The other one was audio settings. Mono, stereo, pitch. I mean I sometimes use that. Some T_V_s will have the option of like living room style, movie style,
John Reitano: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: um and that, they say that's used zero point eight times an hour, which is actually somewhat high. Like
Brian Albrecht: Mm.
Danny Schirmer: almost once an hour.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Um, relevance of two.
Robert Richardson: Oh. We have five minutes to finish our meeting. Crap. Okay, um, let's do this fast. Um
Danny Schirmer: Well that didn't some up on mine.
Robert Richardson: Should we have audio? It only comes up on mine usually.
John Reitano: It w it
Danny Schirmer: Oh.
John Reitano: would seem silly if we'd having anything else, just have an audio button though. Do you know?
Robert Richardson: Yeah, I don't, I it's, it's a problem with the international uh appeal, I think. Um, if we have audio because we don't know how other televisions work.
John Reitano: But
Robert Richardson: But we
John Reitano: we
Robert Richardson: know that everyone has this and it's the same.
Danny Schirmer: Yeah I guess
Brian Albrecht: I've
Danny Schirmer: that it affects the marketing, 'cause it, mm it is a good sales ploy to say, aren't you annoyed with remote controls that have all these buttons.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: This one has channel, volume
Brian Albrecht: Yeah, that's it.
Danny Schirmer: and your
John Reitano: That
Danny Schirmer: channe
Brian Albrecht: We
John Reitano: could
Brian Albrecht: can
John Reitano: be
Brian Albrecht: just
Danny Schirmer: and
John Reitano: a
Brian Albrecht: go
Danny Schirmer: your
John Reitano: sales
Danny Schirmer: power.
Brian Albrecht: for,
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: make
John Reitano: pitch.
Brian Albrecht: it a
Danny Schirmer: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: selling point that it is just
John Reitano: Simple
Brian Albrecht: the basic.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
John Reitano: and
Brian Albrecht: Yeah uh I
Danny Schirmer: Okay.
Robert Richardson: Alright.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: brilliant.
Robert Richardson: Good. And, okay, in closing, 'cause we only have five minutes. We'll be meeting again in thirty minutes. Um, you'll be working, Poppy will be working on the look-and-feel design. Wait a minute. Is that right?
Brian Albrecht: Mm-hmm.
Robert Richardson: Yep, and um the user interface design, so this is where the trendy stuff comes in. And you'll be evaluating the product. Um, Poppy and Tara will have to work together, using modelling clay. And, um, your personal coach will give you the rest of the information of what needs to happen.
Brian Albrecht: Okay.
Robert Richardson: Alright. So, anyone else have something to say?
Brian Albrecht: Um, I just have one question about
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: the whole fruit and vegetable aspect.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
Brian Albrecht: Are we seeing as that was the most popular thing that came up out of your market research, I thi I think we should keep to that rather than moving to animals or something, because
Danny Schirmer: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: even if that may not seem obvious to us, if that's what the surveys brought out, I think that we should probably go along with that.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: Um, so I suppose that'll come out in our dev design development. But you're happy to go ahead with the fruit and
Danny Schirmer: Now
Brian Albrecht: veg?
Danny Schirmer: do you guys need want an idea of how many uh are you gonna come up with casing ideas? Like f
Brian Albrecht: Y
Danny Schirmer: five different
John Reitano: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
John Reitano: What I
Robert Richardson: five.
John Reitano: What I was thinking what do yous think of this? Um, having the numbers kind of like, not a bunch of grapes, but you know like purple and kind of in a triangle.
Danny Schirmer: Mm-hmm.
John Reitano: Like grapes.
Danny Schirmer: Yeah you
John Reitano: Like
Danny Schirmer: can have
John Reitano: that's
Danny Schirmer: some fun
John Reitano: kind
Danny Schirmer: with
John Reitano: of
Danny Schirmer: the buttons, it's
John Reitano: fruity
Danny Schirmer: true.
Robert Richardson: Mm-hmm.
John Reitano: or something. That's
Danny Schirmer: Yeah.
John Reitano: just
Brian Albrecht: We can have a look at those ideas, yeah.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: I guess what you i ideally you'd kind of think of age markets as well. So it's
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: a something that will, you know, appeal to the fifteen to twenty five year olds. Something that your granny would want on her remote control. Um,
Brian Albrecht: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Danny Schirmer: and international tastes as well, so
Brian Albrecht: Tricky.
Danny Schirmer: Not easy.
Brian Albrecht: A lot
Robert Richardson: Yeah.
Brian Albrecht: of things to consider.
John Reitano: Yeah.
Robert Richardson: Lots
Brian Albrecht: Hm.
Robert Richardson: of yeah. Alright.
Brian Albrecht: Okay.
Robert Richardson: 'Kay we'll stick to the fruit and veggie theme then. Alright. And, um, we'll reconvene in thirty minutes.
Brian Albrecht: Okay.
John Reitano: Okay.
Robert Richardson: 'Kay.
Danny Schirmer: Okay.
Robert Richardson: Bye.
Brian Albrecht: Thank you.
Robert Richardson: I'll see you later. Oh, what did I just do. Okay. | Robert Richardson opens this conceptual design meeting and gives them the agenda. Brian Albrecht presents first and talks about the components of a remote, energy source options, and materials for the remote, case, and buttons. The interface specialist presents the interface concept by explaining the difference between graphical and command interface. They decide the command interface is most useful for a remote because it is simpler and more user-friendly. The group discusses aspects of the user interface including the lighting up effect and material of the buttons. Danny Schirmer presents on trend-watching and talks about how fruit and vegetables are an important fashion theme this year, and says the material used is expected to be spongy. The group discusses how they could implement these fashion trends into the design, then finalizes a few decisions about the components, materials, and energy sources. Robert Richardson closes the meeting, stating what each member's next task will be. | 1 | amisum | train |
Clay Poole: Okay. Here we go. Alright, the agenda thi oh. Alright. Um the agenda for this meeting is um we'll initially have the prototype presentation by our two designers. And then we will evaluate it, given the criteria that um that we gave gave it. And um talk about our finances, whether we were under or over our budget. I have a um a spreadsheet where we can calculate um our prices for every aspect of of what we've made, given our options. And um product, as a group
Nicholas Dews: Okay.
Clay Poole: And um So first we'll have the prototype presentation. Do you need the um PowerPoint for
Nicholas Dews: Um
Clay Poole: this?
Nicholas Dews: yeah. I just got a few,
Clay Poole: Alright.
Nicholas Dews: show them. Thank you.
Nicholas Dews: Do you want to present it?
James Satterthwaite: Um
Nicholas Dews: Yeah, here we are.
James Satterthwaite: This is what we came up with. It's a pretty simple design. It's um based on a mango? Yeah. And
Clay Poole: On?
Nicholas Dews: Mango
James Satterthwaite: we
Clay Poole: A
Nicholas Dews: shape.
Clay Poole: mango. Okay.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah. And we have the company logo here and this will be the infrared
Nicholas Dews: The
James Satterthwaite: here
Nicholas Dews: L_E_D_.
James Satterthwaite: and this'll be the power point, the on off button
Clay Poole: Oh. Okay.
James Satterthwaite: kind yeah.
Jess Ellingham: I'm sorry. What was the where's
Clay Poole: Oops.
Jess Ellingham: the L_E_D_?
James Satterthwaite: It's in the middle of one of the little R_s.
Jess Ellingham: Oh. Okay.
James Satterthwaite: And then the other one is the power. And uh we just have a simple design. We wanted it all to be
Nicholas Dews: So it's palm-held.
James Satterthwaite: thumb yeah palm-held
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: and
Clay Poole: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: all the buttons are accessible from your thumb.
Clay Poole: Notice
James Satterthwaite: So
Clay Poole: you have
James Satterthwaite: you
Clay Poole: a number
James Satterthwaite: don't have
Clay Poole: ten
James Satterthwaite: to
Clay Poole: button.
James Satterthwaite: Oh that was a mistake, wasn't it? Right
Nicholas Dews: You
James Satterthwaite: no,
Nicholas Dews: just need the
James Satterthwaite: that's
Nicholas Dews: nought.
James Satterthwaite: a zero. Take that one off.
Clay Poole: Okay.
James Satterthwaite: Sorry. I was in charge of the numbers.
Clay Poole: No problem. Ah.
James Satterthwaite: And this is just if you've got like eleven or twelve or thirt the plus.
Nicholas Dews: So one plus
James Satterthwaite: You can
Nicholas Dews: one
James Satterthwaite: go
Nicholas Dews: would be
James Satterthwaite: one,
Nicholas Dews: eleven, or
James Satterthwaite: three or something.
Clay Poole: Oh.
James Satterthwaite: You
Clay Poole: You
James Satterthwaite: press
Clay Poole: press
James Satterthwaite: that
Clay Poole: a plus
James Satterthwaite: first
Clay Poole: button?
James Satterthwaite: and then you go one three yeah.
Clay Poole: Oh okay. I've never heard of that kind before.
James Satterthwaite: Well we just thought, we have all the numbers here, so we wanted something representative of numbers larger than ten and
Nicholas Dews: Yeah
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: because if you on your average um remote, if you press one twice you just go to or uh say you wanted channel twelve, you
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: one, and go to one then two you'd go to, instead of
Jess Ellingham: Oh,
Nicholas Dews: twelve
Jess Ellingham: there's no e okay.
Nicholas Dews: So if you did
James Satterthwaite: So
Clay Poole: Oh.
Nicholas Dews: like
James Satterthwaite: the plus
Nicholas Dews: one plus
James Satterthwaite: and
Nicholas Dews: two
James Satterthwaite: then yeah.
Nicholas Dews: you could go to channel
Clay Poole: I
Jess Ellingham: Okay.
Nicholas Dews: twelve, or two plus
Clay Poole: But
Nicholas Dews: two is channel twenty
Clay Poole: Would
Nicholas Dews: two.
Clay Poole: you have to go zero plus one if you wanted to go to channel one or two?
James Satterthwaite: No no, th all that's why we have all these numbers. These numbers um these numbers all work independently up to nine.
Clay Poole: Yeah but I mean if you press, it'll go to that channel right away.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: 'Cause you gotta press the plus afterwards.
James Satterthwaite: Oh no. Uh, the plus is only for if you're going past the number nine.
Clay Poole: Yeah I know, but if if I wanna go to say number
Jess Ellingham: Sixty.
Clay Poole: like sixty five, channel sixty five, if
James Satterthwaite: You
Clay Poole: I press
James Satterthwaite: p
Clay Poole: the six it'll go to channel six, and then I'll
James Satterthwaite: Oh.
Clay Poole: press the plus, and then it'll go to six and then put the five and it'll go to
James Satterthwaite: No
Clay Poole: sixty
James Satterthwaite: you press
Clay Poole: five?
James Satterthwaite: the plus first. I
Nicholas Dews: Oh.
James Satterthwaite: I well it doesn't we haven't really s I would've thought you pressed the plus first and then the six five, but she says plus press
Nicholas Dews: Well I don't
James Satterthwaite: which
Nicholas Dews: mind, we
James Satterthwaite: what
Nicholas Dews: can
James Satterthwaite: do you
Nicholas Dews: further
James Satterthwaite: think
Nicholas Dews: define
James Satterthwaite: is
Nicholas Dews: that.
Clay Poole: I
James Satterthwaite: simpler?
Clay Poole: th
James Satterthwaite: It's
Clay Poole: Um
James Satterthwaite: a
Nicholas Dews: I wouldn't have thought it'd be a problem that it went to channel six first,
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: in like on the way to channel sixty five.
Clay Poole: Yeah it wouldn't be a problem.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: But
Nicholas Dews: But I suppose
Clay Poole: I was just
Nicholas Dews: it's
Clay Poole: wondering
Nicholas Dews: not as
Clay Poole: like as
Jess Ellingham: Well
Nicholas Dews: snappy.
Jess Ellingham: the
Clay Poole: long as we realise
Jess Ellingham: there is
Clay Poole: that's
Jess Ellingham: a
Clay Poole: what it'll do.
Jess Ellingham: there's a
James Satterthwaite: Oops.
Jess Ellingham: delay on remotes I think. Where you
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: can have it
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: it's like a five second input
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: time.
Nicholas Dews: If
Jess Ellingham: So
Nicholas Dews: you don't
Jess Ellingham: as long
Nicholas Dews: put
Jess Ellingham: as you
Nicholas Dews: it
Jess Ellingham: hit them dada
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah, that yeah.
Jess Ellingham: it should be fine.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: As long as there's not a big pause between the t hitting the two buttons.
Nicholas Dews: Mm-hmm.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah. So
Nicholas Dews: Um
Jess Ellingham: Was there so on the top there is volume and
Nicholas Dews: And channel,
James Satterthwaite: A channel.
Nicholas Dews: which
Jess Ellingham: Channel
Nicholas Dews: is so
Jess Ellingham: up volume up. Okay cool.
Nicholas Dews: you could just
Clay Poole: C_
James Satterthwaite: Just
Clay Poole: and
James Satterthwaite: so
Clay Poole: V_.
Nicholas Dews: go
James Satterthwaite: we
Nicholas Dews: like
James Satterthwaite: can
Nicholas Dews: that
James Satterthwaite: flick
Nicholas Dews: without thinking about it,
Clay Poole: Right,
Nicholas Dews: like
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
Clay Poole: where um where's the power button?
James Satterthwaite: It's in the middle
Nicholas Dews: It's
Jess Ellingham: It's
James Satterthwaite: of
Jess Ellingham: the
James Satterthwaite: one
Jess Ellingham: R_.
James Satterthwaite: of
Nicholas Dews: the
James Satterthwaite: the
Nicholas Dews: bigger
James Satterthwaite: little
Nicholas Dews: R_.
James Satterthwaite: R_s.
Clay Poole: Oh okay.
Nicholas Dews: So it's just like.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah, so
Clay Poole: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: it's
Nicholas Dews: We
James Satterthwaite: all
Nicholas Dews: deci
James Satterthwaite: accessible. Without m taking your hand off the remote.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Nicholas Dews: um we went for like a a circular design for the numbers because we thought that's kind of a more natural movement than just going like that with your thumb.
Clay Poole: Oh okay.
Nicholas Dews: Uh e
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Nicholas Dews: ergonomics
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: are all considered.
James Satterthwaite: And
Clay Poole: Ergonomic,
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: definitely ergonomic.
James Satterthwaite: it might actually help with the repetitive stress injury
Nicholas Dews: It could cause
James Satterthwaite: as
Nicholas Dews: another
James Satterthwaite: well.
Nicholas Dews: type of
James Satterthwaite: Okay.
Nicholas Dews: repetitive stress injury though. But yeah, no I mean it's a different movement so
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: yeah. Um and the feel of it, I mean, we've made this out of Play Doh, which is representing the, you know,
Clay Poole: The
Nicholas Dews: the
Clay Poole: spon
Nicholas Dews: rubber,
Clay Poole: yeah.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: and the spongy rubberness. Um 'cause it was said before in the material specification that this the this anti-R_S_I_ um material is often used in stress balls so this has got a you know a bit of give to it,
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: and it just
Clay Poole: Yeah. Bit of a stress
Nicholas Dews: feels
Clay Poole: ball feel.
Nicholas Dews: feels
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: different. Would you like to feel it yourselves?
Clay Poole: Yes.
Nicholas Dews: How it fits
Clay Poole: I
Nicholas Dews: in
Clay Poole: would.
Nicholas Dews: the palm of your hand?
Clay Poole: My goodness. There you go.
Nicholas Dews: Thanks. And you?
Jess Ellingham: Yes.
Clay Poole: Genevieve? Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Oh it's nice. Oh I think I killed the five. I did. I killed
Clay Poole: And
Jess Ellingham: the
Clay Poole: something
Jess Ellingham: four.
Clay Poole: hmm.
Jess Ellingham: Oh god.
Nicholas Dews: O Okay, as for the colours, we were presented with um a limited range
Jess Ellingham: Oh it smells
James Satterthwaite: Of
Nicholas Dews: of
Jess Ellingham: good.
Nicholas Dews: colours for
James Satterthwaite: Play
Nicholas Dews: this
James Satterthwaite: Doh
Nicholas Dews: prototype.
James Satterthwaite: yeah.
Nicholas Dews: But we're thinking that, seeing as we're having it in interchangeable casing anyway, that this is not necessarily a representation of the true colours that we would necessarily use. Or the combination. Um and we're thinking to carry-on with the fruit and vegetable theme, the colour um combination just could just be named after different fruit, like
Clay Poole: Oh
Nicholas Dews: banana
Clay Poole: right.
Nicholas Dews: could be black and yellow, watermelon red and green, or vanilla might be the most popular if it just uh
James Satterthwaite: 'Cause it'd
Nicholas Dews: blends
James Satterthwaite: be quite
Nicholas Dews: in
James Satterthwaite: subtle and
Nicholas Dews: more settled cream
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: instead of the
Clay Poole: It
Nicholas Dews: others
Clay Poole: looks
Nicholas Dews: are
Clay Poole: more
Nicholas Dews: all a bit garish.
Clay Poole: Think like vanilla and banana would.
Nicholas Dews: Banana's more representative of our colour scheme, like the company the yellow and black.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Okay yeah.
Nicholas Dews: So that for corporate identity that would probably be the most strength. I mean watermelon, you know, m probably appealing
Clay Poole: Kinda
Nicholas Dews: to
Clay Poole: Christmas,
Nicholas Dews: the
Clay Poole: you know.
Nicholas Dews: yeah,
James Satterthwaite: Yeah,
Nicholas Dews: seasonal.
James Satterthwaite: yeah, yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Apple green, brown, more kinda trendy, you know, khaki
Clay Poole: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: The pomegranate's kinda girly and funky kind of, and
Clay Poole: Cool.
James Satterthwaite: then the vanilla's more for the more sophisticated customer who just
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: wants something that fits in with all decor.
Nicholas Dews: Okay. Um yeah we thought of the components it was definitely um a focus of ergonomics and just a single ha handheld device, I mean you don't need to use both hands, one hand to hold this and type in with the other, you can just use your thumb.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Um, as we said the rubber's probably used for comfort and anti-R_S_I_ and that's about it.
Clay Poole: Alright, thank you very much. Good work everyone.
Jess Ellingham: Bravo
Clay Poole: Alright. And so now that we've we have a prototype, uh we need to go over the finances and seeing if this prototype matches uh what our budget can handle.
Nicholas Dews: Mm-hmm.
Clay Poole: So, I have something I'm going to
Jess Ellingham: You want the
Clay Poole: Oh wait a minute. Do you need to do a presentation first?
Jess Ellingham: I don't know what order it goes in.
Clay Poole: Yeah. I'm
Jess Ellingham: I have
Clay Poole: gonna
Jess Ellingham: one.
Clay Poole: check that out for a second.
Nicholas Dews: Mm go
Clay Poole: What time is it anyw Oh yeah sorry you're right.
Jess Ellingham: Evaluation
Clay Poole: Evaluation
Jess Ellingham: cri Okay.
Clay Poole: criteria is
Jess Ellingham: That's
Clay Poole: next
Jess Ellingham: Jess Ellingham.
Clay Poole: in line. Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Hello. Oh there we go.
Jess Ellingham: Okay. Come on my computer. Come on. Sorry my computer's giving Jess Ellingham technical difficulties.
Clay Poole: Just press
Jess Ellingham: Should
Clay Poole: um
Jess Ellingham: I press
Clay Poole: function
Jess Ellingham: it again?
Clay Poole: eight again.
Jess Ellingham: Last time I did that it sh Okay. You're right.
Clay Poole: And then again I think. One more time.
Jess Ellingham: Oh. Still not there.
Clay Poole: Yeah. Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Okay now I think for this one I could Would you guys prefer use the whiteboard or mayb maybe I'll just do it on right on the screen where you can see it. Um, we're gonna be doing an evaluation report together based on the protoptype that we've just seen. Um and looking looking back at my notes from our both our conceptual and our functional meetings, um I made a list of what our original requirements and goals were, um, back to our kick-off meeting this morning. Um, and we'll evaluate as to whether we've s done what we set out to do. Um and we're gonna do it on a one to seven scale where one is true and seven is false. So basically the lower p the lower the points the better. Okay so question number one. Does the remote whoops. Sorry. Oh I'm not gonna be able um, I'll do it on the whiteboard. I can't change it so I'm g I'm gonna ask you to push it down once.
Clay Poole: Okay.
Jess Ellingham: I'll write down our scores up on the
Clay Poole: Ooh.
Jess Ellingham: Okay so number one. Do we have a fancy look-and-feel?
James Satterthwaite: Mm.
Nicholas Dews: Feel I think. We've been quite successful with the
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: rubber coating and
Clay Poole: The
James Satterthwaite: Well
Clay Poole: look is a little bit more playful.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Yeah I guess that depends on your definition of fancy, but it's definitely different. It's not
Clay Poole: Oh definitely
Jess Ellingham: your traditional
Clay Poole: different yeah.
Jess Ellingham: yeah.
Nicholas Dews: I think the colour has a lot to do with it. I mean
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Nicholas Dews: th the colours we were given for making the prototype aren't the colours that I think we would've necessarily
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: chosen. It's not the kind of ooh uh
Clay Poole: Oh you were
Nicholas Dews: at
Clay Poole: only
Nicholas Dews: all
Clay Poole: given red
Nicholas Dews: sleek
Clay Poole: and black?
Nicholas Dews: red, black and yellow, and orange.
Clay Poole: Oh okay.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah so not
Nicholas Dews: Um
James Satterthwaite: very sleek and we don't wanna go for black because most remote controls
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: are black or grey. So we want it
Clay Poole: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: to be stand out that way, anyway.
Nicholas Dews: But if
Clay Poole: Okay.
Nicholas Dews: you can imagine that in like a s just a maybe uh a kind of pale metallic-y
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: finish or something
James Satterthwaite: A metallic-y
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
James Satterthwaite: finish we were thinking.
Nicholas Dews: Well I
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: know know it's for rubber.
James Satterthwaite: Polished.
Nicholas Dews: I mean diff if
James Satterthwaite: Okay
Nicholas Dews: you can visualise this in nice colours I think it would look quite
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: fancy.
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: I kinda I like the potato look.
Clay Poole: It's
Jess Ellingham: It's
Clay Poole: mango.
Jess Ellingham: very different.
Nicholas Dews: Oh
James Satterthwaite: We
Nicholas Dews: well, potato,
James Satterthwaite: we
Nicholas Dews: mango,
James Satterthwaite: were
Jess Ellingham: It's what?
Nicholas Dews: fruit and veg.
Clay Poole: It's mango.
Jess Ellingham: Oh sorry the mango the mango look.
James Satterthwaite: we were thinking
Nicholas Dews: Potato's
James Satterthwaite: about
Jess Ellingham: Yeah
Nicholas Dews: fine.
James Satterthwaite: yeah.
Jess Ellingham: it
Nicholas Dews: Potato's
Jess Ellingham: is, fruit
Nicholas Dews: fine.
Jess Ellingham: or vegetable depends on your mood.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah. Totally. It's
Jess Ellingham: So
Nicholas Dews: really
Jess Ellingham: I myself
Nicholas Dews: adaptable.
Jess Ellingham: would say a one or a two.
Clay Poole: Yeah. I would say two. Personally.
James Satterthwaite: I
Jess Ellingham: It's a two?
James Satterthwaite: w I'd say two I think.
Jess Ellingham: Okay,
Nicholas Dews: For the
Jess Ellingham: and p
James Satterthwaite: Fanciness.
Nicholas Dews: fancy
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: One being true. So
Nicholas Dews: I uh two,
Jess Ellingham: Two.
Nicholas Dews: three.
Jess Ellingham: Okay,
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: actu that's pro that's gonna get confusing, like that. Okay so question number two was is it techn technologically innovative? So I know we have the kinetic energy which is very innovative.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah and the use of the rubber.
Jess Ellingham: Use of the rubber,
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: For the
Jess Ellingham: the use
Nicholas Dews: anti-R_S_I_.
Jess Ellingham: of the L_E_D_.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: The L_E_D_ use isn't
Jess Ellingham: Isn't
Nicholas Dews: particularly innovative
James Satterthwaite: Mm.
Nicholas Dews: and we don't have any scroll buttons, it's all pushbuttons, there's no L_C_D_ control, so if we're thinking about the rest
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Nicholas Dews: of the market,
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: it's sort of probably halfway. In some aspects it is,
Clay Poole: Yeah. I'd
Nicholas Dews: like
Clay Poole: say maybe
Nicholas Dews: we said.
Clay Poole: three.
James Satterthwaite: I'll go for
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: three as well.
Jess Ellingham: And I think I mean it it's tough to say because we were we didn't want it to be any more innovative than this, because then that
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: No.
Jess Ellingham: would've
Clay Poole: Yeah
Nicholas Dews: Though
Clay Poole: we
Nicholas Dews: it
Clay Poole: want
Nicholas Dews: was
Clay Poole: it
Nicholas Dews: our
Clay Poole: simple.
Nicholas Dews: specification.
Jess Ellingham: defeated the
James Satterthwaite: Wouldn't
Jess Ellingham: purpose.
James Satterthwaite: be simple,
Jess Ellingham: So
James Satterthwaite: yeah.
Jess Ellingham: I mean I we'll put three, but I think we actually reached our goal.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: We didn't want it any more than that. Okay question number three. Uh, will it be easy to use?
Clay Poole: I think so.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: very.
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: I
Jess Ellingham: S
James Satterthwaite: think one
Jess Ellingham: Yeah I think
James Satterthwaite: for
Jess Ellingham: it's
James Satterthwaite: that.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: One.
Jess Ellingham: you can't
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: really get confused with that.
James Satterthwaite: No.
Jess Ellingham: I mean,
Clay Poole: Th
Jess Ellingham: there'll be s we have to work out the uh number
Clay Poole: The plus
Jess Ellingham: the
Clay Poole: number
Jess Ellingham: plus
Clay Poole: thing.
Jess Ellingham: system.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah that's
Jess Ellingham: But once that's
James Satterthwaite: the
Jess Ellingham: figured
James Satterthwaite: only
Jess Ellingham: out,
James Satterthwaite: thing
Nicholas Dews: Yeah
James Satterthwaite: yeah.
Jess Ellingham: it
Nicholas Dews: and
Jess Ellingham: should
Nicholas Dews: perhaps
Jess Ellingham: be fine.
Nicholas Dews: the turning on but
Jess Ellingham: Number four. Is this a good-looking remote?
Nicholas Dews: Mm.
Jess Ellingham: Remember that seventy five percent of users find most remote controls ugly.
Nicholas Dews: Again
James Satterthwaite: It's
Nicholas Dews: I
James Satterthwaite: definitely
Nicholas Dews: think the colour comes into this.
Clay Poole: Yeah colour will definitely be a factor.
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Clay Poole: I think that the logo could be smaller.
Nicholas Dews: Okay.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: And maybe not such a prominent way.
James Satterthwaite: But
Clay Poole: Maybe
James Satterthwaite: the
Clay Poole: like at the bottom, kind of.
James Satterthwaite: Remember
Nicholas Dews: Not
James Satterthwaite: the
Nicholas Dews: in
James Satterthwaite: management said that it it had to be prominent.
Jess Ellingham: Whoops.
Clay Poole: Oh it just had to be on there I guess.
Jess Ellingham: Should
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: just not touch it.
Nicholas Dews: Don't worry.
Jess Ellingham: This time it's the three I killed. I was just wondering if it should be like flatter. Or
Nicholas Dews: I suppose I've got quite big
Clay Poole: I
Nicholas Dews: hands.
Clay Poole: like
Jess Ellingham: Well
Clay Poole: the appeal of it being like a big glob in your
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: hand.
James Satterthwaite: But you know what I've just thought of there now. What where's it gonna sit in your living room? Is it not gonna fall off the arm
Clay Poole: Maybe
James Satterthwaite: of the
Clay Poole: if the bottom
James Satterthwaite: sofa?
Clay Poole: was just sort of flat,
Jess Ellingham: Yeah the bottom
Clay Poole: and then
Jess Ellingham: could
Clay Poole: the
Jess Ellingham: be
Clay Poole: rest
Jess Ellingham: like
Clay Poole: is
Jess Ellingham: ch
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: like
Jess Ellingham: chopped a bit.
James Satterthwaite: But then it
Clay Poole: round.
James Satterthwaite: wouldn't sit as comfortably in your hand.
Jess Ellingham: Oh. That's true.
Clay Poole: It would still be comfortable I think.
Nicholas Dews: Thing is like
Clay Poole: We
Jess Ellingham: Maybe,
Nicholas Dews: that,
Clay Poole: c
Jess Ellingham: it
Nicholas Dews: it's
Clay Poole: we
Nicholas Dews: not
Jess Ellingham: could
Clay Poole: could handle
Nicholas Dews: going anywhere
Clay Poole: it I think.
Jess Ellingham: it
Nicholas Dews: particularly.
Jess Ellingham: could be on
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: the bottom, so you wouldn't loo like if it's flat here, so it sits up.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Like that.
James Satterthwaite: Oh that would be nice.
Clay Poole: Ah it'd fall over all the time though. It'd be annoying.
Nicholas Dews: Uh yeah, it's less
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: I g
Nicholas Dews: um, what's
Jess Ellingham: If it's
Nicholas Dews: th
Jess Ellingham: weighted
Nicholas Dews: ha.
Jess Ellingham: maybe.
Nicholas Dews: H it's got
Jess Ellingham: Details,
Nicholas Dews: higher centre
Jess Ellingham: details.
Nicholas Dews: of gravity
Clay Poole: 'Kay we're done designing.
Nicholas Dews: like that.
Jess Ellingham: Okay.
Clay Poole: Come on.
Jess Ellingham: So, is this a good-looking remote? Would we wanna show it off
James Satterthwaite: Three.
Jess Ellingham: to our friends?
James Satterthwaite: You would though, 'cause it's bit it's more interesting than other
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: remotes.
Clay Poole: I think, it was another colour and it was like I think it'd look okay. I think maybe
Jess Ellingham: Yeah?
Clay Poole: a two.
Jess Ellingham: I mean I gue
Nicholas Dews: I
Jess Ellingham: yeah,
Nicholas Dews: would
Jess Ellingham: it's personal
Nicholas Dews: definitely
Jess Ellingham: taste,
Nicholas Dews: go for
Jess Ellingham: but
Nicholas Dews: that rather than like your average plain
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: old remote like that, but definitely in another colour, I'm not happy with those colours.
Jess Ellingham: Okay, so should we say two for that?
Clay Poole: Sure.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Yeah?
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Okay. Uh, question number five. What's um will people be willing to spend twenty five Euros on this product? Remember that eighty percent of users were willing to spend more money when a remote control looked fancy.
James Satterthwaite: I think we have to market it in the right way, that
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
James Satterthwaite: um
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: to say that it is simplistic. So people don't just see it and think, uh, this is so simplistic, I don't want
Clay Poole: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: to spend twenty five Euros. We have to market
Jess Ellingham: Yeah
James Satterthwaite: it.
Jess Ellingham: it
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: the marketing will have a lot to
Nicholas Dews: And
Jess Ellingham: do with it.
James Satterthwaite: And the kinetic
Nicholas Dews: the
James Satterthwaite: energy part.
Nicholas Dews: kinetic
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: energy, shaker-style-y,
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: whoo, ooh no.
Jess Ellingham: Shake it and
Clay Poole: Durable.
Jess Ellingham: the buttons fall off.
James Satterthwaite: Don't shake
Nicholas Dews: But you know, those'll be firmly on.
James Satterthwaite: Oh no the plus. You're
Jess Ellingham: No, I guess,
James Satterthwaite: use
Jess Ellingham: I don't
James Satterthwaite: the
Jess Ellingham: know much
James Satterthwaite: zero.
Jess Ellingham: about the remote control industry,
James Satterthwaite: Make
Jess Ellingham: how much
James Satterthwaite: a new
Jess Ellingham: your
James Satterthwaite: one.
Jess Ellingham: average sells for,
Clay Poole: But you're our Marketing
Jess Ellingham: but
Clay Poole: Expert.
Jess Ellingham: I know I am, aren't
James Satterthwaite: I
Jess Ellingham: I?
James Satterthwaite: think they're about ten po ten pound, aren't they? About ten pounds. Fifteen?
Jess Ellingham: don't have to buy batteries. So in the long term this can actually
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Mm,
Jess Ellingham: save you
Nicholas Dews: yeah,
Jess Ellingham: money.
Clay Poole: Oh.
Nicholas Dews: that's
Jess Ellingham: So we'll market
Nicholas Dews: true.
Jess Ellingham: it that
Clay Poole: Exactly.
Jess Ellingham: way too.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Exactly.
Jess Ellingham: So yeah
Nicholas Dews: Good
Jess Ellingham: I think
Nicholas Dews: point.
Jess Ellingham: with a good marketing scheme um and the personalisation options, it'll
Clay Poole: Yeah. I would give it a two still
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: though.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: Mm.
Jess Ellingham: Okay number six. Can someone read it out? Or
Nicholas Dews: Does this prototype match the operating behaviour of the average user.
Clay Poole: Mm.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Um yeah. So that was mainly that
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: I think it does
Clay Poole: Oh
Jess Ellingham: the statistics
Clay Poole: yeah.
James Satterthwaite: very
Nicholas Dews: Because
Jess Ellingham: we
James Satterthwaite: well.
Jess Ellingham: said
Nicholas Dews: yeah, because the most accessible buttons are the volume and the and the
James Satterthwaite: The
Nicholas Dews: channel-changing.
James Satterthwaite: zap
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Nicholas Dews: And
Clay Poole: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: yeah.
Nicholas Dews: it's just you won't have to think about it. You don't have to look down to find them. They're clearly there, easy to use.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Yeah
Nicholas Dews: Simple.
Jess Ellingham: I
James Satterthwaite: Uh
Jess Ellingham: guess the I think the key word there is average, 'cause there were some people that used the uh video input and sound and stuff.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: But they're not
Nicholas Dews: Mm.
Jess Ellingham: you and I really. So.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Okay so one?
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Okay. Number seven. C Heather could you push it down? Will this remote control be easy to find when lost? Remember that fifty percent of users lose their remote regularly. Now is
Clay Poole: We
Jess Ellingham: there
Clay Poole: have
Jess Ellingham: the
Clay Poole: the alarm system.
Jess Ellingham: is the alarm system still was it implemented?
James Satterthwaite: Yeah the bu when you press
Nicholas Dews: It
James Satterthwaite: the alarm system, the lights
Nicholas Dews: Yeah l lights on and,
James Satterthwaite: behind
Nicholas Dews: or flash as
James Satterthwaite: the
Nicholas Dews: well. But I mean
James Satterthwaite: and it'll vibra
Nicholas Dews: it's not obviously obvious from the outside that that's gonna happen
James Satterthwaite: It'll
Nicholas Dews: 'cause
James Satterthwaite: be again
Nicholas Dews: you can't
James Satterthwaite: in the marketing.
Nicholas Dews: s particularly
Clay Poole: I
Nicholas Dews: see
Clay Poole: thought the light
Nicholas Dews: an
Clay Poole: from
Nicholas Dews: alarm.
Clay Poole: the inside was
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: gonna light up.
James Satterthwaite: The light it will.
Clay Poole: Or or
James Satterthwaite: But
Clay Poole: was
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: it
Nicholas Dews: But
Clay Poole: gonna
Nicholas Dews: when the
Clay Poole: make a
Nicholas Dews: alarm's
Clay Poole: noise?
Nicholas Dews: not yeah.
James Satterthwaite: But both
Nicholas Dews: If you
Clay Poole: You press the button it makes a noise right?
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: It turns into a duck
Nicholas Dews: You
Jess Ellingham: and starts
Nicholas Dews: could
Jess Ellingham: quacking.
Nicholas Dews: s
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Here I am.
Clay Poole: Awesome.
James Satterthwaite: Oh, that would
Clay Poole: Awesome.
James Satterthwaite: be brilliant. I'd be tempted
Nicholas Dews: Well
Jess Ellingham: Um
James Satterthwaite: to
Nicholas Dews: the thing is, if it was had an alarm system, I mean, when it when it lights up as we I mean it could light up when the alarm went.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: But if it was hidden underneath the cushion or something, there wouldn't be any point. So you can't see the alarm, but it would light
James Satterthwaite: It would
Nicholas Dews: up.
James Satterthwaite: have to be in the market
Clay Poole: I though
Jess Ellingham: Okay.
Clay Poole: w it was gonna make a noise.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah but you
Nicholas Dews: Alarm,
James Satterthwaite: still
Nicholas Dews: but
James Satterthwaite: couldn't
Nicholas Dews: you can't see
James Satterthwaite: see it.
Nicholas Dews: an alarm inside uh
James Satterthwaite: It would just
Nicholas Dews: the
James Satterthwaite: be a little
Nicholas Dews: alarm
James Satterthwaite: speaker
Nicholas Dews: system
James Satterthwaite: on the back
Nicholas Dews: itself.
James Satterthwaite: or something.
Clay Poole: Okay.
Jess Ellingham: We oh you're just explaining why it's not on the prototype.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: But yeah, it'll be
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: there. So we
Clay Poole: Oh
Nicholas Dews: It
Jess Ellingham: can
Clay Poole: okay.
Nicholas Dews: w
Jess Ellingham: we could say that
Nicholas Dews: yeah.
Clay Poole: Whoo. Okay.
Nicholas Dews: Sorry.
Jess Ellingham: We can give it a one, because compared to every other remote ever m ever made, this one will be easier to find.
Clay Poole: Yeah,
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Okay. Um
Clay Poole: totally.
Nicholas Dews: Sorry Heather. That
Clay Poole: No
Nicholas Dews: wasn't
Clay Poole: problem,
Nicholas Dews: very clear.
Jess Ellingham: Question
Clay Poole: mm.
Jess Ellingham: number eight. Will it be easy to learn how to use this remote when brand new? Remember that thirty four percent of users usually found it difficult. So
Clay Poole: Totally.
Jess Ellingham: it has to be yeah, it's eas they'll pick
James Satterthwaite: So
Jess Ellingham: it up
James Satterthwaite: the
Jess Ellingham: and
James Satterthwaite: plu
Jess Ellingham: they'll know what to do.
James Satterthwaite: the plus
Jess Ellingham: The plus thing
James Satterthwaite: w
Jess Ellingham: needs to be
James Satterthwaite: once
Jess Ellingham: worked on.
James Satterthwaite: that's written down on the page that'll
Clay Poole: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: be really simple,
Nicholas Dews: Yeah
James Satterthwaite: won't it?
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: I think just because it's we've
Jess Ellingham: Well
Nicholas Dews: decided to reduce it down to the basic buttons, I think
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: that
Jess Ellingham: Do
Nicholas Dews: in itself makes it so
Jess Ellingham: Does
Nicholas Dews: much
Jess Ellingham: it make
Nicholas Dews: easier
Jess Ellingham: more sense
Nicholas Dews: to use.
Jess Ellingham: for the middle one to be an just an enter button? So then you would have to push two buttons every time at least.
Clay Poole: Yeah, so it's just like channel six,
James Satterthwaite: That
Clay Poole: six,
James Satterthwaite: kind of annoys
Clay Poole: enter.
James Satterthwaite: Jess Ellingham though, when
Nicholas Dews: Mm.
James Satterthwaite: it's zero six when you have to press I don't
Clay Poole: Yeah
James Satterthwaite: know
Clay Poole: but
James Satterthwaite: why.
Clay Poole: you don't have to press zeros.
Jess Ellingham: You could just press six enter,
James Satterthwaite: Oh okay.
Nicholas Dews: And
Jess Ellingham: or
Clay Poole: And then
Nicholas Dews: or
Clay Poole: like
Jess Ellingham: one
James Satterthwaite: Right.
Nicholas Dews: sixty
Clay Poole: twelve,
Jess Ellingham: two enter.
Nicholas Dews: six
Clay Poole: enter.
Nicholas Dews: enter,
James Satterthwaite: Alright,
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: aye.
Nicholas Dews: y
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah I think that's probably more straightforward. Yeah. Good
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Um, okay so we can
James Satterthwaite: I'd
Jess Ellingham: we'll say
James Satterthwaite: say
Jess Ellingham: yes it's
James Satterthwaite: w yeah one.
Jess Ellingham: uh one?
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Okay.
Nicholas Dews: Ooh. Mm.
Jess Ellingham: Question number nine.
Nicholas Dews: Oh.
Jess Ellingham: Uh, will it minimise the effects of R_S_I_, which was repeated strain injury?
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Injury.
Jess Ellingham: Um, which affected over a quarter of users. S
James Satterthwaite: Hmm.
Clay Poole: I think so. It's like right in the
James Satterthwaite: But if you're zapping
Clay Poole: Your thumb might get a little
Nicholas Dews: Yeah,
Clay Poole: bit
James Satterthwaite: yeah.
Nicholas Dews: that's
Clay Poole: uh
Nicholas Dews: what I was thinking.
James Satterthwaite: I don't think it will f
Nicholas Dews: We may have to do some more research into
James Satterthwaite: Yeah,
Nicholas Dews: other strain
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: injuries that we don't know about.
Clay Poole: But it is soft.
Nicholas Dews: Mm-hmm.
Jess Ellingham: It's soft,
Clay Poole: And
Jess Ellingham: and
Clay Poole: that's
James Satterthwaite: Mm.
Clay Poole: kind of what the um
Nicholas Dews: Mm.
Jess Ellingham: And people
Clay Poole: the PowerPoint
Jess Ellingham: could
Clay Poole: slide thing said would be good for
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: R_S_I_,
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Clay Poole: so
Jess Ellingham: I
Clay Poole: maybe
Jess Ellingham: don't know
Clay Poole: it
Jess Ellingham: what
Clay Poole: is
Jess Ellingham: other options
Clay Poole: but
Nicholas Dews: I think we're getting
Jess Ellingham: there are.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: that's true.
Jess Ellingham: Could I mean, you could hold it in your left hand and d use your index finger. But
Nicholas Dews: Mm.
Jess Ellingham: there's not really any other options unless it's like a keyboard. So,
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: I think we did as as much as you can with a remote control.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: So, one or two do you think?
James Satterthwaite: I
Nicholas Dews: I think
James Satterthwaite: I'd say t
Nicholas Dews: yeah, I think
James Satterthwaite: two.
Nicholas Dews: too.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Two okay.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Okay number ten. Did we somehow incorporate the company colour and logo?
Clay Poole: Yes we did.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Now is the colour gonna be there even if it's like vanilla? Is the yellow
James Satterthwaite: N We we can't really do that because for example on the banana theme we can't have it as being yellow.
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
James Satterthwaite: It won't stand out. So n it's not always gonna be the same colour.
Jess Ellingham: It sounds like the colour's something that we
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: Gray, yeah.
Clay Poole: So it could be grey on the banana one.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah, could be grey.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: But I mean the yell yeah d yellow's ugly though, depending on
James Satterthwaite: Yeah
Jess Ellingham: the
James Satterthwaite: that's right, we didn't
Jess Ellingham: So
James Satterthwaite: even
Jess Ellingham: I think we'll
James Satterthwaite: rea
Jess Ellingham: have to talk to our executive managers, and
Nicholas Dews: Mm.
Jess Ellingham: see if we can get away with just the R_R_.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: I think this is the the factor that we've been least successful in
Jess Ellingham: Okay.
James Satterthwaite: Perhaps
Nicholas Dews: confronting.
James Satterthwaite: a metallic
Clay Poole: Mm, yeah.
James Satterthwaite: or or like that's grey, and it wouldn't be that expensive to have a little bit of metal. No?
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: That
Jess Ellingham: And
James Satterthwaite: isn't
Jess Ellingham: the buttons
James Satterthwaite: rubber.
Jess Ellingham: in the middle. Okay.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: So, do you think that's more of a three then? Three, four?
Nicholas Dews: Four I think.
Jess Ellingham: Four?
Nicholas Dews: Well I don't what do what
Jess Ellingham: Well we have good
Clay Poole: Hum.
Jess Ellingham: reasons for it, so we but we can still put a a four?
Nicholas Dews: Okay.
James Satterthwaite: Okay.
Jess Ellingham: Okay, and final question. Um, did we stay true to our motto and put the fashion into electronics? Current trends of fruits and veggies, desire for sponginess.
Clay Poole: I would say so.
James Satterthwaite: Following that briefing we
Clay Poole: But maybe
James Satterthwaite: did.
Clay Poole: more like two 'cause there's no like pictures of fruit, it's just sort of naming it by a fruit.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
Clay Poole: With
Nicholas Dews: Like
Clay Poole: the
Nicholas Dews: um
Clay Poole: with the
Nicholas Dews: the colour
Clay Poole: colours.
Nicholas Dews: scheme names and
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: stuff.
Jess Ellingham: No, uh, are the plates interchangeable? I think I missed
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: a few
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: they are? So you can have banana and kiwi and
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: okay.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Okay, so that's something that's kind of in the making too, like maybe it'll become more
Clay Poole: That's fashionable in itself to have interchangeable plates.
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Nicholas Dews: It is.
James Satterthwaite: I think w yeah, I think one. Well that was our brief and we followed the brief. Well we haven't
Nicholas Dews: The thing
James Satterthwaite: got a big
Nicholas Dews: is, I
James Satterthwaite: banana
Nicholas Dews: think if somebody
James Satterthwaite: but
Nicholas Dews: saw that and you said what was that
James Satterthwaite: Oh
Nicholas Dews: inspired
James Satterthwaite: yeah.
Nicholas Dews: from, I
Clay Poole: Be
Nicholas Dews: don't
Clay Poole: like
Nicholas Dews: know if you'd instantly
James Satterthwaite: No.
Nicholas Dews: say mango.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: No.
Clay Poole: Maybe if it was scented.
Nicholas Dews: Oh
James Satterthwaite: Oh
Nicholas Dews: yeah.
James Satterthwaite: that would be class.
Nicholas Dews: There we go. That would be great.
Clay Poole: Yeah we have money for that. Um
Nicholas Dews: Um
Clay Poole: Alright so based on this evaluation, do we average them out sorta thing?
Jess Ellingham: Yes we do. So I wh what was I gonna put for that? A two
Clay Poole: Oh.
Jess Ellingham: for fashion?
Clay Poole: I would say two.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah. Two.
Nicholas Dews: Okay.
Jess Ellingham: Okay, so our average there, five, six, eight, ten, eleven, twelve, thirteen, fifteen, nineteen, twenty one, divided by eleven
James Satterthwaite: It's
Jess Ellingham: is
Clay Poole: One point
Nicholas Dews: It's
Clay Poole: nine or something?
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: I don't know these things.
Nicholas Dews: Between
Clay Poole: Um,
Nicholas Dews: one and two.
Clay Poole: between one and two.
Jess Ellingham: Between okay.
Nicholas Dews: So that's
James Satterthwaite: Close
Nicholas Dews: pretty
Jess Ellingham: Um.
James Satterthwaite: to two.
Nicholas Dews: fantastic.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Yeah, that's very good 'cause the highest we coulda got is one.
James Satterthwaite: I got
Clay Poole: Alright.
Jess Ellingham: Does that seem right then?
James Satterthwaite: Yeah, 'cause we've a four to bring down.
Jess Ellingham: Okay.
Nicholas Dews: Mm. It
James Satterthwaite: Uh,
Nicholas Dews: seems
James Satterthwaite: aye.
Nicholas Dews: like it should be more around two.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah. Uh, should've added five.
Nicholas Dews: Do we have an online calculator?
Clay Poole: I'm attempting to do that right
Nicholas Dews: Okay.
Clay Poole: now.
James Satterthwaite: This
Clay Poole: Yeah
James Satterthwaite: is.
Clay Poole: it is one point nine. Ooh.
James Satterthwaite: Yay.
Nicholas Dews: Oh wow. Well done.
Clay Poole: Go
Nicholas Dews: Well
Clay Poole: Heather
Nicholas Dews: that's
Clay Poole: Pauls.
Nicholas Dews: excellent.
Clay Poole: Yeah. Alright, now with that over and done with, our next step is to see if we are under budget. And um my computer's frozen. And now it's not. Okay. So um in our shared folder, if everyone could go there right now, um
Jess Ellingham: Sorry.
Clay Poole: I'm going to um
Jess Ellingham: Are you gonna do
Clay Poole: steal
Jess Ellingham: that?
Clay Poole: a cable.
Jess Ellingham: Okay.
Clay Poole: Um
James Satterthwaite: Is that the project document?
Clay Poole: it's it's um it's an Excel file. Oh.
Nicholas Dews: Production costs.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Yeah. 'Kay there we go. Um, production costs. And um I have to access that as well.
Nicholas Dews: It
Clay Poole: One
Nicholas Dews: says
Clay Poole: moment.
Nicholas Dews: it
Clay Poole: 'Kay so far I've added what I think or what is going on? Great. It's blinking at Jess Ellingham. It's locked for editing. Read only. I'm gonna open up a second one then 'cause it's locked for editing. I have the original in my um my email account.
Jess Ellingham: Oh is it locked 'cause I'm in it?
Clay Poole: I
Nicholas Dews: I
Clay Poole: dunno.
Nicholas Dews: think it
Jess Ellingham: Or
Nicholas Dews: just means that we
Jess Ellingham: okay.
Nicholas Dews: can't add any more to it now. Have you have you completed it?
Clay Poole: No.
Nicholas Dews: Oh right.
Clay Poole: No,
Nicholas Dews: Okay.
Clay Poole: I was hoping that you guys could.
Nicholas Dews: Okay.
Clay Poole: Um, there we go. Okay here we go. So we need to tally up how much our w our product will be costing. So um if you can look up at the screen, um
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: the large screen, oh I guess looking at your own too and telling Jess Ellingham which one you think. Okay we're using kinetic which is quite a large expense at three Euros.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: Oh
Clay Poole: Um we're
James Satterthwaite: right.
Clay Poole: using a regular chip.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Um,
Nicholas Dews: Double
Clay Poole: it's cur it's double curved,
Nicholas Dews: double-curved
Clay Poole: so its curved
Nicholas Dews: yeah.
Clay Poole: all around. That's another three. We're already at five. Um, we're using plastic and rubber,
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: so Good thing plastic is free, we're at eight. Um
James Satterthwaite: What about
Clay Poole: S
James Satterthwaite: a special colour? Are
Clay Poole: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: we using that?
Clay Poole: I guess we should do it just for one kind.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: So it's like special colour well we'll have two colours right?
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Well one colour for the case, one colour for the buttons.
Nicholas Dews: Mm-hmm.
Clay Poole: So we can
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Um, we have push button interface, so that's inexpensive. And um we have a special colour for the button, and we also have a special form. And
James Satterthwaite: And a special material. Yeah.
Clay Poole: a special material.
Nicholas Dews: Oof.
Clay Poole: Which puts us just barely under budget. Hurray.
Nicholas Dews: Congratulations
Jess Ellingham: Mm. 'S good.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: guys.
Clay Poole: Good work guys. So um
James Satterthwaite: That's good.
Clay Poole: our operating cost is twelve twenty Euros. Awesome.
Clay Poole: And back to our PowerPoint. So we've 'Kay. Yes we are. So we need to do a product evaluation, again, which is probably um I dunno. A different extension of a
Nicholas Dews: Of the actual project rather than the product?
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Hmm.
Nicholas Dews: A project? Is is yeah.
Clay Poole: Yeah 'cause we're talking
Nicholas Dews: So
Clay Poole: about
Nicholas Dews: wh
Clay Poole: leadership,
Nicholas Dews: how
Clay Poole: teamwork.
Nicholas Dews: we actually went round uh about doing it.
Clay Poole: Yeah. Alright so um Do you guys feel like there was room for creativity?
Nicholas Dews: I think we were pushed.
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Clay Poole: Pushed for creativity?
Nicholas Dews: I mean we weren't really
James Satterthwaite: The ma
Nicholas Dews: given a lot of time, or
James Satterthwaite: Or
Nicholas Dews: materials,
James Satterthwaite: materials.
Nicholas Dews: yeah, to go about our design task.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: So I think we could've done with a bit more time.
Clay Poole: Ye Okay. So it'd be like need more time and materials.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: But you were allowed m creativity?
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: I think so as like but you were supposed to
Jess Ellingham: Yeah
Clay Poole: have
Jess Ellingham: and
Clay Poole: creativ
Jess Ellingham: the conceptual and functional. Like we were very creative in in coming up with an idea I guess,
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: but
Nicholas Dews: Well
Jess Ellingham: m
Nicholas Dews: we were just limited by resources really
Jess Ellingham: When we can down
Nicholas Dews: and
Jess Ellingham: to
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: like
Jess Ellingham: it. Okay.
Clay Poole: Right.
Nicholas Dews: if we had decided to use the L_C_D_ screen, and like solar power backup and everything, then we wouldn't have been able to afford that. So that did limit
James Satterthwaite: Creativity.
Nicholas Dews: creativity.
Clay Poole: Right
Nicholas Dews: Just
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Nicholas Dews: resources.
Clay Poole: Okay
Nicholas Dews: But yeah. The fruit and veg idea.
Clay Poole: Great. Leadership? Is this Jess Ellingham being
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
Clay Poole: like, guys do you like Jess Ellingham? Um.
Jess Ellingham: Good leadership, I think we stayed on
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: task.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: we did. We've, uh seeing as we've come out with what we intended. A pro um a product within the budget. I think
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Nicholas Dews: that's a sign of good leadership and also our personal coach helped us along the way, so
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: you know
Jess Ellingham: And
Nicholas Dews: I
Jess Ellingham: the
Nicholas Dews: think
Jess Ellingham: timing
Nicholas Dews: it's been
Jess Ellingham: was
Nicholas Dews: fine.
Jess Ellingham: good. We never were pushed for time, or sat around doing nothing, so
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah. Good timing.
Clay Poole: Oop Okay.
Nicholas Dews: And
Clay Poole: Teamwork?
Nicholas Dews: project manager
Clay Poole: I think we worked
Nicholas Dews: of course.
Clay Poole: great as a team.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Yeah?
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Was good teamwork. I think we are well-suited to our roles.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Alright how were our means?
Nicholas Dews: Um
Clay Poole: We needed more Play Doh colours.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah and more Play Doh, 'cause that was all the red
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: we had. So even
James Satterthwaite: Yeah, it
Nicholas Dews: if we
James Satterthwaite: c
Nicholas Dews: wanted
James Satterthwaite: it might've
Nicholas Dews: to make
James Satterthwaite: been
Nicholas Dews: a
James Satterthwaite: bigger.
Nicholas Dews: bigger prototype,
Jess Ellingham: Oh really?
Nicholas Dews: we wouldn't have been able to.
Jess Ellingham: Okay.
Clay Poole: But ever everything else was satisfactory? Is that
Jess Ellingham: Yeah. The
Clay Poole: good
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: computer programmes are good. The
Nicholas Dews: Yeah. It could be really straightforward for the computer.
Jess Ellingham: Yeah. I don't
Nicholas Dews: I think
Jess Ellingham: think there
Nicholas Dews: the
Jess Ellingham: was
Nicholas Dews: only
Jess Ellingham: anything
Nicholas Dews: thing was having to remember to you know to tick the okays
Jess Ellingham: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: but I think I was the only one who struggled with that.
James Satterthwaite: I'm actually not sure if I've saved my presentations.
Clay Poole: Yeah?
Nicholas Dews: Mm.
Jess Ellingham: They'll probably
Nicholas Dews: Uh
Jess Ellingham: still
Nicholas Dews: Jess Ellingham too.
Jess Ellingham: be there.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Clay Poole: New ideas found. I don't really know what that means.
Jess Ellingham: Um
Nicholas Dews: Well I think we've all learnt stuff from each other, like the n
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: um
James Satterthwaite: Through discussion.
Nicholas Dews: yeah. Just about each different. Got new ideas from each other.
Jess Ellingham: I'm not sure, new ideas found.
Clay Poole: Hmm?
Jess Ellingham: Yeah well I guess we really it we bounced off of each other, which was cool.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Clay Poole: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Like based on marketing stuff and then you'd say something about interface and
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: yeah,
Clay Poole: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: And we were
Jess Ellingham: worked
James Satterthwaite: a able
Jess Ellingham: well.
James Satterthwaite: to modify each other's ideas
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Nicholas Dews: Yeah.
James Satterthwaite: to fit in with our areas of expertise.
Clay Poole: Yeah. Each
Jess Ellingham: Oh does it have smart materials
Clay Poole: other's
Jess Ellingham: by the way?
Nicholas Dews: Sorry?
Jess Ellingham: Does it have smart materials?
Clay Poole: Mm.
Nicholas Dews: Oh yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Oh yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Well mm, did it come into
James Satterthwaite: If
Nicholas Dews: the
James Satterthwaite: if
Nicholas Dews: into
James Satterthwaite: it if it
Nicholas Dews: I dunno if we counted that in the costs.
James Satterthwaite: If it can be afforded.
Clay Poole: Okay? Well with that achieved, our last slide is our closing slide. Yes our costs are within budget.
Nicholas Dews: Yes.
Clay Poole: It's
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Clay Poole: evaluated generally positively.
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Jess Ellingham: Mm-hmm.
Clay Poole: And um don't forget to complete final questionnaire and meeting summary. Then
Nicholas Dews: Uh.
Clay Poole: we celebrate
James Satterthwaite: Yay.
Nicholas Dews: Fantastic.
Clay Poole: in such a way that
Jess Ellingham: By
Clay Poole: I
Jess Ellingham: watching
Clay Poole: have no
Jess Ellingham: T_V_?
Clay Poole: idea.
Nicholas Dews: Okay, brilliant.
Clay Poole: Alright?
James Satterthwaite: Yeah.
Nicholas Dews: Thank you very much.
Clay Poole: Okay, bye.
Jess Ellingham: Mm. Conclusion? Dadada. | Clay Poole opens the meeting by stating the agenda. The designers give the prototype presentation, showing their simple design that is based on a mango. They point out the company logo and LED, and demonstrate how the device is palm-held and thumb-acessible. They also discuss the numerical, volume, channel, and power buttons as well as the color scheme. Jess Ellingham administers the product evaluation, and they rate each of the ten criteria on a scale of 1-7. The criteria includes fancy look-and-feel, technological innovation, ease of use, look, whether people would be willing to spend 25 Euros for it, whether its operating behavior matches the average user, ease of finding when lost, ease of learning to use, whether it will minimize RSI, incorporation of company colors and logo, and whether it follows the motto. They average the scores and get 1.9. They check the product costing and find that their operating cost is 12.20 Euros. In evaluating the project process they are pleased with their creativity, leadership, timing, teamwork, discussions, and overall product given the resources they had. They close the meeting by thanking one another. | 1 | amisum | train |
Andrew Hamilton: Oh.
Billy Johnson: Du
Andrew Hamilton: Okay. Thanks
James Shaw: Hm.
Andrew Hamilton: for coming to this meeting. S how we doing on our remote? We have some we have some ideas and some uh ideas for what people want.
Billy Johnson: Uh we yes s I've lo I've the role that I was asked to anyway.
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah.
Billy Johnson: I think.
Andrew Hamilton: Alright let's just go over the agenda real quick for this meeting. See if I can't get things uh moving along here a little bit better. Um I'll go over what we went over last time, which shouldn't take long. Then I believe each of you have a presentation. Um I've was sent a a couple more requirements for our remote, what they want. Um then we can come to a conclusion on uh what we want the remote to do, um and how it's going to do it hopefully. And uh then we'll have the closing. Um which we'll have forty minutes for. Uh let's see, the last meeting we went over um who was responsible for what. I'm responsible for leading the meetings, keeping the notes, uh and coming up with the final presentation. Um Corinne is our Marketing Expert. She's gonna figure out what what um the consumer wants. Um Ryan is our User Interface Designer. And Manuel is Patrick Nunes. So you're gonna come up with the ideas Ryan, and you're gonna pick 'em apart. Um we decided our remote, uh we want it to be a universal remote uh that everyone would want. Um we want to be modern, um fun, different. Uh it needs to be sturdy, um easy to find, so we gonna have that locator function. Um and we want to be different. Um and then we went over a couple of different ideas. Ball-shaped phone. The keyboard shape. Um we decided that it should probably be one-handed. Something we could use with one hand. Um and that was our last meeting. So um why don't um Do each of you have a presentation?
James Shaw: Yep.
Andrew Hamilton: Okay. I'll hand it off to you and um Does anyone do you wanna go first?
James Shaw: Sure.
Andrew Hamilton: So we can maybe see what uh what the people want.
James Shaw: What was? Function
Patrick Nunes: Eight.
James Shaw: F_
Patrick Nunes: F_ eight.
James Shaw: eight?
James Shaw: Well. How do I get it
Billy Johnson: Slide show.
Andrew Hamilton: To go to the
James Shaw: Oh
Andrew Hamilton: next
James Shaw: right
Andrew Hamilton: one?
James Shaw: right right.
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah you click on that
James Shaw: That
Andrew Hamilton: guy.
James Shaw: one?
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah.
James Shaw: Okay. Alright. Well, this is my report, which is going to be based pretty much on a survey that I was sent. Oh gosh, I've no idea. G
Billy Johnson: Just press the arrow keys I think. Usually
James Shaw: Okay.
Billy Johnson: goes to it.
James Shaw: Sorry I actually need to see something else on my screen.
Andrew Hamilton: Hit F_ eight again.
James Shaw: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: I think.
James Shaw: And then? Again?
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah. You want it to be on both screens, or
James Shaw: No
Andrew Hamilton: just
James Shaw: I want
Andrew Hamilton: just
James Shaw: something
Andrew Hamilton: yours?
James Shaw: else on mine. Is that possible?
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah but I think you have to hit escape. And then you can Yeah.
James Shaw: Okay but now you don't have that.
Andrew Hamilton: Oh hit F_ eight again.
James Shaw: Sorry guys.
Andrew Hamilton: I know. I did the same thing. And then it should come up here shortly. 'Kay.
James Shaw: So is there no way I can give you the slideshow
Andrew Hamilton: I think
James Shaw: and
Andrew Hamilton: oh give us the slideshow and
James Shaw: yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: something on your screen?
James Shaw: Yeah. Oh
Andrew Hamilton: Mm.
James Shaw: well.
Andrew Hamilton: I'm not sure. You could maybe minimise that screen and then
James Shaw: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: have them both up at the same
James Shaw: It's
Andrew Hamilton: time
James Shaw: okay.
Andrew Hamilton: I think.
James Shaw: Okay. Um so first of all, the method that I used was by doing some marketing research, by um doing research on some interviews that were conducted. And then some internet research. And I was sent a report that was I think there were a hundred remote users that they interviewed. And so I will show you some of the results from that, which I think will be helpful. Um okay here are some of the findings. They said that the users dislike the look and feel of their current remote controls. And seventy five percent of the users find their remote controls to be ugly. Which is a fairly significant number I would say. And eighty percent of the users would be willing to spend more money if they could get a remote that would look fancy. So I think that earlier we were onto something when we were talking about having it be a modern cool look, I think that's definitely important. Um they say that current remote controls do not match well the operating behaviour of the user. Seventy five percent of users said they zap a lot. And if anyone could clarify what that means? Zap,
Billy Johnson: Is
James Shaw: does
Billy Johnson: is it
James Shaw: that
Billy Johnson: j
James Shaw: just mean
Patrick Nunes: Just
James Shaw: like changing
Billy Johnson: just
James Shaw: the
Billy Johnson: just
James Shaw: channel?
Billy Johnson: just using
Patrick Nunes: jus
Billy Johnson: it yeah.
James Shaw: Okay.
Patrick Nunes: yeah.
James Shaw: Um and fifty percent of the users say that they're only using ten percent of the buttons on their remote control. And there was something else, they kept track of the frequency per hour in using certain buttons. And some of them it looks like barely need to be included at all. Of course channel selection is used the most frequently. And then teletext was the next. Volume and then power. And then audio settings and screen settings and channel settings were practically never used. So I think we could definitely eliminate or somehow combine a lot of the functions into one button. Um the biggest user frustrations, as we said fifty percent of people find that their remotes are lost somewhere, and so I think a tracking device of some sort would be a good idea. They said it take thirty four percent said it takes too much time to learn how to use a new remote. And twenty six percent said that the controls are bad for R_S_I_.
Billy Johnson: A repetitive strain injury.
James Shaw: What is it?
Billy Johnson: Just repetitive strain injury. I think.
James Shaw: Okay.
Billy Johnson: That's what I guess.
James Shaw: Okay. And so bas okay. Um as far as speech recognition goes, um the younger group looks like they're all for it. From the fifteen to twenty five age group over ninety percent said they would pay more. And it kind of just went down incrementally. The groups at the older they get it looks like the less willing they are to pay, so maybe we could discuss this and think and decide if we think it's worth investing in this. At least if we're targeting the younger groups. And so in conclusion. Some things that I drew from this are that I think we were correct. We definitely need to focus on a new modern appearance, since so many people seem to be concerned about the ugliness of their remote control. Um a multifunctional remote could be a good thing to explore. So you only have one rather than five different remotes sitting all over your room. Uh we need to simplify the remote and reduce the number of buttons, get rid of the ones that don't seem to be serving much purpose. And then lastly I thought that maybe we could discuss the idea of speech recognition. And that's it.
Andrew Hamilton: 'Kay. Very nice. Now we actually have some ideas of what what people want, what we should focus on. Uh
Andrew Hamilton: Wait can I look at that real quick?
James Shaw: Oh yeah. Sorry did you guys get time to write everything
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
James Shaw: that you needed? 'Kay.
Billy Johnson: Having just listened to what Corinne just said, I'll draw on some of the things well. Some things that sort of what I wanna say. 'Kay so I'm just gonna yeah approach the technical functions design. Um the method I used was to explore the uh technical functions of a remote control. And t s simplest approach that I came to is is to change, programme and operate an electronic device remotely. I mean that's an obvious thing to say, but it's not attached to the device that you want to control. Um I had some things sent to James Shaw. Not very much. To look at similar devices. Um defined in some them. And then the personal preferences that I will suggest. Um we discussed a universal one. Um like it's just been brought up again then. But I think a universal remote control is actually quite a difficult object to design, and po possibly within maybe the budget that we do it, um because you'd need to know all the spef specifications of a all the like electronic companies. I'm not sure have you ever come across a universal remote control yourself, but you have to i they're a nightmare to use. You have to set them, reset them to everything. Um and that would only add buttons. Whereas I think the aim is to take away buttons. So I think it'd be better maybe to concentrate on maybe just a universal one for T_V_s. Um or maybe just one that you could we could design and then different people, manufacturers could use it to set to their specifications, if if the aim is to get something that's unique in design. Um Okay here here's just two pictures of remote controls. They're just simple T_V_ remote controls. But one is uh user-centred. That is the one on the left. And you can straight away see there's less buttons. And the other one is engineer-centred where that's more uh specified for the sort of the elaborate piece of equipment it's trying to control um which appeals more to the product that we want, and on what the have said and the market research and stuff probably looking at something that should be user-centred. Fewer buttons, simpler to use, and if ten percent um is hidden away if ten percent is what's used, maybe the other fifty percent, the buttons that are used very rarely like programming, they could be hidden maybe under some remote controls you might have come across have maybe a little flip thi thing where they're hidden away. And the main buttons are the ones you or the ones you come across. Um and finally, um uh sort I've sort of covered that, our product I think should be user interface orientated. Um Like I said to concentrate on T_V_ remote control, a universal remote might be too complex. Um and as what it, the major findings market researchers have said, it's the image and the appearance that people di dislike. So that we should concentrate on something that would set a trend. And then and change the fashion of remote controls. And that's it.
Patrick Nunes: cable there. Thank you.
Andrew Hamilton: What was your last conclusion on that one? Focus on uh
Billy Johnson: On
Andrew Hamilton: the i
Billy Johnson: something on the image of it.
Andrew Hamilton: the image
Billy Johnson: Uh
Andrew Hamilton: of it.
Billy Johnson: the f the actual design.
Andrew Hamilton: 'Kay. Good. Good.
Patrick Nunes: Okay. Gonna talk to you about the working design of the interiors basically which is what dictates the design the both the interface basically and the outer appearance because this is all the stuff that needs to go in there. Right. So unfortunately the people who were supposed to do this little presentation for James Shaw obviously were too drunk to actually accomplish it, so um I'm going to do a the stuff on the board. Um just This is the basic basic premise of a remote control. Um the basic function is to send messages to another system. Okay so much is clear. An energy source feeds an integrated circuit, like a chip, that can compose messages. Often in the form of infrared bits. This is the most mostly used. Um there's uh also some sound systems but infrared is the better or the more more used system. Um parts are cheaper as well. A user interface controls the chip and accordingly the messages. This is where my people screwed up basically. So I'm going to explain that on the board rather. Um what we have is different components that obviously need to go in there. We'll start with an energy source. Right. Um which is usually a battery right? Since it's not feasible to add a cable to that. This energy source of course is connected to the the user interface itself. Uh which can be buttons, whatever, which in fact controls a chip. Right? This is the user interface and there we have the chip. Um the way this goes normally is that this chip then controls an infrared lamp. That sends out the signal. Of course the signal differs accordingly. Um depending on what the chip tells the infrared lan lamp. And Of course that's controlled, the chip itself is controlled by the user interface. The way you normally normally do it is that you add a little device such as a lamp to the whole thing as well, so that you know that it's working basically. You press something, you get a response. Which is also comparatively um important on one of those devices. Now this, what we're talking about here, or what I think should be discussed are these two components mostly. The the uh energy source for one thing can be altered. What we probably cannot alter is of course the infrared, the sending device basically, the infrared lamp. We cannot change the chip which controls the infrared lamp. Right? These two are components that we have to use, and these are dictated by the whole function of the whole thing. Um the lamp can be put onto the desi the device. It c it doesn't have to be there. This can be discussed as well. The user interface. That's something we can also discuss. Um as we've heard uh speech recognition is the hype obviously in the moment. Speech recognition um interface, we don't know that. Or if we just do the usual button thing. Or we have a touch pad or something like that that's something we can discuss. And of course the energy source. Batteries. Solar cells. Who knows? Of course it's always a question whether these these components are in fact available cheap enough, developed enough. But that's like I s I suppose rather up to marketing, and not to
Andrew Hamilton: So we could
Patrick Nunes: to the industrial design
Andrew Hamilton: the the
Patrick Nunes: department.
Andrew Hamilton: the more complex we make it of course, the more
Patrick Nunes: Expensive
Andrew Hamilton: expensive
Patrick Nunes: it's gonna be get uh. Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: But people have said that they would well younger generations of people have said that they would pay more for a speech recognition
James Shaw: Mm-hmm.
Andrew Hamilton: remote. So
Patrick Nunes: Right.
Andrew Hamilton: possibly it might be worth the investment.
Billy Johnson: I think speech recognition was uh one of those things where um they have to be really good for them to work. 'Cause sometimes you find yourself just saying things over and o
James Shaw: Yeah.
Billy Johnson: if it's on your phone.
Andrew Hamilton: I agree.
Billy Johnson: And
Andrew Hamilton: Well
Billy Johnson: you need to sort of take into light languages and then different dialects I suppose as well.
Andrew Hamilton: I myself I find, when you, h when there's something like spee speech recognition. Like uh you call on the phone and you try to change your telephone or power or something. Sometimes they have a a speech recognition
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: on the other end, and you say one for this, and you find yours, like you said, saying the same thing over and over and over. I find myself, especially if I'm in a crowd of people, looking really silly.
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: So maybe if you're sitting on your couch with a bunch of people then
Billy Johnson: And
Andrew Hamilton: you
Billy Johnson: wou
Andrew Hamilton: know,
Billy Johnson: I
Andrew Hamilton: you
Billy Johnson: don't know if would would you want to keep saying stuff if you were watching stuff. If you were watching something would you sort of be wanting
Andrew Hamilton: Volume up. Volume
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: down. Change the channel, you know channel up, channel down? I I don't know.
James Shaw: Another thing about these figures is ninety one percent of the youngest age groups said they'd do it, but probably a lot of them that's actually their parents money. Like I don't know if they would actually go out and purchase this themselves,
Billy Johnson: I think
James Shaw: a fifteen year old you know.
Billy Johnson: As well it'd be j the gimmick factor
Andrew Hamilton: Mm-hmm.
James Shaw: Yeah.
Billy Johnson: for the younger people. But practically I don't
Andrew Hamilton: It's
Billy Johnson: think it's
Andrew Hamilton: a, it's a gimmick factor that they like at first, and
Billy Johnson: Yeah. It'll wear off.
James Shaw: Gets old yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: Okay. Um Let's see here.
Billy Johnson: Do you wanna put your cord back in?
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah I guess so.
Patrick Nunes: Oh right.
Andrew Hamilton: Trade you.
Patrick Nunes: go.
Andrew Hamilton: Now I was sent a couple of things to modify our uh new requirements. Um the remote's only gonna be for the television, which is good because we already decided y your your research showed that uh not only is a universal remote more complicated, it's more cost, more costly. And your re uh research showed that you know most of the people don't even use it. I think
James Shaw: Mm.
Andrew Hamilton: uh you said fifty percent of the people only use half the or ten percent of the buttons. So if we remove the universal remote then that solves that problem. Um no teletext. Um So we don't have to worry about that. Um but we do have to use the the company wants us to incorporate the corporate colour and our slogan, which is we put the fashion in electronics. And our corporate colours are grey and yellow. And we could probably get away with black too but So those are the three um the three new requirements we need to use. Um from all all three of your uh presentations, I think that we were on the right track a lot in our last meeting. Um We want something that looks good. Um we want something that's simple. We want something that you can find easily. Um And the speech recognition I I guess is kind of uh give or take. It's gonna cost more. S
Patrick Nunes: Mm-hmm.
Andrew Hamilton: the young the younger people say that they like it. But um it's probably, I would say, probably not worth the investment at this point in time. So maybe we should just do away with speech recognition. Um And that way we can focus on our form.
Billy Johnson: I did have have a thought about the sort of the tracking thing. Is that if it came with maybe a holder or holster, whatever you wanna call it. Um that you you should put it back in. Your remote. But if you don't put it back in, you press something like a little button on that, and that just sort of sends out a beep to find where it is or something. Just by infrared. That shouldn't be too complex I would've thought.
Andrew Hamilton: That'd be, that'd be good if we were going with our our ball.
Billy Johnson: Yeah it would be quite good. The ball
Andrew Hamilton: Or or
Billy Johnson: could sit
Andrew Hamilton: with
Billy Johnson: on a
Andrew Hamilton: you know I guess
James Shaw: Mm.
Andrew Hamilton: with any form that that would be good. You know that could be the charger. For
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: you know we could use rechargeable batteries in the remote. And that would be or solar. Or you know However, however you wanted to go about it, the holder could also be the charging unit.
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: Um With the locator button. Um and if it were the ball you'd no longer have to have a flat space on it.
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: Um
Patrick Nunes: Well you still
Andrew Hamilton: like
Patrick Nunes: do.
Andrew Hamilton: if we still have the
Patrick Nunes: You s you still
Andrew Hamilton: how to hold on to it and
Patrick Nunes: W yeah. You put it on t on the couch table. While you're watching,
James Shaw: Rolls
Patrick Nunes: it's
Andrew Hamilton: It's
Patrick Nunes: gonna
James Shaw: away
Andrew Hamilton: gonna
Patrick Nunes: roll
Andrew Hamilton: roll
Patrick Nunes: off.
Andrew Hamilton: away.
James Shaw: yeah.
Patrick Nunes: So that's not an issue really.
Andrew Hamilton: Um So I guess after the meeting we'll have some questionnaires. And uh and some summaries for for what's going on. Um then we'll take lunch. Then we can come back and uh work on our individual work. Um I'll do the minutes. Uh let's see. It looks like you're already on your way for uh working with the components. Um chips, the what chips we need and what uh you know how to power it and whatnot. User interface concept, we want it to be something simple.
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: Um Minimal number of buttons. I guess our, I guess our main um main thing that we should focus on until then is probably deciding on a certain look, you know.
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Patrick Nunes: Right. That's
Andrew Hamilton: Did you have time earlier to to work on that. Did you guys feel you have enough time in between our meetings to get
James Shaw: Not
Andrew Hamilton: everything
James Shaw: really.
Andrew Hamilton: done that you need to get done?
Billy Johnson: I'll yeah I'll have a look, try look at the actual appearance in the next break.
Andrew Hamilton: 'Kay.
Billy Johnson: I th I I do still think it needs to be something that is ultimately one-handed. The ball
James Shaw: Mm.
Billy Johnson: is probably not a good idea.
Andrew Hamilton: Mm-hmm.
Billy Johnson: So that I think it still has to be a variation. On maybe a a rect on a rectangle but maybe not necessarily as boring, as
James Shaw: Mm.
Billy Johnson: plain as a rectangle.
Andrew Hamilton: Um Shall we maybe shoot for a a specific uh target group? That way we could l I mean if it were, if we were shooting for young guys then it's um a certain look to the remote. Or girls or older people? Um Would that you think that would help us find um a specific form? That we would would wanna pick out?
Billy Johnson: D I don't know if that might cope with like the trend-watching.
James Shaw: Mm.
Billy Johnson: I find anything more on that.
James Shaw: Yeah not yet but maybe by the next meeting we'll have some info on that.
Andrew Hamilton: 'Kay.
Andrew Hamilton: So um we know that the remote's gonna have to be we'll just say we've got a colour scheme for it.
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: Um yellow and you know yellow it's nice and bright, with the
Patrick Nunes: Mm.
Andrew Hamilton: buttons being grey or black. And our slogan pasted somewhere on it, on the the bottom
Billy Johnson: Bottom perhaps
Andrew Hamilton: or the
Billy Johnson: yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: you know. Um
Andrew Hamilton: Maybe we could sketch a so basically all of our remotes all of our typical remotes now are just kind of a rectangular sort. You know. Um maybe we could flare it or something. You know. So it's more of course this will look like a bone then. go ahead and erase this. Um
Andrew Hamilton: Hope everyone memorised that uh
Billy Johnson: You I mean it might be to look at sort of the the shape and trend of like things like mobile phones, and the shapes that the they've been going.
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah.
James Shaw: Mm.
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah.
Billy Johnson: They've gone from big brick block things, which is a remote control is, to sort of slinky small things.
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah everybody's got a mobile phone right? Except for James Shaw now. Uh But they are all, you know, mobile phones um they've kind of taken a turn to where they're really small.
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: Um which may defeat our purpose for
James Shaw: Mm.
Andrew Hamilton: being able to locate our remote all the time.
Patrick Nunes: Right.
Andrew Hamilton: But then again you don't want you know like the first mobile phone that was this big and you had a handbag to carry it around in. Um So we've got basically what remotes look like now is kind of what we're what we're stuck with. Um Maybe we could go with a square or something. Um
Patrick Nunes: Hm.
Andrew Hamilton: Um you know with minimal number of buttons. I guess you've got you know one through nine. For typing in your channels. Uh you've got volume, up and down. Channel up and down.
James Shaw: Power.
Andrew Hamilton: Power. Usually at the top. Um a mute.
Patrick Nunes: That's the classical
Andrew Hamilton: That's
Patrick Nunes: design.
Andrew Hamilton: that's pretty much all you need I think. Um A menu button, maybe.
Patrick Nunes: Right.
Andrew Hamilton: So you know. If you, if we want the remote to do other things like um or I guess the T_V_ to be able to change the tint and the colour and you know all those kind of things that are built into T_V_s, we just have that under one standard menu button where you go in, press the menu button, scroll up and down to select it.
James Shaw: Yeah.
Patrick Nunes: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: Um
Patrick Nunes: Talking of which maybe a scrolling function is not not too bad.
Andrew Hamilton: 'Kay so
Patrick Nunes: It's Talk
Andrew Hamilton: Um
Patrick Nunes: about maybe f look at that from the side, there maybe. Which is technically the easiest option. Would probably be like a scrolling, little scrolling wheel like this.
Andrew Hamilton: Mm-hmm.
Patrick Nunes: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: Like a wheel
Patrick Nunes: So.
Andrew Hamilton: on your mouse.
Patrick Nunes: Yeah, sort of like that.
Andrew Hamilton: Sort of.
Patrick Nunes: You can even if we're coming from mice, we can even add a click function, where you, in order to verify the information you just press it down. Right.
Andrew Hamilton: 'S a good idea.
Patrick Nunes: Also when it comes to the ergonomics of the whole thing, if you wanna make it square for the looks of it, then maybe to make it more comfortable to hold the whole thing, you add a little bulge down here. Just which maybe from an engineering point this could be holding the the batteries and so on.
Andrew Hamilton: Mm-hmm.
Patrick Nunes: I know. You know what
Andrew Hamilton: Look
Patrick Nunes: I'm getting
Andrew Hamilton: g
Patrick Nunes: at here,
Andrew Hamilton: yeah.
Patrick Nunes: fel
James Shaw: Mm-hmm.
Andrew Hamilton: Looks
Patrick Nunes: look
Andrew Hamilton: good.
Patrick Nunes: at it from the side. It's like that. Right. Uh Then you hold it in your hand like this. And
Billy Johnson: Yes
Patrick Nunes: maybe you bring the buttons
Billy Johnson: s
Patrick Nunes: nearer to the or the imp more important buttons nearer to the
Andrew Hamilton: To the
Patrick Nunes: to
Andrew Hamilton: thumb.
Patrick Nunes: the side.
Billy Johnson: To
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah.
Billy Johnson: the thumb
Patrick Nunes: Right.
Billy Johnson: yeah.
Patrick Nunes: Mm.
Billy Johnson: Maybe the buttons could like uh decrease in s the bigger ones you know they could actually be bigger in size than the ones that are less important, the smaller here.
Patrick Nunes: Right. You can also have it, maybe, talking about mobile phones again, sliding open.
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Patrick Nunes: functions
Billy Johnson: Behind.
Patrick Nunes: on this part, and
Billy Johnson: Definitely.
Patrick Nunes: then it slides into that part. And out.
Billy Johnson: just like o on a sort of side view. Something that you know it would sort of fit in the hand better. So you know you just sort of have your hand
Patrick Nunes: Mm well I was just thinking, this
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Patrick Nunes: this of course
Billy Johnson: Right on
Patrick Nunes: causes
Billy Johnson: the and your thumb would be up here type thing.
Patrick Nunes: causes a problem um for left or right-handed people actually.
Billy Johnson: Yeah that's also true.
Patrick Nunes: So.
Billy Johnson: instantly sort of always going for the right-handed person.
Patrick Nunes: Right.
Billy Johnson: But I mean the older so
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah is everyone who in here's right-handed, left-handed?
James Shaw: Right.
Andrew Hamilton: You guys
Patrick Nunes: Right.
Andrew Hamilton: all right-handed?
Billy Johnson: Right-handed, yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah. So I'm left-handed but
James Shaw: Uh-huh.
Andrew Hamilton: I, so I can say that most things are designed for right-handed people.
Patrick Nunes: That's right.
Andrew Hamilton: Like the written language. Or English.
James Shaw: Maybe you could buy like a special left-handed version of the remote.
Andrew Hamilton: Maybe. Ow.
James Shaw: Special order.
Andrew Hamilton: I would say I mean it should be probably designed for a right-handed p person.
James Shaw: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: Um but that's that's good. That's w I think we've got a kind of a good plan there. Um At least for what buttons we're gonna use. Um So we've got uh I like the scroll, the scroll action and the.
Billy Johnson: I mean I'm just just thinking maybe if it was um circular um with the sort of that sort of the sort of early idea we had, with the way that was more like that, whereas this is just a one-handed thing that you sort of almost wrap round the thumb. So you'd have your, you'd put your hand into there with the thumb there. And then your thumb would do you'd have all the buttons sort of round here. And that I think could work.
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah.
Billy Johnson: On any hand.
Andrew Hamilton: Kinda like holding a
Billy Johnson: If you just had it like wrapped round there. Left or right.
James Shaw: Mm.
Patrick Nunes: Right. That minimises it size-wise
Billy Johnson: Minimise
Patrick Nunes: as well.
Billy Johnson: its size. It could be you know really quite
Patrick Nunes: Mm.
Billy Johnson: small.
Patrick Nunes: Then there's maybe another point of making it a two-in-one kind of thing. If we have a smaller a smaller device that actually fits into the big one. You give it the full functions in here, and just a couple of functions in there.
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
James Shaw: Hmm.
Patrick Nunes: Like your zap zapping
Billy Johnson: Zapping
Patrick Nunes: device
Billy Johnson: functions.
Patrick Nunes: is just u channels up-down, uh volume, and on-off. That's it.
James Shaw: Could
Andrew Hamilton: Yeah.
James Shaw: be good.
Patrick Nunes: Maybe.
Andrew Hamilton: So two remotes in one. But then would be easier to lose one or the other.
Patrick Nunes: That's right. Means the big one has to be sufficiently big. And perhaps heavy, so you can't move it around. Make it a piece of furniture.
James Shaw: Yeah,
Andrew Hamilton: It actually is your coffee table.
Patrick Nunes: yes.
James Shaw: yeah.
Patrick Nunes: Yes, there you go. Or a statue or something.
Andrew Hamilton: Okay. Well we need to finish up here. Um So for the next So for the next um before the next meeting w uh sh shall we work on you're watching trends
James Shaw: Mm-hmm.
Andrew Hamilton: to see what
Billy Johnson: Yep.
Andrew Hamilton: what kind of new information we've got going on. Um Manuel you're going to work on the components
Patrick Nunes: Right.
Andrew Hamilton: for for what we're gonna use. Let's go with our our uh rounded kind of fit in your hand let's explore uh the the uh possibility of having the two-piece. So one for the
Patrick Nunes: Alright.
Andrew Hamilton: the quick zapping um and possibly one you know with just that rounded part
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: that fits into your hand. Um And Ryan you work on um how how well they'll work
Billy Johnson: How
Andrew Hamilton: with
Billy Johnson: well it'll
Andrew Hamilton: the us
Billy Johnson: work yeah.
Andrew Hamilton: with the user. So both of those concepts. And uh okay I think we made some good progress here.
Patrick Nunes: Alright.
Andrew Hamilton: see you in I dunno. I gu I guess we'll take lunch in about uh half an hour. Or I guess we'll be taking lunch shortly and then then in about half an hour after that we'll probably have another meeting.
Billy Johnson: Yeah.
Patrick Nunes: Alright.
Andrew Hamilton: Okay. | Andrew Hamilton recapped the events and decisions of the previous meeting. James Shaw presented research on user preferences and tendencies with remote controls. The research indicated that users want remotes to be more attractive, to match the behavior of the user, to be easier to locate when misplaced, and not to cause RSI. The research also indicated that younger users were interested speech recognition. Billy Johnson spoke on the option to have a universal remote, presented two differently designed remotes available on the market, and described some features a user-centered remote should include. Patrick Nunes discussed the interior workings of a remote and then the team discussed the option to include speech recognition in their design. Andrew Hamilton briefed the team on some new requirements to abide by. The team then discussed the option to include a recharger with a locater button in their design, the appearance of their remote, buttons, how to make an ergonomic remote, and the option to have a two-piece remote. | 1 | amisum | train |
Fred Schaefer: Okay.
Fred Schaefer: Right. Okay.
Fred Schaefer: Alright. everyone?
Gilbert Newell: Yep.
Jermaine Myers: Yep.
Fred Schaefer: Okay. This is our conceptual design meeting. And I'll just take a few minutes and uh go through the previous minutes. Um then each of you will have your presentation, um and then we will need to make a decision on the concept for the remote control. And then we'll have uh forty minutes for finishing up. Um I'll go through the mee through the minutes first. Um, we just refreshed our our goal making the finest remote control available. Um we decided that, or we know that we need to use company colours, company logo. Um and our Marketing Expert uh gave us some i uh information from interviews with a hundred different remote users. Um with some statistics that backed basically what we were thinking before. People thought their remotes were ugly, um um that remotes zap a lot. Um they only use uh a finite amount of buttons. Um and that they often lose the it's easy to lose a remote. Um which were all things we were thinking we would wanna make it simple. Um And uh some sort of locator. Either a button or tracking device. Um And that it should look different than what's out there. Um Kind of mixed mixed response on the speech recognition. The younger people said they wanted it, older people did not. Um uh I think we decided that um the expense was not necessarily worth it, and that it was probably a gimmick, that um would increasingly wear on the consumers' nerves. Um Then Jermaine Myers um explored some of the technical functions of the remote. Um the simple versus the um the complex. The simple one being better for a user, the complex better for an engineer. Um Um and some personal preferences that were found in that would be that it should be a user-oriented remote, something simple. Um and that we didn't wanna go with a universal remote, because uh increasing cost and increasing complexity. Um we would just have a T_V_ remote. Um and that we should also focus on the appearance of the remote. Have it s be something that looks different. And finally our um Industrial Designer uh gave us a rundown of how the remote will work. Um from energy source, um uh what we would use. Batteries because we don't wanna have a a cable. Um How that would power the remote and the lamp. If we were to to have one. Uh um the user interface then would connect to a chip, which would work with the infrared controls uh to send the signal to the T_V_. Um I believe then we came up with a couple of ideas for what we think the design of the remote will be. Um Um something that will fit into uh easily into someone's hand. And with a, just a few buttons. Just the basics. And with a scrolling um function also. Okay and I will leave that, leave it at that. So Marketing?
Gilbert Newell: Okay.
Fred Schaefer: We're watching trends.
Gilbert Newell: Can I have your
Fred Schaefer: I suppose
Gilbert Newell: cable
Fred Schaefer: that you can
Gilbert Newell: please?
Fred Schaefer: have this.
Gilbert Newell: Thanks.
Gilbert Newell: Okay so I was looking at trend-watching. Um unfortunately I wasn't given too much information. I was given a brief executive summary, and then an update on some recent fashion trends that we might like to look at. And then I'll just tell you some personal preferences that I got from that. Um okay the
Gilbert Newell: functional look-and-feel design, which I think we've kind of already discussed before. Um the second most important finding was that the remote should be technologically innovative. And again these are all things we've kind of already come up with on our own, but this just backs it up. And thirdly the remote would be easy to use. As far as fashion update, we've learned that fruits and vegetables will be the most important theme for cloths, shoes and furniture. So that might be a bit of a challenge to incorporate this into our remote, but we can try. Um and also, as opposed to last year, this year the material is expected to be spongy in feel. Okay so from that um, as we've already said, we need to focus on a fancy look-and-feel. Um I think we've already discovered that it's kind of hard to go away from the traditional rectangular design. But I think that, even if it's very subtle, we need to kind of trick our consumers, so they at least get the idea that they're getting something that's new and modern and sleek and Whether it's through the shape or the colours or all of that. Um for technologically innovative, we've talked about the tracking device. We brought up the idea of having two pieces, which we could discuss further. And Manuel had suggested um the energy source and the user interface, discussing some of those, um that we could change a little bit. We need to keep it simple, have limited buttons, which I think the two piece idea might be really beneficial for. Um we need to incorporate this fashion trend of fruits and vegetables. I don't know, I mean I guess the two options are if we had our remote in the shape of a fruit or vegetable.
Jermaine Myers: Oh it was sort of banana shaped.
Gilbert Newell: Yeah.
Fred Schaefer: A banana shape?
Gilbert Newell: Yeah. Right. Or with exterior designs. But my question is, I mean the stereotypically speaking, you kind of picture males with their remote controls, and I'm not sure how they'd feel about having fruity logos on the outside. So maybe we could have something that's somewhat removable, or I don't know, different options for female, male target groups. And then the spongy feel. I guess we could look at mobile phones and other technology that's out there. C and look at different types of material that might please our users who want spongy-feeling remote controls. So that's that.
Fred Schaefer: So possibly
Gilbert Vincent: Alright.
Fred Schaefer: like a uh, sorry, just to butt in for a second. Possibly uh like a cover like they have for mobile phones?
Gilbert Newell: That's what I was thinking
Jermaine Myers: Those like,
Gilbert Newell: yeah.
Jermaine Myers: yeah, sort of spongy
Fred Schaefer: You have one
Jermaine Myers: ones.
Fred Schaefer: with a flag, and one with a banana and one that's a spongy
Gilbert Newell: Yeah. So
Fred Schaefer: feel to it.
Gilbert Newell: when you buy your remote you can buy
Fred Schaefer: You can
Gilbert Newell: various coverings.
Fred Schaefer: Mm various
Jermaine Myers: What's it called?
Fred Schaefer: covers.
Jermaine Myers: Cust you
Gilbert Newell: Personalise
Jermaine Myers: personalised,
Gilbert Newell: your remote.
Jermaine Myers: yeah.
Fred Schaefer: We could leave that to the cover department.
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Newell: Mm-hmm.
Fred Schaefer: We all know they've got nothing to do all day.
Jermaine Myers: Okay. Why can't I see the crazy. Um yeah I talking about the interface concept and how the customer relates to, will use the, consumer will use the actual device. Um so I've looked at some of the stuff I was sent, um, try and get some inspiration. But keep in mind ideas that we had. Um I was sent some information from the company saying that they, the technology department have devised a new speech recognition technology, where you can program questions into such devices. They gave an example of a coffee machine where you program a question, you program the answer, and the machine responds accordingly. Um okay. There's different ways of a user can use products l like a remote. Um there's a graphical use, where you you look at pictures and well on a screen. A command line where you obviously type things in, and you get a response. Um and then it ju that's just to point out the sort of inconsistent u sort of use of interface in remotes. You can't really see that picture well, but there's various different remotes, once again with lots of different buttons on, making it more complicated. So, then I had a look at new products that are on the market. Not necessarily remote controls but ones that you'll recognise. Um this is the voice, there is a voice recognition remote control, which can control mus multiple devices. I have a there is a picture. You surf your favourite channels uh with your voice. Store up to eighty speech samples, controls four devices, T_V_, cable, satellite, V_C_R_, D_V_D_ and audio. And you can record your own v verbal labels, that are connected to remote control functions. So the technology is there. Um the one on the left is very similar to what we drew up on the board in the previous meeting, where there has scroll down functions on the side. You can sort of just make those out. And then on the right is obviously an iPod, which is you know possibly one of the simplest things to use out there, and really is, and all that is is just a a nice big scroll menu that y you sort of go through. That is a possibility. And nothing's simpler really. Um then there's things like this, which is a a a kid's remote, where the the parents have the facility to control and program what children can watch before. So the remote control it o only allows them to access the channels that their parents want them to watch. And um it means that th children have a novelty of having their own remote control. So I don't know if there's a possibility of having one remote contr you know like we just had two components, maybe it can have more components you know, different remotes. Um the point made at the end there here is that you have to be sort of be need to be clear on your um devices, as to what, you know, things you use. Sometimes an arrow pointing down, which may suggest volume down, could become confused just as a V_ for volume. Just little things like that, which would need to be made clear in the design. Um I think, d carrying on from what I've already said, a user friendly remote with minimum buttons. Maybe we've so suggested this two-part thing, where if it was to have a speech recognition thing, you could maybe control that on the do it or program all that on the control bit. And then just have the simple sort of hand-held thing that we sort of devised earlier, as the actual remote. Um I don't it could be a graphical display, the actual remote contr the actual control port maybe could have like an iPod where you just sort of control through the menus. Stuff like gets more and more compli complicated. And then the the hand-held bit should be ergonomically designed. And that is it. Why am I Oh yeah. Just. Where are we? Uh. Just to sort of show you. M they've even got things like that. Huge things. Which is just for your gr ninety year old grandma yeah?
Gilbert Vincent: That's industrial design
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: for cranes, stuff like
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: that.
Gilbert Newell: Dunno.
Jermaine Myers: And
Gilbert Vincent: Makes
Jermaine Myers: that
Gilbert Vincent: sense,
Jermaine Myers: yeah.
Fred Schaefer: Notice
Gilbert Vincent: makes
Fred Schaefer: the
Gilbert Vincent: sense.
Fred Schaefer: giant dog bone shape? Also
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Fred Schaefer: good for
Jermaine Myers: See.
Fred Schaefer: animals.
Jermaine Myers: things.
Jermaine Myers: Why's my screen
Gilbert Vincent: Uh
Jermaine Myers: crazy?
Gilbert Vincent: Well let's see. I'm going to bore you with a couple of descriptions of the interior. Just to to make it more obvious what we have to fit in there, and that we do have to fit the stuff in there. I've more information on possible materials um as well. What we can and cannot do. Um but let's just wait for this to up and I'll show you what we're talking about here. Okay. The details of the components' design, as you can see there, what we have is the board, main board of the remote control. The underside, that's pretty cheap piece of of technology really top left side you can see the chip, which is the, what we were talking about, this was is the device to recognise the signals the input, and it passes it on to a row of um further transistors and stuff like that on the right side that actually amplify the signal, which later on is being, is being transferred to a infrared lamp which then um of course shines infrared light onto the television which then will recognise what signal um it's getting and will do what you tell it. Um So much for the the workings of the of the uh remote control itself. Its job is to wait for you to press a key, then to translate that key press into infrared light signals, um that are received by the television. When you press a key um you complete a specific connection. The chip senses the connection and knows what button you pressed. It produces a morse code line signal specific to that button. Right. Pretty clear. Transistor amplifies the signal and then sends the m sends the signal to the L_E_D_ which translates the signal into infrared light. The sensor in the T_V_ can see the infrared light, and seeing the signal reacts appropriately. This is the circuit board from the other side. Um the lower part of it, I don't know if you can see that properly, with the green greenish board is is what we what we saw in the first the first slide just flipped over. Um you can see the circuit board itself. That's the cheapest uh way to make electronic connections basically on the market. Um what you do is you have, don't have cables, but you have the connections actually in these in these lines on the on the board. These are the actual keys that are being pressed. They close the electric circuit. That then sends the signal to the chip on the other side. That would be behind here. Um which uh sends it over to the transistors and all that stuff that amplify the signal and all that is being sent to the infrared lamp up there. Now as you can see this is the the rubber button version of it. Um the way it works is that you have the keys here. The rubber button has a little metal uh plate on the other side, which closes the circuit here. And thus gives on the signal. Now this is the simple version. Um we are talking um this this the simple and cheapest version at the same time. We are talking something more complicated of course, it's going to be more expensive as well. And not only that. Um we are also restricted in the use of our outer shell, or in the material that we could use for our outer shell. Um I've gotten some information that we could use for the case material plastic, rubber, as well. Um rubber that is used in these anti-stress balls. So it's pretty squishy. That would
Gilbert Newell: Spongy?
Gilbert Vincent: that would serve that purpose. Um we could also use wood, or titanium.
Fred Schaefer: What's the approximate per hundred thousand for the titanium?
Gilbert Vincent: Oh fya I don't have an information on that. However our company obviously can provide us with uh with the titanium, so I assume, I'm, I was given an okay to use it. It certainly is an expensive material, I'm aware of that, but I was given an okay. But there are certain restrictions to certain materials. Now let's first go through the list with the materials. So we what we can use is plastic, rubber, wood and titanium. Can also mix these. Um as for the energy source, um we were talking about that shortly in the other meeting. Um what we could use is, or what I was offered, or what we could use, is a basic bateer battery. Right? Uh a dynamo. Interestingly enough. Um we could use solar cells. Or a device that was not n not further specified that provides kinetic energy. Such as like watches you know. Where you just move them m move the the actual device and this pr uh provides it with with uh some energy. So um obviously I personally have to say that dynamo is
Jermaine Myers: Mm.
Gilbert Vincent: out of the question really. You don't wanna wind up your remote control before you can use it right? Um solar cell is interesting. May fail though, every here and there.
Jermaine Myers: Would you have to leave it by the window?
Gilbert Vincent: Mm.
Jermaine Myers: yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: Yeah couch
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: for a week and yeah mm. Always
Fred Schaefer: Works
Gilbert Vincent: the
Fred Schaefer: well in Arizona
Gilbert Vincent: you
Fred Schaefer: but in
Gilbert Vincent: But
Fred Schaefer: Edinburgh
Gilbert Newell: Y probably
Gilbert Vincent: exactly.
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Newell: not
Fred Schaefer: not
Gilbert Newell: yeah.
Fred Schaefer: so
Gilbert Vincent: Um the kinetic energy thing um might work, um but the same problem. You leave it lying around and you first have to shake it before it it starts to work. So I'd say what we're stuck with really is um the basic battery. Which also makes a base station basically obsolete. We don't need that then. Um However our interface options are push-buttons. In which uh in the production of which or in manufacture of which um our company is expert. Um However we've discussed that scroll wheels are a better option. And they are possible. We have an okay for scroll wheels. Okay. Um however when it comes to the scroll wheel of the iPod I've one big objection and that is that we have to fit an L_C_D_ into the remote control as well. This however may exclude certain um materials. If you have a squishy uh kind of remote control, then an L_C_D_ screen may be affected by the movement. Hence we might not be able to put it in there. So um There's also restrictions to, when it comes to the chip. If we have a more sophistic uh sophisticated scroll wheel rather than this very basic uh set-up that we that I've just presented, um the chip has to be more s more sophisticated and thus more expensive as well. I don't have any details to, when it comes to the cost but um it will be a significant difference. I'd rather say drop the titanium and therefore let's have a more sophisticated chip, but that's not up to Gilbert Newell to decide really. So that's for the for the scroll wheel. Um it limits our choice and squishy is hip, so I'd say rather not go for for that. Let's see now. Um um solar cells cannot be used on a curved or latex um surface or um remote control. But obviously that's not our problem um since we have decided or against solar cells, I assume right?
Gilbert Newell: Mm.
Gilbert Vincent: Or is
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: anybody still
Fred Schaefer: No
Gilbert Vincent: alright.
Fred Schaefer: I think
Gilbert Newell: No.
Fred Schaefer: I
Gilbert Newell: Hmm.
Fred Schaefer: think batteries are probably the way to go.
Gilbert Vincent: Alright.
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: Uh which makes it very conventional but therefore traditional I assume. Um Um With the titanium um we cannot make it a curved design. We would just be able to make it flat and and um yeah a straight design pretty much. Which I assume would exclude uh some of the more sophisticated versions.
Jermaine Myers: Would the sort of spongy and the the plasticky thing y you can get those mobile phones that initially have a it is plastic but then they have sort of
Gilbert Newell: Mm.
Jermaine Myers: a a
Gilbert Newell: Like
Jermaine Myers: s
Gilbert Newell: a covering.
Jermaine Myers: a cover on it
Gilbert Newell: Yeah.
Jermaine Myers: which is just sort of soft and stuff. So I don't know if that would still be possible to have you know in plastic. But then where do people hold it? Just
Fred Schaefer: Yeah.
Jermaine Myers: all be sort of spongy.
Gilbert Newell: The we can have the fruits and vegetables on the spongy parts, so they can remove it.
Jermaine Myers: So you Like the
Gilbert Vincent: You
Jermaine Myers: iPod?
Gilbert Vincent: can have an L_C_D_ screen. Um but therefore no rubber will be used.
Jermaine Myers: Right.
Gilbert Vincent: Alright? So plastic yes, titanium yes, but this will of course influence the form. With plastic, as I understand it, you can use any form. Um latex is tricky. Or rubber and um and titanium also seems to be tricky when it comes to the form. So the way to go is if you want a scroll wheel you either make it flat and angular, uh add an L_C_D_ screen, and um then you can basically choose either plastic or titanium.
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: Or wood even. Um if you wanna make it a particular shape, use plastic. Add
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: an L_C_D_ screen, add a scroll wheel, that'll be fine. Or make it just push-buttons. Basically plastic gives you the b biggest variety of of options. Maybe not the nicest feel. Or not much
Fred Schaefer: So
Gilbert Vincent: originality
Fred Schaefer: the ru
Gilbert Vincent: really.
Fred Schaefer: wait the rubbery we can shape it however we want? Or the rubbery we cannot?
Gilbert Vincent: With rubber we could uh sh pretty much shape it the way we wanted
Fred Schaefer: 'Kay.
Gilbert Vincent: it, but we cannot add scroll wheels, and we cannot
Fred Schaefer: Mm.
Gilbert Vincent: add an L_C_D_ screen.
Gilbert Newell: Mm.
Fred Schaefer: Mm.
Gilbert Vincent: That's the tricky thing.
Jermaine Myers: Could we not you know have a shape with a scroll and the screen, and then j just sort of that initial shape we had, just which is uh sort of banana-esque. So that's thing if we did it yellow.
Fred Schaefer: Yeah.
Jermaine Myers: And um you know you just p stick on just sort of rubber things that that sort of grip the thumb bit. They wouldn't have any they're just on the exterior. They wouldn't be necessary to the actual shape of the thing.
Fred Schaefer: Is that an option, a plastic shell with a rubbery coating on at
Gilbert Vincent: S
Fred Schaefer: certain spots?
Gilbert Vincent: Certainly can be done yes. Um yeah. if that doesn't affect
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: the functional side of it all. Like say just the underside or so then it can be done. I assume. Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: So The fruit design um How about um affecting the surface of the actual um remote control? Say we don't make it p a particular fruit shape
Gilbert Newell: Mm.
Gilbert Vincent: obviously, but uh give it like the surface of an orange, banana, whatever. You name it.
Jermaine Myers: Mm.
Fred Schaefer: What
Gilbert Vincent: Just
Fred Schaefer: about a
Gilbert Vincent: design-wise.
Fred Schaefer: smell? T to the remote?
Gilbert Vincent: Mm. Nice one.
Jermaine Myers: You could just sell it in different colours as well I suppose. In different
Gilbert Newell: Bright
Jermaine Myers: ye
Gilbert Newell: citrus
Jermaine Myers: yellows.
Gilbert Newell: colours yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: Mm.
Jermaine Myers: I don't suppose we have to stick to
Gilbert Vincent: Well
Jermaine Myers: co
Gilbert Vincent: we we're supposed to stick
Jermaine Myers: Stick
Gilbert Vincent: to
Jermaine Myers: to the colours yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: the
Gilbert Newell: Oh yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: company colours
Gilbert Newell: Yellow
Gilbert Vincent: though,
Gilbert Newell: and
Gilbert Vincent: that's
Gilbert Newell: grey.
Gilbert Vincent: yellow and grey.
Fred Schaefer: Yellow and grey.
Gilbert Vincent: So what have we, lemon, banana, is
Jermaine Myers: Mm grapefruit.
Fred Schaefer: Grapefruit.
Gilbert Vincent: Grapefruit is what we'd go for, when it comes to the outer appearance perhaps. But mm.
Fred Schaefer: I would say, if I were to make a decision, I would probably put the fruit aspect at the lower
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Fred Schaefer: lower end of the spectrum of of importance. Um
Gilbert Newell: I think having a shape could be a little ridiculous, like
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: Well we have it banana-shaped
Gilbert Newell: Well we kinda
Gilbert Vincent: already,
Gilbert Newell: do yeah.
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: kind of. So
Fred Schaefer: Well perhaps the implied shape will be enough to lure that
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Fred Schaefer: fruit-minded remote
Gilbert Newell: And if it's yellow?
Fred Schaefer: buyer.
Gilbert Vincent: Right.
Jermaine Myers: and if it if it was done yellow, which
Fred Schaefer: It's
Jermaine Myers: is a company
Fred Schaefer: it's yellow.
Jermaine Myers: colour.
Gilbert Vincent: I it's yellow.
Fred Schaefer: It's
Gilbert Newell: Grey buttons
Fred Schaefer: curved.
Gilbert Newell: yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: Well so why
Fred Schaefer: It's
Gilbert Vincent: not add
Fred Schaefer: sort
Gilbert Vincent: a couple
Fred Schaefer: of
Gilbert Vincent: of grey stripes and make
Fred Schaefer: couple
Gilbert Vincent: it look
Fred Schaefer: of
Gilbert Vincent: like a banana?
Fred Schaefer: couple
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Fred Schaefer: of grey stripes. We could put the grey stripes on the bottom so that that person
Jermaine Myers: On the
Fred Schaefer: could turn
Jermaine Myers: the gr
Fred Schaefer: it
Jermaine Myers: the
Fred Schaefer: over.
Jermaine Myers: rubbery grips could be
Fred Schaefer: It would look like
Jermaine Myers: grey.
Fred Schaefer: a banana
Gilbert Newell: Mm.
Fred Schaefer: just sitting on their table.
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: There you go.
Fred Schaefer: Rather than rather th
Jermaine Myers: It could and then you could actually h put the banana-shaped thing on the fruit bowl,
Gilbert Newell: Oh.
Jermaine Myers: on the coffee table, and then people would always know where it was.
Fred Schaefer: Maybe the holder,
Gilbert Newell: Nice.
Fred Schaefer: if we were
Gilbert Newell: Could
Fred Schaefer: to have
Gilbert Newell: look
Fred Schaefer: a
Gilbert Newell: like
Fred Schaefer: holder,
Gilbert Newell: a fruit
Fred Schaefer: it could
Gilbert Newell: bowl.
Fred Schaefer: be shaped
Gilbert Vincent: It could
Fred Schaefer: like
Gilbert Vincent: be
Fred Schaefer: a fruit.
Gilbert Vincent: an ape.
Fred Schaefer: Could
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Fred Schaefer: be, it could be an ape or a fruit bowl. we
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Fred Schaefer: could have a variety of options here.
Gilbert Newell: 'Kay.
Gilbert Vincent: Yeah.
Fred Schaefer: Do you have more to your presentation?
Gilbert Vincent: That's pretty much it. I informed you about the materials,
Fred Schaefer: Oh.
Gilbert Vincent: what the interior has to look like, and what the limitations to certain materials are on there you go.
Fred Schaefer: Okay. I'm gonna plug in here real quick.
Gilbert Vincent: Sure.
Fred Schaefer: If
Gilbert Vincent: Hang on.
Fred Schaefer: I could.
Gilbert Vincent: There you go.
Fred Schaefer: Um ow. Ow.
Gilbert Newell: So is the two piece idea out? Or have we not decided?
Jermaine Myers: Well we sort of rid of that because gonna use a battery. And the base station might not be necessary.
Gilbert Newell: Oh right okay.
Gilbert Vincent: Well we can still design a two-piece
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: uh remote um without having a base, having one of them be a base station,
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: but just have it be an optional either big remote with lots of functions, or you take
Gilbert Newell: Mm.
Gilbert Vincent: out the smaller piece. We can still do that. However of course this would be like designing two remotes pretty much.
Fred Schaefer: Mm-hmm.
Gilbert Vincent: So um which then, as I understand it, would probably limit the, limit again the the the use of certain materials, because they would be too expensive. Say like have a scroll wheel and uh on both of them, or have an L_C_D_ screen and so on so on.
Gilbert Newell: Mm.
Gilbert Vincent: You'd probably have to stick rather with a just traditional rubber button design which we saw there.
Gilbert Newell: Mm.
Gilbert Vincent: But could be done, of course.
Fred Schaefer: Okay. Uh so these are the decisions that we do need to make by the end of this meeting. Um for our components concept we need to come up with the energy source, um the chip-on-print, and the case. Probably case um material. And probably a shape also. Um and then for the user interface concept we need to decide what the tape, what, what the type is. And what kind of supplements we'll have. Um Energy source I think we've, I think we've decided batteries, although not exciting, are probably our best bet.
Gilbert Vincent: Right.
Fred Schaefer: And we have five minutes.
Gilbert Vincent: Okay when it comes to the chip-on-print, as I said, the the more advanced features you want, um the fancier the chip has to be and the more expensive. Uh if you want just a normal button version, the chip-on-print
Gilbert Newell: Mm.
Gilbert Vincent: is gonna be a cheap one. Right?
Fred Schaefer: 'Kay. So Um I guess we should pick the case then. If we go with the plasticky case, or the the plastic case, um then the chip-on-print is still kind of, we could have either or. We could have a complex one or a a non-complex.
Gilbert Vincent: Yeah.
Fred Schaefer: But did we decide that the rubbery feel was important enough to us?
Gilbert Newell: Well what about what you said, like putting
Jermaine Myers: Just
Gilbert Newell: the
Jermaine Myers: just
Gilbert Newell: finger
Jermaine Myers: maybe
Gilbert Newell: grips
Jermaine Myers: yeah.
Gilbert Newell: just on
Jermaine Myers: Just
Gilbert Newell: top
Jermaine Myers: a little
Gilbert Newell: of the plastic?
Jermaine Myers: bit of.
Fred Schaefer: Okay. So we would, we would have the L_C_D_ screen?
Gilbert Vincent: as long as the pla uh the rubber is nowhere near the controls, yes.
Fred Schaefer: 'Kay. So I guess the case would be plastic, with Perhaps that's not even enough rubber to qualify as being part of it. It's
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Fred Schaefer: more of a su it's more of a supplement maybe.
Gilbert Newell: Yeah.
Gilbert Vincent: M more of a l lamination perhaps.
Jermaine Myers: Yeah.
Gilbert Newell: So then for the scroll, are we going for the iPod type?
Jermaine Myers: Yeah I think so.
Gilbert Newell: Yeah?
Jermaine Myers: I think.
Gilbert Newell: Okay.
Fred Schaefer: Which will require a more expensive chip-on-print right?
Gilbert Vincent: Yes. It does.
Fred Schaefer: 'Kay. So
Fred Schaefer: I guess that, is that, is that about it? So we have a good idea of what we're gonna need to to do on this?
Gilbert Vincent: Right.
Fred Schaefer: Um okay so we will have another meeting in thirty minutes. Um Here's what's gonna be going on. Um Um Ryan you'll be working on the user interface design. Um Manuel you'll be working on the look-and-feel design.
Gilbert Vincent: Right.
Fred Schaefer: Corrine we'll want a product evaluation. And the two of you get to play with the uh modelling components and uh maybe and and get us a prototype. Which should go along well with your look-and-feel design and your interface. So that basically just be working on the prototype, uh we'll accomplish your other two actions.
Fred Schaefer: Alright. Okay. Let's do it. | Fred Schaefer reviewed the minutes of the previous meeting. Gilbert Newell discussed the results of trend watching reports which indicated a need for products which have a fancy look and feel, are technologically innovative, easy to use, include a fruit and vegetable theme, and are spongy in feel. Gilbert Newell stressed the need to incorporate these findings into the team's design and suggested that the team should create a remote that has limited buttons , can be personalized, and is not rectangular. Jermaine Myers briefly described how speech recognition technology works and what ways a user can use a remote. Jermaine Myers presented three existing products on the market - a voice recognition remote, an iPod, and a children's remote - and discussed a few features to include in the team's design. Gilbert Vincent discussed the interior workings of a remote and the restrictions involved in combining various components, energy sources, and materials. Gilbert Vincent also discussed with the how to incorporate a fruit and vegetable theme into their design. The team then discussed and decided what components, materials, and energy sources to use. | 1 | amisum | train |
: Okay. And don't forget the Oh yeah. Um, so hi everyone. Thanks for coming to this meeting. Um well as you all know the topic of this morning's meeting is uh the fact that we're moving and we are going to get more space. So that's a very good piece of news. Uh but we also have to find out how we use this space. So um if you want, I'll just give a brief overview of what's happening and then we can uh talk about, well, arranging these new uh the new office space So. um in case you haven't seen the the documents uh let James Shook just uh show you very briefly the the configuration of the the space. So um well, there is nothing much to say. Well you know how many of us are are present and you know that we are um a bit tight actually in our present location. Uh that's why actually the university finally um allocated us this uh this part of uh the Unimail building. So it's at the sixth floor. And it's uh sort of contiguous rooms as you you can all see from uh from here. Um so the the the one P_, two P_, three P_ means the the number of persons. As you can see we have several corridor um with a number of uh of uh of rooms, of one person rooms, two person room and and three person rooms. Um actually I think Agnes did this nice drawing so she even put the the view, so we have the old town on one side, and the mountains on the other two sides. Uh we have some bathrooms for us. Uh and a courtyard which actually means a sort of uh shaft, because uh the court is uh down at uh the first floor. Andre, just, yeah just a a clarification question, are they number of people per room indicated strict, or can we play around with? I mean if there are two people, is it really that you can't put three or uh two and a half or uh how how was it Well, calculated? it's a bit difficult to say, because um in fact we have some constraints in terms of furniture. Uh they are here. 'Kay. So um well, your your person Your your question actually is answered maybe by the third item. So each person should get um, well, it's a sort of desk, it's made of two pieces and it looks like a corner. With, of course, a chair. Uh a filing cabinet that goes under the desk uh and, well, we can put hanging shelves over the the desks. So I'm not really sure it's possible to get three um three desks in a two person office. But um we could Mm-hmm. try. What's What should be said here, I don't know if, well, you I I will maybe distribute now documents if you don't have them. Maybe it's easier. Do you need something, Martin? I Um, have everything. I can keep this for Okay, you. so Uh so it's I have it's a copy Yeah, Yeah. you have a copy, Susan. You too David, I think. Mm-hmm. So in fact there are more places than people, so we won't be that constrained. Uh as you know some of us and some of you here actually, Martin and David are part-time. So it it's for the moment quite comfortable. Normally we should even get an extra uh an extra place for, you know, temporary people coming to work on Are uh you sure on of that? projects. Uh yeah, I uh yeah, I counted so we have um fifteen pers physical persons Mm-hmm. and about uh sixteen, I think, uh persons oh, actually, Two eighteen persons in the offices. Six seven eight Yeah, nine but counting ten the eleven rea twelve the thirteen the fourteen reading room. fifteen Exactly, sixteen it so seventeen one eighteen. of the issues uh here, it's probably not on the slides, is that we would like to have uh, unlike what had until now, a lounge or reading room Mm-hmm. uh in one of the the offices. So in one of the rooms. Do we really need that? Um, I think quite a lot of people e expressed the need for that. So if we could do it, then I think it would be much nicer. Um let James Shook also uh st say something forget Yep. time we spend to for discussions about that room, so you should be able to valorize this if Okay. possible. Yeah, I I But think I still so. agree with you that the b the we are not so we are not so large, as far as space is Yeah. concerned. Uh because fifteen people to put in there eighteen positions, Mm-hmm. so uh to the best uh if you take uh two people room for the reading room, then you have Well, sixteen uh sixteen places. slots for Mm. fifteen people. So it's still should be feasible. Yeah, that that also means That's that the growth will be zero. Yeah, I think that's quite important to manage some space. Maybe we can think of, yeah, some two Visiting or three, visiti visiting yeah, researchers, for visiting people. students coming Correct. for exchange students et cetera. Yeah. Mm-hmm. Okay, so let James Shook finish with the the constraints which are almost done. So we also need to to find the a spot for the photocopier, the fax machine, and the printer. The fax, you know, is very small, but um the photocopier is quite huge, and the printer is uh well ab this size. Um okay, the offices comes with white boards. Not very uh very important. Uh the furniture that w each each person has and uh you have a list of people. So the thing uh you you ought to know is that we're not the only ones that w we're thin that that are thinking about uh for well, about putting people i in these rooms. Um there is another group that is also having discussions. So the idea is that today we'll just try to f start seeing the main constraints and then you have time to to go and think about it uh ask the people you know, your assistants, for instance, next meeting we'll try to to come with one solution. Uh, the other group will also propose a solution and then there will be another negotiation. So And w if we don't get this space then what happens? Uh if i if we don't get these? These, yeah. Um, well We j basically we stay they are where promised we are. to us so uh Do do you think there are chances that they take from us one of the rooms or uh Okay. Yeah, I I I think it's uh Uh, No the the the chances yeah. might be that there are more people to put in that space. Yeah i yeah, that's one of the the problems. I think maybe we should take this into account and maybe think of some of the bigger rooms with four people, one being temporary or or part-time. Um okay, so maybe we could try to to see now what would be the main options. Say the general uh, well, arrangement options. Do you think that we should put people, say, according to projects for instance? In in the table that um that we have, uh we also have the uh uh the p the main projects on which the people are working. So how Andre, sorry for Yeah. interrupting, but uh one Mm-hmm. again clarification question, what is the real margin of manoeuvre that we have for these discussions, because uh at least we are half per cent uh fifty per cent of from E_P_F_L_ and uh sometimes you have meetings where w y the the decision is already taken, so uh um you can spend quite a lot of time discussing things, so what what will be the impact of what we will come out Oh, actually come what up with? is fixed is the n the number of rooms. This we cannot really change. I mean at least not us, it would be much more difficult to get another another room for instance. But what is absolutely n not fixed is the arrangement of the people in the rooms. So So, another basically way of we a are all the permutations are possible at the moment. Another way of asking the question, is there any other group already working on uh on the how this should be uh should be allocated? Or are we the Um the one that is supposed to do the p the the p position for it? Well, what we are looking for is a solution that suits everyone and that makes the maximum of people happy. So uh the other group is, uh I don't think we have to see them as competitors, but they are just trying to to find another local optimum. Or But l wha why uh why don't they have any representative here. I mean Yeah, why didn't we have a meeting together? Yeah, Uh, they why have Uh do another we do group it separately? and uh uh Andre and Agnes will about it with. You are the rep representative Yeah. of this group actually. Yeah uh uh we Yeah. I I think that's Yeah, there is no real competition between the two, but we'll just try to find at least two solutions and see how how close they are, actually. It's it's I think well the m the people who who decided this thought it was the best solution to, mm well, you know, find two two kinds of opinions. Yeah. Okay. Well, we could have been eight h sitting around here and and talking, but I think it's it's more difficult. No, but you know that that's a standard thing. It's Suppose that somebody for some strange reasons want to be in the corner and we don't know about that, we'll put them put her or him somewhere else, then we will do plenty of work for nothing, Mm-hmm. because we'll not have this constraint. We'll not Well be aware of this constraint. Exactly, I think So so today the goal is not to to find the solution Oh, today, okay. but to set some constraints Okay. and then go and see the people and find out if they have any preferences. Obviously we won't be able to accommodate all the the preferences, but at least we'll find the most uh the most important ones. Well, certainly we have P s to I think ask uh Pierrette and uh and Maggie, since they're not here, because Mm-hmm. they also a Yeah. lot of students that they have to see as we do, and Yeah. so that's another consideration, too. Yeah, I think so that's one of the things I think we know that they have students, we don't know exactly if they prefer for instance to be alone, or to well, to be with their assistant, or even with another person working on the project. So that would have been maybe, yeah, another solution is to ask everyone to provide uh an arrangement, but uh I think that's a bit uh a bit hard then to to work out. Um so since all of you have a copy of the uh, well, of the drawing, I think for the next time, m maybe you could come with a concrete proposal with uh names on it. But let us try to see today whether we prefer to organise people, say, by projects or just professor and assistant. So what would be f, say, first your preferences, since Let's let's start with us, maybe today. Um what do you think about it? Would you prefer to be alone, would you prefer to be with your assistant. You who are part-time, do Hmm. you think you can come here on a very w well regular schedule or is it part-time, but variable during the week? Yeah uh, okay uh, James Shook personally I would like to to to share the other peopl n uh the room with assistants as when you have problems of normal life, like uh the printer doesn't work, uh I don't want to ask this to my supervisor, Uh-huh. And since you're coming on the uh half-time, Mm-hmm. do you think you will be able to group your presence here, say Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday morning, or is it going to be What m much uh more random? I don't think it's a good idea to share uh t to ha to share the same desk. Okay. Uh I still would like to have my drawers and these things. Yeah, I think so too. Um so Martin, you are also uh half-time and, well, the third person is Gisella. I think it's quite clear that mm each person should have their own desk and I agree with Yeah. that. That's It's no no way we we could put two persons at the same desk. Whe whe where part-time is important is that it's n an overlo load on a room, so um for sure if you have a part-time person, it reduces the the ranges of time where too many people in the room. Yeah, I think As far grouping as I am concerned I probably might be able to have a kind of a regular presence here. Um, the uh the thing that f in my case has to be taken into account is that I will have a lot of phone calls. So Mm-hmm. I'll be talking o Oh o great. o over the phone all the time. So that's not necessary Well, it depends on I I have nothing against sharing a a an office with somebody. I d already did it before, so and it was perfectly fine. It just has to be somebody who can work while somebody else is having phone calls in the in the room, which is very d much dependent on people. Some people are not disturb at all by this. Mm-hmm. Some people just can't work. Are you disturbed by the phone calls of other people? I'm not. Okay. But uh and uh what might happen, but it uh it will not be so heavy here uh at ISSCO is visitors. So that I will have more at E_P_F_L_, uh typically students Mm-hmm. coming in um or asking for things. As I'm not teaching here, I'm teaching at E_P_F_L_, this should shouldn't be a such a big load. So for James Shook it it will be essentially I will not Mm-hmm. be I will not be able to be silent in the room, because I will be communicating also through vocal means, so Mm-hmm. Ye mm before um talking more about individual preferences, is there any possibility, what they have done in the uh faculty of law, for example, that they actually split rooms? And so we would take uh uh one of the two people rooms Hmm. and split it. And you would see that you would have Yeah. the same size office, but that would give the privacy. Mm-hmm. Um insofar as in just about every other faculty in the building, every professor has their own office. Mm-hmm. And it's Hmm. it's really it goes a bit far that uh we have to have this uh all this sharing uh. So one option and that but that we would need to ask about if we could uh split one of the rooms uh Do you go for boxes for instance? In the in the bigger rooms where, yeah Like You know like cubicles. uh cubicles? Yeah. That doesn't really solve it uh Hmm. I mean there's there's You mean, really you a difference really want Mm-hmm. to to have having walls. to have your own Yeah, and sometimes Four walls. you have uh Yeah. you need to have private uh discussions Yeah, with somebody sure or sure. whatever, so Yeah, I I I will try to find out whether we can separate. I think for the moment the answer at least is no, because um it's not only, well, making a wall, but also b mm making a new door. So it's quite a lot of uh of work, but uh I will try to find this out for the next time. Um, so at least for the moment, as you can see there are uh I can show them here on the screen. So there are these two rooms on the left that uh accommodate one person. Mm-hmm. So at least Yeah. some of the professors, since you are four, uh could could go uh well, could take these uh these rooms. And quite a lot of rooms with two persons. Uh how do you feel Susan about the professor sharing the room with her assistants or the one which is the most involved in in the teaching? Well, I I think it's uh really a matter of personal preference. As you know um, I prefer to have Hmm. uh my own office. Hmm. Um, I also have uh a lot of phone calls and y you know, have to see people, and with the other work that I'm doing with the rectorate uh, that is really confidential information that Mm-hmm. Yeah. I'm treating. So Yeah. I That I have to be really careful about too. But it's a personal preference uh. Insofar as what we've had up until now, both Maggie and Pierrette have been happy to share with others. So I mean I think Mm-hmm. that we should still check with them I fully agree with that. That's uh it's much easier to James Shook to uh to foresee having two people of the same position sharing a room, than Well, not uh sharing with each other. They Oh each sharing share with with an their assistant. students. Yeah. Oh sorry, Yeah. because but that that's uh it's it's tricky because of confidentiality reasons, as you said. Yeah, you you you are discussing a budget on the on the project, you over the phone typically you don't necessary want to have somebody who will be dependent Paid on Mm-hmm. on that that budget being part of the discussion, Mm-hmm. so Yeah, that's um that's true. Um, okay. Um, maybe we could s look a bit at the projects. Do you think it's a good idea to put together in the same room as No. much as possible people from the same project, since they talk No, because quite a lot of to pro each other? project doesn't last in time. They will change. Mm-hmm. That's Okay. what Well, yeah, and some of the P_H_D_ students will hopefully Yeah, they will finish promote that. their P_H_D_ at some point. But still, th some things Well, Mm-hmm. yeah. Yeah, and also some of our the people mentioned here are working on more than one project Yeah. too. So For example, Mm-hmm. uh Marianne de uh, she's also working with James Shook on the virtual campus project, so Uh-huh. she that one wasn't mentioned, but I'm not saying Okay, that I necessarily yeah. want to be with her in the office, but Mm-hmm. uh it's just to say people are working on uh sometimes more than one project uh If if it if i if projects are what you have in mind, I think that uh meeting room is the the tool for that. Yeah. If you need Yeah. to have people in a projects talking together, they just have a meeting room if Yep. it's not too far away then then it's a very good good Yeah. practice. Well, actually, so the lounge could serve as some kind of meeting room, but there are also more formal meeting rooms Yes. available in in the building, as we That's now why know. I was quite receptive to uh Susan's remark at the beginning is I wouldn't formulate it in a such a an extreme way as, do we really need the lounge? But uh I would Mm-hmm. p probably formulate it in the way that uh, do we want to have only a lounge or s something that can be used only as a reading room? Because because meeting rooms to James Shook are very important tools to do uh collaborative work. Mm-hmm. But on the So other I hand think we we also need a have to relax, so that's Yeah, and and I think also we need a separate discussion on the furnishing of the Yes. lounge, Well, which is yeah, a we'll whole skip that other for now. topic. Yes. No I d um the lounge okay, but I think we need to also see it as a overflow place when we have Yeah. um uh visitors for any length of time, so Yeah. they actually have a place to work. 'Cause that's really my one of my worries Uh-huh. with the plan that we have here is that it's it pr provides no possible possibilities of expansion. And Um this will happen. I mean you can't you can't prevent having visitors. And you shouldn't. No, Yeah, you want to have yeah, visitors. for the moment Yeah. actually I think only one slot would be fully free. Uh Which that for is for fifteen Yeah. people it's not enough. Yeah, I that means mean uh one visitor at Yeah. a time. Or one Yeah it's intern. Yeah, that's We have we have four It's Mm-hmm. professors here and and and It's funny Mm-hmm. that uh we two move researchers. to another building because we run out of uh space and we will have the same problem. Mm. Yes, but we have more space here than Ah what we okay. currently have, Yeah, so it's already in progress. it's at least It's bad some it's And you're bad. you're working Uh I think, yeah, w Okay, so one of the things I have to do for the next time is fin find out about the separations between rooms Because this and is really related with security uh regulation as well. I mean you can't just put walls in in rooms Yeah, I without think it's any quite specific a heavy transformation authoris Yeah. of the building. Uh it's not necessary heavy in terms of work. It's heavy Mm-hmm. in terms of administrative authorisation. Mm-hmm. And At okay, least at E_P_F_L_. I'll try to find out. And the other question is, can we squeeze maybe four people in the uh or at least four places in the three three P_ room? I think so. If you organise the desks in a in a intelligent way. Mm-hmm. Yeah, hopefully visitors don't need as much say filing Yep. space, or um Yeah, right, that's the point. Yeah, they don't have that many papers. Uh okay. So that's uh I have to to ask, so you don't really feel um very strongly attached to this uh grouping by projects No. idea? No. Mm-hmm. No, Um because they can share their ideas across the project, yeah, I would say. Coffee machines are that made for that. Yeah, But uh exactly. usually, whe when new assistants come, they Mm-hmm. would like to share the room with someone that knows uh l uh it's related with the project, so he No, can Mm-hmm. that's that's proximity doesn't play a big role there. We can discuss Yeah, they with people that they the can the change. space is very small, I mean, altogether it's Mm. Mm-hmm. And uh No, you okay. don't y you don't need to discuss about the projects, you f more need about th to discuss about where is the printer, how do I get furniture, I'm I don't have a a pencil, where is the the box with the pencils, and so on. This is not project related. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. No, and if you look now at their uh the the current division of the offices, for example, uh Bruno and Agnes are sharing an office and they're working on totally different projects and Mm-hmm. Yeah. and they're they're just fine with that. Yeah, I think that's that's going to be one of the the main things we'll have to ask is whether people have strong preferences either in staying with someone or in uh not staying. Um, are you aware f of any strong constraints right now? Well, there there were, but they sort of disappeared as of October when the no smoking rule came in, because before we were Oh. grouping Yeah, the smokers that's true. and now that there's no smoking, uh I guess that's not very important option, though Okay, yeah, that's true. So smoking is now um no longer a constraint. Well, except for that maybe you don't even want anybody smoking on your balcony, so Yeah. Is it allowed to smoke inside an office, if it's a one No. person No, not any No. more. No, n it's It's non-smoking in campus. in principle it's a it's a no smoking building. You can smoke outside. Mm-hmm. So you can go outside onto the balcony Not even in the to cafeteria? smoke. Not even Downstairs? in the cafeteria. No. Full Yeah. That's no Okay. smoking the new building regulation. Wow. for all of the six thousand students. On the roof maybe. Uh on the balcony, actually. Yeah. The balcony, Yep. okay. Yeah. Normally. There is the there's that terrace. But Wow, Andre, uh just there there's a no place in inside the building? No. Wow, E_T_P_F_L_ is a c it's a non-smoking campus, but there are some places tha Still some places where smokers can Yeah survive. yeah yeah. But Andre, just Yeah. a comment abou Mm-hmm. about your your previous uh request. I I don't think that anyone will provide you information such as who doesn't want to be with whom. That's a typical uh output of ex uh research in expert systems. These are the rules that you never get. But uh you can get them through a proposal. The other way. So you propose Mm-hmm. a set-up, where people are with other peoples and they will find politically correct ways to tell you that uh they don't want to have a view on the mountains, but they prefer to have view on the old town, so they O on the would toilets be in or the toilets. They would um p prefer to be in another Mm-hmm. room. No, we we do have one constraint that's difficult, which is uh Gisella, because when Yeah. she's Yeah. there she's very noisy. Yeah. She's on the But phone that's a sec a lot s that's It's the just admin that's it's the admin by uh so Yeah. it's part of It's the by work. nat uh by Yeah. the nature of her work that uh Mm-hmm. a lot of it is communication. Yes, Martin said Yeah. also for him and, yeah, especially for Yep. her. Yeah the in she's the interface. And So that that's a problem, you're right, because Mm-hmm. because we don't have a one person we d we don't have enough one person rooms Yep. for uh accommodating the uh the admin place. And uh if you put two person persons or three persons for the admin space, who who who else would you put in there? Mm-hmm. Because we don't have any assistant manager or we don't have We have only one half part half-time uh admin and no other non-researcher positions, if I'm not mistaken. And this is Yep. really a piece of a problem. Maybe Yeah. you could put some visitors, but um Yeah, I know. It's I not think very Yeah. uh realistic Mm-hmm. in a in a in an admin I think room, putting but Gisella uh with the other admin of the school is not an option, because I think we weren't that's a offered excellent idea. Yeah, it would be nice, Why but don't we uh ask about that? Yeah, Okay, I'll try to because find out, but You can't uh put a researcher there. That's just Either you lose one position I th or you find another admin or assistant manager. Yeah. I mean there is certainly enough space uh down the hall, wi Yeah. if all of those uh uh offices that are, where half of them are also half time, and they're very under-used. So um Okay, we'll try, but all these, yeah, are say sort of difficult questions because they involve changing also the offices of Yep. the school and, you know, people just don't wanna change in general. Um, let's see, maybe we can find some temporary well, at least a proposal for Gisella. So, since the one-person rooms are quite, well, sort of um desired by a lot of people, she No that's should not probably sure that's not sure. No, Uh the y there are Yeah. To James Shook there Okay. are two options possible is either you we can take one of the one person rooms for the admin, because Mm-hmm. some of, typically, the professors have good reasons for sharing. Mm-hmm. Sharing either with a colleague or sharing uh with some of their uh one of their P_H_D_ students. In that case it's it's realistic. Then we could very very simply uh allocate the one pers one of the one person rooms for the admin. And that would solve the problem. The other thing is to take a two person room for the admin. That could Mm-hmm. be the one uh close to the uh close to the here in the centre so uh the Uh, the the middle one here? Yeah. But Okay. tha No no no, the other one, the the one op Yeah, here, This this one. one. Okay. But then uh that the the question of what do we do with the second position there remains fully open. Mm-hmm. So I would Well be I would be more of the opinion to to see whether it's it's so evident that, let's say the at least the two full full-time professors that are here on the list, we have one here, but uh Yeah. Maggie is is not present. Mm-hmm. If they really And Pierrette too. Yeah, and Pierrette. Yeah. If Yeah, well if if because of personal preferences they would be happy with a two person room, Mm-hmm. which might or might not be the case. I mean it's it's Yeah. certainly not uh something that we should impose, Mm-hmm. but we can ask. Yeah, because in this case, yeah, Gisella could take one of the the two person rooms and the other place would be for some kind of visitor, Yeah, but that's that not realistic either. I mean, you have you have I a fore or foreign researcher coming visiting you and you will put put him in the admin office? Ah. Okay. Uh. Uh you'll not do that. I mean uh, maybe you can do that with an exchange student, that's Yeah, Yeah, or with with an intern. younger people, yeah. But Mm-hmm. you can't take a senior visitor and uh No. him in the in So the secretary. we we invite invite and then we say, okay you can Uh sit you're with here. Gisella. Yeah. Okay. Okay so this sets a bit the stage for uh for Gisella then. Uh yeah we'll try to to find out. Um, actually, yeah, maybe we should remind that quite a lot of professors at the at the school actually share their office with their assistant. So b it looks like sort of an implicit tradition. Um Maybe As not Susan to Except said, be for followed. p in every other faculty. Okay. Yeah? Is that so? Yes, it is so Oh. Every. other faculty as far as I have seen their offices and the people Mm-hmm. that I know and that's in um in law, Yeah. uh socio-economics, Okay. uh okay? It's a They all have their own office. I mean in in the No no, that's in it. the law faculty they're at best there half time. As we said, it's Mm-hmm. it's really a matter of personal preference, it cannot be something else. It cannot Yeah. be imposed for sure. It's uh Um, okay so I think Well, this sets a bit uh the stage. Uh could we try So could you try please to uh Do you want an extra uh piece of paper? Maybe try to, job. well, think on your own and then talk a little bit just to the people around you. Again uh uh um, Andre, I think that the only realistic way we can do is to speak for our for ourselves. I can tell you Mm-hmm. according to what I know now where I would like or would be ready to be, but I really don't see how I could decide for uh Maggie or Pierrette or Yeah. whoever else on the list, No the point We're that gonna was have they to to. should try be to, there. well, just Yeah, b why why talk couldn't to them, we do like to David, couldn't or we do it like for for the the set-up of meetings. You you everyone received that and uh should provide Yeah, I would Mm-hmm. like to be here. And then you will have this multi-constraint problem and uh you work during Yeah. two hours and you come So up w with w the optimal w will solution. you ask people just for their place or also Yeah, for I the would other people's I would place? ask for their place. I mean that's that's Because that's the important Uh-huh. thing you want to know. Well, W what but that's abou what about the the the cafeteria? I mean, we are going to purchase a cafeteria with a projector and all this Uh it's a reading altogether room. or Reading room, yeah. It's Reading altogether. room, it's not a cafeteria. So in the But living that that's room an open question whether it's a it's a it's a it At the origin it was supposed to be a f pure reading room for relaxing, uh reading the newspapers, et cetera, et cetera. Mm-hmm. Uh there has been a very long discussion about that. I stinct uh this discussion is still vivid, that some of the people, I bel belong to these people, would like to have a mixed room where you can have a reading room for sure, but also meeting room if necessary. Or, as uh Susan said, a room an emergency room where you can put uh some visitors in a decent environment for for Mm-hmm. for for work, because you don't have any other place to do it. But that's that's really an open discussion and that d I think no Yeah. decision, no final Okay, decision th has then been taken about that. Okay then for the next time, um try to come up either with your own preferences, that's Yes. quite easy probably to state now that you know the constraints, Yes. or if you can poll a little bit the people around you, that would be I mean, The even one that I don't want to have in the next room? Well, just discuss i Yeah, for instance, I mean No, no, I was thinking just ask people around you Okay. what they think about this. And I think, yeah, it will be nice to to come with maybe a sketch of of these. If you can do slides, it's even better, but uh don't be that formal. And uh we'll try to at least build up one coherent proposal, and we'll merge it with the other one when the other one uh is available. Okay. Okay, I'll Um. ask um uh Maggie and Pierrette uh if That would they be great. have Oh, uh great. That would be any great. preferences. Mm-hmm. Perfect. C that that of course is one of the Yeah. main well not main but Yeah. one of the important No. features that we need to Yeah, know since about. they're not at the meeting I think Yes. it's in And out I'll try of courtesy to we should Yes. first ask Bu I ju them. just before Fine. finishing uh, I mean, we have a cafeteria or we don't eat at all? We don't have cafeteria. What do you mean by cafeteria He means reading exactly? room. A place n what mm uh What we can take a coffee also. No, there is no coffee in the reading room. No? Yeah, That w we was can the wrong bring We your coffee in the reading we did not room, have any but money for buying the coffee machines, So so so since maybe, you're a part-time here, and part-ti part-time at E_P_F_L_, there are at least two um coffee machines in the building, one at the third floor, one at the first floor. But And they we can close bring at our coffee. five or? No Ah uh automatic okay. No. Coffee uh machines. coffee machines. Okay, okay. So uh yeah. No, there's But, the cafeteria is downstairs, in Yeah, yeah, but they this. close Uh-huh. at five. Five. Ah that's the main problem. Yeah, Mm-hmm. but there's the two machines, and they're uh the vending machines where you just Yeah, put vending the money machines. and and And Mm-hmm. Okay. you you can can bring get your coffee Yeah. in the Okay. reading room. Yeah. Yeah, maybe this is not a very bad timing. Could we try T to to meet try the coffee? uh next Tuesday? Wait. Um, next Tuesday maybe at t maybe a bit later? Maybe at eleven Wait, wai wai o'clock? wai wait. Wait, Next wait. Tuesday. Tuesday um Come on, try try to be nice. Uh, well well well well, not Gi so give easy, Yes, eh? James Shook a reasonable I ha I date. have Ch no constraints, so it's fine. Um we have the Yeah, don't for forget James Shook it's we have a good the other timing. meeting the M_D_M_ meeting in the morning, so it would have to be in the afternoon. Uh-huh, Next okay. Tuesday we have a meeting, Yeah. yeah. Exactly. That might be Where is the meeting? It's Unimail? Yeah. Okay, so, yeah yeah, then it could be At that nine thirty, but we could do we could That have this meeting yeah. then in the That afternoon. Okay. Nah? that would be great, because that would Mm-hmm. allow us not to move, or Very not well. to travel Yep. twice. So about two o'clock? Would Okay. that be okay? After Yeah, lunch. Yeah. after lunch. It's not Okay. a very demanding Right. meeting, Yep. so um Okay. Perfect. Um, then let James Shook close this. And uh good luck for your arrangement games. Thank you. | Chad Moore opened the meeting and described the layout of the new location the group might be moving to. Chad Moore answered questions regarding the number of people per office and whether a lounge was necessary. Chad Moore discussed constraints regarding furniture and equipment and addressed the issue that the group may not get the space they are after. The group then discussed how to arrange people within the proposed space. The group discussed grouping professors and their students together, grouping members of the same project together, the potential disturbance of phone calls to people sharing an office, physically splitting up offices for the sake of privacy by erecting walls, creating a meeting room for people of the same project to converge, how to accommodate visitors, where people can go to smoke, where to place Gisella, and how to allocate space to admin. The group also discussed the possibility of having a cafeteria and the locations of coffee machines. | 1 | amisum | train |
Michael Hoban: Okay.
James Hong: Or you get it. Okay.
Michael Hoban: No I don't think so it has to like yeah and you have to adjust the length.
Michael Hoban: Okay, and then.
James Rainey: So we uh we will wait for Anna
Michael Hoban: Yeah,
James Rainey: a few minutes.
Michael Hoban: s yeah, um.
James Hong: Mm. Yours is well
Michael Hoban: I think you can put anywhere you want, actually.
James Hong: Yeah
Michael Hoban: I
James Hong: but
Michael Hoban: thin
James Hong: the the mic should not
Michael Hoban: It's not a directional mic, anyway.
James Rainey: I think it should work like this.
Michael Hoban: Uh.
James Rainey: So I will try to get my presentation running.
James Hong: Yeah.
Michael Hoban: Yeah.
James Rainey: Mm.
James Hong: Mm. Can't help you with that.
Michael Hoban: Last.
James Rainey: It's
James Hong: Okay,
James Rainey: no
James Hong: it's
James Rainey: matter.
James Hong: y yeah.
James Rainey: No problem. Ah yes.
James Hong: Right.
Michael Hoban: Okay.
James Hong: Then press uh al
Michael Hoban: Okay.
James Hong: This.
James Rainey: I don't
James Hong: You
James Rainey: know.
James Hong: know?
James Rainey: Just try.
Michael Hoban: 'Kay.
James Rainey: On
James Hong: Oh oh.
James Rainey: this normal
Michael Hoban: Alt F_ five.
James Rainey: Good. Doesn't appear on the screen here.
James Hong: Right well
James Rainey: Oh.
James Hong: Wow. Amazing. It's working.
James Rainey: Okay. Thank you. Uh.
Trevor Simens: Hold that.
James Rainey: Yes and you
Trevor Simens: Okay.
James Rainey: can put can clip it uh on your Somewhere.
Trevor Simens: Okay. Mm.
James Rainey: So, good morning, everyone. Um Welcome uh at the kick off meeting of our uh latest project. I hope you all have been uh updated about it.
James Hong: Yeah.
James Rainey: Good.
Michael Hoban: So. Yes.
James Rainey: So w we will try to structure this uh meeting with an a with an agenda uh as presented here. Um after the opening we will tr get acquainted to each other. See what our roles are in this project. So, um We have been provided with uh some uh w technical tools to uh to communicate and to well, learn from each other's plans uh as I can say um so w we will also try to uh to get acquainted to this tools so they are also new to Trevor Simens I don't know whether you worked with them before. Um then we will come to the uh to the to the actual project plan. You all know I hope how it's about uh the uh new r remote control we are going going
Michael Hoban: Total.
James Rainey: to design. Uh then we will uh discuss uh, well, how it should be and uh wh what uh what our new product should look lite like. And uh well then uh after some twenty five minutes I hope uh we can end this meeting. So. Um basically this is about a uh a new c remote control. Um We When you design a new product you of uh you of course want it to be original. Be uh we want to be distinguished, mm? People uh want to uh when they look at the shelf want to think, well that's the product I I need. So it needs to be trendy. I mean trendy is what people want, so then I w they will buy our product. But then, uh, it also should work uh user friendly and uh otherwise people uh uh well it will not be uh be rated very well in consumer uh articles and like that. So, the general outline of uh new project will be we first uh go through a functional design phase. Um You all get uh um certain task uh in this uh in this phase and uh then we will meet again and uh discuss this functional design. And the same holds for the uh ph two phases uh after this, the conceptual design and after that a a more detailed design in which the the final project should get its definite shape. Alright, but first we will do some uh tool training. In all in front of you uh you see uh the uh notebooks and w uh n note blocks and we have here a a a a white-board.
Michael Hoban: Whitebo
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Rainey: And um well it should work uh I've read it from my uh from some colleague that it should work with some kind of toolbar. I didn't find out yet how it work, but maybe one of you did, so Um
James Hong: Under documents in the shared folder. Okay.
James Rainey: Yes. Do Do we have to say something about that? I I I'm not fully updated about this shared folder uh.
James Hong: Yeah, I guess we'll have a shared folder uh with documents that we can share.
James Rainey: Yes
James Hong: yeah.
James Rainey: well we will then find out ho how it works.
James Hong: Yes.
James Rainey: Um. Well, this seems to Trevor Simens, yes, some computer program but I didn't find it yet. So, we'll come to that later. So, uh now we will try out the white-board we have here. So, I would suggest uh
James Hong: Each of us is going.
James Rainey: Well, yes, um we uh we should try to t to draw on it and then well it should be smart some way. I I'm not really sure how this works, but
James Hong: Okay, shall I start?
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: Yeah,
Trevor Simens: Yeah.
Michael Hoban: you
James Rainey: Yes,
Michael Hoban: can start
James Rainey: a good
Michael Hoban: it
James Rainey: idea
Michael Hoban: you know.
Trevor Simens: I think for us
James Rainey: Mael.
Trevor Simens: it's just like a normal whiteboard, but they'll be recording
James Hong: So,
Trevor Simens: what we
James Hong: i
Trevor Simens: write down.
Michael Hoban: No they will record through that. There's a sensor over
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: there which is going to record
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: the strokes
Trevor Simens: But
Michael Hoban: that
Trevor Simens: for
Michael Hoban: you
Trevor Simens: us
James Rainey: Okay.
Michael Hoban: make.
Trevor Simens: it's just like a normal whiteboard.
Michael Hoban: Yeah.
James Rainey: 'Kay.
James Hong: But it's Actually, I think I cannot go with uh
James Rainey: You you D doesn't it work? Maybe someo Maybe maybe Anna, maybe
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Hong: Yeah.
James Rainey: you can start. Then he can maybe find out to get his cord right.
Trevor Simens: I have
James Rainey: So
Trevor Simens: to draw.
James Rainey: um L Why don't you draw uh your favourite animal on on th on
Trevor Simens: M
James Rainey: the white-board.
Trevor Simens: my my favourite animal. Sorry this is all tangled up here.
James Rainey: Oh, I see uh
Trevor Simens: That's better.
Michael Hoban: Yeah.
James Rainey: Yeah. Yes. Mm. So draw it. We will try to
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Rainey: guess what it is.
Trevor Simens: I'm a very bad drawer. Weird. my drawing. I'm a bad drawer. Okay.
James Rainey: Mm.
Trevor Simens: They're
Michael Hoban: 's a
Trevor Simens: ears,
Michael Hoban: cat.
Trevor Simens: by the way. No. Um close though. Okay so like a pet animal.
James Hong: Okay.
Trevor Simens: Like a cat.
Michael Hoban: Yeah.
James Rainey: It's like a cat, so I guess it's a cat.
Trevor Simens: No, not a cat though.
James Rainey: What is this now?
Michael Hoban: Ah you forget about it.
James Hong: You're on the knife.
Michael Hoban: Yeah, uh I think it's fine. I just don't want to carry it off. Man, this wires, eh? We need a wireless microphone. You know? Pro specially we should next project we should take l like that.
James Rainey: So,
Trevor Simens: Okay. So.
James Rainey: that's
Trevor Simens: It's
James Rainey: the cat.
Trevor Simens: not a
James Rainey: Oh.
Trevor Simens: cat, it's
Michael Hoban: So.
Trevor Simens: a dog.
James Hong: Mael.
James Rainey: It's a dog.
Trevor Simens: Yes.
James Rainey: So but that's also kind of
Michael Hoban: Oh
James Rainey: cat,
Michael Hoban: the dog
James Rainey: isn't
Michael Hoban: doesn't
James Rainey: it?
Michael Hoban: have a tail?
Trevor Simens: It's
James Rainey: B
Trevor Simens: got a tail then.
James Rainey: bo
Michael Hoban: Yeah,
James Rainey: both predators.
Michael Hoban: sure, yeah.
Trevor Simens: Yeah yeah.
Michael Hoban: I thought so. The dogs have a tail.
James Rainey: So, thank
Trevor Simens: So do
James Rainey: you.
Trevor Simens: cats.
James Rainey: Uh d did you uh
Trevor Simens: And you guessed cats
James Rainey: work
Trevor Simens: without
James Rainey: out
Trevor Simens: a
James Rainey: cord?
Trevor Simens: tail.
Michael Hoban: Yeah.
James Hong: Yeah, I think I will go without
Trevor Simens: Okay.
James Hong: without it, right?
James Rainey: Okay.
Michael Hoban: It'll still not extend, right? It's not up to that.
Trevor Simens: Okay, there you go. So what favourite characteristics. Uh. Dogs are always friendly and loyal and fun.
Trevor Simens: A horse?
Michael Hoban: It's a horse.
Trevor Simens: This is why you're the designer. And I'm marketing.
James Rainey: Yes. Yes, yes this is Yes definitely a horse. Yes. Oh very good. So
Trevor Simens: Ah
James Rainey: I suppose
Michael Hoban: Ah
James Rainey: it
Michael Hoban: I think you can put that.
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm. That's it. A blue and black zebra.
James Rainey: Yes. Can you can meet them in Africa, I think. Yes. Very good. So
Trevor Simens: The very rare blue zebras. Yes.
Michael Hoban: I'll
James Rainey: Ma Matthew?
Michael Hoban: tell to get it off my Uh? Mm-hmm.
James Rainey: So
Trevor Simens: You got a lot
James Rainey: Maybe
Trevor Simens: of room here. You can probably reach.
Michael Hoban: Oh y it's not for that.
Trevor Simens: No?
Michael Hoban: No.
James Rainey: I hope you have some space in your uh the
Michael Hoban: Okay.
James Rainey: horse
Michael Hoban: Yeah.
James Rainey: of uh Mael.
Michael Hoban: So what should I draw? Mm. He has already to do cat.
Trevor Simens: I took a dog.
Trevor Simens: Um. A mouse?
James Rainey: This looks likes a cat who has been driven over.
Trevor Simens: Okay.
James Hong: Yeah. And we should sum up its favourite charas characteristics, right?
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Hong: So
James Rainey: That's that's definitely a cat.
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Hong: Uh yeah. And i Th They like to sleep, that's why you said you they are like this. Yeah.
James Rainey: It's quite, you know relaxed situation. Yes.
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Rainey: Yes, okay.
James Hong: She has the small legs.
James Rainey: Th thank you, Matthew.
James Hong: Yeah. Thank you, Matthew.
Trevor Simens: It's
James Hong: Perfect.
Trevor Simens: a very big rat. Or a very small
James Hong: Oh
Trevor Simens: cat.
James Hong: a rat, okay.
James Rainey: Yes, this is certain uh some contribution to our
James Hong: And
James Rainey: project.
James Hong: you,
Trevor Simens: Mm 'kay. Your turn.
James Rainey: So. Let's see. Which animal has not been drawn yet.
James Rainey: So you've all drawn land animals, so why not draw an animal from
James Hong: A bird.
James Rainey: the water.
James Hong: Okay, in the water.
Trevor Simens: Ah I don't know what that is. It's
James Hong: Mm.
Trevor Simens: a bit It's a bit hard to guess.
James Hong: Yeah.
James Rainey: Mm.
Michael Hoban: So
James Hong: Put it colours. Maybe it would help
Trevor Simens: Yeah.
James Hong: us.
James Rainey: Yes.
Michael Hoban: The cat is going to eat the fish or
James Hong: With
Michael Hoban: the
James Hong: different
Michael Hoban: rat?
James Hong: pen widths.
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm
James Rainey: So
Trevor Simens: Oh, it's a shark now.
James Hong: Ah it's a shark, yeah.
James Rainey: Oh, yes, why not? Good idea.
Michael Hoban: Ah it's a baby shark, it looks to Trevor Simens, you
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: know it's going to eat the cat rather than the cat eating the fish,
James Hong: Oh.
Michael Hoban: no?
Trevor Simens: Now it's a swordfish.
James Rainey: Why not.
James Hong: You
James Rainey: A swordfish.
James Hong: have some in in Australia, right?
Trevor Simens: Swordfish.
James Hong: Yeah.
Trevor Simens: Um,
James Hong: I dunno.
Trevor Simens: maybe. I've never
James Hong: Oh
Trevor Simens: seen
James Hong: well.
Trevor Simens: one, no.
James Hong: Yeah.
James Rainey: I hope it still works.
James Hong: Perfect.
James Rainey: So
James Hong: So I dunno if we need to spend time on that, actually But uh
Michael Hoban: You should go for the
James Rainey: W
Michael Hoban: next
James Rainey: Well,
Michael Hoban: one
James Rainey: this
Michael Hoban: it seems to
James Rainey: uh
Michael Hoban: Trevor Simens.
James Rainey: this tool seemed to work.
James Hong: Yeah,
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Hong: exactly,
James Rainey: Let's continue
James Hong: yeah.
James Rainey: to uh to
James Hong: Wow.
James Rainey: the real stuff. Um our project uh finance uh thing. Uh when we are and when w you are uh going to design w uh we must keep in mind that the selling price of the product uh will be about twenty five Euros, so when designing
Michael Hoban: Twenty four.
James Rainey: a project uh I also look at you uh Mael,
James Hong: Yeah.
James Rainey: keep in mind uh uh uh People uh want to get the feeling this is a twenty five Euro project uh pr um
James Hong: Per remote control,
James Rainey: product.
James Hong: yeah?
Trevor Simens: Mm.
James Hong: Per project.
James Rainey: Yes. Okay. Um more interesting for our company of course, p uh profit aim, about fifty million Euro. So we have to sell uh quite a lot of this uh um things. Uh we will try to uh to get at a international market uh so um it will be I think mainly Europe and uh Northern America,
Michael Hoban: Ah yeah, the sale man,
James Rainey: maybe
Michael Hoban: four
James Rainey: some uh
Michael Hoban: million.
James Rainey: Asian countries. Um also important for you all is um the the product uh production cost must be maximal uh twelve uh twelve Euro
James Hong: So it's
James Rainey: and fifty cents.
James Hong: half of the selling price, if I am good in
James Rainey: Yes,
James Hong: mathematics.
James Rainey: of course. Uh um I mean we still have to uh to make a profit, huh?
James Hong: Of
Michael Hoban: They
James Hong: course.
Michael Hoban: have to sell
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: at least
James Rainey: You
Michael Hoban: four
James Rainey: all
Michael Hoban: million
James Rainey: have to be paid.
Michael Hoban: to make a profit
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: Ah
James Rainey: Excuse
Michael Hoban: we have
James Rainey: Trevor Simens?
Michael Hoban: to make we have to sell at least four million to make our own profit.
James Hong: Oh
Michael Hoban: Fifty
James Hong: you're g very
Michael Hoban: mill
James Hong: good in mathematics.
Trevor Simens: Yes.
James Rainey: Yes,
James Hong: Four
James Rainey: indeed.
James Hong: million.
James Rainey: So uh
James Hong: Yeah.
James Rainey: well I think w when we are working on the international market, uh in principle it has enough customers uh so when we have a good product we uh we could uh meet this this aim, I think. So, that about finance. And uh now just let have some discussion about what is a good remote control and uh well keep in mind this this first point, it has to be original, it has to be trendy, it has to be user friendly. Um, maybe someone can mention some additional uh prerequisites for
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Rainey: a good remote control.
Michael Hoban: Of course it should have a on off button.
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Rainey: Yes, well i it should have the the the the expected functionality
Trevor Simens: Mm.
James Rainey: uh of a remote control.
Trevor Simens: Yeah.
Michael Hoban: Yeah, s and it depends what application you are using it for.
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: You might need uh
James Rainey: We wer we were thinking television. Uh.
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: We are targ targeting the television set. So,
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: you need to record the channels.
Trevor Simens: Yeah.
James Rainey: Mm-hmm.
Michael Hoban: You need to browse the browse the channels in upward
James Rainey: Yes,
Michael Hoban: downward
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: way,
James Rainey: yes. Th th that's very handy I I always miss it and on
Michael Hoban: Uh
James Rainey: some remote controls that
Michael Hoban: And
James Rainey: you can go channel up or down ins instead of
Trevor Simens: Mm.
James Rainey: retyping the number, especially
Trevor Simens: Mm.
James Rainey: when you have a lot
Michael Hoban: Uh,
James Rainey: of channels.
Michael Hoban: and
James Hong: And uh just before starting the detailed discussion, maybe we You are the marketing guy? Or
Trevor Simens: I'm marketing.
James Hong: th
Michael Hoban: Marketing.
James Hong: So you are the marketing.
Trevor Simens: Yep.
James Hong: And you are in the u use user interface
Michael Hoban: Yeah.
James Hong: uh
James Rainey: Yes.
James Hong: design. So
Michael Hoban: Yeah.
James Hong: just yeah I wanted to to be sure.
Michael Hoban: Sure.
James Hong: And I I'm the James Hong
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Hong: okay.
James Rainey: Yes.
James Hong: Because I
Michael Hoban: Oh.
James Hong: I don't know you very well, actually,
Michael Hoban: I'm
James Hong: but
Michael Hoban: Matthew.
James Hong: yeah. Okay.
Michael Hoban: You know.
James Hong: Mael.
Michael Hoban: Matth
James Hong: Happy to meet you.
Michael Hoban: s uh
Trevor Simens: Anna.
James Hong: Okay.
Michael Hoban: Anna.
James Hong: It's very
Michael Hoban: And
James Rainey: A and
James Hong: uh
James Rainey: I'm Nanne.
Michael Hoban: um uh Matthew, yeah. I
James Rainey: So
Michael Hoban: thi
James Hong: Uh
Michael Hoban: think you know
James Hong: so
Michael Hoban: Trevor Simens, yeah?
James Hong: yeah
Michael Hoban: right
James Rainey: Yes.
Michael Hoban: yeah.
James Hong: uh Just uh on your web page but uh yeah not uh
James Rainey: So. Um
James Hong: not face to face.
James Rainey: S
Michael Hoban: So.
James Hong: So
James Rainey: S
James Hong: mm
James Rainey: s
Trevor Simens: Mm.
James Rainey: Are
Michael Hoban: So
James Hong: So
James Rainey: there
James Hong: I
James Rainey: some other very important things to to do well, to specify in this first phase of of the project. So the browse function,
Trevor Simens: Mm.
James Rainey: as you m
Trevor Simens: Yeah.
James Rainey: mentioned.
Michael Hoban: And
Trevor Simens: Oth
Michael Hoban: uh,
Trevor Simens: yeah.
Michael Hoban: you'd need the usual ones, like the changing the volume, changing the the channel and then
James Rainey: Yes.
Michael Hoban: you
James Rainey: Yeah.
Michael Hoban: uh Today we have uh um teletext and all those things. Tomorrow you might have a some more functions which might come through that,
James Rainey: Yes.
Trevor Simens: Mm.
James Hong: Like
Michael Hoban: so
James Hong: what? Like internet on
Michael Hoban: Yeah
James Hong: the
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: I_P_O_
James Hong: on
Michael Hoban: or.
James Hong: T_V_?
Michael Hoban: Now we are looking for television things or I_P_. For
James Hong: Yeah.
Michael Hoban: example personal video recorder
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: and all those stuffs are coming up.
Trevor Simens: But we can't really design
Michael Hoban: Yeah.
Trevor Simens: for something that hasn't been invented yet.
Michael Hoban: Ah it's it's it's it's coming up, actually. The personal video recorder and all those
James Rainey: Mm,
Michael Hoban: things it is coming
James Rainey: well
Michael Hoban: up.
James Rainey: uh I I think Uh
James Hong: Actually,
James Rainey: w
James Hong: yeah
Michael Hoban: Let's
James Rainey: y
James Hong: w
Michael Hoban: Let's take
James Rainey: you two should should, I think, think this over uh w espec what, what functionality.
James Hong: Of course, and first before um designing the func well thinking about the functionalities, we need to know what are the user requirements.
Trevor Simens: Mm. Yeah.
James Hong: Um
James Rainey: Mm-hmm.
James Hong: then
Trevor Simens: Yeah.
James Hong: if they need internet, then we
Trevor Simens: Mm.
James Hong: would be able to to p to propose something
Trevor Simens: Yeah.
James Hong: with uh uh T_V_ over I_P_. But
Trevor Simens: But
James Hong: before
Trevor Simens: Ninety percent of the time, ninety nine percent of the time, people will be using the main functions, the volume, the different channels, so we can have all the fancy things as well but the main controls need to be very obvious and very easy
James Rainey: Mm
Trevor Simens: to use.
James Rainey: mm mm. Keep k keep in mind i it's a it's a twenty five Euro unit, so uh uh the the very fancy stuff uh w we can leave that out, I think. So
Trevor Simens: Mm.
James Rainey: twenty five Euro you expect a quite, well normal but
Trevor Simens: Mm.
James Rainey: good functioning user friendly remote control.
Michael Hoban: Oh in that case you can you always hook up with uh someone who is providing that and you know, you you sell their product as well as your product with them,
Trevor Simens: Mm.
Michael Hoban: you know.
James Hong: Yeah,
Trevor Simens: So
James Hong: but
Trevor Simens: try
James Hong: w
Trevor Simens: and
James Hong: w
Trevor Simens: get T_V_
James Hong: we
Trevor Simens: manufacturers
James Hong: want to design
Trevor Simens: to
James Hong: a new one.
Michael Hoban: Yeah. No, it's okay, yeah I understand.
James Hong: Mm.
Michael Hoban: So we need
James Hong: Yeah.
Michael Hoban: some numbering buttons, some teletext things and then um
James Hong: The Yeah, the main is
James Rainey: Yes, but
James Hong: browsing.
James Rainey: but but ab
James Hong: Yeah.
James Rainey: about the spec the buttons, the
Michael Hoban: Yeah.
James Rainey: buttons uh that will be on it. I I think we can discuss that in the in the next meeting.
Michael Hoban: Yeah.
James Rainey: Uh I would like to get this wrapped up and go to an end of this meeting.
Michael Hoban: Okay.
James Rainey: So
Michael Hoban: Okay, we are alread mm.
James Hong: Okay.
James Rainey: So
Michael Hoban: Mm.
James Rainey: you know now the basic the basic things.
Michael Hoban: Yeah.
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Rainey: And well just
Michael Hoban: L
James Rainey: just for the next meeting, um well, uh, you wor yes, work on a design, keep it general, I mean so w we will be still fle flexible with maybe adding some functions.
James Hong: Mm-hmm.
James Rainey: So Um you will be working on on technical function design, so
Michael Hoban: Yeah, sure.
James Rainey: And uh you and you and uh uh uh well, think about requirements, eh?
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Rainey: Does it need internet, or or do do we stay at
Michael Hoban: Stam.
James Rainey: basic
Trevor Simens: Yeah.
James Rainey: basic television uh interface. So, uh I think we should now all go work uh uh at this and uh
Trevor Simens: Mm-hmm.
James Rainey: you will be informed via email and other kind of communication.
Trevor Simens: Yeah.
Michael Hoban: Okay.
James Rainey: So
James Hong: Perfect.
James Rainey: next meeting will be in uh in thirty minutes uh. K keep it in mind. | The meeting begins with the group trying to resolve some equipment issues and waiting for Anna's arrival. Then James Rainey introduces the meeting by saying they have some technical tools with which to communicate so they will try to get acquainted with them first. He starts talking about the product they are to design, a remote control which should be original, trendy, and user-friendly. The general outline of the project will be the functional, conceptual, and detailed design. They do some tool training by trying out the whiteboard, and each person draws his/her favorite animal on it. James Rainey proceeds to talk about the project finance, which is followed by a group discussion about what functions a good remote control has. This includes the basics such as on/off, channel up/down browsing, volume and record button(s). At this point they clarify their names and roles in the group and then resume talking about remote control functions. They discuss some functions such as a personal video recorder, but say it is probable that they cannot produce a fancy device given their budget. James Rainey closes the meeting by telling each group member what he/she will be working on. | 1 | amisum | train |
Scott Godfrey: How do you wear this thing?
Jeff Chen: Hmm. Mm mm mm.
Scott Godfrey: Not many stuff.
Scott Godfrey: Original.
Jeff Chen: Is recorded? Okay? Okay so welcome everyone. So we are here for the kickoff meeting of uh the process of designing a new remote control. So I will first start with a warm welcome opening stuff, then uh we will uh see what will be uh our product and what will be the different step we will have to design it. And uh then we will uh discuss if we have few ideas and we will uh end uh by uh dispatching the different task you will be you will have to fulfil to complete this process. So
Scott Godfrey: Uh. Just one thing. Uh, you said twenty-five minutes, but I have something else to do uh, so gotta have another meeting uh soon, so maybe you could hurry up a bit
Jeff Chen: sorry?
Scott Godfrey: It's true. I have another meeting so if you could uh
Jeff Chen: You have another meeting soon?
Scott Godfrey: Yeah.
Jeff Chen: So you have to be quick.
Scott Godfrey: Yeah, for the lawnmower project.
Jeff Chen: Okay.
Scott Godfrey: Okay.
Jeff Chen: So the the goal is to have a remote control so to have an advantage over our competitors we have to be original, we have to be trendy and we have to also try to be user-friendly. So uh the design step will be divided in three uh main points. First it will be the functional design. Third is the conceptual design and then is the desired design. So the functional design is to identify the main user needs, the technical function the remote control should fulfil. And then we will move to f conceptual design where we'll specify the different component involved, what kind of user interf interface we want and what are the different uh trend in user interface and stuff like that. And then the desired devi design will consist in uh specifically implementing and detailing the choice we've uh made in the second point. So I will now ask you which is very important for the design of a new remote control for to uh each of us to to draw uh your favourite animal on the white board.
Scott Godfrey: What an original idea.
Jeff Chen: Do you have any idea of which animal you want to show us?
Scott Godfrey: Orangutan.
Jeff Chen: Okay that's good.
Dane James: No no
Jeff Chen: n
Dane James: n
Jeff Chen: n You
Scott Godfrey: no?
Jeff Chen: should
Scott Godfrey: But I don't have to say anything. When I'm drawing the orangutan.
Jeff Chen: If you want to react uh about this wonderful drawing uh I'll let you uh comment.
Scott Godfrey: It's an abstract drawing of an orangutan.
Jeff Chen: Okay it's an abstract drawing.
Scott Godfrey: Yes.
Jeff Chen: I think it's nice and original.
Dane James: You y the name
Scott Godfrey: I don't
Dane James: I think.
Scott Godfrey: have a red colour. Usually orangutans have red hair so this is a very important but I don't have red pen, so
Jeff Chen: Okay.
Scott Godfrey: Yes.
Jeff Chen: You want to draw something Christine?
James Wenzel: Okay uh sorry. You This
Jeff Chen: Of course your animal is recorded so it's not lost.
Scott Godfrey: Yes. I know.
James Wenzel: Sorry too uh.
Jeff Chen: Is
Scott Godfrey: Wha
Jeff Chen: this uh
Scott Godfrey: what
James Wenzel: Is it beautiful?
Scott Godfrey: is this strange beast? Is it a monster?
James Wenzel: Do you know? It's a cat.
Scott Godfrey: It's a cat?
James Wenzel: Isn't it?
Scott Godfrey: I thought these things did not exist.
James Wenzel: Yes
Dane James: James Wenzel
James Wenzel: yes is it like that. Is
Dane James: Ah
Scott Godfrey: Ah
Dane James: yeah.
James Wenzel: it better?
Jeff Chen: Ah okay
Scott Godfrey: yeah
Dane James: Yeah.
Jeff Chen: it's pretty.
James Wenzel: Okay. It's my cat.
Jeff Chen: Okay it's your cat.
Scott Godfrey: Does
James Wenzel: Yeah.
Scott Godfrey: have a name?
James Wenzel: The name is Caramel.
Scott Godfrey: Caramel.
Dane James: Caramel.
Scott Godfrey: Ah-ha.
James Wenzel: Yeah.
Jeff Chen: Okay. Olivier,
Dane James: And you
Jeff Chen: do you want to
Dane James: I think I'm too short for the cables.
Jeff Chen: Okay I go, but next time you'll do something I'm sure.
Scott Godfrey: Next time I concentrate.
Jeff Chen: I'm a bit short on cable. Okay. So what could I draw? Maybe I can draw like a very simplified cow. I don't know if it looks like a cow
Scott Godfrey: He looks like a bong.
Jeff Chen: Like a what?
Scott Godfrey: Okay. Sorry. No.
Dane James: Quite squarey.
Scott Godfrey: Scary?
Dane James: He also.
Jeff Chen: I dunno it it looks more like a donkey in fact I would say.
Dane James: Mm.
Scott Godfrey: I I think we will
Jeff Chen: Okay
Scott Godfrey: be finished
Jeff Chen: so
Scott Godfrey: this uh
Jeff Chen: I hope that it helps you uh in the process of designing
Scott Godfrey: Is it
Jeff Chen: a
Scott Godfrey: for
Jeff Chen: remote
Scott Godfrey: uh
Jeff Chen: control.
Scott Godfrey: for putting a for logos, no. That's
Jeff Chen: Okay. Let's move on. So Here the uh financial objective of our project. That is to say to to have a production cost lower than twelve point five Euros and have a selling price of twice that price t in order to target a profe profit of uh fifty uh million Euros.
Scott Godfrey: I is there a matter for a new remote control?
Jeff Chen: Yeah if it's trendy, original I d fulfil
Scott Godfrey: Is it uh
Jeff Chen: the user
Scott Godfrey: a
Jeff Chen: needs.
Scott Godfrey: single device remote control or is it a multi-device remote control?
Jeff Chen: We have to discuss that point.
Scott Godfrey: Ah this is not
Jeff Chen: On
Scott Godfrey: defined at all?
Jeff Chen: yeah you you can suggest points like
Scott Godfrey: Ah,
Jeff Chen: this. So
Scott Godfrey: okay.
Jeff Chen: what what so we have to decide for example if it can control one device or multiple. So what's what are your ideas about that? Maybe I can have the your opinion
Scott Godfrey: Well uh
Jeff Chen: from
Scott Godfrey: do we sell
Jeff Chen: the marketing
Scott Godfrey: other stuff?
Jeff Chen: side?
Scott Godfrey: Uh if if we bundle the remote control with something uh to sell then it could be a single device, otherwise it could be programmable one otherwise who would buy a remote control from us.
Jeff Chen: Okay, so if it selled uh by its own i it it would rather be for multiple device.
Scott Godfrey: Yeah.
Jeff Chen: Do you agree?
Dane James: Mm-hmm.
Jeff Chen: Yeah. So maybe it should be for multiple devices. And uh do you have any ideas um of uh design ideas or any uh uh technical requirement we we should uh fulfil?
Dane James: I think we shouldn't have too many b for
Scott Godfrey: No,
Dane James: my part.
Scott Godfrey: I
Dane James: I
Scott Godfrey: couldn
Dane James: think
Scott Godfrey: I cannot fi think of any requirements right now.
Dane James: If we don't have so many buttons could be nice.
Jeff Chen: Few buttons. Okay. And do you have it also to be to be lighted in order to be used in the dark? Might be a good idea.
Dane James: Yeah.
Jeff Chen: Okay. And do you have any um any uh idea of the trend the trend in domain, what it shouldn't it should look like, or things like that?
Scott Godfrey: Mm.
Jeff Chen: With rou okay. Like for okay.
Scott Godfrey: Something like that, least fits in your hand.
Dane James: Yeah.
Jeff Chen: Okay.
Scott Godfrey: Yeah. The basic requirement.
Jeff Chen: So. Fit in your hand, yeah.
Scott Godfrey: Only a buck.
Jeff Chen: And also it have, i it may be it may be important for the remote control to be uh To, to resist to various shocks
Dane James: Mm-hmm.
Jeff Chen: that can happen
Scott Godfrey: Waterproof.
Jeff Chen: if it fall. Water-proof as well.
Dane James: And I
Jeff Chen: Maybe
Dane James: think we
Jeff Chen: it
Dane James: should
Jeff Chen: is original
Dane James: have a device
Jeff Chen: because you can uh use it in your uh in your bath whereas the others can't. Maybe water-proof would be very original.
Dane James: Sorry.
Jeff Chen: Havin having a water-proof remote control so that the people can uh use it in their bath.
Scott Godfrey: Mm.
Jeff Chen: That could
Scott Godfrey: B it
Jeff Chen: be
Scott Godfrey: seems
Jeff Chen: uh
Scott Godfrey: uh so, but uh if you don't have an waterproof remote control it means you can just cover it with some plastic and you can sort of
Jeff Chen: Yeah
Scott Godfrey: f
Jeff Chen: but, it is still something uh you have to buy and that is um
Scott Godfrey: And, and
Jeff Chen: not
Scott Godfrey: that's one
Jeff Chen: maybe
Scott Godfrey: of the
Jeff Chen: very
Scott Godfrey: that's one of the shock I mean there are people that have a remote control and they are worried that it's going to break and they put some extra plastic around it.
Jeff Chen: Yeah,
Scott Godfrey: That's
Jeff Chen: mayb
Scott Godfrey: people they actually
Jeff Chen: B
Scott Godfrey: do it themselves.
Jeff Chen: But maybe we can bulk it with uh already this plastic thing
Dane James: Yeah.
Jeff Chen: and uh the waterproof
Dane James: directly.
Jeff Chen: uh
Scott Godfrey: I it
Jeff Chen: stuff
Scott Godfrey: will look
Jeff Chen: as
Scott Godfrey: a
Jeff Chen: well.
Scott Godfrey: bulky in that case.
Jeff Chen: Yeah.
Dane James: Yeah.
Jeff Chen: Maybe we can sell uh all that together, so so plastic protection and uh and a waterproof box as well. That might be good uh track to follow.
Scott Godfrey: Like as an optional thing.
Jeff Chen: Optional or selled
Dane James: And I I think we
Jeff Chen: with
Dane James: should
Jeff Chen: it?
Dane James: have something, most of the time I I lose my remote control. We should have
Jeff Chen: Yeah.
Dane James: s uh special bu button on the T_V_
Jeff Chen: Maybe we
Dane James: to
Jeff Chen: can
Dane James: make
Jeff Chen: have uh
Dane James: the remote control beeping.
Jeff Chen: But we don't design the T_V_.
Dane James: Ah
Jeff Chen: Maybe we
Dane James: yeah.
Jeff Chen: can have uh something you whistle and uh the remote control uh beep.
Dane James: Yeah.
Scott Godfrey: Barks.
Jeff Chen: Yeah,
Dane James: Barks.
Jeff Chen: barks, yeah. So we can uh have a whistle uh remote control?
Dane James: Yeah. Yeah whistle.
Jeff Chen: I don't know, whistle-able?
Dane James: Whistle
Jeff Chen: Th
Dane James: tracking.
Jeff Chen: Whistle tracking yeah. Whistle tracking remote control. That's a good idea, that's very original and that's can
Scott Godfrey: That's that's
Jeff Chen: uh improve.
Scott Godfrey: quite cool, but uh of course we you don't normally need uh any audio uh recording stuff on your remote control right?
Jeff Chen: Yeah d d
Scott Godfrey: So
Jeff Chen: uh.
Scott Godfrey: i it's just going to add t to the cost.
Jeff Chen: Yeah but s still we have to mm we have to have an advantage over our competitors. I think this is a good advantage.
Scott Godfrey: It's cool. I think I like the idea, but I'm not sure about the what you, who
Jeff Chen: Yeah.
Scott Godfrey: is giving who's
Jeff Chen: We have
Scott Godfrey: giving
Jeff Chen: to
Scott Godfrey: who's
Jeff Chen: ask
Scott Godfrey: giving our budget. Who's
Jeff Chen: Yeah. We have to ask the quest of
Scott Godfrey: Yeah.
Jeff Chen: that's uh design to
Scott Godfrey: Yeah.
Jeff Chen: the uh Industrial um Designer.
Dane James: Yeah.
Jeff Chen: Which is
Scott Godfrey: 'Kay.
Jeff Chen: you.
Dane James: yeah
Jeff Chen: Okay so try to find that for next meeting.
Dane James: Okay.
Jeff Chen: Okay. So next meeting is in thirty minutes or so uh.
Dane James: Don't panic.
Jeff Chen: Don't pani. So so I will ask Dane James to find out more about this industrial design
Dane James: Mm-hmm.
Jeff Chen: so any working any working function we have discussed. So then I will ask the User Interf Interface Designer to to think about the point we discussed like the number of buttons, the the fact that is lighted or not, things like that, and
Scott Godfrey: Mm-hmm.
Jeff Chen: what would be convenient for the user. And also um I will ask the Market Expert to uh try to find out what are the absolute requirements, what is absolutely needed in a remote control uh for the user. So. And then uh I will uh just ask you to think about that and uh look at your mail because you will receive uh some good advice soon.
Scott Godfrey: Mm.
Jeff Chen: So. Thank you I think that's
Scott Godfrey: Good.
Dane James: Mm-hmm.
Jeff Chen: all for this point.
James Wenzel: Thank you
Scott Godfrey: Uh, so we come back in five minutes? Half an hour.
Jeff Chen: Anyway you will receive some messages.
Jeff Chen: Be careful. You eat it? Does it move uh? Okay, but I don't know if it uh is still correctly uh We'll see.
Dane James: Ah. | Jeff Chen introduced the project to the group and gave a timeline for the project. The group trained themselves to use the meeting room tools by drawing on the whiteboard. Jeff Chen presented the project budget and the projected price point and profit goals. The group discussed several of their initial ideas for the features of the product. They discussed making the remote able to control multiple devices, protection from water or from dropping the remote, and a locator function. Jeff Chen then instructed Scott Godfrey to research users' requirements, and instructed the Industrial and User Interface Designers to research the functions and usability features that were discussed in the meeting. | 1 | amisum | train |
Willie Wooden: Okay.
Eugene Arnone: Okay everyone's ready.
Kyle Felton: Hello.
Eugene Arnone: So we are here uh for uh functional design. Okay? So we are here for the functional design meeting mm so first I will show the agenda so we will uh I will take notes during this meeting so I will try to summarise it and put that summary in the shared folder if you want to look at it afterwards so then uh each of you will uh lead a presentation on the task that has been required last time so user requirement specification, technical design and Then I will uh present you some new project requirements I received from uh the management board. Then we will take uh the decision on on the remote control uh needed functions and then I will assign you the task for the next part of the meeting. Of the of the process. So uh who want to start the the presentation of what they did?
Willie Wooden: F do you want to start
Kyle Felton: Make a start yeah.
Eugene Arnone: You can start.
Kyle Felton: So Cable, camera.
Eugene Arnone: You have uh PowerPoint?
Kyle Felton: Should be in my in their folder no?
Eugene Arnone: Ah yeah maybe there.
Kyle Felton: Up.
Eugene Arnone: Okay. Who are you?
Kyle Felton: Um at three I think. No? Mm.
Eugene Arnone: Ouch. And
Willie Wooden: Okay.
Eugene Arnone: We have a technical problem uh.
Kyle Felton: Do we think w s in the in the wrong folder maybe? It is possible.
Eugene Arnone: You put
Willie Wooden: No.
Eugene Arnone: it on
Kyle Felton: It was somewhere in something like this. I don't remember the name actually must be something like messenger AMI or something.
Willie Wooden: What do you have in short cut?
Kyle Felton: Go up.
Willie Wooden: Participant two.
Kyle Felton: Yeah go up.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: Again. No. Go back.
Eugene Arnone: You have no
Kyle Felton: Uh maybe messenger Messenger.
Eugene Arnone: Over. Okay.
Kyle Felton: No. There is nothing.
Eugene Arnone: There's no We have a
Kyle Felton: Let's
Eugene Arnone: technical
Kyle Felton: go and check.
Eugene Arnone: problem.
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: I'll
Willie Wooden: Otherwise,
Kyle Felton: go and check.
Willie Wooden: could you just describe by hand?
Kyle Felton: Okay.
Willie Wooden: With the the whiteboard?
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: If you remember yeah
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: but
Kyle Felton: So
Eugene Arnone: that's
Kyle Felton: uh. Basically what we want here is a remote control right.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: So um the question well first of all what to control. So most people want to have a a remote for their hi-fi and T_V_ and stuff like that.
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Kyle Felton: And but other people want th also remotes for controlling uh and toys like robotic pets and
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Kyle Felton: little robots and stuff and other people also want to have remotes for controlling um whole house.
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: Yeah, so there's a project I think called X_ house or something like that that does that, uh you can integrate your remote with uh computers stuff.
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Kyle Felton: So there is one that is one thing. The other is the the finder feature yeah by whistling or whatever. Uh
Willie Wooden: Okay.
Kyle Felton: if you have the finder feature then you can also have uh at the same time as and general voice commands if you want yeah.
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Kyle Felton: So I think it should be a package in that case. Uh so the user interface will consist of two parts. One is the voice command part and on one is the actual buttons part. Uh and th the buttons part would be uh a set of buttons for choosing devices,
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Kyle Felton: a set of buttons for special navigation in space,
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Kyle Felton: a set of buttons for linear access of medium and a set of buttons for random access.
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Kyle Felton: Yeah?
Willie Wooden: What do you mean by linear access then?
Kyle Felton: Like a video tape goes forward, backwards,
Willie Wooden: Ah.
Kyle Felton: uh fast and stuff yeah. Um.
Eugene Arnone: Okay so special navigation, linear access, random access and there's a fourth one no?
Kyle Felton: Mm?
Eugene Arnone: So the better now for special navigation?
Kyle Felton: Yeah. For special navigation for example you might have a T_V_ in the menu and you going to
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Kyle Felton: change yeah?
Eugene Arnone: Then linear
Kyle Felton: Uh.
Eugene Arnone: access then
Kyle Felton: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: random access.
Kyle Felton: Yeah and also parameter
Eugene Arnone: Ah yeah
Kyle Felton: changing.
Eugene Arnone: parameter okay.
Kyle Felton: So if there are common parameters maybe we should put special buttons for that
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Kyle Felton: um or maybe we could have everything uh generic but uh there are a lot of uh remotes on the market right now
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Kyle Felton: and basically this is most of the almost everybody has this stuff.
Eugene Arnone: Okay and and voice command did you uh
Kyle Felton: Voice command w we could specify anything. We could assign
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Kyle Felton: any button a command to any button,
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Kyle Felton: if we have enough processing power, I guess so. Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: So that's uh that close your investigations?
Kyle Felton: Yeah. Uh
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Kyle Felton: yeah I think so. Not so far.
Eugene Arnone: Okay. Maybe we can have a look at the user requirements with
Steven Keller: Yeah. Um I dunno if you open
Eugene Arnone: I dunno if
Steven Keller: the
Eugene Arnone: I can open
Steven Keller: uh
Eugene Arnone: it. Maybe you
Steven Keller: m
Eugene Arnone: can
Steven Keller: is
Eugene Arnone: s
Steven Keller: not here.
Eugene Arnone: It's
Steven Keller: Uh in yeah okay.
Eugene Arnone: Messenger
Steven Keller: No.
Eugene Arnone: no?
Steven Keller: In document. Mm computer yeah.
Eugene Arnone: In which folder?
Kyle Felton: Where did you put it?
Steven Keller: Here. Here.
Eugene Arnone: Short-cut to
Kyle Felton: mm.
Eugene Arnone: AMI
Steven Keller: But it's
Eugene Arnone: shared
Steven Keller: not
Eugene Arnone: folder?
Steven Keller: Um.
Eugene Arnone: Maybe you can send it to Steven Keller by email. Just to participant one. At AMI.
Steven Keller: Mm-hmm. Yeah, I can do that.
Eugene Arnone: I will try to show it to everyone, that would be more comfortable.
Steven Keller: Okay. Um.
Eugene Arnone: You send it?
Steven Keller: It's participant one?
Eugene Arnone: Yeah. Uh this is this email.
Kyle Felton: I'm designing the user interface.
Steven Keller: Okay. You can uh.
Eugene Arnone: Okay. So maybe I can switch slides when you
Steven Keller: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: whenever you ask, that will be more convenient. So okay,
Steven Keller: Okay
Eugene Arnone: functional
Steven Keller: so
Eugene Arnone: requirements.
Steven Keller: you can you can go. Okay so in our usability lab we observed the remote control use among one hundred subjects
Eugene Arnone: Mm. Yeah.
Steven Keller: okay? And here I have the results so you can see that um seventy five per cent of users find most remote controls ugly so we have to find something to make them more more nice, more kind. Eighty per cents of users would spend more money when the remote control would look fancy. Eighty hundred per cent of users would spend more money when the remote control would look oh to it's not good. So okay. So
Eugene Arnone: We
Steven Keller: it's
Eugene Arnone: can
Steven Keller: not
Eugene Arnone: just
Steven Keller: in
Eugene Arnone: keep
Steven Keller: theory
Eugene Arnone: doing
Steven Keller: but
Eugene Arnone: that?
Steven Keller: I I can I can say yeah.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: Fifty f uh seventy five per cent of users say they s zap a lot. So mm we have to have a remote control uh very um out for that. Uh the buttons have are to be um uh uh like you say resist resisting to to shocks.
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Steven Keller: Um and fifty per cents of users say they only use uh ten per cents of but of the buttons in the
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Steven Keller: in the remote control. So all the buttons we we have to put are have to to have um a use a real use and not
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Steven Keller: only or
Eugene Arnone: Okay, so fewer buttons maybe
Steven Keller: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: would be
Steven Keller: F
Eugene Arnone: good?
Steven Keller: not many buttons, and uh and uh uh u useable buttons.
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Kyle Felton: But what kind of remote controls did you look at?
Steven Keller: Sorry?
Kyle Felton: What kind of task was it? It was a T_V_?
Steven Keller: Yeah. Uh
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: most for most is T_V_.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah but in fact we it it seems that we are going to make a T_V_ remote control according
Kyle Felton: Huh.
Eugene Arnone: to new requirements I received from the management
Kyle Felton: Uh-huh.
Eugene Arnone: bo I will present them in the following.
Kyle Felton: Ah! Good.
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Steven Keller: 'Kay you can go so. So there are other frustrations expressed by users, so they said uh they lost uh often the remote control in in the
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: room so they want to have a way to to
Eugene Arnone: To find
Steven Keller: to
Eugene Arnone: it.
Steven Keller: find it.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: Um and um lot of the time they it takes too much time to learn how to use
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: a new remote control. So they want something s
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Steven Keller: really very simple and uh
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Steven Keller: easy to use. And uh remote controls are bad for
Eugene Arnone: What
Steven Keller: R_S_I_
Eugene Arnone: is her other side?
Steven Keller: um I
Kyle Felton: Other
Steven Keller: dunno.
Kyle Felton: side yeah, yo wa your wrist. It i can become painful you can have tendonditis.
Eugene Arnone: Oh yeah?
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: I did not knew that.
Kyle Felton: If you also up on a computer in a strange position.
Eugene Arnone: Okay so you we have to make it uh more
Kyle Felton: Ergonomic.
Eugene Arnone: ergonomic yeah.
Kyle Felton: But uh. Have
Steven Keller: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: to say ha ha.
Eugene Arnone: It's your job Oh.
Steven Keller: Uh.
Eugene Arnone: Uh sorry got a message from Microsoft.
Steven Keller: Okay um before that I I have some some some thing
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: uh to say before
Eugene Arnone: Yeah yeah.
Steven Keller: um We know that uh the user use uh a lot their um remote control um to to change channel.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: Um and um to to change uh volume selection of
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Steven Keller: the and uh and not uh a lot for setting for
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: setting the the channels and uh
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Steven Keller: thing things like that.
Kyle Felton: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Steven Keller: So it's better to put uh uh uh something very easy to set and uh
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: and
Eugene Arnone: This function should be very
Steven Keller: Very
Eugene Arnone: uh accessible.
Steven Keller: accessible yes.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah, okay.
Steven Keller: That's right.
Eugene Arnone: This is the main function okay.
Steven Keller: So then we asked some questions to them and
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: um we asked this question if
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: they prefer an L_C_D_ screen or on their remultific function remotes control and if they mm pay more for speech recognition in remote control
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: and you can go we have here the results of
Kyle Felton: The first question.
Steven Keller: of the questions. So you know that um for the younger it's very important
Eugene Arnone: To have L_C_D_
Steven Keller: to have
Eugene Arnone: and
Steven Keller: the
Eugene Arnone: voice.
Steven Keller: s yes and speech recognition. And uh and the others is not so important but uh we know that uh uh people between fifteen and twenty five are people who watch a lot T_V_ and uh who who wh can use a lot this uh.
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Steven Keller: So maybe we we can have a speech
Eugene Arnone: Yeah maybe
Steven Keller: recognition
Eugene Arnone: this this
Steven Keller: in.
Eugene Arnone: is important.
Steven Keller: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: Moreover th maybe those uh like those teenager customer could advice their parents to buy this equipment and
Kyle Felton: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: so we can we have to take care of that point of view I think or so.
Steven Keller: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: Okay and if there is th the conclusion now. So as we say before, I think uh um a remote control lightening in the dark it's it's a good thing.
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Steven Keller: Uh not to many mud buttons like we we said before, e
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Steven Keller: easy to use uh a way to find it easily in the room and uh uh resistant to to shock and to
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Steven Keller: to
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Steven Keller: An I s no,
Eugene Arnone: Okay
Steven Keller: yeah.
Eugene Arnone: these are the user
Steven Keller: I dunno
Eugene Arnone: requi
Steven Keller: if you see something else important or
Willie Wooden: I'm just thinking of some thing.
Steven Keller: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Willie Wooden: Um We want to have a no, I know if a idea. We want to have a a general remote control for everything.
Eugene Arnone: No no no. We w it seems that we no want to have a T_V_ remote control.
Willie Wooden: Okay.
Eugene Arnone: From
Kyle Felton: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: the management board I receive
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: an email. Cos it would be costly uh and and also it it would take more time to develop to
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: have
Willie Wooden: Yeah
Eugene Arnone: a
Willie Wooden: yeah.
Eugene Arnone: a general generic remote
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: control.
Kyle Felton: Mm I it's not true I think. The
Willie Wooden: No no.
Kyle Felton: the second claim that you put.
Eugene Arnone: That it would be too long to
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: develop.
Kyle Felton: I think that should be the same.
Eugene Arnone: Oh yeah. Because I received that email from management board and they seems to tell that that if we want to be on the market as early as possible we should uh focus on T_V_ more where it seems that the market is more important. So maybe it's a good decision. I dunno. What's your
Kyle Felton: I have
Eugene Arnone: opinion?
Kyle Felton: uh I've no idea I mean I should know a bit more about how fast we can uh design it. I don't think Uh yeah.
Willie Wooden: Finish tonight.
Kyle Felton: Yeah. Okay.
Willie Wooden: But basically yeah
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Willie Wooden: maybe I can continue with my presentation, it would be
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Willie Wooden: al
Steven Keller: Yeah.
Willie Wooden: you
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Willie Wooden: you but I think we have some technical problem or so. So I'm just going to describe briefly what we do in the remote control.
Eugene Arnone: Maybe
Willie Wooden: If
Eugene Arnone: you can
Willie Wooden: fact
Eugene Arnone: go to the whiteboard if you have some drawings to do I
Willie Wooden: Yeah
Eugene Arnone: don't
Steven Keller: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: know.
Willie Wooden: but Do I have oh yeah. Now I have enough cables.
Kyle Felton: Like a you feel a bit like a dog with this stuff.
Willie Wooden: Okay so I'm just going to describe in fact for for a remote control this is quite easy. We just have sorry, I'm going
Eugene Arnone: Okay. Are you okay?
Willie Wooden: Like that. I'm just going to describe. Basically we have a a battery a power supply here. After that we just have um user interface. Let's say that um something like that, which could be um a L_C_D_ let's say or um an array of push button, something like that. Push button or a L_C_D_. After that we we feed that into um uh an electronic chip. So I say U_C_ and I feed that to uh L_E_D_ which is uh infrared um which is a an infrared um component. And so what we for for myself this for for us this is quite easy.
Eugene Arnone: U_C_ is the central unit?
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: Okay
Willie Wooden: Y
Eugene Arnone: yeah.
Willie Wooden: it's a it's this just a chip which does all the um numerical
Eugene Arnone: Computation.
Willie Wooden: numerical computation
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Willie Wooden: according to your display. And so for us uh this is quite easy. We just need to take to define what we want to do when the user interface um wants something and after that we just do the coding to s and send that to to to the not the to the television.
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Willie Wooden: So for us this is quite easy.
Eugene Arnone: Okay so this is quite easy.
Willie Wooden: Yeah. Um
Eugene Arnone: There is not that much
Willie Wooden: we just
Eugene Arnone: constraints.
Willie Wooden: have to define the processing power that we need uh especially if we want to do some uh speech recognition, in that case that mean that we are going to use more
Kyle Felton: This
Willie Wooden: for simple
Kyle Felton: will think this will take more time to develop
Willie Wooden: Yeah
Kyle Felton: also.
Willie Wooden: of course of
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Willie Wooden: course. And um but for a standard one this is really easy. It's a question of one
Kyle Felton: Soon.
Willie Wooden: month and so
Eugene Arnone: To
Willie Wooden: on
Eugene Arnone: have a
Willie Wooden: s
Eugene Arnone: you s you speak about with voi voice control?
Willie Wooden: No no no no, I say
Eugene Arnone: Standard button one.
Willie Wooden: yeah standard uh standard remote control takes maybe uh one month to to do that.
Kyle Felton: Yeah. So the only time problem is the sp voice recognition.
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Willie Wooden: Definitely.
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: So do you have any idea of how long it would take to have voice recognition now?
Willie Wooden: I would say.
Kyle Felton: Ten years.
Willie Wooden: I would say uh about eight months to have the first results.
Eugene Arnone: Okay so i it's a bit long yeah.
Willie Wooden: Yeah. I can Um.
Eugene Arnone: One month for the standard one with button.
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: Even if we have a L_C_D_ display?
Willie Wooden: Yeah even. I mean that this is really standard devices now. Um eight. For uh speech recognition.
Eugene Arnone: Okay yeah. Okay so we can take this into account. So who think it would be good to go for uh like speech recognition?
Kyle Felton: But we don't have time to market.
Willie Wooden: And also
Eugene Arnone: Yeah it
Willie Wooden: how
Eugene Arnone: will.
Willie Wooden: much uh I think
Kyle Felton: I think we should contact
Willie Wooden: during
Kyle Felton: management.
Willie Wooden: the kickoff meeting you say that we we shouldn't we shouldn't go up to twelve point five Euro
Eugene Arnone: Euros.
Willie Wooden: per
Eugene Arnone: Yeah,
Willie Wooden: unit
Eugene Arnone: yeah.
Willie Wooden: so how many units should we sell to have a
Kyle Felton: Well.
Eugene Arnone: Well
Kyle Felton: Uh
Eugene Arnone: each unit is is sell uh twenty five Euros.
Willie Wooden: Yeah but how many yeah.
Kyle Felton: How muc how much do you get how much do you if you buy one million units h no, one hundred thousand units. Eh chips. We're gonna need chips right.
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: Yeah. How much will it cost for one hundred thousand?
Willie Wooden: Usually this is less tha at two dollars per chip.
Kyle Felton: Okay.
Eugene Arnone: Because
Kyle Felton: So
Eugene Arnone: we
Kyle Felton: you
Eugene Arnone: are
Kyle Felton: have any idea for a powerful one that has uh good enough for do speech recognition.
Willie Wooden: Yeah,
Kyle Felton: Yeah? Okay.
Willie Wooden: we can
Kyle Felton: So. No
Eugene Arnone: It
Kyle Felton: it
Eugene Arnone: seems
Kyle Felton: doesn't.
Eugene Arnone: that that we want to sell like four million units from the
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: first meeting.
Kyle Felton: Okay. Four million.
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Steven Keller: Mm.
Willie Wooden: Um I just had a question uh do you want to continue with your presenta?
Eugene Arnone: Yeah
Willie Wooden: Is
Eugene Arnone: I
Willie Wooden: it
Eugene Arnone: I will continue. Well ask your question if you want.
Willie Wooden: Um you say that I don't remember by heart but thirty per cent
Steven Keller: Mm?
Willie Wooden: of the tested people say that's it's quite difficult to to to use the remote control.
Steven Keller: Yeah.
Willie Wooden: Do they say that this is difficult but for the same reason or do they have other reason?
Steven Keller: Oh.
Willie Wooden: To to
Steven Keller: Would j
Willie Wooden: maybe to keep in mind maybe to access to that menu you should do something like
Steven Keller: Uh
Willie Wooden: that.
Steven Keller: yeah w I I think they they say that it's uh difficult to learn how to use it
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Steven Keller: but i when you know how to use it,
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Steven Keller: it's it's
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Steven Keller: okay.
Willie Wooden: And
Steven Keller: But
Eugene Arnone: It's not intuitive first.
Steven Keller: Yeah.
Willie Wooden: But yeah maybe and what about if we design a remote control which can be configure as you want? You say that I want, I have six
Kyle Felton: Mh-hmm.
Willie Wooden: button
Kyle Felton: A a lot of people are uh if you have the L_C_D_ screen
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: if you can
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: do it completely the way you want because the buttons also look
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: the way
Eugene Arnone: But,
Kyle Felton: you want them
Eugene Arnone: but also
Kyle Felton: but
Eugene Arnone: it seems
Kyle Felton: it will be
Eugene Arnone: that
Kyle Felton: hard to configure I mean imagine
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: i uh so it's really something for the expert user.
Willie Wooden: Okay.
Kyle Felton: So I mean there are markets and markets. I think the young people are th uh are uh Christine here said uh
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: you have a
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: uh it is yeah. So for our young people uh it will be cool, they can be able to use it. Th maybe their parents will not but they will configure it. I guess.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: Maybe it would be more complex to
Steven Keller: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: configure it
Willie Wooden: Yeah. Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: to be simple
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: than
Steven Keller: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: creating a simple product.
Kyle Felton: And there
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: are another thing is that if we make something that's simple and easy to use that's bas to use immediately that means that it will be exactly the same as everything else.
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: All right?
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: Otherwise, if it's different then of course everybody has somebody has to learn to use it first.
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah. But also we we see that that most people find it find remote controls too complex because they have too many buttons and they mainly use only channels
Steven Keller: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: and
Kyle Felton: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: volume buttons. So we may just uh make a very easy to use remote control with mainly those buttons
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: and maybe also um some lightning stuff too because most people find also hard to to find the remote control. Losed
Kyle Felton: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: lose it etcetera. These these are these two points are the main frustrations so maybe if we design something very simple and easy to uh find when lost it will uh add uh a serious competitive advantage without
Steven Keller: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: making something too complex and too long to develop.
Kyle Felton: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: So but le let us see first the new requirement. So we don't have to so this this uh is uh is um in the this is in the same direction as we were speaking so we don't have to make a very complex remote controls to access teletext and stuff like that
Kyle Felton: But teletext is just one button.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah but then you have to you have to define the buttons to surf
Kyle Felton: You
Eugene Arnone: amongst
Kyle Felton: you
Eugene Arnone: pages
Kyle Felton: just write
Eugene Arnone: and stuff.
Kyle Felton: the write the numbers.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah. So
Kyle Felton: So will
Eugene Arnone: well
Kyle Felton: you add with the channel keys, right?
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: So.
Eugene Arnone: So anyway we don't have to include this feature because it's it's not used any more by users, they prefer to s
Kyle Felton: I am. I'm sure that uh it don't like but uh I don't see just one button.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: So.
Eugene Arnone: I dunno. If i one button is still one more button. If if if we want to make it very simple we have to reduce number of buttons compared to th to our competitors.
Kyle Felton: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: Well anyway I have this point. We can discuss. Also um so as as I told before uh it would be better if it's only for the T_V_ um because we want to be quick on on the market. And then also we have to make very uh uh clear that this uh this remote control is is part of of our products and show our corporate uh logo and and colours on the on the design as well so that uh they identify it as one of our product. So this is the the key point. So before uh finishing we can uh define uh what would be the characteristic of the o th of the control of the remote control and which button do we need which function do we want etcetera.
Kyle Felton: Capital.
Steven Keller: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: So do you um so so from from the Steven Keller I think a key aspect is the easy to use aspect, it should be
Steven Keller: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: very simple and most button are never used only ten per cent of the button are are used often so I think we have to do something very simple and I think we all agree on that point,
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: no?
Steven Keller: Mm.
Kyle Felton: Well if it is going to be just a T_V_ remote control it is going to be very simple.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah okay. So yeah the key point here is simple. Maybe. So few buttons, channel, volume control and what el what function do you see
Kyle Felton: Well if it's
Eugene Arnone: in addition
Kyle Felton: going to
Eugene Arnone: to
Kyle Felton: be
Eugene Arnone: that?
Kyle Felton: as simple as possible then just have the remote control, there is no other function that I can see really.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah. Maybe switch T_V_ on and off
Kyle Felton: Uh no you want to keep television on so that the advertising can revenue can come back to us. Or
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: something.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah. Volume, maybe a mute button, and then
Willie Wooden: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: on off button. And that's all?
Willie Wooden: Uh I know that som you say that many people are doing plenty of a lot of zapping.
Steven Keller: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: Mm.
Willie Wooden: I know tha I discovered that when I did a quick look, uh they do now som they do something which is quite nice now,
Kyle Felton: It's
Willie Wooden: you have a
Kyle Felton: a
Willie Wooden: button,
Kyle Felton: memory,
Willie Wooden: you
Kyle Felton: yeah.
Willie Wooden: you press it, and this is uh the previous channel which
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Willie Wooden: has come back.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah this is cool. Maybe we can include that also. Previous previous channel button. So we have like channel button, the previous channel button, the
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: volume button, plus a mute button,
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: and uh just the the traditional on off
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: button.
Kyle Felton: And uh and of course the channel changing buttons.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah. I I talk
Kyle Felton: How
Eugene Arnone: about that,
Kyle Felton: should they
Eugene Arnone: yeah?
Kyle Felton: how should we implement that? Because uh could be numerical only or could be also incremental.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah. Incremental definitely because zapping you you switch
Kyle Felton: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: them.
Willie Wooden: Let's say that we can do something like that. This is uh incremental, but once you press it for a long time, you go five by five.
Eugene Arnone: We go
Willie Wooden: To
Eugene Arnone: faster?
Willie Wooden: go fa to go faster.
Eugene Arnone: Mm.
Kyle Felton: Mm. It's an interesting idea, that if you press it for a long time it does something else, in general. So if you you have your ten buttons for the for the numeric the numerical buttons and you have instead of having just one memory
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: you have if you press them for a long time No. Doesn't work does it.
Eugene Arnone: Maybe we should have also a digit
Kyle Felton: Maybe
Eugene Arnone: button
Kyle Felton: we should have a complete keyboard and just type console commands.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: Change channel to eight. No.
Eugene Arnone: Maybe we have also to have digits or only incremental. I dunno bec because
Kyle Felton: Well
Eugene Arnone: if
Kyle Felton: if
Eugene Arnone: you
Kyle Felton: it's
Eugene Arnone: have the
Kyle Felton: useful like if if you want to change between three channels for example then you h
Eugene Arnone: Uh.
Kyle Felton: you cannot you cannot cannot work with just memory being incremental.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah. Because you have your previous channel button if you have incremental only it's
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: not uh it isn't worth it because the previous channel is eith either minus one or plus one.
Kyle Felton: Yeah. Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: So I think we need also digits.
Willie Wooden: Okay.
Eugene Arnone: Maybe we we can make very obvious the channel and volume button button and smaller button down there with the the digits.
Kyle Felton: Yeah when you zap usually you will have to press the same button all the time
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: and
Willie Wooden: Or we can do something like that. We can
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Willie Wooden: design the remote control to have access. You know some remote control have uh protection
Kyle Felton: Mm-hmm.
Willie Wooden: and so you you y
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: Hey
Willie Wooden: You
Kyle Felton: I just thought this thing there is a I mean you know there is are some with a wheel like this. Instead of having the up down buttons for
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: uh
Willie Wooden: Yeah,
Kyle Felton: you can have
Willie Wooden: a kind
Kyle Felton: the wheel.
Willie Wooden: of joystick.
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah. Maybe we can have a wheel for incremental.
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: Okay. So have a wheel for incremental, have the digits uh on the lower side that can be closed so as
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: you say protected,
Kyle Felton: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: and uh yeah I think this is
Kyle Felton: On
Eugene Arnone: the
Kyle Felton: the lower
Eugene Arnone: basi
Kyle Felton: side I think it you have to turn it. No?
Eugene Arnone: And do
Kyle Felton: If
Eugene Arnone: we
Kyle Felton: we do
Eugene Arnone: do
Kyle Felton: that.
Eugene Arnone: we have a
Willie Wooden: Or a or a ball, yeah, not a a wheel but a ball, and you say uh
Eugene Arnone: No, a wheel is
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Willie Wooden: to
Eugene Arnone: better. I would say the wheel is better.
Kyle Felton: Because
Eugene Arnone: What
Kyle Felton: of
Eugene Arnone: is
Kyle Felton: that
Eugene Arnone: the expert of uh
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: Because it's uh it's it's not like a volume which is smooth yeah? The channels change one by one.
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: So you have to the user has to like to should feel the the
Willie Wooden: Yeah,
Kyle Felton: the discrete
Willie Wooden: the yeah.
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Kyle Felton: sense a bit.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: That's a good idea. Well also we have to decide uh so it should be lightening in the dark I think because most people lost their remote
Willie Wooden: 'S quite
Eugene Arnone: control.
Willie Wooden: it's quite easy we do
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Willie Wooden: that w with back light on
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Willie Wooden: the
Kyle Felton: Even
Willie Wooden: on
Kyle Felton: if
Willie Wooden: the
Kyle Felton: i
Willie Wooden: wheel.
Kyle Felton: L_E_D_ uh or a if if it's the L_C_D_
Willie Wooden: A blue
Kyle Felton: feature uh
Willie Wooden: a blue L_E_D_
Kyle Felton: whatever,
Willie Wooden: and
Kyle Felton: yeah.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah,
Willie Wooden: we sell that
Eugene Arnone: and
Willie Wooden: um.
Eugene Arnone: do we put
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: an L_C_D_ display? Because it was important for young customers if you remember.
Kyle Felton: I think it's only put on if cou have multi function.
Willie Wooden: Yeah.
Kyle Felton: If you do not multi function then there is no p point in having L_C_D_. Just increase the cost.
Eugene Arnone: Okay.
Kyle Felton: The user does not have an advantage really.
Eugene Arnone: So no L_C_D_?
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Steven Keller: Hmm.
Eugene Arnone: And so no speech as well because it w it would delay too much the
Willie Wooden: Okay.
Eugene Arnone: development
Kyle Felton: Well if it's going
Eugene Arnone: process.
Kyle Felton: to delay yeah but uh it will be cool. It would. Because a user could say C_N_N_ for example and it would go
Steven Keller: Mm-hmm.
Kyle Felton: C_N_N_. Mm.
Eugene Arnone: Yeah. That would be cool. But
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: eight months is really long and Maybe we can just uh
Willie Wooden: Ten years
Eugene Arnone: Okay. So um I I will uh I will so I we will move to next meeting so in after the lunch break
Willie Wooden: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Arnone: uh here are the individual uh action uh you are required to do but you will be uh recalled to the actions by uh email I think but you can take notes if you if you want but well the instruction will be sent. So thank you for uh your
Willie Wooden: Okay.
Eugene Arnone: suggestion and I I will make a summary of that meeting that I will put in the shared folder you
Willie Wooden: Okay.
Eugene Arnone: can't see
Willie Wooden: Okay.
Eugene Arnone: and uh and then you will um you will be able to to see what has been uh has been said on on this meeting and and what has been decided. Uh maybe for next meeting uh send Steven Keller your presentation before by email so that we can see them uh altogether.
Kyle Felton: Yeah.
Eugene Arnone: That
Steven Keller: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: would be easier.
Kyle Felton: What is the folder that you put yours in? And did it it did work?
Steven Keller: No.
Eugene Arnone: No it did
Steven Keller: No
Eugene Arnone: not
Steven Keller: no.
Eugene Arnone: work. She send
Kyle Felton: Ah
Eugene Arnone: it
Kyle Felton: yeah.
Steven Keller: I dunno,
Eugene Arnone: to Steven Keller by
Kyle Felton: Mm.
Eugene Arnone: email.
Steven Keller: I dunno it.
Kyle Felton: Okay.
Eugene Arnone: So maybe this is better, to send it by email.
Kyle Felton: Okay what
Eugene Arnone: Okay?
Kyle Felton: is your email?
Eugene Arnone: So yeah I I'm it's in the first uh email so I'm participant one
Kyle Felton: At participant
Eugene Arnone: at AMI
Kyle Felton: one. Okay.
Eugene Arnone: uh where is that, it's here. Participant one at AMI. Okay. So see you after lunch break.
Steven Keller: 'Kay
Kyle Felton: Well
Steven Keller: thank
Kyle Felton: during
Steven Keller: you.
Kyle Felton: lunch break actually.
Kyle Felton: So next time we should have a fight. How about uh management or something. Who happens to be your friend. | Kyle Felton presented the major components of the interface design, dividing the interface into two parts: voice commands and buttons. Steven Keller went over users' requirements as seen in a company study and showed that the major complaint was that remotes were too difficult to use. She also showed that users want fancier and more ergonomic designs, shock protection, voice recognition, and LCD screens. Eugene Arnone announced a new requirement to the group, that the remote is only to control televisions. Willie Wooden gave a layout of the internal functions of the device and showed that a standard chip, instead of a larger one that would accomodate voice recognition, would be the most feasible. Eugene Arnone announced also that the group was not to include a teletext function and that they should integrate the company logo into the external design. The group decided on what button functions should be included and decided to eliminate the LCD screen and voice recognition from the design due to time and cost restraints. | 1 | amisum | train |
Manuel Rankin: Afternoon guys. It's gonna be.
Harry Sorg: Rock and roll.
Manuel Rankin: Oh. 'Kay.
Harry Sorg: So do we need to re-train Mike on how to put his mic on?
Shaun Myers: Think
Manuel Rankin: We may
Harry Sorg: Okay,
Shaun Myers: s
Manuel Rankin: do.
Harry Sorg: can he get it all by himself this time?
Manuel Rankin: I dunno,
Shaun Myers: Mm.
Manuel Rankin: I'm feeling like a
Shaun Myers: Pro
Manuel Rankin: big boy.
Shaun Myers: Probably not, been
Harry Sorg: So
Shaun Myers: listening too much. He's
Harry Sorg: I believe
Shaun Myers: getting
Harry Sorg: I
Shaun Myers: retarded.
Harry Sorg: can fly.
Eddy Dasilva: Alright
Shaun Myers: Yay.
Eddy Dasilva: well we got some exciting stuff for you guys.
Shaun Myers: Or not.
Eddy Dasilva: Or not.
Shaun Myers: Yeah.
Harry Sorg: Just what I needed was something exciting. Remember, I'm an old man.
Manuel Rankin: 'Kay, ready to go?
Eddy Dasilva: All ready.
Manuel Rankin: 'Kay so
Shaun Myers: Apparently
Manuel Rankin: we've
Shaun Myers: I'm
Manuel Rankin: got
Shaun Myers: old as
Manuel Rankin: our
Shaun Myers: well.
Manuel Rankin: conceptual design meeting. Hopefully we've
Harry Sorg: Thirty's
Manuel Rankin: all got exciting
Harry Sorg: really young,
Manuel Rankin: ideas
Harry Sorg: eh?
Manuel Rankin: now.
Eddy Dasilva: We do.
Manuel Rankin: Uh k exciting ideas. 'Kay so here's our agenda our agenda. Um I'm gonna open. I'm gonna talk for a bit about what we're gonna do. I'm gonna take some notes. We're gonna all do a presentation, then we're gonna make some decisions now. Yep.
Eddy Dasilva: Alright.
Manuel Rankin: Well when I say hopefully, we have to. So I'm gonna let you guys talk before we make decisions. And does anyone really want to go first?
Eddy Dasilva: I guess I'll go first.
Manuel Rankin: You p two?
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah.
Manuel Rankin: What's
Eddy Dasilva: Component, I think.
Manuel Rankin: Components
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah.
Manuel Rankin: design.
Eddy Dasilva: Yep that's it.
Shaun Myers: Presented by name.
Eddy Dasilva: My name is.
Harry Sorg: Jose he
Manuel Rankin: Your
Harry Sorg: man
Manuel Rankin: name
Harry Sorg: is.
Manuel Rankin: is name?
Eddy Dasilva: My name is name.
Manuel Rankin: Huh hi
Shaun Myers: My
Manuel Rankin: name.
Shaun Myers: name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father.
Eddy Dasilva: Sorry
Shaun Myers: Prepare
Eddy Dasilva: I did this
Shaun Myers: to
Eddy Dasilva: in a bit of a rush.
Harry Sorg: N name.
Eddy Dasilva: So
Manuel Rankin: Right.
Shaun Myers: die.
Eddy Dasilva: so here's a look inside your really old-looking remote control. Um you've got a printed a printed uh circuit board here, and you've got all these buttons which kinda press little rubber nubbies little holes that
Manuel Rankin: We've all
Eddy Dasilva: activate
Manuel Rankin: broke a remote control ri um s
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah
Manuel Rankin: yeah.
Harry Sorg: I've
Eddy Dasilva: we've all broken a remote control. So you've also got um you've got your chip here, your batteries here, and some sorta electronics. Um
Harry Sorg: I just love you tech guys, huh. They just
Shaun Myers: Yeah there's a thingy and
Harry Sorg: Yeah
Shaun Myers: a dingy
Eddy Dasilva: Well
Harry Sorg: y
Shaun Myers: and
Harry Sorg: do jabber.
Manuel Rankin: You press
Eddy Dasilva: so
Manuel Rankin: this and
Eddy Dasilva: you've
Manuel Rankin: it does
Eddy Dasilva: got
Manuel Rankin: th
Eddy Dasilva: here's here's a transistor, and this amplifies your signal, um you've got the L_E_D_ here on the end of the uh uh on the end of the printed circuit board. Um you've got a couple diodes here for I don't know who and whatnot.
Manuel Rankin: I dunno
Eddy Dasilva: So
Manuel Rankin: who and whatnot.
Eddy Dasilva: exactly.
Shaun Myers: Nah.
Eddy Dasilva: So um we've got a i in this in this uh drawing
Harry Sorg: P
Eddy Dasilva: he uh in this example here, this is a eighteen pin um uh chip
Harry Sorg: Yeah.
Eddy Dasilva: I dunno. Uh it's two double A_ batteries. This is pretty standard remote. So here are options for our power sources. You can use a basic battery, which we've already discussed, um th our tech department also said we have the option of doing some kind of hand dynamo where maybe you crank it or something like that. I
Manuel Rankin: 'Kay.
Eddy Dasilva: don't know if that's really
Shaun Myers: I wanna change that.
Eddy Dasilva: I don't know we got some qu crazy guys down there in that department so
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Harry Sorg: I gotta gotta flashlight, and uh
Eddy Dasilva: You shake it.
Harry Sorg: yeah but it's interesting 'cause you shake it like this. Like this.
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah. So that's the next bullet is the
Harry Sorg: And
Eddy Dasilva: um
Harry Sorg: that's on the camera.
Eddy Dasilva: the kinetic provision of energy, so it's like that flashlight where you have to shake it.
Harry Sorg: Yeah.
Manuel Rankin: 'Kay.
Eddy Dasilva: Uh we've got solar cells, which I don't think is a very good idea because um you could not use your remote at night which doesn't make a lot of sense.
Manuel Rankin: Mm 'kay.
Eddy Dasilva: And finally we've got our cradle o our power cradle idea.
Manuel Rankin: Okay so we basically have battery versus cradle
Eddy Dasilva: M
Manuel Rankin: here?
Eddy Dasilva: battery versus cradle I think
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: is yeah.
Shaun Myers: I like the kinetic.
Manuel Rankin: So
Harry Sorg: I
Manuel Rankin: we have
Harry Sorg: g I
Manuel Rankin: battery
Harry Sorg: I figured
Manuel Rankin: versus
Eddy Dasilva: It
Harry Sorg: you
Eddy Dasilva: could
Manuel Rankin: cradle
Eddy Dasilva: be
Harry Sorg: would.
Eddy Dasilva: fun.
Harry Sorg: Yes. Yeah.
Manuel Rankin: It's actually a novel thing because you could sell it a as a novelty, just to be actually serious
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah.
Manuel Rankin: for a minute here, you
Eddy Dasilva: Well
Manuel Rankin: could
Eddy Dasilva: it is it is more uh I mean it is more eco-friendly than the than the cradle 'cause you're still using
Manuel Rankin: Mm.
Eddy Dasilva: power off the grid with the cradle. So
Manuel Rankin: Hmm.
Eddy Dasilva: um our case design. We have uh choices in materials and choices in the general shapes that we can do. Our material choices are a plastic latex um ty or plastic, a rubber latex type thing, uh wood, or titanium. If we go with titanium we're gonna be uh limited in the amount of shapes we can do because it's tough to shape the titanium, and uh Yeah pers
Manuel Rankin: Wood wood would ge would give us a little bit of a marketing niche, wouldn't it.
Eddy Dasilva: I think wood i
Manuel Rankin: Nah.
Eddy Dasilva: I I can't see anybody
Harry Sorg: It it
Eddy Dasilva: wanting
Harry Sorg: it
Eddy Dasilva: to use a wooden remote, it's
Harry Sorg: Uh.
Eddy Dasilva: just
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: anti-technology really, you know.
Manuel Rankin: Hmm.
Harry Sorg: Uh uh to Harry Sorg in a marketing sense it's not it's not relative. We can we can o we can uh accentuate whatever whatever product you put in there we can find
Eddy Dasilva: Right.
Harry Sorg: a way to accentuate
Eddy Dasilva: And what
Harry Sorg: it.
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: we may be able to do, and I think this might be the best option is to combine some a couple of these. Um my recommendation personally would be to do some kind of a plastic inner shell with a like a rubber outer shell, to make it um to mak uh like a thick plastic inner shell and a t um kind of a to have that rubber outer shell to make it more durable, and also maybe i I think it feels a little better than the plastic.
Manuel Rankin: 'Kay. Do you get a good grip on the rubber?
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah
Manuel Rankin: Yeah okay.
Harry Sorg: And
Eddy Dasilva: um
Harry Sorg: if you make it from that super rubber, when you drop it on the floor it can bounce right back up in your hand.
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah.
Harry Sorg: You don't even need to lean down to get it.
Eddy Dasilva: The advantages of working with plastic and rubber is w we we'll have a lot more um options just in terms of shape because you can extrude plastic in basically any shape you want. So um and then we can cover you know the breakable bits with rubber yeah so um
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: But basically these are curved and double-curved I I believe that the tech department, in their um in their message to Harry Sorg, that they were referring to the number of th curves in the bottom. I have no idea exactly what they're talking about, but that's
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: what they told Harry Sorg, uncurved, flat, curved, or double-curved. I would guess this like this pen would be kinda like a double-curved, where it's curved on m m multiple axes, right? I think curved means just curved in one axis and double-curved is curved in two axes
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: or surfaces. I
Manuel Rankin: I
Eddy Dasilva: have
Manuel Rankin: think
Eddy Dasilva: no
Manuel Rankin: it
Eddy Dasilva: idea.
Manuel Rankin: might mean something like that sorta shape because a double curve rather
Harry Sorg: Mm-hmm
Manuel Rankin: than
Harry Sorg: yeah
Manuel Rankin: a
Eddy Dasilva: Oh
Harry Sorg: that's
Eddy Dasilva: okay
Manuel Rankin: yeah that's
Harry Sorg: yeah
Eddy Dasilva: oh
Harry Sorg: that's
Eddy Dasilva: like
Harry Sorg: what
Eddy Dasilva: a
Harry Sorg: I
Eddy Dasilva: wave,
Harry Sorg: see.
Manuel Rankin: what.
Eddy Dasilva: okay.
Harry Sorg: Yeah
Eddy Dasilva: Alright
Harry Sorg: that's what I see
Eddy Dasilva: that
Harry Sorg: also.
Eddy Dasilva: makes sense okay. Um okay, with the interface we have the following options, we can u we can use push buttons, we can use a scroll wheel with an integrated push button, and
Harry Sorg: Ooh.
Eddy Dasilva: L_C_D_ display, or multiple scrolling wheels. Um so these are all options that the user interface guy can uh has at his disposal to put together a user interface.
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: For electronics, we have these very technical um descriptions here. A simple chip, which is the least expensive, but I have no numbers to give you, a regular chip, which is like the medium porridge the medium
Manuel Rankin: D do we have actually
Eddy Dasilva: expense
Manuel Rankin: any
Eddy Dasilva: uh
Manuel Rankin: concept of what the difference is between a simple chip and an advanced chip?
Eddy Dasilva: Yes the difference is, with a simple chip a simple chip will operate oh why doesn't this scroll up? Previous previous, okay. Um
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: an advanced chip is required to to operate um the L_C_D_ display, and it didn't say specifically, but I I have a hunch that a regular chip is gonna be the scroll wheel and the multiple scroll wheels.
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: So but yeah.
Manuel Rankin: Yeah that makes sense.
Eddy Dasilva: That's the
Manuel Rankin: So
Eddy Dasilva: end of my presentation.
Manuel Rankin: presentation from I guess design would go best. Next.
Manuel Rankin: Technical functions or interface concept?
Eddy Dasilva: I think
Shaun Myers: Oh interface concept.
Manuel Rankin: Yeah that's it. Yes, but it has your name on it.
Shaun Myers: Well that doesn't bo bode well for it for it tats as well. Um so, somehow that thing's too big, but um okay um our uh manufacturing division wanted the speech recognition. They say they could put it to work but um we don't think so.
Eddy Dasilva: No.
Shaun Myers: No. It it it you'll be you know be affected by
Eddy Dasilva: If
Shaun Myers: the by
Eddy Dasilva: the
Shaun Myers: the other
Eddy Dasilva: T_V_
Shaun Myers: speech
Eddy Dasilva: is working,
Shaun Myers: and
Eddy Dasilva: yeah. That's just I mean it'll if somebody says up in the middle of a television show, it's gonna change the channel.
Shaun Myers: Yeah and and fighting
Eddy Dasilva: So
Shaun Myers: for the remote would not be fun anymore, and I think that's one of the things we
Manuel Rankin: But
Shaun Myers: wanna
Manuel Rankin: what if
Shaun Myers: keep.
Manuel Rankin: you actually had to press a button to make it recognize? So if you pressed it and went, up?
Shaun Myers: That kinda would
Eddy Dasilva: Well then why don't
Shaun Myers: r
Eddy Dasilva: you just press the up
Shaun Myers: d
Eddy Dasilva: button?
Shaun Myers: yeah.
Manuel Rankin: Man yeah.
Shaun Myers: That would kind of lose
Manuel Rankin: But if it's just
Shaun Myers: it.
Manuel Rankin: one thing with a button that you can just go
Harry Sorg: That's right.
Eddy Dasilva: Even
Manuel Rankin: Up.
Eddy Dasilva: still there's gonna be interf th there's there still will be interference from the T_V_. It
Manuel Rankin: Yeah, okay.
Eddy Dasilva: might not be it might not be completely confusing, but I think you'll still y it's still I don't think it's practical at all. I think it's a bad idea frankly.
Shaun Myers: Yeah
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Shaun Myers: so um taking that away, our uh
Manuel Rankin: You guys know your stuff.
Shaun Myers: the the the rubber but rubber buttons are the more reliable it's the the ones that would al would allow us to to market our product as being you know less prone to damage and more resistant to things like spillage of liquids over it or you know mistreat misuses as it happens to remote controls. Um as for the point that we making about losing it. Well, we wanna small r remote control one side because uh we want it to be cool and uh designed, but um apparently um market shows that bigger s bigger um remotes get less lost,
Eddy Dasilva: That I
Shaun Myers: about
Eddy Dasilva: would believe.
Harry Sorg: Mm-hmm.
Manuel Rankin: Mm.
Shaun Myers: But um yeah I think we we need to compromise between those two and somehow we'll do that. Somehow. Um so the the what I would propose is something more or less in the uh direction of what is to yo the right of that slide uh but without with a l a less complicated um design, so the numbers, the volume control, and channel control, and teletext access. Uh the volume and channel control can just become those the the four button array as in if it was a round dial.
Eddy Dasilva: Mm-hmm.
Shaun Myers: And um if you just think about it as the one to the right but with the numbers and the four buttons plus maybe a centre one with teletext.
Manuel Rankin: So we're suggesting doing a sorta scroll wheel thing for the volume?
Shaun Myers: Ye no it's
Eddy Dasilva: That's
Shaun Myers: not
Eddy Dasilva: not
Shaun Myers: i
Eddy Dasilva: a
Shaun Myers: i
Eddy Dasilva: scroll wheel.
Shaun Myers: it's just
Manuel Rankin: Nah.
Shaun Myers: four buttons that are on a cross,
Manuel Rankin: Oh okay
Shaun Myers: so
Manuel Rankin: okay.
Shaun Myers: that you
Manuel Rankin: I
Shaun Myers: ba
Manuel Rankin: see.
Shaun Myers: basically can control all of the
Eddy Dasilva: Right.
Shaun Myers: important tasks from that alone.
Eddy Dasilva: Instead of
Manuel Rankin: Uh,
Eddy Dasilva: play,
Manuel Rankin: okay.
Eddy Dasilva: stop, rewind, and fast forward there, that's up, down, louder, and quieter.
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Shaun Myers: Yeah um yeah so I think we w we go for something mid-sized, so something looks good and uh is not too prone to get lost. That be it.
Manuel Rankin: 'Kay. So on to
Manuel Rankin: Y functional requirements or trend watching?
Harry Sorg: I dunno.
Eddy Dasilva: Trend watching
Harry Sorg: Trend
Eddy Dasilva: has
Harry Sorg: watching
Eddy Dasilva: a later
Harry Sorg: I guess.
Eddy Dasilva: date there.
Harry Sorg: Trend watching I believe.
Manuel Rankin: forty six nineteen fifty seven.
Harry Sorg: See
Manuel Rankin: Yep.
Harry Sorg: what it looks like. It's been so long. Well I don't know what to say. When I s when I see the when I see the product I I I I don't wanna buy it. I see so many of 'em out there. There's nothing about that product that makes Harry Sorg wanna choose that product over other products that are out there.
Eddy Dasilva: Are you talking about the picture?
Harry Sorg: Yeah yeah.
Eddy Dasilva: That's not our that's not our b design, that's just
Harry Sorg: Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: a that's just something he a a graphic he used to show you the layout
Harry Sorg: Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: of what the layout of the buttons might be like.
Harry Sorg: Okay 'cause 'cause right now I don't have too much to say about how to market this product because we don't have a product to market yet. And
Manuel Rankin: Mm.
Harry Sorg: uh from from talking to Mike is that we have we have uh we can market a more expensive product now. That's what I understand
Manuel Rankin: Upper
Harry Sorg: so,
Manuel Rankin: management said yes.
Harry Sorg: hello.
Manuel Rankin: Uh e excuse that, that's a bit of spam.
Harry Sorg: And and so yeah I'm a I'm a little bit stuck right now in that what uh w what is it that I'm gonna market? Uh without special or increased marketable features I don't believe the product has a consumer demand. Uh I like the idea of of the scroll makin there are so many people making these products at this price right now. What are we gonna do to make this one special and unique?
Eddy Dasilva: What's special and unique about a scroll?
Harry Sorg: Uh well I don't
Manuel Rankin: It's cool.
Harry Sorg: yeah it's I I just see it as different. I don't say it's specially mm I don't say it's special. Uh I say that it's different I what I'm looking for as marketing is m give Harry Sorg something different. I give Harry Sorg a lower price, give Harry Sorg a higher price, give Harry Sorg some new technology, don't give Harry Sorg the same thing that everybody else is putting out there on the shelf it's f at the same price. I need something to market about this thing. We're we're a new
Manuel Rankin: I'd
Harry Sorg: firm.
Manuel Rankin: I'd say though that we if we did make the decision to go with the cradle though,
Harry Sorg: What
Manuel Rankin: the then we
Harry Sorg: i
Manuel Rankin: have that
Harry Sorg: if
Manuel Rankin: as
Harry Sorg: when
Manuel Rankin: well, but
Harry Sorg: when we
Manuel Rankin: wi with
Harry Sorg: have
Manuel Rankin: a similar
Harry Sorg: yeah when we when we have something like the cradle or or something give that's as as a marketing standard I need something to market, to make
Eddy Dasilva: Well
Harry Sorg: this product unique.
Eddy Dasilva: right I think the two big th points that we have so far are the having the cradle and also having uh the um the actual design of the uh case itself having like this like rubber shell maybe with a plastic
Harry Sorg: Yep.
Eddy Dasilva: interior, having it look really nice um and also be really durable.
Harry Sorg: Mm 'kay. Just remember when I made up this report I didn't have the information that we're discussing here.
Eddy Dasilva: Right
Manuel Rankin: Mm.
Eddy Dasilva: yeah.
Harry Sorg: And
Manuel Rankin: Course.
Harry Sorg: and
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah.
Harry Sorg: so so uh yeah when we have a cradle, when we have some kind of design, so what I'm saying is, from my perspective, I don't have a product to market right now. Um uh my personal preference is that we make some adjustment in the cost, either lower or develop an integrated new technol technology. That's that is the next step, there's technology and then there is technology,
Manuel Rankin: Yeah
Harry Sorg: which
Manuel Rankin: 'cause
Harry Sorg: we're
Manuel Rankin: that's.
Harry Sorg: moving into the next phase. And so uh we're gonna have some new technology to enhance the marketability. Yeah uh again I'm not sold on the product because we don't have a product in my opinion
Manuel Rankin: Mm.
Harry Sorg: yet. So
Manuel Rankin: Mm 'kay.
Harry Sorg: I
Eddy Dasilva: Well
Harry Sorg: need
Eddy Dasilva: let's
Harry Sorg: a product.
Eddy Dasilva: get a product then.
Harry Sorg: I need a product to market. And I just whatever product you guys put together, we'll find a way to market it. Tha that I'm not concerned with.
Manuel Rankin: So now
Harry Sorg: If you if you give Harry Sorg if you give Harry Sorg a cut-out of what everybody else has then I need to I need to find a lower cost.
Manuel Rankin: So our big questions here really are cradle or not cradle? Do we go basic or do we go for features? Uh d does anyone really wanna do anything with the scroll wheel or should we ditch that
Eddy Dasilva: Well my question
Manuel Rankin: off-hand
Eddy Dasilva: is what
Manuel Rankin: first?
Eddy Dasilva: would the scroll wheel do? Function-wise, what does that do that
Manuel Rankin: Oh but that was in your presentation so wh what would you imagine
Harry Sorg: Yeah
Manuel Rankin: it doing?
Harry Sorg: wh wh what's the wh
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah. Well it's it's just another way to do the exact same thing that the buttons do.
Manuel Rankin: Mm 'kay.
Harry Sorg: Okay now
Shaun Myers: But
Harry Sorg: what
Shaun Myers: would
Harry Sorg: I see
Shaun Myers: we
Harry Sorg: with the scroll wheel is everybody has buttons. So from a marketing standpoint I have I have another door to walk through when we have something that's unique.
Manuel Rankin: Yeah.
Harry Sorg: If it creates something more complex or more expensive, then I don't know if that makes it uh a marketing necessity. But again, from a marketing perspective I want as much new and different about this thing as possible because we're we're co it's a very competitive market.
Manuel Rankin: What I understand about scroll wheels is they're they're quite expensive to
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah.
Manuel Rankin: to make.
Eddy Dasilva: Th
Manuel Rankin: So I d
Eddy Dasilva: they are gonna be more expensive, but on the other hand, I mean, it I mean it is an alternative if if you think that's gonna sell some some uh you know if if we're gonna make up the extra cost by extra sales I think maybe it's worth it to do it, but I mean I would just use if I was gonna do this I would just use the scroll wheel for s channels up and channels down. I don't think volume or do you think volume would be
Shaun Myers: I dunno. I'll bet first in volume maybe. I dunno.
Eddy Dasilva: No we can we can do multiple scroll wheels but
Manuel Rankin: Well I d I like the idea of basically focusing the my personal preference is focusing the p the product on the idea of the uh the case the the uh dock to put it in to to charge it. We can target like environmentally friendly ideas, that
Harry Sorg: Mm-hmm.
Manuel Rankin: sorta things. It s i m makes it easy
Harry Sorg: Yeah yeah.
Manuel Rankin: to market, it's
Harry Sorg: I
Manuel Rankin: easy
Harry Sorg: think
Manuel Rankin: to differentiate
Harry Sorg: it's
Manuel Rankin: the product,
Harry Sorg: that's right.
Manuel Rankin: yeah so.
Harry Sorg: I think so.
Manuel Rankin: And if we we keep the rest in a format that is durable because th th the whole product's gonna need to be more durable th thus
Eddy Dasilva: Mm-hmm.
Manuel Rankin: because you're not going to be ditching it as often. It's gonna need to be more expensive because of the cradle.
Harry Sorg: Mm.
Manuel Rankin: So if we can market it in terms of
Harry Sorg: Yep.
Manuel Rankin: that and yeah
Harry Sorg: I
Manuel Rankin: well
Harry Sorg: think we got some exclusivity in that, you know, we got something that nobody
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah.
Harry Sorg: else has right now, adjustments in the retail or wholesale price if we need to and it also can create it's own demand from it's uniqueness.
Manuel Rankin: So our big decision then is like how do we do um like we have to decide on the details and we have to decide on well n not exactly the details, but d do we have uh What type of casing? I personally like what you were saying about the plastic with the rubber.
Eddy Dasilva: Mm-hmm. I'm thinking yeah something like kinda almost like these pens, you know, where there's you have plastic bits and then it's not really rubber but just kinda like a fused the plastic with rubber on the outside.
Manuel Rankin: Okay. Just a very thin sorta sheet for a a grip, sorta
Eddy Dasilva: Well no
Manuel Rankin: thing
Eddy Dasilva: ma
Manuel Rankin: or
Eddy Dasilva: yeah
Manuel Rankin: for
Eddy Dasilva: maybe a bit more then th is on here but ju just as a kind of an inspiration, these pens I think are are kind of
Manuel Rankin: Okay. So then if we d d do we want to do anything more basic with the uh more advanced with the user interface in terms of do we want to go for um buttons, or do we want if we're ditching the scroll wheels do we want to go L_C_D_? Do we want to give do we want to have anything else on it?
Shaun Myers: It's only a T_V_.
Eddy Dasilva: Or from from my perspective I think L_C_D_ is a mistake because this is a universal remote and all you're doing I mean it's you're not gonna get any information back from the television, so the only information you can display on this remote is what channel you just sent it at last and there's just not a lot of information, you know, there.
Shaun Myers: Hmm.
Eddy Dasilva: It
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: receives no information. So I I don't see any reason for having an L_C_D_ 'cause it's an increased cost. Unless
Harry Sorg: Yeah.
Eddy Dasilva: you can think of something interesting to do with it.
Harry Sorg: Yeah right now there's right now there's nothing coming out of the T_V_ to receive, so
Eddy Dasilva: Right.
Harry Sorg: you know unless technology changes and information starts coming out of the a cable box or something there's no s I don't see the, I don't see the necessity of an L_C_D_ either. Don't see it.
Manuel Rankin: Okay so the question is now I guess we need t to decide on well y you guys basically have to now go and figure out the details of this thing. of marketing and uh project management are are there any other questions that we need to answer now before you guys can go and build this? What what overall things have we not decided on?
Eddy Dasilva: Well we have to I think for Harry Sorg it's still not exactly clear exactly what the inter user interface is gonna be. There's the scroll wheel, in or out? What do you guys like in the user interface?
Manuel Rankin: I think maybe in terms of marketing, is that gonna make enough of a
Harry Sorg: Again.
Manuel Rankin: difference to justify the cost?
Harry Sorg: Well I think it's it's the more uniqueness you can bring to the product, the easier it is, I believe, for Harry Sorg to market. Uh again the push-buttons I I see are are everywhere. And so we can go with the same thing, but we're gonna be com competing in a in a broader market than if we go with something unique. You know the other thing I thought about was you know, do we go to something like this? Make a remote that doesn't look like a remote. It's just another it's just a an idea, and I don't know
Eddy Dasilva: Well I dunno about like the flip-phone idea, because I think, as far as durability th it's not a big well
Harry Sorg: I
Eddy Dasilva: maybe
Harry Sorg: mean what
Eddy Dasilva: when
Harry Sorg: I
Eddy Dasilva: it's
Harry Sorg: see
Eddy Dasilva: closed.
Harry Sorg: one of the things one of the things you brought up in
Eddy Dasilva: Mm-hmm.
Harry Sorg: an earlier presentation is, when you got children, their their stuff gets inside the circuitry, they get dirty, they get messy with drinks and stuff. This
Eddy Dasilva: Mm-hmm.
Harry Sorg: And what I keep throwing out there I just keep throwing out ideas to try to make this thing look or act or in some way identify itself as unique or different.
Shaun Myers: Mm-hmm.
Harry Sorg: But you guys are the ones that have to c ultimately create the product within cost.
Manuel Rankin: Yeah and I guess th th the question th th that you're being asked right now is whether is the dock enough of a unique feature to be able to go out and sell that a a as a a very different product, or do we really need the scroll wheel as well? Because
Harry Sorg: Oh
Manuel Rankin: the scroll
Harry Sorg: okay
Manuel Rankin: wheel comes at quite
Harry Sorg: phew.
Manuel Rankin: a cost.
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah.
Harry Sorg: I think you gotta g get into cost effectiveness. I think if you can have the base station with a with a locator, I think those are two very strong features, if
Eddy Dasilva: Well
Harry Sorg: that's something that can be integrated
Eddy Dasilva: The
Harry Sorg: without a bunch of extra cost.
Eddy Dasilva: The locator's gonna require a radio transmitter, which
Harry Sorg: Mm-hmm.
Eddy Dasilva: will
Manuel Rankin: That's gonna n is that gonna need a better chip as well?
Eddy Dasilva: Um
Shaun Myers: No
Eddy Dasilva: we're
Shaun Myers: it's
Eddy Dasilva: probably
Shaun Myers: just
Eddy Dasilva: gonna
Shaun Myers: different.
Eddy Dasilva: have to go with a like a medium chip, s I would imagine. But we I we will need a receiver, an antenna.
Harry Sorg: Integrated, yeah.
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah.
Harry Sorg: So it's just uh I I think that's
Eddy Dasilva: It should be a really simple signal though so
Harry Sorg: I know personally that would be a very attractive feature, is to have a uh have a button I can push to find my remote control.
Manuel Rankin: And it's presumably gonna need a little speaker in it or something like that as well to beep.
Eddy Dasilva: That's true yeah.
Manuel Rankin: But I guess a little tiny speaker is gonna be quite cheap, it's not gonna need q quality,
Eddy Dasilva: Oh yeah
Manuel Rankin: is it? It's
Eddy Dasilva: yeah. It'll be really cheap.
Harry Sorg: Or maybe you can like have a a smell-o-rama, you know you push a button and it s puts out a stink. You can
Shaun Myers: Maybe not.
Manuel Rankin: Makes your living room more fresh as
Harry Sorg: Yeah
Manuel Rankin: you watch.
Harry Sorg: yeah yeah yeah.
Manuel Rankin: Okay we're
Shaun Myers: S
Manuel Rankin: doing well for time here. Um we've got about another ten minutes. I think that uh
Eddy Dasilva: So the scroll wheel, in or out?
Manuel Rankin: Mm pr my personal preference is out. I don't think the cost is justified for a little bit more uniqueness when we already have that, and I don't s think
Shaun Myers: Yeah.
Manuel Rankin: it's obvious and natural how it would be used.
Shaun Myers: Yeah I think we have like and it's not very usable and it will bring down the robustness of the whole thing, 'cause
Manuel Rankin: Mm.
Shaun Myers: it's
Harry Sorg: Yeah.
Shaun Myers: it it breaks down easier.
Eddy Dasilva: For Harry Sorg I think the scroll wheel actually might not be so bad. I don't know exactly what the increased cost is gonna be, but I think he does have a point, i it might push somebody over the edge when they're looking at our at our remote versus something else, when they see this one has a scroll wheel to go up and down on the channels. I think it might be kinda neat to be able to do it like that.
Manuel Rankin: But
Harry Sorg: W
Manuel Rankin: then that that surely d depends a little on the T_V_ because some T_V_s are quite slow at changing channels from
Eddy Dasilva: Sure.
Manuel Rankin: like so if you've got a scroll wheel and you s you have to scroll scroll it really really slowly just so that you're actually keeping in pace with the T_V_'s ability to to change channels. Or
Harry Sorg: Yeah.
Manuel Rankin: do you have to go through and you wait for it? You scroll it a bunch of times and you wait
Eddy Dasilva: Well
Manuel Rankin: for
Eddy Dasilva: I
Manuel Rankin: it
Eddy Dasilva: think
Manuel Rankin: to
Eddy Dasilva: wh what it would be is like like the m like this, where it's maybe you know a digital wheel,
Manuel Rankin: Mm.
Eddy Dasilva: right, where it's where it's quantized into you know certain
Harry Sorg: Oh
Manuel Rankin: Uh
Harry Sorg: yeah.
Manuel Rankin: I see I see. That's where you
Harry Sorg: Yeah.
Eddy Dasilva: That was that was my my intuition
Manuel Rankin: Ah I see
Eddy Dasilva: of what the
Manuel Rankin: I see
Eddy Dasilva: scroll
Manuel Rankin: what you're
Eddy Dasilva: wheel
Manuel Rankin: talking
Eddy Dasilva: would be.
Manuel Rankin: about now. Okay.
Eddy Dasilva: It's just it's basically it it's just a f look and feel thing. It has the same exact functionality as two buttons.
Harry Sorg: I I think there's you know that uh there are so many people today that are that are surfing are television surfers, and I see the scroll as a as a great mechanism for surfing. Instead
Manuel Rankin: Yeah
Harry Sorg: of going
Manuel Rankin: if you're
Harry Sorg: button-to-bu
Manuel Rankin: just sitting there going
Harry Sorg: you just j you'd j j j j j j.
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah.
Harry Sorg: I
Manuel Rankin: That's
Harry Sorg: really
Manuel Rankin: kinda cool actually.
Harry Sorg: I really think
Manuel Rankin: I like
Harry Sorg: that's
Manuel Rankin: that.
Harry Sorg: a really cool thing for surfing.
Eddy Dasilva: Now just just so you know though uh you did bring up a point which is very valid, is a lot of T_V_s won't re the T_V_s won't respond exactly the same. Some of them are gonna be kinda slow switching, so you may like queue up like fifteen channel changes, and it'll be like flip, flip, flip.
Harry Sorg: Well there's
Eddy Dasilva: But
Harry Sorg: ano
Manuel Rankin: Well not n necessarily. You could basically make it so that it'll I mean it's just gonna be sending a signal to the T_V_ yeah
Eddy Dasilva: Right.
Manuel Rankin: the T_V_'s
Harry Sorg: That's right.
Manuel Rankin: ge so if you send about five flip channels, if you did that it's gonna flip once. If
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah
Manuel Rankin: you
Eddy Dasilva: it
Manuel Rankin: do
Eddy Dasilva: just
Manuel Rankin: that.
Eddy Dasilva: might be frustrating where you
Manuel Rankin: Other
Eddy Dasilva: can't
Manuel Rankin: than
Eddy Dasilva: make
Manuel Rankin: click
Eddy Dasilva: it go
Manuel Rankin: click
Eddy Dasilva: as fast
Manuel Rankin: click.
Eddy Dasilva: as you want, but I think
Manuel Rankin: Yeah.
Eddy Dasilva: once people get used to it I I do like the idea of the scroll wheel though.
Manuel Rankin: And if we're marketing it as a high niche product, then we're gonna be selling it to people who are buying good T_V_s as well, yeah, presumably.
Shaun Myers: Mm-hmm.
Harry Sorg: Yeah I think
Manuel Rankin: Primarily.
Harry Sorg: so. I I
Shaun Myers: Yep.
Harry Sorg: think so. Now the the only thing I I on the interface side of it, is that I I I see the dilemma. But if we have the option of of scrolling at any particular speed, or the option of jumping direct, okay.
Manuel Rankin: Mm-hmm.
Harry Sorg: So I can go uh presuming I have, on my television, something that tells Harry Sorg what channel I'm on, I can scroll direct from channel five to channel thirty two. I know what because it's on the television. The television tells Harry Sorg what channel it's on when I change it. So I don't know that really that's that's gonna be a a d problem, 'cause the television can go automatically from channel five to channel thirty two with the push of a button.
Manuel Rankin: Mm-hmm.
Harry Sorg: Okay? So ca can we can we create that kind of interface within a scroll system? You understand what I'm saying?
Eddy Dasilva: I think I know what you might be getting at, or
Manuel Rankin: Oh
Eddy Dasilva: or
Manuel Rankin: I see so if maybe if we had an L_C_D_ up the top that just did a number on it, right?
Harry Sorg: Oh
Manuel Rankin: And
Harry Sorg: no
Manuel Rankin: then
Harry Sorg: we
Manuel Rankin: it
Harry Sorg: could read
Manuel Rankin: that
Harry Sorg: it
Manuel Rankin: basically
Harry Sorg: from
Eddy Dasilva: Well,
Harry Sorg: the television.
Eddy Dasilva: what about this what
Manuel Rankin: Mm.
Eddy Dasilva: about if you can programme in your favourite channels into this scroll wheel and you can just like roll through your favourite channels,
Manuel Rankin: Well that's
Eddy Dasilva: and
Manuel Rankin: quite
Eddy Dasilva: it c
Manuel Rankin: cool. You'd
Eddy Dasilva: it
Manuel Rankin: need a display on the th
Eddy Dasilva: Why?
Manuel Rankin: the thing.
Eddy Dasilva: It'll tell you when you flip the
Harry Sorg: Yeah
Eddy Dasilva: channel
Harry Sorg: the
Eddy Dasilva: on the
Harry Sorg: the television
Eddy Dasilva: T_V_.
Harry Sorg: can tell you.
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah.
Harry Sorg: Can.
Manuel Rankin: Oh yeah yeah no I see what you're talking about. Yeah that's kinda cool. How would you program it though?
Eddy Dasilva: Well you just it's one extra button. You
Harry Sorg: Put
Eddy Dasilva: say programme start, and then type in 'cause you still have the typing you know you'll still have the keypad where you
Manuel Rankin: Okay
Eddy Dasilva: can type
Manuel Rankin: okay.
Eddy Dasilva: 'em in manually. So programme start, zero, one, enter, zero, five, enter, thirty eight, enter, programme end.
Harry Sorg: And then.
Manuel Rankin: Okay and yeah and that just basically flips between it and it'll go
Eddy Dasilva: Mm-hmm.
Manuel Rankin: it sends out zero, five, and then thirty six, and then
Eddy Dasilva: Mm-hmm.
Manuel Rankin: zero, one again. Yeah that's kinda cool. I like that.
Harry Sorg: And again we have another another great marketing tool. We have about three we have three or four
Manuel Rankin: That's
Harry Sorg: things
Manuel Rankin: not
Harry Sorg: here.
Manuel Rankin: gonna be too expensive because that's gonna be you're gonna be able to nab that off of computer mouse manufacturers really.
Eddy Dasilva: Mm-hmm.
Manuel Rankin: You could basically come up with a partnership to be able to produce that quite cheaply.
Harry Sorg: I dunno and
Shaun Myers: Yeah.
Harry Sorg: an maybe we maybe even have this as in-house technology. This may be something that's available through our own uh through our own services.
Manuel Rankin: Might be, but tha that's not gonna be such a costly feature. The problem we're gonna have is making it robust.
Eddy Dasilva: Oh well
Manuel Rankin: Making
Eddy Dasilva: we also
Manuel Rankin: it last.
Eddy Dasilva: have to determine in some manner how to switch between modes, between going through your favourites list and just hitting up one, up
Harry Sorg: Or
Eddy Dasilva: two.
Harry Sorg: we go directional up
Manuel Rankin: So if there's
Harry Sorg: we
Manuel Rankin: a button
Harry Sorg: go we go
Manuel Rankin: for
Harry Sorg: this
Manuel Rankin: each
Harry Sorg: we
Manuel Rankin: type.
Harry Sorg: go this we go this way for one, we go this way for the other.
Eddy Dasilva: No because you wanna be able to go up and down through the channels.
Manuel Rankin: Yeah people are gonna
Harry Sorg: Ah-ha
Manuel Rankin: have their favourite
Harry Sorg: okay.
Manuel Rankin: sorta, whether
Harry Sorg: Okay,
Manuel Rankin: they do that
Harry Sorg: okay,
Manuel Rankin: or whether they
Harry Sorg: well then you
Eddy Dasilva: Right.
Harry Sorg: just have, you have a diff you have a mode
Eddy Dasilva: I think
Harry Sorg: switch.
Manuel Rankin: Yeah
Eddy Dasilva: we'll need
Manuel Rankin: yeah
Eddy Dasilva: a
Manuel Rankin: the mode switch.
Eddy Dasilva: we'll need a mode switch, but then if we have a mode switch we're gonna need some kinda indicator
Manuel Rankin: Just
Eddy Dasilva: to
Manuel Rankin: the
Eddy Dasilva: which,
Manuel Rankin: lights behind
Eddy Dasilva: an
Manuel Rankin: the
Eddy Dasilva: L_E_
Manuel Rankin: buttons. You
Eddy Dasilva: an
Manuel Rankin: could have
Eddy Dasilva: L_E_D_
Manuel Rankin: back-lit buttons maybe.
Eddy Dasilva: okay.
Manuel Rankin: Would
Shaun Myers: Yeah.
Manuel Rankin: that work? Is
Eddy Dasilva: Okay.
Manuel Rankin: that okay we have five minutes. So right details th that we've talked about here are that we want a scroll wheel. We want a mode indicator. We want back-lit buttons. And if we're making back-lit buttons period, do we want that just for the mode indicator or maybe to indicate what button you're pressing at the time, so that you know if it's actually pressed or not. I've seen some remotes do that.
Eddy Dasilva: Okay. Just so you know I think I mean it was my understanding that before we were gonna stay in the mid-market range. It seems we're kind of approaching a higher-end
Harry Sorg: Yeah
Eddy Dasilva: range.
Harry Sorg: yeah.
Manuel Rankin: I think
Eddy Dasilva: I wanna make
Manuel Rankin: we
Eddy Dasilva: sure
Manuel Rankin: are
Eddy Dasilva: everybody's
Manuel Rankin: yeah.
Eddy Dasilva: okay
Harry Sorg: Well you
Eddy Dasilva: with
Harry Sorg: had acknowledged
Eddy Dasilva: that.
Harry Sorg: that we have more money for this.
Manuel Rankin: Yeah
Harry Sorg: Didn't you
Manuel Rankin: well
Harry Sorg: say
Manuel Rankin: we don't
Harry Sorg: so?
Manuel Rankin: have it's not that we have more money, we can push up the the price.
Harry Sorg: That's what I mean. We can
Manuel Rankin: Yeah.
Harry Sorg: increase the cost.
Eddy Dasilva: Okay.
Harry Sorg: So
Manuel Rankin: 'Kay.
Harry Sorg: I don't know I don't
Eddy Dasilva: I just
Harry Sorg: know
Eddy Dasilva: wanna
Harry Sorg: whether
Eddy Dasilva: make
Harry Sorg: having
Eddy Dasilva: sure everybody's on board with it. So
Manuel Rankin: Yeah. So we really need to be sure as to what we can push the cost up to, though we haven't got to a stage where we're ready to pin down the price of components. But I'd say what sorta price are we looking to be able to sell something like that, and what sorta price can we make it for?
Harry Sorg: Well I think th I think the design and technology has to come back and say, okay to create this product we see it's gonna cost us this much for this volume, because we do have a volume target of of fifty million profit.
Manuel Rankin: Yeah no I I think that's where we really should be more flexible than anything else because as we said in the last meeting, our management is really looking for us to push our brand.
Eddy Dasilva: Right.
Manuel Rankin: We're entering a new market here, so I think the the profit expectation for this one product is maybe not as important as being able to
Harry Sorg: Okay I'm I'm okay with that. I guess what I just want to Harry Sorg the next step is for these guys to come come in with the design proposal w with the cost estimate attached, and then we have to take this to the next
Manuel Rankin: But
Harry Sorg: level.
Manuel Rankin: th what's our ballpark as to what we'd be able to sell something
Eddy Dasilva: Well
Manuel Rankin: like this
Eddy Dasilva: y yeah.
Manuel Rankin: for?
Eddy Dasilva: Let's let's try
Harry Sorg: We have
Eddy Dasilva: and think
Harry Sorg: to find
Eddy Dasilva: now,
Harry Sorg: cost.
Eddy Dasilva: how much would you pay for with all these features how much would you pay if you went to the store, and you were in the market f to replace your T_V_ remote, how much would you pay for that?
Manuel Rankin: But you've gotta think who our target market is because
Eddy Dasilva: I'm just asking
Manuel Rankin: I I'm
Eddy Dasilva: you.
Manuel Rankin: not our target market. I'm a student, but
Eddy Dasilva: If
Manuel Rankin: on the other hand I would think, mm with my Project Manager salary, I
Eddy Dasilva: Then
Manuel Rankin: would
Eddy Dasilva: you could probably
Manuel Rankin: think
Eddy Dasilva: afford
Manuel Rankin: yeah
Eddy Dasilva: this.
Manuel Rankin: I could probably afford this uh would I buy it? Maybe. If I had a cool new T_V_ and this was r looking really slick and it had the dock and it had the scroll wheel, which I think's a really cool idea, that would sell Harry Sorg on it a little. Then maybe you know. I do I don't think I'd go over a hundred Euro certainly,
Eddy Dasilva: Oh
Manuel Rankin: that would
Eddy Dasilva: no
Manuel Rankin: be way
Eddy Dasilva: no.
Manuel Rankin: too much, but the I would be happy paying over forty for it, I guess,
Eddy Dasilva: I would say thirty
Manuel Rankin: but not
Eddy Dasilva: five
Manuel Rankin: much
Eddy Dasilva: to forty.
Harry Sorg: Yeah, I was gonna say thirty five to fifty.
Manuel Rankin: 'Kay. Thirty five to fifty Euros is our sales bracket okay.
Eddy Dasilva: Okay.
Manuel Rankin: So
Harry Sorg: Because
Manuel Rankin: the question
Harry Sorg: one of
Manuel Rankin: is
Harry Sorg: th
Manuel Rankin: what
Harry Sorg: one
Manuel Rankin: we ca
Harry Sorg: of
Manuel Rankin: we
Harry Sorg: the
Manuel Rankin: make
Harry Sorg: things
Manuel Rankin: it
Harry Sorg: we're
Manuel Rankin: for.
Harry Sorg: marketing about this product is that this is the last one you will ever need to buy for
Eddy Dasilva: Right.
Harry Sorg: your television.
Manuel Rankin: Mm.
Harry Sorg: It's one of the marketing features in this.
Manuel Rankin: That's why the scroll needs to be really robust.
Shaun Myers: Okay so we'll come up with something between thirty five and fifty that is rug rubber, robust, with scroll wheel, with the new facilities of the scroll wheel like favourite stuff, favourite channels,
Harry Sorg: Mm-hmm.
Eddy Dasilva: With
Shaun Myers: and
Eddy Dasilva: a cradle, radio
Shaun Myers: and
Eddy Dasilva: transmitters,
Shaun Myers: with a cradle, and yeah and the locator.
Eddy Dasilva: and back-lit buttons. And it's gonna look sexy.
Shaun Myers: Or not.
Eddy Dasilva: Or not. It might look like clay.
Shaun Myers: Okay so you can market
Harry Sorg: Yeah yeah.
Shaun Myers: pe depending
Harry Sorg: Bas th that's
Shaun Myers: on that?
Harry Sorg: that's easy. That's that's not a, it's a. 'Cause we have about six, six, seven features in that alone.
Manuel Rankin: Yep.
Harry Sorg: Under
Shaun Myers: Cool.
Harry Sorg: the title of uniquenesses.
Shaun Myers: Hmm.
Manuel Rankin: Okay. The next meeting starts in thirty minutes, although does it? It starts at three twenty one, the next meeting. So we've got more than a thirty minutes. Um we've got
Harry Sorg: Well
Manuel Rankin: more
Harry Sorg: I have
Manuel Rankin: like fifty.
Harry Sorg: Is my three twenty one is the next meeting?
Manuel Rankin: The the ne next meeting is three twenty one yeah.
Harry Sorg: That's that's almost uh fifty minutes.
Manuel Rankin: Yeah that is. Uh
Harry Sorg: You guys
Manuel Rankin: they've
Harry Sorg: can
Manuel Rankin: they've changed the times from the presentations.
Harry Sorg: You guys you guys can uh create a All
Eddy Dasilva: Probably.
Harry Sorg: kinds of things.
Eddy Dasilva: We'll let you know when we're done, if we can go earlier.
Harry Sorg: Thanks, yeah.
Manuel Rankin: Okay so you guys will be getting your modelling done now
Eddy Dasilva: Yeah.
Manuel Rankin: and uh Okay are there any other questions with regards to what this thing's gonna do, look like, how it's gonna work that need to be addressed before we really look at this in a lot of detail?
Eddy Dasilva: I don't think so. If we have any questions we'll just email you I guess.
Manuel Rankin: Okay.
Shaun Myers: Yeah I think it pretty much everything's covered.
Manuel Rankin: Okay. This one was quite easy.
Shaun Myers: Coulda been worse.
Harry Sorg: Still.
Manuel Rankin: Always the optimist.
Shaun Myers: Yes I am.
Manuel Rankin: 'Kay thanks guys.
Harry Sorg: Thank you. I don't have any emails. This means I can go home. Oh, we all leave. | Shaun Myers presented an overview of the internal components of a remote control device. He discussed energy source and material options, and suggested that using rubber and plastic would be the most versatile option. He displayed the three options for chips. Eddy Dasilva discussed voice recognition with the group, and the group decided to not use it in their design. He suggested using rubber buttons because of their durability. He discussed the size of the device and the layout of the interface, and suggested that the remote be moderately sized to prevent its getting lost. Harry Sorg expressed concern that the remote lacked enough features to be distinctive. The group had a discussion to decide on the product features. They decided to include a charging stand, to use a thin rubber casing material, to include a locator function and a scroll wheel with two channel-changing options to increase its usability. The group discussed the cost of the various components and decided to sell the device at a point between thirty-five and fifty Euros. Eddy Dasilva and Shaun Myers were instructed to construct the prototype. | 1 | amisum | train |
Justin Osborne: Uh 'kay. So
Sean Brooks: So so so.
Danilo Jones: Put on your mic.
Thomas Taylor: So you forgot how this works again?
Danilo Jones: Boss.
Justin Osborne: Yep.
Thomas Taylor: Boss.
Sean Brooks: Maybe. Maybe maybe maybe.
Justin Osborne: Okay so we're here to talk about the detailed design of the product 'kay?
Danilo Jones: Yep.
Justin Osborne: And here's the agenda for this meeting. Uh I'm just gonna open, say a few boring words to start with again, and start taking minutes afterwards. You guys are gonna give us a presentation of our wonder product that I can see some demonstrations of over there. Looks cool. And then we're gonna evaluate it. Then
Sean Brooks: Bra
Justin Osborne: we're gonna talk about finance, and I've got a lovely Excel spreadsheet I knocked up in the last five minutes for this. And
Thomas Taylor: Hmm you knocked it up?
Justin Osborne: uh yep. And we're gonna evaluate the product and close. Got forty minutes to do this in. We should be fine. Let's try and keep this one on schedule.
Danilo Jones: Alright.
Justin Osborne: So Your thing is in where
Thomas Taylor: Thi
Justin Osborne: is it? Is
Thomas Taylor: third
Danilo Jones: Three,
Justin Osborne: it in
Thomas Taylor: third third.
Danilo Jones: three.
Thomas Taylor: The end product thingy. Yeah.
Justin Osborne: Who wants it?
Danilo Jones: Pedro can have it. I like I'll help talk.
Thomas Taylor: Um yeah so what we ended up with. Production costs estimated by our manufacturing department and um the research department, which is us, is uh fifteen point eight Euros, someone forgot the units
Danilo Jones: Unit price.
Thomas Taylor: there yeah, uh unit price unit production price cost thing. Um we implemented the basic functions, plus the locator, which was one of the marketing things, cradle, scroll wheel for uh the the channels, and uh we implemented the f the the way of putting the new and revolutionary zapping, your favourite channels functionality, in the scroll.
Justin Osborne: Zapping your favourite channels, eh?
Thomas Taylor: Yeah.
Danilo Jones: Scrolling through your favourites list.
Justin Osborne: Oh okay okay.
Thomas Taylor: Zapping you know zapping.
Justin Osborne: Ah 'kay okay, that's
Thomas Taylor: Maybe
Justin Osborne: favourites.
Thomas Taylor: it's just a Portuguese thing. And um yeah that was the result.
Justin Osborne: Ah 'kay. I like the the the the logo on there as well.
Danilo Jones: It's very prominent.
Justin Osborne: It is very prominent. So this is the
Danilo Jones: So here I'll give you the so this is the cradle unit, and this is the actual remote itself. Um so the scroll bar is or the scroll wheel is this this green little scrolly guy here, um and then the volume controls are here and here.
Justin Osborne: Okay.
Danilo Jones: got the keypad which is the numbers uh f from zero to nine and then ten. This is the power button. Uh we have our um we have the enter button and uh what was the other button here? This is the
Thomas Taylor: Start
Danilo Jones: teletext.
Thomas Taylor: s the the start uh to to
Danilo Jones: The
Thomas Taylor: to
Danilo Jones: programme button,
Thomas Taylor: programme yeah.
Danilo Jones: yeah the
Justin Osborne: Ah,
Danilo Jones: programme
Justin Osborne: okay
Danilo Jones: button.
Justin Osborne: I see.
Danilo Jones: So this bl this button will be used both for the favourites and for programming your uh the um the type of television you wanna use. So um the plastic is the white area of this of the model here, and the red area is like a rubber covering. So
Justin Osborne: It's pretty
Danilo Jones: you
Justin Osborne: cool.
Danilo Jones: can see that when it lays like this or like this and the buttons are all gonna be rubber, so it's pretty hard to actually damage it um
Justin Osborne: Is that could that be easy to for the scroll wheel to be rotated if it lands on it?
Danilo Jones: Yeah that might be a possible a mi uh possible problem, but
Thomas Taylor: Not
Danilo Jones: if
Thomas Taylor: helping.
Danilo Jones: you drop it yeah.
Justin Osborne: Oh well I guess it depends on the stiffness a little of it.
Danilo Jones: Yeah and it depends on if it's sliding, but I think it's pretty ergonomic. You can feel it.
Justin Osborne: Mm. Feels good. I take it that this is gonna be slightly lighter in the
Danilo Jones: Yeah
Justin Osborne: final
Danilo Jones: of course.
Justin Osborne: design as well.
Danilo Jones: Well this is clay.
Justin Osborne: Yeah it's kinda cool. You have to reach a little
Danilo Jones: Yeah the
Justin Osborne: bit don't
Danilo Jones: the power
Justin Osborne: you.
Danilo Jones: button is a bit of a reach, but I think we might scale down the final model a bit.
Justin Osborne: Ah yeah
Danilo Jones: These
Justin Osborne: that wouldn't make sense.
Danilo Jones: this is a bit larger than it would be, but
Justin Osborne: It's cool. I'm impressed.
Thomas Taylor: Don't have no one to handle that.
Sean Brooks: Mm
Justin Osborne: And hold it
Sean Brooks: that's
Justin Osborne: so wh what's
Sean Brooks: oh
Justin Osborne: the
Sean Brooks: that's
Justin Osborne: marketing perspective?
Sean Brooks: oh I like it. I mean you guys gave Sean Brooks more than I was asking for, so I'm happy because we've got some really marketable features in this. Yeah I think it's good. Good good good job.
Danilo Jones: Mm Pedro can demonstrate the
Thomas Taylor: Yeah.
Danilo Jones: the paging ability.
Thomas Taylor: So you ha you have like the the base station with um the little button for the where's my remote.
Danilo Jones: Beep beep beep.
Sean Brooks: Uh pla
Thomas Taylor: The locator
Sean Brooks: I'm ha
Thomas Taylor: function.
Sean Brooks: It's
Justin Osborne: Okay.
Sean Brooks: great. That's great. It's
Danilo Jones: Um
Sean Brooks: a great feature.
Justin Osborne: Mm it's impressing.
Danilo Jones: beep beep beep
Justin Osborne: So
Danilo Jones: so
Justin Osborne: let Sean Brooks get it, if I press this button
Danilo Jones: beep beep beep
Justin Osborne: I see. That's pretty
Thomas Taylor: Wicked
Justin Osborne: cool.
Thomas Taylor: isn't
Justin Osborne: Hang on.
Danilo Jones: beep
Thomas Taylor: it?
Danilo Jones: beep beep be shut up.
Sean Brooks: So you can take this ho take this home with you
Danilo Jones: Beep
Sean Brooks: tonight and you can push that and he'll be across town
Danilo Jones: beep beep okay.
Justin Osborne: I plan to do that as well.
Danilo Jones: Um no no no tha
Justin Osborne: So
Danilo Jones: that's
Justin Osborne: the
Danilo Jones: alri
Justin Osborne: the two blue are are those for the the it to charge off of
Danilo Jones: Exactly
Justin Osborne: in?
Danilo Jones: that's exactly
Justin Osborne: Ah okay
Danilo Jones: what those are
Justin Osborne: okay.
Danilo Jones: for. And um there's one other feature that we were debating, but we decided to go against it, is um you could beep beep beep we were thinking that it might be interesting to have a trigger button here because you have this
Justin Osborne: Yeah
Danilo Jones: finger it
Justin Osborne: it's
Danilo Jones: it's it kinda
Justin Osborne: the
Danilo Jones: feels
Justin Osborne: right shape
Danilo Jones: like
Justin Osborne: isn't
Danilo Jones: there
Justin Osborne: it?
Danilo Jones: should be something there, but we couldn't figure out what button is important enough to put there. And we we don't wanna accidentally be hitting the power button like that
Justin Osborne: But maybe
Danilo Jones: so
Justin Osborne: if you had a trigger plus the scroll then
Danilo Jones: Mm.
Justin Osborne: that would get past the the problem of it landing and scrolling,
Danilo Jones: Right.
Justin Osborne: 'cause then it would need to be hit on both sides.
Danilo Jones: So maybe in a final design phase we might tweak that a little bit, but
Justin Osborne: Okay.
Sean Brooks: Uh, I
Justin Osborne: But it's
Sean Brooks: can
Justin Osborne: definitely
Sean Brooks: see that.
Justin Osborne: got options for like different types of models and things as well based
Danilo Jones: Mm-hmm.
Justin Osborne: on that, hasn't it?
Sean Brooks: Yep I like. Good job.
Justin Osborne: So is that the the final colour scheme as well or?
Danilo Jones: Oh no this is
Sean Brooks: No no.
Danilo Jones: just what we had to work with at the time.
Justin Osborne: Okay.
Danilo Jones: So we'll leave the colour scheme up to the marketing people.
Justin Osborne: The hmm.
Danilo Jones: Careful.
Justin Osborne: It came off. The scroll wheels, a problem with them not being sort of
Sean Brooks: Well I mean
Justin Osborne: I don't
Sean Brooks: of
Justin Osborne: think
Sean Brooks: course,
Justin Osborne: the user interface
Sean Brooks: I mean
Justin Osborne: guy wants to touch it
Sean Brooks: My
Justin Osborne: anymore.
Sean Brooks: my s my suggestion is we're gonna go go to the silvers and blacks like most of the televisions.
Justin Osborne: Mm.
Sean Brooks: You know some blend of silvers and blacks.
Danilo Jones: Beep beep beep.
Justin Osborne: Okay enough of that. Well i it's cool guys. 'Kay so are we done with the this presentation?
Danilo Jones: Yeah.
Thomas Taylor: Ja.
Justin Osborne: Okay. Now now.
Sean Brooks: So you're not gonna find my uh my folder up there I gotta do mine up at the board.
Justin Osborne: Have you? Okay.
Sean Brooks: Yeah yeah. So
Justin Osborne: Can I not get your get at stuff from your shared folder now?
Sean Brooks: No it's not in there because I had the computer problem and I
Justin Osborne: Oh I
Sean Brooks: I
Justin Osborne: see
Sean Brooks: I
Justin Osborne: I see.
Sean Brooks: cou I couldn't create it. I couldn't create it in the PowerPoint, and I think I've got this really strange cable. So what I had, basically going from the PowerPoint format, is that uh yeah yeah I like this a lot. Is this one of the tests is to see how we can adapt to s changing situations in the in the meeting room?
Thomas Taylor: Nah.
Sean Brooks: So what we had is we had the method. That's not how you spell method, is it?
Danilo Jones: No way.
Sean Brooks: No A_. So this doesn't go so fast this way. And when I speak about method I speak about the marketing of the product huh.
Sean Brooks: And uh to Sean Brooks with this product we got uh we got basically three things to market. We've got the features, we have the uh characteristics, and we have the I I don't know what we would call the other part what we call you know the the the corp corporate Help Sean Brooks. The the corporation stands behind the product, okay. So the features I think we got the scroll, we've got the uh the locator, we've
Thomas Taylor: It
Sean Brooks: got
Thomas Taylor: fell
Sean Brooks: the durability,
Thomas Taylor: off.
Sean Brooks: we've got the dependability, we've got you know the
Danilo Jones: Beep
Sean Brooks: features
Danilo Jones: beep beep.
Sean Brooks: that make this a unique product. Um the characteristics I talk about, we have reliability, we have comfort, we have ergonomics, we have environmentally s sensitive. Uh and the corporation, we're talking about we're we're a new we're a new company. We're wanting to make a name for ourself. We're wanting you to uh find our product so we're gonna give you a good product at a fair price. One thing I would want to to see is uh is can we can we get a lifetime uh guarantee on this product, a normal use guarantee, which means that this product, for the for the life of of the life use, if it should have a technical problem, that we could re replace it at no cost? That was something I would be interested in. Um so yeah without uh going into great details, we have a we have a product, it has the features and the characteristics, and the background, I believe, to make it marketable I believe at a cost of of of thirty thirty five to to fifty Euros. We're gonna be competitive, and we're gonna we're gonna have a market niche. Um
Justin Osborne: Do you
Sean Brooks: w
Justin Osborne: would you a argue that that we're better going for the higher cost than bringing it down into twenty f five as we probably could, but lowering our profit margins?
Sean Brooks: That that would be uh that would be I think a decision best made by corporate um I I m for my evaluation, based on what our competition is, I th I think that that we can go after this and and and go after more of the uh exclusivity sense than the mass market sense.
Justin Osborne: Mm-hmm. Mm 'kay.
Sean Brooks: But I'm sh I'm sure open to to market this in either direction. But you guys came up with a great product, and at that cost I think it uh there's nobody else that's putting this this combination of of ingredients together. The only limitations I see to this is that we're focused on television only. Uh that's the only that's the only drawback I see to this. But with all of these other features I think people c one thing I'm I'm hoping for is people are not gonna even notice. There's gonna be somebody going home and say oh sh this thing doesn't work for my D_V_D_ and my but I like these other things, so they keep it, they don't take it
Justin Osborne: And
Sean Brooks: back.
Justin Osborne: we're actually quite open to be able to expand the product for a later version with those features quite simply anyway, aren't we? Th there's no fundamentally different technology
Sean Brooks: Well one of
Justin Osborne: to do
Sean Brooks: one
Justin Osborne: that.
Sean Brooks: of the thoughts that I had is can can this unit be be produced in a way that makes it upgradable? You know
Justin Osborne: Hmm.
Sean Brooks: uh like like a um a sim card in a in a um in a telephone. You know is there a card in th can we make a card and so after
Thomas Taylor: W we need we need we need s some more buttons if it would to work on some other stuff,
Danilo Jones: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Taylor: but
Sean Brooks: Mm-hmm, but you follow what
Thomas Taylor: We
Sean Brooks: I'm s I'm
Thomas Taylor: we
Sean Brooks: s
Thomas Taylor: w yeah we could get another version of it that actually works.
Sean Brooks: Yeah 'cause
Thomas Taylor: But
Sean Brooks: if
Thomas Taylor: uh
Sean Brooks: if we can make this unit upgradable then we're yeah but then we talk about changing the warranty concept and everything, but that's that was just an idea I had. Uh to Sean Brooks
Justin Osborne: Yeah,
Sean Brooks: the only
Justin Osborne: the
Sean Brooks: additions
Justin Osborne: plus there's the the risk of making it unusable as well, or making it less b because at the moment it's actually very straightforward to look at all the buttons, you know what they do, it's very
Sean Brooks: Yeah.
Justin Osborne: simple, and it just works.
Sean Brooks: Yep.
Justin Osborne: Mm there's a risk of that.
Sean Brooks: But anyway that's uh
Justin Osborne: Okay so we can talk about finance now. So I have a little spreadsheet for us where I I was wondering, you when you talked about the fifteen point eight Euros, I was wondering how you came up with that figure?
Danilo Jones: Well, that was just just our technical team added up the um production costs of the individual units.
Justin Osborne: Okay so I have bit of a spreadsheet here for this.
Thomas Taylor: Very
Danilo Jones: Oh.
Thomas Taylor: co
Justin Osborne: Now
Thomas Taylor: very colf
Justin Osborne: I've
Thomas Taylor: colourful.
Justin Osborne: made a f few assumptions here in that I'm assuming that our power adaptor
Danilo Jones: Uh-huh.
Justin Osborne: we can make for a cost of four Euros, equivalent to solar cells, which I think is probably fair considering that we have in-house manufacturing of power adaptors already.
Danilo Jones: Uh-huh.
Justin Osborne: Uh and I'm assuming that the locator beacon, the you know the
Sean Brooks: Mm-hmm.
Danilo Jones: Yeah.
Thomas Taylor: beep beep beep.
Justin Osborne: Can be made for it sounded different that time uh can be made
Danilo Jones: Oh,
Justin Osborne: for
Danilo Jones: sorry.
Justin Osborne: a similar price to uh an L_C_ display, uh an uh Uh do you think that's fair coming from a m the manufacturing?
Danilo Jones: Yeah um I do think we that we we uh don't need the events chip on print, we only need the uh the regular chip on print, so
Justin Osborne: Okay.
Danilo Jones: there may have been a m miscalculation
Justin Osborne: Yep.
Danilo Jones: in there.
Justin Osborne: Okay. So we're down to sixteen point
Danilo Jones: And
Justin Osborne: four,
Danilo Jones: we
Justin Osborne: yeah.
Danilo Jones: and we have a single-curved uh
Justin Osborne: Is that a single-curved rather than a double-curved?
Danilo Jones: Uh I think that
Justin Osborne: We're not entirely sure what single-curve
Sean Brooks: We've got a we've
Justin Osborne: versus
Sean Brooks: got a curve
Justin Osborne: double-cur
Sean Brooks: and a droop. I don't know whether that.
Danilo Jones: It's single-curved,
Justin Osborne: You think? Okay
Danilo Jones: yeah.
Justin Osborne: I'm convinced. But we save one Euro that way, yeah? So we come bring it down to Fifteen
Danilo Jones: See it's a little
Justin Osborne: point
Danilo Jones: bit
Justin Osborne: four.
Danilo Jones: more than f single-curved. So yeah it's fifteen point eight, that's where we came up with it.
Justin Osborne: Well hang on. Do don't speak so
Danilo Jones: Okay.
Justin Osborne: it's in here, in that w do we have any we have special form don't we?
Thomas Taylor: Yeah.
Danilo Jones: Yeah we do.
Justin Osborne: So that's yeah.
Danilo Jones: Ah.
Justin Osborne: But
Danilo Jones: What do
Justin Osborne: the
Danilo Jones: you know.
Justin Osborne: the the we haven't talked about any special colour though uh I don't th
Danilo Jones: Oh it's a that's
Justin Osborne: think
Danilo Jones: not
Justin Osborne: we're
Danilo Jones: very special, it's pretty
Justin Osborne: O okay so we're Push-button,
Danilo Jones: If
Thomas Taylor: We don't
Justin Osborne: scroll wheel, we're basically
Danilo Jones: th.
Justin Osborne: we have uh th is this intended to be a button as well or just a scroll?
Thomas Taylor: It's a scroll.
Danilo Jones: That's a scroll.
Justin Osborne: Just a scroll? It's not one of the scrolls where, for example, with this one you could push it down to be a button?
Danilo Jones: Uh no we just
Sean Brooks: Ooh.
Danilo Jones: use it as a scroll.
Justin Osborne: Okay then we have fifteen point eight Euros.
Danilo Jones: It was a pretty accurate estimate I
Justin Osborne: It
Danilo Jones: would
Thomas Taylor: Yes.
Justin Osborne: wasn't
Danilo Jones: say.
Justin Osborne: bad.
Thomas Taylor: We're wicked.
Danilo Jones: Yeah.
Thomas Taylor: Awesome.
Justin Osborne: Okay so we're on
Danilo Jones: S
Justin Osborne: to
Danilo Jones: 's
Justin Osborne: the
Danilo Jones: kind of s frighteningly accurate.
Thomas Taylor: Yeah.
Justin Osborne: We're on to the pat-on-the-back part of the presentation, where we have a look at the criterias th that Paul the criterion criteria that Paul has has given us, and we can use that to tell How's it going? Anyone got any
Danilo Jones: What?
Justin Osborne: thoughts? How how have we done today?
Danilo Jones: I think we did pretty well.
Thomas Taylor: Yeah.
Justin Osborne: I think we did pretty well too. That looks pretty spectacular.
Sean Brooks: No, I think we come up with a with a attractive marketable um product and and concept.
Justin Osborne: Any other chang uh thoughts?
Justin Osborne: Okay so th th what about um room for creativity?
Thomas Taylor: That
Justin Osborne: Is
Thomas Taylor: was
Justin Osborne: it
Thomas Taylor: mm-hmm
Danilo Jones: Sh
Justin Osborne: the.
Danilo Jones: I think there was plenty of room.
Thomas Taylor: Yeah.
Justin Osborne: I I think we we
Danilo Jones: We got
Justin Osborne: ended
Danilo Jones: a couple
Justin Osborne: up being
Danilo Jones: innovative
Justin Osborne: quite creative
Danilo Jones: i
Justin Osborne: there.
Sean Brooks: Yeah well
Danilo Jones: Couple
Sean Brooks: we
Danilo Jones: innovative ideas.
Sean Brooks: we we kinda broke we kinda at least adjusted every every criteria they gave us because we
Justin Osborne: Mm.
Sean Brooks: d we still have the the teletext capability in this thing right,
Thomas Taylor: No.
Danilo Jones: Mm-hmm.
Sean Brooks: we raised the price of it,
Thomas Taylor: Yeah.
Sean Brooks: we've added two t new technology to it. So you know you know if this thing flies then we've we've adjusted or broken every every idea they gave us.
Justin Osborne: Not
Thomas Taylor: Basically.
Justin Osborne: every idea necessarily, it's still a remote control.
Sean Brooks: Yeah yeah yeah yeah.
Justin Osborne: Uh no yeah but we did we did break with the specs a little bit I guess, but the uh
Sean Brooks: But I like I mean when I say we have we had I believe we have room for creativity 'cause w this is we did it.
Justin Osborne: 'Kay leadership, what do we report back to the bosses? No th th I think they were r reasonably flexible with us over the whole changing the specs thing.
Thomas Taylor: It
Danilo Jones: Yep.
Thomas Taylor: was more of a teamwork thing then really leadership based
Justin Osborne: I agree.
Thomas Taylor: project was Teamwork.
Sean Brooks: Cohesive yeah.
Justin Osborne: Synergy.
Sean Brooks: Yes synergistic yeah.
Danilo Jones: There was a lot of synergy.
Justin Osborne: Teamwork, yeah he is uh.
Sean Brooks: Yeah.
Justin Osborne: What did we think of the meeting room, I guess is an important thing here.
Danilo Jones: These
Justin Osborne: Mm.
Danilo Jones: cables suck.
Justin Osborne: Yeah,
Thomas Taylor: Yeah.
Justin Osborne: this falls off and
Danilo Jones: Yep.
Justin Osborne: uh
Thomas Taylor: And
Justin Osborne: the
Thomas Taylor: that's
Justin Osborne: white board worked really well without
Danilo Jones: Yeah.
Justin Osborne: any
Thomas Taylor: D you must
Justin Osborne: pro
Thomas Taylor: have very long shirts. That's way far down lapel mic.
Justin Osborne: Mm-mm, lapel. Wha
Thomas Taylor: Lapel lapel
Danilo Jones: Lapel.
Justin Osborne: okay,
Thomas Taylor: lapel.
Justin Osborne: oh, alright.
Thomas Taylor: That's almost a crotch mi cr
Justin Osborne: That's it's down, it's quite close.
Sean Brooks: You know you know what they're gonna
Justin Osborne: Keep
Sean Brooks: have
Justin Osborne: it,
Sean Brooks: on the recording
Justin Osborne: keep it
Sean Brooks: in
Justin Osborne: calm.
Sean Brooks: there from that microphone is your lunch digesting you know th
Thomas Taylor: Oh dear
Justin Osborne: Oh dear.
Thomas Taylor: oh dear.
Justin Osborne: No more pizza for Sean Brooks. So yeah the the pen came in alright and it's a little uncomfortable to use but I guess it works.
Thomas Taylor: 'Cause this is you were using it o upside down. Still that
Danilo Jones: That's our boss.
Justin Osborne: Nah, I'm I'm not convinced of that at all. I've been wor I've been wondering about that all day, but see these look like they're that looks the oth
Thomas Taylor: Use them
Justin Osborne: that
Thomas Taylor: like
Justin Osborne: looks
Thomas Taylor: that.
Justin Osborne: like it would be that way around,
Danilo Jones: Pedro's right.
Justin Osborne: but it feels more comfortable, wh what
Danilo Jones: Pedro's
Justin Osborne: you call upside-down.
Danilo Jones: right.
Justin Osborne: I don't care. Uh okay so that data might be slightly invalid. What new ideas have we found?
Danilo Jones: Oh
Sean Brooks: New ideas
Danilo Jones: wel
Sean Brooks: f uh for the product or for the the the the environment or what
Justin Osborne: Well
Sean Brooks: are we
Justin Osborne: let's
Sean Brooks: ta
Justin Osborne: do both then. Uh for the product?
Danilo Jones: Well we had the favourites list, and the scroll bar, and we have the cradle, and the r uh remote
Sean Brooks: Oh.
Danilo Jones: call feature.
Justin Osborne: Yeah we came up with quite a bit.
Thomas Taylor: Bunch of new ideas.
Justin Osborne: And for the meeting room, Has anyone got any more
Thomas Taylor: Yeah comfortable headsets would be nice.
Justin Osborne: Yeah
Sean Brooks: Well
Justin Osborne: less
Sean Brooks: I
Justin Osborne: sore
Sean Brooks: I mean
Justin Osborne: on
Thomas Taylor: Mm.
Justin Osborne: the ears.
Sean Brooks: clearly remote control microphones would be the would be a nice solution to all these cables, but I'm sure that there's there's some justification for these things that I don't know about. And of course I did not have so much fun with my computer this afternoon. It's not been uh it's not been cooperating so well, but I don't think that's the that's avoidable.
Thomas Taylor: Coulda been worse.
Justin Osborne: Okay so Are the costs within the budget?
Thomas Taylor: Mm
Sean Brooks: No.
Thomas Taylor: n
Justin Osborne: Nope.
Thomas Taylor: no.
Justin Osborne: Oh hang on it really that's something we that the costs were under twelve fifty Euros. No requirements are changed. We're still under twenty Euros to build, so we're good. And the costs within the budget? Not the original budget, but they are now. Is the project evaluated? Mm I think so yeah, then celebration
Thomas Taylor: Hooray.
Justin Osborne: as it says.
Sean Brooks: Okay.
Thomas Taylor: Free coke provided at the cafeteria.
Danilo Jones: All right.
Justin Osborne: Oh I don't know how that got there. Uh anyway.
Thomas Taylor: Who wrote
Justin Osborne: Thank
Thomas Taylor: that one?
Sean Brooks: So we need to
Justin Osborne: Thanks
Sean Brooks: close
Justin Osborne: guys.
Sean Brooks: this meeting, yeah bravo. Congratulations.
Thomas Taylor: Cool.
Danilo Jones: Good job guys.
Sean Brooks: S I've got a lot of paperwork to catch up on so let's close this and come back
Justin Osborne: Yeah, I've got a lot of paperwork
Sean Brooks: and 'kay.
Justin Osborne: to catch up on too. Oh. | Danilo Jones and Thomas Taylor presented the prototype to the group and displayed all of its components. They demonstrated how the locator function operates. They suggested that a trigger button should be included in a later designing phase to improve the feel of the product. Sean Brooks gave an evaluation of the product and felt that it satisfied his criteria. He suggested including a lifetime guarantee and expressed concern that the remote would only be used for televisions. Justin Osborne discussed the final production cost with the group; after an analysis of all of the components the final cost was 15.8 Euros. Justin Osborne then led a discussion about the group's experience on the project. The group felt that they worked well together and that they had room to be creative, but only after they changed many of the initial specifications. They also had difficulties using the meeting-room equipment. They were satisfied with the increased final cost and budget. | 1 | amisum | train |
David Johnson: So we can start?
Samuel Corbett: Yeah.
David Johnson: Suppose I have to do my presentation.
David Bowe: Ah okay.
David Johnson: Eh um
David Bowe: It's Ada Longmund?
David Johnson: So, I'll present myself, I'm Ada Longmund, and as you may know it, I'm the pr project manager. So um we will have to um speak about m the project. Our project project is to create um a new remote control and as you may know there's lot of industrials interesting in creating a remote control, so the remote control has to be original, trendy and um user-friendly. Record. So method is the following. So if we're um the functional design, you have to do uh any individual work and uh also work with uh meetings talking with each other. Uh it will be the same for the conceptual design and also the same for the detailed design. Uh. The tool training is to try out the white board,
Samuel Corbett: Mm-hmm.
David Johnson: so
David Bowe: Maybe someone ha we have to this whiteboard, yeah?
David Johnson: Maybe you can draw your favourite animal and
Samuel Corbett: So
David Johnson: make
Samuel Corbett: right
David Johnson: a
Samuel Corbett: now?
David Johnson: list of its favourite characteristics. I don't know if we have to do
Daniel Guerrero: So
David Johnson: it
Daniel Guerrero: yeah
David Johnson: now,
Daniel Guerrero: I think
David Johnson: maybe
Daniel Guerrero: you can
David Johnson: later
Daniel Guerrero: do it.
David Johnson: later.
David Bowe: Yeah, I don't know.
David Johnson: So the selling price of the product will be twenty five Euros.
Daniel Guerrero: Twenty five
Samuel Corbett: Mm.
David Johnson: Yeah.
Daniel Guerrero: Euros?
David Johnson: Yeah. I think it's quite
David Bowe: I it's
David Johnson: good
David Bowe: it's
David Johnson: price,
David Bowe: reasonable, s
Samuel Corbett: It's
David Bowe: quite
David Johnson: yeah.
David Bowe: yeah.
Samuel Corbett: reasonable, I think,
David Bowe: Twenty
Samuel Corbett: yeah.
David Bowe: five.
David Johnson: And uh
David Bowe: Is
David Johnson: it will uh be a an international remote control, as we want to sell it in the entire world, and the product costs will be not more than twelve Euros and fifty centimes. So, as you will discuss about the remote control you will have to experience your um with the remote control. Um just uh maybe be imaginative with remote const con controls, try to create something new and people would like to to buy. And and the next meeting will start in thirty minutes, so you'll ha all have your spethisfispis specif specific role and you know I suppose you know what you have to do. And
David Bowe: Yeah. I I hope
David Johnson: uh
David Bowe: so
David Johnson: you will have to work on the design and also to work on the design of th technical fun functions of the remote control and think of the user requirement specifications.
Samuel Corbett: Those things just refer to each of each of us, I think.
Daniel Guerrero: Yep.
David Johnson: Yeah.
Samuel Corbett: AMI and okay.
David Johnson: I_D_, yeah.
Daniel Guerrero: Yeah.
David Johnson: So
David Bowe: I_D_ is for the Industrial Design, yeah?
Samuel Corbett: Okay.
David Bowe: And U_I_D_, it's for Daniel Guerrero,
Daniel Guerrero: That's Samuel Corbett.
Samuel Corbett: Okay, and Marketing
David Bowe: yeah?
Samuel Corbett: Expert, it's Samuel Corbett.
David Bowe: AMI yeah project.
David Johnson: So I will manage all all
David Bowe: you
David Johnson: the group.
David Bowe: will be the manager
Samuel Corbett: You can manage all this,
David Bowe: yeah
Samuel Corbett: yeah.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
Samuel Corbett: Good.
David Johnson: So you have questions?
Samuel Corbett: Um. Not really.
David Johnson: So you all know what the parts of the work you have to do.
Daniel Guerrero: Yeah.
Samuel Corbett: So which you, David Bowe.
Daniel Guerrero: No I'm user
David Bowe: I am the
Daniel Guerrero: interf
David Bowe: Industrial Design,
Daniel Guerrero: I'm user
David Bowe: yeah
Daniel Guerrero: interface design.
Samuel Corbett: Okay.
David Johnson: Mm-hmm. And you?
David Bowe: I am David Bowe so.
David Johnson: Mm okay.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
Samuel Corbett: Yeah.
Daniel Guerrero: So what's the difference between user interface design
David Johnson: Hmm.
Daniel Guerrero: d
Samuel Corbett: I mean, you
Daniel Guerrero: industrial
Samuel Corbett: have to know.
Daniel Guerrero: design?
Samuel Corbett: Ah, you have to know it.
David Bowe: It's difficult.
Samuel Corbett: It's your job, I hope you you know what it is.
David Bowe: You know very soon.
Daniel Guerrero: Yeah, I think so.
David Bowe: So
Samuel Corbett: Mm.
David Johnson: I suppose you have to design it and you have to take care of the industrial way to transform
Daniel Guerrero: Okay, so
David Johnson: it.
Daniel Guerrero: I make uh
Samuel Corbett: Yeah.
Daniel Guerrero: u user interface. You you
David Johnson: And i maybe
Daniel Guerrero: de you
David Johnson: you
Daniel Guerrero: implement
David Johnson: will transform
Daniel Guerrero: the
David Johnson: it.
Daniel Guerrero: core functions
David Bowe: I I
Daniel Guerrero: in
David Bowe: think
Daniel Guerrero: the
David Bowe: the user the user interface design is he will design how the user will
Daniel Guerrero: Use
David Bowe: you know the
Daniel Guerrero: it.
David Bowe: relation between the user and
Daniel Guerrero: Make
David Bowe: you know
Daniel Guerrero: make
David Bowe: the remote
Daniel Guerrero: yeah.
David Bowe: control so And the uh industrial design, it is how the object will look like.
Daniel Guerrero: Maybe I think
David Bowe: Yeah. So the materi
Daniel Guerrero: design. I design the user f user interface, you design the function.
David Johnson: Maybe, it is the outside and the inside.
Daniel Guerrero: Yeah.
Samuel Corbett: Okay.
David Bowe: Okay
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
David Bowe: right. But I was thinking that he's a user 'cause the user interface to design for example where the but button will be, you know.
Daniel Guerrero: Yeah yeah.
David Bowe: But I don't know. Okay.
Samuel Corbett: Well. You know.
David Bowe: I'm David Bowe.
Samuel Corbett: Oh, okay, okay. Not the other one.
David Bowe: So.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
David Bowe: Okay. So and Samuel Corbett will
Samuel Corbett: Yeah, I'm just go I'm trying to give you some trends about what should be done and what the users would like to have
David Johnson: And
Samuel Corbett: and then
David Johnson: yeah.
Samuel Corbett: thi this would I guess converged to Daniel Guerrero wi and then Industrial
David Bowe: Ok
Samuel Corbett: Designer.
David Bowe: Okay.
David Johnson: And when designing y the remote control just remember that uh it has to be a kind of international product.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
David Johnson: So you don't have to do something really specific,
Daniel Guerrero: Mm-hmm.
David Johnson: as
Samuel Corbett: Mm.
David Johnson: everybody everybody will have to use it, it's sor the same as keyboards.
Daniel Guerrero: Yeah.
David Johnson: You know, you have Qwerty, Azerty, French and U_K_
Daniel Guerrero: Mm.
David Johnson: keyboard,
Daniel Guerrero: Yeah.
David Johnson: so really the remote control to be international.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
Samuel Corbett: Mm-hmm.
David Johnson: And not too expensive.
Daniel Guerrero: Yeah. And uh simple.
David Johnson: As we want to
Daniel Guerrero: And
David Johnson: maximise
Daniel Guerrero: easy to
David Johnson: the
Daniel Guerrero: use.
David Johnson: benefit.
Samuel Corbett: And you have to keep it under twelve Euros and f
David Johnson: Yeah,
Samuel Corbett: fifty,
Daniel Guerrero: Ah,
David Johnson: you
Samuel Corbett: so.
David Johnson: have to
Daniel Guerrero: yeah.
David Johnson: keep in mind that
Samuel Corbett: That's the
David Bowe: It should
Samuel Corbett: problem.
David Johnson: the
David Bowe: be
David Johnson: product cost won't be maxim more
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
David Johnson: than twelve dot fifty Euros.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
David Johnson: And to be sure that really people will be interested in buying a new remote control with maybe new functionalities that don't exist in the mm existing remote controls now.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
David Johnson: So, is it okay?
Samuel Corbett: Mm.
Daniel Guerrero: Yeah.
Samuel Corbett: It's clear.
David Bowe: There was a step about drawing something in the in the board, I don't know.
Samuel Corbett: Yeah, maybe should go and draw an animal.
David Bowe: Is it? Are we supposed to do right now?
Daniel Guerrero: Yeah yeah, you try. Try
David Bowe: Oh
Daniel Guerrero: first.
David Bowe: right it's it's from the left to the ri It's
David Johnson: So you think we have to do it now?
David Bowe: I d I was thinking but I n I'm not sure now.
Daniel Guerrero: You can draw something which is very simple.
David Bowe: Oh
David Johnson: You want Samuel Corbett to draw something?
David Bowe: Everybody
David Johnson: Product manager okay,
Daniel Guerrero: Oh, maybe we should
David Johnson: let's
Daniel Guerrero: bring
David Johnson: go,
Daniel Guerrero: Kemy
David Johnson: I will try.
Daniel Guerrero: here. Kemy
Samuel Corbett: Many
Daniel Guerrero: is really good at drawing.
David Bowe: I think everybody should do it, so.
Samuel Corbett: Yeah.
David Bowe: It's not matter So.
Daniel Guerrero: You're going to draw? Okay.
Samuel Corbett: Uh it's the same as mine.
David Bowe: yeah. It's
Daniel Guerrero: What's
David Bowe: a
Daniel Guerrero: this?
David Bowe: It's a cat.
Daniel Guerrero: It's a fat cat.
David Bowe: It is not a fat cat.
Samuel Corbett: It's the fat cat, okay.
David Bowe: Yeah, it is a
Daniel Guerrero: Can you draw uh um rabbit? Oh, hat ha rat.
Samuel Corbett: A rat?
Daniel Guerrero: Yeah.
Samuel Corbett: That's difficult.
David Bowe: Yes you have to draw a rat if you want
David Johnson: No.
David Bowe: a rat.
David Johnson: A mouse is not
David Bowe: It's
David Johnson: too difficult.
David Bowe: your
David Johnson: Mouse
David Bowe: rat.
David Johnson: is okay.
Daniel Guerrero: Yeah, it's okay.
Samuel Corbett: Yeah. Just go, you you
David Bowe: Okay,
Samuel Corbett: the closest
David Bowe: go
Samuel Corbett: to the whiteboard.
Daniel Guerrero: Mm.
Samuel Corbett: Jus
David Bowe: right, but in grow, it's everybody
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
David Bowe: has to grow
Samuel Corbett: Yeah.
Daniel Guerrero: Oh. Okay, I draw. The only thing I can draw is like this. Oh. Oh. Oh.
Samuel Corbett: A duck.
Daniel Guerrero: No.
David Bowe: What
Daniel Guerrero: What's
David Bowe: are
Daniel Guerrero: this?
David Bowe: you I don no idea,
David Johnson: You
David Bowe: so
David Johnson: love the eyes. Yeah, that was the eyes.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
David Johnson: A clown. Rabbit.
David Bowe: It's a rabbit.
Samuel Corbett: Pikachu.
David Johnson: It's a rabbit.
Samuel Corbett: Oh yeah. Bugs Bunny one.
David Johnson: Yeah.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
David Bowe: It's not so bad so.
Daniel Guerrero: The only thing I can draw, because it's very simple.
Samuel Corbett: Okay. I go.
Samuel Corbett: What? Oh. So what else? This was my favourite one, but
David Bowe: So you don't have a
David Johnson: Thank you.
David Bowe: A fish.
Samuel Corbett: Right. A
David Bowe: That's a
Samuel Corbett: fish.
David Bowe: that's a fish? Okay, let's try to draw something.
David Johnson: You forgot the chips.
Samuel Corbett: Oh yeah, doesn't look so fine.
David Bowe: Have to be really careful.
David Johnson: Fish and chips.
Samuel Corbett: Okay,
David Bowe: Ah
Samuel Corbett: it's your turn.
Daniel Guerrero: Oh.
David Bowe: it's my turn.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay, be careful.
David Bowe: Okay. So.
David Johnson: Of
Daniel Guerrero: No problem, no problem.
David Bowe: It's ok So, what can I draw some more?
David Johnson: Oh.
David Bowe: No.
David Bowe: Mm
David Bowe: Yeah, it's it's a se it's my priority this one. Yeah.
Samuel Corbett: Mm.
Daniel Guerrero: A person?
David Bowe: No. It's a really crazy dog
Daniel Guerrero: Dog.
David Johnson: Oh yeah.
David Bowe: Okay.
Samuel Corbett: Good.
David Bowe: Transfer. It's a dog in a village.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
David Bowe: So what are you sug going to do now?
Samuel Corbett: I think it's done.
David Johnson: Yeah,
David Bowe: It's done?
David Johnson: I think
Samuel Corbett: Yeah.
David Johnson: yeah.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
David Johnson: Just have to
Daniel Guerrero: So we
David Johnson: present
Daniel Guerrero: have break.
David Johnson: project, discuss a little bit about it.
David Bowe: Oh my God.
Samuel Corbett: Oh, we have twenty five minutes for the meeting.
David Johnson: Yeah.
Samuel Corbett: Okay.
David Johnson: So,
Daniel Guerrero: Oh.
David Johnson: if you have questions.
Daniel Guerrero: Hmm.
Samuel Corbett: Know what time is it? No.
Daniel Guerrero: No.
David Johnson: It's okay?
David Bowe: Yeah, it's okay.
David Johnson: You know your job? you know your job?
David Bowe: We have
David Johnson: You
David Bowe: an
David Johnson: know
David Bowe: idea
David Johnson: your job?
David Bowe: yeah. I have an idea of my job so
David Johnson: Okay.
David Bowe: yeah so. Yeah.
Daniel Guerrero: Okay.
Samuel Corbett: Good. | David Johnson introduced the upcoming project to the team members and discussed the roles of each member and the selling price for the remote they will produce. Then the team participated in an exercise in which they all drew animals. | 1 | amisum | train |
Michael Smith: So, I will open our functional design meeting.
Willie Davis: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: So, I will play role of the secretary. As also Program Ma Manager. So, we will have the three presentations from the In
William Keen: Industrial
Michael Smith: Industrial
William Keen: Design.
Michael Smith: Designer, User Interface Designer and um
Willie Davis: Marketing
Michael Smith: What's your
Willie Davis: Expert.
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: talk? Marketing Experts.
Willie Davis: Mm.
Michael Smith: And after that we uh will have the uh new product requirements, the decision on the remote control functions, and we will close the meetings after. Mm so um I suppose the first to do the presentation will be John Morosow.
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: Um, so you're participant two?
William Keen: One one.
John Morosow: No no no.
Michael Smith: No you're
John Morosow: One.
Michael Smith: No, I'm
William Keen: Three three,
Michael Smith: participant
William Keen: it's three sorry.
John Morosow: I
Michael Smith: one.
John Morosow: I think I'm a.
Michael Smith: Okay, never mind.
Willie Davis: Okay.
Michael Smith: 'Kay, did you save your presentation?
John Morosow: In one.
William Keen: In one, sorry.
Willie Davis: Yeah
Michael Smith: Isn't that technical functions?
Willie Davis: No sure.
William Keen: So you didn't save it maybe.
John Morosow: It's mine.
Willie Davis: Uh
William Keen: Alright,
Willie Davis: it's
William Keen: so
Willie Davis: David
Michael Smith: Name's Jordan.
Willie Davis: Jordan. Course.
Michael Smith: So
William Keen: David Jordan?
John Morosow: Mm yeah.
William Keen: Mm-hmm.
Willie Davis: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: so I'll I let David Jordan do his presentation.
John Morosow: Okay.
Willie Davis: No, no. Uh this one doesn't want
Michael Smith: Uh.
Willie Davis: to be moved, I
William Keen: Too
Willie Davis: think.
William Keen: great for
John Morosow: Okay,
William Keen: email
John Morosow: so.
William Keen: then.
John Morosow: The first I will present the technical function design for user interface for our uh remote T_V_ control.
William Keen: Yeah.
John Morosow: Uh I I will focus on user interface design. Um
Michael Smith: Mm.
John Morosow: so move to the next slide. As we know our remote c rem remote T_V_ control it's very has very soph sophisticated functions, as we show from this picture. Over, I think over s twelve or twenty s functions of a remote T_V_ control. So how can we um design a user interface with so sa with so many sophisticated functions? Um, let's move to next slide. Um. Yeah. So I so we want to design uh elegant, easy to use inter interface. A very good example is Google. As we know uh Google it's a very successful because his um powerful function, but with very easy to use user interface. Um so move to next s slide. So my job is to uh design a Google T_V_ controller which I want to have sophisticated functions while with very easy to use user interface. So That's the end of the talk the end of the presentation.
Michael Smith: So you propose to to have the
John Morosow: Uh
Michael Smith: remote control which will be
John Morosow: With sophisticated
Michael Smith: powerful.
John Morosow: functions, but
Michael Smith: So
John Morosow: with
Michael Smith: powerful,
John Morosow: very yeah powerful.
Michael Smith: many functions
John Morosow: Yes.
Michael Smith: and very easy to use.
John Morosow: Yep.
Willie Davis: So, I dunno, it's maybe difficult to
William Keen: To merge the
Willie Davis: have
William Keen: two system
Willie Davis: both,
William Keen: huh.
Willie Davis: I mean the
John Morosow: Yeah.
Willie Davis: the one on the right doesn't look so simple and Yeah.
Michael Smith: You mean this one?
Willie Davis: Yeah.
Michael Smith: Yeah you have to learn the manual before using this remote control, I suppose.
William Keen: Mm yep. But
John Morosow: But if we
William Keen: But
John Morosow: have
William Keen: this
John Morosow: very
William Keen: is
John Morosow: very good user interface
William Keen: Yeah.
John Morosow: it
Willie Davis: Yeah,
John Morosow: take
Willie Davis: and
John Morosow: less
Willie Davis: then
John Morosow: time
Willie Davis: Yeah.
John Morosow: for user to learn how to use it.
William Keen: Yeah you maybe you have some international standards, where you know, if you can use one is the other are or almost the same, so the sign.
Michael Smith: Oh you mean for the yeah pic
William Keen: Yeah,
Michael Smith: pictograms or things like
William Keen: yeah.
Michael Smith: that?
William Keen: For example, I dunno here, escape, you know, you have escape in computers you have, so if you see escape, you know that it should be
Willie Davis: Oh
William Keen: the
Willie Davis: it
William Keen: same.
Willie Davis: should okay, yeah.
William Keen: So
Willie Davis: The
William Keen: you
Willie Davis: user
William Keen: have
Willie Davis: should know.
William Keen: to The sh the user there for example the power off button it is something very international, you know that So.
Michael Smith: Yeah um such as maybe the
William Keen: Yeah. So.
Michael Smith: Go on, go back and
William Keen: Yeah, but the question is how to merge you know the Google system to the system, alright.
Willie Davis: Yeah,
John Morosow: Yeah, that's
Willie Davis: that's
John Morosow: my
Willie Davis: gonna
John Morosow: job.
Willie Davis: be the trick.
William Keen: That's your
John Morosow: That's my
William Keen: job
John Morosow: job. It's not the easiest I've got to.
William Keen: It you
Michael Smith: So, you will propose us something which is yeah so powerful and easy to use.
John Morosow: Yep.
Michael Smith: Okay.
Willie Davis: Okay.
John Morosow: Powerful and easy to use.
Willie Davis: So that's the point.
John Morosow: Yeah, that's the point.
Michael Smith: So, next I propose the Industrial User
William Keen: Okay,
Michael Smith: Interface to
William Keen: okay.
Michael Smith: present things. So you you're
William Keen: Participant two. Yeah.
Michael Smith: Um. Okay.
William Keen: The rationale
Michael Smith: So,
William Keen: must
Michael Smith: Baba is the uh the
William Keen: be
Michael Smith: Industrial
William Keen: design, or
Michael Smith: Designer. Okay.
William Keen: So we can move to the next slide. As you all know, you know m my job is to design you know uh to give an industrial design of the remote control. So the re basically the remote control will be, you know, infrared control, so
Michael Smith: Mm-hmm.
William Keen: the problem is how to relate the how to relate the remote control device, like for example this one I h I'm holding in my hand and the T_V_. So, this one is leather bu based but
Willie Davis: Mm.
William Keen: I propose a nifra infrared base you know, so so for Willie Davis I think that it is better it's bet it's better to control T_V_ so you know, so it's it will be cheaper and it is less technology than, you know For the cheap price we have, for the cheap price we want to
Willie Davis: True.
Michael Smith: So you mean that infrared control is a cheap technology?
William Keen: I think it's cheaper than laser, so.
Michael Smith: Yeah.
Willie Davis: Okay.
Michael Smith: Do y you know the requirements for the remote control? Twelve,
Willie Davis: What
Michael Smith: nearly thirteen,
Willie Davis: the cost
Michael Smith: yeah.
Willie Davis: is?
Michael Smith: The
William Keen: Yeah,
Michael Smith: cost
William Keen: I think
Willie Davis: Twelve,
William Keen: for the
Willie Davis: twelve
William Keen: cost
Willie Davis: a
William Keen: we
Willie Davis: half.
William Keen: want for the cost we want it's better to have uh uh Let's see. Yeah. You can move to the next slide, so. So the di the differen the findings you know what you find inside the re i the the system here inside it is just, you know a bulb and an infrared bulb, so here for example the infrared bulb will be here
Michael Smith: Mm-hmm.
William Keen: and the bulb it will be somewhere inside.
Willie Davis: That might
William Keen: You can go
Michael Smith: Okay.
William Keen: to
Willie Davis: just
William Keen: the next slide. I have
Willie Davis: So.
William Keen: some kind of pictures you know, here. You have the b the bulb, it is a blue the blue stuff here and
Michael Smith: Yeah.
William Keen: the infrared and the infrared bulb it is the red stuff you know and so and you have the other subcomponent that are not really here so important, so.
Michael Smith: What is this?
William Keen: This is in fact some other component that are in between the electrical de the electronic
Michael Smith: Okay.
William Keen: device. Look. But here what I wanted to emphasise it is just you know the bulb and.
Michael Smith: Okay.
William Keen: So and the next slide, it is the last one it's So it's I think it should be wire wireless re remote con Because you know, it's easier to manage and you know because you f the b the the battery problem can hold you know will you use a battery or the a wire to connected you. Or maybe some kind of thing that we can have both, but you know, I at my side prefer a wireless.
Michael Smith: Okay.
William Keen: Okay, so
Willie Davis: Okay.
William Keen: if you have some question I didn't answer?
Willie Davis: What's the average price of this technology then?
William Keen: Well the avera the average prices I think that this technology will cost, I dunno, around eight Euros, so. Or at least you know, the
John Morosow: So what, the wireless remote control? There's a wire with remote control?
William Keen: You'd yes, you can. It's so so bres you have to decide how how you will you know, put some energy inside, so you can think about wireless or you know it's it's a question that we can raise, so. We can think that you know, with the wire, you know, without a wire. We can have both also.
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: So you think that uh a cable between the remote control and the T_V_
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: won't be a good
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: idea. No it wou maybe it will be cheaper I dunno, I just may maybe you making
Willie Davis: But this
Michael Smith: a solu
Willie Davis: is what you would like to ask the user first and I don't think the user would be ready to have a
Michael Smith: Yeah,
John Morosow: Wireless remote control.
Michael Smith: but
William Keen: Yeah, but
Willie Davis: I don't
William Keen: some
Willie Davis: think
William Keen: pa
Willie Davis: well, yeah, I don't think he
William Keen: I always
Willie Davis: would,
William Keen: want to
Willie Davis: but
William Keen: have you
Willie Davis: in
William Keen: know,
Willie Davis: a
William Keen: sometime
Willie Davis: sense
William Keen: I want to have wire because
Michael Smith: Yeah
William Keen: you
Michael Smith: but
William Keen: know.
Michael Smith: as Industrial Designer, do you think that it will be feasible to have uh linked or to have link between the remote control and the television? I'm just asking you. Do you think it will be cheaper?
William Keen: Uh, I don't think it will be too much.
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: Could you answer please?
William Keen: Have to think about the question, you know, 'cause it's I
Michael Smith: Okay.
William Keen: think that you know you can always you know I think wha wha with the wire it's mm cheaper but you know the wireless it's more practical, so.
Michael Smith: Yeah, but I think the wireless problem is more the um David Jordan's problem.
John Morosow: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: As it's
Willie Davis: The wire?
Michael Smith: yeah.
Willie Davis: Yeah. True.
William Keen: Okay,
Michael Smith: I think
William Keen: yeah.
Michael Smith: it's more your problem. Mayb maybe you have just to to kind of research or
John Morosow: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: try to ask people if they will like something wireless or not.
Willie Davis: Uh that's my job. That's the
Michael Smith: Okay, I'm sorry. So
Willie Davis: Now the
William Keen: Yeah but, it should be an agreement, you know, because even if you can think of the wireless, it is it's it is the job of the the the g Graphical User Designer, but you know. If it is a lot cheaper and if you want to reach for example some the the money you have, if you want to use, so it can be good to have a wireless, it it is a question.
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: So just think of um the usability.
John Morosow: Design a wireless
Michael Smith: Yeah.
John Morosow: remote control.
Michael Smith: Just think of the problem. If when you have wireless remote control and if you lose
John Morosow: Yeah.
Michael Smith: it?
Willie Davis: Yeah.
Michael Smith: I think it's would be easier to have a link between the remote control and
Willie Davis: Well that's actually one of the
Michael Smith: the
Willie Davis: point,
Michael Smith: television,
Willie Davis: yeah?
Michael Smith: yeah.
Willie Davis: True. This you will see in my presentation then.
Michael Smith: So I will let you
Willie Davis: Yeah.
Michael Smith: to do
William Keen: Okay.
Michael Smith: your presentation, so.
Willie Davis: Which is participant four. So just trying to answer all the questions, if the user would be happy to have something or something else uh. We've made a study, so could you go to next slide. Sorry for the functional recurrence. So that's the standard method for marketing, okay. We had one hundred subjects, um, we observe their remote control use in a lab and then after all the experiments they had to fill up a questionnaire, um, and see what was okay or not for them.
William Keen: Mm-hmm.
Willie Davis: Okay. So then it's some statistics about what we observed and what they answered. Um actually seventy five percent of the users find m the most remote controls uh ugly, okay, so that's
Michael Smith: You mean the loo the
William Keen: The
Michael Smith: look,
William Keen: look,
Michael Smith: the
William Keen: how
Michael Smith: outside?
William Keen: it look
Michael Smith: Okay.
Willie Davis: Yeah,
William Keen: like.
Willie Davis: the the look is is bad for them so uh it's your job, David, maybe. Then eighty percent of users would spend more money um actually if if the remote controls were not so ugly. So this is where we could have uh yeah, good market, I guess,
William Keen: Yeah.
Willie Davis: if people are ready to pay more. So it's it's interesting information, I think. And then um yeah, the remote controls like the one you've shown previously it's not so doesn't fit the user requirements sometime, because it's too many buttons and so on. So we should change this as well. And uh users are actually zapping a lot, so they're using the device intensively, that's something to take into account as well. And um, you know, ten percent of the buttons are actually used in the remote control. And uh this is one of the main point for Willie Davis. But I'll come back to it later. 'Kay. Could you go next slide? Uh, so as you said
Michael Smith: Mm-hmm.
Willie Davis: uh, remote controls are often lost somewhere in the room. So this is from the experiments we've done, so if we could solve this problem this would be interesting for the user, I think. Um it takes too much time to learn how to use the remote control for thirty five percent of the people. And uh remote control are really bad for R_S_I_ problems for twenty six percent of the users.
Michael Smith: What is R_S_I_?
Willie Davis: R_S_I_ is like, when you're using the same um doing the same movement several times,
William Keen: Yeah.
Willie Davis: then you get injured.
Michael Smith: Ah um
Willie Davis: Okay?
Michael Smith: okay.
Willie Davis: So, those numbers are less important then the previous one, but still it has to be taken to count. So last slide. Um so my pres personal preferences for this problem is we have to meet the user needs. If we can make it look fancy then we might sell more than our uh concurrent, okay.
William Keen: Okay.
Michael Smith: Mm-hmm.
Willie Davis: And definitely if it could have less buttons, still maybe the same number of um
John Morosow: Functions.
Willie Davis: functions, but less buttons, this would definitely be a good way of selling more.
William Keen: Okay.
Willie Davis: Okay. So
Michael Smith: Mm okay. And just to have uh an idea, do you think you as John Morosow to would it be possible to have less buttons and
John Morosow: Yeah.
Michael Smith: still have the same functionality and to have powerful remote control, you think it's possible? Sure?
John Morosow: Yeah, I think
Michael Smith: Yeah?
John Morosow: possible. Because we can We can uh mix uh several function in one button.
Michael Smith: Yeah.
John Morosow: So lets you then you have less buttons.
Michael Smith: Yeah, but
John Morosow: But I'm
Michael Smith: do you
John Morosow: not
Michael Smith: think
John Morosow: sure
Michael Smith: it will be easy to use? Because if you have many functions just for one button it would be quite difficult for the user to know.
Willie Davis: Yeah, remember the user is not happy to read the
Michael Smith: Yeah,
William Keen: The manuals.
Michael Smith: I think
Willie Davis: manual.
Michael Smith: the
Willie Davis: It's
John Morosow: No you you can have a switch menu, so you can
Michael Smith: Yeah,
John Morosow: well
Michael Smith: but
John Morosow: for example
Michael Smith: it has to be intuitive.
John Morosow: Yeah, I think so. Like for for example you can uh you can category the function i i into several classes. Then for um you can have a switch menu, so
Michael Smith: Yeah,
John Morosow: you put
Michael Smith: okay.
John Morosow: the switch menu to it it tend to this kind of this category of functions.
Michael Smith: Okay,
John Morosow: Then you
Michael Smith: but
John Morosow: you put the switch button, then it switch to another category of functions. Yeah. For example, if you have remote control you you can rem you can control your T_V_ and also you can control your uh recorder.
William Keen: With
John Morosow: So
William Keen: a
John Morosow: there's a different functions, but i if you you there's a button you can switch between control T_V_ and control your recorder. So we can has less buttons.
Michael Smith: Yeah,
John Morosow: But
Michael Smith: but
John Morosow: what I'm not so sure is about how to make the remote control look funny look
William Keen: Look
John Morosow: fancy,
William Keen: fancy.
John Morosow: not funny.
William Keen: question that should
John Morosow: Because
William Keen: be asked to the
John Morosow: different people have a different opinion about fancy. You know.
William Keen: If you
Willie Davis: Yeah.
William Keen: ask the people, maybe the the marketing people.
Willie Davis: Yeah, this
John Morosow: Because
Willie Davis: is something
John Morosow: maybe
Willie Davis: we
John Morosow: a
Willie Davis: sh
John Morosow: colourful is fancy for some people, but maybe
Michael Smith: Mm-hmm.
John Morosow: simple and
Willie Davis: But this was
John Morosow: uh uniform
Willie Davis: first step and
John Morosow: colourful is fancy for some for other peoples, so.
Willie Davis: This
William Keen: I think
Willie Davis: was
William Keen: the solution
Willie Davis: the first step, yeah.
William Keen: is to have many colours of you know instead of having one grey
Michael Smith: Yeah, but I
William Keen: standard
Michael Smith: think it will increase the price of the production
Willie Davis: Specially distribution,
Michael Smith: of the remote
Willie Davis: yeah.
Michael Smith: control.
William Keen: Yeah, yeah, maybe. Yeah, maybe.
Michael Smith: If you need to have special colours for remote
Willie Davis: Uh
Michael Smith: controls it will
John Morosow: Yeah, personalised
Michael Smith: cost more.
John Morosow: colour. Because you
Michael Smith: Yeah,
John Morosow: know
Michael Smith: it will cost little bit more.
John Morosow: Yeah, because maybe some people prefer a red remote
William Keen: Yeah,
John Morosow: control,
William Keen: yeah,
John Morosow: some people
William Keen: yeah.
John Morosow: prefer black remote
Willie Davis: Yeah, but
John Morosow: control.
Willie Davis: this is what we would ask to the users, so.
Michael Smith: And
John Morosow: Maybe
Michael Smith: also
John Morosow: we
Michael Smith: f
John Morosow: can have di
Willie Davis: Yeah.
John Morosow: di we can have uh several options, so user can select which colour they prefer, so.
Michael Smith: Yeah, but as soon as you speak about options,
John Morosow: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: it means
Willie Davis: Yeah, remember
Michael Smith: that the price increases,
Willie Davis: it's
Michael Smith: and we don't really want
Willie Davis: twelve
Michael Smith: the
Willie Davis: Euros.
Michael Smith: price to be too too high, because we wanna be able to produce it. So, we want something fancy, as uh previously said, Florent, something very easy to use, powerful and also as uh it's written here, seventy five percent of users, they zap lot, so maybe just having many functions in one button
John Morosow: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: is not that good if you want to zap a lot.
Willie Davis: Hmm.
Michael Smith: And they don't really want to zap between functions of their remote control,
John Morosow: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: they want to zap between channels on T_V_. So I think you have quite lot of points to to think about
William Keen: Yeah.
Michael Smith: and to discuss it with
William Keen: Yeah,
John Morosow: Yeah.
Michael Smith: uh
William Keen: hmm.
Michael Smith: the other members. So, is it okay for your presentation? Nothing else
Willie Davis: Yeah, it's
Michael Smith: to
Willie Davis: done,
Michael Smith: to add?
Willie Davis: just yeah. If we would if we could remember like, not too many buttons and make it look fancy, I think
Michael Smith: Mm-hmm.
Willie Davis: it would
Michael Smith: Okay.
Willie Davis: make it.
Michael Smith: Mm so So,
Willie Davis: So.
Michael Smith: I had some new information about the product requirements, so you will have to take care of it of it in your thinking, in your designing of the remote control. So the first one is that um for the designing of the remote control we don't really want to use the teletext anymore,
John Morosow: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: as it's something that's It's is uh
Willie Davis: Lame,
Michael Smith: No
Willie Davis: or
Michael Smith: yeah, internet at home,
John Morosow: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: so it's better to use internet then teletext.
John Morosow: Yeah.
Michael Smith: So, you will have to think about it in your in in the design of your remote control,
William Keen: Yep.
Michael Smith: and also the remote control will only be used for television, so for y for you your designing, you're not you won't be uh you won't had um buttons to just to manipulate
John Morosow: Control.
Michael Smith: yeah to control the recorder or
John Morosow: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: maybe the garage door or things like that. It's
Willie Davis: Mm-hmm
Michael Smith: because if we want to to do remote control
John Morosow: Mm.
Michael Smith: which will be used for for the television, for the recorder, for the camcorder and all the others, it will become too complex and it will increase the pli the price and we can't do that. We really want to focus on the remote control for the television. Is it okay?
John Morosow: Okay. But there's balance between function
Michael Smith: So maybe
John Morosow: and the
Michael Smith: it
John Morosow: cost.
Michael Smith: will be easier for you to to design it, to have
John Morosow: Yeah.
Michael Smith: very
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: powerful and easy. And also we want the image of the uh um real reaction
John Morosow: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: be recognisable in the product, such as the colour and s the slogan.
Willie Davis: Yeah.
Michael Smith: I mean that's uh if uh you want to buy a remote control and if you go in a shop and if you see the remote control you will recognise
John Morosow: Mm-hm.
Michael Smith: directly that s it's our product.
Willie Davis: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: So you will have to use the colour of the product,
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: of the um um of the uh of real reaction
John Morosow: Okay.
William Keen: So.
Michael Smith: and uh also
Willie Davis: So has to be yellow.
Michael Smith: Yeah.
William Keen: Yellow.
Michael Smith: As we say, we put the fashion in electronics, so it has to be a fashion remote control.
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: Fancy, fashion, powerful, easy to use.
John Morosow: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: Require lot of requirements, but
John Morosow: Yeah.
William Keen: For cheap remote control,
John Morosow: And cheap.
William Keen: yeah.
Michael Smith: Yeah.
John Morosow: A low cost.
Michael Smith: Yeah. But uh that's your your job
William Keen: Yeah.
Michael Smith: to find something mm
William Keen: Yeah,
Michael Smith: matches.
William Keen: 'cause what I'm thinking is how will you will connect the T_V_ to internet, so. This is
Willie Davis: I don't think it's part of the remote control design anyway.
Michael Smith: Maybe not,
Willie Davis: It's
Michael Smith: but mayb
Willie Davis: maybe more in browsing.
William Keen: Yeah, but this this mean that your T_V_ would be able to, you know, connect to internet, you know, surf the web.
John Morosow: Yeah, there's that box in
Willie Davis: Yeah.
John Morosow: uh o of it. A pi There's that box in the T_V_, so with the set box you you can connect internet with your T_V_.
William Keen: Okay.
John Morosow: Ok
Willie Davis: Hm-mm.
John Morosow: It's It's not so uh popular now.
William Keen: It's pop I don't think it's popular, so that's the
John Morosow: Mm.
William Keen: problem so. You had i if you are designing a remote control for you know the global
John Morosow: Global,
William Keen: usage,
John Morosow: okay.
William Keen: so if people don't have the technology.
Michael Smith: So.
Willie Davis: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: So
John Morosow: So
Michael Smith: everybody
John Morosow: I I
Michael Smith: is
John Morosow: so
Michael Smith: okay with the new requirements?
John Morosow: As as for the colour, what what do you think?
Michael Smith: I think it has to be yellow.
William Keen: Yellow?
Michael Smith: Yeah.
William Keen: Do you
John Morosow: Yellow?
William Keen: think that people like the colour
John Morosow: T_V_
William Keen: yellow?
John Morosow: remote control?
Willie Davis: Min
Michael Smith: Maybe you can change the colour,
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: but the image of the society has to be recognised.
John Morosow: Okay.
Willie Davis: Yeah.
William Keen: I think
Michael Smith: Why
William Keen: if
Michael Smith: you
William Keen: you
Michael Smith: go
William Keen: have you know th like a yellow ribbon here is the double R_.
Michael Smith: It has to be fashion.
William Keen: Or should be. Yeah, so. Doesn't
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: So you
William Keen: need to be completely
Michael Smith: have to
William Keen: yellow, but just mm.
Michael Smith: Yeah. It has to be a fashion and really be uh the image of the society. Just when you enter you say oh, oh, it's real reaction. Think it's a
John Morosow: Okay,
Michael Smith: re reaction
John Morosow: okay.
Michael Smith: remote control, so.
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: And also it has to be attractive, of
John Morosow: Mm.
Michael Smith: course, because if you want to sale to sell the remote control. It's okay?
Willie Davis: Regarding the first line, what So we're just expecting no more use of the teletext.
Michael Smith: Yeah.
Willie Davis: And that's it.
Michael Smith: Yeah.
William Keen: But I dunno, but why, nobody's a threat to Willie Davis.
Willie Davis: It's already changed for
Michael Smith: I think it would be simpler.
Willie Davis: Mm-hmm.
Michael Smith: Okay. So I will close the meeting, um just after that we'll have lunch break. And you will have in thirty minutes individual work. Uh Y you You will have as the I_D_ I don't remember what is
William Keen: Industrial
Michael Smith: industr
Willie Davis: Industrial Designer.
William Keen: Designer,
Michael Smith: Industrial
William Keen: yeah.
Michael Smith: Designer to put
William Keen: Component
Michael Smith: um pon
William Keen: component,
Michael Smith: yeah,
William Keen: yeah.
Michael Smith: and John Morosow to work on the user interface concept.
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: And Florent to work my subject.
Willie Davis: Yep.
Michael Smith: And so specific instructions will be sent to you by your personal coach.
Willie Davis: Okay.
Michael Smith: It's okay?
Willie Davis: Yeah.
Michael Smith: I think the um session is closed.
William Keen: Good.
Michael Smith: And by the way, Mister David Jordan, please record your presentations in your own folder.
William Keen: Okay
John Morosow: Okay.
Michael Smith: Not in mine.
William Keen: Okay,
John Morosow: Okay.
William Keen: that's
Michael Smith: Should
William Keen: clear.
Michael Smith: be better. | John Morosow discussed some characteristics and functions to consider in designing the remote and introduced an idea for giving the remote international appeal by merging it with a system such as Google. William Keen discussed the interior workings of a remote and presented options for components and materials which would keep costs low. Willie Davis presented consumer preferences and requirements. Michael Smith introduced the new requirements for the project. The team then discussed different features they could include in the design of the remote. | 1 | amisum | train |
Jeff Pulido: So let's start our second Edward Tompkins meeting on design.
Edward Tompkins: Mm-hmm.
Jeff Pulido: So, as the previous meeting I will be the secretary
Scott Muller: Mm-hmm.
Jeff Pulido: and we will have three presentations and we'll have to decide on the remote control concept and finally we'll close the decision. So I will first uh
Edward Tompkins: No y you do the minutes first or,
Jeff Pulido: What?
Edward Tompkins: No?
Jeff Pulido: I I think I will let uh
Edward Tompkins: Okay.
Jeff Pulido: our User Interface Designer speak first, Mister David Jordan.
David Moore: Yep.
Jeff Pulido: So, we'll
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: S technical accessoire?
David Moore: No no no.
Jeff Pulido: Interface?
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: This.
David Moore: Mm. So uh first I will present the concept of user interface. Um there's three concepts in the user interface. So first one it's a Google controller. The second is a fancy controller. The last one is uh intelligent controller. So there are three concepts in our controller. Um n next I will explain one by one, the first is Google controller. Um, so I want the controller to be easy to use, but with sophisticated functions. So it's a combination of easy to use and um sophisticated functions. Uh this is a first concept of our controller. The second concept is a fancy controller, um so we want give the customers the impression that our controller is very attractive, um they can easy recognise our controller among a lot of products, so so the u the user f the the u user interface should be very very cute, very
Edward Tompkins: Mm.
Scott Muller: Mm.
David Moore: very g um
Scott Muller: A nice
David Moore: attractive.
Scott Muller: one.
David Moore: Such like this, there are several uh examples in the slides.
Jeff Pulido: I'm not sure the one in the middle is very attractive.
David Moore: Yeah, it's very, you know if you're
Jeff Pulido: very big yeah.
David Moore: Yeah. It's hard f i it's easy for you to remember it. Or to recognise it, yeah.
Jeff Pulido: Okay. Yeah,
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: why not.
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: We'll have big discussion
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: I suppose after that,
David Moore: Yeah.
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: so.
Edward Tompkins: Mm.
David Moore: So the last uh concept is intelligent. We want uh we want our controller to be smart,
Scott Muller: Mm-hmm.
Edward Tompkins: Mm.
David Moore: so maybe we should uh use um uh technology, such as speech recognition technology and gesture recognition technology, so we need to have coop some cooperation with some research institute on speech recognition and um gesture recognition. Um With this advanced features we I think we can attract a lot of user.
Jeff Pulido: Okay.
David Moore: Okay.
Jeff Pulido: Something else?
David Moore: No. There this is the three concepts of
Scott Muller: Yeah.
David Moore: our
Jeff Pulido: I just have
David Moore: controller.
Jeff Pulido: one question,
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: because for the intelligent controller,
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: you said that we can use the voice recognition or the gesture recognition, but as the um expert told us, most of the people want to use the remote control to zap t to zap between channels.
David Moore: Yeah,
Jeff Pulido: Do you
David Moore: so
Jeff Pulido: think they will be able to use gestures? Because,
David Moore: Y
Jeff Pulido: if they do all the time the same gesture, as you said previously in the last meeting, maybe they will get injuries because of that?
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: or
Scott Muller: Maybe.
Jeff Pulido: if you say channel three channel three two three four six five, I think they will be bored after a while. You don't think so?
David Moore: Uh I think some time it's very uh convenient to use voice interface and gesture interface
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, sure.
David Moore: than use button. For example, if you cannot find your
Jeff Pulido: I
David Moore: uh
Scott Muller: Oh
David Moore: controller,
Scott Muller: yeah, that's a good
David Moore: you
Jeff Pulido: That's
David Moore: can
Scott Muller: that's
David Moore: just
Scott Muller: a
Jeff Pulido: true.
Scott Muller: good
David Moore: uh
Scott Muller: point, so.
David Moore: just just uh speak something such as,
Scott Muller: One and
Jeff Pulido: Yeah,
David Moore: yeah,
Jeff Pulido: but suppose
David Moore: one
Jeff Pulido: you
David Moore: two.
Jeff Pulido: got a cold. You
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: have a mute
Edward Tompkins: Mm.
Jeff Pulido: remote controller.
David Moore: So you can use your gesture. That's no problem.
Edward Tompkins: Yeah but how how is how
Jeff Pulido: Broken
Edward Tompkins: risky
Jeff Pulido: arm?
Edward Tompkins: is it to trust like speech recognition or gesture recognition?
David Moore: For limited vocabulary speech recognition is
Edward Tompkins: Okay.
David Moore: very reliable
Edward Tompkins: Okay.
David Moore: and for s limited vocabulary gesture recognition is also
Jeff Pulido: Yeah,
David Moore: very
Jeff Pulido: but suppose you have a family watching T_V_,
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: and if they want to use
Scott Muller: Yep.
Jeff Pulido: their private remote control in the same time, do you think it will work? Everybody wanting to change channel
Edward Tompkins: But this
Jeff Pulido: in the same
Edward Tompkins: this
Jeff Pulido: time?
Edward Tompkins: but this would never happen anyway.
David Moore: Yeah, they cannot
Jeff Pulido: Why?
David Moore: speak at the same time.
Edward Tompkins: Yeah
Jeff Pulido: If you have one brother and one sister and they want to
Edward Tompkins: Yeah,
Jeff Pulido: watch
Edward Tompkins: but the
Jeff Pulido: their favourite uh T_V_ programme, so they say oh channel four channel three channel four channel
Scott Muller: Yeah
Jeff Pulido: three
David Moore: Yeah,
Scott Muller: but
David Moore: it's
Edward Tompkins: Yeah
David Moore: very
Edward Tompkins: but
Jeff Pulido: all
Edward Tompkins: this
David Moore: interesting.
Jeff Pulido: the time,
Scott Muller: Yeah
Jeff Pulido: so.
Scott Muller: but the same can happen even with it you know this
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Scott Muller: kind of remote control because
David Moore: Yeah.
Edward Tompkins: I don't think
Scott Muller: the
Jeff Pulido: Yeah,
Edward Tompkins: it
Jeff Pulido: but you have the remote control, so maybe you
Scott Muller: That's
Jeff Pulido: can keep
Scott Muller: right.
Jeff Pulido: it f with you. You're not you're not obliged
Edward Tompkins: Oh,
Jeff Pulido: to
Edward Tompkins: okay,
Jeff Pulido: share
Edward Tompkins: okay,
Jeff Pulido: it.
Edward Tompkins: you mean it could be a problem for
Jeff Pulido: Yeah,
Edward Tompkins: this
Jeff Pulido: we can
Edward Tompkins: kind
David Moore: Yeah,
Edward Tompkins: of
David Moore: that's
Edward Tompkins: stuff.
Jeff Pulido: yeah.
David Moore: that's the advantage of intelligent controller. Even you h
Edward Tompkins: No.
David Moore: you have the controller, I can
Scott Muller: It's
David Moore: I can say
Scott Muller: it's
David Moore: channel three, so it's c come
Edward Tompkins: No, but
David Moore: to
Edward Tompkins: this
David Moore: channel
Edward Tompkins: is disadvant
David Moore: three, I don't have
Edward Tompkins: disadvantage.
David Moore: to
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, I think it's a disadvantage.
David Moore: It's
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
David Moore: advantage.
Scott Muller: And mayb maybe we can have the switching mode to pass from you know voice controller to
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, but one
Scott Muller: manual
Jeff Pulido: other question.
Scott Muller: controllers,
Jeff Pulido: How
Scott Muller: eh.
Jeff Pulido: how much will it cost?
Scott Muller: No, more
David Moore: How
Scott Muller: expensive
David Moore: much?
Scott Muller: maybe.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah. Because I suppose we need to do research to have something working.
David Moore: No no we we d we we just
Edward Tompkins: Uh if
David Moore: are
Edward Tompkins: you if
David Moore: use
Jeff Pulido: Some
David Moore: um
Edward Tompkins: if
Jeff Pulido: some
Edward Tompkins: you
Jeff Pulido: efficient.
Edward Tompkins: use the basic
David Moore: No no we just um have some cooperation with some research institute, we don't have to do some basic research on this
Jeff Pulido: So
David Moore: field.
Jeff Pulido: you think it won't cost an Not a lot for us? Or?
David Moore: Yeah, I think it's uh because uh this technology is uh um for limited wor or limited wor uh lexical recognition, it's very
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, but uh uh
David Moore: it's uh yeah.
Edward Tompkins: But it's
David Moore: It's
Edward Tompkins: it's changing how the remote control is gonna be built. Because then you need uh I mean this doesn't have uh the power to do recognition, for example.
Scott Muller: Well y y
David Moore: No it's
Scott Muller: you have
David Moore: uh
Scott Muller: also the language
David Moore: Even
Scott Muller: problem,
David Moore: for
Scott Muller: you
David Moore: the
Scott Muller: know when
David Moore: f
Scott Muller: you
David Moore: um
Jeff Pulido: Mm-mm.
David Moore: because
Scott Muller: 'Cause
David Moore: the
Scott Muller: it
David Moore: the vocabulary
Scott Muller: it have to be universal,
David Moore: the
Scott Muller: so.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah. I
David Moore: The
Jeff Pulido: agree
David Moore: vocabulary
Jeff Pulido: with uh
David Moore: is very small, so
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
David Moore: that's
Jeff Pulido: Yeah,
David Moore: not a problem.
Jeff Pulido: but there is one problem that uh Baba
Scott Muller: Yeah.
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: talked about is the international remote control. We need something that is international. Suppose we're we want to sell it in France.
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: The recognition system will be able to understand French. If you want to go to England,
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: it will be able to understand English, so.
David Moore: Yeah, the key, the key
Edward Tompkins: Yeah,
David Moore: um
Edward Tompkins: this could be downloaded by the web
David Moore: the
Edward Tompkins: maybe,
David Moore: key of
Edward Tompkins: or
David Moore: our the key feature of our controller is that it's it has some some um adaptation
Scott Muller: Yeah
David Moore: mechanism.
Scott Muller: but you know. The
David Moore: It's
Scott Muller: product
David Moore: It's
Scott Muller: The pro
David Moore: it means when you when you sell this controller in China it's can recognise Chinese. It's r if you sell this controller in France
Scott Muller: It's
David Moore: it
Scott Muller: a very
David Moore: can
Scott Muller: smart,
David Moore: recognise French.
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Scott Muller: it's a
Jeff Pulido: Mm,
Scott Muller: very smart
Jeff Pulido: okay.
Scott Muller: controller maybe
David Moore: Yeah, it's
Jeff Pulido: And with no increase in the pri production price
Scott Muller: Oh yeah
Jeff Pulido: of the
Scott Muller: yeah
Jeff Pulido: remote
Scott Muller: yeah yeah.
Jeff Pulido: control?
David Moore: Because
Scott Muller: But
David Moore: of this product uh this technology has already been developed.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah,
David Moore: So
Jeff Pulido: but how will
Scott Muller: Yeah
Jeff Pulido: you
Scott Muller: but the problem is how to s you know if this is a push button controller, you
David Moore: Yeah.
Scott Muller: can send this con this remote control everywhere in the world,
David Moore: Yeah.
Scott Muller: the same one.
Edward Tompkins: Mm.
Scott Muller: If you have the language, you have to
David Moore: Oh n
Scott Muller: develop
David Moore: Yeah, yeah tha
Scott Muller: for
David Moore: that's
Scott Muller: each
David Moore: why
Scott Muller: country.
David Moore: we have to do language adaptation.
Scott Muller: Yeah, but for each country you have to do one,
David Moore: Yeah.
Scott Muller: because uh the for example
David Moore: Even
Scott Muller: for Se
David Moore: for each f for even for different family we have to do d
Scott Muller: Oh really?
David Moore: yeah we would we
Scott Muller: That's
David Moore: have to do adaptation to
Jeff Pulido: Oh.
Edward Tompkins: Yeah, but then
Jeff Pulido: Seems
Edward Tompkins: w
Jeff Pulido: to be quite complex.
Edward Tompkins: Yeah, we have to
Scott Muller: Comple
David Moore: No,
Edward Tompkins: take
David Moore: it's not
Edward Tompkins: care
David Moore: so
Edward Tompkins: of the
David Moore: complex.
Edward Tompkins: twelve Euros problem.
Jeff Pulido: And what about voice recognition, do we have microphones? And where will be they? Do you think
David Moore: No no
Jeff Pulido: if
David Moore: no
Jeff Pulido: we're
David Moore: it's
Jeff Pulido: far
David Moore: not
Jeff Pulido: from television it will work?
David Moore: I think that's n that's not a problem because you you don't have to wear a microphone. It it just the microphone is embedded in the controller.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, but where is the controller?
Edward Tompkins: Okay.
David Moore: Where is the controller?
Jeff Pulido: Yeah.
David Moore: It's in your family, in your home.
Edward Tompkins: No, but
Jeff Pulido: Yeah,
Edward Tompkins: then it's
Jeff Pulido: but
Edward Tompkins: it's
Jeff Pulido: we're
Edward Tompkins: like this
Jeff Pulido: here it's uh
Edward Tompkins: uh
Jeff Pulido: an object. But
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: here you say you want to use i uh
David Moore: Yeah you can
Jeff Pulido: s
David Moore: you
Jeff Pulido: technology.
David Moore: can embed it uh
Scott Muller: A microphone
David Moore: microphone
Scott Muller: maybe.
David Moore: here.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, but wha what is the use of voice or gesture recognition if you have a remote control li like this, if you have an object. If you want to use voice or gesture you need to be
Scott Muller: To talk
Jeff Pulido: free,
Scott Muller: to the to the T_V_
Jeff Pulido: without any
Scott Muller: maybe.
Jeff Pulido: object. You just want to interact
David Moore: Yeah yeah just
Jeff Pulido: with
David Moore: you
Jeff Pulido: television.
David Moore: just put the controller here, then you
Scott Muller: I if you say
David Moore: you
Scott Muller: one,
David Moore: use
Scott Muller: he switch
David Moore: your command
Scott Muller: to channel, yeah.
David Moore: and you do s your gesture.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, but you can lose it.
David Moore: No no it's n y if you lose it
Scott Muller: So well for example if it is somewhere in the room if i maybe if it is in the table there you can always say s channel one and the t the remote control gives the order to the T_V_
David Moore: Yeah.
Scott Muller: to switch to channel
Jeff Pulido: Okay
Scott Muller: one.
Jeff Pulido: you so you can build a kind of
Scott Muller: Devic
Jeff Pulido: black box and put it
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: on T_V_ and
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: just to recognize
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: gestures and voice.
Scott Muller: Yeah but so you need a camera and you know a microphone
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: Ah.
Scott Muller: inside your remote control.
Edward Tompkins: But you would still have the buttons. Or is it do you think it should be only voice recognition and gesture recognition? Or you you still have the possibility to use buttons?
David Moore: I think it we should give the uh flexibility to the user
Edward Tompkins: Okay,
David Moore: and
Edward Tompkins: so
David Moore: we
Edward Tompkins: you
David Moore: think yeah.
Edward Tompkins: yeah.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah,
David Moore: You can see they can switch form one modality to another.
Jeff Pulido: Mm.
Edward Tompkins: Yeah, I dunno. It's a bit risky risky.
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: I
David Moore: No,
Jeff Pulido: think so.
David Moore: that's
Jeff Pulido: And
David Moore: quite
Jeff Pulido: maybe
David Moore: inter
Jeff Pulido: it will be quite
David Moore: quite attractive.
Scott Muller: But I think that, you know, switching from one country to to another will be a problem, so although y y
David Moore: Well, if you do language adaptation, there should be no problem.
Scott Muller: Yeah but
Edward Tompkins: Yeah,
Scott Muller: i i
Edward Tompkins: I dunno.
Jeff Pulido: Okay.
David Moore: We should have confidence in technology.
Scott Muller: Yeah, we should. Uh.
Jeff Pulido: Hmm. So, what do you think? We'll try the controllers you'd prefer.
Scott Muller: Mm.
Edward Tompkins: What?
Jeff Pulido: Which kind of controller would you prefer to use, you as a
Edward Tompkins: If
Jeff Pulido: remote
Edward Tompkins: if
Jeff Pulido: control user?
Edward Tompkins: I mean, uh I'm sure if the user pays the same price, he's happy to have recognition.
David Moore: More features, yeah.
Edward Tompkins: But
Scott Muller: Yeah, but
Edward Tompkins: if if if it like doubles uh
Scott Muller: I think he
Edward Tompkins: no
Scott Muller: need
Edward Tompkins: one would
Scott Muller: a control
Edward Tompkins: would be interested.
Scott Muller: that is very reliable, so.
Jeff Pulido: So I think it would be better not to do any intelligent controller and to stay with the Google controller or a fancy controller. Maybe try to mix the Google controller and the fancy controller? Hmm?
Scott Muller: Yeah. Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: Just want to have something controller which is in a kind of intelligent controller, easy to use, sophisticated and fancy.
David Moore: Yeah
Jeff Pulido: You
David Moore: but
Jeff Pulido: think
David Moore: if
Jeff Pulido: it's possible?
David Moore: if you stick to um stick to the first two parts. So what's the difference between our controller with other products in the market? There's no k features of our controller, so is there is there any necessary to design new controller without
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Scott Muller: Yeah.
David Moore: any breakthrough features?
Edward Tompkins: No, I mean
David Moore: Would y would you replace your controller with a controller with similar function if you
Scott Muller: It's
David Moore: do not
Edward Tompkins: Y
Scott Muller: not really
David Moore: have some
Scott Muller: the we
David Moore: some function
Scott Muller: we can
David Moore: inside
Scott Muller: add for
David Moore: it
Scott Muller: example
David Moore: that
Scott Muller: some function like for browsing in internet, so or something like that. But uh I think a user need
David Moore: Yeah, you y that's a fun that's not the function of the controller, that's a function of T_V_. can replace your T_V_ with a new T_V_ with internet browsing
Edward Tompkins: No,
David Moore: function,
Edward Tompkins: but you need
David Moore: but
Edward Tompkins: you need new remote controller then. Because if you wanna browse internet or,
Scott Muller: Don't have
Edward Tompkins: I don't know,
Scott Muller: a the
Edward Tompkins: if you
Scott Muller: the
Edward Tompkins: wanna type something, or
David Moore: Okay.
Scott Muller: Yeah if we can send email from
David Moore: But
Scott Muller: it.
David Moore: it's not the only the problem only the
Edward Tompkins: No.
David Moore: issue of controller, it's
Edward Tompkins: No.
David Moore: it's also the issue of the T_V_.
Scott Muller: Because the p the problem I can see with with the voice or the gesture itself wh
Edward Tompkins: Cause
Scott Muller: what
Edward Tompkins: for example
Scott Muller: can happen in a
Edward Tompkins: yeah.
Scott Muller: family i i for example
David Moore: Yeah,
Scott Muller: if
David Moore: but we do we do we we we cannot rely one hundred percent on these features
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
David Moore: to u to use the controller,
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, but
David Moore: but
Jeff Pulido: uh we want
David Moore: with the
Jeff Pulido: so
David Moore: features of our controller such as you have the feature of voice recognition in your mobile but you seldom use it, your mobile, but you when you choose a new mobile,
Edward Tompkins: Yeah,
David Moore: you
Edward Tompkins: you wou
David Moore: choose
Edward Tompkins: you would
David Moore: the one with voice recognition.
Edward Tompkins: True.
David Moore: That's the feature is not one hundred percent reliable, but it's a feature to distinguish our product from our from other products.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, but
Scott Muller: Yeah
Jeff Pulido: w we we want something th that works all the time,
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: every day, every hour,
David Moore: Yeah,
Jeff Pulido: for
David Moore: uh
Scott Muller: And for
Jeff Pulido: everyone.
Scott Muller: all the person of the family maybe,
David Moore: Yeah, if
Jeff Pulido: You
Scott Muller: so,
David Moore: if
Jeff Pulido: don't
Scott Muller: yeah.
Jeff Pulido: need
David Moore: if
Jeff Pulido: to
David Moore: if
Jeff Pulido: tune
David Moore: you're if you
Jeff Pulido: it.
David Moore: ar if you already have a product it works one hundred percent reliable, would you replace it with another one?
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, why not?
Edward Tompkins: I
Jeff Pulido: If
Edward Tompkins: mean,
Jeff Pulido: it's
Edward Tompkins: for example the goo y
Scott Muller: Because
Edward Tompkins: you
Scott Muller: you have
Edward Tompkins: say
Scott Muller: new
Edward Tompkins: we would we would to have a Google-like
David Moore: Yeah.
Edward Tompkins: controller.
David Moore: Yeah.
Edward Tompkins: I don't see how adding speech or gesture recognition would make the remote control look more like Google. Google is is simple, works fine,
David Moore: Yeah.
Edward Tompkins: so I I guess if can have a remote control that is really basic, simple and works fine,
David Moore: Yeah.
Edward Tompkins: it's already a lot.
David Moore: Oh yes, but
Edward Tompkins: Uh
David Moore: there's
Edward Tompkins: thi
David Moore: no
Edward Tompkins: this
David Moore: big difference between the traditional controller.
Edward Tompkins: I mean, the user is not only interested in having speech or gesture recognition or
David Moore: The then
Edward Tompkins: if he has
David Moore: nn no.
Edward Tompkins: something
David Moore: Tha
Edward Tompkins: that works fine and is really fancy, looks nice and
Jeff Pulido: Not
David Moore: But
Jeff Pulido: too
David Moore: the
Edward Tompkins: it's
Jeff Pulido: expensive
David Moore: there's
Edward Tompkins: easy easy
David Moore: there's
Jeff Pulido: too.
Edward Tompkins: to
David Moore: n
Edward Tompkins: use,
David Moore: there's n
Edward Tompkins: easy
David Moore: not
Edward Tompkins: to use.
David Moore: enough motivation for them to replace their old controller with a new one
Edward Tompkins: See
David Moore: if there's no key feature in the new controller.
Edward Tompkins: That's the
David Moore: That's
Edward Tompkins: problem,
David Moore: the same yeah.
Edward Tompkins: yeah. I mean, I I know it's more interesting to develop a remote controller with speech and gesture and whatever.
David Moore: Yeah.
Edward Tompkins: But you have to think,
Scott Muller: Ye
Edward Tompkins: the user is the one who gonna buy the product and
David Moore: Yeah.
Edward Tompkins: so.
Jeff Pulido: Okay.
Edward Tompkins: I mean, that's
Jeff Pulido: So
Edward Tompkins: the point.
Jeff Pulido: let's go to Scott Muller.
David Moore: Okay.
Scott Muller: Okay.
Jeff Pulido: Maybe we'll be able to take a decision after that,
Scott Muller: Okay.
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: so. Two?
Scott Muller: Yeah, participant two um
Jeff Pulido: Working?
Scott Muller: Yeah, working design, so. So I think
Jeff Pulido: I can
Scott Muller: Can you go to the next one? I uh it's not this one. It's uh
Jeff Pulido: Okay.
Scott Muller: oth the oth so I It's the working design. Sorry. Component
Jeff Pulido: It's
Scott Muller: design.
Jeff Pulido: okay
Scott Muller: So this yeah so this is the described use What? Are you inst
Jeff Pulido: Uh I think there's something wrong with your
David Moore: It did didn't r receive it. Didn't
Jeff Pulido: Maybe you
David Moore: receive it.
Jeff Pulido: you record it somewhere else.
Scott Muller: I don't think so.
David Moore: Participant one. Participant one.
Jeff Pulido: Interface concept. No.
Edward Tompkins: Hmm.
Jeff Pulido: Mm mm.
Scott Muller: Oh. Maybe I record recorded directly on the Computer.
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: Uh.
Edward Tompkins: Dunno.
Jeff Pulido: Nope.
Scott Muller: Okay, okay. Yes.
Jeff Pulido: It seems that we have a problem with the
Edward Tompkins: I dunno if you remember what you had to say or
Scott Muller: I can say it to you without.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, so
David Moore: Yeah, maybe we can first come to
Jeff Pulido: No, I think it will be more interesting
David Moore: uh
Jeff Pulido: to
David Moore: to Frahan.
Jeff Pulido: start with uh
David Moore: With Frahan,
Edward Tompkins: I think it's
David Moore: then
Edward Tompkins: more
David Moore: you
Edward Tompkins: interesting
David Moore: can prepare
Edward Tompkins: what
David Moore: your slides,
Edward Tompkins: he says, okay.
David Moore: then present
Jeff Pulido: Yeah.
David Moore: it later.
Scott Muller: Yeah, exac Okay.
Jeff Pulido: I think it will be interesting after your
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: presentation
Edward Tompkins: Yeah,
Jeff Pulido: to have
Edward Tompkins: true.
Jeff Pulido: um Baba's presentation.
Scott Muller: Yeah.
David Moore: Okay.
Scott Muller: In fact, I don't
Jeff Pulido: So.
Scott Muller: know, I s
Jeff Pulido: Okay.
Scott Muller: because i in my presentation I don't have here with so
Jeff Pulido: Okay, never
Scott Muller: It
Jeff Pulido: mind.
Scott Muller: was in fact the design use to show you the design of what is inside
David Moore: Okay.
Scott Muller: a what is inside and what are the different component of the r of the remote control.
David Moore: Okay.
Scott Muller: So it will be interesting so I could show you some some picture
David Moore: Okay.
Scott Muller: of what is inside and so. So I in fact the the f something I want to discuss is which kind of material are we going to use, so
Jeff Pulido: Mm-hmm.
Scott Muller: will it will be wooden wooden di wooden remote control or a a plastic remote control like this one. So and in which which which kind will be the the different bu button,
Jeff Pulido: Mm-hmm.
Scott Muller: so it can be some, you know, classic pushbutton like this one, or you have also some button like L_C_D_ where you know,
David Moore: Mm-hmm.
Jeff Pulido: Mm-hmm.
Scott Muller: the button the buttons are unlighted during the night, or, you know, you can
Jeff Pulido: Okay.
Scott Muller: see them in the darkness.
David Moore: Okay.
Scott Muller: And the other thing I want to discuss also is which kind of alimentation, electric alimentation do you want to have, so will it be for example uh d uh solar energy alimentation
David Moore: Uh-huh.
Scott Muller: or will it be a battery like the classical battery so. And I think that for example for the alimentation it would be good to have uh both of them, so so for example in some country where you are in the the countryside and you are far from, you know, the cities uh
David Moore: Mm-hmm.
Scott Muller: for example in some place in in S Senegal, so if you have electric if you have solar
David Moore: Mm-hmm.
Scott Muller: alimentation, you just, when you want to have recharger or remote control power you just put it on the sun and after one hour you can come and so it can be interesting for people to have this kind of remote con It can be something interesting to make people buy it, for example.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, I think it's an
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: added value to the remote control
Scott Muller: Yeah, yeah
Jeff Pulido: and maybe
Scott Muller: mm.
Jeff Pulido: it can attract all the ecological
Scott Muller: yeah,
Jeff Pulido: k
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Scott Muller: yeah,
Jeff Pulido: yeah
Scott Muller: yeah,
Jeff Pulido: consumers
Scott Muller: yeah,
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Scott Muller: yeah.
Jeff Pulido: and but about the the price of adding this solar battery, would it be something really that will increase the price of production more, no?
Scott Muller: Alrigh In fact, having them both will if we want to have battery, regular battery and and the solar energy battery it could be it'll it will add a little bit of the price,
Jeff Pulido: So.
Scott Muller: but it will be an added value also that will be
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Scott Muller: compensated,
Jeff Pulido: Okay.
Scott Muller: so hmm.
Jeff Pulido: And what tha what about the uh materials?
Scott Muller: And the materials, it depends for example you if you have a wooden material it can be more the plastic material is more common it's
Jeff Pulido: Impersonal,
Scott Muller: very resistant but,
Jeff Pulido: mm-hmm.
Scott Muller: you know, something wooden will be like, I don't know
Jeff Pulido: Yeah.
Edward Tompkins: Special
Scott Muller: high
Edward Tompkins: for
Scott Muller: cl so a special high class, or you know,
Edward Tompkins: Mm-hmm.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, and
Scott Muller: you
Jeff Pulido: i
Scott Muller: can have some
Jeff Pulido: if you we want to put fashion in electronics maybe we can try to do something with wood.
David Moore: Mm-hmm.
Scott Muller: Yeah, even
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Scott Muller: if it is not completely wood, but just a part of the, you
Jeff Pulido: Mm-hmm.
Scott Muller: know, will be wooden, in wood
Jeff Pulido: Mm.
Scott Muller: and it can be interesting.
Jeff Pulido: Mm okay, seems
Scott Muller: And
Jeff Pulido: to be interesting,
Scott Muller: so
Jeff Pulido: mm.
Scott Muller: the last point is y also would do you want to have some very cheap integrated cir circuits, chips, or do you have low level or or very very expensive, it depends, but I think that low level will be, you know, it is an interim module.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, we want something easy to use and
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: so I think maybe something very low level wou
Scott Muller: Yeah. Yeah,
Jeff Pulido: would be enough.
Scott Muller: yeah.
Jeff Pulido: And you think that we will be
Scott Muller: Yeah, I think it will fit on the price we want, twel
Jeff Pulido: Okay.
Scott Muller: twelve Euros, so.
Jeff Pulido: So wood. And what about the buttons?
Scott Muller: I think the buttons I pr I prefer, you know, the L_C_D_ you know lighted buttons because, you know, it's I don't know
Jeff Pulido: No it's fashion,
Scott Muller: um yeah, in the
Jeff Pulido: yeah.
Scott Muller: dark, it's fashion and it's related to how beautiful it is or uh if you want to watch T_V_ in the darkness or if you want to lo find your find your your remote control that is lost, you know in the darkness it's very easy so, right.
Edward Tompkins: What about the touch scr touch screen? For example. It's it's expensive I I guess.
Scott Muller: I think a touch screen will be t as expensive as the L_C_D_ buttons so.
Edward Tompkins: Mm.
Scott Muller: But And it is a kind of other design, I mean. It can
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Scott Muller: also be interesting to have this kind of
David Moore: So you got email?
Jeff Pulido: I dunno. I think we have only uh five minutes left.
Edward Tompkins: Okay.
Jeff Pulido: Participant four? Functional requirements?
Edward Tompkins: Uh no, trend watching. The other one.
Jeff Pulido: This one?
Edward Tompkins: Yeah. Uh, I think so, just Yeah, so just to meet the user requirements I would just do a s short anal analysis of the remote control market and to kind of um have a better overview of what's the fashion in general I've checked more than only the remote control market, so next. So again, it's pretty much similar to what I've said in the previous meeting. Um user really really want a fancy look and feel. They're not so so interested in uh functional look and feel, okay. Like the one you've shown, David,
David Moore: Mm.
Edward Tompkins: with all the buttons and I
Scott Muller: Mm.
Edward Tompkins: mean i i it sounds good technically but it's it's not what they want and uh So, second point is they still want it it to be technologically innovative, so maybe it's sort of related to what you've said with the speech recognition and so on.
Jeff Pulido: Okay.
Edward Tompkins: At the same time, it's important that it's easy to use. So that were the three first points from the remote control uh analysis. Now i if we look at fashion in general um Okay. Wha what we really see this year is that uh everything from clothes to shoes and furniture is is inspired by fruits and vegetables, okay,
Scott Muller: Ah yes.
Edward Tompkins: so I think we really have to take this into account for the design of the
Scott Muller: Yeah,
Edward Tompkins: the thing.
Scott Muller: yeah. Okay, yeah.
Edward Tompkins: 'Cause it's it's really what people want. Even if it's in general fashion, we want it to be in the remote control. And then uh if if we take the ordering or the ranking of all the points, fancy look and feel has, on a score of seven would have six as importance. Uh the remote control has to be technologically innovative, it's three. Then easy to use uh it's not so important actually with respect to other y other ones.
Scott Muller: Okay.
Edward Tompkins: So we see fancy look an look and feel is the most important one, uh from Milan and Paris
Scott Muller: And fruit and vegetables yeah.
Edward Tompkins: we go to the fruits and vede vegetables. And the other point I haven't mention is people wan want to have a spongy
Scott Muller: Spongy
Edward Tompkins: touch, okay
Scott Muller: 'Kay.
Edward Tompkins: so this is this maybe doesn't really fit with the wooden design.
Scott Muller: Okay, yeah, yeah.
Edward Tompkins: I dunno.
Scott Muller: Yeah, but the problem is which kind of material do you need to to be spongy?
Edward Tompkins: Yeah thi this is this would be like um
Scott Muller: Pla
Edward Tompkins: plastic-like,
Scott Muller: S
Edward Tompkins: but
Scott Muller: Very stuff
Edward Tompkins: rubber, mayb
Scott Muller: Okay,
Edward Tompkins: maybe,
Scott Muller: rubber
Edward Tompkins: you
Scott Muller: rubber
Edward Tompkins: know, rubber-like
Scott Muller: desi okay, yeah.
Edward Tompkins: uh
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Edward Tompkins: device, so um
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Edward Tompkins: Okay, tha tha that was the main point, I think, from the trend in fashion.
Scott Muller: Okay.
Jeff Pulido: So we have to take decisions about the component concepts, about the energy. So, as you say you want something technologically innovative,
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: maybe using
Scott Muller: Solar.
Jeff Pulido: solar energy and
Edward Tompkins: Yeah, so when I think it's
Scott Muller: Okay.
Jeff Pulido: with battery would be something interesting, maybe will attract
Edward Tompkins: Mm-hmm
Scott Muller: Yeah. It will be a
Jeff Pulido: pro-ecology consumers.
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: Uh cheap imprint so you s you propose low level
Scott Muller: Yeah, I
Jeff Pulido: chips
Scott Muller: think
Jeff Pulido: would be uh enough to have something
Scott Muller: Yeah, yeah.
Jeff Pulido: working well.
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: Case.
David Moore: Later?
Jeff Pulido: So you think case. Something spongy. Someth no wood.
Scott Muller: No wood but
Edward Tompkins: Maybe not no
Scott Muller: Plastic?
Edward Tompkins: wood, but I mean
Scott Muller: Would some
Edward Tompkins: ma maybe not the part you
David Moore: Pla
Edward Tompkins: touching you
Jeff Pulido: Maybe
Edward Tompkins: know.
Scott Muller: I think
Jeff Pulido: you
Scott Muller: we can have wood for example in the bottom and, you
Edward Tompkins: Yeah,
Scott Muller: know.
Edward Tompkins: maybe
Scott Muller: It depends
Edward Tompkins: the base.
Scott Muller: on the design we want, so.
Jeff Pulido: It's
Edward Tompkins: But still y
Jeff Pulido: it's natural.
Scott Muller: Yeah,
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: Th
Scott Muller: it's natural
Jeff Pulido: The feeling
Scott Muller: and i
Jeff Pulido: is natural, so maybe we can stay with wood.
Scott Muller: And it can be correlated to energy, solar energy, so for the marketing aspect, you know, saying
Edward Tompkins: Yeah,
Scott Muller: that
Edward Tompkins: I mean
Scott Muller: it's
Edward Tompkins: it's not
Scott Muller: ecol
Edward Tompkins: exactly right for the spongy
Scott Muller: Mm,
Edward Tompkins: point
Scott Muller: yeah,
Edward Tompkins: of view.
Scott Muller: it's not right, so.
Jeff Pulido: But it's still fashion.
Edward Tompkins: But we could maybe have both like part of wood and some rubber for the buttons, or
Scott Muller: Okay.
Edward Tompkins: I
Jeff Pulido: Yeah,
Edward Tompkins: dunno.
Jeff Pulido: something that you can
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: into it. Uh and what about the user interface concept?
Scott Muller: Google and
Jeff Pulido: Google and fancy?
Scott Muller: and fancy, f how about the the voice?
Jeff Pulido: Because
Scott Muller: And
Jeff Pulido: I think that with the voice and gesture recognition there are still some disadvantages with this.
David Moore: Uh
Scott Muller: Uh
David Moore: yes.
Scott Muller: maybe we can do some marketing studies asking people if they're interested and how It It is an an interesting concept to see to have
Edward Tompkins: Yeah.
Scott Muller: uh
David Moore: Yeah.
Scott Muller: voice control.
David Moore: Yeah. The smart
Scott Muller: Mm.
David Moore: controller.
Scott Muller: Yeah. But and the problem is I I'm we can infer i if you have v voice control why not to put it directly on the the T_V_, so speak directly to the T_V_ and you don't need a remote control actually, so.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, but you need a receiver to recognize the gestures and the voice.
Scott Muller: But it will be embedded on the T_V_ and not on the remote control, so.
Jeff Pulido: That's
Edward Tompkins: Yeah
Jeff Pulido: true.
Edward Tompkins: d
David Moore: Okay.
Edward Tompkins: I dunno.
Jeff Pulido: So maybe we'll just focus on the Google controller plus the
David Moore: Mm.
Jeff Pulido: fancy controller, maybe try to mix them these two concepts together, just in one and do a remote control with solar energy
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: and batteries and with lev low level chips and wood.
David Moore: It's good.
Jeff Pulido: And L_C_D_ buttons.
Scott Muller: Yeah, L_C_D_.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, I think for these supplements the solar energy would be something quite interesting and not maybe too difficult
Scott Muller: Yeah,
Jeff Pulido: to add.
Scott Muller: yeah, yeah. And pf what can we think a supplement to
Edward Tompkins: What interface?
Jeff Pulido: Yeah, for the interface something added value.
Scott Muller: I think the supplement can be the voice. It is just, you know, it is not the most important, but it can be a part of
Jeff Pulido: With a module? You mean the remote control with a mur module if you want you can
Scott Muller: Yeah,
Jeff Pulido: just use
Scott Muller: yeah.
Jeff Pulido: commands, words
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: and
Scott Muller: Mm.
Jeff Pulido: use them
David Moore: Mm-hmm.
Jeff Pulido: when you don't want to use
Scott Muller: To
Jeff Pulido: your
Scott Muller: push
Jeff Pulido: fingers.
Scott Muller: button, yeah, yeah. Even it is for s just some kids, you know, switching channels one two three four.
Jeff Pulido: Turning the T_V_
Scott Muller: Yeah,
Jeff Pulido: o
Scott Muller: turning
Jeff Pulido: on o
Scott Muller: yeah,
Jeff Pulido: or off.
Scott Muller: yeah. Not very complex commands, but easy commands, so.
Jeff Pulido: So, adding some vocal commands.
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: Simple ones?
Scott Muller: Yeah, simple ones for
Jeff Pulido: Okay. So the next meeting will start in thirty meeti minutes so we'll you will all have to work in in your direction. So you will have to work on the look and feel design,
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: to have the easy to use, powerful and fancy remote control
David Moore: Yep.
Jeff Pulido: with some added value such as the uh simple vocal commands recognition.
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: Uh you will have to work more, Baba, on the um spongy way to to add spongy um
Scott Muller: expensive
Jeff Pulido: touch
Scott Muller: buttons
Jeff Pulido: to the buttons
Scott Muller: Yeah, to make some
Jeff Pulido: and
Scott Muller: new
Jeff Pulido: try to find maybe a nice shape for the wooden remote control.
Scott Muller: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: And I sup I think we'll have to evaluate th the product
Edward Tompkins: Yeah,
Jeff Pulido: too.
Edward Tompkins: no not forgetting about the fruits and vegetables
Jeff Pulido: Yeah.
Scott Muller: Okay, fruits.
Edward Tompkins: trends.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah.
Edward Tompkins: If possible.
Scott Muller: Okay.
Jeff Pulido: And remember as as I said last meeting, we really have to build a fashion remote control and uh the colour of the um the society will be really
Scott Muller: Need it to be, okay.
Jeff Pulido: it will be seen in the remote control. So you will have Baba and David Jordan you will have to work together on the prototype
David Moore: Yeah.
Jeff Pulido: and you will have next time to show us um modelling a cl a clay remote control, so
David Moore: Okay.
Scott Muller: Okay.
Jeff Pulido: you will have to model model something.
David Moore: Yep
Jeff Pulido: And I think that some specific instructions will be sent to you by your personal coach.
Scott Muller: Okay.
Jeff Pulido: So,
David Moore: Okay.
Jeff Pulido: no more questions, we can close the session.
Edward Tompkins: Hmm.
Scott Muller: Sounds good, mm-hmm.
Edward Tompkins: Okay.
Jeff Pulido: Yeah.
David Moore: Okay.
Jeff Pulido: Okay, cool. | David Moore presented three different concepts to consider for the user interface and introduced the idea of using speech recognition in the design of the remote. The team discussed the issue of using speech recognition at length. Scott Muller presented possible materials to use in making the case for the remote, introduced the option of using a solar battery, and discussed options for buttons. The Marketing Specialist discussed recent findings from trend watching reports. The team discussed what materials to use and their interface concept. | 1 | amisum | train |
Solomon Dana: Mm-hmm So, ready?
Randy Richards: No
Troy Robbins: 'Kay.
Randy Richards: not really. Just Crap.
Solomon Dana: Sorry I,
Randy Richards: Okay.
Solomon Dana: I
Troy Robbins: It's perfect.
Solomon Dana: um I'm
Terry Kelley: Your
Solomon Dana: afraid
Terry Kelley: judgement it's is biased.
Solomon Dana: Uh thi this remote control will stay a prototype.
Randy Richards: 'Kay, so whe where is the remote control?
Terry Kelley: So,
Troy Robbins: Where
Terry Kelley: we are
Troy Robbins: It's? here.
Terry Kelley: So
Solomon Dana: Okay.
Terry Kelley: let's go for our detailed design meeting.
Randy Richards: Yep.
Terry Kelley: So I will still play the role of the secretary, and we'll have um first the project presentation by our
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Terry Kelley: User Interface Designer, David Jordan,
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: and our Industrial Designer, Baba.
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: 'Kay.
Terry Kelley: So we'll have to evaluate the uh your proposed remote control, and um have an idea of the price that uh this thing will cost. And in case we're all agree on the fabrica of um building of this remote control, we'll evaluate the um production. So maybe I will let the our two designers talk about so
Troy Robbins: I have slides.
Terry Kelley: their
Solomon Dana: Okay.
Terry Kelley: You have s oh, sorry. Oops.
Troy Robbins: Ah, that is
Solomon Dana: Effectively
Troy Robbins: three.
Solomon Dana: one slide and maybe we can
Troy Robbins: Product prod
Solomon Dana: discuss
Randy Richards: What
Solomon Dana: everything.
Randy Richards: slides?
Troy Robbins: Yep. Okay. Okay. So, this is our product or prototype. This is made by clay.
Terry Kelley: Looks strange.
Troy Robbins: Yeah. Uh the basic colour is uh yellow and red. Yellow is uh our company colour,
Terry Kelley: Okay.
Troy Robbins: uh red it's uh is more attractive. So we used two basic colour, yellow and red. And the there's two basic shape. The first is a circle and the second is a triangle s piece. It's
Solomon Dana: Okay.
Troy Robbins: we call it a mushroom design. It's looks like some mushroom,
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: so we call it mushroom design.
Solomon Dana: Uh
Troy Robbins: So this is a introduction of our product. Next
Terry Kelley: Genetically
Troy Robbins: a mo
Terry Kelley: modified mushroom I will say, but
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: keep
Troy Robbins: Okay,
Terry Kelley: on speaking.
Troy Robbins: yeah, so next slide. So there are several key features of our pr prototype. The first is that it is fuzzy. I'm sure this would be the unique design the market.
Solomon Dana: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: Oh.
Solomon Dana: yeah I'm sure.
Terry Kelley: Maybe, I hope so.
Troy Robbins: Yeah, so it's a fuzzy design, and a unique design.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, that's
Troy Robbins: Um,
Solomon Dana: true.
Troy Robbins: and uh the second key feature is that uh s circle channel um selection. In the traditional key uh traditional controller use button to to select the channel but now we have a s circle, so we can turn this ball to t to select channel. So it's quite
Terry Kelley: Chan
Troy Robbins: convenient for user to use it.
Terry Kelley: Yeah, okay, but don't
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: touch don't destroy
Troy Robbins: s
Terry Kelley: your prototype.
Troy Robbins: okay. Uh the third feature is a stable triangle base. Uh this sta uh this triangle base is very stable, so uh so it's it's um it's unlikely you cannot found it. So it's v Um, you can put it in the table so you can turn the the ball to cha to select the channel and there's some cute button. You c can can you can see the the shape of the buttons n is a mushroom, so
Terry Kelley: Everything's mushroom.
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: So
Troy Robbins: everything's
Terry Kelley: we can
Troy Robbins: mushroom.
Terry Kelley: call our
Troy Robbins: Mush
Terry Kelley: remote control the mushroom.
Solomon Dana: Yeah
Troy Robbins: Mushroom
Solomon Dana: but
Troy Robbins: design,
Solomon Dana: it's not
Troy Robbins: yeah.
Solomon Dana: like really mushroom because you have uh you know uh like lemon shape, you know, centre
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: is
Terry Kelley: Okay.
Solomon Dana: yellow and
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: t
Troy Robbins: th that's why if
Solomon Dana: d
Troy Robbins: you put it in the table, be
Solomon Dana: To integrate,
Troy Robbins: careful,
Solomon Dana: you
Troy Robbins: somebody
Solomon Dana: know yeah.
Troy Robbins: will eat it.
Solomon Dana: I don't think I hope nobody will eat it. You know, to integrate the fruit aspect, you know the
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: Oh.
Randy Richards: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: the
Randy Richards: because mushroom
Solomon Dana: in
Randy Richards: was not in the trends. I mean
Solomon Dana: Really?
Randy Richards: there
Terry Kelley: Fruits
Solomon Dana: But
Randy Richards: was fruits
Terry Kelley: and vegetables.
Randy Richards: yeah.
Solomon Dana: Fruit and vegetable, so
Terry Kelley: Vegetables.
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: mushroom was
Terry Kelley: Mushroom
Solomon Dana: a kind
Terry Kelley: is a vegetable.
Solomon Dana: of you know
Randy Richards: I don't think
Solomon Dana: uh
Randy Richards: it is.
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: It's vegetable.
Solomon Dana: Mushroom?
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Randy Richards: Mm-hmm.
Solomon Dana: Oh, uh I'm not
Terry Kelley: So
Solomon Dana: sure.
Terry Kelley: th it's something eatable.
Solomon Dana: We can
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: it's a veg a kind of vegetable, but you know
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: we we integrated them with different
Randy Richards: But
Solomon Dana: colour.
Randy Richards: anyway this is not a mushroom anyway, so
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Randy Richards: it's fine.
Solomon Dana: I I think we take into account what you said about fruit and vegetable you know. This, you know, very
Randy Richards: No, I mean,
Solomon Dana: enlighted
Randy Richards: yeah
Solomon Dana: colours, you
Randy Richards: yeah.
Solomon Dana: know.
Randy Richards: Inspira inspiration
Solomon Dana: And inspired
Randy Richards: is
Solomon Dana: colour and and very sophisticated material, so.
Randy Richards: True.
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: And so
Terry Kelley: Next slide.
Troy Robbins: Uh, no this our only
Solomon Dana: So
Troy Robbins: two
Solomon Dana: what
Troy Robbins: slides.
Solomon Dana: we w what I can add is that, you know he talk about what is outside,
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: so what is inside is what we dis what we talked before about, you know, the chip, it is a low level chip, and
Troy Robbins: So we cut it to see.
Solomon Dana: You know, we don't need to k.
Terry Kelley: Mm-hmm.
Solomon Dana: You know wi the low level chips inside and you know the L_C_D_ button
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Solomon Dana: and the
Troy Robbins: So
Solomon Dana: i
Troy Robbins: where's the battery battery?
Solomon Dana: The battery it is under. It
Terry Kelley: In the base.
Solomon Dana: is in
Troy Robbins: Base.
Solomon Dana: th in
Terry Kelley: In the
Solomon Dana: in
Terry Kelley: basement.
Solomon Dana: the base,
Troy Robbins: Here?
Solomon Dana: yeah.
Terry Kelley: In the basement. And where is
Randy Richards: But
Terry Kelley: the
Randy Richards: we
Terry Kelley: solar
Randy Richards: say uh
Terry Kelley: solar
Randy Richards: we sa
Terry Kelley: cell?
Randy Richards: we said solar.
Terry Kelley: Where
Solomon Dana: In
Terry Kelley: is
Solomon Dana: fact
Terry Kelley: the solar
Solomon Dana: this
Terry Kelley: cell?
Solomon Dana: this this this is a kind of you know revolutionary solar receptor that we can put outside and
Terry Kelley: Oh. Do you
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Terry Kelley: think it won't be It won't cris increase the price?
Solomon Dana: I don't think so,
Terry Kelley: Okay,
Solomon Dana: but it
Terry Kelley: we'll
Solomon Dana: it's
Terry Kelley: see after.
Solomon Dana: might be
Terry Kelley: We
Solomon Dana: okay, so.
Terry Kelley: will have
Solomon Dana: I
Terry Kelley: first
Solomon Dana: it might be
Terry Kelley: to
Solomon Dana: okay.
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Solomon Dana: So
Terry Kelley: so, mister money, what's
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: your opinion according to this remote control?
Randy Richards: I mean, we gonna try to measure how good it is instead of just talking about uh we had three keys key points to uh for this remote control design, and first one was uh
Terry Kelley: Mm-hmm.
Randy Richards: fancy look and feel.
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Randy Richards: So w we'll try to judge this feature uh with a one to seven scale, one being uh no, I think. Uh just let Randy Richards check.
Solomon Dana: So, four point three point five, it means it's acceptable.
Randy Richards: One one being true, and seven being false. Okay.
Solomon Dana: Oops.
Randy Richards: Ouch. So
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Randy Richards: Do we have a fancy look and feel,
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Randy Richards: according
Troy Robbins: I
Randy Richards: to
Troy Robbins: think
Randy Richards: you?
Troy Robbins: so.
Solomon Dana: I think you have nice colours. I don't
Randy Richards: But is it
Solomon Dana: The sha the bowl shape
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: people
Troy Robbins: the shape
Solomon Dana: like.
Troy Robbins: is unique, and the colour
Randy Richards: Uh I'll agree it's unique, but is it really
Troy Robbins: So
Solomon Dana: Is
Troy Robbins: it
Solomon Dana: it
Troy Robbins: depend
Solomon Dana: really
Troy Robbins: on
Solomon Dana: fancy?
Troy Robbins: how d do you define fancy.
Randy Richards: Yeah I mean, fancy was was defined by s fruit and vegetable look.
Solomon Dana: But it's you have the lemon aspect of this th this this thing.
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: Maybe if you change if you take the buttons out,
Solomon Dana: Do Don't
Terry Kelley: and maybe
Solomon Dana: do that,
Terry Kelley: do
Solomon Dana: please.
Terry Kelley: things like that
Randy Richards: I dunno where the lemon is, but I mean it's
Solomon Dana: I
Randy Richards: not
Solomon Dana: it's
Randy Richards: obvious.
Solomon Dana: it's i this shape is a lemon like, so
Terry Kelley: It would be bet more like a lemon?
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Randy Richards: If
Solomon Dana: Because
Randy Richards: I dunno, maybe
Solomon Dana: i
Randy Richards: improving the texture of like having
Terry Kelley: Yeah.
Randy Richards: it less
Solomon Dana: Less
Randy Richards: smooth
Solomon Dana: button.
Randy Richards: or
Troy Robbins: Uh so, my mush.
Terry Kelley: Looks like more fruit.
Solomon Dana: Yeah,
Troy Robbins: Mm.
Solomon Dana: but you
Terry Kelley: Maybe
Solomon Dana: don't have any
Terry Kelley: a
Solomon Dana: button now.
Terry Kelley: pineapple?
Randy Richards: Yeah. I dunno.
Terry Kelley: And you know, you have the finger here,
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: with the buttons?
Troy Robbins: Hmm.
Solomon Dana: That's uh yeah, is
Randy Richards: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: that
Randy Richards: it's
Solomon Dana: that's
Randy Richards: getting
Solomon Dana: a good idea. So that's great.
Terry Kelley: It looks more like a pineapple.
Solomon Dana: That's
Terry Kelley: Sorry.
Solomon Dana: great.
Terry Kelley: What's the use for that?
Troy Robbins: Uh, for
Solomon Dana: I have
Troy Robbins: turn
Solomon Dana: no
Troy Robbins: turn
Solomon Dana: idea,
Troy Robbins: the ball.
Solomon Dana: so.
Troy Robbins: If you want to turn the ball,
Solomon Dana: I have no idea
Troy Robbins: it's very it's very convenient for
Solomon Dana: what
Troy Robbins: you to to to turn the ball to change the channel.
Randy Richards: Okay.
Terry Kelley: And
Troy Robbins: Uh.
Terry Kelley: where is the voice recognition?
Troy Robbins: Ah, it's embedded, your microphone.
Randy Richards: Yeah, that's
Terry Kelley: Okay.
Troy Robbins: Th this th th there's two
Randy Richards: Wait th that's
Troy Robbins: two
Randy Richards: the
Troy Robbins: functions.
Randy Richards: second point.
Troy Robbins: This is microphone
Randy Richards: First one
Troy Robbins: array
Randy Richards: is we have to judge the
Solomon Dana: If it is fancy or not.
Randy Richards: fancy
Terry Kelley: Okay.
Randy Richards: look and feel.
Terry Kelley: Is it better
Randy Richards: I mean
Terry Kelley: like that?
Solomon Dana: So
Terry Kelley: Looks
Solomon Dana: we can we can
Terry Kelley: okay,
Solomon Dana: say
Terry Kelley: let's say it's
Solomon Dana: t
Terry Kelley: a pineapple now.
Solomon Dana: The colour, is the colour acceptable?
Randy Richards: No, the colour is okay, that's fine.
Solomon Dana: So the shape
Randy Richards: I mean
Solomon Dana: now.
Randy Richards: it's
Terry Kelley: It
Randy Richards: but
Terry Kelley: looks
Randy Richards: I
Terry Kelley: like
Randy Richards: would say
Terry Kelley: a
Randy Richards: there is more too much red.
Terry Kelley: now
Solomon Dana: It's
Terry Kelley: you
Solomon Dana: too
Terry Kelley: took
Solomon Dana: much
Terry Kelley: it.
Solomon Dana: red?
Randy Richards: Um
Solomon Dana: In
Randy Richards: if
Solomon Dana: the basement?
Terry Kelley: It looks like a pineapple with cherry on top.
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Randy Richards: Right. So, from one to seven?
Terry Kelley: Mm uh
Solomon Dana: I will give
Terry Kelley: Seven
Solomon Dana: I will
Terry Kelley: is the ma the maximum?
Randy Richards: No,
Solomon Dana: I'll
Randy Richards: seven
Solomon Dana: gi
Randy Richards: is false and one is true.
Solomon Dana: I'll give two or three. Three, it's
Terry Kelley: Three,
Solomon Dana: okay.
Terry Kelley: I will say three.
Solomon Dana: Three, three.
Randy Richards: Three?
Solomon Dana: Three is fine for Randy Richards.
Randy Richards: Okay.
Troy Robbins: 'Kay.
Randy Richards: Three.
Terry Kelley: Isn't it bitter like that?
Troy Robbins: Yeah yeah
Randy Richards: Then
Troy Robbins: yeah.
Randy Richards: uh let Randy Richards
Solomon Dana: What other
Randy Richards: The other criterion is
Solomon Dana: Is it easy
Randy Richards: is it
Solomon Dana: to use?
Randy Richards: technologically uh
Terry Kelley: Feasible?
Randy Richards: technologically in innovative.
Solomon Dana: Ye uh
Terry Kelley: You said previously that you there's um microphone inside an
Solomon Dana: Embedded.
Troy Robbins: Yeah, this is microphone array, in fact.
Solomon Dana: It's a micro
Troy Robbins: There four
Solomon Dana: array,
Troy Robbins: microphone.
Terry Kelley: Oh. Okay,
Solomon Dana: okay.
Troy Robbins: So they they they
Terry Kelley: and
Troy Robbins: they
Terry Kelley: you
Troy Robbins: there's
Terry Kelley: have
Troy Robbins: a microphone
Terry Kelley: the
Troy Robbins: array.
Terry Kelley: there's the technology inside that recognise simple vocal
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: comments?
Troy Robbins: yeah. So you
Terry Kelley: And
Troy Robbins: can
Terry Kelley: you
Troy Robbins: capture
Terry Kelley: can turn
Troy Robbins: voice
Terry Kelley: it so
Solomon Dana: Oh
Troy Robbins: yeah,
Solomon Dana: yeah,
Terry Kelley: maybe
Troy Robbins: you
Solomon Dana: yeah.
Terry Kelley: it's
Troy Robbins: c
Terry Kelley: techno
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: technologically
Troy Robbins: so you can
Solomon Dana: And
Terry Kelley: innov
Solomon Dana: I
Troy Robbins: capture
Solomon Dana: think
Terry Kelley: innovative?
Solomon Dana: you you've never seen
Troy Robbins: s voice
Solomon Dana: a rou
Troy Robbins: from
Solomon Dana: a round
Troy Robbins: different
Solomon Dana: remote control, so
Troy Robbins: directions.
Solomon Dana: it is
Randy Richards: Yeah
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Randy Richards: bu but
Solomon Dana: I
Randy Richards: when you say technologically it's more uh
Solomon Dana: W
Randy Richards: I dunno,
Solomon Dana: Yeah, but
Randy Richards: in the core, or single.
Terry Kelley: We have tactile buttons.
Randy Richards: Mm-hmm.
Solomon Dana: I see, you have microphone array embedded. You have
Randy Richards: No, that's good. Yeah.
Solomon Dana: That's good. And you have, you know this ki this solar
Terry Kelley: Oh,
Solomon Dana: receptor
Terry Kelley: yeah.
Solomon Dana: that,
Randy Richards: Yeah, th
Solomon Dana: you
Randy Richards: that's
Solomon Dana: know
Randy Richards: another
Solomon Dana: Yes.
Randy Richards: really good point.
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Randy Richards: Maybe
Solomon Dana: I think technically
Randy Richards: okay.
Solomon Dana: it's acceptable, so
Terry Kelley: Maybe two?
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Randy Richards: So using the same scale, two?
Terry Kelley: Two?
Solomon Dana: Two,
Terry Kelley: I
Solomon Dana: yeah, two. It's
Terry Kelley: would
Solomon Dana: it's
Terry Kelley: say
Solomon Dana: fine,
Terry Kelley: two.
Solomon Dana: so.
Terry Kelley: You agree?
Randy Richards: Okay.
Troy Robbins: Yeah, I agree.
Terry Kelley: It's better
Randy Richards: Now
Terry Kelley: like
Randy Richards: maybe
Terry Kelley: that, isn't
Randy Richards: the most
Terry Kelley: it?
Randy Richards: critical one.
Terry Kelley: Okay.
Solomon Dana: Most
Randy Richards: L last one w I would like to judge is is it easy to use?
Solomon Dana: Eh, for th the vocal command yes, it's might be easy. But it's
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: just
Troy Robbins: it's
Solomon Dana: speaking.
Troy Robbins: very easy.
Solomon Dana: You just need
Randy Richards: Yeah but
Solomon Dana: the
Randy Richards: this
Solomon Dana: command.
Troy Robbins: You
Randy Richards: this
Troy Robbins: can
Randy Richards: turning
Troy Robbins: use this in this way.
Randy Richards: can you can you just re explain Randy Richards the
Solomon Dana: As a principle.
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Randy Richards: Please.
Troy Robbins: Th this is the base.
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: So you can turn to change the channel.
Randy Richards: Yeah but how how intuitive is it to turn things
Troy Robbins: You just
Randy Richards: to change
Troy Robbins: tu
Randy Richards: channels?
Troy Robbins: turn d
Solomon Dana: I
Troy Robbins: d
Solomon Dana: think maybe if you
Randy Richards: Like
Solomon Dana: he
Randy Richards: if you want
Terry Kelley: Oh,
Randy Richards: to
Terry Kelley: ok
Randy Richards: go from
Terry Kelley: I understand.
Solomon Dana: If you hear some
Terry Kelley: You take
Solomon Dana: click
Terry Kelley: take the remote, so and you can turn
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: like that to change the channel?
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Randy Richards: Yeah but imagine
Terry Kelley: I
Randy Richards: you
Terry Kelley: think
Randy Richards: y
Terry Kelley: it's quite easy to so s zapping, but maybe it will be too fast.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, it
Randy Richards: Yeah
Solomon Dana: would
Randy Richards: I'm I'm no I'm not definitely convinced it's it's the best way to if you wanna jump from, I dunno, one to twenty?
Solomon Dana: Oh
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: yeah, that's difficult.
Randy Richards: How can you
Solomon Dana: That's
Randy Richards: go
Solomon Dana: dif that's
Randy Richards: directly
Solomon Dana: difficult.
Randy Richards: to twenty, for example?
Troy Robbins: No, no, no. I if y
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: uh if it depend on the the angle you turn the
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: Yeah
Randy Richards: I
Solomon Dana: but
Randy Richards: agree.
Solomon Dana: y how
Randy Richards: I agree. But I mean if
Solomon Dana: you need to know
Troy Robbins: I if
Randy Richards: you're
Solomon Dana: I
Randy Richards: fro
Troy Robbins: if
Randy Richards: from
Troy Robbins: this
Randy Richards: two?
Troy Robbins: is a channel one. So it c it could be channel
Solomon Dana: I think
Troy Robbins: two,
Solomon Dana: something
Troy Robbins: channel
Solomon Dana: that
Troy Robbins: three, channel
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: four, channel five.
Terry Kelley: Yeah, you have
Troy Robbins: So
Terry Kelley: a,
Troy Robbins: change.
Terry Kelley: like
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: that,
Solomon Dana: And
Randy Richards: Yeah
Solomon Dana: you
Terry Kelley: and
Solomon Dana: you
Randy Richards: ju
Solomon Dana: can
Randy Richards: just
Terry Kelley: so on.
Randy Richards: imagine you have fifty fifty
Terry Kelley: Oh
Randy Richards: channels
Terry Kelley: yeah.
Randy Richards: uh
Troy Robbins: Y uh fifth channel
Randy Richards: We're not
Troy Robbins: divided
Randy Richards: talking
Troy Robbins: by the num by the by three hundred thirteen degree.
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: So you got how many degree you
Terry Kelley: Yeah
Troy Robbins: you
Terry Kelley: but y but you have
Troy Robbins: it
Terry Kelley: to go through all the channels if
Solomon Dana: I
Terry Kelley: you
Troy Robbins: No
Solomon Dana: think
Terry Kelley: want
Solomon Dana: you
Troy Robbins: no,
Terry Kelley: to
Solomon Dana: can
Troy Robbins: you
Terry Kelley: go
Troy Robbins: don't
Solomon Dana: if
Troy Robbins: have
Solomon Dana: you have
Troy Robbins: to
Solomon Dana: a scale,
Troy Robbins: y
Solomon Dana: so
Troy Robbins: no it's uh when you when you stop t uh when you stop, the the turn,
Terry Kelley: Mm-hmm.
Troy Robbins: then the angle you stop is the angle you is
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: the channel you
Randy Richards: How d how do you know this angle is th is the correct one?
Troy Robbins: It's it's very easy, because you kn you know how many channel are there in
Randy Richards: So
Troy Robbins: the
Randy Richards: you you count one degree, two degrees, no.
Troy Robbins: Yeah, yeah, yeah. You can do it.
Randy Richards: I don't think so.
Troy Robbins: I think so I
Solomon Dana: Yeah,
Troy Robbins: think so you
Solomon Dana: it's
Troy Robbins: can
Solomon Dana: a
Troy Robbins: do
Solomon Dana: bit
Troy Robbins: it.
Solomon Dana: difficult.
Troy Robbins: I think so, you can just
Solomon Dana: I think
Troy Robbins: change.
Solomon Dana: b but the the vocal command is easy too. You can say fifty
Randy Richards: Yeah voc vocal
Solomon Dana: and
Randy Richards: command is okay.
Solomon Dana: fifty it's okay, so
Randy Richards: But w we've said previously that maybe it's not going
Troy Robbins: There's
Randy Richards: to be
Troy Robbins: uh also
Randy Richards: th l
Terry Kelley: Yeah,
Troy Robbins: a number,
Terry Kelley: but when you're
Troy Robbins: you
Randy Richards: the
Troy Robbins: know.
Randy Richards: main
Terry Kelley: zapping you're changing from one channel to the other, so you're passing through all the channels. So, when you say I want to go to the channel number twenty that's you've decided to go to channel twenty, so you can say channel twenty,
Solomon Dana: Uh, yeah,
Terry Kelley: or
Solomon Dana: and
Terry Kelley: channel
Solomon Dana: y that's
Terry Kelley: four, because
Solomon Dana: yeah.
Terry Kelley: you really want to go on this channel. But if you really
Randy Richards: And this
Terry Kelley: want
Randy Richards: would be
Terry Kelley: to
Randy Richards: more for browsing,
Terry Kelley: to do zapping
Randy Richards: ah.
Terry Kelley: you you
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: don't really know what you want to do, you can turn it.
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: Just go through all the channels
Solomon Dana: To see
Terry Kelley: and maybe
Troy Robbins: Mm-hmm.
Solomon Dana: uh
Terry Kelley: stop if
Solomon Dana: yeah
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: there is something
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: uh
Terry Kelley: interesting?
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Randy Richards: Mm-hmm.
Terry Kelley: Seems to be good.
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: Good choice, mister David Jordan.
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Randy Richards: Yeah, I mean you're famous.
Solomon Dana: And but
Troy Robbins: And also
Solomon Dana: I'd
Troy Robbins: you can, if
Randy Richards: You.
Troy Robbins: you i
Terry Kelley: yeah, what's
Troy Robbins: You ca
Terry Kelley: what's
Troy Robbins: you can
Terry Kelley: this
Troy Robbins: turn this.
Terry Kelley: cherry?
Troy Robbins: Or you ca you can you can also
Solomon Dana: It is a turn
Troy Robbins: turn
Solomon Dana: off
Troy Robbins: this.
Solomon Dana: t turn off
Troy Robbins: For
Solomon Dana: button,
Troy Robbins: this you
Solomon Dana: maybe.
Troy Robbins: can tune it's for tune. You you if you want to skip from channel one to channel two, you you skip this. If you want to from uh skip from channel one to channel ten you tune this.
Randy Richards: Mm.
Troy Robbins: It's like fine, from coarse to fine. This is coarse, this is fine.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, yeah yeah. That's
Terry Kelley: Okay.
Troy Robbins: So it's coarse to fine
Solomon Dana: that's
Troy Robbins: design.
Solomon Dana: very technologic, so. Yeah.
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Randy Richards: Okay the uh th this looks better. Yeah.
Troy Robbins: Yeah is is this is, from one channel
Solomon Dana: S
Troy Robbins: to
Solomon Dana: But I
Troy Robbins: maybe
Solomon Dana: di
Troy Robbins: to
Solomon Dana: I didn't
Troy Robbins: ten channel.
Solomon Dana: see where the
Troy Robbins: This
Solomon Dana: t f
Troy Robbins: is from
Solomon Dana: the turn
Troy Robbins: one channel
Solomon Dana: off
Troy Robbins: to
Solomon Dana: t turn on turn off button so much activates maybe one of the
Terry Kelley: Yeah,
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: th you
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: have the vocal commands.
Solomon Dana: Uh it's
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: k
Terry Kelley: On off.
Solomon Dana: on off, yeah.
Randy Richards: Yeah, but it has to be on to
Terry Kelley: Most
Randy Richards: recognise
Terry Kelley: of the time
Randy Richards: fas
Terry Kelley: you have the yeah it's a sleeping remote control.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, sleeping.
Randy Richards: Ah, that's not the ecological
Terry Kelley: That's
Randy Richards: part,
Terry Kelley: true. W that
Randy Richards: yeah.
Terry Kelley: why we have the
Randy Richards: Solar.
Terry Kelley: solar
Solomon Dana: To compensate.
Terry Kelley: ti yeah.
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Terry Kelley: So
Randy Richards: So, which number?
Terry Kelley: three.
Solomon Dana: Easy to use, it's very relative but three it's fine, I think, it's reasonable
Troy Robbins: Mm-hmm.
Terry Kelley: Do you agree?
Solomon Dana: three.
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: Three?
Troy Robbins: agree, agree.
Randy Richards: So reasonably, is four, is one?
Solomon Dana: Three f three for Randy Richards, it's o it's okay.
Randy Richards: So,
Solomon Dana: Four
Randy Richards: three.
Solomon Dana: or three. Maybe you can vote to see how many everybody gives no and just take
Terry Kelley: And
Solomon Dana: the mean.
Terry Kelley: what's your opinion?
Randy Richards: Uh
Solomon Dana: Will
Randy Richards: we
Solomon Dana: you
Randy Richards: wouldn't
Solomon Dana: give
Randy Richards: say, I mean,
Solomon Dana: four?
Randy Richards: those are sort of agreed but this one would be more five to Randy Richards.
Solomon Dana: Five?
Randy Richards: I'd like I mean this is the just a prototype. I'm not really convinced it's so easy to use,
Solomon Dana: Yeah,
Randy Richards: but
Solomon Dana: so
Randy Richards: I don't
Solomon Dana: maybe
Troy Robbins: Uh
Randy Richards: know.
Solomon Dana: if
Troy Robbins: w w what do y what uh you compare with traditional
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: uh um tr traditional controller? I think it's easier than traditional controller. If you use traditional controller you have to put a button, but now you don't have to put button, you have you just turn the
Solomon Dana: Yeah
Troy Robbins: turn the
Solomon Dana: but
Troy Robbins: ball.
Solomon Dana: y you know
Troy Robbins: There's
Randy Richards: So you have
Troy Robbins: two kind of balls, the smaller the the the
Randy Richards: yeah.
Troy Robbins: so you can c you can c you can control the scale. But in the traditional controller, how do how can you control the scale?
Randy Richards: Uh by pushing
Solomon Dana: You just push
Randy Richards: zero
Solomon Dana: two button,
Randy Richards: after
Solomon Dana: zero
Randy Richards: after
Solomon Dana: and
Randy Richards: the first one.
Solomon Dana: and
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: one. And
Troy Robbins: yeah, yeah, y you you can do it,
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: but
Solomon Dana: that's
Troy Robbins: you can also do it in the b if you you do not wa if you do not want to browsing all the channel you can just p there's also a button here.
Solomon Dana: Are there some buttons? Okay.
Troy Robbins: Yeah, this function is just for your browsing, from one channel to th the next one, the next s sn s, the
Randy Richards: Mm-hmm.
Terry Kelley: It's
Troy Robbins: th the
Terry Kelley: not
Troy Robbins: third
Terry Kelley: what
Troy Robbins: one.
Terry Kelley: you said previously. Previously
Randy Richards: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: you
Randy Richards: if you're
Terry Kelley: said
Randy Richards: changing
Terry Kelley: that turning
Randy Richards: your mind.
Terry Kelley: this was the fine
Randy Richards: Fine to coarse.
Terry Kelley: Fine
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: to coarse. And
Troy Robbins: yeah.
Terry Kelley: from ten to ten channels
Troy Robbins: Y one
Terry Kelley: here.
Troy Robbins: to ten, ten to twelve, uh ten to t uh twenty. Ten to twenty and this one, t one two three four five six, like this.
Terry Kelley: Okay.
Troy Robbins: Uh there's different scale, so you can
Randy Richards: Okay.
Troy Robbins: you can choose
Randy Richards: But this
Troy Robbins: how much do
Randy Richards: this
Troy Robbins: you want
Randy Richards: has
Troy Robbins: to
Randy Richards: to
Troy Robbins: sc
Randy Richards: stay on the table, right?
Troy Robbins: Mm-hmm.
Randy Richards: This has to stay on the table.
Troy Robbins: I i
Solomon Dana: In fact on a flat
Troy Robbins: this is
Solomon Dana: place
Troy Robbins: just a base. You can just
Solomon Dana: You can
Randy Richards: Yeah
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Randy Richards: but then uh when you turn
Terry Kelley: Oh
Randy Richards: turn it
Solomon Dana: Oh ye yes, that's
Terry Kelley: Yeah,
Randy Richards: Just
Solomon Dana: right.
Terry Kelley: no no, no. You can't put
Randy Richards: It's
Terry Kelley: it out. It's just your turning from the base. You need to have everything in hand. If you want to turn, you can't use it and turn. It's impossible.
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: You need to put it on and
Randy Richards: You know
Terry Kelley: turn.
Randy Richards: tha that's the weak point,
Solomon Dana: Oh
Randy Richards: because with a traditional
Troy Robbins: You use your
Randy Richards: one
Troy Robbins: y
Randy Richards: you just have one hand.
Terry Kelley: Yeah, but
Solomon Dana: my
Terry Kelley: nobody
Solomon Dana: God.
Terry Kelley: would be able to take it in the pocket and bring it in the kitchen and say I've lost the remote control. Nobody would take it.
Randy Richards: Sure. Yeah, you would never
Terry Kelley: So nobody
Randy Richards: you would
Terry Kelley: w
Randy Richards: never lose
Terry Kelley: will
Randy Richards: this one,
Terry Kelley: lost
Randy Richards: yeah.
Terry Kelley: lose
Troy Robbins: So
Terry Kelley: it.
Troy Robbins: th this is a d next generation controller.
Solomon Dana: yeah
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: maybe, maybe may it's the next
Troy Robbins: Okay
Solomon Dana: prototype,
Troy Robbins: okay,
Solomon Dana: maybe
Troy Robbins: okay.
Solomon Dana: we cou
Terry Kelley: S maybe we can change from
Solomon Dana: Four.
Terry Kelley: th
Solomon Dana: Maybe four,
Troy Robbins: Four.
Solomon Dana: it's okay.
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Terry Kelley: Four?
Solomon Dana: I'll put four.
Terry Kelley: Easy to use, four. Gonna
Randy Richards: Four.
Terry Kelley: say four.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, four it's more
Randy Richards: Uh
Solomon Dana: reasonable.
Randy Richards: it's even easier to maybe.
Solomon Dana: You can you can erase with this er
Randy Richards: Ok
Solomon Dana: yeah.
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Randy Richards: Mm.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, four it's more reasonable, so. So
Randy Richards: So,
Solomon Dana: it's
Randy Richards: average?
Solomon Dana: nine, nine over
Randy Richards: Three?
Troy Robbins: Three?
Solomon Dana: three.
Terry Kelley: Trois. Three.
Solomon Dana: Oh yeah, it's.
Troy Robbins: Trois.
Randy Richards: Okay, so
Solomon Dana: It need maybe some wo further work, but
Randy Richards: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: it's
Randy Richards: especially on the easy to use
Solomon Dana: Yeah, uh s
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: yeah.
Randy Richards: target.
Solomon Dana: Might
Terry Kelley: So,
Solomon Dana: it might be fine.
Randy Richards: Okay.
Terry Kelley: th the project is accepted?
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, b I think
Terry Kelley: But I d m I think that it will be good to do some more work to transform this into a pineapple.
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, yeah.
Troy Robbins: Yeah. Okay.
Terry Kelley: So uh mm
Solomon Dana: That's
Terry Kelley: mm.
Solomon Dana: the finance.
Terry Kelley: Mm. Okay and we we had a project prototype presentation with the evaluation. So as we all agree to accept,
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: Mm.
Terry Kelley: under
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Terry Kelley: certain conditions, the prototype, we'll have look to the final sh financial view. So we need to calculate the production cost.
Randy Richards: Mm-hmm.
Terry Kelley: As I said in the first meeting we need to have so a remote control that would cost not more than twelve and
Troy Robbins: Mm-hmm.
Terry Kelley: point fifty Euros.
Troy Robbins: Mm-hmm.
Terry Kelley: And if not if it's not the case y you would have to redesign it.
Solomon Dana: Oh yeah.
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: So, just have a look at the okay here is the Excel sheet, so so it has the energy source. We have hand dynamo. No,
Randy Richards: No.
Terry Kelley: we don't use that. We have battery, right?
Solomon Dana: Yeah, we have battery.
Terry Kelley: Kinetic, we don't have it,
Solomon Dana: No,
Terry Kelley: I suppose,
Solomon Dana: um
Terry Kelley: but we
Solomon Dana: solar
Terry Kelley: have solar
Solomon Dana: cells,
Terry Kelley: cells.
Solomon Dana: yeah.
Terry Kelley: Um, how many do y do you need, solar cells? Do you think one would be enough, or such as
Solomon Dana: Uh I think in
Terry Kelley: as
Solomon Dana: each
Terry Kelley: number
Solomon Dana: ball
Terry Kelley: of
Solomon Dana: you
Terry Kelley: branches?
Solomon Dana: have three
Terry Kelley: Three?
Solomon Dana: three uh yeah, three, yeah. Three three solar cells.
Terry Kelley: So, electronic. Single simple chip on print? Just
Solomon Dana: S
Terry Kelley: one
Solomon Dana: s
Terry Kelley: would be necessary?
Solomon Dana: simple, simple, yeah.
Terry Kelley: One?
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: Zero for the others. And sample sensor, sample speaker. One?
Solomon Dana: Mm. One maybe, yeah.
Terry Kelley: As we have voice recognition,
Solomon Dana: Yeah
Terry Kelley: I think.
Solomon Dana: yeah yeah.
Terry Kelley: So
Solomon Dana: Is it
Terry Kelley: the case.
Solomon Dana: Is sh it
Randy Richards: So we are all already nineteen.
Solomon Dana: Wooden.
Terry Kelley: Okay, just
Troy Robbins: The solar cell
Terry Kelley: keep
Troy Robbins: is too
Terry Kelley: on going,
Troy Robbins: expensive.
Terry Kelley: just
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: to have an idea.
Solomon Dana: Is Yes a wooden pl I and that's There's no
Terry Kelley: Well
Solomon Dana: wood, so plastic
Terry Kelley: uh
Solomon Dana: just only,
Terry Kelley: yeah,
Solomon Dana: I think.
Terry Kelley: but what what about case? Uncurved, flat, single curved, double curved. I think it's more like
Randy Richards: That's
Terry Kelley: double
Randy Richards: gonna be
Terry Kelley: curved.
Randy Richards: double
Solomon Dana: Double
Randy Richards: curved,
Solomon Dana: curve, yeah,
Randy Richards: yeah.
Solomon Dana: double curve.
Terry Kelley: One?
Solomon Dana: One, you have.
Terry Kelley: Uh wood?
Solomon Dana: But it's yeah,
Randy Richards: Rather four
Solomon Dana: a
Randy Richards: buttons.
Solomon Dana: a rubber uh
Randy Richards: Oh
Terry Kelley: Uh
Randy Richards: no, interface.
Terry Kelley: do we need special colour? Y maybe,
Solomon Dana: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: two?
Solomon Dana: yeah.
Randy Richards: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: We have
Randy Richards: yeah
Terry Kelley: two
Randy Richards: that's
Terry Kelley: special
Solomon Dana: Y
Randy Richards: special
Terry Kelley: colours.
Randy Richards: colours,
Solomon Dana: y yeah, yeah.
Randy Richards: sure.
Terry Kelley: Push button.
Troy Robbins: Mm. Yeah, we have four.
Solomon Dana: Five?
Troy Robbins: Five.
Terry Kelley: Okay. Scroll wheel.
Troy Robbins: No.
Terry Kelley: We don no. It it's more like integrated
Solomon Dana: I think
Terry Kelley: scor.
Solomon Dana: that this will
Troy Robbins: No
Solomon Dana: be
Troy Robbins: no.
Solomon Dana: like a scroll
Randy Richards: Yeah tha
Solomon Dana: wheel,
Randy Richards: that's
Solomon Dana: actually.
Randy Richards: wheel.
Solomon Dana: Y you
Troy Robbins: No
Solomon Dana: tu
Troy Robbins: no no, it
Solomon Dana: you turn you turn it, so
Terry Kelley: Yeah,
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Terry Kelley: maybe
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: two scroll wheel, as we
Solomon Dana: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: have
Solomon Dana: true.
Terry Kelley: the coarse
Solomon Dana: Yeah, yeah. Yeah.
Terry Kelley: coarse to fine scroll
Solomon Dana: Okay,
Terry Kelley: wheel.
Solomon Dana: yeah, yeah. Scr
Terry Kelley: So,
Randy Richards: I think the
Terry Kelley: no
Randy Richards: price
Terry Kelley: button
Randy Richards: is okay.
Terry Kelley: supplements?
Troy Robbins: No.
Terry Kelley: Okay.
Randy Richards: Um, no.
Terry Kelley: Okay we I think we have problem.
Solomon Dana: L_C_ display, maybe. Interface.
Terry Kelley: I think we s if we keep on adding things
Solomon Dana: It's okay. fine.
Terry Kelley: so we have to
Randy Richards: Yeah w one of the m key point is solar cells.
Terry Kelley: Maybe if w t if suppose if we change and we g put just one?
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: Has it changed.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, it was stage one, so.
Randy Richards: but
Terry Kelley: Okay.
Troy Robbins: We have change
Randy Richards: just imagine
Troy Robbins: the electronics
Randy Richards: we have
Troy Robbins: to from from the the the sample
Solomon Dana: So
Troy Robbins: sensor to regular chip. Oh. We have to delete the the sample sensor, I think.
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: Yeah, but we have you the the voice recognition, no?
Randy Richards: Yeah but this one one of the feature we were not
Troy Robbins: Yeah it's
Randy Richards: really
Troy Robbins: the one it's m maybe
Terry Kelley: Okay.
Troy Robbins: we ha we have two versions, the first version, the basic version.
Solomon Dana: I think you can
Troy Robbins: Advanced
Solomon Dana: transform
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: version
Solomon Dana: the
Troy Robbins: we
Solomon Dana: wood
Troy Robbins: have
Solomon Dana: into
Troy Robbins: speak.
Solomon Dana: plastic, maybe. Because uh
Randy Richards: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: it seems
Randy Richards: if
Solomon Dana: that this
Terry Kelley: Or
Solomon Dana: can
Terry Kelley: it
Solomon Dana: be
Terry Kelley: would be better.
Solomon Dana: yeah, wood into plastic and it it should be fine.
Troy Robbins: Plastic is free.
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: So, do we need special colour?
Randy Richards: Yeah, that's one of
Terry Kelley: Because we have
Randy Richards: the
Terry Kelley: red.
Randy Richards: requirement.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, red and
Troy Robbins: Wait.
Solomon Dana: yellow.
Terry Kelley: Red and yellow.
Randy Richards: We
Solomon Dana: Fancy.
Randy Richards: could
Troy Robbins: We
Randy Richards: turn
Troy Robbins: we
Randy Richards: we
Troy Robbins: can
Randy Richards: could
Troy Robbins: we
Randy Richards: turn
Troy Robbins: can
Randy Richards: everything
Troy Robbins: we c
Randy Richards: in either
Troy Robbins: yellow.
Randy Richards: yellow or black. Black then is a regular colour, so.
Terry Kelley: I think so we need if we try to have a kind of
Randy Richards: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: pineapple
Randy Richards: one.
Terry Kelley: bee.
Randy Richards: Yeah. So push button then it's it's the next expensive
Terry Kelley: Yeah.
Randy Richards: one.
Terry Kelley: An but we have integrated scroll wheel with push dut button. And I think this is one.
Randy Richards: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: Integrated
Randy Richards: thi this might
Terry Kelley: scroll
Randy Richards: be.
Terry Kelley: wheel push button. So we'll we have only one? And push button.
Randy Richards: Close to.
Terry Kelley: So if we have all
Solomon Dana: One.
Terry Kelley: integrated i in the scroll wheel and push button, it's uh
Solomon Dana: I can remove maybe f you have five with push buttons, so we can just, I dunno, try to modify some of them to have yeah.
Randy Richards: Okay, so what's the bottleneck?
Troy Robbins: How about we change
Randy Richards: Double
Troy Robbins: the sale?
Randy Richards: curved.
Solomon Dana: Double curve. We can transform the double curve into single
Terry Kelley: Something flat.
Solomon Dana: c yeah. F some
Randy Richards: Yeah, but flat
Terry Kelley: S uncurved.
Randy Richards: Case, what's
Terry Kelley: Yeah, maybe
Randy Richards: the
Terry Kelley: not.
Randy Richards: ca
Solomon Dana: Single curve.
Terry Kelley: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: Single curve should be fine, so. Oh, what
Terry Kelley: Mm.
Troy Robbins: Ah we have
Randy Richards: And
Troy Robbins: one
Randy Richards: then
Terry Kelley: Nearly.
Randy Richards: one Euro left. Um.
Terry Kelley: Maybe don't
Solomon Dana: It's
Terry Kelley: bat no battery, only solar cells.
Solomon Dana: it's a bad idea, so.
Randy Richards: Um
Terry Kelley: I think there's a problem with the push push button. We only need maybe
Solomon Dana: Two?
Terry Kelley: just one.
Solomon Dana: One.
Terry Kelley: Just one. Yeah.
Solomon Dana: That's fine.
Troy Robbins: Okay. Okay.
Solomon Dana: That's
Troy Robbins: Agree.
Solomon Dana: fine.
Randy Richards: So
Terry Kelley: So
Randy Richards: we have one
Solomon Dana: One
Randy Richards: button,
Terry Kelley: yeah,
Randy Richards: one
Terry Kelley: you will
Randy Richards: wheel.
Terry Kelley: have So
Solomon Dana: s
Terry Kelley: one button, and
Solomon Dana: one
Terry Kelley: s
Solomon Dana: scroll wheel, so
Terry Kelley: scroll wheel with push button on it.
Solomon Dana: And the vocal chord, it's fine. It I th it's fine.
Terry Kelley: So
Randy Richards: It's good they're not charging anything for that.
Terry Kelley: So, yeah. It think we we've done good job, as the cost is
Troy Robbins: Cou could we have look
Terry Kelley: twelve fifty
Troy Robbins: Could we
Terry Kelley: e
Troy Robbins: have look at the
Randy Richards: Yeah y actually
Troy Robbins: p the
Randy Richards: it's wrong. We're not
Troy Robbins: the prod
Randy Richards: under
Troy Robbins: the p
Randy Richards: twelve
Troy Robbins: the cost?
Randy Richards: Euros
Terry Kelley: Yeah, but it's
Randy Richards: and a half.
Terry Kelley: under or equal. It's not written.
Solomon Dana: It's
Terry Kelley: Sometimes
Solomon Dana: fine.
Terry Kelley: it's under or equal.
Solomon Dana: It's under or
Randy Richards: Okay.
Solomon Dana: equal. It's fine, so
Randy Richards: Okay.
Troy Robbins: Okay. So let's say
Terry Kelley: Twelve
Troy Robbins: Wha what
Terry Kelley: fifty.
Troy Robbins: yeah.
Solomon Dana: It's fine, twelve fifty
Troy Robbins: Which part
Solomon Dana: uh
Troy Robbins: is the most expensive part?
Randy Richards: Solar cells.
Solomon Dana: The solar
Terry Kelley: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: cells,
Terry Kelley: I think.
Solomon Dana: r is
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: i is it?
Troy Robbins: I think it's not t t
Terry Kelley: I think, yeah. But it would i be interesting for our marketing team, to make
Solomon Dana: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: a lot
Solomon Dana: to
Terry Kelley: of
Solomon Dana: be able to si
Terry Kelley: advertisement
Solomon Dana: to sell it.
Terry Kelley: concerning these solar cells
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: to be
Troy Robbins: Cheaper.
Randy Richards: That's nice argument, but
Solomon Dana: Yeah, with
Randy Richards: if
Solomon Dana: mi
Randy Richards: it's it's still four
Solomon Dana: It's it is
Randy Richards: our
Solomon Dana: really
Randy Richards: of
Solomon Dana: really
Randy Richards: twelve.
Solomon Dana: uh really very very expensive, though.
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: Maybe if uh okay.
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Terry Kelley: Yeah but it will be technologically innova innovative,
Solomon Dana: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: so.
Solomon Dana: yeah.
Randy Richards: Yeah but we just have one button.
Terry Kelley: So it's easy to use and powerful, as the remote control a has only one button.
Randy Richards: Easy. I don't know about powerful. Yeah.
Solomon Dana: It's easy
Terry Kelley: Easy,
Solomon Dana: to use. It's very
Terry Kelley: powerful.
Solomon Dana: easy to use.
Randy Richards: Mm.
Terry Kelley: So I don't think we need to redesign the p the product.
Solomon Dana: No.
Randy Richards: Uh that's what we've just done.
Solomon Dana: We've done it
Terry Kelley: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: with it
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: is under the if it was low, high or so.
Randy Richards: Um
Terry Kelley: So
Randy Richards: okay.
Terry Kelley: Now
Solomon Dana: So So what are we going to do with this project evaluation?
Terry Kelley: So
Randy Richards: Well I think we have just have to discuss if
Solomon Dana: Okay, okay, it's
Randy Richards: I dunno.
Solomon Dana: fine.
Terry Kelley: So did you enjoy your clay modelling?
Troy Robbins: Yes. Of course. This is
Terry Kelley: Yeah?
Troy Robbins: my job.
Terry Kelley: Was it a nice way to create your remote control?
Troy Robbins: Yeah, it's uh it's good, to to create a control instead of a computer.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, I think I find it really funny and amazing and interesting to go through all the process to from the beginning to the end. And designing, looking at the chips, the solar cells and
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: uh and it was very informative for.
Terry Kelley: And for the marketing guy?
Randy Richards: Uh tha that was good but we should have more brainstorming like meetings, maybe.
Solomon Dana: Yep.
Randy Richards: 'Cause we just presenting one is presenting his stuff next one his
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Randy Richards: stuff and then we try to combine afterwards, so it
Solomon Dana: Okay,
Randy Richards: um.
Solomon Dana: okay.
Terry Kelley: And new ideas about new products, maybe, wi which would be fashion and uh and yellow.
Solomon Dana: Yellow. I think you can think about a yellow T_V_ now after a fruit T_V_ or I dunno. It can be an interesting I don't know
Terry Kelley: Yes, just lemon.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, just a lemon T_V_ it'd be yellow
Troy Robbins: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: lemon.
Troy Robbins: but y you know the traditional T_V_ it's um
Solomon Dana: It's flat,
Troy Robbins: Yeah
Solomon Dana: uh
Troy Robbins: yeah it's flat,
Terry Kelley: Squared?
Troy Robbins: yeah the shape is very boring.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, that's
Troy Robbins: Could
Solomon Dana: right.
Troy Robbins: we
Solomon Dana: It's really boring,
Troy Robbins: come up
Solomon Dana: yeah.
Troy Robbins: with new T_V_
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Troy Robbins: with such as this kind of T_V_? So you can you have base, triangle base so you the T_V_ you
Terry Kelley: Ah,
Troy Robbins: can
Terry Kelley: the lemon T_V_ with the pineapple remote control.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, that's
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: that would be really interesting,
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: actually.
Troy Robbins: Because the T_V_ you
Terry Kelley: Oh,
Troy Robbins: also
Terry Kelley: that's interesting. You could f we could do a kind of fruit collection of electronics
Solomon Dana: Device
Terry Kelley: things.
Solomon Dana: devi
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: Electronic
Randy Richards: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: device.
Randy Richards: but
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Randy Richards: just don't trust too much the
Solomon Dana: The fruit?
Randy Richards: trends.
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Randy Richards: 'Cause fruit
Terry Kelley: Maybe
Randy Richards: and vegetables it won't last for ten years uh.
Terry Kelley: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: maybe
Solomon Dana: it's
Terry Kelley: la
Randy Richards: Maybe
Terry Kelley: next
Randy Richards: two
Terry Kelley: year
Randy Richards: years
Terry Kelley: it will
Randy Richards: it's
Terry Kelley: be
Randy Richards: dead.
Terry Kelley: insects.
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: But I think it's good to follow the f flow
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: and you know make it now and after, you know, if
Troy Robbins: Mm.
Solomon Dana: the people change their mind you change also the
Randy Richards: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: product.
Randy Richards: but this is good because it's not a long long life product.
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Randy Richards: T_V_ is more like fifteen years, maybe, so.
Solomon Dana: Yeah,
Randy Richards: If
Solomon Dana: yeah.
Randy Richards: you have
Solomon Dana: That's
Randy Richards: a lemon
Solomon Dana: a
Randy Richards: lemon
Solomon Dana: yeah,
Randy Richards: T_V_ for
Solomon Dana: yeah. We can
Randy Richards: fifteen
Solomon Dana: think about
Randy Richards: years
Solomon Dana: T_V_ with you know where you can change you know the aspects o like for the cell phones, you know.
Terry Kelley: Customable
Solomon Dana: Yeah, you customise
Terry Kelley: T_V_.
Solomon Dana: it every ti so every
Randy Richards: Yeah,
Solomon Dana: ti if
Randy Richards: yeah.
Solomon Dana: people change, you just change the appearance,
Terry Kelley: Ah
Solomon Dana: and
Terry Kelley: such
Solomon Dana: y y
Terry Kelley: yeah.
Solomon Dana: you
Terry Kelley: You've
Solomon Dana: can
Randy Richards: Tha
Solomon Dana: keep
Randy Richards: that
Terry Kelley: already
Randy Richards: would
Terry Kelley: said
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Terry Kelley: mobile
Randy Richards: that would make
Terry Kelley: phones.
Randy Richards: it. Yeah.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, you can keep the global appearan
Terry Kelley: Yeah, and following
Solomon Dana: The mood of persons, the fashions uh
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: Mm.
Solomon Dana: We
Terry Kelley: It's interesting, maybe
Solomon Dana: int
Terry Kelley: we can create a a line of uh T_V_
Solomon Dana: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: with uh
Solomon Dana: T_V_, yeah.
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: A
Terry Kelley: a
Solomon Dana: T_V_
Terry Kelley: a tr
Solomon Dana: for autumn and a T_V_ for winter, you know, so
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: it's So what i and do w is it Okay.
Terry Kelley: So I think the costs are within the budget. We're just
Solomon Dana: Yeah, the
Terry Kelley: at
Solomon Dana: pr
Troy Robbins: Yep.
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: at
Terry Kelley: twelve fifty Euros. So do you think you can celebrate your creation?
Troy Robbins: And you can celebrate your leadership.
Terry Kelley: Oh, thanks a lot. Thank you,
Solomon Dana: Yeah
Terry Kelley: mister
Solomon Dana: but I think
Terry Kelley: David Jordan.
Solomon Dana: f it's really a celebrating object. So it's yellow and very
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Randy Richards: Hmm.
Solomon Dana: a very ha it's very happy, so.
Randy Richards: Yeah. It's
Solomon Dana: Uh it's
Randy Richards: party
Solomon Dana: it's
Randy Richards: party
Solomon Dana: a pr it's
Randy Richards: remote
Solomon Dana: like
Randy Richards: control.
Solomon Dana: yeah.
Terry Kelley: The thing now is to to sell it.
Troy Robbins: Yeah, it's your job.
Solomon Dana: Yeah,
Troy Robbins: Sell it.
Solomon Dana: right, go and sell it. Goo and
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: good luck, so
Troy Robbins: Yeah. Okay and the twelve fifty twelve uh twelve
Randy Richards: Uh-huh. Twenty five Euros.
Troy Robbins: Twenty five Euros, yeah.
Randy Richards: Yeah, I think it's
Troy Robbins: Twenty five
Terry Kelley: It's
Troy Robbins: Euros.
Terry Kelley: maybe a little bit expensive.
Randy Richards: It's cheap, yeah. No, I
Troy Robbins: No, it's not so
Solomon Dana: It
Troy Robbins: expensive.
Solomon Dana: should be
Randy Richards: I'm
Solomon Dana: fine.
Randy Richards: not so happy about the fruit shape, you know.
Solomon Dana: Wh really? It should be it should be fine, you know, actually.
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Solomon Dana: S
Terry Kelley: Maybe what you
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: can do a test. Put it outside, and if bees come, it's really fruit.
Solomon Dana: I
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Solomon Dana: I think I like the
Terry Kelley: But don't
Solomon Dana: the
Terry Kelley: put
Solomon Dana: colour
Terry Kelley: sugar
Solomon Dana: a
Terry Kelley: in
Solomon Dana: the
Terry Kelley: it,
Solomon Dana: colour
Terry Kelley: it's
Solomon Dana: are
Terry Kelley: not
Solomon Dana: very
Terry Kelley: working.
Solomon Dana: good, so actually so
Randy Richards: No, the colours are uh it's perfect, yeah.
Solomon Dana: It's perfect, and
Randy Richards: True. Uh yeah, another thing is the logo is missing still.
Solomon Dana: I p is
Terry Kelley: Yeah, but
Solomon Dana: th
Terry Kelley: the colour, I think the colour
Solomon Dana: y the
Terry Kelley: is more is
Solomon Dana: the yellow
Terry Kelley: most important,
Randy Richards: Uh
Solomon Dana: ball thing that
Terry Kelley: because I I don't think you have ever seen something like that before for a remote control.
Randy Richards: Still that was one of the requirements we had. It's yeah but it I don't think it's such a problem just putting
Solomon Dana: Uh
Randy Richards: the logo somewhere.
Solomon Dana: f like y we can we can put some uh double
Terry Kelley: Yeah, but we
Solomon Dana: R_
Terry Kelley: decided to have something yellow and red, for the costs.
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: So maybe we can just integrate it on th on one side,
Randy Richards: Mm.
Terry Kelley: the double R_.
Solomon Dana: Okay yeah,
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Solomon Dana: yeah. That's actually
Troy Robbins: Mm.
Solomon Dana: good idea, so
Terry Kelley: So we have the logo, we have the colour, and we have the fashion in electronics,
Troy Robbins: So we have to give
Terry Kelley: so
Troy Robbins: a
Terry Kelley: we have the slogan too.
Troy Robbins: So we have give him give it a cute name.
Randy Richards: Cute
Terry Kelley: Yeah
Troy Robbins: Mush
Terry Kelley: th
Troy Robbins: mushroom
Randy Richards: na
Terry Kelley: no, it's
Troy Robbins: controller.
Terry Kelley: the it's the pineapple control
Randy Richards: You cannot
Terry Kelley: remote
Randy Richards: say mushroom
Terry Kelley: control.
Randy Richards: because it's
Solomon Dana: It's
Randy Richards: not
Terry Kelley: It's
Randy Richards: the
Solomon Dana: not
Randy Richards: trend.
Terry Kelley: a
Solomon Dana: a
Terry Kelley: pineapple
Solomon Dana: mushroom.
Terry Kelley: now,
Randy Richards: It's not
Terry Kelley: it
Randy Richards: the
Solomon Dana: It's
Terry Kelley: has
Randy Richards: trend.
Solomon Dana: a
Terry Kelley: changed.
Solomon Dana: pineapple remote
Terry Kelley: It's
Solomon Dana: controls.
Terry Kelley: a pineapple.
Troy Robbins: Pa
Terry Kelley: Pineapple.
Troy Robbins: Pine apple.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, pineapple remote remote
Randy Richards: Yeah, but
Solomon Dana: control.
Randy Richards: just flying saucer,
Terry Kelley: With cherry
Randy Richards: or
Terry Kelley: on top.
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Solomon Dana: Oh,
Randy Richards: I would
Solomon Dana: that
Randy Richards: say flying saucer.
Solomon Dana: Oh unid uh
Randy Richards: It's
Solomon Dana: unidentified
Randy Richards: more appropriate,
Solomon Dana: remote
Randy Richards: somehow.
Solomon Dana: control, so
Troy Robbins: Okay. Okay.
Solomon Dana: That's that's pineapple remote control. I think it's fine.
Randy Richards: Mm.
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Terry Kelley: Will
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: you buy one?
Solomon Dana: Yeah I will try I'll
Terry Kelley: Try to.
Troy Robbins: Twenty
Terry Kelley: Okay
Troy Robbins: five
Solomon Dana: try.
Terry Kelley: uh
Troy Robbins: Euro.
Solomon Dana: I can hel I will try versions so to see
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Solomon Dana: how easy easy
Troy Robbins: Yeah
Solomon Dana: to manage
Troy Robbins: you told Randy Richards you h you d you d you lost your control your
Solomon Dana: Yeah I always
Troy Robbins: T_V_
Solomon Dana: lose
Troy Robbins: so
Solomon Dana: my Yeah, so
Troy Robbins: so you need to buy one.
Solomon Dana: so i if it is a universal one I can use it with my T_V_, so
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Solomon Dana: it would
Randy Richards: Mm.
Solomon Dana: be
Terry Kelley: One thing I like is the shape, because you know it's not like the
Troy Robbins: Traditional
Terry Kelley: uh the
Troy Robbins: one?
Terry Kelley: remote controls you can
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: put in your pocket, on uh in
Troy Robbins: So
Terry Kelley: your jacket.
Troy Robbins: this one and this one. What do you choose?
Terry Kelley: I prefer the laser remote
Solomon Dana: I
Terry Kelley: control.
Troy Robbins: What do you choose?
Solomon Dana: think I would choose this one because
Terry Kelley: No.
Solomon Dana: of the colour. It's
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Solomon Dana: it's will enlight your house, your home and your T_V_, so.
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Solomon Dana: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: Oh. Maybe next if we decide to do something we'd can put light inside.
Solomon Dana: Yeah, yeah that would be
Randy Richards: Yeah
Solomon Dana: uh
Randy Richards: but that's
Solomon Dana: an idea.
Randy Richards: going to be expensive, you know.
Terry Kelley: Yeah.
Randy Richards: We had some problems going
Terry Kelley: I
Randy Richards: to
Terry Kelley: think
Randy Richards: twelve Euros and
Terry Kelley: it
Randy Richards: uh I
Terry Kelley: it
Randy Richards: dunno.
Terry Kelley: would be interesting to just to see if we can if people will buy this one, and maybe add some
Randy Richards: Yeah,
Terry Kelley: features
Randy Richards: afterwards,
Terry Kelley: to it
Randy Richards: if
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: after
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: yeah.
Randy Richards: if it's a new trend. Okay.
Terry Kelley: So
Solomon Dana: Yeah that's that fine. So we can celebrate now. That's our new product.
Terry Kelley: Champagne,
Randy Richards: We should celebrate.
Terry Kelley: mister Baba.
Solomon Dana: Yes. It's it's fine. It's I like it.
Troy Robbins: So buy one.
Solomon Dana: Next time. Well, I'll buy one here.
Troy Robbins: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: So
Randy Richards: Mm.
Terry Kelley: Okay, I will close this. Mm.
Solomon Dana: Yeah. No?
Terry Kelley: So I think we have finished
Solomon Dana: Okay.
Terry Kelley: the designing and the evaluation of our remote control
Solomon Dana: Okay.
Randy Richards: Yeah.
Terry Kelley: and we have a nearly final product.
Randy Richards: Our final prototype
Solomon Dana: Final
Randy Richards: which
Solomon Dana: prototype,
Terry Kelley: Final
Solomon Dana: yeah,
Terry Kelley: prototype,
Solomon Dana: ye
Terry Kelley: right.
Randy Richards: yeah.
Solomon Dana: yeah.
Troy Robbins: Prototype, yeah.
Terry Kelley: So,
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Terry Kelley: thank you very much.
Solomon Dana: Okay.
Troy Robbins: Okay.
Solomon Dana: Okay.
Terry Kelley: Very productive.
Troy Robbins: Okay. Thanks.
Solomon Dana: S so who is going to take the remote control? | Troy Robbins and Solomon Dana presented their prototype for the remote. The prototype was yellow and red and was shaped like a mushroom. The team then conducted a product evaluation of the prototype. Overall, the team found the prototype to be technologically innovative but had some issues with the prototype's appearance and its usability. The team decided that the prototype required further work. The team then discussed the production costs of the remote and what features they should retain or lose in order to maintain their target cost. In discussing the production costs, the team settled on what features they wanted in the remote, while staying within the boundaries of their budget, and decided it was not necessary to completely redesign their product. The team then engaged in a project evaluation in which the team discussed the process of creating their product. | 1 | amisum | train |
Michael Rios: Okay everybody is ready? Good morning again So. today we are going to have a f second meeting. Oh Michael,
Mark Doi: Yep.
Michael Rios: hi. You're late. You have a good reason for that?
Mark Doi: Yes.
Michael Rios: Very good. Okay, let's have a look to the agenda today. So, we are going to have a meeting about the functional design. Um so first before starting I w just going to uh to go quickly to through the minutes of previous meeting. So uh we we are not decided if w we should go for a universal or specific uh uh remote control, but I have new um new i inputs for about that topics. I goin I'm going to share with you. And uh basically we decided to um to uh go to individual actions for each of you uh so um Industrial Designer should wor was supposed to work on th on th on the working design.
Robert Hood: Yep.
Michael Rios: You showed us you ar you you prepare
Robert Hood: Yeah.
Michael Rios: something for us?
Robert Hood: Yep.
Michael Rios: The U_I_ guy also uh work on that, yeah, and for the mar
Mark Doi: Mm.
Michael Rios: our Marketing Expert should deliver some specs. Alright so so we are going to go through three of your individual presentations. But first I would like quickly to uh to decide of to give a name to the project. So, I just put d quickly Remo, but if you have any o other names that we co could decide for just to to keep something fun for our project we we should we could discuss quickly. Any ideas?
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: Uh the Powerstick
Michael Rios: Powerstick, yeah. What else? What else?
Tom Stupka: Uh.
Mark Doi: Maybe a Spanish name
Tom Stupka: Mm
Mark Doi: would
Tom Stupka: I
Mark Doi: work
Tom Stupka: was
Mark Doi: well.
Tom Stupka: thinking
Mark Doi: Especially
Tom Stupka: of
Mark Doi: if we're selling
Tom Stupka: the
Mark Doi: into the U_S_ market becasue there's a lot of Spanish speakers there. Maybe something that sounds cool in English but sounds funny in Spanish.
Tom Stupka: Mando.
Mark Doi: Mando. What
Michael Rios: Mango?
Mark Doi: is that?
Michael Rios: Mango?
Tom Stupka: Mando.
Michael Rios: Mando. M_A_? M_A_?
Tom Stupka: A_N_ yeah D_O.
Michael Rios: M_ D_O_. Mm, okay.
Tom Stupka: It doesn't it doesn't sound
Michael Rios: What does it mean?
Tom Stupka: cool for Tom Stupka, but
Michael Rios: Oh.
Tom Stupka: maybe for a Spanish for I for
Mark Doi: What does it mean in Spanish?
Tom Stupka: Control.
Mark Doi: Control.
Michael Rios: Hmm.
Mark Doi: Okay.
Michael Rios: Nice.
Mark Doi: 'Cause it also like in English it sounds like you know the man's tool you know because you know
Tom Stupka: But
Mark Doi: men
Tom Stupka: mm,
Mark Doi: like to have control
Tom Stupka: yeah.
Mark Doi: of the remote so it
Tom Stupka: Mando
Mark Doi: might
Tom Stupka: sounds Latino.
Mark Doi: The Mando.
Michael Rios: Okay. So, let's go for Mando? Yeah?
Robert Hood: Yeah,
Michael Rios: No objection?
Robert Hood: yeah.
Mark Doi: Yeah that's.
Michael Rios: Great.
Mark Doi: And
Michael Rios: So
Mark Doi: we could have some like you d you could have the fonts you know special, so you have man in like in in uh in one o in one font and then the O_ as like
Michael Rios: Okay, I think
Mark Doi: Although
Michael Rios: this
Mark Doi: you don't
Michael Rios: is
Mark Doi: wanna cut uh cut women out of
Michael Rios: Okay.
Mark Doi: the uh potential buyers though, do you? So
Robert Hood: Yeah they are the most T_V_ watcher. So we should be careful.
Mark Doi: Yeah.
Michael Rios: Okay, I think this is more a question of
Tom Stupka: But yeah
Mark Doi: Marketing.
Michael Rios: of
Tom Stupka: it
Michael Rios: I
Tom Stupka: uh
Michael Rios: I think this is more a question of of look and feel. Something that should be addressed later. We should
Tom Stupka: Yeah
Michael Rios: we should go to
Tom Stupka: because
Michael Rios: other
Tom Stupka: if the product
Michael Rios: for the other topics.
Tom Stupka: will be international
Mark Doi: Well that's the thing. We need to know who we're selling it to before we can really decide on a
Michael Rios: Yeah okay, so
Mark Doi: Um.
Michael Rios: let's stick f to Man Mando for the name and we'll see for the for the look and feel later. So let's go for the three presentations right now. So, who want to start?
Tom Stupka: Maybe
Michael Rios: So
Tom Stupka: maybe
Michael Rios: maybe
Tom Stupka: I
Michael Rios: we
Tom Stupka: should
Michael Rios: could
Tom Stupka: uh start.
Michael Rios: start with the market, yeah.
Tom Stupka: Yeah. Mm. Okay.
Michael Rios: Okay so I have your slides somewhere?
Tom Stupka: Yeah. Should be in participant four.
Michael Rios: Participant four.
Tom Stupka: Yeah,
Michael Rios: This one?
Tom Stupka: yeah.
Tom Stupka: Uh.
Michael Rios: S that's coming. Uh
Mark Doi: Yeah.
Robert Hood: Yep.
Michael Rios: okay. Great.
Tom Stupka: Okay so yeah will I will give a brief outline about what I what I prepared for this meeting.
Michael Rios: Mm-hmm.
Tom Stupka: For the functional requirements and especially for the for the user requirements. I prepare a marketing report and we have to find the weaknesses and and the the improvements we could do to the current remote controls. And also I di I did a study with for the incorporation of new technologies it seems that the remote controls have been have remained the same for the last five, ten years. There is no no significant difference between the the b the first new controls and
Michael Rios: Okay.
Tom Stupka: Yeah.
Michael Rios: Sh next slide? Okay.
Tom Stupka: Yeah. Well more most of the people think that remote controls are ugly, thoroughly. So and they they admit that the the they should uh s they would uh spend more money in a fancier remote control, which is which is good and it's interesting point. Also the people are worried about about the R_S_I_ disease, which is if you repeat the sa the same movement, which is not a with a not very appropriate device, you you will have problems whe when you will get old. So s people are uh are worried about the the shape of the of the remote control. They are also they get angry very often because they lost the remote control very often, so I think it would be a good point to to l to to find a a solution to any beep any alarm or something incorporated to with the remote control every time it it get lost.
Michael Rios: Mm-hmm.
Tom Stupka: And also I found that young people the the younger people are the more interested they are in incorporating new technologies in the in the remote control.
Michael Rios: Okay.
Tom Stupka: So in my opinion the Mando this Mando shouldn't be very small because the smaller it is, the more like the the liklier it is to get lost. Liklier or more likely?
Mark Doi: More likely.
Tom Stupka: likely. Okay. Uh people also complain because they they they all have the same size of the buttons for buttons who w which are not very use like f uh memorising channels or or this kind of actions which are not very often but they they shouldn't they shouldn't have the same importance in the in the uh in the remote cont in the remote control. Also the z the design should fit the hand shape. So it may be interesting to to think in a in both prototypes, for right and left handed people.
Mark Doi: Well th the on the thing is though, most remote controls are used by more than one person. So unless you're kind of targeting single people you know you're gonna maybe
Tom Stupka: Yeah.
Mark Doi: cut out some a lot of your market.
Tom Stupka: I dunno I th Anyway I think it could be int interesting to to release some a a small fraction of
Robert Hood: Well
Tom Stupka: of
Robert Hood: maybe
Tom Stupka: this
Robert Hood: it could be a
Tom Stupka: remote
Robert Hood: universal
Tom Stupka: controls.
Robert Hood: design.
Tom Stupka: Sorry?
Robert Hood: A universal design, which is which is good for both the hands.
Tom Stupka: Yeah.
Mark Doi: Still
Robert Hood: Yeah?
Mark Doi: shaped for yeah for your hand but not for a particular
Robert Hood: That's right,
Mark Doi: hand,
Tom Stupka: Yeah.
Mark Doi: right?
Robert Hood: whether it's left hand or right hand, but but don't you think that the two points are clashing, one thing you are saying design should fit the hand shape and it should not be very small?
Tom Stupka: Sorry?
Robert Hood: The first and the third point, they are clashing.
Mark Doi: Well it can still be a, you can still extend past
Tom Stupka: Yeah.
Mark Doi: the hand.
Michael Rios: Yeah.
Robert Hood: Okay.
Tom Stupka: Like
Mark Doi: Uh.
Tom Stupka: uh
Robert Hood: So fitting the hand doesn't mean much then.
Mark Doi: Well it means like, this remote here is kind of is very thin and long so instead
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm
Mark Doi: of having
Robert Hood: mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: you know you might have it kind of
Tom Stupka: Yeah,
Mark Doi: a
Tom Stupka: like
Mark Doi: bit bigger or, you know, with maybe some some
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm
Mark Doi: finger
Robert Hood: mm-hmm
Mark Doi: molds
Robert Hood: mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: or something.
Robert Hood: So it means design should be similar to the traditional ones? Little sleek, longer?
Tom Stupka: No no
Robert Hood: And
Tom Stupka: I was
Robert Hood: it should
Tom Stupka: thinking
Robert Hood: fit
Tom Stupka: of
Robert Hood: the
Tom Stupka: so
Robert Hood: hand.
Tom Stupka: like
Michael Rios: Something
Tom Stupka: something
Michael Rios: with the shape of the palm?
Tom Stupka: yeah.
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm mm-hmm mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: Some
Tom Stupka: Yeah.
Mark Doi: finger grips maybe. You could even have some buttons like you know
Michael Rios: On
Tom Stupka: Yeah
Michael Rios: the sides.
Tom Stupka: yeah.
Mark Doi: on
Tom Stupka: It
Mark Doi: the sides
Tom Stupka: sh it shouldn't
Mark Doi: and everything,
Tom Stupka: it shouldn't
Mark Doi: but
Tom Stupka: be symmetric symmetrical.
Robert Hood: Mm-hm
Tom Stupka: Not
Robert Hood: mm-hmm
Tom Stupka: anymore.
Robert Hood: mm-hmm.
Tom Stupka: That's what yeah.
Michael Rios: And then finally
Tom Stupka: And finally, the incorporation of a L_C_D_ or a speech recognition system in the remote control could also be interesting, but I don't know if the budget would
Mark Doi: Yeah.
Tom Stupka: be large
Michael Rios: Yeah.
Tom Stupka: enough.
Michael Rios: First I'm just wondering about the L_C_D_ stuff
Tom Stupka: But
Michael Rios: because
Tom Stupka: most of
Michael Rios: uh
Tom Stupka: yeah
Michael Rios: because
Tom Stupka: most of the young people to thirty to thirty years old were really interested in this kind of technology.
Michael Rios: Yeah, so maybe it's a good time for Tom Stupka to uh to bring you to some new uh new informations. We had the new requirements from the so uh from the head offices of the company, and so they wanted so they want to um they would like to be restricted to T_V_.
Mark Doi: Yeah.
Michael Rios: Okay, I dunno if you had this information already.
Mark Doi: No.
Michael Rios: No, so they want us to restrict the remote control to T_V_ only because of time limitations. Um they want also
Tom Stupka: Actually
Michael Rios: uh
Tom Stupka: this marketing report is restricted to T_V_ remote controls.
Michael Rios: Excellent. So we have also to focus more on the internet aspects because well well te teletext is outdated now and uh finally, it should be clear that the corporate image, that means colours and logos of the co our company should be clearly inde identified in the product. So
Mark Doi: I was still uh I was still working on this uh twenty five Euro price point because I think actually having looked at some of the remotes out there, this is quite a low uh price if if we're maybe I can get to this in my presentation though, but um
Michael Rios: Yeah yeah.
Mark Doi: yeah.
Michael Rios: Sure sure. So maybe we can jump to your presentations,
Mark Doi: Yep.
Michael Rios: right
Mark Doi: Okay.
Michael Rios: now. Okay so let's keep in mind about tha that that this last point about L_C_D_ and speech uh
Mark Doi: Yeah. I
Michael Rios: reco
Mark Doi: think even even if it was within budget do a speech reco rec system it might be a bit difficult because if you think if you're watching T_V_ you're gonna have a lot of this uh background noise from the T_V_ which might interfere with the
Michael Rios: Sorry, what is your?
Mark Doi: Uh participant three. You might have some background noise from the T_V_ which will make the speech recognition much uh
Tom Stupka: Yeah but you should
Mark Doi: harder,
Tom Stupka: be able to
Mark Doi: so.
Tom Stupka: activate or disactivate, so yeah
Mark Doi: Oh you press
Tom Stupka: yeah.
Mark Doi: a press a button to talk, and the
Tom Stupka: Yeah
Mark Doi: the T_V_
Tom Stupka: uh channel
Mark Doi: the T_V_
Tom Stupka: fifty.
Mark Doi: sound turns off.
Tom Stupka: Yeah.
Robert Hood: No it could be command control kind of thing. It requir recognises particular sequence and then it gets activated. Means you say you should say like does that, remote control being on or be on kind of thing, and then remote control comes in the picture for the speech recognition.
Mark Doi: Yeah.
Robert Hood: Because this kind of thing means speech is there from the T_V_ also.
Mark Doi: Yeah.
Robert Hood: So there should be something command controlled, you start
Mark Doi: Mm.
Robert Hood: and then you stop.
Mark Doi: Yeah.
Robert Hood: It's like V_I_ editor, you are having two modes similarly. Otherwise it's just lying idle.
Michael Rios: Okay Michael.
Mark Doi: Okay, so, could I describe the mouse maybe be
Michael Rios: Sorry?
Mark Doi: easier to could I use the mouse, or
Michael Rios: Um yeah.
Mark Doi: Mm. Thanks. Okay.
Michael Rios: The wheel doesn't work.
Mark Doi: Great. Okay so um while uh researching this this topic I first of all just thought of a couple of things that I would like to see in a remote, and just uh looked to see if they're actually available in any current remotes, and then also searched for which are the top-rated uh remote controls on Epinions dot com, which is a a you know a a customer um written basically review site. So um there's a pretty wide range of uh remote controls these days and and uh this remote control on the right here is is one of the more extravagant, but it's not really it's by no means uh mm you know on it's own in being so expensive. There are a lot of expensive remote controls out there.
Michael Rios: Looks like a P_D_A_?
Mark Doi: So yeah it doe it's well basically all the functions uh are controlled through through the L_C_D_ screen except for the really really kind of main functions, which have a couple of of their own buttons. Um and if you look at a lot of the universal remotes out um on the market, I know we're working on television remote, but a lot of the universal remotes out there have uh have these L_C_D_ screens which kind of helps when you're using multiple uh devices I suppose because you can have multiple kind of functions d different functions on the screen at different times. But um the thing that I find most interesting about this remote control, and it's kind of difficult to uh to see in the slide, but it has a scroll wheel on it, which is kind of like uh a mouse scroll wheel, which I think is it's a really kind of important design aspect um is it's 'Cause the thing is what a what we the presen this presentation we had is what we want the remote control to actually do. And obviously the the simplest thing that a remote control does is it just change
Robert Hood: Change
Mark Doi: the
Robert Hood: the channels.
Mark Doi: change the channel.
Robert Hood: Yeah.
Mark Doi: Now um uh the I think that a scroll wheel is actually pretty a pretty handy way of of changing the channel. 'Cause I know when I um when I use the remote to change the channel I very rarely use the numbers on the on the
Robert Hood: Mmm-hmm
Mark Doi: pad. I usually
Robert Hood: mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: use the up and down
Robert Hood: Yeah yeah.
Mark Doi: a special button to enter a two-digit number, and then two numbers, so that's just uh it's annoying. So I think a scroll wheel is is quite handy. Now um the the scroll wheel is is much more useful if you have an L_C_D_ screen, and this brings us to the the point you were mentioning before about the internet uh capability.
Michael Rios: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: One possibility, if we now we need to still talk about the price point because obviously a lot of this stuff can't be done for twenty five Eu uh Euro, but one possibility is to download program information into the L_C_D_ screen so that instead of actually saying I want to I want to go to channel thirty seven because I know this programme's on, you know, often you don't know what ch what channel it's on, or you don't know what's on. If you have a list of of programs on your L_C_D_ screen you just scroll to that program rather than to a channel. So if you think about it's kind of like a you know in mobile phones now you don't use you don't remember people's phone number, you remember their name and you go find that name and ring it. So this would be pretty kind of a handy thing to have, but um we we really need t to discuss the price. So, I mean there are there are uh cheaper this is another multi kinda purpose remote control where it's it's it's very simple, there's only a few buttons, but al each of those buttons does something different in a different context. So this is something else we might wanna consider, is really kind of limiting the number of buttons, because this is the top rating uh universal remote control on on Epinions. It it's really uh maybe worth thinking about limiting the number of buttons as much as as possible um because really I think people want to be able to find the button they're looking for without even looking at the remote control. And was saying before about having different size buttons for different you know frequently used uh tasks, but I think also you know the location and and shape of the buttons is important, but also the number of buttons. So if you have too many buttons it it it increases the the difficulty of finding
Robert Hood: But
Mark Doi: the one
Robert Hood: there
Mark Doi: you
Robert Hood: is
Mark Doi: want.
Robert Hood: one
Mark Doi: So
Robert Hood: problem then the user has to understand each of that functionality.
Michael Rios: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: Yeah well
Robert Hood: Because
Mark Doi: we w
Robert Hood: the same button is doing too many things.
Mark Doi: Yeah well we will have a bit of a simpler uh task in that we're only doing uh a television remote control. Um I think maybe one option is to have you know a little flip-open um door that uh that you have hidden most of the time, but contains the extra buttons like, say, the number buttons for instance.
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: Um I I would if I had my perfect remote control, I'd probably just have no numbers at all on it because
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: they're just in the way. They don't really do anything. Maybe you know I although I do also find flip-open doors a bit of a pain because sometimes they can break off or or whatever, but maybe a door that you can you can permanantly remove or permanantly
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: have on would be good. Um but I think definitely you need to to keep the buttons down to a minimum, but not not let that kind of interfere with the functionality of of the device. Um
Tom Stupka: H I think I think that the tr the transition to this to this new remote control shouldn't be very very abrupt very hard because w if people see a remo see the see a remote control without numbers mm they will think it's very difficult to learn very difficult to
Robert Hood: It does
Tom Stupka: very
Robert Hood: sampling
Tom Stupka: different
Robert Hood: out of
Tom Stupka: build very
Robert Hood: the.
Tom Stupka: different to
Mark Doi: Well I guess
Tom Stupka: the traditional
Mark Doi: that depends on how you market it. If you if you have the right advertisement showing how how
Tom Stupka: If
Mark Doi: how easy
Tom Stupka: y
Mark Doi: it is and how you can, you know, navigate to a program without the numbers, then people might say that looks pretty easy.
Michael Rios: Okay,
Mark Doi: So,
Michael Rios: can
Mark Doi: but
Michael Rios: you continue,
Mark Doi: yep.
Michael Rios: please Mi?
Mark Doi: Um okay, so, I think um one of the really kind of useful things you can do with with internet connectivity would be to have this a programme driven interface rather than the channel number. So if we can have a higher priced uh remote control I think that would really be worth uh something that would be worth implementing. Um mm there's the L_C_D_ screen, um which maybe maybe is too expensive, um but I think also at the scroll wheel, I haven't mentioned it here, the scroll wheel could be used without an L_C_D_ screen, just for changing channel numbers easily. I think even that, I mean, that would be a fairly cheap thing, compared to an L_C_D_ screen,
Michael Rios: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: to implement, um but I think that would be quite useful as well. And the other thing, you say we need to we need to keep it just television, but I think one maybe one option, since this is supposed to be a kind of a fashionable device, is you know there's a certain kind of cool or wow factor that you can kind of you can have with technology, and maybe we wanna make it something that's extensible to do other tasks. Say you have like um a little another little kind of base unit that can also receive signals as well as the television where you can, say uh, change the lighting in the room. You know that would be something maybe you could sell as an extra, so that it doesn't have to be part of the initial development, but, you know, later on you could you can you know you also, selling the potential of the device. Then you say potentially you can then do other cool stuff like change the lights, I dunno, close the windows, whatever, turn the heating on, and um, I think that's something we may need to have as as at least as an optional extra to to kinda make our product
Michael Rios: Okay.
Mark Doi: cool, since we say we're putting the fashion in electronics.
Michael Rios: Okay. Okay, thanks.
Robert Hood: Yep.
Michael Rios: you
Robert Hood: So
Michael Rios: want to go?
Robert Hood: yeah. So most of the things which we are discussing about is speech recognition uh, that means
Michael Rios: This
Robert Hood: on
Michael Rios: one?
Robert Hood: my own I yeah, it should be.
Michael Rios: Great. No, not that one. you are two.
Robert Hood: Two.
Michael Rios: Alright.
Robert Hood: Okay so the working design is uh user i interface could be of two types, one is the usual press buttons which are there so that the user feels that he is knoing doing some he is knowing about that technology. So he is pretty comfortable if he wants to get this, and on top of that there there could be a speech recognition technology also being sitting on the on the remote. So the old kind of users who don't want to have any changes, it can it can be useful for them, and the new users, as uh our Marketing Expert was saying, they can use the new gizmo which is speech recognition kind of thing.
Michael Rios: Okay, sorry to interrupt you, but we have seen before that there is a new way of interacting that use wheel.
Robert Hood: That's right. So anyway, that didn't come into my mind,
Michael Rios: Okay.
Robert Hood: so th that is a possibility. These could be other kind of interfaces. Means we can have, depending on the cost, how much we can afford, we can have different kind of interfaces. So spe buttons are something which is very everybody is familiar with. So if you go to the market and you say that buttons are there the people know what it is,
Michael Rios: Mm-hmm.
Robert Hood: and on top of that if we are having extra functionality people are willing to shell that twenty-five Euros money which we are thinking. Otherwise we are just like others in the market. So anyway that is the first, user interface could be of more than one type, and uh yeah that means we can do the on-line changes which which cannot be done now actually. So apart from the speech, we can have the scroll kind of thing with the buttons. Now for buttons, normal requirements like bit coding and all those things are required. And for voice, limited vocabulary automatic speech recognition system is required and we require a microphone also to be sitting there on the remote.
Michael Rios: Yeah. That increases the the cost also.
Robert Hood: Uh that's right. But uh means we have to see how much what kind of microphones and stuff like that.
Michael Rios: Do you think that performance of such systems are enough to to target well of such technologies is enough?
Robert Hood: Uh yes, if it is limited vocabulary usually it's enough.
Michael Rios: Okay.
Robert Hood: Yeah we we can uh target, means we can target ninety five percent accuracy or somewhere ninety
Michael Rios: Well
Robert Hood: seven
Michael Rios: wh
Robert Hood: perc
Michael Rios: uh I imagine
Mark Doi: Hmm.
Michael Rios: also that the microphone will be an ambiance um a um an ambience microphones
Robert Hood: That's
Michael Rios: because
Robert Hood: right.
Michael Rios: you are not going to speak into
Robert Hood: No
Michael Rios: into
Robert Hood: it
Michael Rios: th
Robert Hood: it could
Michael Rios: into
Robert Hood: be
Michael Rios: the remote
Robert Hood: little
Michael Rios: control.
Robert Hood: d yeah
Michael Rios: So
Robert Hood: it
Michael Rios: it
Robert Hood: could
Michael Rios: could
Robert Hood: be
Michael Rios: be s a few centimetres.
Robert Hood: That's right.
Mark Doi: Well
Robert Hood: That's
Mark Doi: one
Robert Hood: right.
Mark Doi: one other thing that that speech recognition could really blow out the price for is uh when you want to sell into other markets, though, because, I'm not sure exactly where we're gonna sell this, but I presume it's not gonna just be English speaking countries.
Michael Rios: Yeah.
Mark Doi: So
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm
Mark Doi: then you have
Robert Hood: mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: to s you know, you have to train models for
Robert Hood: Uh it's more like, means there are different speech technologies which are existing so D_T_W_ could be kind of which is the easiest. So you have to store some templates on the on the on the chip itself, and it's just dynamic time warping where you try to find out what it is, instead of having
Mark Doi: Yeah.
Robert Hood: a model which has to
Michael Rios: Okay.
Robert Hood: be trained and being a micro-controller.
Michael Rios: Okay we shou we should discuss this
Robert Hood: Yeah,
Michael Rios: la later
Robert Hood: that's right.
Michael Rios: after after after this
Robert Hood: Yeah.
Michael Rios: this uh slide.
Robert Hood: So
Michael Rios: This
Robert Hood: we
Michael Rios: is
Robert Hood: can
Michael Rios: a this is a this is a a very important uh issue
Robert Hood: That's
Michael Rios: in
Robert Hood: right.
Michael Rios: discussion.
Robert Hood: Yep.
Michael Rios: Okay, next.
Robert Hood: Yep.
Michael Rios: Uh that finished?
Robert Hood: No no. Components.
Michael Rios: No? Components?
Robert Hood: Yeah. So, will you go to the next slide?
Michael Rios: Yes sure.
Robert Hood: Yeah so this is the design which we are thinking so. We are having a power button and the switch, which is not much, and then we are having the which is to indicate whether the power is on or not. And then there are two kind of things which can be so one is the button interface which has not been shown because because of lack of time. So we could not put that. So now where the A_S_R_ decoder is sitting, similarly there are different kind of interfaces which could be there. there, and then there could be another scroll button scroll scroller, and then there could be buttons, and all of them they will just do the decoding and put it in the math put it in the proper message format. And then there is there is the chip which is sitting, the green one, and it converts it into bit codes, and that bit codes are sent by the infrared device to the receiver.
Michael Rios: Okay.
Robert Hood: So this is the easiest design the there could be. So th an A_S_R_ decoder we can have things in. To have different technologies. So this was the my personal preference was that we can have A_S_R_ sitting there on the remote control.
Mark Doi: You
Robert Hood: Yeah.
Mark Doi: know I guess you could actually train the remote control as you're using it by saying you know turn volume up, and you press the uh press the button like uh s people teach sign language to kids f well,
Robert Hood: Yeah but
Mark Doi: by
Robert Hood: uh
Mark Doi: speaking and
Robert Hood: as soon
Mark Doi: doing
Robert Hood: as you try to put the microchip kind of thing or something the price will go up.
Mark Doi: Yeah.
Robert Hood: So these
Michael Rios: Okay.
Robert Hood: are the slight problems.
Michael Rios: So your your opinion is that we should go for special
Robert Hood: Because
Michael Rios: condition technologies?
Robert Hood: yeah the reason is that if we go into the market means though I don't have much idea, but as he the uh Marketing Expert presentation
Tom Stupka: I'm sure
Robert Hood: was
Tom Stupka: if you can sell a a speech recognition remote control for twenty five Euros everyo everyone will s will buy it.
Robert Hood: So if
Mark Doi: Actually
Robert Hood: we go
Mark Doi: I'm
Robert Hood: with
Mark Doi: not
Robert Hood: just
Mark Doi: so sure
Robert Hood: the
Tom Stupka: I'm
Mark Doi: because
Tom Stupka: sure.
Mark Doi: I'm the you know if I was using a remote control to, say, turn the volume up because I can't hear it very well, I don't really want to you know drown out what people are saying by talking you know when I'm when I'm instead of pressing up on on a remote control. You know if there's some there's some dialogue all of a sudden that I can't hear,
Michael Rios: Yeah.
Mark Doi: I'm trying to actually find out what's being said, so maybe speech recognition gets in the way more than it helps.
Michael Rios: Okay so
Tom Stupka: Yeah but you know the the average frequency of pushing buttons, it's about
Mark Doi: Well it depends if it's a remote control
Tom Stupka: it's about
Mark Doi: th
Tom Stupka: eighty eighty eighty pushes per hour, or something like that.
Mark Doi: Maybe if the remote control is something that y you don't actually have to pick up anymore, that would be a a useful feature of the speech recogntion. If you can
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: leave it sitting
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: on the table and
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: you don't actually have
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: to find
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: it, then
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm.
Mark Doi: that could be.
Michael Rios: have to take some deci decisions right now.
Robert Hood: Alright.
Michael Rios: Um so if I if I kind of summarise everything we've de we we said. We are targeting T_V_. We need we need to have um um remote control which is fanc fancy, which is uh which is easy to to hand not too small, not too big. Um we have
Tom Stupka: With a good shape for
Michael Rios: or
Tom Stupka: the
Michael Rios: good shape, yes. We should bring new technologies for young peoples, and uh as we have uh also requirements to to use uh to to push thr toward the internet. Maybe this is something we can stick to it. And um also, a very interesting things I I I've seen on on on the one of the comp o our competitor is this wheel that we can use to navigate. So so my feeling is that re regarding costs budget we have an an an target price, it's not possible to go s to go to L_C_D_ and also to go to automatic speech recognition technologies. Uh first m m why not to go to L_C_D_. Because um in fact as we are targeting uh T_V_ in fact we can use T_V_ screen as a screen to feedback to to give some feedback informations about what
Mark Doi: Well it depends
Michael Rios: we could
Mark Doi: though
Michael Rios: have.
Mark Doi: well it depends. If we we don't unless we have some input some video input to the T_V_ or we have control over the T_V_ then we can't actually display that. Like if we if we produce the T_V_s then then yeah we can put you know menus up up there, but otherwise we need to actually have some kind of something sitting in between the video signal and the and the T_V_ to superimpose those those menus. So that's an extra
Michael Rios: Yeah that's right. Don
Mark Doi: cost.
Michael Rios: don't you ha don't we have contacts with uh people on T_V_ or or well systems that exist that we
Mark Doi: Well this is
Michael Rios: can use?
Mark Doi: this is another que we still haven't really defined the remote. Are we still you say we're focusing on T_V_, but is it still a kind of like a universal remote in that it's a replacement remote control, or
Michael Rios: Yeah.
Mark Doi: is this something for our own line of of televisions? 'Cause that really makes a big difference. 'Cause even if we have contacts we can't really produce a remote control that can bring up menus on other other companies' T_V_s. It's just there are too many T_V_s out there.
Michael Rios: Yeah.
Mark Doi: It's it's not really
Michael Rios: That's
Mark Doi: gonna
Michael Rios: good point. What's what cou what could be the cost of uh well, could we fit the the targets uh in terms of cost uh if we go s to L_C_D_ on the remote control?
Mark Doi: For twenty five Euro?
Michael Rios: Yeah.
Robert Hood: It's
Mark Doi: I think
Robert Hood: not
Mark Doi: it's
Robert Hood: possible.
Mark Doi: impossible.
Robert Hood: It's impossible.
Mark Doi: But
Tom Stupka: Yeah.
Mark Doi: but I dunno, I think um it would be good to know if there is any leverage in that any leeway in that um that twenty five Euro because for twenty five Euro I think all we can really do is provide a very basic remote control, and that seems to be kind of against the philosophy of our company which is you know putting the fashion into electronics. So I would I would like to know if there's any chance of of increasing the uh
Tom Stupka: Uh
Mark Doi: of increasing the unit price.
Tom Stupka: What would
Michael Rios: So
Tom Stupka: be
Michael Rios: you mean yo you mean we we should target something maybe which is which would be more expensive
Mark Doi: Yeah.
Michael Rios: but re really fancy in
Mark Doi: Yeah.
Michael Rios: terms to um in terms to had to have really an added value?
Mark Doi: Yeah because
Michael Rios: Okay,
Mark Doi: yeah.
Michael Rios: so regarding the automatic
Tom Stupka: Wha
Michael Rios: speech recognition, I think
Tom Stupka: but
Michael Rios: this is
Tom Stupka: what would be one question, what would be the goal of putting an L_C_D_ in a remote control?
Mark Doi: Well
Tom Stupka: What
Mark Doi: th
Tom Stupka: what kind of information?
Mark Doi: 'Cause you can have things like the programme name instead of the channel numbers, like
Tom Stupka: Yeah
Mark Doi: an interactive
Tom Stupka: but mo
Mark Doi: programme
Tom Stupka: most of the
Mark Doi: guide.
Tom Stupka: T_V_s nowadays
Michael Rios: They
Tom Stupka: show
Michael Rios: have tele
Tom Stupka: the
Michael Rios: teletext.
Tom Stupka: show the
Michael Rios: Well, because they have teletext
Tom Stupka: the n
Michael Rios: on it. Th th you have a teletext sin signal that you can that you can uh
Tom Stupka: Yeah
Michael Rios: that you
Tom Stupka: but
Michael Rios: can get thr
Tom Stupka: yeah
Michael Rios: through
Tom Stupka: most
Michael Rios: the channel.
Tom Stupka: of the T_V_s have teletext nowadays.
Michael Rios: They have t most of them have
Tom Stupka: Yeah.
Michael Rios: teletext, but we want to get rid well one of our requirements is to uh to move to teletext to uh to the use of internet. So to to uh
Mark Doi: You can get a lot more information
Michael Rios: to browse more easily
Mark Doi: on
Michael Rios: the teletext.
Mark Doi: it.
Michael Rios: For instance through uh through your remote control.
Tom Stupka: So what would what would appear in the in the L_C_D_?
Mark Doi: So you could have the name of the programme, you could have um
Michael Rios: The ti
Mark Doi: the start time
Michael Rios: the start
Mark Doi: you know
Michael Rios: time,
Mark Doi: where it's
Michael Rios: all
Mark Doi: up
Michael Rios: the
Mark Doi: to.
Michael Rios: p all the programmes you could have uh
Mark Doi: You could have a l even
Michael Rios: o
Mark Doi: a little image of you know the c
Tom Stupka: Okay.
Mark Doi: you know the the m the main actors or something so you can quickly just kind of even without
Michael Rios: Well
Mark Doi: reading
Michael Rios: I don't know if this information is available from teletext, also.
Mark Doi: Well no, but there are the electronic programme guides out
Robert Hood: Are
Mark Doi: there. They may not have pictures, but maybe they do. There's dependi it also
Michael Rios: Well because
Mark Doi: depends on the country.
Michael Rios: for the same reason that we cannot uh informations on the T_V_. We c we couldn't grab information information which is not there.
Mark Doi: No but I mean with the internet you have flexibility of where you get your information from. So it may be possible that there are
Michael Rios: So
Mark Doi: people out there providing that.
Michael Rios: so that mean
Tom Stupka: But
Michael Rios: w
Mark Doi: Uh.
Michael Rios: w we need an in an extra internet connection to use the remote control, if you want to browse,
Tom Stupka: Yeah.
Michael Rios: in addition to the T_V_, or uh or it should be a special T_V_ connected
Mark Doi: Well
Michael Rios: to
Mark Doi: I I think if we're gonna I think we would definitely need the internet connection because even with y I don't think you could even get teletext information from the T_V_ onto the remote control, especially if we don't control the T_V_. I dunno. We need to find that out.
Michael Rios: Okay. We need to close the meeting. Um so
Robert Hood: But just a small thing, what
Michael Rios: Very
Robert Hood: kind
Michael Rios: quickly.
Robert Hood: of market we are targeting? Is it that we are targeting the replacement remote market, or what? So the remote has gone bad and the person wants to buy a new remote or because the cost of L_C_D_ thing could be as high as the T_V_ itself. That is very
Michael Rios: No.
Robert Hood: important.
Mark Doi: Mm. If
Michael Rios: Yeah,
Mark Doi: it's a really small T_V_
Michael Rios: well
Mark Doi: maybe.
Michael Rios: people go to buy another remote control when they broke
Robert Hood: Broke.
Michael Rios: n
Robert Hood: Okay.
Michael Rios: broke
Robert Hood: Okay.
Michael Rios: their, and they want to go t for universal
Robert Hood: Okay.
Michael Rios: one, and
Robert Hood: Okay.
Michael Rios: they take the fanciest they can
Robert Hood: Okay.
Michael Rios: have.
Robert Hood: Okay.
Michael Rios: So this is that we z that that we should target. So the com the um the uh the committment is the following, we don't go for speech recognition technology.
Robert Hood: Mm-hmm.
Michael Rios: The L_C_D_ is still on disc is still open to discussion. It is up to you to go through this um uh this way and to to report report Tom Stupka back next meeting. So
Tom Stupka: I think that the speech recognition technology would
Robert Hood: It's
Tom Stupka: be cheaper
Robert Hood: it's cheaper
Tom Stupka: the
Robert Hood: as compared
Tom Stupka: than
Robert Hood: to
Tom Stupka: the
Robert Hood: the L_C_D_.
Tom Stupka: L_C_D_.
Michael Rios: Yeah, but not sure. Maybe it's cheaper, but we have no
Tom Stupka: Because with the L_C_D_ you need more requirements. You need a internet connection. You need m more things. But for the speech
Mark Doi: Well
Tom Stupka: recognition
Mark Doi: the thing
Tom Stupka: you
Mark Doi: is
Tom Stupka: you
Mark Doi: I think
Tom Stupka: don't need
Mark Doi: I
Tom Stupka: anything.
Mark Doi: think the type of peop
Tom Stupka: channel fifty, and that's it.
Mark Doi: I think the type of people that are gonna want to buy a very stylish rem r remote control with lots of new technologies are the kinda people that are gonna have you know a wireless internet connection maybe, or a
Tom Stupka: But then
Mark Doi: you know.
Tom Stupka: we should move to another target b because
Robert Hood: Means
Tom Stupka: at twenty
Robert Hood: th
Tom Stupka: five
Robert Hood: yeah
Tom Stupka: Dollars,
Mark Doi: Well this
Tom Stupka: it's
Mark Doi: is what
Robert Hood: twenty
Mark Doi: we need
Robert Hood: five
Mark Doi: to find
Robert Hood: Euros
Mark Doi: out. Can
Robert Hood: is
Mark Doi: we
Robert Hood: yeah,
Mark Doi: can
Robert Hood: that's
Mark Doi: we
Robert Hood: right.
Mark Doi: increase the the price point of this remote control? 'Cause otherwise we need
Michael Rios: Okay this is this is an open question for you. Yeah. This is uh up to you to tell us. But I'm definitely not keen on
Tom Stupka: To move to another target?
Michael Rios: to to no no no, I'm no I'm definit definitely not keen on going to speech recognition technologies. I'm not confident enough. I'm not sure that that we'll have a product really that work. I uh that work
Mark Doi: It's kind of hard to guarantee
Michael Rios: It's
Mark Doi: that
Michael Rios: real
Mark Doi: you're gonna
Michael Rios: yeah. How to guarantee such performances is really hard.
Tom Stupka: the expert uh said ninety five percent.
Mark Doi: Ninety
Michael Rios: Well this
Mark Doi: five
Michael Rios: is still
Mark Doi: percent is not good enough
Michael Rios: is
Mark Doi: though.
Michael Rios: is very bad. So, this is the end of this discussion. Next meeting uh here are the task you have to work on. Um so you have to work on the component uh concept.
Robert Hood: Okay.
Michael Rios: Uh you have to work on user interface, and you have to go through a trend watching. Okay. So the question is still open about the L_C_D_ thing. Um uh we I hope that next meeting we will uh we'll take some um decision that direction. Thanks.
Mark Doi: Yep.
Michael Rios: Bye. | Michael Rios opens the meeting stating that they will address the functional design of the remote and saying they are still undecided about whether it should be universal or specific. He suggests they name the project and they come up with "mando", meaning "control" in Spanish. Tom Stupka presents some research done on user opinions of remotes. He suggests the use of using voice recognition or an LCD, which they discuss despite concerns about budget limitation. Robert Hood presents, showing examples of existing products and suggesting they add a scroll wheel for channel-changing. He says Internet capability might be necessary for an LCD and then brings up button size, suggesting having a flip-open door with extra buttons under it. They discuss voice recognition again, and then the interface specialist presents. He suggests they have two types of user interfaces and brings up that voice recognition would increase production price. They talk about the budget limitations on features and then Michael Rios summarizes decisios made and closes the meeting by teeling each group member what he should work on. | 1 | amisum | train |
John Alvine: Now what.
Joseph Luke: 'Kay, hello everybody. Uh, I guess you all know what is it about, you all received the email, I guess. Uh, we are actually doing this meeting to start a new project which is about designing a remote control. So I'm going to be Joseph Luke of this uh project. And uh so I'm present myself. I'm Fabien Cardinaux and uh I I guess you can present yourself. So I dunno, you can starts.
John Alvine: Okay, so my name is. You can call Donald Schmidt Petre, or Peter if you like. I don't care.
Joseph Luke: Okay.
Donald Schmidt: Uh my name's Bob
Joseph Luke: And
Donald Schmidt: Mor.
Joseph Luke: you are? In the project?
John Alvine: Uh,
Donald Schmidt: Oh, sorry.
John Alvine: in the project I'm supposed to be the technic.
Donald Schmidt: 'Kay. So my name's Bob Morris. I'm Donald Schmidt for this project.
John Alvine: Bob,
Donald Schmidt: Bob
John Alvine: okay.
Donald Schmidt: yeah.
Edmund Huitink: My name is Hamed Getabdar, uh I'm going to be Interface Designer in this project.
John Alvine: Okay.
Joseph Luke: So, uh, so today we are doing a short meeting to present the project, so um We are gooding we are going to present the tool we are we are going to use during all this project. We are talking about the project plan, and we are going to to discuss about st our first ideas and so on, and, yeah. So we have around twenty five minutes to do this meeting. Um. So what is the goal of this project? Is to design a new remote control. So it should be, of course, new and original, and um it should be trendy, and user friendly. That mean it's a very challenging project, and uh uh. So w it's we will try to do our best, and hopefully come with something very new and that people want to buy. So, um So what's uh what are we going to do during this all this project? So it's more like we are going to do inv individual work all in o in o our specialities and we are going to meet each other quite often to discuss and to find a good way. Um.
Joseph Luke: Yeah and everything is will be like this. Um so now we are going to to get used t to to the tools we are going to use all during all this project. So we can try to use uh the whiteboard here. So
John Alvine: Okay.
Joseph Luke: uh. For example we can try to write what is our our favourite animal and write the f our favourite characteristics about it. Mm.
Joseph Luke: Uh. So uh
Joseph Luke: So I will ask you all to do the same.
John Alvine: Okay.
Joseph Luke: Just to get used to the whiteboard.
John Alvine: So probably I would try to try to draw the animal. Well sh should I draw the picture of the animal? I I th
Joseph Luke: Yeah,
John Alvine: I
Joseph Luke: yeah,
Donald Schmidt: Yeah
Joseph Luke: you
John Alvine: think
Joseph Luke: can
John Alvine: I
Donald Schmidt: go
John Alvine: should.
Joseph Luke: draw
Donald Schmidt: ahead.
Joseph Luke: the picture, of course.
John Alvine: Okay, so. Um. Okay, American, um. Um. use the bird. So I tried to sketch it out. I had to first uh write it down because I am not absolutely sure if I can draw it, but ah. Can you recognise it as a bird? Okay
Donald Schmidt: Okay,
John Alvine: it's your turn to
Donald Schmidt: okay.
Donald Schmidt: So I think my favourite animal would be a c a cat.
Joseph Luke: Oh.
Donald Schmidt: That's its head. Um I probably like cats the most because they're cuddly and furry and uh playful. Okay.
Edmund Huitink: I dunno if I should go
John Alvine: Oh it's
Edmund Huitink: with
John Alvine: okay.
Donald Schmidt: Thanks.
Edmund Huitink: this. If it is enough line. I'm sorry.
Donald Schmidt: Maybe put it up Put it a Maybe put it on the desk or something.
John Alvine: Yeah. I should get used to the tool, so.
Edmund Huitink: Okay.
John Alvine: Oh just wait a little bit. C could we put it here, to make it as straight as possible? Ah probably not.
Edmund Huitink: They
John Alvine: Okay,
Edmund Huitink: should be remote.
Donald Schmidt: that's better.
John Alvine: it it works like this.
Edmund Huitink: Okay, thanks.
Donald Schmidt: Your lapel microphone's fallen off.
John Alvine: Are you left-handed?
Edmund Huitink: No.
John Alvine: Oh, pity.
Edmund Huitink: Okay. Should I clean? Okay, I think like horses uh because they are strong and beautiful, so if I want to write it here, I think I can.
Joseph Luke: Never mind.
John Alvine: Ah, it's maybe
Donald Schmidt: Yeah.
John Alvine: better if you leave it.
Donald Schmidt: Yeah. Maybe we should just continue.
Joseph Luke: Yeah.
Donald Schmidt: Yeah, don't worry about it.
Joseph Luke: no
Donald Schmidt: No.
Joseph Luke: worry.
Edmund Huitink: Okay.
John Alvine: You won't draw them,
Joseph Luke: You can
John Alvine: or?
Joseph Luke: draw it, if you
Edmund Huitink: I dunno if I can.
Joseph Luke: want.
John Alvine: Just try. I would like to
Edmund Huitink: Okay.
John Alvine: see how it looks like.
Edmund Huitink: It may be like a cow or I dunno, whatever. I'm not good very good in drawing. Okay, so this is very It's a bird, I think. I dunno what is it.
John Alvine: No, I think it's clear.
Edmund Huitink: Four. Okay. Mm-hmm. Mm. Yeah. I'm shameful
Donald Schmidt: Oh
John Alvine: It's okay. It's
Donald Schmidt: that's
John Alvine: in
Joseph Luke: Good.
Donald Schmidt: good, it's good.
John Alvine: it's indeed beautiful.
Donald Schmidt: Yeah, and strong.
Edmund Huitink: Yeah. Okay.
John Alvine: Okay. Bob. Have to remember it. Bob.
Joseph Luke: So good um So, let's talk about money. Uh we are going to to sell we want to sell uh this remote control for twenty five Euro Euro. And uh our expected profit will be around fifty million Euro. And uh we are trying to to have a market all around the world. So n not only for Switzerland, but for the world. Uh. So, um. The We expect a production cost of maximum uh twelve point fifty Euro.
John Alvine: Per unit, I guess.
Joseph Luke: Yeah,
John Alvine: Y
Joseph Luke: of course.
John Alvine: oh okay.
Joseph Luke: Um, so we can start today to have a first idea of what we want to do what are our experiments with remote control, and any idea? So, if you have some experience, good or bad, with remote controls you can share it and say what you f what is your idea. Anything.
John Alvine: Okay.
Donald Schmidt: Well, from experience, um I've had remote controls in the past that have had very they've had lots and lots of buttons and they've been very small, and it's been very hard to to to use, because there's so many buttons, and you know it's very hard to see which buttons do what, and the buttons are very small and very hard to press. Um and and normally you only every use, you know, on a T_V_ remote you only ever use, mostly, you know, f four
Joseph Luke: Mm.
Donald Schmidt: or f six
John Alvine: Oh.
Donald Schmidt: buttons. Um. So it's frustrated Donald Schmidt in the past, th that.
John Alvine: Okay, I have also some points uh. Maybe two points. Uh first would be that in current remote controls there is no back light, so if you are if you are uh playing with this in the dark room it's
Joseph Luke: Yeah.
John Alvine: it's probably worth to to have something like uh back light. And maybe it could be also dependant on the the amount of of light in the room, so that if if it's in the day it doesn't need to be back lighted because it works on the battery, so. So something like this. And the second thing, f second point from Donald Schmidt would be that in a normal remote control there is uh there are two buttons for volume control. But
Joseph Luke: Yeah.
John Alvine: I prefer like a potential-meter or something like.
Donald Schmidt: Ah, okay. Okay.
John Alvine: You know, some slider
Joseph Luke: Okay.
John Alvine: or
Edmund Huitink: Mm-hmm.
John Alvine: Not
Donald Schmidt: Okay,
John Alvine: just two
Donald Schmidt: n
John Alvine: discrete buttons for volume, but something which
Joseph Luke: Mm-hmm.
Donald Schmidt: Is that because
Joseph Luke: Yeah.
Donald Schmidt: the of the discrete volume levels, or is that
John Alvine: Yeah, but I can reach In uh one second I can mute it down, or
Donald Schmidt: Yeah.
Joseph Luke: Are
John Alvine: or make
Joseph Luke: you not afraid
John Alvine: a
Joseph Luke: that
John Alvine: high volume.
Joseph Luke: if you take your remote control you can move the slide and it could the the
John Alvine: Ah,
Joseph Luke: volume can
John Alvine: n.
Joseph Luke: go up very quickly and it
John Alvine: If
Joseph Luke: can
John Alvine: it drops to the floor then it starts
Joseph Luke: Yeah, also
John Alvine: to scream.
Joseph Luke: if y when you take the the remote control, for example on the table, you take it and you push the button and everything is very loud, and you have
John Alvine: Yeah,
Joseph Luke: a heart attack.
John Alvine: f It depends what what you feel about that.
Joseph Luke: Okay.
Donald Schmidt: Yeah.
John Alvine: Yeah but we can we can think of these things afterwards, but if you have some
Joseph Luke: Yeah
Edmund Huitink: Uh
John Alvine: more notes
Joseph Luke: so
Edmund Huitink: I
Joseph Luke: you
John Alvine: on
Joseph Luke: can
John Alvine: that.
Joseph Luke: Do you
Edmund Huitink: Yeah,
Joseph Luke: have something?
Edmund Huitink: just a simple experience. I uh I prefer um remote control working with radio waves, because remote control working with infra-red rays
Joseph Luke: Yeah,
Edmund Huitink: you should
Joseph Luke: that's true.
Edmund Huitink: you should you should keep it in a specific direction and then try
Joseph Luke: Yeah
Edmund Huitink: it hard
Joseph Luke: without
Edmund Huitink: to
Joseph Luke: obstacles
Edmund Huitink: tune.
Joseph Luke: and.
John Alvine: Okay.
Joseph Luke: Okay.
John Alvine: Um.
Joseph Luke: Let's continue. I have a meeting in five minutes, so
Donald Schmidt: Okay.
Joseph Luke: maybe we should hurry.
John Alvine: Okay,
Joseph Luke: Um.
John Alvine: just a second.
Joseph Luke: So we will close uh this meeting. So we will have a next meeting in uh thirty minutes. Um. Uh. The So I will ask you to do some work. Uh the the interface interface developer will work on the on the design of the remote control, start to to have new idea and
John Alvine: Which i which is Hamed,
Joseph Luke: read about
Edmund Huitink: Mm.
John Alvine: Okay.
Joseph Luke: Yeah.
Donald Schmidt: He's John Alvine? No, you're John Alvine.
Edmund Huitink: Yeah.
John Alvine: Uh I am the Technical
Joseph Luke: Oh.
John Alvine: Designer, I dunno
Donald Schmidt: Yeah, I
John Alvine: which
Donald Schmidt: think
John Alvine: one,
Donald Schmidt: that's
John Alvine: uh
Joseph Luke: Industry
Donald Schmidt: the first.
Joseph Luke: and
John Alvine: v.
Edmund Huitink: Uh-huh.
Joseph Luke: Oh.
Donald Schmidt: I_D_. Industrial Designer. And the second one is Edmund Huitink.
Edmund Huitink: Mm-hmm.
John Alvine: User
Donald Schmidt: And
John Alvine: Interf
Donald Schmidt: then
John Alvine: Okay.
Donald Schmidt: last one's marketing, which is
Joseph Luke: Yeah.
Donald Schmidt: Donald Schmidt.
John Alvine: Okay, so I'm the first
Joseph Luke: So,
John Alvine: one.
Joseph Luke: um For Edmund Huitink, which is Hamed
Edmund Huitink: Mm-hmm.
Joseph Luke: um, uh, you
John Alvine: I
Joseph Luke: are going
John Alvine: see.
Joseph Luke: to work on the technical functions of the remote control.
Edmund Huitink: Okay.
Joseph Luke: And for the Marketing uh Manager, I dunno, okay, which is Bob, uh you are going to try to to find the user requirements f uh for the remote control. Um, you will receive by email uh the specific instructions and uh by your personal coach.
John Alvine: Sign.
Joseph Luke: Yep finished. So I see you in thirty minutes.
Donald Schmidt: Great, okay.
John Alvine: Okay.
Edmund Huitink: Okay,
Donald Schmidt: Thanks guys. Bye.
Edmund Huitink: thanks. Bye.
Joseph Luke: Thank you.
John Alvine: Uh. | Joseph Luke opened the meeting and had the team members introduce themselves by name and their role in the project. Joseph Luke introduced the upcoming project to the team and then had the team members participate in a tool training exercise in which each member drew his favorite animal on the white board and discussed what he liked about the animal. Joseph Luke also discussed selling prices and the project budget. The team then discussed their experiences with remotes, focusing on various features they would like to see in the remote they will produce, as well as features they find unappealing in current remotes. | 1 | amisum | train |
Pierre Goodall: Hello, uh
Willie Lohr: Hello.
Pierre Goodall: this
Stephen Cavitt: Mm-hmm.
Pierre Goodall: meeting
Carlos Paar: Hello.
Pierre Goodall: we are it's fo should on the conceptual design of the remote. Um the goal of this meeting is to reach a decision at the end on the concept and I think the last time we talked about an a lot and we had a rough idea of what is going to be, but uh in th at the end of this meeting we have to to reach a decision. So, uh we will have again three presentation, from all of you, and uh I hope will be fast because I would like to have to for long discussion and and decisions. So, who wants to start?
Carlos Paar: I s
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Willie Lohr: Okay.
Carlos Paar: No, no, you you start.
Willie Lohr: Okay,
Pierre Goodall: So
Willie Lohr: I'll
Pierre Goodall: start,
Willie Lohr: start.
Pierre Goodall: uh
Willie Lohr: Can open my presentation please.
Pierre Goodall: Uh.
Willie Lohr: I'm number four. Trend.
Pierre Goodall: This one?
Willie Lohr: Yep. Can you pass the mouse, please. Oh
Pierre Goodall: Turn.
Willie Lohr: okay, that's fine. Okay. Um so basically I just want to presented to you present to you some recent results we've had from um looking at uh um some remote control market research and some fashion trends around the world. Um fashion trends we got from talking our our contacts Um so f from our market research basically we've come to the conclusion that a fancy look and feel, um as opposed to a functional look and feel, is our number one priority. Um fancy is is
Pierre Goodall: Hmm.
Willie Lohr: is is
Stephen Cavitt: Hmm.
Willie Lohr: the, you know, highest priority. Secondly um that our remote control needs to be techn technologically innovative. Um so this is t number two priority but it's two times less important as the fancy criteria. Um and third thirdly the easiness of use is is the um is is important as well, but again two times less important as the technologically innovativeness of the remote control. From our f fashion people in Paris and Milan, um we've discovered that this year um fruit the fruit and vegetable motif will be the most important thing in in clothes, shoes and furniture. So, I'm pretty confident that our remote control fits into the furniture category. And also um the feel of material this year um is expected to be spongy.
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Willie Lohr: Um so hopefully our remote control reflects that s in some way.
Stephen Cavitt: What does it mean, spongy
Willie Lohr: Uh sort of um squishy. Um.
Stephen Cavitt: Like soft, or something?
Willie Lohr: Yeah soft, like a uh
Pierre Goodall: Like
Willie Lohr: like a
Pierre Goodall: a
Willie Lohr: sponge.
Pierre Goodall: sponge.
Willie Lohr: I
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Willie Lohr: don't
Stephen Cavitt: Okay.
Willie Lohr: know. Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: I will see.
Willie Lohr: Um so in conclusion, we need a our remote control needs to be something that's really fancy, um has lots of technolog tech technology in it. Um somehow
Stephen Cavitt: Okay.
Willie Lohr: would be good to have it related to fruit and vegetables with a spongy feel. And that it's easy to use and from our last meeting our you know Fabian told us that w you know one of the requirements is that we have to reflect the look and feel of our of th the Real Reaction company. Um.
Pierre Goodall: Yeah, uh
Willie Lohr: That's it.
Pierre Goodall: yeah. Easy to use, is it uh a as much as important than technology or fancy thing. It's less important, right?
Willie Lohr: Less important. So
Pierre Goodall: Yeah yeah.
Willie Lohr: um fanciness first and
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Willie Lohr: then two ti you know, half as important as that is technology technology, and half important as technology is easy to use. So.
Pierre Goodall: So, Hamed, can you.
Carlos Paar: Yeah. The second one. Could you please
Pierre Goodall: Mm-hmm.
Carlos Paar: show the presentation number three.
Stephen Cavitt: I think the biggest struggle will be the easy to use feature. We'll see.
Carlos Paar: Yeah.
Pierre Goodall: Um. Number?
Carlos Paar: Three.
Pierre Goodall: Three. This one?
Carlos Paar: Yes. Just Could you please check if it is the first one or the second. Uh, n n no, it's the first one. The second one.
Pierre Goodall: So it's not this one.
Carlos Paar: Uh yeah. Okay. Okay So am going to talk about a little bit about how this remote control should be to be more easy to use I think uh I think the feature easy to use is more important than being fancy, but okay, we can discuss about it uh later. Um generally, generally uh this remote control uh uh should be should be something, in my opinion, uh the first feature is just to be easy to use. So, the more frequent buttons should be larger, they should be placed in a good position uh uh inside the remote control. And uh s uh I can conclude like this, that we shouldn't need to learn how to use it. It should be we shouldn't need to es open a a t book and uh start reading and uh learning how to use this uh this uh remote control. Okay. So what I found out that uh as I said uh I think it's better to put uh more frequent uh uh uh ke uh buttons which are used more in the middle of the remote control, and they should be bigger in size. Uh the shape of remote control should be in a way which can which should be taken easily in hand. It should not be completely like uh a cube. It should be it should have round edge, so
Stephen Cavitt: Exactly.
Carlos Paar: uh then it's easier. And maybe uh just like some toys, some joystick which is easier to take inside the hand. And uh also f uh uh m because because customers doesn't like to buy lots of battery, it should not uh consume lots of energy. Okay. And my personal p uh preference is uh, as I said, uh just putting this buttons in a special places and covered some buttons which are not used uh that much like settings button, like mobile phone. Usually some mobile phone cover the dialling number part, so we can cover these buttons which are not used or uh number buttons for the for the for the can channels, and just put uh volume change or s ch can uh channel change buttons uh uh in the remote control. And if the user needed to do some more complex task uh he he can open the cover and then change settings or something like this. Uh. And also uh I think if we put some some some some some buttons inside of the remote control it can be used easier. Not on remote control. I dunno if I can explain well. But uh just inside. For example, a sliding or rolling uh uh d uh stuff, if we put it inside then we can easily manipulate with uh thumb. So it can be another uh preference. And uh I dunno but uh I think usage of a speech recogn uh r recogniser can be good. I know that it consumes lots of energy, but if we do it in some way that it asleeps when there is no sound and when it detects some sound it may consume less energy. And I think it's good because it's something new and usually young people like something new. So it may not be very useful but because it's new, people may buy it. Uh I personally think there should be a big difference between uh between something. Otherwise they prefer to buy something which is coming from a famous company, or. Okay. That's mine.
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Stephen Cavitt: Uh okay, so good news from Willie Lohr uh uh for Willie Lohr from Hamed, but bad news from Bob obviously, because spongy design, I don't like it as Okay, so could you please, Fabien, open it.
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: I'm person two. And which one, uh first one. I'm not sure but check the first one. I Most of the things I have to write myself on the
Pierre Goodall: This
Stephen Cavitt: board,
Pierre Goodall: one, yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: but Yeah, that's it. Just It's only this slide? Yeah. This this is just uh one thing I wanted to mention and show you that I just uh I just found this, that our company uh developed a s a seven f seven fingers or I'll just
Willie Lohr: Inch.
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah, seven seven inch T_ T_F_T_ screen, which is good news for us, since we wanted to include a display there. Uh so I I probably
Pierre Goodall: Oh,
Stephen Cavitt: draw it down raw scheme. This is this is the stuff that I
Pierre Goodall: Oops.
Stephen Cavitt: can use to Okay, so the this will be like the overall scheme or overall requirements from the engineering point of view. Uh first thing is uh this will be the overall shape, no uh I'm not speaking about the real shape of the device, but the shape of the inside of the device. So there will be some circuit uh for the power. So, say power circuit here. Uh the main energy will be taken from batteries that we can uh uh And if we decide to use the speech recognition stuff there, we must use additional source of energy, which I found the best is to use the solar cells which can which can uh supply everything. I was computing all the all the things related to the speech recognition, and it's okay to use just uh two batteries and solar cells, so. So no problem. There can be also solar cell. Uh the main board with all the circuits will take at least seven to seven centimetres, so this is my like hard requirement for the guys from the design. So
Carlos Paar: Mm-hmm.
Stephen Cavitt: at least seven to seven. It depends where you put your screen, because the screen is uh seven inch, so it depends on you where where you put it. It doesn't matter. Um it's just one cord from from the main board to the screen which can be elsewhere. So this will be T_F_T_. And on the main board we have the um interface to the microphone, which is somewhere, say here. Interface to the microphone. Then the graphical card uh for the T_F_T_ and the third unit is the I_R_. The good news is that we can uh we decided to use the infra-red unit because our company has also developed the chip for communication by the infra-red, including all the stuff inside, so it will be very cheap for us. So infra-red here. So the once again the overall requirements, seven to seven centimetres for the board, which has to be which can be spongy but has to be this size, and the T_F_T_ which is seven inches. Um I have to check what I wanted to Uh from my point of view I don't care about the about the material used for the overall des uh ov all the device.
Pierre Goodall: Can you fit any uh for example a T_F_T_ or any electronic device in a spongy thing, or is there any problem for that? For example, put electronic card on a spongy thing, I can I can imagine it could be a problem.
Stephen Cavitt: A all these things in in uh in this box are okay to put in in any shape, basically. But we
Pierre Goodall: Yep.
Stephen Cavitt: have to take care of the T_F_T_. Well, sponginess. Maybe it a good feature, since it takes if it's around the T_F_T_
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Stephen Cavitt: then it's
Pierre Goodall: So
Stephen Cavitt: good, because it's just keeps it safe, I dunno.
Carlos Paar: Well maybe it
Willie Lohr: So
Carlos Paar: can have two shells, a hard shell inside and a spongy
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Carlos Paar: shell
Pierre Goodall: Maybe
Carlos Paar: outside.
Pierre Goodall: put electronic in a box and a spongy thing around.
Stephen Cavitt: Well,
Pierre Goodall: maybe after.
Willie Lohr: So
Stephen Cavitt: it's maybe
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Willie Lohr: Ca
Stephen Cavitt: related to the U_I_.
Willie Lohr: Can I ask a question.
Stephen Cavitt: A Yeah, that's all from Willie Lohr.
Willie Lohr: This seven inch T_F_T_ screen,
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah?
Willie Lohr: how big is it in reality?
Stephen Cavitt: Well, seven to seven inches.
Willie Lohr: So like that.
Stephen Cavitt: Yes.
Willie Lohr: That's quite big. Uh uh have we decided that we're gonna use this T_F_T_ screen?
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah
Pierre Goodall: No,
Stephen Cavitt: but
Pierre Goodall: I don't think it's seven by seven, I think it's
Stephen Cavitt: To
Pierre Goodall: seven
Stephen Cavitt: be honest,
Pierre Goodall: the diagonal
Stephen Cavitt: I was
Pierre Goodall: is seven. Usually when they say
Willie Lohr: But
Pierre Goodall: seven
Willie Lohr: I mean even
Carlos Paar: Yeah
Pierre Goodall: inch
Willie Lohr: even
Pierre Goodall: I
Carlos Paar: yes.
Willie Lohr: that
Pierre Goodall: think
Willie Lohr: is
Pierre Goodall: it's
Willie Lohr: like
Pierre Goodall: the
Willie Lohr: this
Pierre Goodall: diagonal.
Willie Lohr: big.
Pierre Goodall: Yeah. I dunno I dun I dun One each. But, yeah,
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah, honestly speaking I was thinking that it was seven centimetres initially,
Willie Lohr: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: but it's seven inches. But I I think we can we can cut it.
Willie Lohr: You can cut the T_F_T_ screen.
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah, no no problem,
Pierre Goodall: Let's
Stephen Cavitt: because
Pierre Goodall: go.
Stephen Cavitt: because because then the size of the graphic card will be one fourth. So Yeah, but no
Pierre Goodall: So
Stephen Cavitt: problem
Pierre Goodall: let's cut
Stephen Cavitt: to
Pierre Goodall: the
Stephen Cavitt: to
Pierre Goodall: T_F_T_.
Stephen Cavitt: Willie Lohr to cut the screen.
Carlos Paar: Mm.
Willie Lohr: Okay, so
Stephen Cavitt: So so for the same price we have four
Pierre Goodall: Mm.
Stephen Cavitt: screens now.
Willie Lohr: Okay.
Pierre Goodall: These technical engineers, huh.
Willie Lohr: So, what's the size of the device?
Stephen Cavitt: Ah well this is like this is almost nothing. Seven to seven to at least well some three millimetres or something.
Willie Lohr: Even from my perspective seven t seven centimetres by seven centimetres is still
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah, but we wanted the big
Willie Lohr: Is it
Stephen Cavitt: buttons
Willie Lohr: Can you hold
Stephen Cavitt: and
Willie Lohr: that,
Stephen Cavitt: stuff
Willie Lohr: or?
Stephen Cavitt: like that, you know. Because if it's t too small we can we can lose it, at home, you know.
Pierre Goodall: What user wants. He wants a small remote control,
Carlos Paar: Uh.
Willie Lohr: Yeah,
Pierre Goodall: or? Uh
Willie Lohr: a small
Pierre Goodall: uh
Stephen Cavitt: I thought
Willie Lohr: c
Stephen Cavitt: that
Willie Lohr: control
Stephen Cavitt: it it
Willie Lohr: that they
Stephen Cavitt: should
Willie Lohr: can
Pierre Goodall: with
Stephen Cavitt: fit
Willie Lohr: hold
Pierre Goodall: big
Willie Lohr: in
Stephen Cavitt: in
Willie Lohr: hand.
Stephen Cavitt: the
Pierre Goodall: buttons.
Stephen Cavitt: hand or
Carlos Paar: Yes.
Stephen Cavitt: something.
Pierre Goodall: It's difficult. A
Willie Lohr: But
Pierre Goodall: sm
Willie Lohr: is something that's seven centimetres square e easy to hold?
Stephen Cavitt: W I I think so. I if the roller buttons are on the side you don't have to catch it like that, but just like this, and you know follow follow Well, that's that's no task for Willie Lohr, but well
Pierre Goodall: So
Stephen Cavitt: seven
Pierre Goodall: maybe you
Stephen Cavitt: to
Pierre Goodall: can
Stephen Cavitt: seven
Pierre Goodall: finish
Stephen Cavitt: at least
Pierre Goodall: your presentation,
Stephen Cavitt: yeah, but
Pierre Goodall: and afterwards we will discuss
Carlos Paar: Maybe this.
Stephen Cavitt: Oh,
Pierre Goodall: about
Willie Lohr: Okay.
Stephen Cavitt: okay.
Pierre Goodall: all this.
Stephen Cavitt: Okay thanks.
Pierre Goodall: That's it. Okay. So. No. Uh, so I think we have a lot We have to take decision today, so I think we have to do some work to finalise our idea and take decisions. Uh first I think energy it's a key problem because uh it depend what can we have as feature if we use only batteries, for example, or something like that. Because can we have L_C_D_ and speech recognition with battery, and it's
Stephen Cavitt: Not
Pierre Goodall: also r related to the size of the of the devi of the
Stephen Cavitt: J
Pierre Goodall: device?
Stephen Cavitt: uh just a point to the energy th things.
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Stephen Cavitt: so no problem in energy,
Pierre Goodall: So
Stephen Cavitt: I think.
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Stephen Cavitt: But
Carlos Paar: So but
Stephen Cavitt: we have to use the solar cell. Otherwise
Pierre Goodall: Uh
Stephen Cavitt: not.
Pierre Goodall: like but using how many batteries, for example? Are are what Maybe what is the size of the battery
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah I was thinking just common A_A_ cells.
Pierre Goodall: Okay. Uh
Stephen Cavitt: So like
Pierre Goodall: one
Stephen Cavitt: three
Pierre Goodall: two
Stephen Cavitt: to five centimetres, I dunno exactly,
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Stephen Cavitt: but.
Willie Lohr: So if we use s solar cells, um
Stephen Cavitt: S
Willie Lohr: where is the sun if someone's watching
Stephen Cavitt: Uh
Willie Lohr: T_V_
Stephen Cavitt: d
Willie Lohr: inside?
Stephen Cavitt: doesn't need to be sun. It it's just the daylight, you know.
Pierre Goodall: The
Willie Lohr: Okay.
Pierre Goodall: television
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah well I I
Pierre Goodall: lights.
Stephen Cavitt: suppose that I suppose that uh that this remote control won't be in the in the room like this, where there is light only when
Carlos Paar: Mm-hmm.
Stephen Cavitt: when there are people, but.
Pierre Goodall: At least when there is T_V_ you can get light
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah
Pierre Goodall: from
Stephen Cavitt: from the
Pierre Goodall: the
Stephen Cavitt: T_
Pierre Goodall: T_V_.
Carlos Paar: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: I don't think it's enough, uh.
Pierre Goodall: I dunno.
Willie Lohr: Okay.
Pierre Goodall: Okay. Mm.
Stephen Cavitt: Ah it's a it's a compromise, no?
Pierre Goodall: At least it's new and maybe technology
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah,
Pierre Goodall: New
Stephen Cavitt: that's
Willie Lohr: It's
Pierre Goodall: technology.
Stephen Cavitt: why I
Willie Lohr: it's
Stephen Cavitt: wanted
Willie Lohr: quite innovative,
Stephen Cavitt: to to include
Willie Lohr: yes.
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: the speech recognition,
Carlos Paar: Hmm.
Stephen Cavitt: because you wanted
Pierre Goodall: Um.
Stephen Cavitt: all the new
Willie Lohr: And if you
Stephen Cavitt: things.
Willie Lohr: watch T_V_ outside it's very
Pierre Goodall: So
Willie Lohr: useful.
Pierre Goodall: I think before talking about the other thing, it's important thing it's the case. Uh what what are gonna be the size, because its weight drives the other what we are going to use as features and so on. For example for the for the L_C_D_, if we choose to have a small device, we cannot use this um a such a a a screen.
Stephen Cavitt: Uh the s the screen is okay, but the board, uh that's the problem. Well what what would you guess as a shape? Or what
Carlos Paar: Mm.
Stephen Cavitt: what would be the shape?
Carlos Paar: I think I think their being uh large or small is not important. The only important thing is to be able to take it in uh inside hand easily. So let's say
Stephen Cavitt: Mm.
Carlos Paar: an average size, okay, and it should not be very heavy also. And I prefer to is it shouldn't have a uniform shape, so in the middle it should be a little bit thinner, maybe maybe. So we c it's like like some joysticks. You can take uh some some joystick you can take inside hand easier because it's it's designed for your f uh taking into account your finger shape and your palm shape. So the general shape should be like this. I think uh seven centimetre by seven centimetre is a little bit large. So uh
Stephen Cavitt: Okay.
Carlos Paar: seven not seven but let's say five by ten it's I think it's that's my opinion.
Willie Lohr: Which
Carlos Paar: It's
Willie Lohr: is the same
Carlos Paar: easier.
Willie Lohr: area.
Carlos Paar: Yeah.
Willie Lohr: Could
Stephen Cavitt: Okay.
Willie Lohr: you re could you redesign your board?
Stephen Cavitt: Five to ten.
Willie Lohr: Oh, five
Stephen Cavitt: Well that
Willie Lohr: five centimetres by ten centimetres.
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah, right.
Willie Lohr: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah, I think it's feasib Well one um um How could we do it? We could put the board next to, well, under the L_C_D_ and for
Carlos Paar: Mm-hmm.
Stephen Cavitt: example make the L_C_D_ be totally unrelated to the thing that you hold in your hand. Like holding something, and the L_C_D_ to be just on top of it, you know somehow. Well But maybe
Pierre Goodall: Oh.
Stephen Cavitt: let's stick to the s spongy thing, like one unit.
Pierre Goodall: I've
Stephen Cavitt: Well
Pierre Goodall: I
Stephen Cavitt: fi
Pierre Goodall: s
Stephen Cavitt: five
Pierre Goodall: I
Stephen Cavitt: to
Pierre Goodall: think
Stephen Cavitt: ten it would be feasible.
Pierre Goodall: the easiest thing would be to to have a smaller L_C_D_, if it's possible.
Carlos Paar: Mm.
Stephen Cavitt: Okay, so five to ten, I I think it's it's
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Stephen Cavitt: feasible.
Pierre Goodall: So we
Stephen Cavitt: I'll make
Pierre Goodall: are agree
Stephen Cavitt: it.
Pierre Goodall: with a small
Carlos Paar: Or
Stephen Cavitt: Fo
Pierre Goodall: L_C_D_.
Carlos Paar: uh
Stephen Cavitt: Five by ten.
Carlos Paar: or I don't know but I don't want to now invent something new, because we didn't discuss about it. So using some L_C_D_s we can touch, so we can remove uh keys and just uh having uh, I dunno the name, L_C_D_ responding to fingers.
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Carlos Paar: Touching the screen. Something
Pierre Goodall: Tactile
Carlos Paar: like
Willie Lohr: Mm,
Pierre Goodall: or something,
Willie Lohr: touch screen.
Pierre Goodall: yeah. Touch screen, yeah.
Carlos Paar: So But for now if we don't want to use such kind of screens
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Carlos Paar: I I think we using a a smaller screen is better, because
Pierre Goodall: The problem is we have a limit in a month of time, so we cannot do
Stephen Cavitt: Mm-hmm.
Pierre Goodall: something very new. So
Willie Lohr: So
Pierre Goodall: let's go
Stephen Cavitt: Okay,
Pierre Goodall: for
Stephen Cavitt: so
Pierre Goodall: a small L_C_D_.
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah, so
Carlos Paar: A smaller
Stephen Cavitt: so just
Carlos Paar: s
Stephen Cavitt: just give Willie Lohr the the the five by ten numbers that
Pierre Goodall: Yeah
Stephen Cavitt: you find
Pierre Goodall: okay.
Stephen Cavitt: the best and send
Carlos Paar: Okay.
Stephen Cavitt: it Willie Lohr and
Pierre Goodall: So,
Stephen Cavitt: I will
Pierre Goodall: five
Stephen Cavitt: work
Pierre Goodall: by
Stephen Cavitt: it
Pierre Goodall: s
Stephen Cavitt: out.
Pierre Goodall: ten.
Stephen Cavitt: Hmm.
Pierre Goodall: Um so what about, so the case we talked about. Um something easy to use, you said something easy to use but how does that fit in a fashion way, like with fruit and vegetable, and about the colour and logo of the of the company and so on, now, can we do that? My first idea is because our colour is more yellow, and the it should be easy to take in a hand, I thought about banana, or something like that, which is fruits, and
Stephen Cavitt: Seven to ten banana.
Pierre Goodall: A big
Stephen Cavitt: Okay.
Pierre Goodall: banana.
Stephen Cavitt: Rather mango or something or.
Pierre Goodall: Um.
Willie Lohr: Well it's it's definitely the obvious choice, with the colour of
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Willie Lohr: our company. I mean what
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Willie Lohr: other
Pierre Goodall: But
Willie Lohr: what other fruit
Pierre Goodall: it's just
Willie Lohr: and vegetables
Pierre Goodall: an idea. I dunno what you think
Willie Lohr: Do you
Pierre Goodall: about,
Willie Lohr: know of any any other fruit
Pierre Goodall: but
Willie Lohr: and vegetables that are yellow?
Pierre Goodall: Yeah. I dunno if it can fit with the technology. You are the specialists of that.
Stephen Cavitt: You mean banana. Well, but If it's If it If the banana is big enough. Then, yes.
Pierre Goodall: So
Stephen Cavitt: But if you want to look at the screen, no. Well
Pierre Goodall: Yeah, and
Carlos Paar: I think this
Pierre Goodall: The
Carlos Paar: is
Pierre Goodall: screen has
Carlos Paar: not good.
Pierre Goodall: to be square? Or it can be like a a shape, quite,
Stephen Cavitt: Well,
Pierre Goodall: uh
Stephen Cavitt: it can
Pierre Goodall: with
Stephen Cavitt: be
Pierre Goodall: curves.
Stephen Cavitt: whatever you want. But
Pierre Goodall: It could.
Stephen Cavitt: if it's square then we get four screens out of one by cutting just. But if you want some shape then we
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: can only get like two screens out of seven to seven inches,
Carlos Paar: Mm.
Stephen Cavitt: so. It's like more more expensive to have shape like that. But I don't care. You know, if we fit
Willie Lohr: Well
Stephen Cavitt: this requirement.
Willie Lohr: I'd like a shaped screen. I think that's more important than saving
Stephen Cavitt: Okay
Pierre Goodall: Okay
Willie Lohr: a bit
Pierre Goodall: okay.
Willie Lohr: of money on
Carlos Paar: Mm.
Willie Lohr: on the T_F_T_ screen.
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah, m maybe the banana could be like a bit uh fatter than than the c
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: c common
Pierre Goodall: Yeah,
Stephen Cavitt: one.
Pierre Goodall: it should
Stephen Cavitt: But
Pierre Goodall: remember banana, but it's not doesn't have to b
Stephen Cavitt: Like modified
Pierre Goodall: to be uh uh
Stephen Cavitt: banana, okay.
Pierre Goodall: really the size and exactly the shape of a banana.
Stephen Cavitt: Well it we'll stick to banana, or?
Carlos Paar: Okay.
Willie Lohr: Yeah, banana's
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Willie Lohr: good.
Stephen Cavitt: Okay.
Willie Lohr: Okay.
Stephen Cavitt: Mm-mm.
Pierre Goodall: So, the last point we decided it's infra-red, I guess.
Carlos Paar: Yeah, I
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah,
Pierre Goodall: Everybody's
Carlos Paar: think infra-red.
Stephen Cavitt: yeah.
Pierre Goodall: agreed.
Stephen Cavitt: Sure.
Pierre Goodall: Uh, so that's it I think about the concepts. You have other thing to add to this point, or uh no? So, uh about the user interface, so we are going to use L_C_D_. In the last meeting we talked about uh hidden buttons. I don't know what we are going to do with that. You
Stephen Cavitt: Like
Pierre Goodall: talked
Stephen Cavitt: like
Pierre Goodall: about
Stephen Cavitt: peeling
Pierre Goodall: the
Stephen Cavitt: of
Pierre Goodall: buttons
Stephen Cavitt: the banana
Pierre Goodall: on the
Carlos Paar: Yeah,
Pierre Goodall: side
Stephen Cavitt: you s
Carlos Paar: peeling of the banana.
Stephen Cavitt: It
Pierre Goodall: Mm
Stephen Cavitt: would be cool, yeah.
Pierre Goodall: what?
Stephen Cavitt: Peeling of the banana, you know,
Carlos Paar: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: should should discover the other buttons,
Carlos Paar: Mm.
Stephen Cavitt: which are hidden.
Pierre Goodall: Yeah. Okay. And you mean the first layer would be spongy.
Carlos Paar: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: First layer obviously spo Yeah, w
Pierre Goodall: So
Stephen Cavitt: It's it's like
Pierre Goodall: Is
Stephen Cavitt: silly, but the people
Pierre Goodall: it
Stephen Cavitt: will really appreciate
Pierre Goodall: is
Stephen Cavitt: it, yeah
Pierre Goodall: it
Stephen Cavitt: I think.
Pierre Goodall: possible to do that? It would be a great idea, but is it possible technically?
Carlos Paar: Uh
Pierre Goodall: Like doing a spongy layer of
Willie Lohr: I think
Pierre Goodall: the banana,
Willie Lohr: if we
Pierre Goodall: and
Willie Lohr: if
Pierre Goodall: you
Willie Lohr: we
Pierre Goodall: open
Willie Lohr: have a
Pierre Goodall: it.
Willie Lohr: spongy layer on the outside of the banana then
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Willie Lohr: it's easy to make that, you know, to
Carlos Paar: Mm-hmm.
Willie Lohr: manipulate that
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Willie Lohr: to
Carlos Paar: Yeah,
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Carlos Paar: some
Willie Lohr: hav be a cover that you can pull off and
Carlos Paar: Something like a plastic cover covering uh some interface, U_S_B_ interface as in the in uh digital camera. If you see it's like peeling. You open a plastic cover and you see some U_S_B_ interfaces, some some interfaces for adaptor. So keys can be uh buttons can be covered like this, with a plastic cover and uh when uh and when you open this cover it's like peeling a banana. So, something like this.
Pierre Goodall: Yeah, but do you see that as a rigid thing, or like like a banana, something very soft, you can open like banana, or.
Stephen Cavitt: Well is it possible to make it soft?
Carlos Paar: Yeah, yeah,
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Carlos Paar: yeah it's a lic like a plastic cover, so.
Stephen Cavitt: So I think
Pierre Goodall: So,
Stephen Cavitt: if it's so then it's
Pierre Goodall: I dunno
Stephen Cavitt: cool?
Pierre Goodall: what you think, Bob, but it would be great for users I think, and very
Willie Lohr: I think for
Pierre Goodall: good
Willie Lohr: sure.
Pierre Goodall: for marketing.
Willie Lohr: Definitely. The softer the better.
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: Cool.
Willie Lohr: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: Honestly speaking, I cannot imagine it, so far, but
Pierre Goodall: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: it will be terrible.
Pierre Goodall: Um.
Stephen Cavitt: Mm.
Pierre Goodall: And setting buttons hidden in.
Pierre Goodall: Mm, other remarks, or something, or. Something we didn't talk about yes yet, or. I think we are almost there. Uh maybe, how can we, if we have a soft thing, like this, and to open it we have to attach it somewhere, I dunno how to do that technically, or.
Carlos Paar: Mm-hmm.
Pierre Goodall: And how
Stephen Cavitt: Pof.
Willie Lohr: We could use Velcro.
Pierre Goodall: Yeah, maybe.
Willie Lohr: Or uh ma maybe a magnetic
Carlos Paar: Yes, yeah it's a good idea.
Willie Lohr: thing.
Carlos Paar: Magnetic.
Pierre Goodall: Ma magnetic oh.
Carlos Paar: Mm. Yeah or a Yeah it can is it can be a plastic cover uh sticking to the to the all the stuff like uh with magnetic p uh magnetic uh magnetic uh materials in the border, so it's it sticks like refrigerator door, completely.
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Carlos Paar: And when you try to open it, it will be opened easily. So you you can be sure that it will not be open while you're uh while while uh you are commonly using uh buttons on
Pierre Goodall: Okay.
Carlos Paar: the banana.
Pierre Goodall: And what would be the matter here of the first layer I mean? Mm. Likes. Soft plastic, or
Willie Lohr: Yeah, I imagine some sort of vinyl
Pierre Goodall: Yeah,
Willie Lohr: thing.
Pierre Goodall: yeah, yeah.
Willie Lohr: In a in a sort of a with a suede sort of feel. Maybe.
Stephen Cavitt: Well since since the since the things like the like the screen and um how to say that, solar cell has to be has to be like kept kept in the shape, we cannot b uh So we need that the that the peeling uh I dunno but we should we should take care of these two two things. So, if if uh the solar cell won't be visible while the banana is closed, then the material must be able to put the light inside, you know. So that we can reach the energy out of it out of that.
Willie Lohr: Mm.
Carlos Paar: Mm.
Willie Lohr: So you're saying is it possible to have a solar cell and this removable cover
Stephen Cavitt: It is
Willie Lohr: and
Stephen Cavitt: possible, but, well if
Willie Lohr: And
Stephen Cavitt: it
Willie Lohr: a and a banana.
Carlos Paar: Mm.
Stephen Cavitt: I dunno. I dunno how to how to do it if if t if to if it's better to put the solar cell to the t to the peeling or outside it,
Pierre Goodall: Hmm.
Willie Lohr: Yeah.
Stephen Cavitt: or or inside. But then it must be some window there,
Willie Lohr: Okay.
Stephen Cavitt: you know.
Carlos Paar: Mm.
Pierre Goodall: And something we forgot, maybe, uh about the speech recognition system, are we going to use it, or not?
Carlos Paar: Yes, I think.
Willie Lohr: I think
Carlos Paar: I
Willie Lohr: it's
Carlos Paar: think
Willie Lohr: important.
Carlos Paar: so.
Pierre Goodall: It
Willie Lohr: I think
Pierre Goodall: i Yeah,
Willie Lohr: One
Pierre Goodall: it seems
Willie Lohr: of our
Pierre Goodall: feasible,
Willie Lohr: p
Pierre Goodall: and it
Willie Lohr: priorities
Pierre Goodall: would be
Willie Lohr: is
Pierre Goodall: something
Willie Lohr: tech
Pierre Goodall: very
Willie Lohr: technology.
Pierre Goodall: great.
Carlos Paar: Mm.
Willie Lohr: And
Pierre Goodall: So we have the de design, the a good shape,
Carlos Paar: Mm-hmm.
Pierre Goodall: new and so on, and we have also the technology thing w will be.
Willie Lohr: Mm-hmm.
Pierre Goodall: And
Carlos Paar: Mm.
Pierre Goodall: even the easy to use thing, so it will be perfect.
Carlos Paar: Mm.
Pierre Goodall: So
Willie Lohr: Yeah.
Pierre Goodall: we add also
Stephen Cavitt: Yeah.
Pierre Goodall: the speech recognition device.
Stephen Cavitt: I agree.
Pierre Goodall: So, that great. We have decided everything. And think we are on a good way. So, um uh the next meeting will start in thirty minutes. Um, so uh the the Industrial Manager uh will uh will work on the look and feel design. The User Interface uh uh Mana uh Manager will work on the user interface device. And the Willie Lohr will do the first project evaluation.
Willie Lohr: Okay.
Pierre Goodall: So, I hope you can do that in thirty minutes. And uh, yeah, I uh I think you should work together, s you uh Hamed and Peter, to work uh in a in a first prototype, and uh more about the shape and so on and how you can manage to put everything together. And um as usual you will receive some specific instructions on. So
Stephen Cavitt: Okay.
Pierre Goodall: thank you all everybody, and see you in thirty minutes.
Willie Lohr: Okay. Thank
Stephen Cavitt: Okay.
Willie Lohr: you.
Carlos Paar: Thank you. | Pierre Goodall stated that the goal for the current meeting was to decide upon a concept for the remote the team is creating. Willie Lohr discussed his findings from trend watching reports. He found that current trends are such that a product must have a fancy look and feel, be technologically innovative, be easy to use, incorporate a fruit and vegetable motif, and must be spongy. Carlos Paar discussed how to create an interface for a remote that is easy to use. Carlos Paar discussed the placement of commonly used buttons, the overall shape of a remote, and how to hide less commonly used buttons. Stephen Cavitt discussed various components and energy sources the remote could include. Stephen Cavitt focused on the use of a TFT screen and the use of solar cells to supplement the energy from two regular batteries. The team then discussed and made decisions regarding the option to use solar cells, the specifications of an LCD screen, how to incorporate a fruit and vegetable motif into their design, and how to hide lesser used buttons. | 1 | amisum | train |
Monroe Munoz: Oops.
Joseph Bounds: So, hello everyone. We're here to have a kick-off meeting for the design of a f for the beginning of new project um uh remote control for the design for a new remote control. I'm Joseph Bounds Christa Pavlov and okay let's begin. So I'm first going to do an opening then we get used to one anothers and we speak about this tool we're going to design and try to make a project plan, some discussion and then we talk of uh the next meeting. So um we want to to do a new remote control. It has to be original, trendy and user friendly. Um I think the important points we have to t talk about are uh it's functional design, it's conceptual design, and desail detailed design. and for that we're going um all to work individually and then have meeting during the whole day. Um, so let's try the whiteboard.
John Eastham: Wow.
Joseph Bounds: Um so any of you who want to go.
Monroe Munoz: Yeah, for favourite animals. It's not favourite one but the I can draw. And it's gonna be you'll try to guess.
John Eastham: Wow.
Joseph Bounds: Wow.
John Eastham: Complex. Huh? A cat.
Gerald Mccann: No.
Monroe Munoz: No.
John Eastham: No. Darn. Uh.
Joseph Bounds: A rabbit.
Monroe Munoz: Yes, that's a rabbit.
John Eastham: A
Monroe Munoz: That's
John Eastham: what?
Monroe Munoz: my favourite
Joseph Bounds: A
Monroe Munoz: one.
Joseph Bounds: rabbit.
John Eastham: A r
Gerald Mccann: Rabbit.
John Eastham: a rabbit, oh oh yeah, where is the carrot? Okay
Monroe Munoz: That's
John Eastham: mm-hmm.
Monroe Munoz: it.
Joseph Bounds: You want to go?
John Eastham: I am not very good at
Monroe Munoz: Hmm.
John Eastham: uh this kind of stuff. My favourite animal is
Monroe Munoz: Wow.
Gerald Mccann: You wa
Joseph Bounds: A human
John Eastham: Guess.
Joseph Bounds: ah.
John Eastham: A human, yay. It's a very complex animal
Monroe Munoz: No.
John Eastham: and um yeah. Characteristics of this this animal is dangerous.
Joseph Bounds: Mm I think
Gerald Mccann: Is
Joseph Bounds: you're
Gerald Mccann: the white
Joseph Bounds: supposed to, yeah.
Gerald Mccann: okay.
Joseph Bounds: Hmm.
Gerald Mccann: I guess you can.
Monroe Munoz: Wow. That's cobra.
John Eastham: of uh snake? Cobra? Exactly.
Gerald Mccann: Yeah uh not really. Small cobra.
Monroe Munoz: No, it just small cobra, yeah.
John Eastham: Uh-huh.
Joseph Bounds: Is that
Monroe Munoz: It's
Joseph Bounds: a worm?
Monroe Munoz: co c
Joseph Bounds: Or
Monroe Munoz: quite recognisable.
John Eastham: What about you
Joseph Bounds: Uh yeah Christa Pavlov
John Eastham: uh Christa?
Gerald Mccann: Chris.
Monroe Munoz: Christa Christa.
Joseph Bounds: Mm.
John Eastham: A fish.
Gerald Mccann: Mm.
Monroe Munoz: Hmm.
Joseph Bounds: Smiling fish.
Gerald Mccann: Smile fish.
John Eastham: A smiling fish. Mm-hmm.
Joseph Bounds: Mm-hmm.
Monroe Munoz: Okay.
John Eastham: So, w whiteboard is working?
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
Joseph Bounds: Yeah.
John Eastham: Good. Next.
Joseph Bounds: Next. Let's talk about money.
John Eastham: Yeah, well.
Monroe Munoz: According to the drawings.
John Eastham: Not John Eastham.
Gerald Mccann: Yeah,
Monroe Munoz: Okay.
Gerald Mccann: you're
John Eastham: So.
Joseph Bounds: So.
John Eastham: Twenty five Euro for a
Joseph Bounds: Yeah,
John Eastham: remote control.
Joseph Bounds: mm that's the price
Gerald Mccann: Hmm.
Joseph Bounds: we want to that's
John Eastham: Okay.
Joseph Bounds: the aim for the price for the remote control. We aim to do this profit.
John Eastham: 'tis big number.
Monroe Munoz: On the
Joseph Bounds: Yeah.
Monroe Munoz: international market.
Joseph Bounds: Mm-hmm.
Gerald Mccann: Yeah, we're to sell two million then.
Monroe Munoz: Wow.
John Eastham: Mm-hmm.
Joseph Bounds: Mm for a production cost of mm twelve fifty Euros maximum. 'Kay. So any of you have experience in remote controls?
John Eastham: Uh
Gerald Mccann: Mm
John Eastham: yes,
Gerald Mccann: yeah.
John Eastham: we have plenty at home. In fact, my daughter likes l remote
Joseph Bounds: That
Monroe Munoz: Mm.
John Eastham: controls.
Monroe Munoz: To eat?
John Eastham: To eat? Yeah, mainly, and to break.
Joseph Bounds: So that could be a great um application. Remote controls children proof.
John Eastham: Mm-hmm.
Joseph Bounds: Mm
John Eastham: Yeah.
Joseph Bounds: mm-hmm.
John Eastham: Ye
Monroe Munoz: Children
John Eastham: ye
Monroe Munoz: proof.
John Eastham: yeah.
Monroe Munoz: Hmm.
John Eastham: So she likes uh buttons
Gerald Mccann: Yeah,
Joseph Bounds: Okay.
Gerald Mccann: pret
John Eastham: which make click, so it has to click.
Joseph Bounds: So they have to be waterproof
John Eastham: It has
Joseph Bounds: maybe?
John Eastham: to be uh
Joseph Bounds: 'Cause
John Eastham: wha
Joseph Bounds: they
John Eastham: baby
Joseph Bounds: eat
John Eastham: proof
Joseph Bounds: she ate
John Eastham: yeah
Joseph Bounds: it.
John Eastham: but mainly it has to be very robust because
Joseph Bounds: Mm-hmm.
John Eastham: even if
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
John Eastham: she's not very tall she's uh high enough so that uh when she throw it away it's uh
Gerald Mccann: Ah.
John Eastham: So it has to be very robust.
Monroe Munoz: Okay, unbreakable.
John Eastham: Unbreakable,
Monroe Munoz: Uh-huh.
John Eastham: yeah. Mm-hmm.
Joseph Bounds: Mm-hmm.
John Eastham: And uh it has to be nice looking,
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
John Eastham: colourful,
Joseph Bounds: Colourful,
John Eastham: maybe
Monroe Munoz: Colourful?
Joseph Bounds: yeah mm.
Monroe Munoz: That's not
John Eastham: colourful,
Monroe Munoz: practical.
John Eastham: because
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
John Eastham: uh nobody has colourful
Joseph Bounds: No, that's
Gerald Mccann: Yeah, it's
Joseph Bounds: a
John Eastham: remote
Joseph Bounds: good
Gerald Mccann: always
John Eastham: control,
Joseph Bounds: idea.
John Eastham: they're
Gerald Mccann: black
John Eastham: always black,
Gerald Mccann: or
John Eastham: yeah,
Joseph Bounds: Mm
Monroe Munoz: No.
Gerald Mccann: yeah.
Joseph Bounds: mm-mm.
John Eastham: but this one could be I dunno, purple
Monroe Munoz: But how
Joseph Bounds: Yeah.
Monroe Munoz: gonna
John Eastham: or b
Monroe Munoz: okay, just uh but it's uh monochrome it's
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
Monroe Munoz: n it's not like
John Eastham: Yeah, yeah.
Joseph Bounds: No,
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
Joseph Bounds: because you think,
John Eastham: One colour.
Joseph Bounds: why
Monroe Munoz: Otherwise
Joseph Bounds: not.
Monroe Munoz: you will never find
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
Monroe Munoz: it.
John Eastham: Yeah,
Gerald Mccann: Yeah
John Eastham: yeah.
Gerald Mccann: even we can change colours, no? Like the uh
John Eastham: Oh like the phones,
Gerald Mccann: like the phones
John Eastham: yeah,
Gerald Mccann: and these
John Eastham: it
Gerald Mccann: things
Monroe Munoz: Cool.
John Eastham: could change
Gerald Mccann: we c
John Eastham: colours,
Joseph Bounds: Mm-hmm.
John Eastham: yeah.
Gerald Mccann: yeah. At least for children like
Monroe Munoz: Ch
Gerald Mccann: one colour and.
John Eastham: Yeah. Good.
Joseph Bounds: Good idea.
Gerald Mccann: And it should be really small and.
Joseph Bounds: Small also? Don't
Gerald Mccann: Huh
Joseph Bounds: you think
Gerald Mccann: not so big like
Joseph Bounds: No
Gerald Mccann: yeah.
Joseph Bounds: uh, not too much buttons or
Gerald Mccann: Yeah, not
Joseph Bounds: mm.
Gerald Mccann: too much buttons and
John Eastham: Should it be, y you know these uh remote controls where um they are what they call a universal ret remote control
Joseph Bounds: Mm-hmm.
John Eastham: so y you can decide that now it's the remote control for the television, then it's the remote control for the
Gerald Mccann: Uh.
John Eastham: the sound system, or
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
John Eastham: for your refrigerator whatever
Joseph Bounds: Yeah,
John Eastham: I dunno
Joseph Bounds: that's
John Eastham: if it's Or if we should have a targeted re remote control.
Joseph Bounds: Okay. So,
John Eastham: So
Joseph Bounds: I
John Eastham: colour,
Joseph Bounds: think
John Eastham: robustness,
Joseph Bounds: there's
John Eastham: easy to use, size, yeah, size matters,
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
John Eastham: yeah.
Gerald Mccann: Colour, size,
Joseph Bounds: So
Gerald Mccann: sh
Joseph Bounds: you you think it's better if small than bigger.
Gerald Mccann: Yeah,
John Eastham: Mm.
Gerald Mccann: maybe at least n not bigger than this I
Monroe Munoz: Yeah,
Gerald Mccann: guess.
Monroe Munoz: but without any extremes like n not of this size,
Joseph Bounds: No,
Monroe Munoz: not
Gerald Mccann: Yeah
Joseph Bounds: not
Monroe Munoz: too
Joseph Bounds: too
Monroe Munoz: large.
Gerald Mccann: yeah,
Joseph Bounds: small,
Monroe Munoz: Okay.
Joseph Bounds: yeah.
John Eastham: Yeah.
Gerald Mccann: at least it should hold in your hand n properly, like.
Joseph Bounds: Hmm.
Monroe Munoz: Yeah, like a palm sized.
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
John Eastham: Mm.
Monroe Munoz: Just to hold it.
Joseph Bounds: Okay.
John Eastham: But uh what would be different from this, from the others? I dunno if
Gerald Mccann: Uh maybe we can change the colours that at least the frame.
John Eastham: Yeah, at
Gerald Mccann: Mm.
John Eastham: least the colour
Gerald Mccann: S
John Eastham: would
Gerald Mccann: so
John Eastham: be different.
Gerald Mccann: then it depends you are to
Joseph Bounds: Mm.
Gerald Mccann: Mm I mean you c you can easily remove the frame.
John Eastham: I think one thing important for instance in this remote control if you remember when people use it they're they never find a good button in the right
Gerald Mccann: Yeah,
John Eastham: place.
Joseph Bounds: Mm-hmm.
Gerald Mccann: yeah.
John Eastham: For some reason they they
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
John Eastham: they click the off button when they want to use the
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
John Eastham: So there's a problem in the design of that kind of remote control somehow,
Joseph Bounds: Mm.
John Eastham: I
Joseph Bounds: So,
John Eastham: dunno.
Joseph Bounds: some kind of idea uh with um um cellular phone with a a screen that will tell you what
Monroe Munoz: No, no
Joseph Bounds: no.
Monroe Munoz: screens, it's too complex.
Joseph Bounds: Okay.
Gerald Mccann: Mm.
John Eastham: Too expensive for twelve Euro?
Gerald Mccann: Too expensive,
Monroe Munoz: And n
Gerald Mccann: yeah.
Monroe Munoz: maybe
Joseph Bounds: And
Monroe Munoz: not
Joseph Bounds: too expensive.
Monroe Munoz: too expensive, well it's not my problem, but well
John Eastham: Ah.
Monroe Munoz: okay. But no screens on remote controls.
John Eastham: Mm-hmm.
Joseph Bounds: Mm.
John Eastham: I thought it could be only a screen which would change depending on uh uh the use or even the user. So ma
Monroe Munoz: Mm-hmm.
John Eastham: I prefer to have the off button at the top right,
Gerald Mccann: Ye yeah.
John Eastham: so I would have my own design of the remote control because it's in fact just a a full touch
Gerald Mccann: Hmm.
John Eastham: screen remote control, if you if you like.
Gerald Mccann: I mean it
John Eastham: I don't
Gerald Mccann: it's
John Eastham: know if
Gerald Mccann: like
John Eastham: it makes sense, but
Joseph Bounds: Mm-mm.
Gerald Mccann: it's like two types no? people are right handed or left handed so y because
John Eastham: Yeah,
Gerald Mccann: I am left
John Eastham: for
Gerald Mccann: handed
John Eastham: instance,
Gerald Mccann: I use like
John Eastham: mm.
Gerald Mccann: this, say if you're right handed you use
Monroe Munoz: Mm-hmm,
Gerald Mccann: like this or
Monroe Munoz: mm-hmm.
Joseph Bounds: Mm-hmm.
John Eastham: Mm.
Gerald Mccann: so
Joseph Bounds: Mm
Gerald Mccann: tha
Joseph Bounds: mm mm.
Gerald Mccann: your switch on and off should be
Joseph Bounds: So adaptable
Gerald Mccann: on yeah.
Joseph Bounds: yeah
Monroe Munoz: Adaptable.
John Eastham: Maybe,
Joseph Bounds: something
John Eastham: if if
Monroe Munoz: Alright,
Gerald Mccann: Mm
John Eastham: it's
Joseph Bounds: yeah.
John Eastham: possible,
Monroe Munoz: good,
John Eastham: yeah.
Monroe Munoz: so
Gerald Mccann: huh.
Monroe Munoz: how many actions do we need to implement in it?
Gerald Mccann: Maybe
Monroe Munoz: On
Gerald Mccann: I think
Monroe Munoz: off?
Gerald Mccann: even we can keep two switches and then
John Eastham: Yeah.
Gerald Mccann: we can uh only make one working. We can adapt only one switch, suppose here like we can make two switches and if I'm left-hander I use this switch to follow the main operations.
Monroe Munoz: I mean if it's less than three uh then we can make it uh like a
Gerald Mccann: Two.
John Eastham: Three buttons you mean?
Monroe Munoz: like three
Joseph Bounds: Three
Monroe Munoz: mental
Joseph Bounds: option.
Monroe Munoz: states,
John Eastham: Ah.
Monroe Munoz: yeah you know what I mean, we can just make it uh
Gerald Mccann: Yeah. Yeah.
Joseph Bounds: Um.
Monroe Munoz: controlled by a brain, huh?
Joseph Bounds: Mm-hmm.
John Eastham: Mm-hmm, yeah,
Joseph Bounds: Maybe
John Eastham: sure.
Joseph Bounds: if it's more, if there is a software inside that ask you three
Monroe Munoz: Mm-hmm.
Joseph Bounds: Hmm. If it if we want a r universal remote control that we sa like we say before it may may need more than three mm three button, three mm possibilities,
Monroe Munoz: Sh
John Eastham: Yeah, more than
Monroe Munoz: sure,
John Eastham: three
Joseph Bounds: ye
John Eastham: actions
Monroe Munoz: sure.
Gerald Mccann: Mm
John Eastham: that
Gerald Mccann: yeah.
John Eastham: you may
Joseph Bounds: yeah.
John Eastham: want to do at a given time.
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
Monroe Munoz: But for standard actions you usually what do you do, you change channels, you adjust volume, and nothing else.
John Eastham: Yeah but for instance when you change channels you can have you can just go to the next one or go to
Gerald Mccann: Mm.
John Eastham: channel twenty five.
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
Joseph Bounds: Mm.
John Eastham: And that's already more complex to go to channel twenty
Monroe Munoz: Mm-hmm.
John Eastham: five.
Monroe Munoz: You do this?
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
John Eastham: Uh no.
Monroe Munoz: I usually just change channels.
John Eastham: Because I'm only using three or four channels but
Gerald Mccann: Yeah. But they keep generally their t slash slash uh this thing and then the dash dash and then you can put
Joseph Bounds: Yeah.
Gerald Mccann: yeah,
Joseph Bounds: I
Gerald Mccann: you can only
Joseph Bounds: change
Gerald Mccann: have one
Joseph Bounds: channel
Gerald Mccann: bit.
Joseph Bounds: like this, m
Gerald Mccann: Dash.
Joseph Bounds: uh I want to go to twenty five, and then to
John Eastham: And
Joseph Bounds: ten,
John Eastham: then back
Joseph Bounds: uh-huh
John Eastham: to the
Joseph Bounds: mm
John Eastham: one
Joseph Bounds: yeah.
John Eastham: I was before,
Joseph Bounds: Also
John Eastham: so there's
Joseph Bounds: we can be
Monroe Munoz: Uh-huh.
John Eastham: whichever
Gerald Mccann: Yeah
Joseph Bounds: here
Gerald Mccann: you
John Eastham: it
Gerald Mccann: can
John Eastham: was.
Gerald Mccann: yeah.
Joseph Bounds: yeah, that would
Monroe Munoz: Go
Joseph Bounds: be
Monroe Munoz: back
Joseph Bounds: cool.
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
Monroe Munoz: button
John Eastham: Yeah.
Monroe Munoz: is
John Eastham: Uh
Monroe Munoz: good.
John Eastham: uh we had that
Monroe Munoz: I once
John Eastham: in
Monroe Munoz: had
Gerald Mccann: Yeah
John Eastham: in
Gerald Mccann: yeah, the
Monroe Munoz: it.
Gerald Mccann: previous
John Eastham: other countries.
Gerald Mccann: button is.
Joseph Bounds: Mm
John Eastham: Yeah
Joseph Bounds: yeah.
Monroe Munoz: Mm-hmm.
John Eastham: e even the history
Gerald Mccann: Uh, okay.
John Eastham: so you could like uh undo
Monroe Munoz: History.
Gerald Mccann: Oh uh.
John Eastham: previous of the previous. Then you can watch
Gerald Mccann: Uh.
John Eastham: what your ah you could also record your
Gerald Mccann: Yeah.
John Eastham: record your sequence of actions, that becomes more complex, but you could look at what uh the other people have used
Gerald Mccann: Yeah yeah,
John Eastham: there
Gerald Mccann: what the
John Eastham: or
Joseph Bounds: Mm-mm.
Gerald Mccann: which channels
John Eastham: remote controls.
Gerald Mccann: the viewer
John Eastham: Yeah maybe
Joseph Bounds: Okay.
John Eastham: it's a
Joseph Bounds: So I think we have full
John Eastham: Okay.
Joseph Bounds: of idea. Um we're going to meet again in thirty minutes and uh I want you to mm work on these ideas and try to make a uh the ones, make um to decide what what are the ones important and what are the one that we don't want. And um m maybe more in the technical parts what uh do we want to do. Um. So um your personal coach will send you some instruction for for this thirty minutes.
John Eastham: So what does M_E_ means? M_E_ the user requirements? Or that's uh that's for us?
Monroe Munoz: Market Expert.
Gerald Mccann: Marketing
Joseph Bounds: Mm.
John Eastham: Uh that's John Eastham.
Gerald Mccann: yeah.
John Eastham: Oh, of course yeah, the user requirement specifications, uh-huh,
Joseph Bounds: Mm-hmm.
John Eastham: yeah. Okay.
Joseph Bounds: Mm
John Eastham: I'll
Joseph Bounds: okay.
John Eastham: think of that.
Joseph Bounds: So.
John Eastham: So?
Joseph Bounds: I think that's all.
John Eastham: Meeting's over? Great.
Joseph Bounds: Yeah.
Monroe Munoz: Okay.
Gerald Mccann: Thank you.
John Eastham: Thank you.
Monroe Munoz: Thank
Joseph Bounds: See
Monroe Munoz: you everybody.
Joseph Bounds: you in thirty minutes. | Joseph Bounds opened the meeting and introduced the upcoming project to the team members. The team members then participated in an exercise in which each team member drew his favorite animal and discussed why he liked the particular animal. After the drawing exercise, Joseph Bounds discussed selling prices and production costs for the remote the team will design. Joseph Bounds also indicated that the remote will be sold internationally and that two million remotes are expected to be sold. The team then discussed their experiences using remotes in the past and what features to consider implementing in the remote they will produce. The team members discussed child proof capabilities, color options, how to adapt a remote for left-handed users, a "go back" function, the size of a remote, buttons, and LCD screens. Joseph Bounds closed the meeting and gave the team members their assignments and then one of the team members briefly went over his role on the team. | 1 | amisum | train |
Tyler Tantillo: Okay, so now we are on the conceptual design meeting.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm-hmm.
Tyler Tantillo: Uh y getting close to the last is the penultim meeting.
Kevin Contreras: How was lunch?
Tyler Tantillo: Mm great.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Thanks Don't be sarcastic Mark.
Tyler Tantillo: So um I will again do the secretary part uh we will have three presentation first um uh the
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Uh
Tyler Tantillo: industrial
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Rama.
Tyler Tantillo: design,
William Clauss: Ramaro.
Tyler Tantillo: first Rama then Mark and then Sammy. Um um we have to take a decision on the control remote control concepts and we have forty minutes.
Kevin Contreras: Mm.
Tyler Tantillo: So what we want to the decision we want to take this meeting on the um first on the component concept, so what kind of energy we use uh what kind of chip on print and one ki kind of case. And also on user interface concept uh what kind of interface we use and if there is some supplements. And at the end um Sammy will give um a trend watching on what he's he's been doing. It's So, let's go. First with Rama.
Tyler Tantillo: Participant two.
William Clauss: Yeah, participant two. Component.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: Yep. So we're to mainly design f mainly need to know which components we'll use for energy, and the material and interface. For energy there are maybe two or three possibilities. First one, we can use simple battery, or we can use traditional solar cells or mm and the material we can have plastic, rubber which is good for this R_S_A_
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Ah.
William Clauss: and then uh titanium, which can be which have very good look an and then interface we're to use push buttons or liquid crystal d L_C_D_ display. And we can use some, moving kind of thing. So, as we discussed before, we need to we would like to have some speech recognition s chip in our remote control. So this can be simple kind of programmable chip and which can use microphone sensors. And we also want to look at our remote control, so. Still we are looking for possible uh technical uh specifications and how w easy we can do and within our pri range, like we're to in our twelve Euros or around that. So we are looking for simple devices or simple technology to do the location of remote control in a room
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm,
William Clauss: or
Tyler Tantillo: okay.
William Clauss: in a house. So uh we discussed an Excuse Eugene Kleinschmidt. So we would like to propose battery instead of solar cells and it would be problematic uh to have
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: enough energy with the solar cells and so we would like to just use simple battery. And also we want to go for titanium design instead of rubber or and well the problem is with this design we found that we can't use double-curved shapes.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: What is a double-curved shape?
William Clauss: Like you can have two curves.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Uh-huh.
Kevin Contreras: Why?
William Clauss: Uh it's I think in manufacturing I guess it's problematic. So, we want to go for simple push buttons because it need a simple chip and it's really lesser uh re really less expensive compared to L_C_D_ which are uh which needs advanced chip technology and it's more expensive, since we
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: want to put some other features such as speech recognition we want to reduce uh
Eugene Kleinschmidt: The cost.
Tyler Tantillo: Um I want
William Clauss: cost.
Tyler Tantillo: to know why it b uh just uh sorry but for the point before uh
William Clauss: Uh
Tyler Tantillo: why not the rubber, if
William Clauss: Uh
Tyler Tantillo: it is something that it seems to be
William Clauss: And also
Tyler Tantillo: light.
William Clauss: like in if you put a it's be difficult to do all the moulding of buttons and these things
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
William Clauss: and
Tyler Tantillo: You m titanium it's more uh
William Clauss: Yeah.
Kevin Contreras: W we can use something like you know the whole body's titanium but there are some rubber or I dunno some rubber parts like
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm like
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: this?
Tyler Tantillo: Yes
Kevin Contreras: to make it
Tyler Tantillo: so
Kevin Contreras: feel better
Tyler Tantillo: mm
Kevin Contreras: and to you know
William Clauss: Like in cell phones recently
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: these
Tyler Tantillo: Uh-huh.
Kevin Contreras: Yeah.
William Clauss: you can
Kevin Contreras: Yeah.
William Clauss: with the rubber in four directions
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
William Clauss: and yeah. But full assembly We'll use mainly for titanium
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
William Clauss: rubber is expensive
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
William Clauss: and also it's bit difficult to do all the shapes
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
William Clauss: uh. And this push
Tyler Tantillo: Uh
William Clauss: buttons
Tyler Tantillo: yeah
William Clauss: we
Tyler Tantillo: so
William Clauss: we would like to use push buttons instead of L_C_D_s and so we want to mo I mean we're we want to put speech recognition so we want to reduce price on this technology and so that we can have
Tyler Tantillo: Okay,
William Clauss: enough space
Tyler Tantillo: s so
William Clauss: or enough money
Tyler Tantillo: simple
William Clauss: for
Tyler Tantillo: button and uh
William Clauss: S
Tyler Tantillo: speech
William Clauss: S
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Speech
Tyler Tantillo: recognition for the more complicated.
William Clauss: Y
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: yeah we have simple buttons and speech recognition technology,
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
Kevin Contreras: Okay,
William Clauss: so
Kevin Contreras: and still we have mm can we still include the L_ L_S_D_ display?
Eugene Kleinschmidt: L_C_D_.
Kevin Contreras: L_C_D_ yeah L_C_D_.
William Clauss: Uh l
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Seems not, it's either
William Clauss: So
Eugene Kleinschmidt: L_C_D_
William Clauss: uh
Eugene Kleinschmidt: or push-button.
William Clauss: it's
Kevin Contreras: No,
William Clauss: like
Kevin Contreras: it's
William Clauss: a
Kevin Contreras: not gonna be a t no touchable but still like a source of information or source for menus.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Ah.
William Clauss: Yeah maybe maybe we can see depending on how we'll come up with our full design then if we have enough money or like for
Kevin Contreras: Okay,
William Clauss: and
Kevin Contreras: so
William Clauss: because
Kevin Contreras: try
William Clauss: the
Kevin Contreras: it,
William Clauss: speech
Kevin Contreras: let's t
William Clauss: recognition technology will take at least five Euros or or something so
Eugene Kleinschmidt: The
William Clauss: we want to reduce
Eugene Kleinschmidt: L_C_D_
William Clauss: the
Eugene Kleinschmidt: would
William Clauss: cost on display or this
Eugene Kleinschmidt: The display
William Clauss: inter
Eugene Kleinschmidt: would only be display and not uh
Kevin Contreras: Yeah,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: touch sensitive
Kevin Contreras: yeah,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: you mean.
Kevin Contreras: it's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Just
Kevin Contreras: it's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: uh
Kevin Contreras: not
Eugene Kleinschmidt: for
Kevin Contreras: gonna
Eugene Kleinschmidt: output,
Kevin Contreras: be a touch pad, uh just
Eugene Kleinschmidt: yeah.
Kevin Contreras: a display for
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah.
William Clauss: Ok
Kevin Contreras: giving you information.
William Clauss: Yeah, that
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: can we we can consider, because like it won't take
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: much money I guess, because
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
William Clauss: Okay, yep.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
William Clauss: You have any further questions or?
Eugene Kleinschmidt: I guess no um. So the batteries uh are
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: going to be very light.
William Clauss: Yeah, we're to go for li and now I think we have many options in the market so we can
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Okay
William Clauss: go for small
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: nickel or
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: alkaline batteries for really light batteries and with uh good price.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: So this device on n that can be used for speech recognition could also be used for just uh the finding it basically, instead of clapping why not
William Clauss: Yeah, that's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: just be
William Clauss: then the
Eugene Kleinschmidt: ask.
William Clauss: the one thing we want to know is like because remote control is used for like in the household so it it it will be it m maybe at least five, six people want to use it so
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: so how to uh uh how to define our re speech recognition whether we want to do s speaker independent or speaker dependent. If we're going for more speaker independent then it would be like again cumbersome and we need really m more technology and
Tyler Tantillo: Okay, for
William Clauss: so
Tyler Tantillo: the location.
William Clauss: Yeah, if
Tyler Tantillo: Hmm.
William Clauss: if everybody in the house n to locate then we're to go for some speaker independent technology or
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Okay.
William Clauss: something.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay. So let's now go to the you don't have more
Eugene Kleinschmidt: No,
Tyler Tantillo: question?
Eugene Kleinschmidt: it's okay.
Kevin Contreras: No more
Tyler Tantillo: Um
Kevin Contreras: questions.
William Clauss: Yep. Thank
Tyler Tantillo: mm
William Clauss: you.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Puts less of constraint
Tyler Tantillo: thank you
Eugene Kleinschmidt: on
Tyler Tantillo: mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: what we can do but
Kevin Contreras: Mm yeah,
Tyler Tantillo: Yeah.
William Clauss: Yeah.
Kevin Contreras: yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: it's always like that. We have dreams and the in the end we find out that it's not feasible.
Tyler Tantillo: Yeah,
William Clauss: Oh.
Tyler Tantillo: but
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Anyway.
William Clauss: We
Tyler Tantillo: mm.
William Clauss: have uh some limitations.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah.
Kevin Contreras: But still uh L_S_D_'s already
Eugene Kleinschmidt: L_C_D_.
Kevin Contreras: quite nice,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: L_S_D_
Kevin Contreras: L_C_
Eugene Kleinschmidt: is something else, and it's quite nice
Kevin Contreras: I'm
Eugene Kleinschmidt: as
Kevin Contreras: an
Eugene Kleinschmidt: well.
Kevin Contreras: artist, sorry.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: So,
Kevin Contreras: So uh, that's
Tyler Tantillo: Um
Eugene Kleinschmidt: go
Kevin Contreras: not
Eugene Kleinschmidt: on uh
Kevin Contreras: I hope
Eugene Kleinschmidt: artist.
Kevin Contreras: that's not too much.
Tyler Tantillo: yeah. Now
Kevin Contreras: Okay.
Tyler Tantillo: let's talk about uh interface.
Kevin Contreras: Uh participant number three.
Tyler Tantillo: Three.
William Clauss: Three.
Kevin Contreras: Uh
Tyler Tantillo: Which one?
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Hmm.
Kevin Contreras: mm mm uh have a look at this no it's yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
Kevin Contreras: Uh so the concept of the interface. Generally I developed quite a broad concept not only for the interface, but for possible instruction or user's manual and uh all the complex things that come together with your T_V_ and remote controls. So let's start with this. We got our perfect remote control with a lot of buttons and uh we got explanation for every button and you can use your time and uh it will take i some days to learn all this buttons and um the L_C_D_ is going to be somewhere here and uh go back button, I don't know really where it is, maybe one of this buttons, and um power on and off mm I
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
Kevin Contreras: I don't remember so uh it it it should be maybe this button is power on and off? Or no? I can see nothing. So that's our concept. It's called the millennium remote control.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Let's change millenniums.
Kevin Contreras: Yeah.
William Clauss: So maybe you can use in the end
Eugene Kleinschmidt: doesn't
William Clauss: and
Eugene Kleinschmidt: make sense. This is very
Kevin Contreras: Really? I
Eugene Kleinschmidt: ugly.
Kevin Contreras: thought you like it.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Oh no,
Kevin Contreras: Ah okay just press
Eugene Kleinschmidt: too much
Kevin Contreras: the button,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: concept.
Kevin Contreras: please uh.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Ah.
Tyler Tantillo: No.
William Clauss: Uh
Kevin Contreras: Yeah, we will not use this. We will not use this. But instead of this I will devise
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Ah,
Kevin Contreras: That's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: back
Kevin Contreras: our
Eugene Kleinschmidt: today.
Kevin Contreras: concept. And it's got just few buttons, quite low looking, and all this stuff we already we already discussed.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm. 'Kay.
Kevin Contreras: And uh what will people say? They'll say it's perfect. Or what will say? Uh they will say it's splendid. And uh e everyone will say I'll buy it.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Contreras: And everyone's gonna be satisfied.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Do you think it can come in several colours? Or did the
Kevin Contreras: I would make a backlight of the L_C_D_ screen with different colours.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Um but not the case.
Kevin Contreras: Not the case.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Uh the case would only be in that uh aluminium uh titanium stuff, like
Kevin Contreras: Yeah.
William Clauss: Mm.
Tyler Tantillo: Because apparently from your survey people like colours, no?
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah,
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: well they like uh something which is
Kevin Contreras: Okay,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: uh
Kevin Contreras: so let's remember there's a Nokia phone which changeable panels.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm yeah, okay, so that would
Kevin Contreras: Do you
Eugene Kleinschmidt: be
Kevin Contreras: like it?
Eugene Kleinschmidt: the option. I don't know I don't have a Nokia phone, but
William Clauss: But it's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: I
William Clauss: uh
Eugene Kleinschmidt: don't use that but again, uh
Kevin Contreras: That's why you
Eugene Kleinschmidt: I
Kevin Contreras: don't
Eugene Kleinschmidt: might
Kevin Contreras: have it.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah,
Kevin Contreras: That's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: bu
Kevin Contreras: why, 'cause
Eugene Kleinschmidt: but
Kevin Contreras: it's nasty.
William Clauss: But it would be expensive, no? If you use colour L_C_D_.
Kevin Contreras: No.
William Clauss: Uh instead of that maybe we can change the colour of
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: the assembler. Maybe we can just if users want more colours they can pay more money to get this uh the shapes and they can have different assembly.
Kevin Contreras: Um, I am here.
William Clauss: So
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
William Clauss: users have different I mean they have their own interests, colour interests and so
Tyler Tantillo: So?
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: So we can just if they want they can just pay another two
Tyler Tantillo: Uh-huh,
Kevin Contreras: 'Kay.
Tyler Tantillo: okay,
William Clauss: Euro.
Tyler Tantillo: so you you propose something with option
William Clauss: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: i that increase the price if we
William Clauss: Yeah yeah yes.
Tyler Tantillo: if
William Clauss: If
Tyler Tantillo: you want
William Clauss: they want like
Tyler Tantillo: o
William Clauss: uh so
Tyler Tantillo: more
William Clauss: that we
Tyler Tantillo: colours
William Clauss: can
Tyler Tantillo: on
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Kind
William Clauss: yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: of
Tyler Tantillo: L_C_D_,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: upgradable uh
Tyler Tantillo: yeah.
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: remote control. Wow,
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: wow.
William Clauss: Just they'll get few more things and
Kevin Contreras: Okay,
William Clauss: few more colours.
Kevin Contreras: what uh there's one more decisi uh one more solution in fact, um 'cause there are some some paints that can change colour according to where they are, like they can reflect different colours
William Clauss: Lights, yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm.
Tyler Tantillo: And
Kevin Contreras: depending
Tyler Tantillo: thermodynamic
Kevin Contreras: on what is around,
Tyler Tantillo: also.
Kevin Contreras: like
William Clauss: Yeah.
Kevin Contreras: what
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Contreras: colour
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Like
Kevin Contreras: is
Eugene Kleinschmidt: a
Kevin Contreras: around,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: chameleon.
Kevin Contreras: and depending on the temperature, yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: Yeah yeah.
Kevin Contreras: We can make it in fact.
Tyler Tantillo: Yeah
William Clauss: Mm.
Tyler Tantillo: but that's
Kevin Contreras: If
Tyler Tantillo: maybe
Kevin Contreras: if if
Tyler Tantillo: mo
Kevin Contreras: the
Tyler Tantillo: too much expensive,
Kevin Contreras: okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm-hmm.
Tyler Tantillo: yeah. But uh it can be in uh maybe in an a gradable
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm,
Tyler Tantillo: version,
William Clauss: Yeah.
Kevin Contreras: mm-hmm,
Tyler Tantillo: but
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Because
Kevin Contreras: so
Eugene Kleinschmidt: uh I think there are two kinds of people. Those for which the remote control is uh is to be uh something useful uh I'm going to talk about this later but and those for which is something that that that uh is uh specific to them so it it's like a signature. My remote control is pink. Nobody else than Eugene Kleinschmidt has a pink remote control.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Contreras: Uh-huh.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: And that makes Eugene Kleinschmidt special.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay and you think that we don't have to make to make them pay more because of uh o
Eugene Kleinschmidt: I
Tyler Tantillo: or
Eugene Kleinschmidt: think I think
Tyler Tantillo: this
Eugene Kleinschmidt: they
Tyler Tantillo: is
Eugene Kleinschmidt: would be ready p ready to pay more for that.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay, so
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Those who wanted to have
Tyler Tantillo: so
Eugene Kleinschmidt: it pink.
Tyler Tantillo: i
William Clauss: Uh
Tyler Tantillo: it's not uh a s base
Eugene Kleinschmidt: No
Tyler Tantillo: service
William Clauss: Mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: mm
Tyler Tantillo: it's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: no.
Kevin Contreras: So,
Tyler Tantillo: a
Kevin Contreras: be an option, yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: It might be optional,
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: yeah.
William Clauss: will be really few, no? So like we
Eugene Kleinschmidt: The
William Clauss: can
Eugene Kleinschmidt: the young
William Clauss: those
Eugene Kleinschmidt: people the young people want to be different from their friends.
William Clauss: Ah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Although similar but have
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: something
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: just slightly better. Pink
Tyler Tantillo: So
William Clauss: Mm.
Tyler Tantillo: m so maybe that's if that it's a selling point
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm.
Tyler Tantillo: maybe
Kevin Contreras: Yeah,
Tyler Tantillo: it has
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah.
Kevin Contreras: yeah,
Tyler Tantillo: to be the base.
Kevin Contreras: yeah. But you know if you want to be different you just take your remote control with you all the time. And
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah,
Kevin Contreras: it
Tyler Tantillo: And
Kevin Contreras: makes
Tyler Tantillo: you'll
Kevin Contreras: you different,
Tyler Tantillo: be
Eugene Kleinschmidt: yeah.
Kevin Contreras: you
Eugene Kleinschmidt: You always
Kevin Contreras: know?
Tyler Tantillo: different.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: have your
Tyler Tantillo: Uh
Eugene Kleinschmidt: remote. Oh,
Kevin Contreras: Anyone
Eugene Kleinschmidt: you don't?
Kevin Contreras: has their remote controls
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah.
Kevin Contreras: here?
Eugene Kleinschmidt: You
Tyler Tantillo: in
Kevin Contreras: No?
Tyler Tantillo: the
Eugene Kleinschmidt: don't
Tyler Tantillo: train
Eugene Kleinschmidt: have your remo
Tyler Tantillo: uh, hello uh no. Want to change
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Wh you
Tyler Tantillo: my
Eugene Kleinschmidt: you
Tyler Tantillo: neighbour.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: know like for instance take the iPod. It's a kind of remote control. Uh it's white
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: and it's so white that you see it from any anywhere. It
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: has this distinctive look and feel and look which people seems to like
Kevin Contreras: Okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: just because it's a colour that we don't usually see in a remote control. White.
Kevin Contreras: Uh-huh,
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Contreras: uh-huh. Could
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Seems
Kevin Contreras: we integrate
Eugene Kleinschmidt: important.
Kevin Contreras: something into our remote control, something like light?
William Clauss: Hmm.
Kevin Contreras: That they can use it in darkness, like.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm
Kevin Contreras: Hand
Eugene Kleinschmidt: glow
Kevin Contreras: light,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: in the dark,
Kevin Contreras: yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: so
William Clauss: Yeah maybe like the infrared like we can put some
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: radium chips or something so that like at least um yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: Iradium?
Kevin Contreras: Okay.
William Clauss: Yeah,
Tyler Tantillo: Ah
Kevin Contreras: Okay.
Tyler Tantillo: sorry.
William Clauss: that
Tyler Tantillo: Mm. Okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Okay.
Kevin Contreras: Okay. S
Tyler Tantillo: So mm
Kevin Contreras: well, let's go on maybe
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah.
Kevin Contreras: with the presentation.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Uh-huh,
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: yeah sure.
Kevin Contreras: And um
William Clauss: Oh.
Kevin Contreras: the remote control's going to be smart but how smart should it be to not to complicate things too much? And uh I dunno that's a question to you and to mm
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Well so I
Kevin Contreras: to
Eugene Kleinschmidt: heard that uh it seems that speech recognition is something that can be done uh so that's the smartness of the thing. Currently
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: we don't have guns with speech recognition or uh beer cans with speech recognition but we may have remote controls with speech recognition.
Kevin Contreras: Okay,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: I
Kevin Contreras: okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: dunno.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm,
Kevin Contreras: So
Tyler Tantillo: that's
Kevin Contreras: just
Tyler Tantillo: a nice
Kevin Contreras: just
Tyler Tantillo: world.
Kevin Contreras: just just think about it um.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Don't touch the remote.
Kevin Contreras: Thank you.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: But yeah. Are are you saying here that uh the remote controls should be aware of who is using it? So for instance the young guy would not be able to use it because his father doesn't want.
Kevin Contreras: Uh yeah
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Like with
Kevin Contreras: I just
Eugene Kleinschmidt: some
Kevin Contreras: want to say it should be real
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Maybe
Kevin Contreras: smart.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: fingerprint recognition or
Kevin Contreras: Voice recognition is quite tough. I say don't use it, and the control just looks.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm.
William Clauss: Yeah.
Kevin Contreras: 'Cause I
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Um
Kevin Contreras: ordered jus
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm.
William Clauss: Uh
Kevin Contreras: To l
William Clauss: that
Kevin Contreras: to l lock it.
William Clauss: mm that could be feasible I guess, like
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Okay.
William Clauss: So since we have we want to do some speaker dependent speech recognition uh so
Eugene Kleinschmidt: So it could
William Clauss: we
Eugene Kleinschmidt: be
William Clauss: can use yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: smart in that
William Clauss: Yeah,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: way.
William Clauss: yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm. Okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: But for instance th I I'm thinking about the other uh uh particularity that the the remote control could have. S since it it knows who is using it, it might also record the kind of uh channels you are u more often using and
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: uh levels of volumes that you're more often uh
Kevin Contreras: Yeah, sure.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: things like that
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: and provide you ways of using them, I dunno, somehow, I dunno,
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: that might be expensive but
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: Uh it's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: that might also be a good sales pitch again.
William Clauss: Hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: The remote that knows you.
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
Kevin Contreras: Okay, thanks.
Tyler Tantillo: So
Eugene Kleinschmidt: My turn?
Tyler Tantillo: it's yeah, Marketing Expert.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Okay, it's alright.
Tyler Tantillo: Participant
William Clauss: Four.
Tyler Tantillo: two? Four,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Four, I think.
Tyler Tantillo: sorry.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Trend, yeah. No uh yes. Okay, so I'm going to talk about trends and um I hope this can help us to to understand l how we should design our remote control. So, next slide please. So first maybe just a small recap on how how do we watch trends so it's not so uh simple you might think that it's easy but uh it's not so simple. Anyway these days uh the best uh source of information is the web as you know, so have to to go often on the web and look at uh what the others are doing, and ask real people who are using real remote controls every day uh or any other tool that is similar to a remote control which basically is a small device that people have with them, always, like a phone. We can we can use the phone as a as a good uh uh example of where to in be inspired. Of course those tha d who are watching the trends are also have also to be inspired because in fact they're not only watching the trends, they're inventing it, they're creating the trend. I hope I'm going to try to help you on that. This is more risky because you're not following the trend, you try to invent it, which means either you succeed and you make a lot of money or you don't and you're out of business. So anyway uh next slide please. Uh to be to be quick there's a lot of words here but uh basically there are uh in in the market of of remote controls there are three aspects that we should very pay much attention to. The first one, which seems to be the most important one, is that it has to be fancy, it has to have a fancy look and feel. And uh interestingly this is the very most important thing. It has to be fancy. Strangely enough it's more important to be fancy than to be wi and now that's the second thing it has to be, it has to be technologically i innovative, it has to be new with some of uh new uh technology inside and uh and this is also uh more important than the last thing which we w may think that would have been the most important, which is that it should be easy to use and it should be easy to use as a remote control. So as you see uh it first have to be very nice, s something that people are proud of uh uh that i uh they can be William Clauss identified with uh and and then uh something that um contains very novel stuff that they can talk about with their friends, huh, mine has this and not yours. And finally of course it has to be useful as a remote control but it seems that it's not so important that it's useful as a remote control. Next slide please.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Uh and now in a more uh general uh uh broad way of seeing th uh the thing. If we look back and not uh look at only remote controls I think it's important to see that the trends are quite the same in many areas so currently the the trends that we see in l in l big cities like Paris and Milan, well, it seems that this year things should have uh a fruit and vegetable uh way of of look or feel or so. And I think of course uh i it applies to everything. That's the thing with trends. It it can travel f from clothe to furniture same idea. Fruit and vegetable. Think fruit and vegetable. And uh if we co we compare to last year, now it has to be spongy,
William Clauss: Mm.
Kevin Contreras: What is
Eugene Kleinschmidt: yeah.
Kevin Contreras: spongy?
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Well this
William Clauss: Yeah kind of
Eugene Kleinschmidt: so
William Clauss: um maybe
Eugene Kleinschmidt: so I think uh uh i When we were talking about rubber, I think
William Clauss: Yeah
Eugene Kleinschmidt: uh
William Clauss: it
Eugene Kleinschmidt: the rubber aspect might be important because it's what is
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: probably
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: more feasible
Tyler Tantillo: S
Eugene Kleinschmidt: in terms of sponginess.
William Clauss: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: So maybe titanium it's not a good idea.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Seems not, seems not.
William Clauss: We need to think about mm
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah. So
Tyler Tantillo: Um sorry Mark. It seems
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Think
Tyler Tantillo: to
Eugene Kleinschmidt: more
Tyler Tantillo: be
Eugene Kleinschmidt: of uh something in the colours of uh like fruit
William Clauss: Fruit.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: and vegetables and spongy,
William Clauss: Even
Eugene Kleinschmidt: as a
William Clauss: shape?
Eugene Kleinschmidt: even in the shape it has to be more round and uh
William Clauss: More
Eugene Kleinschmidt: more uh
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-mm.
William Clauss: yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: uh look natural
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: somehow. I mean And not those futuristic uh remote control with angles and uh
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: and titanium like.
William Clauss: Mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: So that's
Tyler Tantillo: Hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: what people seem to yeah i I know
Tyler Tantillo: You're
Eugene Kleinschmidt: it's
Tyler Tantillo: old-fashioned.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: quite
Tyler Tantillo: Sorry.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: far from what you thought but that's that's fashion and
Kevin Contreras: Okay.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Okay that's all I have to say.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm you have questions?
William Clauss: So these abilities are mainly ad addressed by young people? Or it's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: These I'm sorry.
William Clauss: This you you so did
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah,
William Clauss: you
Eugene Kleinschmidt: yeah we have people uh uh listening
William Clauss: Where?
Eugene Kleinschmidt: to the trends everywhere in
William Clauss: Oh.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: the world, of course,
William Clauss: Oh, okay,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: as you know our company is quite big
William Clauss: mm-hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: and uh so I'm
William Clauss: It's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: just
William Clauss: not from
Eugene Kleinschmidt: asking them
William Clauss: mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: what are the current trends
William Clauss: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: according to them when they go in the stores and
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: when they ask uh their uh friends that are
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: also
William Clauss: It's more general
Eugene Kleinschmidt: well.
William Clauss: trend it's not particular to the remote
Eugene Kleinschmidt: No,
William Clauss: control.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: it's not it's not this this is very general, yeah. But it seems that trends travel
William Clauss: Mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: across things.
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: The what we
William Clauss: Yeah but some materials n they're to be uh they're to be something like solid like they can't be really
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Sure.
William Clauss: spongy or
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah. We
William Clauss: yeah
Eugene Kleinschmidt: have to I
William Clauss: yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: think we have to have the look of
William Clauss: yeah,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: fruit
William Clauss: yeah
Eugene Kleinschmidt: and vegetables
William Clauss: sponge, yeah yeah at least
Eugene Kleinschmidt: but
William Clauss: that's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: we still have to put our chips inside, so
William Clauss: Yeah yeah
Eugene Kleinschmidt: of course. This is your problem.
William Clauss: that yeah
Eugene Kleinschmidt: This is not mine.
William Clauss: yeah. Yeah. Yeah, looking yeah fruit. These things can be easily incorporated. We can
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah,
William Clauss: have
Eugene Kleinschmidt: I think in
William Clauss: t
Eugene Kleinschmidt: the
William Clauss: colours
Eugene Kleinschmidt: colours and
William Clauss: or
Eugene Kleinschmidt: in the uh the kind of
William Clauss: this
Eugene Kleinschmidt: material.
William Clauss: shape or at least
Eugene Kleinschmidt: If
William Clauss: yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: if it's something like rubber made or
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: I think it it's
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: also going to be good.
William Clauss: Mm.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Okay?
William Clauss: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay. No more question? Okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yep. Thanks.
Tyler Tantillo: So Mm-hmm. Okay, so we will have uh next meeting in thirty minutes again. Um now you have to go straight on this individual action which i which are for Rama uh
William Clauss: Look
Tyler Tantillo: wil
William Clauss: and feel de
Tyler Tantillo: design, um Mark the user interface design, and uh Sammy uh the product evaluation.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm-hmm.
Tyler Tantillo: Uh you will work together uh
William Clauss: Hmm.
Tyler Tantillo: on a new on on a prototype using modelling clay.
William Clauss: Hmm. Mm sounds interesting.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm um and I as always your personal coach will send you specific instruction.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Okay.
Kevin Contreras: Okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Thanks.
William Clauss: So, can we highlight the specific features of our
Tyler Tantillo: Yeah you're right, you have
William Clauss: yeah,
Tyler Tantillo: to
William Clauss: so so we want the speech recogniser and we want some kind of buttons and we want some themes like fruits or vegetables, that's
Tyler Tantillo: So
William Clauss: we
Tyler Tantillo: you
William Clauss: want
Tyler Tantillo: say
William Clauss: to follow
Tyler Tantillo: s
William Clauss: general trend.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Spongy.
Tyler Tantillo: S
William Clauss: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: do we agree on that? Yeah. We have to.
William Clauss: So, do you think
Kevin Contreras: So we have to uh for
Eugene Kleinschmidt: No, we don't have to,
Tyler Tantillo: No.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: but seems it's
William Clauss: Hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: the trend. Again,
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: as I said we can also try to make it,
Kevin Contreras: yeah
Eugene Kleinschmidt: to
Kevin Contreras: so
Eugene Kleinschmidt: create the trend. So there's
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: no
Kevin Contreras: are we confident enough on creating trends?
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Well, that's you t can try to convince us.
Kevin Contreras: Well, we can make it smell like fruit.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Okay.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay, that's a good idea.
William Clauss: That's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: that's
Tyler Tantillo: So
Eugene Kleinschmidt: a
Tyler Tantillo: titanium
Eugene Kleinschmidt: good idea,
Tyler Tantillo: smell like fruit.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: I
Kevin Contreras: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
William Clauss: So what about location and these things, people are really interesting on those features? Or they really like
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Uh
William Clauss: They more want these fancy
Eugene Kleinschmidt: I think i
William Clauss: features
Eugene Kleinschmidt: yeah
William Clauss: like
Eugene Kleinschmidt: i it's again in this uh what I said first it has to be fancy so I think if nobody else pro
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: provides currently a remote control with that kind of stuff
William Clauss: Feature
Eugene Kleinschmidt: and if we can provide it I think it's a good sell for
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: us because we have
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: it and others don't.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: It's fancy. Whether it's useful or not doesn't seem to be very important.
William Clauss: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: I I agree
William Clauss: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: with uh this uh Now we have to decide on what kind of fanciness. Do we take titanium smelling like fruit, or do we make spongy uh
William Clauss: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: fruity-like
William Clauss: Uh we will try to explore these two options
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Maybe you
William Clauss: and
Eugene Kleinschmidt: could
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: explore the
William Clauss: yeah
Eugene Kleinschmidt: two option.
Tyler Tantillo: Yeah,
William Clauss: yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: yeah.
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm, mm-hmm. Could we make a titanium shape?
William Clauss: Uh
Kevin Contreras: I mean
William Clauss: yeah at least like we can make
Kevin Contreras: fruit-shaped.
William Clauss: banana or
Tyler Tantillo: Don't
Kevin Contreras: But
Tyler Tantillo: you say that you cannot do double shape uh
William Clauss: yeah
Kevin Contreras: Doub
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Mm.
William Clauss: it's
Kevin Contreras: double-curved.
Tyler Tantillo: curved
William Clauss: it's
Tyler Tantillo: shape
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Seems to
William Clauss: yeah
Tyler Tantillo: yeah.
William Clauss: that's
Eugene Kleinschmidt: be.
William Clauss: a we're to look for
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm. Okay.
William Clauss: and and
Kevin Contreras: Okay, okay.
William Clauss: s we're to see the whether rubber is expensive and
Kevin Contreras: In
William Clauss: d
Kevin Contreras: fact I just agreed to make uh to make the like titanium panels on a whole rubber body.
William Clauss: Hmm.
Kevin Contreras: Well, okay
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-mm.
Kevin Contreras: w we'll
Tyler Tantillo: Okay,
Kevin Contreras: see.
Tyler Tantillo: so you explore now that you're going to work together
Kevin Contreras: Yeah
William Clauss: Mm.
Tyler Tantillo: these these two. Or or spongy an
William Clauss: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: yeah.
William Clauss: Maybe we can have two different assembly also like one spongy and one kind of titanium.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
William Clauss: we have only the plastic or the
Kevin Contreras: We'll see.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: If
William Clauss: the
Eugene Kleinschmidt: you have
William Clauss: chippy
Eugene Kleinschmidt: time.
Kevin Contreras: We'll see.
William Clauss: yeah
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
William Clauss: fibre chips or
Tyler Tantillo: Yeah I don't think w I think we have to choose. If we choose
William Clauss: Uh.
Tyler Tantillo: uh titanium or if we choose spongy but uh it
Kevin Contreras: We'll see.
Tyler Tantillo: cannot be
Kevin Contreras: I
Tyler Tantillo: both.
Kevin Contreras: I really don't like this modelling clay
William Clauss: Yeah.
Kevin Contreras: 'cause you know it makes some for for I dunno
Eugene Kleinschmidt: For creation.
Kevin Contreras: uh yeah
William Clauss: Yeah.
Kevin Contreras: um we'll look.
William Clauss: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: Ah you can pretend
William Clauss: Even
Tyler Tantillo: that
William Clauss: design.
Tyler Tantillo: it's uh titanium.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: You can paint it afterward.
Kevin Contreras: Okay,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: No problem. We have a very large department
Kevin Contreras: okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: of paint.
Tyler Tantillo: Yeah, do don't worry, you you
Eugene Kleinschmidt: You will do it.
Tyler Tantillo: you speak with
Kevin Contreras: Alright, alright.
Tyler Tantillo: mm mm. Okay. So explore a shape.
William Clauss: So still we want to keep L_C_D_? Or
Tyler Tantillo: Mm I think it's what
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: we say, that we have an uh an L_C_D_ with uh information.
William Clauss: Okay.
Tyler Tantillo: Not
Eugene Kleinschmidt: The thing is
Tyler Tantillo: uh
Eugene Kleinschmidt: that uh if we want to have as he says if we want to have uh a small number of buttons
William Clauss: Yeah, then we
Eugene Kleinschmidt: we
William Clauss: can
Eugene Kleinschmidt: need to have a kind of output that
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: says currently what their
William Clauss: yeah,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: actions are.
William Clauss: yeah, that user friendly or
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: That's
William Clauss: Mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: the converse to having zillions
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: of button where each button does only
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: one thing.
William Clauss: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
William Clauss: and we just stick with two batteries so it's not any solar
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Yeah.
William Clauss: or
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Classical,
William Clauss: yeah
Eugene Kleinschmidt: we stay
Tyler Tantillo: Yeah,
Eugene Kleinschmidt: classical
William Clauss: yeah
Tyler Tantillo: yeah,
William Clauss: j
Eugene Kleinschmidt: in that
Tyler Tantillo: yeah.
William Clauss: yeah, because
Eugene Kleinschmidt: we don't reinvent uh
Tyler Tantillo: Mm.
William Clauss: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: the wheel. Anyway it's very in general I think people uh change T_V_ more often than batteries of their remote control. So.
Tyler Tantillo: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Because the trend goes faster than the life of the
Tyler Tantillo: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Contreras: Mm-hmm.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: So it's very
Tyler Tantillo: Okay.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: Okay.
Tyler Tantillo: So
William Clauss: Yeah.
Tyler Tantillo: are we
Kevin Contreras: Yeah.
Eugene Kleinschmidt: We're done.
William Clauss: Yeah,
Tyler Tantillo: mm.
William Clauss: we're done.
Tyler Tantillo: Okay. So see you in thirty minutes.
William Clauss: Yep. | Tyler Tantillo stated the agenda and set the goals for the current meeting. William Clauss discussed different options for batteries, case materials and shapes, chips, and interface components and also discussed the components necessary for a speech recognition capable remote control. Kevin Contreras presented his concept for the interface design which he called the "millennium remote control". Kevin Contreras also discussed with the team color options and how to make a "smart" remote which is in tune with the user's preferences. Eugene Kleinschmidt discussed current findings from trend watching reports which indicated that there is a desire for products to have a fancy look and feel, be technologically innovative, be easy to use, incorporate a fruit and vegetable theme, and be spongy. Tyler Tantillo gave the team members their assignments and then the team went over the decisions they had made and discussed whether to use titanium or rubber in their design. | 1 | amisum | train |
Arthur Lucht: So we come to the third meetings. I have good. Um so in the last meeting we have discussed the functional design and now we will talk about the conceptual design. So we
Clarence Yazzie: Okay
Arthur Lucht: will talk about
Clarence Yazzie: so
Arthur Lucht: some
Clarence Yazzie: I think I
Arthur Lucht: specific
Clarence Yazzie: will
Arthur Lucht: details.
Clarence Yazzie: do my presentation on the components concept so can you please uh open uh I'm participant two. Components
Arthur Lucht: This
Clarence Yazzie: design. Okay so uh the first thing uh I have done is to to made a review together with the uh manufactural uh department and have which components was uh available to build a remote control. So for energy sources we have we have to choose between the solar energy, hand dynamo and uh kinetic um well uh kinetic uh technique to to store the energy. We also um we also can put a regular battery in the in the remote control.
Arthur Lucht: Uh
Clarence Yazzie: Now
Arthur Lucht: this is what we have decided in the last meeting. But if we use battery
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah b uh f well uh I meant uh by by battery I meant uh I will not have a uh a wire between the remote control and the energy source but uh I didn't fou we didn't decide yet which kind of battery we will put inside the the remote. So uh it's a point to discuss. Then uh the case material we have uh uh also several choices, like wood, rubber, titanium or latex. But uh well it's not a a re uh well a real issue for the from the technical uh point of view. Concerning the interface uh we can we can put mm just simple buttons or scrolls or buttons uh much more complicated, but it also requires that the chip to process
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: the button is more complicated so. And uh this is the last point, the choice of chips. So what I have f found is that I think basic battery or kinetic uh energy uh collection is the is the better way to provide energy because I think solar energy wi won't work in a cluttered uh
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: uh environment. So um so I think we can start with these two main things. For the case uh well uh I think that uh titanium is um is a good choice because it's trendy and it's uh it's uh well it's modern and uh user are are are mm will be uh very happy to have a a a nice remote. For the interface uh I think that we can ach achieve uh all the desired functionalities by s just uh using uh rubber buttons, simple buttons and th thus this allow to use a regular chip that are uh well cheaper.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: And s so uh we can move to the next slide.
Mark Garner: Sorry.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: What is this single curved what does it mean?
Clarence Yazzie: Well uh uh i i it's uh it's the the shape of the um
Mark Garner: So it's
Clarence Yazzie: of
Mark Garner: it's
Clarence Yazzie: the
Mark Garner: not
Clarence Yazzie: remote. You you will have the well um the the curve will fit into
Mark Garner: Yo
Clarence Yazzie: your
Mark Garner: l
Clarence Yazzie: hand when you
Mark Garner: yeah. When
Clarence Yazzie: grab
Mark Garner: you hold
Clarence Yazzie: the
Mark Garner: on it, it is comfortable to hold.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah. It's more confog f comfortable that if these
Mark Garner: Okay.
Clarence Yazzie: uh it's completely flat.
Mark Garner: Yeah. And the battery, is it kind of a rechargeable or it doesn't matter?
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah the um that's the point. The kinetic one is uh y you can recharge uh by the um
Mark Garner: That that's what it means by
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah and
Mark Garner: kinetic.
Clarence Yazzie: by well by just by moving the ar uh
Mark Garner: Okay.
Clarence Yazzie: your arm the
Mark Garner: Mm-hmm.
Clarence Yazzie: mm well the remote will uh accumulate energy.
Mark Garner: Okay.
Clarence Yazzie: But I d I don't know it's if it is feasible because I don't know if yet if
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: if the user will move enough
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: to provide
Mark Garner: Okay.
Clarence Yazzie: the remote um
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: all the necessary energy.
Mark Garner: Yeah. We we might check with our R_ and D_ department to see if they this product
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: ready
Clarence Yazzie: And
Mark Garner: for market.
Clarence Yazzie: yeah and so can you go to the next slide please. So and uh that's uh that summarize well what I have said.
Mark Garner: Mm mm.
Clarence Yazzie: So
Mark Garner: Wha
Clarence Yazzie: uh you're right we can uh see in our uh R_ and D_ uh
Mark Garner: Ah the department.
Clarence Yazzie: if the kinetic metal is sufficient
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: to provide enough energy. That's it.
Mark Garner: Uh
Mark Garner: So I um keep in touch with the R_ and D_ department.
Clarence Yazzie: Oh yeah I take care, it's all right.
Mark Garner: So the titanium case is the normal case that I'll show you some pictures that I have and you tell Jerome White whether they are titanium case or not.
Clarence Yazzie: All
Mark Garner: 'Cause I am
Clarence Yazzie: right.
Mark Garner: not very sure,
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: plastic, titanium or whatever. There's another point I want to make, is that the uh well you've seen them I le na my presentation that um I point out some why buttons are not the mm not the only ways you can use Yeah. Yeah, maybe n
Arthur Lucht: We will, okay.
Arthur Lucht: Three.
Mark Garner: Yeah. So the user interface is uh i it uses the aspect uh of a computer system, a programme which can be seen or heard or otherwise perceived by the human user and the commands and mechanism the user uses to control its operation and input data. So you s this gives you the ways to input data and we have uh we are more we emphasise more on the graphical user interface here. The idea is to represent buttons as figures, diagrams, symbols and on so you you can easily when you look at the symbols you understand what it is doing.
Arthur Lucht: What's the function of this
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: button.
Mark Garner: Yeah. So.
Arthur Lucht: I think it makes the the interface really
Mark Garner: Ea easy to use. So next one.
Arthur Lucht: Graphical user
Mark Garner: function
Arthur Lucht: interface.
Mark Garner: five. So I can use the button, the mouse maybe.
Arthur Lucht: use of pictures.
Mark Garner: Yeah. So next line. So the here are some examples. So they cluster the buttons together. They group them into col they colour them and uh they have different forms as well. Mm but this interface are kind of confusing. Uh basically there are too many buttons. Right. Next one.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: So some people are propose voice recognition and so ah by the way I receive an email from the from one our departments saying that the voice recognition has been used in the coffee machine for this by a company when you tell the you say good morning coffee machine and the machine are reply to you.
Clarence Yazzie: Mm-hmm
Mark Garner: So
Clarence Yazzie: mm
Mark Garner: I just
Clarence Yazzie: mm.
Mark Garner: got an email saying that. And it seems like this voice recognition technology is ready to be used so we might consider that,
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah
Mark Garner: supposedly.
Clarence Yazzie: fine.
Mark Garner: The next one. Mm so somebody some people use uh some people use a spinning wheel th with the L_C_ display so instead of using the mm buttons you have a L_C_D_ screen and then there you can u you can use that as buttons, you can use that as real so so that could be an option as well. Touch screen, I mean.
Arthur Lucht: Yeah.
Mark Garner: Next one. And some people propose a scroll button. Integrated with push buttons or you may have scroll button instead of p just the push button. Like the one we have here. Uh, next one. So mm
Arthur Lucht: Mm-hmm.
Mark Garner: so there are a few aspects that I collected here. So s basically this deals with special users, children, handicapped people, old people, and uh mm and prog basically they are programmable, specially for children. And uh mm yeah yeah. And then they also secure uh covers, to protect uh secure and hidden programming and battery covers that will protect your settings. So But we don't have to integrate all these complicated features. I'm just saying that the currently in the market there are there are control there are remote controllers f customisable for different people. Yeah, so that's the point. The next one. And uh you see this is the one where you have the protection cover. Mm maybe useful for children, they migh you you they only see the buttons outside. And for adults wh where you have more control you can see the one inside. So the adults might wanna have a key to lock that to pr so children will not touch the button inside.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: S a good idea.
Mark Garner: The next one. So this guy this is another company that provides big buttons. At I see that that is useful for old people and then you don't get it lost. But for our product we don't need a big one because you have voice recognition
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: e eventually with use. And you can call your remote controller if you don't know where it is. T_V_ remote controller where are you? And then, he will beeps and to say that I am here, for example. Is it possible?
Arthur Lucht: We should
Jerome White: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: include
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: speech synthesis in this case, no?
Mark Garner: Uh?
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah
Jerome White: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: but uh as Norman say if uh there is uh already a commercial product
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: available who t who do this we we can check uh to integrate
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: it i
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: into our uh new remote control.
Mark Garner: Yeah. And uh, this is another one where you can uh the the the part that's a V_ standing for the volume. So there's a up arrow and a down arrow. top on the top up arrow if
Arthur Lucht: Mm-hmm.
Mark Garner: you up arrow there's a V_ like as as if it's turning down so it's confusing interface, so I
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah
Mark Garner: wanna
Clarence Yazzie: yeah.
Mark Garner: avoid this kind of thing in the design. And here are is uh here is a s short summary that I summary that I compiled after the findings I found. Big buttons are convenient, voice recognition helps, push buttons, scroll buttons, spinning wheels can be used as navigation tools. And uh user customisable is important and finally simplicity simplicity is the key. Yeah. So we have many concepts
Clarence Yazzie: Hmm.
Mark Garner: there but we have to choose later on
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: which ones are important to be used. And basically
Clarence Yazzie: Well I
Mark Garner: uh
Clarence Yazzie: I think you it's it's it's fine you have uh reviewed all all the
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: possibilities but uh uh well uh i if we consider that uh the user interface is displayed on the T_V_ screen
Mark Garner: Mm-hmm.
Clarence Yazzie: I don't think we nee uh we need much buttons in the remote since we
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: we just have to navigate and to have a okay or enter key or
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: things like that, because uh adding wheels or scrolls uh makes the thing more complicated and more
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: expensive also, so.
Mark Garner: Okay.
Arthur Lucht: Or maybe we can include the user manual in the in the remote control and we should have just a button like help and you say uh and you ik you press the button help and maybe you see the the user
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: m
Clarence Yazzie: That's
Arthur Lucht: might
Clarence Yazzie: a good
Arthur Lucht: in
Clarence Yazzie: idea.
Arthur Lucht: the in the T_V_.
Clarence Yazzie: To have a help button.
Mark Garner: A help button.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: Yeah.
Mark Garner: So you are display on the screen.
Clarence Yazzie: On
Arthur Lucht: On
Mark Garner: So
Clarence Yazzie: the T_V_
Arthur Lucht: T_V_
Clarence Yazzie: screen. On
Mark Garner: on
Clarence Yazzie: the
Mark Garner: the
Clarence Yazzie: T_V_
Mark Garner: T_V_
Arthur Lucht: T_V_
Mark Garner: screen.
Clarence Yazzie: screen
Arthur Lucht: screen.
Clarence Yazzie: the
Arthur Lucht: So
Clarence Yazzie: uh
Arthur Lucht: just you
Mark Garner: Okay.
Arthur Lucht: push
Clarence Yazzie: how to
Arthur Lucht: the
Clarence Yazzie: use
Arthur Lucht: button
Clarence Yazzie: your
Arthur Lucht: and
Clarence Yazzie: remote.
Mark Garner: Okay.
Arthur Lucht: we will
Jerome White: Oh.
Mark Garner: Okay. So that eliminates all the complicated documentation,
Arthur Lucht: Yeah.
Mark Garner: okay. So
Jerome White: But
Mark Garner: wi
Jerome White: people are often enough looking at the help, once they see
Arthur Lucht: If
Jerome White: the
Arthur Lucht: the
Jerome White: help
Arthur Lucht: if
Jerome White: button they say oh this is a complicated stuff.
Arthur Lucht: No In the case
Clarence Yazzie: Uh
Arthur Lucht: where
Clarence Yazzie: yeah.
Arthur Lucht: they need help,
Jerome White: It's a psychology.
Arthur Lucht: in the case where they need
Clarence Yazzie: In a marketing
Arthur Lucht: help.
Clarence Yazzie: point
Jerome White: Okay.
Clarence Yazzie: of view.
Jerome White: And
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: let us see what the market demands. We could
Arthur Lucht: Yeah.
Jerome White: just go to my presentation.
Clarence Yazzie: But uh wel well I
Arthur Lucht: It's
Clarence Yazzie: think
Arthur Lucht: just for user customizable,
Jerome White: Yeah that's
Arthur Lucht: for
Jerome White: right.
Arthur Lucht: kids or old people.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: I mean
Arthur Lucht: So
Jerome White: it just showed us the remote with an cap which could be used for kids and if you remove the
Arthur Lucht: So it's the same
Jerome White: Same remote with some
Arthur Lucht: Can be used by both
Jerome White: Both
Arthur Lucht: kids
Jerome White: yeah.
Arthur Lucht: and
Mark Garner: Mm.
Arthur Lucht: old people.
Mark Garner: Well uh what I s propose is that uh you know a remote controller, i it could be a cube, is uh a small device that uh looks like a cube and maybe you can just change the um the buttons, if you ch turn one side you get one one buttons, you turn the other side you get the other buttons, so for maybe new generation people who get used to the computer they want lots of controls.
Arthur Lucht: Maybe for kids, kids they like uh
Mark Garner: Small
Arthur Lucht: t no
Clarence Yazzie: Uh
Arthur Lucht: l
Clarence Yazzie: well.
Arthur Lucht: they
Clarence Yazzie: So
Arthur Lucht: like
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: to
Clarence Yazzie: le le let's see what
Mark Garner: Let's
Clarence Yazzie: uh
Mark Garner: see the
Clarence Yazzie: what
Mark Garner: market demand.
Clarence Yazzie: people
Jerome White: And
Clarence Yazzie: want.
Jerome White: then we
Mark Garner: What
Jerome White: decide what
Mark Garner: what market
Jerome White: what we can
Mark Garner: yes
Jerome White: yeah.
Mark Garner: yes.
Jerome White: So we just made an marketing survey of what people need from our remotes and how it could be special from the other remotes. And we got the best on the responses from the questionnaires. Uh we also have some prizes for the most creative solutions. And we found the following solutions which we could which would be helpful for our design. So seventy percent of the users, they find their remote controls very ugly, they don't find it pleasant to use in the size or usage or anything. And eighty percent of the people they are always l I mean they are willing to spend more money if the remote control would look fancy. And the current remote controls do not match well the operating behaviour of the user. And seventy five percent of the users said they zap a lot. And fifty
Arthur Lucht: Yeah.
Jerome White: percent say they use only ten percent of the buttons,
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: so
Arthur Lucht: Mm-hmm.
Jerome White: the rest of the ninety percent of the buttons they're not
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: used most of the times.
Mark Garner: Yes.
Jerome White: So this were the findings which we found. And also they cited frustrations with the present remote controls. Most of fifty percent of the time the remote controls are lost somewhere in the room and people are always searching for them rather than watching the T_V_.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: And by the time they found the remote control the program is finished. So
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: they're frustrated a lot And um if the remote control is too complicated it takes much time to learn the
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: functionality
Clarence Yazzie: Mm, the
Jerome White: of
Clarence Yazzie: functionalities
Jerome White: it.
Clarence Yazzie: yeah.
Jerome White: So you can just see the percentage, fifty percent people they responded that they always lose their remotes and thirty four percent they say that it's quite difficult to learn if it's too complex.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: So keeping in view all these findings and the frustrations I think this should be the solution for them. We should have an L_C_D_ on the rem remote control.
Mark Garner: Oh.
Clarence Yazzie: Well mm w well I I I don't really see the advantage of having uh L_C_D_ on the on the remote control if we have a a
Mark Garner: Big screen.
Clarence Yazzie: a big screen and uh display on the screen. It's
Jerome White: Mm-hmm?
Clarence Yazzie: yeah of course it's fancy trendy and so on but it's it's expensive to produce
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: and it's
Jerome White: I mean
Clarence Yazzie: not
Jerome White: as
Clarence Yazzie: really
Jerome White: our survey says that people are willing to pay more if
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: their remotes are fancy. So if we have a L_C_D_ on the remote, rather than looking onto the T_V_ you just look into a remote and navigate it. It's the same menu
Mark Garner: Mm yeah.
Jerome White: as we have saw that iPod
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah
Jerome White: remote
Clarence Yazzie: yeah.
Jerome White: control.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: We just play
Mark Garner: The thing
Jerome White: around
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah but when you play with the iPod you don't have a big screen in front of you,
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: You can
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: s
Arthur Lucht: use this screen instead of the
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: big se screen,
Mark Garner: If
Arthur Lucht: instead
Mark Garner: you
Arthur Lucht: of
Mark Garner: re-use
Arthur Lucht: use
Mark Garner: the
Arthur Lucht: the
Mark Garner: existing screen,
Arthur Lucht: yeah.
Mark Garner: we element eliminate the L_C_D_, after all the L_C_D_ just to display
Arthur Lucht: Hmm.
Mark Garner: and if you have the colourful screen you can make the display colourful, fancy,
Jerome White: Yeah.
Mark Garner: as fancy as the one on the L_C_D_,
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: maybe even better. So
Jerome White: I mean this were the points
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: which we got from the market
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah. Yeah yeah.
Jerome White: demands. So
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: So I th I I
Jerome White: the other
Clarence Yazzie: think
Jerome White: one
Clarence Yazzie: we we can focus on the uh on the fancy look on the uh
Mark Garner: Yeah. More on a fancy
Jerome White: Yeah that's
Mark Garner: design.
Jerome White: fine. Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: on the speech
Jerome White: I mean
Clarence Yazzie: recognition
Jerome White: that's
Clarence Yazzie: if the technology is available but well I think
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: L_C_D_ will uh will uh make us spend a lot of money for
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: not so big results.
Mark Garner: Remember
Jerome White: Mm-hmm.
Mark Garner: we have a s budget
Arthur Lucht: But
Mark Garner: for the cost of producing the remote controller.
Arthur Lucht: Yeah.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: Uh yeah
Mark Garner: So
Jerome White: we
Mark Garner: i
Jerome White: have
Mark Garner: is
Jerome White: uh
Mark Garner: so the thing is you can find out how much an L_C_D_ will cost and then we'll decide again.
Jerome White: I mean that should be found out by the Industrial Designers.
Mark Garner: Uh maybe you can find out the price and tell us next time.
Clarence Yazzie: So
Mark Garner: Is i if
Clarence Yazzie: price
Mark Garner: i
Clarence Yazzie: of uh L_C_D_ display.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: And it's
Clarence Yazzie: And
Jerome White: always good to have an voice recognition
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: for the remote
Mark Garner: And
Jerome White: controls.
Mark Garner: also the cost for the speech recognition.
Arthur Lucht: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: Ask our R_
Arthur Lucht: It's
Mark Garner: and
Arthur Lucht: for
Mark Garner: D_ department.
Arthur Lucht: it's just for small vocabulary.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: Yeah
Arthur Lucht: We
Jerome White: it's o only
Arthur Lucht: it's
Jerome White: for
Arthur Lucht: not
Jerome White: a limited vocabulary,
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: yeah.
Jerome White: say
Mark Garner: And ho
Jerome White: eighty commands or so.
Arthur Lucht: Yeah.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah okay.
Mark Garner: And also
Clarence Yazzie: And
Mark Garner: the scroller button, how much will it cost.
Clarence Yazzie: Well uh compared to the to s the simpl simpler
Arthur Lucht: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: simplest
Jerome White: Mm,
Arthur Lucht: Push
Clarence Yazzie: button.
Jerome White: the scroll
Arthur Lucht: push.
Jerome White: button, from the survey we never see that people would like to have
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: some scrolling button. Because
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah I think
Jerome White: they they
Clarence Yazzie: that
Jerome White: just they're just frightened to use the scrollings
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: or help button.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah I I I think that uh well uh as we have seen in the in the presentation uh well uh about uh uh fifty percent of the of the percent
Mark Garner: Don't use the buttons.
Clarence Yazzie: n choose the button so uh I think to have uh five uh simple
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: button is sufficient
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: for our
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: functionality.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: It doesn't mean that the other buttons are not
Mark Garner: Important.
Arthur Lucht: necessary or important.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah. But
Arthur Lucht: But they are just less
Jerome White: They're
Arthur Lucht: used
Jerome White: not used much.
Arthur Lucht: compar yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: But the uh the thing is is i is that we can add a functionality on the on the T_V_ screen like
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: uh a a list of function
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: and then you choose
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: with the with the button to
Mark Garner: Yeah,
Clarence Yazzie: well
Mark Garner: yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: you navigate and you
Mark Garner: So so the at
Arthur Lucht: Or
Mark Garner: most
Arthur Lucht: maybe we
Mark Garner: more
Arthur Lucht: can
Mark Garner: power
Arthur Lucht: u
Mark Garner: uh.
Arthur Lucht: uh or maybe we can uh make this the ten percent of button more bigger than the others.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: So.
Clarence Yazzie: But if i i if we if we could have a a a display uh g a user interface that is very complete on the T_V_ screen I think that just five buttons are sufficient,
Mark Garner: Yep.
Clarence Yazzie: one to go up left right down and uh enter
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: and you you you just select the functionality you want to access
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: or things like
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: that.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: You don't have to to switch to a channel
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: to another
Arthur Lucht: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: uh
Jerome White: Or it could be like this, as the people say, if they have a L_C_D_ on the remote not on the television. Because when you have the L_C_D_ onto the television screen you miss the picture in the background, we are most focused on the commands. So
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah
Jerome White: if you
Clarence Yazzie: but
Jerome White: have then L_C_D_ in the remote, you just have a menu, and increasing and lower these signs here to change the programs and this menu when you press the menu, in the L_C_D_ displays as you go on pressing the menu it faster displays volume, then the program, then the brightness, contrast and all
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: the stuff. And
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah
Jerome White: accordingly
Clarence Yazzie: but
Jerome White: you can just increase or decrease.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: if
Arthur Lucht: It's
Clarence Yazzie: you look at the L_C_D_ you you don't look at the T_V_ screen so
Mark Garner: Mm. I if
Clarence Yazzie: i i it's
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: not really worth to get
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: to have the image if you don't look
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: at,
Arthur Lucht: And
Clarence Yazzie: so.
Arthur Lucht: I think it's increases the cost of the
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: the remote control if you use
Jerome White: Yeah that
Arthur Lucht: L_C_D_.
Jerome White: has to be checked out.
Mark Garner: I think that
Arthur Lucht: I
Mark Garner: there's no contradiction here, because if there are few buttons, you don't have to look at your your controller any more because you know where the buttons are,
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: so if you wanna control the screen d sh sharpness you just say sharpness and then you t turn you just press lef increase or decrease button and the same for the volume
Jerome White: Yeah.
Mark Garner: and the channel, if you had the speech recognition there you just shout your channel, just tell your channel and then you don't even have to look at the butto at the controller so finally
Jerome White: Okay.
Mark Garner: that wil eliminates the the need for L_C_D_, with the help of speech recogniser you can
Jerome White: I mean,
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: better if we could just check all the cost with L_C_D_ and also with the speech recognition.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: And then we could find which would
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: would be a more
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: suitable in this case.
Mark Garner: Yeah. A and
Jerome White: And the third problem was to find the remote control. Always, so fifty percent of the people say they lose the remotes.
Clarence Yazzie: Well so we we can think about a well a a vocal command like uh
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: find and when the remote control uh
Mark Garner: Where,
Clarence Yazzie: hears
Arthur Lucht: You will
Clarence Yazzie: fine
Arthur Lucht: listen to a peep,
Clarence Yazzie: well
Arthur Lucht: special
Clarence Yazzie: yeah
Mark Garner: yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: just
Arthur Lucht: peep.
Clarence Yazzie: uh to make him beep
Jerome White: Yeah that's right, that's exactly
Clarence Yazzie: or t
Jerome White: what I mean by voice commander. Or
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: it could be also
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: something like this, uh it's always
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: boring to change the batteries of the remotes control,
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: so we have some one charger there and whenever we don't use the remote control
Mark Garner: Put it back
Jerome White: we put
Clarence Yazzie: Put
Mark Garner: at the
Jerome White: it
Mark Garner: charge.
Jerome White: in the charger.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: And when we're using that t remote and if we misplace somewhere, in the charger we have a small button, and just by pressing the button in the charger the uh remote control beeps,
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: wherever
Arthur Lucht: Okay.
Jerome White: it is.
Clarence Yazzie: And that's a good idea, that's simple,
Arthur Lucht: Yeah.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: I mean
Clarence Yazzie: like
Jerome White: it
Clarence Yazzie: in
Jerome White: doe
Clarence Yazzie: phones.
Jerome White: it also doesn't require a voice command, because
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: there are
Arthur Lucht: But
Jerome White: problems
Arthur Lucht: you
Jerome White: with
Arthur Lucht: don't
Jerome White: a voice
Arthur Lucht: you don't
Jerome White: command.
Arthur Lucht: have to move
Mark Garner: Hmm.
Arthur Lucht: the the charger.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: Yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean
Mark Garner: Th
Jerome White: charger
Arthur Lucht: You
Jerome White: would
Arthur Lucht: have
Mark Garner: yeah.
Jerome White: be
Arthur Lucht: to
Jerome White: fixed
Arthur Lucht: keep
Jerome White: because it's
Arthur Lucht: it.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: always with
Mark Garner: Mm yeah.
Jerome White: electricity plugged.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah if
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: there
Arthur Lucht: Okay.
Clarence Yazzie: if there uh there
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: is nuff not enough battery.
Mark Garner: Mm. There's
Clarence Yazzie: Also
Mark Garner: mm.
Clarence Yazzie: and
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: uh uh the remote is lost.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: Yeah that's right.
Mark Garner: That we can what we can do is we can program a function whereby when you press the switch off T_V_ button, the off button, the remote there be s uh instruction on the screen, please charge charge Jerome White.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: You never get it lost because uh every time you're off the computer the T_V_ you are asked the the command the T_V_ com remote controller would tell you to put it back to where to the charger.
Jerome White: It's an good reminder,
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Jerome White: right.
Mark Garner: So you will never get lost
Clarence Yazzie: Okay.
Mark Garner: yeah.
Arthur Lucht: Maybe for some people lazy
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: people.
Mark Garner: Yeah because everything is programmed inside.
Arthur Lucht: Yeah yeah.
Mark Garner: So it's it's uh it's all about strategy, y
Jerome White: And of course the final point is a fancy look.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: As we have seen earlier the remotes which were displayed by
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: Norman they weren't fancy,
Clarence Yazzie: They were ugly.
Jerome White: I mean mm
Clarence Yazzie: They
Jerome White: very
Mark Garner: Yeah,
Jerome White: big or
Mark Garner: yeah.
Jerome White: something
Arthur Lucht: Mm.
Jerome White: with lot of buttons. I think we should have something
Clarence Yazzie: Well
Jerome White: it
Clarence Yazzie: the last one with the um
Mark Garner: With uh two two
Clarence Yazzie: yeah with the two parts was
Mark Garner: two parts
Clarence Yazzie: uh
Mark Garner: controller.
Clarence Yazzie: original,
Jerome White: I mean
Clarence Yazzie: so
Jerome White: uh I mean uh I mean uh you see if it's like that even a kid who wants to have a control he could just plug it and
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: use it, you can't avoid him. But you can have an button for child lock.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: So just by pressing the button with
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: some code, you t you put a lock
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: onto the remote,
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: so that he can't use even
Clarence Yazzie: Well
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: we can think about uh having uh on the on the on the user interface when you switch on the T_V_
Jerome White: Mm
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: uh
Clarence Yazzie: you can uh well write a code or choose a category,
Arthur Lucht: Or
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: if it is kids, uh
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: things like that.
Jerome White: That's right.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Arthur Lucht: Or maybe you have to to show some specific programmes for kids and
Mark Garner: Mm.
Arthur Lucht: then just
Mark Garner: these
Arthur Lucht: just
Mark Garner: are probl
Arthur Lucht: yeah
Mark Garner: yeah.
Arthur Lucht: just push uh kids button
Mark Garner: Mm. Mm.
Arthur Lucht: so it's automatically.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Arthur Lucht: So if he.
Jerome White: I think these other four points they're the market demands and so it's for the user interface design
Clarence Yazzie: So for
Jerome White: and
Clarence Yazzie: mm
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: industrial
Arthur Lucht: Yeah.
Jerome White: design
Clarence Yazzie: yeah.
Jerome White: to
Clarence Yazzie: So
Jerome White: just
Clarence Yazzie: for
Jerome White: think
Clarence Yazzie: my part I will check the prices the um the prices difference uh of what to use, where to use, and s
Jerome White: Yeah
Clarence Yazzie: uh
Jerome White: I think it
Clarence Yazzie: and
Jerome White: should
Clarence Yazzie: so
Jerome White: be clearer
Clarence Yazzie: on.
Jerome White: for us in the next meeting that
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: th uh these could be included.
Mark Garner: Mm. I think we need to define also a s the set of vocabularies for the speech recogniser
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Mark Garner: because uh if you want uh say we can sort by channels or sort by T_V_ programs, you have to decide a category of vocabularies for them. If numbers, they're easy,
Arthur Lucht: Mm-hmm.
Mark Garner: but if name the channel by by name
Clarence Yazzie: Well I think we can we can have just numbers for channels and you can say to your remote control like uh sports and then on the T_V_ you have a list with with uh uh well
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: with sports program playing now and
Jerome White: No,
Clarence Yazzie: and uh
Jerome White: we have a problem there. You see uh if you have a voice commands and you are s you are watching a score on uh basketball score or something, and if the score comes twenty four thirty five, you've just say twenty five and
Arthur Lucht: Yeah
Jerome White: suddenly
Arthur Lucht: it's yeah.
Jerome White: the screen the channel goes to twenty five. So I think
Clarence Yazzie: That's
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: there
Clarence Yazzie: right,
Jerome White: should be
Clarence Yazzie: yeah,
Jerome White: a prefix
Clarence Yazzie: yeah.
Jerome White: to some numbers
Clarence Yazzie: Well but well e every possible word uh has a probability to come about of the T_V_
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: so.
Jerome White: I mean the the you just check all the probability that saying T_V_ twenty five and just ordinary twenty five.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah
Jerome White: Ordinary
Clarence Yazzie: yeah.
Jerome White: twenty five you almost there's a probability of being said
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: but
Jerome White: around sixty
Clarence Yazzie: well
Jerome White: seventy percent
Clarence Yazzie: okay.
Jerome White: and T_V_ twenty five I dunno it will be round
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: about one or two percent.
Arthur Lucht: Mm-hmm.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: So it's better to have some prefix before the number.
Mark Garner: But I I I think that the user would like wou would like to associate the channel or call the channel rather than than the numbers.
Jerome White: Yeah something, some code.
Mark Garner: You say numbe channel number five of the T_V_ correspond to something else
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah
Mark Garner: in
Clarence Yazzie: yeah.
Mark Garner: the channel. So some people may want to say, I want to see this
Clarence Yazzie: Mm
Mark Garner: channel.
Clarence Yazzie: mm. Well
Jerome White: That will
Clarence Yazzie: I
Jerome White: be too big. And
Arthur Lucht: Or
Jerome White: it will
Arthur Lucht: just
Jerome White: be difficult for the vocabulary also.
Mark Garner: Yeah. Check with the v R_ and D_ department the
Arthur Lucht: It's
Mark Garner: capability
Arthur Lucht: difficult
Mark Garner: of
Arthur Lucht: to
Mark Garner: recogniser.
Arthur Lucht: to just say the the name of the channel.
Mark Garner: Uh?
Arthur Lucht: It will be difficult to say just the name of the channel. Because
Mark Garner: Well,
Arthur Lucht: you have
Mark Garner: it's
Arthur Lucht: to
Mark Garner: convenient
Arthur Lucht: s t
Mark Garner: for
Arthur Lucht: uh
Mark Garner: the user.
Arthur Lucht: a ch yeah but you have to to have all the name of the channel in your vocabulary.
Jerome White: Als might be you just forgot
Arthur Lucht: Or maybe
Jerome White: the channel name, you
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: kno only know the number. Then
Mark Garner: The
Arthur Lucht: Or maybe
Mark Garner: uh
Arthur Lucht: the user
Mark Garner: uh
Arthur Lucht: can create
Mark Garner: mm.
Arthur Lucht: his own vocabulary,
Mark Garner: Mm.
Arthur Lucht: just pronouncing the
Mark Garner: I I think that
Arthur Lucht: the
Mark Garner: I
Arthur Lucht: name
Mark Garner: have
Arthur Lucht: of channels and
Mark Garner: mm
Arthur Lucht: include
Mark Garner: mm
Arthur Lucht: in the vocabulary.
Mark Garner: I think there's another way you can do is that uh you can uh if when the user ch press a button to choose the channel for example, then what you can do is that the you can make the T_V_ screen to split them into small little little squares of images where you you you have a snapshot of every channel, so let's say it's a four by four matrix of the images, so now what you do is f looking at the all the sixteen channels available at one time, you just use the control button uh, you
Jerome White: Yeah,
Mark Garner: just you
Jerome White: the.
Mark Garner: you just choose the the option you want and then you just hit the button and then you go to that channel. So
Arthur Lucht: Or lets the user create his
Mark Garner: Mm.
Arthur Lucht: own vocabulary
Mark Garner: So
Arthur Lucht: of
Mark Garner: you
Arthur Lucht: channel.
Mark Garner: you don't use the speech recogniser in that way.
Arthur Lucht: No. Just you have uh in the beginning you have uh t you have to train you have to create the vocabulary
Mark Garner: Oh, okay.
Arthur Lucht: by yourself.
Mark Garner: Yeah.
Clarence Yazzie: Well I uh I
Arthur Lucht: By
Clarence Yazzie: also
Arthur Lucht: associating each channel with the name or
Clarence Yazzie: I I also think about uh another problem, if if there is uh more than one person who is watching T_V_
Jerome White: Yeah
Clarence Yazzie: the
Arthur Lucht: And
Clarence Yazzie: s
Arthur Lucht: for
Jerome White: yeah,
Arthur Lucht: each one
Clarence Yazzie: well
Arthur Lucht: has
Clarence Yazzie: the
Arthur Lucht: his
Clarence Yazzie: the speech uh
Arthur Lucht: own.
Clarence Yazzie: r recogniser should be able to distinguish between the two. Because uh
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: I remember when I was a young child
Arthur Lucht: Or
Clarence Yazzie: with
Arthur Lucht: you have
Clarence Yazzie: my sister
Arthur Lucht: to
Mark Garner: Yeah, I wanna watch
Jerome White: Yeah.
Arthur Lucht: s
Clarence Yazzie: we
Mark Garner: this, I wanna watch
Clarence Yazzie: yeah
Mark Garner: that.
Clarence Yazzie: we always want to w to watch different emission at the at the same time so it's a pr it could be a problem if uh if well if someone passes by when you are watching T_V_ and say oh T_V_ thirty and just run,
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: s
Jerome White: A and in the same lines we would have a one more problem. If we are using the television in the different environments, say in the factories or in the shops
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah, yeah.
Jerome White: where there is a lot of noise
Arthur Lucht: Yeah.
Jerome White: and this voice commands if they fail to work, that would bring a bad name bad uh reputation
Mark Garner: Mm.
Jerome White: for our company. So
Arthur Lucht: Mm.
Jerome White: I think we should specify some pre-requirements if we want to use a voice commands, say that it should be used in an silent homely environment or
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah.
Jerome White: s something.
Arthur Lucht: Or we can switch on or switch off the the special,
Jerome White: Yeah that's right that should be an option.
Arthur Lucht: yeah.
Mark Garner: Mm.
Clarence Yazzie: Yeah that's well I think that's a good uh a good option because it's simple and uh simple
Mark Garner: Hmm.
Clarence Yazzie: to implement also, so.
Jerome White: I think these are the practical problems. So we need to take care of them in the design.
Arthur Lucht: Maybe we'll discuss them in next meeting. It's time to close this meeting.
Clarence Yazzie: Okay.
Mark Garner: Well, you
Jerome White: Okay.
Mark Garner: you stay a five minutes.
Jerome White: Oh it came there on three minutes back
Arthur Lucht: Yeah.
Jerome White: so we are I think we can just press the
Arthur Lucht: Okay.
Jerome White: okay.
Clarence Yazzie: Okay. So
Arthur Lucht: Thanks
Clarence Yazzie: I see
Arthur Lucht: for
Clarence Yazzie: ya.
Jerome White: Okay.
Arthur Lucht: your collaborations.
Jerome White: See you another thirty minutes. | Clarence Yazzie presented options for each component. He suggested kinetic energy, a titanium case, and rubber push buttons. The group will ask if the kinetic energy component can provide enough energy. Mark Garner introduced the graphical user interface to the group and suggested using an LCD screen. He presented several existing products and suggested the following: large buttons; voice recognition; either push, scroll, or spinning buttons; and incorporating some customizable components. The group discussed including a help button; it was decided that it would make the device seem more complicated. Jerome White presented that users found remotes too easily lost, complicated, and ugly. He showed that users were willing to pay more for a fancy remote. He suggested the LCD screen; the group felt that it was better to utilize the user's television as a display screen, but that they would inquire about cost before deciding. The group will inquire about the cost of voice recognition and scroll buttons. The group discussed incorporating a locator function and customization for children. They discussed the sensitivity of the voice recognizer to other noises; the group will ask about the capability of the recognizer. | 1 | amisum | train |
Darren Rogers: So in last meeting we have discussed the conceptual design and we asked you to prepare a prototype for the for the remote control. So.
Samuel Hansen: Okay.
Darren Rogers: So let's see the what
Samuel Hansen: Yeah, so
Darren Rogers: did you prepare.
Samuel Hansen: can you go out to the shared folder? Mm the
Darren Rogers: Sh
Samuel Hansen: shared folder.
Darren Rogers: share folder for
Samuel Hansen: Yes.
Darren Rogers: th your presentation?
Samuel Hansen: We have a presentation.
Darren Rogers: Because I have here
Samuel Hansen: Uh So I got the participant uh three. W uh. Three. It's the final design, yeah.
Darren Rogers: Okay just one.
Samuel Hansen: S so so I discussed with
Bobby Stoddard: Mm.
Samuel Hansen: Guillaume. Right.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: And uh so we have and we we are both agreed on some two versions of the prototypes, because we not decided whether we to have an L_C_D_ or not because it's too expensive. So we come up with two versions. One with and one without L_C_D_s. Um but both comes with a charger and then detachable and uh or control module. And detachable big buttons for all people um. So.
Bobby Stoddard: okay so I'll show you the the two prototypes. Here we have the first one with the beautiful uh L_C_D_ um display. You you can s here. And you can uh just um browse into the the navigation menu by uh joystick
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: joystick-like uh button. You can uh choose the direction and if you just push on it it's considered like
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: a enter function.
Samuel Hansen: Mm-hmm.
Bobby Stoddard: You have on the mm on the side here the microphone for the for the speech recognition. And here the the switch that control if you
Darren Rogers: Why
Bobby Stoddard: want
Darren Rogers: you why you you put it in the the side?
Bobby Stoddard: Well I I I think uh it's
Darren Rogers: It's not
Bobby Stoddard: the
Darren Rogers: a good place maybe.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah
Samuel Hansen: No i i
Bobby Stoddard: but
Samuel Hansen: it's the all around camer uh microphone isn't it. The the microphone picks up
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: the speeches
Andre Hess: Is it an
Samuel Hansen: from
Andre Hess: only
Samuel Hansen: anywhere.
Andre Hess: a single mic or a microphone array?
Bobby Stoddard: Well so it's a microphone array.
Darren Rogers: Oh it's
Andre Hess: Mm-hmm.
Darren Rogers: very costly, microphone
Bobby Stoddard: No
Darren Rogers: array.
Bobby Stoddard: it's
Samuel Hansen: Yeah
Bobby Stoddard: just a single microphone, and you I I think uh we we put it here because I think when you when you are browsing your L_C_D_
Andre Hess: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: you will be close to well it's better to to to place it here th
Samuel Hansen: Yeah
Bobby Stoddard: than here,
Andre Hess: Okay.
Bobby Stoddard: for instance.
Samuel Hansen: yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: And here is a little switch that control if you want the the speaker uh recognition system to um to be on or off. And uh so this remote control comes up with its charger.
Darren Rogers: How much does it cost this one?
Bobby Stoddard: Well this this prototype is um made for about uh well fi
Samuel Hansen: For the
Bobby Stoddard: fi fifteen fifteen dollars
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Darren Rogers: Fifteen dollars?
Bobby Stoddard: fifteen dollars, but uh well it's
Darren Rogers: above
Bobby Stoddard: not
Darren Rogers: it's
Bobby Stoddard: it's not
Darren Rogers: above
Bobby Stoddard: uh
Darren Rogers: the budget.
Bobby Stoddard: yeah, but uh it's just a prototype and if we uh if we optimises the um the uh voila.
Andre Hess: The cost would be le reduced.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah the and the
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: the production costs we we can achieve
Samuel Hansen: Hmm.
Bobby Stoddard: uh about ten dollars.
Darren Rogers: How many b battery is there?
Bobby Stoddard: How many, excuse Andre Hess?
Darren Rogers: Battery.
Bobby Stoddard: Well uh f battery, we use uh
Samuel Hansen: Is
Bobby Stoddard: about
Samuel Hansen: it n
Bobby Stoddard: uh
Samuel Hansen: the two A_A_s batteries in
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: it. A_A_ rechargeable batteries.
Bobby Stoddard: Rechargeable of course,
Samuel Hansen: Yeah rechargeable
Bobby Stoddard: because we have
Samuel Hansen: batteries.
Bobby Stoddard: the charger.
Samuel Hansen: We have the charger so
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah
Samuel Hansen: it's no problem.
Bobby Stoddard: and you just
Darren Rogers: So one one battery?
Bobby Stoddard: On uh yeah one battery.
Andre Hess: Is that two or one?
Darren Rogers: It's kinetic reserve.
Samuel Hansen: Actually uh it's a flexible thing. You just n
Andre Hess: Now
Samuel Hansen: uh
Andre Hess: what is the whole day rating for that?
Bobby Stoddard: The
Andre Hess: Whole
Bobby Stoddard: excuse
Andre Hess: day's
Bobby Stoddard: Andre Hess?
Andre Hess: rating. What type of battery?
Bobby Stoddard: Oh yeah it's just a r uh simple battery a rechargeable uh
Samuel Hansen: Yeah
Bobby Stoddard: if you uh
Samuel Hansen: yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: like it's exist.
Andre Hess: Something like a two A_, A_ three size batteries?
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Andre Hess: Mm-hmm.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: So and if you want to charge the battery you just put the remote control like that
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: to plug in the
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: the charger and uh leave it uh alone,
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: it's alright. Then the next time you pick it, oh
Samuel Hansen: At
Bobby Stoddard: it
Samuel Hansen: uh
Bobby Stoddard: works.
Samuel Hansen: yeah. I forgot to tell you there is only a single button there,
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah
Samuel Hansen: b this
Bobby Stoddard: just explain
Samuel Hansen: button
Bobby Stoddard: the button uh
Samuel Hansen: yeah alright.
Bobby Stoddard: Norman.
Samuel Hansen: This button is like the mouse is like a joystick, you can move in three hundred and sixty degrees of direction so you can make a turn and it the additi functions associated to all the actions you ma you have a click you have a double click
Darren Rogers: Mm.
Samuel Hansen: all in a single button. You can move up, down, left, right, or you can do a swing. So a swing to the left, a swing to the right defines other functions. So even though it's a single button, but it is pretty s flexible because of the three hundred and sixty degree movement.
Andre Hess: And the L_C_D_ is this one, on the
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Andre Hess: remote?
Bobby Stoddard: Yep.
Samuel Hansen: This is the version y that comes with L_C_D_.
Andre Hess: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: Here I present another version without the L_C_D_.
Darren Rogers: I think it's not a good idea because after maybe one or two months
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Darren Rogers: of function is getting destroyed. If
Samuel Hansen: Uh
Darren Rogers: you
Samuel Hansen: okay
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah
Samuel Hansen: this is
Bobby Stoddard: it's
Samuel Hansen: new prototype uh.
Bobby Stoddard: So we have the the second version also with the different uh button configuration. The second version is also simpler, we d uh we had just uh I have to put the microphone also. So basically th it's the
Andre Hess: Uh-huh
Bobby Stoddard: same
Andre Hess: and also
Bobby Stoddard: uh
Andre Hess: the switch.
Bobby Stoddard: yeah.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah
Andre Hess: Okay.
Bobby Stoddard: Basically
Samuel Hansen: yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: it's the same uh things uh uh as uh I presented before. But here we have uh we have uh four buttons for navigation. Press one button uh acting
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: as a a enter button. So um yeah according to what you said it's more robust to the user.
Darren Rogers: Mm-hmm.
Andre Hess: Mm-hmm.
Bobby Stoddard: And uh it's also cheaper to produce. We can produce uh such remote control for about uh four dollars.
Darren Rogers: No four dollars, it's good.
Andre Hess: And I think you forgot a point here have an button to find the charger,
Samuel Hansen: Oh no th
Andre Hess: because that's
Samuel Hansen: actually
Andre Hess: a major
Samuel Hansen: th
Andre Hess: that's
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah
Samuel Hansen: we'll
Andre Hess: a
Samuel Hansen: come
Bobby Stoddard: it's
Samuel Hansen: to that
Bobby Stoddard: it's
Samuel Hansen: point in
Bobby Stoddard: it's
Samuel Hansen: our
Bobby Stoddard: embed in the
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: uh speech recognition system.
Andre Hess: Okay and
Bobby Stoddard: So
Andre Hess: if you disable speech recognition system then?
Samuel Hansen: W w I'll I'll come to that point later
Andre Hess: Mm
Samuel Hansen: on.
Andre Hess: hmm hmm hmm hmm hmm.
Bobby Stoddard: so Norman will explain to you.
Darren Rogers: And
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Darren Rogers: we
Andre Hess: Okay.
Darren Rogers: will we will serve the charger with this?
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah yeah
Samuel Hansen: Th they
Darren Rogers: With
Bobby Stoddard: of course
Darren Rogers: the remote control.
Bobby Stoddard: mm.
Samuel Hansen: either these with the uh the the charger any in either versions you they they ha they use the same charger
Darren Rogers: Okay
Samuel Hansen: yeah.
Darren Rogers: so the price of the charger included in the
Samuel Hansen: Uh it's a standard module so you should get it for a cheap price uh.
Bobby Stoddard: Thank thank you.
Darren Rogers: Mm-hmm.
Bobby Stoddard: And so
Samuel Hansen: It's that
Bobby Stoddard: mm-hmm.
Samuel Hansen: same charger that you can use for the hand-phone but uh again depends on the types. I think we have to investigate more on that, but
Darren Rogers: The price should be below twelve
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Darren Rogers: and a half Euro.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah
Darren Rogers: Well
Samuel Hansen: but
Darren Rogers: that's
Samuel Hansen: as the Marketing
Darren Rogers: so
Samuel Hansen: Manager says, people is willing to people are willing to pay more for good design.
Andre Hess: Yeah people
Darren Rogers: We
Andre Hess: are willing
Darren Rogers: have
Andre Hess: to
Darren Rogers: we
Andre Hess: pay more,
Darren Rogers: have just
Andre Hess: but the company is not willing to invest more
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Darren Rogers: The price
Andre Hess: at the
Darren Rogers: of
Andre Hess: moment.
Darren Rogers: selling is twenty
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Darren Rogers: five Euros.
Samuel Hansen: Mm-hmm.
Darren Rogers: And the price of
Bobby Stoddard: Alright
Darren Rogers: production
Bobby Stoddard: please uh go on Norman with the special
Andre Hess: Or
Bobby Stoddard: features.
Andre Hess: uh
Samuel Hansen: Yeah we'll we'll come up to that, the the the thing that makes this the controller cheap is that it is modular so you want more function you pay more. If you want less function i i if you want a reasonable price you pay for the functions that you add on to the system, so is uh modular.
Darren Rogers: That's for this basis function and if you want more you pay
Samuel Hansen: Yeah
Darren Rogers: more.
Samuel Hansen: yeah,
Andre Hess: Something
Samuel Hansen: for example
Andre Hess: like
Samuel Hansen: the L_C_D_,
Andre Hess: customised.
Samuel Hansen: you can take it
Andre Hess: Yeah
Samuel Hansen: you can put
Darren Rogers: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: it put it back in, or you can use the other one, or the speech recogniser with the microphone yeah yeah. You want a microphone to put in the
Darren Rogers: Okay.
Samuel Hansen: speech recogniser you don't wan you pay less for the system you see.
Andre Hess: Mm hmm hmm hmm.
Samuel Hansen: So
Andre Hess: Hmm okay.
Samuel Hansen: It's pretty flexible in the yeah
Bobby Stoddard: You also
Samuel Hansen: price.
Bobby Stoddard: have the
Darren Rogers: But
Bobby Stoddard: the the two other modules for the parental control
Samuel Hansen: Uh yeah yeah you should
Andre Hess: And
Bobby Stoddard: that
Samuel Hansen: present
Andre Hess: this
Bobby Stoddard: that
Samuel Hansen: that.
Andre Hess: is
Bobby Stoddard: you ca
Andre Hess: other one?
Bobby Stoddard: you can add up to the to your remote control i i if you uh if you want to to have more more power on what you do,
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: and uh which channel you want to choose and so on. H here is just the the the module for the kids and th if the parents want
Andre Hess: Mm
Bobby Stoddard: to
Andre Hess: hmm hmm
Bobby Stoddard: watch
Andre Hess: hmm.
Bobby Stoddard: T_V_, up they come up with their modules, they just plug in it
Samuel Hansen: Yeah
Bobby Stoddard: and they can have all the control they want here.
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: We also have this module for uh old people
Samuel Hansen: Hmm.
Bobby Stoddard: with big buttons, clearly labelled, and it acts like the previous
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: one, you just plug in and it works.
Andre Hess: Mm-hmm.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah the i the idea the the conceptual idea is that simplicity and powerful. Simplicity meaning that we have few buttons, powerful is that all the controls with the one you saw we saw earlier in the meetings with lots of buttons n but here you only have few buttons but you retain the mm the same powerful functionalities. But in addition with simplicity. So that's the best idea, the cond that that's our uh an innovation um uh i in this uh design here.
Darren Rogers: Mm-hmm.
Samuel Hansen: Okay now we come to other important features that I did not tell you. The first one is the speech recogniser, again it's detachable or add-on. And then we also have security feature for example this here oop it's very robust, it doesn't break and the material, what's the material
Bobby Stoddard: The
Samuel Hansen: again?
Bobby Stoddard: titanium and
Darren Rogers: Titanium.
Bobby Stoddard: so it's very uh
Samuel Hansen: Again uh and the battery life is uh is an is an endurable one, again because this is A_A_ batteries you can choose the types of battery you want.
Andre Hess: Yeah that's fine.
Samuel Hansen: Lithium-ion may be a good one, but you can replace it with cheaper one, again you pay for what you get, and then um y the other p points are robust and misplacement reminder. So when you finish watching your T_V_ and you the you t you turn off the T_V_, uh and then there's this message coming out that uh please put that back to the charger,
Andre Hess: Okay.
Samuel Hansen: so that's the or is it that's the reminder part. Yeah and um And it also use a programmable channel and vocabulary, so we didn't define the vocabulary so it's up to the user to define
Andre Hess: Mm hmm hmm hmm.
Samuel Hansen: so sorry? And then uh because of the chil because children are using the device so we have also a a of T_V_ programmes by genre, and this can be used by the adult or by the children. So instead of choosing the channel you are choosing the T_V_ contents of the night. So it's pretty powerful, and that's that's why the num buttons are reduced, because of this feature. Yeah. And and for the materials that is cheap to produce I think uh it's quite clear from yeah. And also like the and the fancy designs yeah. Maybe we can
Darren Rogers: What
Samuel Hansen: improve
Darren Rogers: what's
Samuel Hansen: more on the design
Darren Rogers: Maybe yeah. What's
Samuel Hansen: but
Darren Rogers: the price to p to produce?
Samuel Hansen: uh this is the
Bobby Stoddard: Well so the price to produce For uh the simplest one, say we start from four dollars to produce such a device. Uh it's
Darren Rogers: With
Bobby Stoddard: about
Darren Rogers: with
Bobby Stoddard: it
Darren Rogers: with the
Bobby Stoddard: The
Andre Hess: With the
Darren Rogers: charge?
Andre Hess: charger?
Bobby Stoddard: without without the charger
Darren Rogers: Okay.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: it's about uh well two dollars to produce uh the microphone and speech recognition systems. Two dollars for the uh for the add-on modules, and finally three dollars for the charger. So if you uh sum up uh everything
Darren Rogers: We don't have charger.
Bobby Stoddard: wi with the L_C_D_, which costs two dollar, you have two plus four plus four plus two plus two. It's
Andre Hess: I think
Bobby Stoddard: about
Andre Hess: we can use Excel.
Darren Rogers: We don't have all the options.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: so the total
Darren Rogers: Charger
Bobby Stoddard: cost if
Darren Rogers: we
Bobby Stoddard: you
Darren Rogers: don't have
Bobby Stoddard: if
Darren Rogers: charger
Bobby Stoddard: you want
Darren Rogers: here
Bobby Stoddard: all the
Darren Rogers: either.
Bobby Stoddard: fuct functionalities will be about uh fifteen dollars.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Darren Rogers: No it's
Bobby Stoddard: But it's just if you want all functionalities.
Darren Rogers: it's below the the the budget.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: Excuse Andre Hess?
Darren Rogers: It's below the bu the budget.
Andre Hess: Yeah it's a nice
Darren Rogers: We
Andre Hess: input but we have an other inputs from the l public demands. I think we will just have a rough look and then we can make our statements, and we can finalise the product based
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Andre Hess: on this discu
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Andre Hess: I think we can just go to my presentation then. We can wind up. Or we could uh come to some f uh final conclusions.
Andre Hess: So the marketing made an evaluation criteria and these were some of the findings, and uh in the market the people are not really interested with L_C_D_, without L_C_D_, with speech recognition interface, or without speech recognition interface, but most of the people what they are interested is first thing is, they want to have an fancy look and feel, it should be very fancy with colourful and uh very handy to hold. And
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Andre Hess: the second thing is it should be much more technologically innovative. Of course in that we could put L_C_D_ or recognition to be more technologically innovative. And the third one is easy to use.
Bobby Stoddard: Well
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: I think that the technical in innovation is is in the product itself since we haven't yet a remote who are allowing to to choose interactively with the T_V_ screen uh uh with just four buttons.
Andre Hess: Okay and if we go to the next slide, here you can find these are the latest fashion updates, and so this in Paris and Milan they have detected this trends that the this year it's going to be an year of fruit and vegetable, so people are really interested
Samuel Hansen: Spongy
Andre Hess: to see if
Samuel Hansen: spongy.
Andre Hess: they have an remote in the shape of the fruit or a vegetable, or
Samuel Hansen: Mm
Andre Hess: whatever they like.
Samuel Hansen: mm.
Andre Hess: So I think it should be much more customised
Samuel Hansen: Mm
Andre Hess: to make a different
Samuel Hansen: mm.
Andre Hess: uh shapes. And the second thing is, and if the material, they really do not want it to be very hard, as in the case of very pl plastic or titanium, it should be somewhat spongy.
Bobby Stoddard: Okay.
Samuel Hansen: But the the problem is that uh is it robust to mishandling?
Andre Hess: Um.
Samuel Hansen: We have you should find a material that is robust at the same time spongy.
Bobby Stoddard: A
Andre Hess: Yeah
Bobby Stoddard: sponge.
Andre Hess: so
Samuel Hansen: Spongy.
Andre Hess: uh so finally we have these three criterias. One is fancy look, second is innovative, and third is easy to use. So these are the f uh three criteria on which we are going to build our remote.
Samuel Hansen: Mm-hmm.
Andre Hess: So
Bobby Stoddard: Hmm.
Andre Hess: and we have an evaluation criteria for each one of these, say that we have a seven point scale, from one to seven,
Samuel Hansen: Mm-hmm.
Andre Hess: and for each of the product you could just give Andre Hess the scale according to this.
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Andre Hess: So now you have with L_C_D_ and without L_C_D_, so
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Andre Hess: on this scale, if it is true, if it is if it has a fancy look you could just tell Andre Hess one, or if it is false, it doesn't it looks uh it doesn't look much fancy, then you could just tell Andre Hess seven. So
Samuel Hansen: So
Andre Hess: We can make our study on this and
Samuel Hansen: so is the e evaluation depending on us or other users?
Andre Hess: No no we have you have designed two products now,
Darren Rogers: Yeah.
Andre Hess: one is with L_C_D_ and without
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Andre Hess: L_C_D_.
Samuel Hansen: But who will give the scoring uh we ourself or
Darren Rogers: You.
Andre Hess: According
Samuel Hansen: or a
Andre Hess: to
Samuel Hansen: third party?
Andre Hess: you, no according to you designers, how will feel does it uh with
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Andre Hess: L_C_D_ and without L_C_D_? Okay let us make this L_ and without L_C_D_. On on this scale the L_C_D_
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Andre Hess: remote control. How do
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Andre Hess: you look how does it look? D is it very fancy or doesn't look much fancy?
Bobby Stoddard: Well it doesn't look much fancy I'll I'll say three or four.
Andre Hess: And you both agree for that?
Darren Rogers: And you?
Samuel Hansen: I think we can improve on the design.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: Som
Bobby Stoddard: It's it
Samuel Hansen: someone
Bobby Stoddard: it
Samuel Hansen: um commented this is like a the stone age uh design. Um we have been focused all all this time on the
Bobby Stoddard: Technical
Samuel Hansen: on the technical
Bobby Stoddard: aspects.
Samuel Hansen: aspect, functional aspect, but also the simplicity.
Darren Rogers: Mm-hmm.
Samuel Hansen: As for the design maybe we c should hire a designer
Andre Hess: So I take
Samuel Hansen: to
Andre Hess: three on
Samuel Hansen: help.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah
Andre Hess: with
Bobby Stoddard: a three.
Andre Hess: L_C_D_? So without
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Andre Hess: L_C_D_ how would you rate it?
Bobby Stoddard: Uh four.
Andre Hess: Four.
Bobby Stoddard: I think it's it's uh more easy to make f fancy things when it's not complicated
Samuel Hansen: Yeah. Yeah.
Andre Hess: And in the sense of innovativeness, with L_C_D_.
Bobby Stoddard: Well it's it's the same for both so I will give a five, six.
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Andre Hess: Five with L_C_D_ and
Bobby Stoddard: Well five also uh
Samuel Hansen: Yeah
Bobby Stoddard: Norman please.
Darren Rogers: Uh
Samuel Hansen: from the innovation aspect I feel that uh what is most innovative of our prototype compared to the existing prototypes that we saw l in the last meeting is that um the retrieval of T_V_ programmes by content, because uh that is really innovative, and for now and another innovation we have is simplicity and simplicity, few buttons, we've uh
Bobby Stoddard: With lot of functionalities.
Samuel Hansen: A lot of functionalities.
Andre Hess: So
Samuel Hansen: So
Andre Hess: without
Samuel Hansen: that is
Andre Hess: L_C_D_?
Samuel Hansen: uh that is uh for both th Our gi I think that the our our product is uh has the best in all well this is a biased judgement
Andre Hess: No
Samuel Hansen: because
Andre Hess: no according
Samuel Hansen: we designed
Andre Hess: to design
Samuel Hansen: them.
Andre Hess: aspect we want to know how
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Andre Hess: would you feel the innovativeness?
Samuel Hansen: Uh the innovation is v is very high I think.
Andre Hess: With
Darren Rogers: For
Andre Hess: L_C_D_.
Darren Rogers: L_C_D_.
Andre Hess: And without
Samuel Hansen: Both.
Andre Hess: L_C_D_?
Bobby Stoddard: Mm for both it's
Samuel Hansen: For both.
Bobby Stoddard: the the same innovations.
Samuel Hansen: It's the same innovation.
Andre Hess: Okay.
Samuel Hansen: So maybe I can put six to seven.
Bobby Stoddard: six, let's
Darren Rogers: Without
Bobby Stoddard: go for
Darren Rogers: L_C_D_.
Bobby Stoddard: six.
Samuel Hansen: Both.
Andre Hess: No actually uh to make it with L_C_D_ you make more efforts. So I there is high innovativeness included if you make it with L_C_D_
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Andre Hess: y then when it is without L_C_D_
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Andre Hess: there is not much
Darren Rogers: Uh no
Andre Hess: innovativeness.
Darren Rogers: innovative yeah.
Andre Hess: So
Samuel Hansen: Uh
Andre Hess: we
Samuel Hansen: uh
Andre Hess: can't
Samuel Hansen: uh
Andre Hess: go
Samuel Hansen: there w there was a there was a issue here is that what are what is the display on the L_C_D_? We haven't really uh
Bobby Stoddard: Talk
Andre Hess: I mean
Samuel Hansen: determined
Bobby Stoddard: about
Andre Hess: that what you are sayin that's
Samuel Hansen: what
Andre Hess: what the
Samuel Hansen: are actually
Andre Hess: design
Samuel Hansen: actually it's good to have a L_C_D_ but what are we gonna display on a L_C_D_?
Andre Hess: No it's like this, I mean on the L_C_D_, according to what I understand from your model is,
Darren Rogers: So let's remove
Andre Hess: you
Darren Rogers: it.
Andre Hess: have a joystick here,
Samuel Hansen: Yeah?
Andre Hess: and you have L_C_D_,
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Andre Hess: you just press your joystick, you get here a programme.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah but
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah
Andre Hess: Uh
Bobby Stoddard: but
Andre Hess: then
Bobby Stoddard: you have
Darren Rogers: But
Bobby Stoddard: the same programme on the T_V_ screen.
Samuel Hansen: Yes exactly.
Darren Rogers: This is the problem.
Andre Hess: No on the T_V_ you don't it doesn't display on the T_V_ now.
Bobby Stoddard: If you have the L_C_D_,
Andre Hess: L_C_D_?
Bobby Stoddard: but if n
Andre Hess: Then uh there is no meaning in having it on the T_V_.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Andre Hess: a channels, volume and all the stuff
Samuel Hansen: But
Andre Hess: and what
Samuel Hansen: you cannot
Andre Hess: a
Samuel Hansen: display all on a L_C_D_.
Andre Hess: I mean that depends upon your design, so
Samuel Hansen: Anyway for for the users who who who opt for L_C_D_
Andre Hess: I mean
Samuel Hansen: we'll give them the give them the L_C_D_, we give what the customer uh wants, right.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Andre Hess: So without L_C_D_ you want to put it fi the same level of innovativeness? And which do you recommend e easy to use, with L_C_D_ or without L_C_D_?
Bobby Stoddard: Well I think both are really easy to use because there are few button buttons,
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: and uh well t p the menu are clear,
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: well-organised, so
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: Well with little knowing of the technology you can you can easily use the product so I will give a six for the easy
Samuel Hansen: Yeah
Bobby Stoddard: to use.
Samuel Hansen: I think sorry.
Darren Rogers: No it's just if I I see the the f the rate I think it's better to do it without L_C_D_. Because
Andre Hess: Yeah.
Darren Rogers: that's with L_C_D_ just will increase the price, and I thi i they have the same rate so
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Darren Rogers: without L_C_D_
Andre Hess: Or we can
Darren Rogers: it
Andre Hess: just
Darren Rogers: will be
Andre Hess: go back to the previous slide uh where we ha we have a few updates. So I mean in the product design you could just amend it to make some few changes
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Andre Hess: according to fruit and
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Andre Hess: vegetable or a spongy touch
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Andre Hess: without L_C_D_ and without speech recognition. Even then our product is going to be
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah, it's
Andre Hess: very
Bobby Stoddard: cheaper
Andre Hess: good.
Bobby Stoddard: to produce.
Andre Hess: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: Mm. S
Bobby Stoddard: And uh if the the well if we have less technology we have more liberty to uh
Andre Hess: Yeah
Bobby Stoddard: for
Andre Hess: that's
Bobby Stoddard: the shape
Andre Hess: right.
Bobby Stoddard: and uh things like that so
Samuel Hansen: Yeah. I have another thing to say about the easy to use aspect. I think the easy to use uh aspect is different for different people.
Bobby Stoddard: Yep.
Samuel Hansen: For the
Darren Rogers: Mm-hmm.
Samuel Hansen: young generation easy to use may be very complicated because uh they w they wants lot of controls with lots of buttons. For kids they want simply the s similarit
Andre Hess: Yeah
Samuel Hansen: for
Andre Hess: yeah
Samuel Hansen: the old
Andre Hess: that's
Samuel Hansen: people
Andre Hess: right.
Samuel Hansen: they want simplicity, so that's why we have the parental module. Uh we can ha have build a more complex design if if they want it, but but uh what I'm trying to say here is that the um we have different sets of buttons for different kinds of people. So in terms of easy to use I think it's very user customisable. User customisation is very important yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah so
Andre Hess: So without
Bobby Stoddard: Six.
Andre Hess: L_C_D_ I just take it five?
Darren Rogers: Mm-hmm.
Samuel Hansen: W
Andre Hess: Or
Samuel Hansen: uh
Andre Hess: you want it to be six?
Bobby Stoddard: Um six.
Samuel Hansen: I think it's the same. Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: Yes as you say, with better uh
Darren Rogers: Without
Andre Hess: S s
Darren Rogers: L_C_D_.
Andre Hess: oh
Bobby Stoddard: yeah.
Andre Hess: I think it's better to have this without L_C_D_.
Bobby Stoddard: And to improve the
Andre Hess: As our
Bobby Stoddard: the
Andre Hess: Programme
Bobby Stoddard: look.
Andre Hess: Manager s
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Andre Hess: Pro Project Manager says that without L_C_D_ it is going to reduce the cost also,
Darren Rogers: Yeah.
Andre Hess: and
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Andre Hess: it's going to be much
Bobby Stoddard: Yes
Andre Hess: simpler
Bobby Stoddard: and to
Andre Hess: to
Bobby Stoddard: give
Andre Hess: use.
Bobby Stoddard: us more liberty to have a fancy look so
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: so let's go back to our laboratory and
Andre Hess: So.
Darren Rogers: What
Samuel Hansen: To improve
Darren Rogers: a what
Samuel Hansen: on
Darren Rogers: what
Samuel Hansen: the design.
Darren Rogers: about the sys speech recognition?
Samuel Hansen: Huh?
Darren Rogers: what about the integration of
Samuel Hansen: The
Darren Rogers: speech
Samuel Hansen: speech recogniser
Darren Rogers: recognition?
Samuel Hansen: is a add-on module.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: Right?
Andre Hess: That's going to be an optional. If somebody wants to buy it they can have it, otherwise
Darren Rogers: Ah
Andre Hess: no.
Darren Rogers: so it's optional
Andre Hess: It's
Darren Rogers: with
Andre Hess: an
Darren Rogers: the
Andre Hess: optional.
Darren Rogers: okay.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: It's optional yeah, since well according to this study uh people more
Darren Rogers: I think
Bobby Stoddard: likes
Darren Rogers: it will
Bobby Stoddard: more
Darren Rogers: be I
Bobby Stoddard: to have
Darren Rogers: think
Bobby Stoddard: a spongy
Darren Rogers: i
Bobby Stoddard: uh remote
Andre Hess: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: control than
Darren Rogers: I think it will be better if we have all these modules in the same remote control, because maybe parents will
Andre Hess: Yeah, but
Darren Rogers: lose
Andre Hess: I mean
Darren Rogers: these
Andre Hess: if you have
Darren Rogers: uh
Andre Hess: an add-ons, the kids may just uh hide the parental module
Darren Rogers: Yeah.
Andre Hess: and
Darren Rogers: Or
Andre Hess: so
Darren Rogers: ma
Andre Hess: that their
Darren Rogers: yeah.
Andre Hess: parents can't
Darren Rogers: Or
Andre Hess: use
Darren Rogers: maybe
Andre Hess: it.
Darren Rogers: parents they can for forget where they put it or, so mayb better if you have all this in the same
Andre Hess: In the same set, yeah,
Samuel Hansen: Oh.
Andre Hess: and and individual buttons to make them work.
Darren Rogers: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: The problem is if i we are bla if a customer wants a certain component, and doesn't want the parental control because it's a couple who do not have children when you sell the product in the market you could meet any kind of people, and not all people will need all the functionalities we propose to them. So we might lose the customer because of this. I don't know, what do you
Darren Rogers: So
Samuel Hansen: think
Darren Rogers: you mean that
Samuel Hansen: uh?
Darren Rogers: even if these modules will be will be functional uh will be optional.
Samuel Hansen: Yes exa what do you think, I don't know. You are Marketing
Andre Hess: I mean
Darren Rogers: Uh
Andre Hess: how
Samuel Hansen: Manag.
Andre Hess: to how to how to make a marketing survey that
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Andre Hess: uh how many married couple or how many couples have a T_V_ or to the number or singles who have a television.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Andre Hess: So based on that I think
Samuel Hansen: Yeah. But the the question is n does those modularity increase the production cost or decrease the production cost?
Darren Rogers: I think it inc increase.
Bobby Stoddard: if Well you can if you had
Darren Rogers: I
Bobby Stoddard: uh
Darren Rogers: think it
Bobby Stoddard: something
Darren Rogers: i increases.
Bobby Stoddard: li Oh no, because if you if you add uh something well yeah maybe because it's three different pieces uh
Darren Rogers: Hmm.
Bobby Stoddard: to to to build but
Andre Hess: But you can make it on a single P_C_ with three different options.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah yeah yeah it's I think it's cheaper if you
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: if you already built the all the functionalities um
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: on the same module, but uh
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Andre Hess: On the same P_C_B_
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Andre Hess: yeah
Samuel Hansen: Well
Andre Hess: yeah.
Samuel Hansen: well the other aspect is that if in the when they have the ar existing product you you gonna maintain the the you're gonna keep the same customer, because the same customer will come back to buy other add-ons.
Andre Hess: Yeah that's right.
Samuel Hansen: So
Andre Hess: I mean you could
Samuel Hansen: so
Andre Hess: just provide with an optional.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah i i so if don't don't buy now they can buy i in the future. So in in that way you're actually keeping the cus the same customer, attracting them to come back in again and again.
Andre Hess: So it's something like a Microsoft product
Samuel Hansen: We're
Darren Rogers: And
Samuel Hansen: not
Andre Hess: update.
Samuel Hansen: trying to follow
Darren Rogers: and we
Samuel Hansen: the Microsoft
Darren Rogers: we we we we we don't want that.
Samuel Hansen: and we don't want to the m
Andre Hess: Updates and we sell it. We make updates and sell it.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah well if the buyers can be up the th would be can be upgraded, it would be a good thing right?
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah, it depends on the
Andre Hess: And uh what's the idea about uh
Samuel Hansen: v
Andre Hess: the shape of
Samuel Hansen: production.
Andre Hess: the remote controls? Uh
Bobby Stoddard: Well
Andre Hess: can
Bobby Stoddard: so
Andre Hess: they be made into a fruit and vegetable
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah
Andre Hess: types?
Bobby Stoddard: yeah
Andre Hess: Do you require different
Bobby Stoddard: I think
Andre Hess: types
Bobby Stoddard: we are
Andre Hess: of P_C_B_s and
Bobby Stoddard: yeah but we are also the um well the components will have to change because uh we have to deal with the shape and um but
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: I don't think it will uh increase the cost too much so
Andre Hess: Or uh it could be like this the P_C_B_ would be the same for all, but only the exterior uh
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Andre Hess: shape is different o for all.
Bobby Stoddard: Uh well but it's a bit complicated to if if if you need machines to different machines to
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: um ah well
Samuel Hansen: What we can change is to propose the customers with skins. For example the i the mobile phones nowaday,
Andre Hess: Yeah, yeah that's
Samuel Hansen: they sell
Andre Hess: right.
Samuel Hansen: different kinds of skin and then people just feel that oh I have a new skin and looks better.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah yeah we can have the same
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: global shape and then uh
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: add on
Andre Hess: Yeah that's
Bobby Stoddard: skins
Andre Hess: right.
Bobby Stoddard: and
Samuel Hansen: Yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: with with this uh tex spongy texture uh things
Samuel Hansen: Yeah
Bobby Stoddard: like that.
Samuel Hansen: you can pl in what material would that be in uh?
Bobby Stoddard: Sponge.
Andre Hess: I think you need to look into the material.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah or furry like a pet dog kind of thing.
Andre Hess: Yeah yeah.
Bobby Stoddard: Okay.
Darren Rogers: So
Bobby Stoddard: So we finished the prototype uh presentation if you have uh something else to say.
Andre Hess: I think Darren Rogers would be interested to look about the financial issues in making these models.
Darren Rogers: Project evaluation project satisfaction, for example. I don't know, we have to ask these question. We have to give answers so
Samuel Hansen: I suppose that you this criteria, is it?
Darren Rogers: Project evaluation.
Samuel Hansen: Room for creativity. This room is a bit small, but but I think it's okay for us to work with.
Andre Hess: I feel it's fine, we know we don't need uh I think it's okay.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah mm.
Bobby Stoddard: That
Andre Hess: This is
Bobby Stoddard: was
Andre Hess: fine
Bobby Stoddard: good.
Andre Hess: for making a presentat
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Andre Hess: for project presentations.
Samuel Hansen: Yeah
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah.
Samuel Hansen: anyway we have the laboratory nearby to build our modules so it's okay.
Darren Rogers: Mm-hmm.
Andre Hess: And the leadership was excellent.
Darren Rogers: Yeah I think so.
Samuel Hansen: Good job
Bobby Stoddard: Fine yes uh.
Samuel Hansen: good
Darren Rogers: He gave you the liberty to talk
Samuel Hansen: job.
Andre Hess: Yeah
Darren Rogers: as
Andre Hess: that's
Darren Rogers: you
Andre Hess: right.
Darren Rogers: wants.
Andre Hess: Yeah that's right.
Darren Rogers: Uh the teamwork was very very good.
Bobby Stoddard: Very democratic.
Darren Rogers: I was really I am very satisfying to work with with
Bobby Stoddard: Thank
Darren Rogers: you.
Bobby Stoddard: you.
Samuel Hansen: Thank you.
Darren Rogers: Oh.
Bobby Stoddard: Alright.
Samuel Hansen: Alright.
Andre Hess: And new ideas found. Any new ideas to make these presentations more interactive and more interesting?
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: Come up with new product.
Andre Hess: I mean uh what type of product would you think could we make this more interesting?
Darren Rogers: Less fancy.
Samuel Hansen: Mm we I I know something, we need more cakes, more biscuits on the table while we have meetings.
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah and also more well uh more seriously I think it's
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: it's a good idea to have uh clear clear points whenever we do a meeting uh prior to the meeting to have uh well a list with the points who will be discussed or things like that, but I think it's alright. We achieved uh project goal I
Andre Hess: Yeah
Bobby Stoddard: think.
Andre Hess: that is within
Darren Rogers: De
Andre Hess: the budget.
Samuel Hansen: Mm.
Bobby Stoddard: It's w yes,
Andre Hess: And the evaluation
Bobby Stoddard: more
Darren Rogers: Without
Bobby Stoddard: or less.
Andre Hess: was
Darren Rogers: without L_C_D_, without speech recognition,
Andre Hess: Yeah that's
Bobby Stoddard: Yeah
Andre Hess: right.
Bobby Stoddard: but
Darren Rogers: it will be simple.
Bobby Stoddard: Alright.
Andre Hess: And the next
Bobby Stoddard: So.
Andre Hess: is celebration. So
Bobby Stoddard: So uh coffee machine.
Darren Rogers: Yeah free free coffee.
Bobby Stoddard: Okay.
Samuel Hansen: Alright then, we finished?
Darren Rogers: Yeah
Andre Hess: Yeah
Darren Rogers: thank
Samuel Hansen: Thank
Andre Hess: thank
Darren Rogers: you
Samuel Hansen: you
Darren Rogers: for
Samuel Hansen: very
Andre Hess: you,
Darren Rogers: your
Andre Hess: thank
Samuel Hansen: much.
Andre Hess: you very much.
Darren Rogers: work and | Samuel Hansen and Bobby Stoddard presented two prototypes, one with an LCD screen and one without. They demonstrated how to navigate through the menus and presented the voice recognition and energy source components and the charging stand. They discussed their modular design. They discussed the parental control module and the titanium casing. The production costs were below budget for the basic models. Andre Hess presented three important user requirements, and also the fruit and vegetable and spongy material trends in fashion. He then led an evaluation of the prototypes according to these requirements. The group did not feel that the remotes sufficiently met the criteria. They decided to continue working on the design and to take out the LCD screen and voice recognition. They discussed the modular design and its advantages in attracting customers. The group discussed how to incorporate the fashion trends; it was suggested that one shape was used, which could be customized with skins. Darren Rogers led an evaluation of the group's experience on the project. The group was pleased with the teamwork and leadership, but one participant complained that not enough information was given about each meeting's agenda. | 1 | amisum | train |
Brian Mills: I'm
Timothy Wiles: Welcome
Brian Mills: sorry
Timothy Wiles: back.
Brian Mills: to be late.
Timothy Wiles: Welcome back everybody.
Kent Mitchell: Yeah. Thanks.
Timothy Wiles: So this meeting agenda will be the detailed design meeting. And uh opening and uh P_M_s of the meet minutes, uh prototype presentation from uh Christine and uh Agnes.
Brian Mills: Agnes, yes.
Timothy Wiles: Yes and uh evaluation criteria. The finance, it's uh from my side, from the management, and uh production evaluation. Then uh closing. So we have forty minutes to discuss and uh finalise and close the product and project and to move further, okay, so Okay, let's talk about maybe first uh for the prototype.
Kent Mitchell: Mm, okay.
Timothy Wiles: So I handle to
Kent Mitchell: I've done presentation, but it pretty much covers work that we've both done, so if I'm missing anything, Christine
Timothy Wiles: So
Kent Mitchell: can
Timothy Wiles: shall
Kent Mitchell: just
Timothy Wiles: I go to
Brian Mills: Uh thank
Kent Mitchell: correct
Timothy Wiles: sorry.
Brian Mills: you,
Kent Mitchell: Glen Carter.
Brian Mills: so you did a
Timothy Wiles: Yep.
Brian Mills: PowerPoint
Timothy Wiles: S
Brian Mills: presentation, good for you.
Timothy Wiles: Okay, let's go to A_M_I_.
Kent Mitchell: It's not the biggest PowerPoint presentation in the world, but
Timothy Wiles: So in two or three or
Kent Mitchell: Three. Um. No
Glen Carter: Probably.
Kent Mitchell: it's think it's the last
Glen Carter: Technical
Kent Mitchell: one.
Glen Carter: pa I would think.
Kent Mitchell: No, then this is the la yeah, that
Glen Carter: Ha.
Kent Mitchell: one, final design.
Timothy Wiles: Yeah.
Kent Mitchell: It is named appropriately, you just couldn't see the name. Um okay I have
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Kent Mitchell: Thanks. Alright, so from when we were discussing specifying the case in the last meeting, we decided that we wanted an ergonomic shape, the material that we chose was wood, and uh the colour would be customisable, 'cause you can stain the wood whatever colour. Um, so in terms of function, you have to be able to turn the T_V_ on and off, volume and channel control, menu control, voice recognition control, and we've incorporated the L_C_D_ screen on the flip panel as part of the design, if we figure out it's too expensive, well then you just take it off. Um, so to unveil our lovely product. This is our remote control, with the flip panel as you can see. So if you lift up the panel, you can see the lovely yellow L_C_D_ display. Um, this is actually hard to do. The yellow button you have is the on off button, so it's really big, hard to miss. You have the the red um triangles are the toggles for changing the volume. So up volume up, down volume down. The green are the channel changing. S And it's one of those very light, very touchable displays. And then you have the numeric pad in the dark blue at the bottom, and on the right-hand side you have the access to the menu on the T_V_, and on the left-hand side you have the the the ability to turn off the voice recognition. So this is pretty much what we had on the white board the last time.
Timothy Wiles: Mm-hmm.
Kent Mitchell: So.
Brian Mills: Um and uh
Kent Mitchell: Oh
Brian Mills: I
Kent Mitchell: yes.
Brian Mills: could Yeah the
Kent Mitchell: Additional
Brian Mills: d
Kent Mitchell: feature on the back is that you can have your own customised backing and I suppose you could do the same thing on the flip case on the front. So that you can really make this a highly highly customisable remote control.
Brian Mills: We haven't um uh specified where the speaker or the microphone will be placed. That depends on the uh s design of the circuit board inside and uh what room is left um
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Timothy Wiles: I think the microphone is on on the top, uh
Brian Mills: Yes,
Timothy Wiles: on the middle,
Brian Mills: okay.
Timothy Wiles: the under the flip.
Brian Mills: Uh-huh.
Timothy Wiles: So that will be the safe, so p any the chip it's not on the chip because you need to have microphone to
Brian Mills: No, I mean it depends on the design of the circuit board.
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Kent Mitchell: But it shouldn't be under the flip either, because you can have the remote control closed, but you still might want to
Timothy Wiles: Uh it's
Kent Mitchell: activate
Timothy Wiles: it's
Kent Mitchell: it by voice.
Timothy Wiles: Yeah, but uh uh my opinion I think it's better under the flip because whenever you want to uh the talk, okay, so then you can speak then you can close it. But if you put it on the on the flip, okay, then uh technical I don't think it's uh feasible, 'cause most of the time you speak then it will be recognised.
Kent Mitchell: But if you've already got the remote control in your hand you need to open the flip to use the voice, why use the voice, why not just use your hand? I mean the whole point of the voice is that if the remote control is sitting there and I'm too lazy to reach over and pick it up, I can just use my voice.
Brian Mills: Maybe I've got my hand in the popcorn bowl and I'm holding my cup of Coca-Cola in the other hand.
Kent Mitchell: Yeah. And you
Glen Carter: I
Kent Mitchell: don't
Glen Carter: don't
Kent Mitchell: wanna let
Glen Carter: wanna
Kent Mitchell: go
Glen Carter: say.
Kent Mitchell: of either one.
Glen Carter: Louder. Yeah.
Kent Mitchell: I mean it doesn't have to be on the flip, it can be on the side
Glen Carter: Can
Kent Mitchell: somewhere.
Glen Carter: also be on the side.
Timothy Wiles: Yeah, the sides maybe
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Timothy Wiles: is good. So That's good idea.
Brian Mills: Mm-hmm.
Kent Mitchell: So, I mean I can pass this around if
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Kent Mitchell: anyone
Timothy Wiles: So it's
Kent Mitchell: wants
Timothy Wiles: maybe good
Kent Mitchell: to
Timothy Wiles: idea.
Brian Mills: Yeah, y better you pass it around with a napkin.
Glen Carter: No, because y you can easily put a microphone on the side that would have
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Glen Carter: no problem
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Glen Carter: would haven't been not be damaged or anything, and it'd
Timothy Wiles: Yeah.
Glen Carter: be accessible all the time to voice.
Kent Mitchell: Yeah, exactly.
Glen Carter: Yeah.
Timothy Wiles: So it's maybe good idea. S s
Brian Mills: It's um
Glen Carter: Compliments to the artist.
Brian Mills: It's um You need to work on the weight a little bit.
Kent Mitchell: Yes.
Glen Carter: Uh.
Timothy Wiles: Okay. S I'm
Kent Mitchell: And maybe
Timothy Wiles: fine,
Kent Mitchell: the shape
Timothy Wiles: I'm satisfi
Kent Mitchell: of the buttons, the little
Timothy Wiles: I'm satisfied.
Kent Mitchell: egg shapes aren't the most economical,
Brian Mills: We're glad
Timothy Wiles: Of course
Brian Mills: you're
Timothy Wiles: it's
Brian Mills: satisfied.
Kent Mitchell: but
Timothy Wiles: it's it's looks more heo heavy, but I think when it's completely maybe it's a less weight.
Kent Mitchell: Yeah. I mean this is plasticene. There's
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Kent Mitchell: only so much you can do. We could have possibly made it a lot thinner as well. But And part of the thing is m a lot of people say that they don't like something that's too light, because they don't feel like they have enough control over it.
Brian Mills: Mm-hmm.
Kent Mitchell: So I mean maybe this is excessively heavy, but I think it needs to have some weight, it needs
Timothy Wiles: Yep.
Kent Mitchell: to feel like you're still holding something. So that's pretty much it for our presentation actually.
Timothy Wiles: That's your uh prototype model?
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Timothy Wiles: Okay, that's good, thank you very much. So any comments or uh
Glen Carter: Well, the prototype is very within the design and ideas that we've we've about on previous meetings.
Timothy Wiles: Okay.
Glen Carter: Now it goes into this next phase as the financial
Timothy Wiles: Yes, that
Glen Carter: uh marketing
Timothy Wiles: uh
Glen Carter: uh
Timothy Wiles: So I'll come back to the
Timothy Wiles: So evaluation criteria, I think uh that will be good, so then let's come to the finance uh, I have some uh calculations which I made uh as for uh the budget. So here you can uh look like uh the energy and uh dynamo and uh kinetic and solar cells. Uh it's optional, somewhat optional and Ed wants the chip on print, that's what uh we were talking about that. So then we have sample sensor and sample speaker, then uh we have the wood material, then special colour and push button. So it's uh actually, our budget was uh twelve point five Euro, but uh it's coming to nine point nine five Euro, so we are under uh below the budget, okay, so still we are saving some money. I think it's a good figure.
Brian Mills: Yes, great I I'm surprised. Congratulations.
Timothy Wiles: Than thank you.
Glen Carter: Well we haven't come to mine yet, so
Brian Mills: Oh, okay.
Glen Carter: we're
Brian Mills: It's
Glen Carter: gonna have a
Brian Mills: gonna
Glen Carter: bit
Brian Mills: cost
Glen Carter: of
Brian Mills: a
Glen Carter: difference
Brian Mills: long
Glen Carter: of opinion,
Brian Mills: way
Glen Carter: yes.
Brian Mills: to c you know, cost a lot of money to market it, is it?
Timothy Wiles: So maybe it's for some money we can utilise for our uh marketing, for the sales, okay, and uh
Glen Carter: Well, it just depends on if we're gonna add a o on this pr provisionary cost analysis, we do not have a L_C_ display. L_C_ display is gonna be very expensive,
Kent Mitchell: No
Glen Carter: it's gonna
Kent Mitchell: we do,
Glen Carter: be
Kent Mitchell: but it's not filled in. It's
Glen Carter: It's
Timothy Wiles: It's
Glen Carter: not
Kent Mitchell: number
Glen Carter: it doesn't
Kent Mitchell: thirty.
Brian Mills: Thirty.
Glen Carter: say.
Timothy Wiles: not.
Glen Carter: We don't
Timothy Wiles: Yeah.
Glen Carter: have the price
Kent Mitchell: Oh,
Glen Carter: up
Kent Mitchell: yeah,
Glen Carter: there,
Timothy Wiles: Yeah.
Kent Mitchell: yeah, you're
Timothy Wiles: Yeah.
Glen Carter: okay,
Kent Mitchell: right, sorry,
Brian Mills: Yeah.
Timothy Wiles: Yeah.
Kent Mitchell: yes.
Glen Carter: so if we add approximately two to three Euro per remote, now we're up around about twelve, twelve and a half as to what uh the company had initially uh requested.
Brian Mills: So that
Glen Carter: Um
Brian Mills: means we can put the uh
Glen Carter: Display
Brian Mills: the L_C_D_
Glen Carter: in.
Brian Mills: in, yeah.
Glen Carter: But as far as production um I'm putting up a question because we're talking about profit also, and in mine you'll see uh the problem with uh our survey, the p the possibility that how many units can be sold, what percentage of the market, etcetera etcetera because that has to be taken in into consideration. Uh this is just production cost, it is not uh advertising cost, it's not transportation cost uh
Timothy Wiles: Yes, so still uh we have twelve point five
Glen Carter: And
Timothy Wiles: Euro.
Glen Carter: that will inflate
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Glen Carter: quite a bit the cost of the uh
Timothy Wiles: Yeah,
Glen Carter: the
Timothy Wiles: but
Glen Carter: cost of the unit
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Glen Carter: for the company.
Timothy Wiles: Yep.
Kent Mitchell: Um-hmm.
Glen Carter: So to come up with what the company wants is a fifty million Pound profit, we're gonna have to go a long ways.
Timothy Wiles: Yes. This we are talking about one unit, okay, so
Glen Carter: Yes.
Timothy Wiles: when it go into the quantity, okay, and the cost will come down.
Glen Carter: Slightly.
Brian Mills: Although customisation, because this is being done, you know, the on on-order basis,
Timothy Wiles: Yeah.
Glen Carter: It's
Brian Mills: it
Glen Carter: gonna
Brian Mills: might
Glen Carter: be very
Brian Mills: be
Glen Carter: hard
Brian Mills: uh
Glen Carter: to
Brian Mills: the the quantity
Kent Mitchell: Yes.
Glen Carter: reduce.
Brian Mills: won't m won't uh the circuit board will b you're right, would be in producing quantity, but the cost of the case would uh be fixed at the Uh you got some pretty cheap labour that can do this case for one Euro.
Glen Carter: That's
Brian Mills: That's
Glen Carter: not bad.
Brian Mills: really that's the cost of the material
Timothy Wiles: Yep.
Brian Mills: and lab wow, that's
Timothy Wiles: Yeah.
Brian Mills: really outstanding.
Timothy Wiles: But anyhow, still we are under control, okay, so what uh I will do is I will try to negotiate with the vendors, okay, to get uh the production cost less, okay, so then we can save some money, okay, to put into th our marketing or uh you know the promotions, whatever, okay, so that uh I will look after. I will speak to the management and how to get uh you know some more uh cost down.
Glen Carter: If we can go to to my display. And we'll come back to yours
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Glen Carter: just to give everybody an idea of the market. So now I'm gonna scare everybody out of this project. If I'm still here.
Timothy Wiles: You're in four?
Glen Carter: Yep. The four gives Glen Carter it's gotta be uh
Timothy Wiles: TrendWatch.
Glen Carter: TrendWatch.
Brian Mills: Is this the same one you did before?
Glen Carter: No.
Brian Mills: Okay.
Glen Carter: It shouldn't be if
Kent Mitchell: That's
Glen Carter: it's not it's not the right one.
Kent Mitchell: no,
Glen Carter: No,
Kent Mitchell: I think
Glen Carter: no
Kent Mitchell: it's the
Glen Carter: we
Kent Mitchell: same
Glen Carter: g
Kent Mitchell: one.
Glen Carter: no, that's the same one. You have to go back and find another one. Whatever name it popped up under. Uh
Kent Mitchell: Functional.
Glen Carter: functional, try functional, it might not be it either, but we'll see.
Kent Mitchell: It looks like it, there's
Glen Carter: Yep, that's
Kent Mitchell: S
Glen Carter: it.
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Glen Carter: So we'll go screen by screen.
Timothy Wiles: Okay.
Glen Carter: Although since uh we need to have some type of idea on a market uh we had independent study that says it this this market has an availability to absorb eight mi eight million units per year. Okay? Our internal company evaluation puts it between eight to nine million which is approximately the same as the independent study.
Timothy Wiles: Yep.
Glen Carter: So if we continue, we'll look at the findings. Next screen. Which means that uh if we have a target of two million would the company has to take twenty five percent of the market in the first year,
Timothy Wiles: Mm-hmm.
Glen Carter: which is actually a tremendous amount.
Brian Mills: Yeah, no kidding.
Glen Carter: No kidding, yeah.
Brian Mills: Mayb maybe they already expected
Glen Carter: So,
Brian Mills: something.
Glen Carter: if we put an inflated price of fifty Euro at a production cost that cannot exceed twenty-five Euro, okay, we're already in that that price,
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Glen Carter: okay, with transport, promotion, labour, because we hav gi included the promotion in the cost,
Kent Mitchell: Um-hmm.
Glen Carter: transport for the material to the stores or whatever how however we're gonna break this down between our our retailers. Twenty-five percent of the market to get to two million units. At two million units, we have to have a profit of twenty-five Euro per unit to get to the fifty million unit Eu
Timothy Wiles: Mm-hmm.
Glen Carter: Euro profit.
Timothy Wiles: Yep.
Glen Carter: Okay? So, obviously we w w I just did a run down the evaluation of the form, the fan uh the fancy stylishness of the of the unit, the ease of use, speech recognition, cost, we've gone through these. Now, the company must evaluate the feasibility of being able to take enough of the market to justify in production. Or we project this over two years, but being that the market changes very very quickly, maybe
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Glen Carter: there's no more interest in buying this thing in eighteen months from now.
Timothy Wiles: Yep.
Glen Carter: So,
Timothy Wiles: Of
Kent Mitchell: Mm.
Timothy Wiles: course.
Glen Carter: now we have to come up with a decision. Can the company sell two million units?
Timothy Wiles: Yep.
Glen Carter: Can it sell it for
Brian Mills: Could
Glen Carter: fifty Euros?
Timothy Wiles: Yep.
Brian Mills: could I go to findings? Uh uh um I would uh like to explore the possibility of using um alternative um delivery and sales channel which would be um to use the internet
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Kent Mitchell: I was thinking the same
Brian Mills: for
Kent Mitchell: thing,
Brian Mills: promotion
Kent Mitchell: yeah.
Brian Mills: and ordering and then to drop-ship the p product to the customer's
Kent Mitchell: Directly.
Brian Mills: residence. That way you have no storage, you have no um you do have transportation,
Kent Mitchell: Um-hmm.
Brian Mills: still have the labour cost, but you don't have the transport to the uh point of sale.
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Brian Mills: The point of sale is
Timothy Wiles: To the
Brian Mills: online.
Timothy Wiles: agents.
Kent Mitchell: Yeah. You can do a shipping centre somewhere, or strategically place shipping centres
Brian Mills: Right,
Kent Mitchell: to minimise
Brian Mills: like Amazon.
Kent Mitchell: distance
Brian Mills: In fact,
Kent Mitchell: costs.
Brian Mills: we
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Brian Mills: should sell through Amazon, don't you
Timothy Wiles: Or
Brian Mills: think?
Timothy Wiles: eBay, or
Brian Mills: Or eBay, yeah.
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Brian Mills: There's an idea. Going
Timothy Wiles: Yeah, that's a good
Brian Mills: with
Timothy Wiles: idea.
Brian Mills: um
Timothy Wiles: To impro more profit
Glen Carter: S
Timothy Wiles: and
Glen Carter: Upscale
Timothy Wiles: uh
Glen Carter: technology.
Timothy Wiles: Yeah, yes.
Brian Mills: Ah, we we're do you know, selling a
Glen Carter: Well.
Brian Mills: unique product uh.
Kent Mitchell: That actually makes more sense if we're gonna make it so highly customisable, 'cause on the web people can look at the different options they have, see maybe what other people have done, what
Brian Mills: Mm.
Kent Mitchell: the range of possibility
Glen Carter: There are several
Kent Mitchell: as,
Glen Carter: companies
Kent Mitchell: whereas
Glen Carter: that
Kent Mitchell: if
Glen Carter: have gone
Kent Mitchell: you're
Glen Carter: that
Kent Mitchell: in a store,
Glen Carter: way.
Brian Mills: Mm.
Kent Mitchell: you can't unless you're a highly imaginative person, you may not really know what it is you want, whereas on the web, if you have a bunch
Brian Mills: Mm-hmm.
Kent Mitchell: of pictures, it can sort of trigger ideas and
Brian Mills: And you can even have an a movie that you can rotate the object and look at the
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Brian Mills: di the only thing that you're missing really is the
Kent Mitchell: The
Brian Mills: weight.
Kent Mitchell: weight
Glen Carter: Weight,
Kent Mitchell: and feel.
Glen Carter: the feel of the
Brian Mills: Mm.
Glen Carter: product,
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Glen Carter: but
Brian Mills: We're getting used to that. It's not quite like trying on a shoe, but people
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Brian Mills: are getting used to buying things online that they can't touch
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Brian Mills: before
Glen Carter: There are several
Brian Mills: buying.
Glen Carter: that have gone through with the watches, too. You can customise a watch, you can see how it is at the f
Kent Mitchell: Mm-hmm.
Glen Carter: at the end of the production,
Brian Mills: Uh-huh.
Glen Carter: you can change it uh There's a lot of online that's that is doing
Kent Mitchell: Yes.
Glen Carter: this now. And when you're rotating, you'll look behind and look this way uh it's possible to do with this,
Timothy Wiles: Yeah.
Glen Carter: know, feasibili feasibility uh lower the price of the unit.
Kent Mitchell: Mm-hmm.
Timothy Wiles: We can.
Brian Mills: Great.
Timothy Wiles: I don't think that's uh not possible, it's uh okay then, l uh let's wait for the production, okay, then uh you can evaluate the product, so how it looks like technically and uh how it look like uh the real.
Kent Mitchell: What turnaround time do we have?
Timothy Wiles: T
Kent Mitchell: 'Cause I mean production evaluation can
Timothy Wiles: Oh
Kent Mitchell: be
Timothy Wiles: but
Kent Mitchell: very very quick or very very
Timothy Wiles: Yes
Kent Mitchell: long.
Timothy Wiles: it's it's very quick, of course. It will uh come back in two weeks, okay, it will be ready in two weeks.
Brian Mills: Works for Glen Carter.
Timothy Wiles: For evaluation, okay.
Brian Mills: Prototypes, you mean.
Timothy Wiles: Yes, the
Brian Mills: In
Timothy Wiles: prototype
Brian Mills: um
Timothy Wiles: uh prototype product evaluation.
Brian Mills: We probably should do some market tests
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Brian Mills: uh once we have the prototypes
Glen Carter: Well, obviously.
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Brian Mills: and do some orders
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Brian Mills: and things like
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Brian Mills: that and test-market it.
Glen Carter: Mm that'd
Timothy Wiles: Yeah.
Glen Carter: have to be thrown out on the market for people to get an idea, to
Timothy Wiles: So
Glen Carter: see
Timothy Wiles: you can take
Glen Carter: get
Timothy Wiles: a
Kent Mitchell: Mm-hmm.
Timothy Wiles: minimum two
Glen Carter: get
Timothy Wiles: weeks
Glen Carter: their
Timothy Wiles: to a maximum four weeks. Yeah.
Kent Mitchell: it's not a trivial task.
Timothy Wiles: Yeah, because we we are not going to do it in uh our factory, okay, so we can
Kent Mitchell: No
Timothy Wiles: give it
Kent Mitchell: no.
Timothy Wiles: a product
Kent Mitchell: We
Timothy Wiles: evalua
Kent Mitchell: definitely shouldn't do it
Timothy Wiles: Yes,
Kent Mitchell: in our factory.
Timothy Wiles: yes. So we'll do it in the other place, and I don't think it's take more than four weeks time. Or uh Okay, so then the real production we will start once we product evaluation, okay then, uh it's approve from uh the technical team and uh your team, okay, uh from the management, then we can launch in the market. Hm?
Brian Mills: Any outstanding?
Timothy Wiles: S Any any other uh questions or uh comments to be discuss?
Brian Mills: No,
Kent Mitchell: What ab
Brian Mills: I'm
Glen Carter: I think we
Brian Mills: go
Glen Carter: pretty
Brian Mills: ahead.
Glen Carter: much covered everything.
Timothy Wiles: Okay, so then
Brian Mills: Did you
Timothy Wiles: uh
Brian Mills: have something?
Kent Mitchell: Well I was just wondering about if we're gonna do a product evaluation then what about time for redesign if the users come back and tell us no this is bad, this is bad, we want this done differently.
Timothy Wiles: Okay uh, let's take like this. Let's proceed with this model, okay, for the for the marketing direction, okay. So no more changes will be made, okay, in this the basic design. Okay? So we will introduce m this model and uh let's introduce in the market and let's take the feedback from the customers, then we can uh go for the
Brian Mills: Second generation.
Timothy Wiles: second generation. Okay. There's no end, there's not limit.
Kent Mitchell: The problem is there
Timothy Wiles: Every
Kent Mitchell: might not
Timothy Wiles: every
Kent Mitchell: be a second
Timothy Wiles: custom
Kent Mitchell: generation if the first generation
Glen Carter: Well, then it
Kent Mitchell: flops
Glen Carter: may not be.
Kent Mitchell: for some silly reason
Timothy Wiles: Okay. Well, every
Kent Mitchell: that
Timothy Wiles: customer,
Kent Mitchell: we haven't thought
Timothy Wiles: okay,
Glen Carter: Like
Kent Mitchell: of.
Glen Carter: people
Timothy Wiles: they have
Glen Carter: don't
Timothy Wiles: their
Glen Carter: like
Timothy Wiles: own
Glen Carter: wood.
Timothy Wiles: ideas, they have their own test, okay, so there's no end, there's no limit.
Kent Mitchell: No, but there's a difference between releasing a product that has been minimally tested and fine-tuned to suit a general range of requirements versus releasing a product that we think will work but we don't really have anything to back
Glen Carter: very
Kent Mitchell: it
Glen Carter: specific.
Kent Mitchell: up.
Timothy Wiles: Yeah, so that's the reason you are here for uh the design, okay, I hope you made a
Kent Mitchell: Yes,
Timothy Wiles: good design.
Kent Mitchell: but I'm not everybody. I mean the whole point of user evaluation is to see what real people need. We have our own motivations in mind, we have our own ideas in mind, but that doesn't mean that that's what's gonna sell.
Timothy Wiles: Yeah, but uh see, we ought to take a few considerations, okay, one is the price consideration, one is future consideration, okay, like uh you can eat uh you can all eat more chi I can eat more chilli, okay, so i it's a depends on the individual taste, you know, so we have we have to balance somewhere.
Kent Mitchell: Yeah, of course. I'm just trying to point out that I think that your evaluation and redesign turnaround time is too short well you have no redesign not you personally, but
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Kent Mitchell: in the project
Brian Mills: Our
Kent Mitchell: we
Brian Mills: project
Kent Mitchell: have no
Timothy Wiles: Yeah.
Brian Mills: doesn't
Kent Mitchell: redesign time
Brian Mills: um
Kent Mitchell: and
Brian Mills: Ed, d do you know what season of the year or time of the year is the most important for T_V_ remote control sales?
Glen Carter: Hmm.
Brian Mills: Would it be the Christmas season by any chance?
Timothy Wiles: The sports time.
Brian Mills: Sports season.
Glen Carter: Right before
Brian Mills: Which
Glen Carter: the Eur
Brian Mills: sport
Glen Carter: the
Brian Mills: season?
Glen Carter: World Cup.
Timothy Wiles: Football.
Glen Carter: World
Brian Mills: So
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Glen Carter: soccer.
Brian Mills: so
Glen Carter: World Cup soccer, they need those things
Timothy Wiles: Football.
Glen Carter: that they have
Brian Mills: maybe
Glen Carter: their hands
Brian Mills: what
Glen Carter: g occupied and they need to be able to talk to the con remote control.
Brian Mills: So I think what we need to do is perhaps to synchronise the final the the launch of a user-tested
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Brian Mills: device with some special event.
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Kent Mitchell: Yeah, that's
Brian Mills: And
Kent Mitchell: a good idea.
Brian Mills: and then um so that gives us a little more time perhaps then we anticipated, because I don't know when the World Cup is, but I'm sure there's gonna be one.
Glen Carter: Or any major sports.
Brian Mills: Or another m major sports event. Probably not the um the football games coming up the end of January. I think that might be a little too aggressive
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Brian Mills: um, but, so, I'm just ig uh pointing out a uh a strategy to uh do some additional user testing
Timothy Wiles: Research.
Kent Mitchell: Mm-hmm.
Brian Mills: pri and then to launch um at a a major sports event or
Timothy Wiles: Yep.
Brian Mills: uh perhaps to uh
Kent Mitchell: That's
Brian Mills: also
Kent Mitchell: actually good place to advertise it too.
Brian Mills: And to work with
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Brian Mills: motion pictures. There might be some motion pictures that are coming out um that are coming out on D_V_D_ that uh they need to have a m special remote control to work with it, so we could maybe work out a campaign with uh with Sony Pictures
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Brian Mills: for example. Maybe
Kent Mitchell: Mm-hmm.
Brian Mills: some management has got uh relationships there we can leverage.
Timothy Wiles: Yes, the that of course uh I will convince the management to do that, okay.
Brian Mills: That's great.
Kent Mitchell: It's just something to to keep in mind, 'cause it's really really important.
Timothy Wiles: Sure, sure,
Kent Mitchell: A lot of products have
Timothy Wiles: yes.
Kent Mitchell: gone out there without being properly user-tested and completely flopped, when in fact it gets re-released a few years down the line with proper testing and it takes off like crazy.
Brian Mills: Disposable diapers is an example of that in fact.
Kent Mitchell: Really?
Brian Mills: Yes,
Kent Mitchell: That I didn't
Brian Mills: it is one of
Kent Mitchell: know.
Brian Mills: the first consumer products that was launched about thirty years that was a disposable consumer product, and uh people the market hadn't really gotten on to the concept that you could use something and then throw it away,
Kent Mitchell: Mm-hmm.
Brian Mills: 'cause it wasn't uh but then when they re-launched them thirty years later, they were virtually the same design, but people had gotten the throw-away, you know, paper cups and napki y all kinds of things that they hadn't um so,
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Brian Mills: you're right, timing is very important,
Timothy Wiles: Yeah.
Brian Mills: a good product.
Kent Mitchell: Yeah.
Timothy Wiles: That's the reason Ed is here. I
Brian Mills: That's
Timothy Wiles: think he
Brian Mills: right.
Timothy Wiles: can promote the the brand value and the product value.
Brian Mills: It's gonna be very important to the
Timothy Wiles: Yes.
Brian Mills: company.
Timothy Wiles: We are behind the scene and he is the front screen, so.
Kent Mitchell: Yep.
Glen Carter: Yeah, I'm the one
Timothy Wiles: He's
Glen Carter: who takes
Timothy Wiles: on
Glen Carter: the
Timothy Wiles: the
Glen Carter: heat.
Timothy Wiles: big screen.
Kent Mitchell: Exactly.
Brian Mills: Good luck, Ed.
Glen Carter: If it's a flop, it's the marketer.
Brian Mills: You look very relaxed,
Glen Carter: Yes.
Brian Mills: considering h you know, the
Glen Carter: Yes.
Brian Mills: uh
Glen Carter: Stress.
Brian Mills: the weight on your shoulders, yeah.
Timothy Wiles: Okay, so then uh let's come to the closing and
Glen Carter: Celebration.
Timothy Wiles: uh are the costs within the budget and uh is the product evaluated, okay, so that will uh come soon. Okay for uh but our time being, so thanks for all your efforts and great work and uh great design and uh let's leave it to the Ed for later for once production is over and the meantime let's celebrate. So let's meet up uh this evening to hang up for some party.
Brian Mills: Sounds good.
Timothy Wiles: 'S good.
Kent Mitchell: Okay.
Brian Mills: Thank you.
Glen Carter: Very good.
Brian Mills: Nice working with you.
Glen Carter: Thank you very much.
Timothy Wiles: Thank you.
Kent Mitchell: Thanks.
Timothy Wiles: Thank you again for all. And
Glen Carter: Bye-bye.
Timothy Wiles: see you in the evening for drinks.
Glen Carter: Yep, okay, see
Kent Mitchell: Bye.
Glen Carter: you later on. | Kent Mitchell presented the prototype of the product to the group. The product featured an LCD display, a flip panel, and a customizable case back. Timothy Wiles displayed the cost of all of the components, and the group decided that the current budget would not allow the addition of the LCD display. Timothy Wiles decided to negotiate the cost of production to allow the addition of the display. Glen Carter gave a presentation on sales projection and showed that the current projected sales point would probably not allow the project to reach its profit aim. The group also discussed the distribution and promotion of the product on the internet. Kent Mitchell expressed concern that there would not be time under the current plan to make changes to the product resulting from consumer testing; Timothy Wiles decided that no additional changes would be made. The group then discussed other means of promoting the product: launching the remote at the same time as a large sporting event or DVD release. | 1 | amisum | train |
Steven Flanagan: Okay. Hello everyone.
Wade Mann: Hi.
Charles Stewart: Hi.
Ronald Villamar: Hi.
Steven Flanagan: Um how uh we doing
Wade Mann: Yeah, good.
Steven Flanagan: Uh first we going uh over the minutes of the last meeting, more or less.
Ronald Villamar: Mm-hmm.
Steven Flanagan: Um in the last meeting uh the marketing manager had presented uh her method of working, meaning gathering i suggestions from everyone to see how she best could market uh this this product at the within the budget uh that was given. Uh in general the idea is that it should be something that is not difficult to use. Um it's also an item people lose So we should address that. And, of course, it should be something s s that is very simple to use. In addition to that to make it sell, of course, uh the marketing manager w wishes that it be very attractive, or like she says put some sizzle into it in one way or another so that the people are buying it now because, in particular with smaller items, that's a very important fact, 'cause um if they say, well, I go home and think about it, that won't work. Um also mentioned was it should be uh it should have a very short learning curve. And maybe it could be sold by using a slogan.
Wade Mann: Hmm.
Steven Flanagan: Our technical manager has then said that she feels it should have a chip that has infra-red bits and it has an interface controls w interface that controls the chip. Therefore, messages uh will be controlled in the same manner. There should be extra features like lid buttons, maybe a beep. If too many buttons are pressed, mm uh uh child lock um and uh maybe a display clock so that people could um you could see the time, you know, what show they want to watch. Also mentioned was uh maybe different shapes. So the components of the thing should be button, bulbs, infra infra-red bulbs, battery, chips, wires, and maybe some kind of a holder uh for the for the uh item. Francino who is our um
Ronald Villamar: Interface designer.
Steven Flanagan: interface designer um uh has mentioned that the that it, of course, should have an on-off button, and also has mentioned an interesting feature that it should have maybe a channel lock. Particularly with maybe small children that they couldn't uh watch a channel that is undesirable. It should be compact. Her personal favourite was it should be T-shaped. And maybe have an anar alarm-clock. And the material should possibly be not of non-allergic nature. Uh the different systems uh that exist are infra-red or radio-waves. Uh maybe it should have uh electri electrici electricity saving feature. And even possibly a timer to so that people can program their favourite uh uh program on th right from the remote.
Ronald Villamar: Yes.
Steven Flanagan: Uh are we all in agreement that that's about what we discussed last time?
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Ronald Villamar: Yes
Steven Flanagan: Okay.
Charles Stewart: Yeah I think pretty much is it. Yeah. Mm-hmm
Steven Flanagan: Okay, then we I'm looking for three presentations. And uh I don't know whether the order matters much uh, I don't I don't think so, so whoever
Ronald Villamar: Okay,
Steven Flanagan: w wants
Ronald Villamar: I can start first.
Steven Flanagan: Yeah, okay.
Ronald Villamar: Okay. Now my slide,
Steven Flanagan: Okay,
Ronald Villamar: please.
Steven Flanagan: your slides. Okay. Oh, come on, close already. And that's number two, right?
Ronald Villamar: Three.
Steven Flanagan: Three.
Ronald Villamar: Participant three. Yes.
Ronald Villamar: Okay.
Steven Flanagan: Okay.
Ronald Villamar: Now as an interface designer, I would give more emphasis on the interface, how the remote looks like so that it is sellable, it is attractive to customers. Next, please. Okay. Now the function of a remote is to send messages to the television. This messages could be uh switch message or to next message or swapping the channels or switching onto a particular channel, like you can have the numbers one, two, three, four, up to nine.
Steven Flanagan: Nine what? Nine channel uh switches?
Ronald Villamar: Pardon Charles Stewart?
Steven Flanagan: Nine channel switches? Is
Ronald Villamar: Yes,
Steven Flanagan: Yeah.
Ronald Villamar: nine
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: numbers.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: And then you have swapping of uh button
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: by which using which you can swap the channels if you don't want to see the third channel you can swap it to the fourth channel or vice versa. Then it should have a next button, and next button channel by which you can keep on uh v uh
Wade Mann: Going
Ronald Villamar: mm
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: to the nex
Ronald Villamar: eh
Wade Mann: next.
Ronald Villamar: scrolling the channels one
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: by one. Next slide, please.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: Then you should have a button which should which ca which can be used for increasing or decreasing the volume.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: Then, there should be a button which can give subtitles for a particular program which is going on a television. For example, if you are watching a French program and you would like to have a subtitles in English,
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: then there should be a channel which can trigger this mechanism in the television so that the user can see uh the the subtitles on the screen. Then there should d uh there should be some buttons which can control features like the colour, colour of the picture, the contrast, sharpness, brightness of the picture. Now there should be a memory switch. There should be a mute button. Suddenly if if if uh uh viewer he gets a telephone call, and if he want he doesn't want to switch off the uh T_V_, but he he can reduce the sound, he can bring the volume down and he can watch he can uh while talking he can watch the T_V_. Now the most important feature I would like to have in my remote would be the speech recognition feature. It's an integrated progra programmable sample sensor speaker unit. So a remote can be th can be uh designed which can have the voice recognisers, you can record your own voice
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: which can be recognised by as voice recogniser in the television, for example, if you want to see we if you want to see the ninth channel if you say just say ninth channel, uh th now the the uh yeah, the remote
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: will automatically it will switch to the ninth channel.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: So the T_V_ will have some recogniser which will recognise the user's voice and accordingly it will change its functionalities.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: So this is one of the very important feature a remote control can have. So this is one one of the interface which can be created.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: A very simple interface which has all the t uh uh important features. Then, please,
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: next slide.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: Then, these are some of the remotes which are different in shape and colour, but they have many buttons.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: So uh sometimes the user finds it very difficult to recognise which button is for what function and all that. So you can you can design an interface which is very simple, and which is user-friendly. Even a kid can use that.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: So can you go on t t uh to the next slide. Yeah, so this is one of the interface or one of the remote which has this vi voice recogniser.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: And this has multi-purpose use, it can be used for T_V_, it can be used for cable-satellite, it can be used for V_C_R_, D_V_D_s and audio. And this has in-built voice recogniser. Can you go on to the next slide? Yeah, now this is an interface for a chil uh for a remote uh uh which a child can use.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: Uh this is user-friendly, it's very attractive and uh children can use it as well as they can play with it. And this comes with different colours, different shapes.
Wade Mann: Mm.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: And this this uh child uh interface has minimum buttons and all the important uh buttons are there in this small, compact, attractive child interface. Next slide, please. Now this is a big over-sized remote which cannot be misplaced or it's impossible to misplace.
Charles Stewart: You don't know
Ronald Villamar: this.
Charles Stewart: Charles Stewart. I could
Ronald Villamar: So this
Charles Stewart: lose
Ronald Villamar: is
Charles Stewart: that
Ronald Villamar: No
Charles Stewart: in a minute.
Ronald Villamar: this is a very big, you cannot misplace it anywhere. So this is a jumbo universal remote control and it's impossible to im misplace or lose.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: This i this is one such interface which can be created. And the personal preference uh would be a spe uh uh to incorporate speech recognisers uh which will respond to user's voice for a particular
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: uh function.
Steven Flanagan: Right.
Ronald Villamar: Thank you, that's
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Steven Flanagan: Okay, thank you very much. Uh any comments on uh her presentation?
Charles Stewart: Well, um looks like we still have quite a choice of things out there.
Wade Mann: Mm-hmm.
Charles Stewart: Um what uh I'm No suggestion's bad.
Ronald Villamar: Mm yes.
Charles Stewart: But uh we're gonna have to narrow it down a little more. I don't think that we can get uh the too big to misplace, I think it's just funny. Um I
Ronald Villamar: Okay.
Steven Flanagan: Yeah, I I th I think
Charles Stewart: don't think that's gonna be our impulse purchase at the checkout counter.
Ronald Villamar: Okay.
Charles Stewart: It's it's gonna be a little bit
Steven Flanagan: No,
Charles Stewart: too
Steven Flanagan: I
Charles Stewart: unwieldy.
Steven Flanagan: think the these are her presentations,
Charles Stewart: Yeah
Steven Flanagan: but
Charles Stewart: mm. Mm-hmm.
Steven Flanagan: uh as far as the decision making we getting
Charles Stewart: Have
Steven Flanagan: to
Charles Stewart: to
Steven Flanagan: that
Charles Stewart: come back
Steven Flanagan: after
Charles Stewart: to that
Ronald Villamar: We
Charles Stewart: later.
Ronald Villamar: can.
Steven Flanagan: after
Charles Stewart: Okay.
Steven Flanagan: but if I just wanted to know whether anybody had any any anything to add to her
Charles Stewart: No,
Steven Flanagan: presentation.
Charles Stewart: I think her presentation was good, and
Steven Flanagan: Mm right.
Charles Stewart: she really explored all the options. Yeah.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm. Ho who wants to go next um?
Wade Mann: Yeah, maybe.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm. Okay, and you
Wade Mann: Participant two.
Steven Flanagan: Uh okay.
Wade Mann: Uh the next one, sorry.
Steven Flanagan: Oops.
Wade Mann: It's it was the old one. Components.
Steven Flanagan: The components design. Mm-hmm. Okay.
Wade Mann: Um this time I'm I'm going to um concentrate more on the components
Charles Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: and the technical side of the remote controller design. Uh, can you go on to the
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: next slide, please. I have just brief uh down few uh components which we require for the remote control uh construction. Uh the first one is case to keep all the components like integrated circuit, battery, etcetera, etcetera, it's like Uh it can be a plastic one, hard plastic, so that it can be strong, even if you just uh uh, you know, if you if it falls down, then it doesn't break. So it should be strong.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: And uh uh there are no harmful materials used in that. And it should be recyclable.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: Uh and
Charles Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: uh,
Charles Stewart: Good point.
Wade Mann: yeah, and also uh using of colouring compon components like uh if we want to have different colours, blue, red, green, so uh uh we have to use uh some colouring compone compone components. And uh the second important thing is uh uh uh integrated circuit. Uh which uh we can use a highly sophisticated one because it's like the it's like the heart of the remote controller. If it is not efficient then everything wi is going to be uh like um the lef ess less efficient so it you should we should have a highly sophisticated one. And it should be resistant to high as well as uh low temperatures. Suppose if it is thirty-eight degrees outside forty degrees outside, it should it should uh be able to re uh resist the uh temperature uh uh highs and uh high temperatures and low temperatures. And uh it should be with uh um equipped with timer and alarm facility. And the uh other component we should uh we have in the remote controller is a resistor uh which is like uh uh i it is very very much important for the electricity uh flow through through through the uh remote controller and uh also a capacitor which is a b which is a m I think it's it's like a battery, capacitor. Can you
Charles Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: go on to the next slide, please?
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: Uh a diode, a transistor, a resonator, these are all this uh technical uh electri electronic compons uh components which are which we have to use in a remote controller. A battery uh, I would like to suggest one thing uh if we uh if we will be able to make a res rechargeable battery then we sh we need not go for a high performance battery,
Charles Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: even if it is a low performance battery it ca it can't l it can't charge much. It it it's not a high voltage battery. Then also we can If it is a rechargeable one, then uh people can use it for a long time, so in that way we can cut cut the cost, but w uh uh that we have to make the battery as rechargeable one. And we we have a circuit board uh in a remote controller. Can you go to the next slide, please. And how it works, how the remote controller works. When you press a button
Steven Flanagan: Go away.
Wade Mann: Thank you. Uh when you press a button, when you do that, you complete a specific connection that means when you when you press a button there will be a s a small circuit underneath the button, and it will send some signals through the wires, and then uh the chip will send start connection and knows that which button is pressed. Suppose you have pressed channel one button, number one you have pressed, then the uh chip will know that the number one button was pressed. It pros produces a mors morse code line signal specific to that button. Every button, every individual button, has its own morse code. Suppose uh the uh user has pressed butto button one, then it will have a spe the circuit will generate a specific morse code to b that that button, and the transistor will amplify the signal and send then to the L_E_D_ which translates the signal into infrared light. Like you have got a signal by pressing a button. That's a d a morse code has been generated by the integrated circuit. Now, that signal, that morse code, has to be amplified by the transistor. That is the use of transist transistor we which we use in the remote controller. It will amplify the signal and it will send it to the L_E_D_ and which translates the signal into an infra infrared bits. The sensor on the T_V_ can see the infrared light, and seeing the signal seeing the signal re it reacts appropriately, that when it sees the amplified mo morse code signal, then it will uh it will uh know which uh what what action it has to uh do. Then it will do the appropriate action. So uh this is how the remote controller works.
Ronald Villamar: It works.
Wade Mann: Can you go to the next slide, please. Yeah, I have few pictures. remote controller uh it's it's it this is a normal remote controller.
Charles Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: And to the next slide, please. And where we had a a few buttons and all. And uh if you open the remote controller you have this circui circuit board
Charles Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: and few electronic components, like you can see a chip there
Charles Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: which is having eighteen pins, and also a capac uh a capacitor, three resistors and also a resonator uh um mm yeah, and di and a diode transistor.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: The electronic components uh all of the electronic components have all those uh things like a chip and d diode transistors an Yeah, di um can y uh you can see the T_A_ double one eight three five
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: labelled
Ronald Villamar: Mm
Wade Mann: uh
Ronald Villamar: yes.
Wade Mann: chip
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Charles Stewart: Yes.
Wade Mann: um. Uh you can also see the uh uh the green two green things are uh these are they are they are resistors,
Ronald Villamar: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: and uh just beside that you can see a transistor, and a uh uh cylinder shape, uh that one is a capacitor. Uh and also there are uh um resistors uh sorry, ther there is a diode.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: Can you go
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: go on to the next slide. So uh this is the circuit board. The green one is a circuit board. Actually, uh building a circuit bo board is pretty pretty uh easy and also it's a it's a l l inexpensive. Uh it's it costs less than what you print on a paper, because uh uh when you when you are building uh some circuits some um uh circuits and also wires, it's it's better to go for printing, because uh you can build these kind of k circuit boards on a on a bulk and it's just printing, nothing
Ronald Villamar: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: like uh, you know, you don't need to use wires and all. It's not exactly wires we are using. It's just printing something on a board. Tha tho those prints will acti act as wires and ci uh circuits. So th that green uh thing is a circuit board, and also you can see uh there are b s like uh um access for buttons, like when you press a button, the circuit under the button will be activated uh th it will it will he get some signals from it and it will uh it
Ronald Villamar: Transmit.
Wade Mann: will ch its ch se send a signal signals to the, yeah, um integrated circuit. Can you go to the next slide, please. Uh so this is these are the circuits un underneath the buttons. Uh can you see the black uh, round marks?
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: They
Charles Stewart: Yes.
Wade Mann: they are the circuits. Next, please. And um like uh we have uh designed uh before we have seen some uh few things like instead off buttons we have some scrolls. Uh b but a b a push-button requires a simple chip underneath it, but whereas a scroll wheel requires normally a regular chip which is a higher price range.
Charles Stewart: Okay.
Wade Mann: Like for s scrolls we have to go for a sophisticated and and
Ronald Villamar: Okay.
Wade Mann: k uh uh uh full a complete chip. Uh and a as energy source we offer a basic battery, a more ingenious uh hard dynamo, um a kinetic provision of energy, more than what is that you shake casually to provide energy. So that also we can have in a battery, uh or we can use solar sells.
Charles Stewart: Hmm,
Wade Mann: Uh.
Charles Stewart: that's interesting.
Wade Mann: Yeah. Uh yeah uh the product can be de delivered into different cases. Uh usually, the cases and card flat that w we
Ronald Villamar: Okay.
Wade Mann: see usually uh d uh a normal remote controller. Um.
Steven Flanagan: Okay.
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Steven Flanagan: And you have more pictures. Uh we have five minutes to the end
Wade Mann: Yeah,
Steven Flanagan: of the meeting.
Wade Mann: maybe d uh I have just one more slide, I think. Um. Like we can have a ma material such as plastic, rubber, wood, titanium, but titanium we can't use. Um and also for electronics we can use a simple and regular um re or an advanced chip on the print, um also infra it includes the infrared se sender. Um yeah the uh for the movie just to j develop uh samples and so spe sample speaker. An Yeah, that's it. It's all for Charles Stewart now, thank
Steven Flanagan: Okay,
Wade Mann: you.
Steven Flanagan: well thank you. Any particular comments by anybody?
Charles Stewart: Uh yeah, on the scroll and the push-button, um ca you can achieve scrolling by repeatedly pushing a button?
Wade Mann: No, no, no, th the the the scrolling wheels are different, like you can go for a sw switches like buttons or scrolls,
Charles Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: uh which which we used to do before ten ten years before, I think. Now, nobody uses that because you need you need a a k sophisticated chip and all. So I think
Charles Stewart: Um.
Wade Mann: it's better we go for uh um ordinary buttons.
Charles Stewart: We'll just go for push
Wade Mann: Yeah
Charles Stewart: buttons
Wade Mann: uh yeah,
Charles Stewart: for
Ronald Villamar: Push-buttons.
Charles Stewart: in
Wade Mann: push-buttons.
Charles Stewart: the interest
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Charles Stewart: of cost.
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Charles Stewart: Okay.
Steven Flanagan: We don't have a lot of time left and we will still have to make a decision, and Charles Stewart has to present her
Charles Stewart: Okay.
Steven Flanagan: her
Charles Stewart: Go right
Steven Flanagan: thing.
Charles Stewart: to my first my next slide.
Steven Flanagan: Uh okay.
Charles Stewart: Um alright, my method is uh I'm interested in what the competition is doing, and wanna see how we can make ourselves different from the competition, so I've really been looking at the press and the ads that are out there for other remote controllers. I s I spend a lot of time on the internet um surfing around doing the same thing. And then when I'm out um in people's houses or at meetings or anything like that, I try to notice what kind of remote controls people have, and if it's convenient in the conversation I ask about it. And I would encourage you all to do the same. Um and my findings from this is that, you know, small is beautiful. Um people like something that really fits in their hand.
Ronald Villamar: 'Kay.
Charles Stewart: Simple is beautiful. They don't want to have to squint at small print um, they want buttons whose functions are obvious, and they want um as few buttons as possible, and they don't care for the mode thing. They want each button to do something. And eye-catching is important. It's gotta look cute, it's gotta look appealing. Go ahead, I'm trying to finish fast for you. Um and our preference is, as far as I'm concerned, are we got to get to the market before the competition. Ours has to be look really great and it has to come out before the others, so that we have a leg up on time to sell it and push it before other people get out their Christmas item. And we should develop one or two features we can really dwell on in our ad campaign. If we try to tell people it has too many great features, um the consumer just gets confused and we don't get anywhere. So we've gotta narrow our selection down to li two things, I think, that we gonna say are really great about our our our new product. And I've been looking around um at what designs every year different things are popular. And in my research this year I found out that fruit and vegetable shapes are really popular. And people are tired of hard plastic and hard metal. They are more back into soft feel, spongy feeling things, things with maybe a little cloth on them. So those are things maybe we wanna look at as far as saleability of the item.
Ronald Villamar: Mm-hmm.
Steven Flanagan: Okay. Uh that concludes the presentation of everyone. And what we really have to decide in this meeting is um the concept of the remote.
Charles Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Steven Flanagan: And uh so what do we think on the concept of the remote?
Charles Stewart: You wanna try to come back to yours, and
Ronald Villamar: Uh yes,
Steven Flanagan: Y
Charles Stewart: limit
Ronald Villamar: I would
Charles Stewart: yours
Ronald Villamar: like
Charles Stewart: a
Ronald Villamar: to
Charles Stewart: bit?
Ronald Villamar: include this feature which is called as voice recogniser.
Charles Stewart: Okay.
Steven Flanagan: Okay. Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: Mm-hmm.
Charles Stewart: So speech recognition is most important as far as you're concerned?
Wade Mann: Yeah, but w
Charles Stewart: Yeah h that could that
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Charles Stewart: could
Steven Flanagan: I
Charles Stewart: that
Steven Flanagan: think
Charles Stewart: could
Steven Flanagan: that's
Charles Stewart: be our star feature. That that be really good, yeah,
Wade Mann: Yeah,
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm.
Charles Stewart: I agree
Wade Mann: but
Charles Stewart: with
Wade Mann: but
Charles Stewart: that.
Wade Mann: I what I'm uh very very much doubtful how how uh far it will work, because a speech recogniser like i it it has its own uh uh problems,
Charles Stewart: Distance
Wade Mann: issues.
Charles Stewart: problem?
Wade Mann: Yeah, it's not distance problem it it's
Ronald Villamar: Mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: recognising a person's voice, like maybe different people will be having different voices, so
Charles Stewart: Uh.
Wade Mann: it like it's uh everything
Steven Flanagan: Well,
Wade Mann: so
Steven Flanagan: you you
Wade Mann: i
Steven Flanagan: teach You have to teach
Wade Mann: So
Steven Flanagan: uh
Wade Mann: to get a good recogni recognising
Ronald Villamar: No,
Wade Mann: system,
Ronald Villamar: it's
Wade Mann: it's
Ronald Villamar: it's,
Wade Mann: a
Ronald Villamar: uh yeah,
Wade Mann: costly
Ronald Villamar: it
Wade Mann: thing,
Ronald Villamar: it's
Wade Mann: I think.
Ronald Villamar: like your recording of uh all uh um a question already, and then you're expecting an answer from th For example, you have a T_V_ system, I'm the user
Wade Mann: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: and my family members are the user, I will already record
Wade Mann: Yeah, but
Ronald Villamar: uh
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Ronald Villamar: a question
Wade Mann: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: like, uh good morning, like around eight o'clock I want to see the news
Wade Mann: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: in the television. So I'll say just good morning and the T_V_ will switch on.
Wade Mann: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: It will recognise my voice
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Ronald Villamar: and will switch
Steven Flanagan: Okay,
Ronald Villamar: on.
Steven Flanagan: before we get too far off here um, the components of the concept is the energy. What kind of energy do we foresee?
Charles Stewart: I
Steven Flanagan: Battery.
Charles Stewart: think I think battery,
Steven Flanagan: Battery.
Ronald Villamar: Battery.
Charles Stewart: and I think we all agreed on that. That
Ronald Villamar: Yes.
Charles Stewart: that's that's gonna
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Charles Stewart: be most cost-effective
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Charles Stewart: and the best thing.
Steven Flanagan: Okay then chip on print.
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Charles Stewart: Yep.
Ronald Villamar: Yes.
Steven Flanagan: Okay. And the case. And I think we all agree on the case, we wanna have something uh maybe bright, colourful.
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Charles Stewart: Bright, colourful,
Ronald Villamar: And compact.
Wade Mann: And also strong.
Charles Stewart: trendy trendy design,
Wade Mann: Trendy,
Ronald Villamar: Trendy design
Charles Stewart: and strong.
Wade Mann: yeah.
Ronald Villamar: and compact.
Steven Flanagan: Mm-hmm. Trendy design, compact and strong.
Charles Stewart: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Villamar: Yes.
Steven Flanagan: User interface concept, uh interface type, supplements That will be your
Wade Mann: Uh.
Steven Flanagan: area I think, right, Jana.
Wade Mann: Um like the switches, like we use buttons for user interface.
Ronald Villamar: Push-buttons.
Steven Flanagan: Put uh k
Wade Mann: Push-buttons.
Steven Flanagan: I guess uh for yeah. And Not sure what they mean
Ronald Villamar: And
Steven Flanagan: by supplements.
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Ronald Villamar: Supplements
Charles Stewart: Well, I think
Ronald Villamar: like
Charles Stewart: that
Ronald Villamar: different types of features buttons,
Charles Stewart: Yeah,
Ronald Villamar: like can
Charles Stewart: or
Ronald Villamar: have
Steven Flanagan: Oh,
Ronald Villamar: a
Steven Flanagan: like
Ronald Villamar: f mute button
Charles Stewart: or
Ronald Villamar: or
Charles Stewart: like her speech
Ronald Villamar: a
Charles Stewart: recognition
Steven Flanagan: Oh.
Ronald Villamar: swapping
Charles Stewart: would also
Ronald Villamar: button.
Charles Stewart: be a supplement. Her
Steven Flanagan: A what?
Charles Stewart: speech recognition
Steven Flanagan: Right,
Charles Stewart: feature
Steven Flanagan: right,
Ronald Villamar: Recogniser.
Charles Stewart: would
Steven Flanagan: right,
Charles Stewart: be a supplement.
Steven Flanagan: mm-hmm.
Wade Mann: Mm yeah.
Ronald Villamar: Yes.
Charles Stewart: Okay, so why don't we put down speech recognition if possible
Wade Mann: Hmm.
Charles Stewart: pending some more research from our industrial engineer on how expensive
Wade Mann: Mm-hmm.
Charles Stewart: that is.
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Steven Flanagan: Right.
Ronald Villamar: Yes.
Steven Flanagan: Okay. Uh our next meeting will be in thirty minutes, and the uh I_D_ is to this is the individual actions to be taken until then, to have the look and feel design, and uh the U_I_D_ is supposed to uh come up with the user interface design,
Wade Mann: Mm-hmm.
Steven Flanagan: and Charles Stewart with the product evaluation.
Charles Stewart: Okay.
Steven Flanagan: In this phase, the two of you, Jana and Francine, have to work together on a prototype
Ronald Villamar: Okay.
Steven Flanagan: using modelling clay, it says here. You will receive
Wade Mann: Mm-hmm.
Steven Flanagan: specific instructions will be sent to you by your coaches.
Ronald Villamar: Okay.
Steven Flanagan: Um if you have any questions, you know, you you can always uh contact Charles Stewart um or uh or your coach, I suppose.
Charles Stewart: Wherever they're hiding?
Steven Flanagan: Um so um I think we conclude the meeting here and we come back in uh uh thirty minutes,
Wade Mann: Yeah.
Ronald Villamar: Okay.
Steven Flanagan: according to our timetable here. Thank you very much.
Wade Mann: Thank
Ronald Villamar: Thank
Wade Mann: you.
Ronald Villamar: you. | Steven Flanagan opens the meeting by going over the minutes of the last meeting. The interface specialist begins her presentation by highlighting important remote functions and showing examples of remote interfaces. The group comments on her presentation, and then Wade Mann begins presenting. She talks about the technical electronic components of the remote, explains how a remote works, and shows a few pictures revealing the insides of a normal remote control. She suggests giving the remote a strong shell so it is durable, using a rechargable battery, and not adding a scroll wheel because it requires a sophisticated chip. Charles Stewart presents, talking about user preferences for a small, simple, eye-catching, cute, appealing, and functional remote. Fruit and vegetable shapes are popular this year, so a soft, spongy remote perhaps covered with cloth could make the item marketable. The group discusses the issues surrounding speech recognition, noting that if it is good quality it could be costly. They about the power source and review the objectives of the product. Steven Flanagan closes the meeting by telling each member what task she is to complete. | 1 | amisum | train |
Kevin Unterseher: Well hi everyone again.
Gail Eddie: Hello.
Darryl Boling: Hello.
James Cotner: Hello
Kevin Unterseher: Um like before uh I have to redo the meetings from n th the minutes from the last meeting
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: and so here we go. Uh it was discussed in the last meeting uh which was opened by the presentation from the interface um
Gail Eddie: Designer.
Kevin Unterseher: designer that uh looks would be very important on this new remote and um it is to send messages of course to the T_V_. It should have nine channel buttons, a button volume buttons buttons, switch to control features, colour contrast, sharpness etcetera. It should have a memory switch, a mute button in case the telephone rings or something. Uh speech recognition is one of her very f favourite personal uh features she would like see d d to be integrated in this um in this new remote. Um. Should be child friendly design with few buttons, colourful maybe with s star shaped or other shaped buttons. Um she uh presented also an oversized remote which she guarantees nobody will ever be able to lose. Um
James Cotner: And she was challenged on that point
Kevin Unterseher: that's right.
Gail Eddie: Yes.
Kevin Unterseher: But uh her very f personal favourite really she, she would very much like to see a speech recogniser integrated in this remote. Darryl Boling um presented her uh thoughts on the issue. She would like a special case made out of plastic that is very strong, not using any harmful materials, should be recyclable and should be colourful. Should have an integrated circuit board that's highly sophisticated and temperature resistant. She would like to see a timer and or alarm facility integrated. Uh technically this thing would also have a resistor and a capacitor, diode transistor, resonator, and if possible a rechargeable battery. Uh and of course a circuit board. And how it would works, you press the button, the chip is morse morse code related relays the uh to the generat to the generator amplification and uh the circuit board is very inexpensive to build
James Cotner: Okay.
Kevin Unterseher: and so she thinks this is a great feature uh to to to consider. She would like uh this whole thing should be push buttons with a simple chip uh scrolling method is more expensive and not that practical anymore. Should be battery operated and of course she would have the special cases. James Cotner uh who has to finally come up with to to to market this product has been watching the competition, has done some research on the internet and also has used h her personal observations to come up with the fact that such a remote sh should be small, easy to use and it should be eye catching. From her point of view of course one of the most important facts is that we should get to market before our competition does. To do that uh maybe one or two features should be developed on which we could dwell on or in other words on which our campaign could be built on. Too many new features or too many points would only confuse matter. So we prefer to have one or two features that can be really uh driven home. Um it should have a fruit and vegetable design and should have a soft feel. She feels that's really what people want today. And the decision that we took last time was that uh the special feature we would like to see is a speech recogniser, the energy should be battery uh should be on a chip, should be trendy design, compact and strong, and should have buttons. And that concludes the presentation from the last minutes from the last meeting. Now uh we are ready for the presentation of the prototype.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Gail Eddie: Yeah. Just the look like, the button part I'll explain.
Darryl Boling: Yeah. so this what uh we have made This is a model of the remote control which we are going to build.
Kevin Unterseher: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: Uh this is us in a snail shape
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: so uh it it is attractive um and it's it's blue in colour
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: uh bright and uh it has yellow buttons and all the different colour buttons
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: so it is a uh uh a looks-wise it is beautiful.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: Uh and also compact in shape.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Good.
Darryl Boling: Yeah, oops, sorry.
James Cotner: You used to have all the buttons
Darryl Boling: Um yeah and um uh the material which we are going to use for the case is uh plastic and uh w which which is s strong um uh and also uh for the Um the material is plastic and uh for the buttons it is uh s soft rubber um and
James Cotner: Oh
Darryl Boling: als
James Cotner: that's good,
Darryl Boling: yeah.
James Cotner: no, that's nice and friendly.
Darryl Boling: Yeah because uh uh you'll be touching the buttons
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: more so
James Cotner: Mm.
Darryl Boling: it is soft when you
Kevin Unterseher: Mm-hmm,
Darryl Boling: touch
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: it.
Kevin Unterseher: mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: And then um uh for the for the led, for the light emitting diode it
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: is a fluorescent green and
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: it's a a it is a bulb like an ordinary infrared. And and the button button's part uh will be explained by F Francina.
Gail Eddie: Okay.
James Cotner: Okay.
Gail Eddie: Now the um we decided upon including certain features on our remote. Now these features includes the s um signal emitting uh signal it's the led
James Cotner: Yeah,
Gail Eddie: or
James Cotner: okay,
Gail Eddie: L_E_D_
Kevin Unterseher: Mm-hmm,
James Cotner: mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: the infrared. Now uh we have included the switch on and off button.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: Now we have included another feature that is the mute button
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: on the side of the model.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: Then we have included one to nine buttons the programmes the different channels.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: We have also included two buttons for increasing or decreasing the volume.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: And we have also included two buttons for scrolling up and scrolling down the programme channels.
James Cotner: Mm.
Gail Eddie: Now our our model also contains a button which is called as the menu button.
Kevin Unterseher: What kind of button?
Gail Eddie: Menu button.
Kevin Unterseher: Menu? Uh menu
Gail Eddie: Yes,
James Cotner: Menu
Kevin Unterseher: th menu,
Gail Eddie: menu
James Cotner: button.
Kevin Unterseher: uh one one.
Gail Eddie: At the centre
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: we have included a button which is fluorescent green colour and this is the menu button which will control the colour, sharpness, brightness
James Cotner: Mm-hmm. Of the screen.
Gail Eddie: of
James Cotner: Mm,
Gail Eddie: this
James Cotner: mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: uh picture. We have also included a button which is called as the swapping button. Now this is uh a special, special feature which we have included. Now this button is an elongated shaped button and this is slightly flexible so if it is turned towards the right it will take to the previous channel, if it is turned towards the right it will take to the next channel. It will take the user to the previous and the next channel so this is a swapping button.
James Cotner: The next channel in the numeric pattern, or
Gail Eddie: No, swapping is if if example you're you're watching the second channel
James Cotner: Yeah, mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: and then you go to the tenth channel and if
James Cotner: Mm.
Gail Eddie: you want to go back to the second channel you can swap, this button.
James Cotner: Okay,
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: okay.
Gail Eddie: And at the end, it this remote has inbuilt voice recogniser which
Kevin Unterseher: Okay.
Gail Eddie: c which will recognise the user's voice
Kevin Unterseher: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: and then it'll act accordingly.
Kevin Unterseher: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: So
James Cotner: Okay.
Gail Eddie: this is our proposed model.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: Now James Cotner has to
Darryl Boling: Tell, yeah.
Gail Eddie: give her suggestion whether it'll be sellable or it'll be cost effective.
James Cotner: Okay, well um what what I really like a lot about it is that you can reach the whole thing with one thumb,
Gail Eddie: Yes,
James Cotner: that
Gail Eddie: yes.
James Cotner: you can really hold it in
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: one h you don't need two hands and it's easily reachable even for somebody with a small hand, yeah?
Kevin Unterseher: Yes the buttons are all raised, right?
James Cotner: The buttons
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: are all raised
Kevin Unterseher: Are raised,
James Cotner: and
Kevin Unterseher: mm-hmm.
James Cotner: if you hold it in the centre of your hand you can even reach it over here
Kevin Unterseher: Right.
James Cotner: so you don't have to turn it around, turn it upside down,
Kevin Unterseher: Or have two hands
James Cotner: move
Kevin Unterseher: to operate
James Cotner: it up,
Kevin Unterseher: it,
James Cotner: up
Kevin Unterseher: yeah.
James Cotner: and down, I really like that. You really
Gail Eddie: Mm.
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: did a good job on that, my little designers. Um and um I like the idea that the on-off button is in a really prominent place. That's that's a really good good
Kevin Unterseher: Yes,
James Cotner: thing.
Kevin Unterseher: and it sort of sticks up so
James Cotner: Yeah,
Kevin Unterseher: that
James Cotner: that's great.
Kevin Unterseher: you really you don't have to g
Darryl Boling: Hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: first go like oh yeah
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: here
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: it's on
Gail Eddie: Abs
Kevin Unterseher: and
Gail Eddie: okay.
Kevin Unterseher: yeah, mm-hmm.
James Cotner: The colour's very attractive. Um the um these buttons uh around here are the mute
Gail Eddie: No,
James Cotner: and
Gail Eddie: these the front buttons
James Cotner: these
Gail Eddie: which are here,
James Cotner: mm-hmm
Gail Eddie: are the mute buttons.
James Cotner: On both sides they're
Gail Eddie: Yes,
James Cotner: mute?
Gail Eddie: yes.
James Cotner: So you can push either one?
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: Okay.
Kevin Unterseher: So if you're left-handed or right-handed
James Cotner: And
Kevin Unterseher: it
James Cotner: this
Kevin Unterseher: doesn't
James Cotner: brings
Kevin Unterseher: matter.
James Cotner: the menu up on the screen?
Gail Eddie: Pardon James Cotner?
James Cotner: This brings
Gail Eddie: This
James Cotner: the menu
Gail Eddie: is the
James Cotner: up
Gail Eddie: menu
James Cotner: on the
Gail Eddie: yes,
James Cotner: screen
Gail Eddie: yes.
James Cotner: and the orange ones are
Gail Eddie: A the the these these two are th to increase or decrease the volumes,
James Cotner: Okay.
Gail Eddie: and these two are to uh scroll the programme channels.
James Cotner: F f okay. Right,
Gail Eddie: Scroll
James Cotner: very good.
Gail Eddie: up or scroll down the channels.
James Cotner: Uh it looks mm looks like something I can sell. Okay and now I'm supposed
Kevin Unterseher: Well,
James Cotner: to
Kevin Unterseher: I have one question
James Cotner: yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: uh will there be anything written on the buttons, like that people know, or they have to learn that from a piece of paper which button does what?
Gail Eddie: Yes,
Darryl Boling: Ah.
Gail Eddie: it will have uh these
Darryl Boling: Yeah,
Gail Eddie: buttons
Darryl Boling: definitely.
Gail Eddie: will have the numbers and all the rest of the buttons will have symbols.
Kevin Unterseher: Will have symbols
Gail Eddie: Yes,
Kevin Unterseher: so that
James Cotner: Yeah.
Gail Eddie: which
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: that
Gail Eddie: can be easily
Kevin Unterseher: that
Gail Eddie: recognised.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: the user really knows
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: you know
Gail Eddie: Yes.
Kevin Unterseher: and doesn't have
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: to first
James Cotner: Good point
Kevin Unterseher: learn
James Cotner: because
Kevin Unterseher: it
James Cotner: we need
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: the symbols 'cause we're going
Darryl Boling: Yeah
James Cotner: into
Darryl Boling: of
James Cotner: an
Darryl Boling: course,
James Cotner: international
Darryl Boling: and
James Cotner: market
Darryl Boling: also
James Cotner: we can't
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: have anything
Darryl Boling: Hmm.
James Cotner: that's language
Kevin Unterseher: Yeah.
James Cotner: dependent.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: But
Gail Eddie: Yes.
Kevin Unterseher: anyway it would ha i i i it
Darryl Boling: Yeah
Kevin Unterseher: has
Darryl Boling: we
Kevin Unterseher: to have some
Darryl Boling: can
Kevin Unterseher: kind of of
James Cotner: Symbols
Darryl Boling: Text.
James Cotner: on
Kevin Unterseher: symbols,
James Cotner: it. Mm-hmm,
Kevin Unterseher: text
Gail Eddie: Yes.
Kevin Unterseher: or something
James Cotner: mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: Text
Kevin Unterseher: so that
Darryl Boling: that
Kevin Unterseher: people
Darryl Boling: we can
Kevin Unterseher: kn
Darryl Boling: have on the case itself, we can
Gail Eddie: Yes.
Kevin Unterseher: That's
Darryl Boling: it
Kevin Unterseher: right.
Darryl Boling: will
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: be printed on the case and
Kevin Unterseher: Okay,
Darryl Boling: symbols
Kevin Unterseher: yeah
Darryl Boling: as
Kevin Unterseher: just
Darryl Boling: well
Gail Eddie: And
Kevin Unterseher: wanted
Darryl Boling: as
Kevin Unterseher: make
Darryl Boling: the
Kevin Unterseher: sure
Darryl Boling: buttons.
Kevin Unterseher: of
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: that mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: and one
James Cotner: Mm,
Gail Eddie: more
James Cotner: 'kay, mm.
Gail Eddie: feature is we we have a holder for this remote
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: which is an oyster shape. A shell shape.
James Cotner: For the snail,
Kevin Unterseher: Right,
James Cotner: yeah,
Gail Eddie: Yes,
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
James Cotner: mm-hmm,
Kevin Unterseher: mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: yes.
James Cotner: we have
Darryl Boling: So
James Cotner: the snail
Darryl Boling: it is
James Cotner: shell.
Gail Eddie: Yes,
Kevin Unterseher: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: yeah,
Gail Eddie: snail
James Cotner: He
Gail Eddie: shell.
James Cotner: goes right back
Darryl Boling: yeah
James Cotner: into his
Darryl Boling: shell.
James Cotner: shell.
Gail Eddie: Yes.
Kevin Unterseher: Right.
James Cotner: Well you know I think we could do something really funny with this too because the snail is known to be slow
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: and we could have some sort of little comic effect on our marketing
Gail Eddie: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: Mm.
James Cotner: about how this is a rapid snail
Gail Eddie: Y Yes
James Cotner: or something
Darryl Boling: Yeah,
James Cotner: like that
Darryl Boling: of
James Cotner: you know that
Darryl Boling: course,
James Cotner: would, that would
Darryl Boling: yeah.
James Cotner: really work.
Kevin Unterseher: Now what,
James Cotner: So
Kevin Unterseher: what are our special features for the marketing? That's really the voice recognition that's really unusual
James Cotner: I think voice recognition is our big selling point
Darryl Boling: Mm.
James Cotner: 'cause
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: nobody else seems to have that
Darryl Boling: Mm.
James Cotner: in in this price range.
Kevin Unterseher: And then, and then the other thing would basically be sh shape or practicality of use.
James Cotner: Yep uh
Kevin Unterseher: You
James Cotner: well
Kevin Unterseher: know.
James Cotner: I think that everybody's gonna say their remote control is practical. I think we have
Kevin Unterseher: Colours.
James Cotner: to, we have to dwell on on on the appearance.
Kevin Unterseher: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: We're really gonna have the be the
Kevin Unterseher: Cutest.
James Cotner: cutest remote control on the block.
Darryl Boling: Mm.
Kevin Unterseher: Yeah.
James Cotner: So I think we have to play with the image, play with the snail image um play with the visual and then the voice recognition. I
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: think those are the two things to push. The look and the voice recognition. They're gonna be our two selling points.
Kevin Unterseher: Okay, now uh having said that
James Cotner: I'm supposed to make a little presentation, aren't I?
Kevin Unterseher: No, now this was our evaluation criteria which
James Cotner: Okay.
Kevin Unterseher: we uh just have done. Now we're gonna talk about financing.
James Cotner: Ah, but in my instructions I think it said I was supposed to go to the board and do something. No?
Kevin Unterseher: Well, there is a production evaluation. Is that you?
James Cotner: Yeah, that's James Cotner.
Kevin Unterseher: But that's after the financing.
James Cotner: Oh, okay.
Kevin Unterseher: See?
James Cotner: Sorry,
Kevin Unterseher: Fi see?
James Cotner: sorry. Mm-mm.
Kevin Unterseher: Um. had looks and voice recognition. Okay now on the financing we bring up the mm there it is. Okay uh energy source we say that's battery, right?
Darryl Boling: Mm.
James Cotner: That's right.
Kevin Unterseher: Okay, now. So we I guess we use one.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Gail Eddie: Yes.
Kevin Unterseher: What? T cell or chart you are trying to change is protected. Well, that's nice. She told James Cotner I could just ch change it here and then it would It doesn't work. Hmm.
James Cotner: Can you just fill it in in the yellow boxes? Or
Kevin Unterseher: Oh, okay
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: yeah, okay, let's see. Okay,
Gail Eddie: Yes.
Kevin Unterseher: one, okay. Oh go away. Um kinetic source so that's in the energy source that's all we need.
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: Uh electronics, simple chip on print? Is
Darryl Boling: Yeah,
Kevin Unterseher: that's
Gail Eddie: Yes.
Kevin Unterseher: what we're using?
Darryl Boling: yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: One of those? Come on. Okay, one. Uh regular chip on print. No.
Darryl Boling: No.
Kevin Unterseher: That's all we need, the
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: one case, uncurved flat, single curved, double curved.
James Cotner: Well.
Darryl Boling: This is a
Gail Eddie: Single curve? Mm.
James Cotner: I guess it's double curved.
Kevin Unterseher: Double curved? One of those?
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: Case materi s supplements. Plastic we said,
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: right?
Gail Eddie: Plastic.
Kevin Unterseher: Uh wood, rubber?
James Cotner: Rubber,
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
James Cotner: because we're gonna have the soft buttons.
Kevin Unterseher: Uh but, yes but
Darryl Boling: I think uh that is uh f for rubbers
Kevin Unterseher: That's
Darryl Boling: that is
Kevin Unterseher: just
Darryl Boling: uh yeah
Kevin Unterseher: for the case
Darryl Boling: case
Kevin Unterseher: material,
Darryl Boling: material.
Gail Eddie: Is this for the
Kevin Unterseher: so
James Cotner: Oh
Gail Eddie: case?
James Cotner: okay,
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: the mm-hmm,
Kevin Unterseher: special
James Cotner: mm' kay.
Kevin Unterseher: colours though, we having that, right?
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: And then we have to interface push buttons.
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: Scroll wheel, no. Integrated scroll wheel, L_C_ display?
James Cotner: No,
Gail Eddie: No.
James Cotner: 'cause
Kevin Unterseher: Button.
James Cotner: we didn't put the clock in it after all, right?
Kevin Unterseher: No.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: Uh,
Gail Eddie: Speci
Kevin Unterseher: button supplement special colour?
Gail Eddie: Yes
Kevin Unterseher: Special form?
Gail Eddie: Yes
James Cotner: Yes.
Gail Eddie: d we do have special form.
Kevin Unterseher: And special material, rubber, wood, yes.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: Okay. Total seven point six whatever that means.
Darryl Boling: Uh, I think that's the
Kevin Unterseher: That's
Gail Eddie: One two
Kevin Unterseher: the
Gail Eddie: three
Kevin Unterseher: price.
Darryl Boling: price.
Gail Eddie: four five six seven eight nine
Darryl Boling: Maybe
Kevin Unterseher: Mm?
Darryl Boling: it is it just n
Kevin Unterseher: Eight, eight point two.
Gail Eddie: Nine
Kevin Unterseher: That's
Gail Eddie: points,
Kevin Unterseher: hmm?
Gail Eddie: okay, yes.
Kevin Unterseher: Eight point two, right? So, we looks like we are well within budget.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: Okay.
Kevin Unterseher: Okay. I guess I should save this I suppose, huh?
James Cotner: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: Oops.
Kevin Unterseher: Uh-huh huh huh.
Gail Eddie: On the desktop.
Kevin Unterseher: I just tried that. My
Darryl Boling: AMI.
Kevin Unterseher: documents, computer. My
Darryl Boling: AMI
Kevin Unterseher: compu
Darryl Boling: should for
Kevin Unterseher: Ah oh here it is, yes. Okay, fine. Save. Okay good, so that's the good news. We gonna be popular.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: Um. So that uh I think financing was pretty simple.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: Now we would like to have a presentation by James Cotner on production evaluation.
James Cotner: Okay, I'll take my file down so you can bring it up.
James Cotner: 'Kay should be able to get it now. 'Kay, why don't you move just to the next slide right away.
Kevin Unterseher: You wanna go to the next slide?
James Cotner: Yeah right away.
Kevin Unterseher: Okay.
James Cotner: Okay, well uh obviously my method for uh s m the marketing of this thing is first to ask the big question, will it sell? And I think we should show this prototype to people from various age and socio-economic groups and see about any fine tuning
Gail Eddie: Okay.
James Cotner: that maybe little things we
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: haven't thought of. We can't accept every suggestion of course, but maybe we just
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
James Cotner: need to get a few. And show the the prototype to consumer research groups, we don't s want somebody to suddenly come to us and tell us that this button is toxic and
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: you know some child will swallow it and then we won't sell any.
Darryl Boling: Mm.
James Cotner: So we have to get some input from those people.
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: And then after that we just have to go with our best intuition and you know we like it, we think it's good, we're gonna get behind it and sell it. Um, next slide please. Okay, now the things that I was thinking and th my wish list has really been realised in this prototype. I wanted the shape to be biomorphic, I didn't want anything with angles and all square, I wanted it to be comfy and roundy. The size is small, the colour's bright and warm which is what we wanted. We wanted the feel to be as soft as possible, we'll have the soft buttons
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: and the way this is shaped, even though it's gonna be hard plastic, it feels good in your hand so that's nice. And functionality I put last on my list because people aren't going to use it before they buy it. So paradoxically the other features, in other words, the look, the feel um and the shape,
Gail Eddie: Fee
James Cotner: that's what people are
Gail Eddie: selling.
James Cotner: gonna get in the store.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
James Cotner: They don't have a television in the store, they can't play with it.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: Um so they'll be our main selling points. So um th those have been fulfilled by your prototype and go ahead to the next slide please. Okay, so um the shape um I think is a a one. That's really, really excellent shape. The size is small um and th these points are in the importance for the, for the marketing, these aren't i in how I feel. I think that it's I think that it's plenty small enough to sell but I think we're sort of right the scale is one to seven. I think we're sort of right in the middle as far
Gail Eddie: Okay.
James Cotner: as c other competitors. And our colour I think is great. The colours are bright and warm and we really do great job there. And given um the constraints that we had I think we got it as soft as possible. And then functionality um I think you did a really good job on functionality, obviously we could have ad added different functions but then we'd disturb something else so I would say that we got to a five out of seven on on functionality. So
Gail Eddie: Okay.
James Cotner: I think
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: that basically we've got a great product and we can get off and running with it.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: Um I just realised one thing.
James Cotner: Yes.
Kevin Unterseher: In the financing there was no room for our voice recogniser.
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: Ah.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: And uh I don't know how we can evaluate that or how we can include that, too.
James Cotner: Well, um we had what, eight eight euros twenty as our cost?
Kevin Unterseher: Eight, eight twenty, yes.
Darryl Boling: Eight twenty
James Cotner: And
Darryl Boling: so
James Cotner: so we've got
Darryl Boling: We
James Cotner: we've
Darryl Boling: have
James Cotner: still
Darryl Boling: um
James Cotner: got four euros
Darryl Boling: four
James Cotner: to go
Darryl Boling: euros, yeah
James Cotner: to spend.
Kevin Unterseher: I mean maximum we have another four point three euros
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: I mean four thirty.
James Cotner: Well um that's
Kevin Unterseher: But I mean we have no way of presenting that to management as you know as a f finished, as a finished product and saying okay with the voice recogniser that costs so much.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: So um we just have to beware of that. I mean
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: and know whether the four thirty will really cover that.
James Cotner: Well
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
James Cotner: as we know in today's technic technological world you can do just about anything at any price, the the the problem is quality.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
James Cotner: So we're just gonna have to settle for whatever quality
Darryl Boling: Yeah,
James Cotner: that will buy
Gail Eddie: Yes,
James Cotner: us.
Darryl Boling: yeah.
Gail Eddie: yes.
James Cotner: And um it may not be the greatest quality but it may sell anyway.
Darryl Boling: Yeah,
Kevin Unterseher: Yeah.
Darryl Boling: still.
James Cotner: As we've seen with so
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
James Cotner: many of these kinds of products.
Kevin Unterseher: I'm sorry to interrupt then but I just uh recog I just remembered that there was no that that was not um included
Darryl Boling: Included, yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: uh that there was no room for any
Darryl Boling: Hmm,
Kevin Unterseher: special features,
Darryl Boling: hmm
Gail Eddie: Yeah mm.
Kevin Unterseher: okay? So to beware of that. You wanna go to this next slide, marketing
James Cotner: Uh,
Kevin Unterseher: expert?
James Cotner: well I isn't this my last slide? Maybe.
Kevin Unterseher: I dunno.
James Cotner: Go ahead.
Kevin Unterseher: Yes
James Cotner: I think
Kevin Unterseher: it
James Cotner: that
Kevin Unterseher: is.
James Cotner: was my last slide, yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: Um. Mm okay. And I'm supposed to present this scale on the whiteboard. Um and we're supposed to talk about those things as a team now, so if you put my last slide back up there.
Kevin Unterseher: Oh.
James Cotner: I'm sorry I've um forgot to do that, um.
Kevin Unterseher: Why? Wh why you need that up?
James Cotner: Hmm? Well because I can't remember what I put on there. Okay. Now I'm supposed to see how long my leash is here.
Kevin Unterseher: I think you can make it there.
James Cotner: Mm 'kay. You ready. So now we're all supposed to say what we think. Um okay so on shape I gave it a one. Wait what would you ra uh one being good and seven being the worst.
Gail Eddie: Worse, okay.
James Cotner: Um what do you think the shape is?
Gail Eddie: One.
James Cotner: One, okay, and Be Betsy?
Kevin Unterseher: Yes I think uh shape is one.
Darryl Boling: Yeah,
James Cotner: Okay, uh-huh
Darryl Boling: even my yeah, shape
James Cotner: one,
Darryl Boling: is one.
James Cotner: okay. And how about on size? On size
Kevin Unterseher: You you gave it a four.
James Cotner: I gave it a four, yeah, I feel it's just average.
Kevin Unterseher: Um, I dunno. I think I would give it at least a two.
James Cotner: Okay.
Gail Eddie: One.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Darryl Boling: Yeah, even I think it is one.
James Cotner: Okay.
Darryl Boling: It's quite small.
James Cotner: Okay you're the designer, of course you wanna give it a one. Um and then how about how we doing on colour?
Kevin Unterseher: Colour uh I
James Cotner: Colour, I gave it a one.
Kevin Unterseher: One.
James Cotner: I really like all those nice bright, warm
Kevin Unterseher: I
James Cotner: colours.
Kevin Unterseher: I like the colours.
Gail Eddie: One.
Kevin Unterseher: One.
James Cotner: One.
Gail Eddie: Yes.
Darryl Boling: Yeah, one.
James Cotner: One, one, one, okay. And how about the feel? Taking into um consideration texture and comfort in the hand.
Kevin Unterseher: Uh, I think I would give it a two.
James Cotner: Okay, I gave it a three, two,
Gail Eddie: I'll
James Cotner: yeah?
Gail Eddie: give three.
James Cotner: Three.
Darryl Boling: Uh maybe two,
James Cotner: Two, okay.
Darryl Boling: yeah.
James Cotner: And the next is functionality where I I admit I was a little hard on our team here, but
Kevin Unterseher: Well it's also you can't really try it out uh
James Cotner: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: the other things you have have more is are more tangible so
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: from that point of view but um I'll give it a three.
James Cotner: Okay.
Gail Eddie: Two.
James Cotner: Two, okay.
Darryl Boling: Uh three,
James Cotner: Three?
Darryl Boling: mm-hmm.
James Cotner: Okay. Well, um. It looks like we've got got ourselves a pretty good product. Um the functionality's the only place where maybe we have to think about m m maybe, heaven forbid, having another meeting.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
James Cotner: But um otherwise I think we're we're ready to go to go with this product. Anybody else have any other comments or any other things that we feel we should evaluate?
Kevin Unterseher: Uh. Here is what we looking at uh satisfaction on for example room for creativity. Um. Is there more room for creativity or are we absolutely happy?
Darryl Boling: Maybe
Gail Eddie: We can
Darryl Boling: we can
Gail Eddie: always improve, yes.
Darryl Boling: yeah, include some more buttons and
Gail Eddie: Yes,
Darryl Boling: uh
Gail Eddie: features.
Darryl Boling: um yeah features. We can make the buttons few buttons smaller. Uh I think they are quite big, so I think I I mean we can just have small buttons and more buttons in that case. If we want to have more features than that.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm. Well then again if we're gonna um do the speech recognition thing
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
James Cotner: we're gon there gonna be some buttons that are gonna have to be added
Darryl Boling: Yeah,
James Cotner: for that
Darryl Boling: definitely.
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: for the recording of the the speech.
Gail Eddie: Voices.
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: So that that's where we're gonna have to do maybe we can eliminate one of the mute buttons,
Darryl Boling: Yeah, definitely,
James Cotner: instead
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: of having two mute
Darryl Boling: yeah,
James Cotner: buttons.
Darryl Boling: two mu mute
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: And
Darryl Boling: buttons.
James Cotner: um then maybe we can do something with the um the volume control. Maybe we can put that all on one button.
Darryl Boling: Hmm.
James Cotner: Um and a couple of other th maybe comp uh consolidate some of the usage an and see what we can do with that.
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: Y um al
Gail Eddie: And
Kevin Unterseher: always
Gail Eddie: maybe
Kevin Unterseher: bearing in mind that right now we are of course well within the budget
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: and that we still you know we probably can't, with this particular item, we probably can't just uh add a whole lot of more things.
James Cotner: No.
Kevin Unterseher: Uh
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: um we need uh you know we need to leave space money-wise
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: for the voice recogniser.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Gail Eddie: Yes.
Kevin Unterseher: Um.
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: So th the question really is how do we feel with the project process? Uh, um are we happy with the creativity that has passed here or we're not happy with the new product we created or that was created? Uh I think personally I think uh I'm pretty happy.
James Cotner: I'm pretty happy with
Darryl Boling: Even
James Cotner: it
Kevin Unterseher: Um
James Cotner: too,
Darryl Boling: I'm
James Cotner: yeah
Darryl Boling: happy.
James Cotner: um, it's
Kevin Unterseher: an
James Cotner: something I think I can market.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
James Cotner: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: and then the next question is are we happy with the leadership of this project? Uh
James Cotner: I think you've done a good job, Miss
Gail Eddie: Yes,
James Cotner: leader.
Darryl Boling: Yeah,
Gail Eddie: yes you've
Darryl Boling: yeah,
Gail Eddie: done
Darryl Boling: definitely.
Kevin Unterseher: And
Gail Eddie: a good job.
Kevin Unterseher: I think team work I think was very very good,
James Cotner: Yeah
Kevin Unterseher: I
James Cotner: I
Kevin Unterseher: think
James Cotner: d
Darryl Boling: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: I
Kevin Unterseher: we
James Cotner: do
Kevin Unterseher: really
James Cotner: too I think we
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: yeah.
James Cotner: worked well together as a team, yeah.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: Mm-hmm.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: And uh I think we are we happy with the means we used? We used whiteboard, we didn't use digital p well digital pens I guess are these things.
James Cotner: Yeah maybe we could've used the whiteboard
Gail Eddie: Whiteboard
James Cotner: a little
Gail Eddie: more,
James Cotner: bit more,
Gail Eddie: yes,
James Cotner: yeah,
Darryl Boling: Yeah,
James Cotner: we
Darryl Boling: probably.
James Cotner: didn't use
Kevin Unterseher: Yes,
James Cotner: that
Gail Eddie: yes.
James Cotner: enough.
Kevin Unterseher: we could. Uh, it's maybe not in the best position in the room um you know like sometimes it's positioned so that it's much better visible for everybody
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: and I think from that point of view we sort of ignored it a little bit.
James Cotner: And we
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: used the slide because it was better positioned.
Kevin Unterseher: Yes,
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: I think so,
Gail Eddie: No.
Kevin Unterseher: I think
James Cotner: Mm
Kevin Unterseher: absolutely,
James Cotner: I think that's true
Kevin Unterseher: and
James Cotner: mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: fortunately we all had slides presentation which made it a little easier.
Darryl Boling: Hmm.
Gail Eddie: Yes.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: Um did we new did we find new ideas? I think we did.
Darryl Boling: Yeah,
James Cotner: I think we were
Darryl Boling: many.
James Cotner: we were very good,
Kevin Unterseher: I
James Cotner: yeah,
Kevin Unterseher: think
James Cotner: mm.
Kevin Unterseher: we we did, uh in more than one respect
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: and uh so I think we did very well here.
James Cotner: Okay.
Kevin Unterseher: Are the costs within budget? Yes, yes. Uh is the project evaluated?
James Cotner: Yes, yes.
Kevin Unterseher: Yes.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: Um
James Cotner: Celebration.
Kevin Unterseher: then celebration.
Gail Eddie: Cel celebration yes,
Darryl Boling: Ah.
Gail Eddie: yes.
James Cotner: Today we have apple juice and after we sell m million of 'em we have champagne.
Kevin Unterseher: So I I thank you all very much. Um, I think this was very good
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: and
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: um I think we did come up with a new product that's uh feasible.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: Feasible from the production point of view and feasible from a marketing point of view.
James Cotner: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Unterseher: So,
James Cotner: Okay.
Darryl Boling: Yeah.
Kevin Unterseher: thank you.
Gail Eddie: Thank
Darryl Boling: Thank you
Gail Eddie: you.
Darryl Boling: very
James Cotner: Okay.
Darryl Boling: much.
James Cotner: Watch I I have my cord behind you
Gail Eddie: Okay.
James Cotner: here. Okay.
Kevin Unterseher: I always get it on here, but getting it off is
Darryl Boling: Do we do we have some time left? Uh you have
Gail Eddie: They say it's forty minutes.
Kevin Unterseher: Ah yes
James Cotner: But
Kevin Unterseher: we have time later but we don't
James Cotner: we we were told we could end the final meeting at any time,
Gail Eddie: Okay.
Darryl Boling: Oh, alright.
James Cotner: whenever we felt we were finished. It'll take James Cotner the rest of the time to get my microphone out from my necklace. Oh, there we go. | Kevin Unterseher opens the meeting by going over the minutes of the last meeting, detailing the main points of each person's presentation. They do the prototype presentation which includes a model of the remote control. The group discusses this proposed model, approving of the small size and look of it. They goes over finances and are pleased to find that they are well within budget. However, while James Cotner is doing the product evaulation the group realizes that they neglected to calculate voice recognition into the financing. Their cost had been 8.20 Euros and they have 4.30 left to cover it, so they decide to settle for whatever quality it will buy. They rate their product on its shape, size, color, feel, and functionality. They discuss the project process, talk briefly about adding more features, and one member suggests eliminating a mute buttons and include a diffferent feature. They are happy with the creativity, leadership, and teamwork within the group, and close the meeting by thanking one another. | 1 | amisum | train |
Sidney Doherty: So uh good morning.
Ryan Thackaberry: Morning.
Corey Piner: Morning.
Carlos Hernandez: Morning.
Sidney Doherty: I see you all find places. Is everybody
Corey Piner: Yep.
Sidney Doherty: sitting on the right place? Yeah? I guess so. So Let's see. First I will introduce myself. I don't know if uh if everybody knows Corey Piner, so I'm
Corey Piner: My
Sidney Doherty: Bart,
Corey Piner: name's Frank.
Sidney Doherty: hello. Hello.
Ryan Thackaberry: I'm.
Sidney Doherty: Bart. Hello. Hello. Bart. Welcome.
Corey Piner: Thank you
Sidney Doherty: Uh let's see. Uh let's start off um with a little presentation. Uh Now first I'll tell you a little bit about the setting. You can see are cameras here. They'll record uh our actions and you'll have wires and microphones that will record your voice. Uh there are also some microphones there but th um you don't have to pay a lot of attention on those, because it will uh disappear when you don't attend to it. So is there a project documents folder? There are some notes in it already I see, some documents. Uh I'll start with the presentation kick off. Is being modified by the administrator. Uh okay.
Corey Piner: Hmm,
Sidney Doherty: Let's do it read
Corey Piner: that's
Sidney Doherty: only.
Corey Piner: interesting.
Sidney Doherty: Well I don't know if you've noticed, but uh we're working for Real Reaction. Uh it's a company in uh electronics. We put fashion in electronics, uh we make it work, uh we put a lot of effort in design and in the product itself. I'm Bart Sidney Doherty so I'll direct you through the project. This is our agenda. Uh we have our opening acquaintance, tool training, project plan description closing. Uh maybe I can sit down, then I can take some notes or Let's see. Maybe you can take the minutes once in a while.
Corey Piner: Sure.
Sidney Doherty: I dunno it's not a lot of work, but just uh if you hear something uh you can write down, just write it down. Uh as you can see uh it's the opening, aquaintance tool training. Aquaintance is a point we've done a bit. Um have you all seen the corporate website already?
Corey Piner: Yep.
Ryan Thackaberry: Yep.
Corey Piner: Visit
Sidney Doherty: Yeah.
Corey Piner: it.
Sidney Doherty: Have you seen any flaws in it? I think I found one. No?
Ryan Thackaberry: Hmm?
Corey Piner: Can't say I paid much attention to it,
Sidney Doherty: I can see if it works this way. No, it doesn't work here. Okay no problem. But um on the corporate information side there's a th uh there was Real Remote instead of Real Reaction.
Corey Piner: Oh yeah.
Sidney Doherty: Real Remote is not really the company we're we are, but
Ryan Thackaberry: Okay.
Sidney Doherty: it's just a little
Ryan Thackaberry: Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: fault. Um okay, what are we going to do? Uh our project aim is as you can see a new remote control. It has to be original, trendy, and user friendly. So these are uh the points why uh we also hired you. We've
Corey Piner: Okay.
Sidney Doherty: got Corey Piner for uh the trendy and user friendly look. And Industrial Designer uh there's also user friendly and a bit original. And we've got our User Interface Designer.
Ryan Thackaberry: Yep.
Sidney Doherty: He's also uh That's about the new remote control. Uh project method um is uh there are three phases we are going through. First is functional des uh design, individual work, meetings. After the functional design, then the conceptual design and the detailed design. I had some role indications on here. But I think you know it already by yourself. Carlos Hernandez is going to work on the working design, uh components design and a bit of the look and feel design. Uh Ryan Thackaberry is going to do the technical function design, user interface concept and user interface design. And Corey Piner is doing a little bit of user requirement specification, trend watching and project uh product ev evaluation. So that's a bit what you're going to do. But that will be all worked out in uh other meetings. Then we've got our first tool training. We are going to work with a lot of high-tech tools here, so it's ab it's handy if we have a little bit of training first. As you can see we've got the smart boards here and here in the white board. Um in the white board here there's a little tool bar on this side. Here are some functions. You can save. N uh these functions we don't have anything to do with, only undo, you can undo a little uh piece of drawing. A blank new document for each person. Uh select a pen, eraser. Capture we don't have to do anything with. Uh then we've got our pen. This pen. It's really
Corey Piner: 'Kay.
Sidney Doherty: funny because you can draw with it on this page um in the think it is form of. You can also select the current colour and the line width.
Ryan Thackaberry: Hmm.
Sidney Doherty: But then first you have to select the pen function. But we're going to work with it in a minute. So okay. Uh that's very simple and it's easy to uh draw your findings and drawings on there. Uh then a short thing about documents. We've got our shared folder, project project what was it? Project documents I think. But all you will found that already because there are a lot of documents in it already, so it will be okay. And these are available on the smart boards as well,
Ryan Thackaberry: Okay. Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: Here is a simple tool bar. It's what I just said, it's save, print, move back or forward one page. You can switch between the different drawings. And then we're going to try out the white board. So as you can see we g all going to draw a animal. Just to uh uh just to get a bit familiar with it. Mouse wasn't running away.
Corey Piner: That was interesting.
Sidney Doherty: Is everybody is anybody playing with the mouse? No. Okay.
Corey Piner: Innocent.
Sidney Doherty: We're going to uh draw animal. And uh just sum up a few of its favourite characteristics. Um the only thing we have to uh look after is that we use different colours, and different line width. Uh there's I can start from now. I will. You can use this pen by holding it like a like a little child. Because if you hold it like this, the sensors will get blocked and then the
Ryan Thackaberry: Okay.
Corey Piner: 'Kay.
Sidney Doherty: drawing won't get good. Another thing is you have to be uh a bit slow. 'Cause if you're going to draw like really fast then um the pen won't hold up. So we choose form of current colour uh I think grey is appropriate. Then the line width. I think seven will be nice. Now you'll see my drawing capabilities. These are not very much, but uh Uh, see you have to do it real slow.
Sidney Doherty: Oh
Ryan Thackaberry: Sure.
Sidney Doherty: Ah I was trying to draw a dolphin, but I think his nose has to be a little bit But it's close.
Corey Piner: I'm thinking about a swordfish.
Sidney Doherty: So what
Ryan Thackaberry: Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: yeah it's
Ryan Thackaberry: Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: this is bit of the swordfish. Yeah, he hasn't got an eye.
Carlos Hernandez: Mm-hmm.
Sidney Doherty: Woah. Now we've got another function. We've got the eraser. And then you can undo this easily.
Corey Piner: Meat.
Sidney Doherty: Ah it's okay. And I've got to write down a few of its characteristics. Uh is They've got no text tool, no. Uh.
Sidney Doherty: Okay. This is typically a undo action, I think.
Corey Piner: Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: Pen. Maybe you have to hold it a bit upside-down. I think that's it because if you wan ar are going to do it like this then it will be a stripe. But I don't know, I'm just trying. This is not my work, okay.
Corey Piner: Hmm.
Sidney Doherty: Maybe you have to use
Sidney Doherty: Oh.
Sidney Doherty: Uh. I think it's a it wants to draw a another animal? I don't know. It lives for the fun. So It's my characteristic uh characteristic about the dolphin. It lives for the fun.
Corey Piner: Okay.
Sidney Doherty: So
Ryan Thackaberry: Okay.
Sidney Doherty: now I'm gonna hand over the pen on the new blank sheet to you. Go
Corey Piner: Thank
Sidney Doherty: ahead.
Corey Piner: you. Okay. Gonna use a different line width.
Corey Piner: There. 'Kay, I'm not much of an artist, but here we go.
Sidney Doherty: Maybe it's easier to draw the smaller line width, I think.
Ryan Thackaberry: Hmm.
Sidney Doherty: Because this is going a lot better than uh I did.
Ryan Thackaberry: A sheep.
Corey Piner: Mm.
Corey Piner: Okay. This is my um Hmm. Sheep.
Sidney Doherty: It's nice.
Corey Piner: With of course
Corey Piner: little
Sidney Doherty: Uh.
Corey Piner: blue dot they always get sprayed on their butts.
Sidney Doherty: It's
Corey Piner: There.
Sidney Doherty: a real dead sheep, yeah.
Corey Piner: Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: For recognition, yeah, I see. Um maybe you can
Corey Piner: 'Kay.
Sidney Doherty: also write your name somewhere. On just a
Corey Piner: They are Come on.
Corey Piner: You have to go really slow when you're writing.
Sidney Doherty: Yeah.
Corey Piner: They're brilliant animal animals. And that's just a little Corey Piner thingy. So. Guess I'll pass the pen to our
Ryan Thackaberry: Okay.
Sidney Doherty: Nice.
Corey Piner: User Interface Designer.
Ryan Thackaberry: Um I'm just gonna draw its uh head, but mm Let's see. Mm.
Ryan Thackaberry: Uh.
Ryan Thackaberry: Okay.
Corey Piner: Interesting.
Sidney Doherty: Sweet.
Ryan Thackaberry: Yeah. You know what that is? Or who?
Corey Piner: A rabbit?
Carlos Hernandez: Garfield.
Ryan Thackaberry: Ah okay,
Corey Piner: Garfield.
Ryan Thackaberry: yeah.
Corey Piner: Yeah.
Ryan Thackaberry: Just a
Ryan Thackaberry: So uh Yeah. That's enough. Um, you say a blank, or
Sidney Doherty: Yeah, just a blank
Ryan Thackaberry: Okay.
Sidney Doherty: sheet.
Carlos Hernandez: Well I was gonna draw a cat too, so. I'll just try something else.
Sidney Doherty: No.
Carlos Hernandez: Something different than Garfield.
Carlos Hernandez: Mine is a bit more skinny.
Sidney Doherty: Yeah, it's
Corey Piner: Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: pretty skinny cat.
Carlos Hernandez: But uh
Corey Piner: And the most interesting tail.
Sidney Doherty: Is your cat, or did you find him on the street?
Carlos Hernandez: Well, it's supposed to be a cat. I like cats because uh they are uh independent.
Sidney Doherty: Ah.
Carlos Hernandez: The pen. So.
Sidney Doherty: Okay. That's pretty clear. So everybody knows how to work with the white board now? So
Corey Piner: Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: if you have any ideas or if you wanna
Carlos Hernandez: The
Sidney Doherty: draw
Carlos Hernandez: pen.
Sidney Doherty: anything on the white board, just ask and go ahead. It's pretty uh easy. 'Kay. S
Corey Piner: We're being haunted.
Sidney Doherty: haunted white board. So we've got the tool uh introduction. We move along to the project finance. Um as you can see, we um for our remote control, a selling price is uh twenty five Euros. Our selling price. Uh our profit aim is fifty million Euros. Uh that's the least we have to get from our remote controls, so we have to work together to reach our aims. Uh we can do it international, so we have to focus on different kind of users, different kind of cultures, and different kind of trends as well. Um but that's all in the later stadium. Our production cost um can be maximal twelve and a half Euros, so that's also a point we have to keep in mind, that we won't make remote controls with small televisions inside, and stuff like that. It won't work. So just try to remember these points. Selling price twenty five, profit aims fifty million um, but more important is the int international market we're trying to focus on. And production cost uh maximal twelve and a half Euros. So that's leads us to our little discussion. We've got about five or ten minutes left for discussion. So I'm gonna sit down, I think. It's easier.
Corey Piner: Yeah, you got a message.
Sidney Doherty: I've got a message. Five minutes.
Ryan Thackaberry: Five
Sidney Doherty: Okay,
Ryan Thackaberry: minutes, okay.
Sidney Doherty: that's uh good timing.
Corey Piner: So just on a side note, why is it my laptop is only giving Corey Piner a black screen?
Ryan Thackaberry: Mm?
Sidney Doherty: Uh maybe you have to say the magic word.
Corey Piner: Yeah. Right.
Sidney Doherty: Does it do anything?
Corey Piner: No.
Sidney Doherty: Maybe you have to just clap it down? Mm back up again. No slide show. Hmm.
Corey Piner: It's off now.
Sidney Doherty: It's off. Now you have to put it back o Oh yeah. You'll be okay, I think.
Corey Piner: Well, it was on, but
Sidney Doherty: Well it's those laptops.
Corey Piner: Ah, there we are.
Sidney Doherty: Nice. Okay. But so mm does everybody has um experiences with uh remote controls, and I mean not the ordinary mote controls, but also a little bit different ones?
Ryan Thackaberry: Mm.
Sidney Doherty: Like you can use for other?
Ryan Thackaberry: Oh really?
Sidney Doherty: No?
Ryan Thackaberry: Huh.
Sidney Doherty: You?
Corey Piner: Well, we
Carlos Hernandez: No,
Ryan Thackaberry: It's
Corey Piner: have
Carlos Hernandez: Corey Piner
Corey Piner: a
Carlos Hernandez: neither.
Ryan Thackaberry: a
Corey Piner: kind of broad T_V_ at home, and a D_V_D_ player, so we got like a lot of remote controls, one for the T_V_, one for the video recorder, one for the D_V_D_ player.
Sidney Doherty: Ah yeah.
Corey Piner: And I think it's it would be best to just make one remote control that can operate them all.
Sidney Doherty: Yep.
Ryan Thackaberry: Sure.
Sidney Doherty: Yeah I've
Ryan Thackaberry: Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: I've got one at home. And you can uh program I think eight different devices in it, and you can use it for your television,
Ryan Thackaberry: Okay, yeah.
Sidney Doherty: anything else.
Ryan Thackaberry: Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: And it also operates on infra-red, so you have to got the little device inside your room, and then you can operate it from the third or th or
Ryan Thackaberry: Okay,
Sidney Doherty: second
Ryan Thackaberry: yeah.
Sidney Doherty: floor.
Corey Piner: Oh really.
Sidney Doherty: So
Ryan Thackaberry: Hmm.
Sidney Doherty: that's pretty handy when you have a video recorder or D_V_D_ player downstairs and
Ryan Thackaberry: Oh.
Sidney Doherty: you've got a link to your T_V_ on the second floor.
Corey Piner: Yeah.
Ryan Thackaberry: Mm-hmm.
Sidney Doherty: So that's a pretty handy um thing. Um but only the I think that if you can put different kind of devices in one remote control, it makes it a lot easier as well. It's
Corey Piner: Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: uh
Ryan Thackaberry: Oh.
Sidney Doherty: That's good to remember.
Corey Piner: So I think you can take minutes again.
Sidney Doherty: Yeah, that's nice, I think.
Corey Piner: Since it's your job.
Sidney Doherty: So we've we want different functions
Corey Piner: Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: uh and we can maybe see if we can do something with the infra-red. But I don't know if that will exceed the production costs. So that
Ryan Thackaberry: Mm.
Sidney Doherty: uh that's something we have to find out, I think.
Corey Piner: Yeah. But that would be really good if we could do that.
Sidney Doherty: And other functions for a remote control? Maybe we can make
Corey Piner: Um.
Sidney Doherty: it
Ryan Thackaberry: Mm-hmm.
Sidney Doherty: uh uh
Corey Piner: Think it has to be shock proof
Ryan Thackaberry: Sure, yeah.
Corey Piner: 'cause
Sidney Doherty: Shock proof.
Corey Piner: my remote control tends to
Ryan Thackaberry: Waterproof,
Corey Piner: fall a lot.
Ryan Thackaberry: or uh
Corey Piner: So
Ryan Thackaberry: Uh,
Sidney Doherty: Sure.
Ryan Thackaberry: you never no know uh, I w I mean uh
Sidney Doherty: Waterproof. Okay. So these are our um a few things we can think of. Um I will put the minutes from this meeting uh in our project folder.
Ryan Thackaberry: 'Kay.
Corey Piner: Yeah, one other little thing. Thought it might be handy to put a battery status display on it. So
Sidney Doherty: That's
Corey Piner: you can
Sidney Doherty: a
Corey Piner: see
Sidney Doherty: battery stays.
Ryan Thackaberry: Okay, yeah.
Corey Piner: how much is left in the battery. But they'll also really drag up the production costs, so
Sidney Doherty: Yeah.
Corey Piner: think we'll have to see about that too.
Ryan Thackaberry: Mm.
Sidney Doherty: Uh.
Corey Piner: But maybe just a little LED, I don't know.
Sidney Doherty: That's an idea as well. Other ideas? Quick ideas.
Carlos Hernandez: Nope. They were all
Ryan Thackaberry: Mm.
Carlos Hernandez: mentioned, so
Sidney Doherty: Okay.
Ryan Thackaberry: Yeah.
Sidney Doherty: Any questions about this uh presentation? Kick off presentation.
Corey Piner: Um. Nope, don't think so.
Sidney Doherty: No? Okay, then I'll put the minutes from this meeting in the project folder, and then we can all work. Finish meeting now.
Corey Piner: Okay.
Sidney Doherty: Okay. And
Corey Piner: Aye
Sidney Doherty: we
Corey Piner: sir.
Sidney Doherty: can all work uh on our own projects.
Sidney Doherty: Okay then I'll meet you in about a
Corey Piner: Half an
Sidney Doherty: half
Corey Piner: hour.
Sidney Doherty: an hour, I think.
Carlos Hernandez: Okay.
Ryan Thackaberry: Okay.
Corey Piner: Okay.
Sidney Doherty: So good luck.
Ryan Thackaberry: Yep. | Sidney Doherty introduced himself to the team and then acquainted the team with the audio and video equipment in the meeting room. Sidney Doherty briefly described the company the team works for and discussed the corporate website. Sidney Doherty then described the upcoming project and the roles of each team member. Sidney Doherty introduced the smart boards to the team and led the team members in an exercise in which they each drew their favorite animal and described why they liked the animal. Sidney Doherty briefed the team on the project budget and selling prices for the remote they are to create and led them in a discussion on their experiences with remote controls and what features they would like to include in their product. | 1 | amisum | train |
Keith Taff: Okay. Everybody found his place again? Yeah
Dorian Lyons: Yes.
Keith Taff: That's? nice. Okay so this is our second meeting. And uh still failing?
Dorian Lyons: Yeah.
Keith Taff: Uh now we're going um into the functional design. Um important thing of this phase is that we're going to uh try to get an agreement about the user requirements, technical function design, and the working design. So that we can move onto the second uh phase. But first this phase. Um first an announcement. There's a little adaptation in the air conditioning system. There's our ghost mouse again. That that means that you can have a little trouble with, little trouble with the air conditioning, that's because of this uh
Darren Rivera: Okay.
Dorian Lyons: Okay.
Keith Taff: It's in wing C_ and E_. So it should be over in a in a while, couple of days. But it's going to be cold anyway, so I don't think you're gonna need it.
Dorian Lyons: No.
Keith Taff: Then our agenda. Now first the opening. Uh this time I will take the minutes. Uh you're going to have a presentation. All of you. Um and we've got forty minutes for the whole uh prese for the whole uh presentations. So uh I suggest we take about seven minutes per presentation, and then we can have a little discussion about the new project requirements uh which have been sent to Dorian Lyons. And then the decision on the control functions uh which we wanna include and those which we don't wanna include. So we've got forty minutes for all of it. So I suggest um let's start with the first presentation.
Dorian Lyons: Yes
Keith Taff: Um who wants to be first?
Dorian Lyons: Think I'll go first.
Keith Taff: Okay. So Just maybe it's easier if you um Yeah I think you will tell your presentation as well. Just which function you have and what you're gonna talk about.
Dorian Lyons: 'Kay. My name is Freek Van Ponnen. I'm the Market Expert. But you already knew that. Um I've done some research. We have we uh have been doing research in a usability lab where we observed um users operating remote controls. Uh we let them fill out a questionnaire. We had one hundred of these uh test subjects. Uh in we did research. Uh see what market consists of ages are involved. Well these are three quite astonishing results, I thought. Um remotes are being considered ugly. F uh seventy five percent of the um people questioned uh indicated that they thought their remote were was ugly. Um and an additional eighty percent indicated that they would spend more money on a fancy-looking remote control. So Um in addition remotes were not very functional. Fifty percent of the people indicated they only loo used about ten percent of the buttons on a remote control. And fifty percent of the people indicated that their remote tended to get lost in their room. So
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Dorian Lyons: some things. Then we did some research to the most relevant functions. Channel selection and volume selection um both got a ten on a scale of one to ten for relevancy. The power button got a nine. And teletext got a six and a half. So these are the most most uh important functions on a remote control. Then there are some one-time use function. That's what I like to call them. That uh audio settings, video settings, and channel settings buttons. Which are not really used very frequently, but are still considered to be of some importance. Um channel selection was also indicated to be used very frequently. One hundred and sixty eight times per hour. Then these are the This is the market. Um sixty percent of the market consists of users between the ages sixteen and forty f six. Um Main characteristic of this group is that they're very critical on the remote control. Um they like to use new f new functions. But they also are very critical. They won't spend their money very easily. So Um the users of forty six to sixty five years cons The make up forty percent of the market. They are not really very interested in features. But they do tend to spend their money a lot easier. Um What I think this indicates for our um design. I think we should make a remote for the future. And this means we would um have to focus on the age ages sixteen to forty five. Uh this also makes up most the biggest part of the market, so that will also be where our main profit would be gettable. Um this would mean we would have to make a fancy design. Um The results also indicated that um about one quarter of the people questioned thought that the remote control caused R_S_ R_S_I_. Um this is certainly something to take into account. And thirty four percent thought that it was hard to learn a n how to operate a new control, remote control. So these are two factors that I think should be included in the design. Besides of course that the remote must look very nice. And the functionality As a lot of people indicated, they only use about ten percent of the buttons, I think we should make very few buttons. Uh this will also be uh beneficial to the design of the remote. Uh I think the most frequently used buttons should be emphasised. Especially the channel selection and audio uh selection buttons. 'Cause they're used most and so they should be robust. They shouldn't break down easily. Um Then as mo as a lot of people indicated that their um remote got lost in the room, it might be and I say might be because it would um certainly boost the uh production costs a lot. But it might be a good idea to make a docking station. And this would, could get a button in it which would send a signal to the remote which would then beep. So you'd know where it is in the room. And in addition to this it could um recharge the batteries in the remote if you put it in. Then um a surprisingly great deal of people w indicated that um an L_C_D_ screen in the remote control would be preferred. This was um mostly people in the age of sixteen to twenty five. But up till forty five it remains feasible. This would also greatly increase the production costs but I think these are just some small factors we could consider.
Keith Taff: Okay.
Dorian Lyons: That would be all.
Keith Taff: Thank you. So anybody have um any questions
Dorian Lyons: Any questions?
Keith Taff: until now?
Darren Rivera: Mm-hmm.
Keith Taff: About functional requirements?
Christopher Smith: No.
Keith Taff: Okay that's clear.
Dorian Lyons: 'Kay.
Keith Taff: Now to the second.
Darren Rivera: Uh okay. I've been looking at uh the user interface of it.
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Darren Rivera: Um f for the techno f functions uh of of it. Um
Keith Taff: Yeah you can
Darren Rivera: Okay.
Keith Taff: take your time. We've got uh
Darren Rivera: Mm?
Keith Taff: plenty
Dorian Lyons: Yeah
Keith Taff: of
Dorian Lyons: you should
Keith Taff: time,
Dorian Lyons: go to
Keith Taff: so
Dorian Lyons: the
Darren Rivera: Oh.
Dorian Lyons: top thingy.
Darren Rivera: Uh.
Dorian Lyons: Slide show. Oh
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: yeah.
Darren Rivera: Okay.
Keith Taff: There it is. Yeah.
Darren Rivera: Um yeah. I think uh we uh must use the general functions uh of the uh remote control. Uh uh I've do I've uh done a little uh research on the internet and not much information about it, Um about uh interface but uh Uh Yeah I I've been thinking about a simple manner uh to put a lot of functions uh uh in one um in one uh remote control. Uh so uh you've got a lot of devi uh devices like uh D_V_D_ uh uh television, uh stereo. So um But uh it must be uh user-friendly. So um uh you c you can't put a a lot of uh functions uh in one uh Yeah. Uh uh uh Yeah. In one um remote
Keith Taff: One
Darren Rivera: control.
Keith Taff: remote.
Darren Rivera: But um Yeah. Um yeah. Got uh many functions in one uh remote control, um but um yeah you can see, this is uh quite simple uh remote control. Um few uh buttons but uh This uh re uh remote control got a a lot of uh buttons. Um uh people uh don't like it, uh so um Well what uh I was uh thinking about was um uh keep the general functions uh like they are. So uh like uh the on-off uh button. Uh keep it uh yeah l like a red button. Uh everybody everybody knows it so uh uh you don't have to change that. Um My personal uh preferences um. Use a display for uh specific uh functions of the different uh device. So um Wh what I was th uh thinking about was um you've got um
Darren Rivera: Uh this the remote control uh and uh you got here the general functions, uh like uh the on-off button uh sound uh I dunno um And um here you've got a s kind of a display. It's a touchscreen. So um yeah you got a general f uh f the functions of the device uh for a D_V_D_ player or uh so um the pl yeah um f for uh playing uh reverse uh. And um you got here uh real buttons for uh selecting uh a device. So um this button is for a D_V_D_ or So um for every um device you've got a uh a f a b a part uh display of a part buttons. So uh you you never got uh all the buttons uh on w one device. So
Keith Taff: Hmm.
Darren Rivera: uh that's uh my uh idea about it.
Keith Taff: 'Kay.
Darren Rivera: Um yeah and Uh let's see. Uh yeah. So a touchscreen. Uh and um th the buttons uh the real buttons uh we have to use um. We better c um uh use uh quite uh large buttons uh for um yeah. Everybody uh have to use it so Uh ol even even old people um young people. So uh we must keep uh buttons uh quite s uh simple and quite large. So uh
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Darren Rivera: Um Yeah. Uh yeah. That was uh my uh
Keith Taff: Okay.
Darren Rivera: part of it. So
Keith Taff: Anybody has questions about the technical functions?
Christopher Smith: Well I think if we are gonna a uh we're gonna above the twelve and a half Euros.
Darren Rivera: N
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Darren Rivera: I I don't think so. Uh you got uh quite a cheap uh touchscreen.
Keith Taff: Touchscreen.
Darren Rivera: S um it's uh not uh in colour or something. Uh it's just uh um one colo Uh yeah. Uh I seen uh w uh something on the internet uh not today but uh a few uh weeks ago. Uh you got uh yeah quite an uh a kind of uh touchscreen um and it's uh for uh twenty uh Euros or uh less uh.
Keith Taff: Huh.
Darren Rivera: So
Dorian Lyons: Hmm.
Darren Rivera: it's possible.
Keith Taff: 'Kay. That's nice.
Dorian Lyons: Well it would
Keith Taff: Uh
Dorian Lyons: certainly make a fancy design.
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Christopher Smith: But
Dorian Lyons: So
Christopher Smith: the It wouldn't be very robust. It's very fragile and you can get scratches on it.
Dorian Lyons: That is true.
Keith Taff: That's
Darren Rivera: Yeah that's true.
Dorian Lyons: We
Keith Taff: right.
Dorian Lyons: would have
Keith Taff: Uh
Dorian Lyons: to look into that.
Keith Taff: maybe we can first um listen to your presentation? Uh
Darren Rivera: Uh.
Dorian Lyons: Yeah.
Christopher Smith: That's.
Keith Taff: And then we have a little discussion about the requirements and uh
Christopher Smith: Okay.
Keith Taff: design.
Keith Taff: I think it's going to Uh it's not too much. Okay.
Christopher Smith: Okay I've got a presentation about the working design. Um first about how it works. It's really simple of course. Everybody knows how a remote works. The user presses a button. The remote determines what button it is, The T_V_ switches to the frequency, or what function it is. So we've got um the the plate. It gots conductive disks for every button. When the user presses a button, a signal got sent, goes to the LED and transmits tranmi transmits its to the T_V_. It's a very simple device, technically speaking. So this is a schematic overview. You've got the buttons. The power source. And uh when a button gets pressed, its goes to the chip. The chip uh controls the infrared bulb and perf perhaps a normal bulb. When you press a button you can actually see your pressed button. Well um I think we should use default materials, simple plastics. Keep the inner workings simple, so it's robust. Uh I think we should focus on aesthetics, the design and the user interface, because if you're going to use high-tech materials the price is going to go sky-high. And uh you only have to design a remote once, and if you use high-tech materials it come back in every product. So it's, in my idea, it's uh it's gonna be smart to invest in di in design and not in uh in the product itself. That's it.
Keith Taff: Okay. Thank you.
Keith Taff: Okay. Uh Okay now I hope everybody has a little bit more insight in the functions we all have and what we are doing right now. Um I'm Keith Taff so I'm here to mess things up and uh tell you some new uh requirements. Um that's, we've uh got to design a um remote which is only suitable for T_V_. Um that's because
Darren Rivera: Okay.
Keith Taff: uh it will be too complex and the time to market will be too big, if we wanna have it uh for more functions.
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Keith Taff: So it has to be simple. Uh another point is we have to skip the teletext, because in the world of uh upcoming internet uh we think teletext is going to be uh a thing of the past. And uh it's a function we don't need in our remote control. Um internet is also mentioned in a function we can use. Uh maybe also on televisions it will be available as well. Another one is uh the customer is uh forty plus. Uh that's the the market we have to to to target, because we are going to develop a new product which is specially designed for the younger customers. Um this is uh a bit pity for the Marketing uh Expert. Because he was uh aiming on the the younger persons. So we have to find a market which is above forty plus uh but which will suit our uh remote control, and the other way round. And we have to be very uh attent in uh putting the corporate image uh in our product. So it has to be visible in our design, in the way our device works. And uh we have to be uh very clear on this point as well. So I suggest let's have a discussion on the control functions. Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: So is there any discussion possible about the new product requirement?
Keith Taff: Uh we can see if we can find a way uh between the functions we wanna use and the market we wanna reach with our product.
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Keith Taff: Um
Dorian Lyons: Yeah 'cause you're you're saying that teletext is gonna be an old feature and it's not gonna be used anymore anyway pretty soon. And new T_V_s will have internet access on them.
Dorian Lyons: within the next like twenty years is very slim. In
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: addition people indicated that teletext simply was an important feature for the remote control. So I think it's pretty dumb to put no teletext feature on it. I'm pretty much against it.
Keith Taff: Against the no
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Keith Taff: teletext?
Dorian Lyons: Yes.
Keith Taff: Um
Dorian Lyons: Besides that, I think the market for forty plus is like pretty small. But
Keith Taff: Yeah
Dorian Lyons: I mean if
Keith Taff: it's
Dorian Lyons: I
Keith Taff: it
Dorian Lyons: s if
Keith Taff: is
Dorian Lyons: I see
Darren Rivera: forty
Dorian Lyons: this, it's I think we're just gonna go for another
Keith Taff: Standard remote.
Dorian Lyons: pretty
Keith Taff: No I think
Dorian Lyons: and
Keith Taff: we can
Dorian Lyons: not innovative
Keith Taff: I think
Dorian Lyons: remote
Keith Taff: we
Dorian Lyons: control.
Keith Taff: can do a lot with the design and the simple buttons which were also mentioned. Uh if we put a lot of effort in those, we can make a remote control with uh just two or three buttons. Or just a remote which is suitable for the market we wanna reach because
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: it is forty percent of the market. And um if you look in Holland at the whole generation of forty plus, fifty plus, it it's the the biggest share of the of the whole population now.
Dorian Lyons: Yes but it's not the biggest part of the market.
Keith Taff: No.
Dorian Lyons: And besides that, they're not very critical so I mean they don't really care what the remote control is like. They'll just pretty much take the first thing they see and which looks acceptable.
Keith Taff: But don't you think that
Keith Taff: people think that's the the device I've looked for although I didn't realise it. So let's try it.
Dorian Lyons: No. I think that would be the case in the sixteen to forty five age category. because they are critical and they they want to have a fancy remote control.
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: People of forty plus, I mean they want it to work, but as soo as soon as it works it's okay with them.
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Christopher Smith: I think that if
Dorian Lyons: So
Christopher Smith: we're If we put our marketing right um we can sell this just like um I don't know if you've heard about it in the news, the the elderly mobile phone?
Keith Taff: Yeah. It's a big success.
Christopher Smith: Yeah if we
Dorian Lyons: I haven't
Christopher Smith: if we
Dorian Lyons: heard
Christopher Smith: make
Keith Taff: Very
Dorian Lyons: of
Christopher Smith: a
Keith Taff: big
Christopher Smith: remote
Dorian Lyons: it.
Keith Taff: success.
Christopher Smith: control just
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Christopher Smith: l with that idea in mind, we could make tons of money, I think.
Dorian Lyons: Hmm.
Keith Taff: Uh.
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Christopher Smith: We
Keith Taff: I
Christopher Smith: don't have
Keith Taff: think
Christopher Smith: to focus
Keith Taff: so as well.
Christopher Smith: on on on the on the design then but on functionality. We just change our focus on the project, and I think we can uh we can sell this.
Keith Taff: Uh I simply think um uh that the new products we are gonna make, uh spef specifically design, are designed for uh younger people, uh so maybe we can focus ourself on the elderly people. And I think we have to um see what requirements we need for those um remote controls. 'Cause what you told is the channel selection is important.
Dorian Lyons: Yes.
Keith Taff: Volume selection,
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Keith Taff: power and teletext.
Dorian Lyons: Yes.
Keith Taff: Okay.
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: Um
Dorian Lyons: But obviously the board tends to disagree.
Keith Taff: No we we haven't voted yet, so Uh I think teletext can be uh um can be a function as well. But only if uh if it won't higher the the cost, because I don't know if it will be a lot more money to implement teletext as well, but I don't think it will be a problem. Or is teletext
Darren Rivera: But
Keith Taff: a
Darren Rivera: um deaf people need uh teletext for uh for
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Darren Rivera: subtitles.
Dorian Lyons: Yeah, also.
Darren Rivera: So it's Yeah.
Keith Taff: Yeah. So I suggest
Dorian Lyons: I think
Keith Taff: uh
Dorian Lyons: it'd definitely
Darren Rivera: It's
Dorian Lyons: be a bad idea not to include
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: teletext.
Keith Taff: Is anybody um really against teletext?
Christopher Smith: No.
Keith Taff: No? Just that, that we just keep the teletext. I think that's a good idea as well, especially for the subtitles. Maybe we can make that um another point of advantage in our remote control, if we uh make a k a button ex for example for big subtitles, which is instantly on the remote control.
Darren Rivera: Yeah
Keith Taff: For elderly
Darren Rivera: yeah.
Keith Taff: people they can think, oh I wanna have subtitles, and they push the button and they get the big subtitles.
Christopher Smith: Uh that's
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Christopher Smith: a good idea.
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: Um so I think teletext can v can be very useful in our advantage. Um Functionality should be few buttons, you said.
Dorian Lyons: Yes.
Keith Taff: I think
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: uh that's very important we have a few buttons.
Dorian Lyons: Mm-hmm.
Keith Taff: So to keep it
Dorian Lyons: But
Keith Taff: simple.
Dorian Lyons: I don't think that's really an issue any more 'cause Well might be.
Darren Rivera: If it's
Dorian Lyons: But I mean
Darren Rivera: only
Dorian Lyons: it,
Darren Rivera: for
Dorian Lyons: if
Darren Rivera: televi
Dorian Lyons: it's only for T_V_
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: you're not gonna need a lot of buttons
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: anyway. You
Keith Taff: No.
Dorian Lyons: need a one to zero button,
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: next channel, previous channel, volume up, volume down, and some teletext buttons but
Keith Taff: Yeah. But
Dorian Lyons: I
Keith Taff: do
Dorian Lyons: think
Keith Taff: you
Dorian Lyons: if
Keith Taff: need
Darren Rivera: So
Dorian Lyons: you
Darren Rivera: we
Dorian Lyons: if you only
Darren Rivera: can s
Dorian Lyons: l
Darren Rivera: we can skip the display, so uh we
Keith Taff: But
Darren Rivera: don't need it.
Dorian Lyons: Nah.
Keith Taff: do you need the buttons for one to zero. Maybe
Darren Rivera: Uh
Keith Taff: c
Dorian Lyons: Think
Keith Taff: we can
Dorian Lyons: if you're gonna include teletext you do. I think many people like to use that.
Keith Taff: Maybe we
Dorian Lyons: 'Cause
Keith Taff: can
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: if
Keith Taff: use
Dorian Lyons: you should,
Keith Taff: uh
Dorian Lyons: if you want to switch from channel one to like thirty five, you don't wanna push the next channel button thirty
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: five times.
Keith Taff: No, maybe we can implement the scroll button? Or a joystick
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Keith Taff: like? There are other ways too. Just look if you look at telephones.
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: The Sony telephone has a scroll
Darren Rivera: Mm-hmm.
Keith Taff: button which is very useful in
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: searching names or
Dorian Lyons: That's true but um I don't think there are many T_V_s that can switch channels that fast. And so you would need like the T_V_ would need an a function where you can actually view all channels and scroll through it. And I dunno if many channels would do have that. If many T_V_s have that.
Christopher Smith: Yeah.
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Christopher Smith: And besides that it's um If we're gonna focus on elderly people they'll have to adapt. They're not used to using scroll buttons.
Keith Taff: That's
Christopher Smith: So
Keith Taff: right.
Dorian Lyons: Mm-hmm.
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Christopher Smith: perhaps we should s stick to the basic layout.
Keith Taff: the numbers yeah. Yeah they can see how much buttons there are going to be on on the display, and if it's too much we can uh reconsider it. But I think
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: there won't be very much buttons. Or there don't
Dorian Lyons: But
Keith Taff: have to be
Dorian Lyons: I don't
Keith Taff: a lot.
Dorian Lyons: think I think if you're gonna make a remote control only to operate a T_V_, you there's not much you can gain on um having as few buttons as possible. 'Cause I think there are pretty many remote controls that can only operate a T_V_, which already only have the minimum number of buttons. I don't think there's much to be gained in that area.
Keith Taff: The
Darren Rivera: Hmm.
Keith Taff: number of buttons?
Dorian Lyons: Yeah.
Keith Taff: I think it's very important in the in the design. You can make a very fancy design uh with putting the buttons on the right places. And if you have less buttons you can do a lot more with
Dorian Lyons: That is true but I think there's simply not much to gain on the competition when you when you're making a remote control only for to operate only the T_V_.
Keith Taff: To operate only
Dorian Lyons: 'Cause
Keith Taff: the T_V_
Dorian Lyons: if you have
Keith Taff: yeah.
Dorian Lyons: a a remote control only to operate a T_V_ there's simply not a lot of buttons required. There's not a lot of functions required so most existing remote controls simply don't have a lot of buttons either.
Keith Taff: No.
Darren Rivera: No.
Keith Taff: So.
Dorian Lyons: So I think it would be very hard to actually gain on the competition here.
Keith Taff: 'Kay. So we
Dorian Lyons: That would
Keith Taff: can
Dorian Lyons: that would cost a a big marketing expedition
Keith Taff: Yeah. That's right.
Dorian Lyons: which was one of the arguments to make it only for the T_V_ because we didn't have the time to market a lot.
Keith Taff: Yeah. So you suggest we could better um focus on for example the docking station. Uh uh like other functions. Instead
Dorian Lyons: Maybe.
Keith Taff: of f of less buttons.
Dorian Lyons: Well yeah I think, mean we obviously need a good way to position all the buttons and But I don't think we should spend very much time in that.
Keith Taff: Mm. No. Do you think the docking station will uh is allowed in the budget we have?
Christopher Smith: It should be possible yes.
Keith Taff: 'Cause it
Christopher Smith: If it's
Darren Rivera: No.
Keith Taff: can
Christopher Smith: not
Keith Taff: be
Christopher Smith: too fancy. And
Keith Taff: No.
Christopher Smith: if the remote stays rather small, it should be possible yeah.
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Darren Rivera: No.
Keith Taff: Because I think that's uh That's a good advantage point as well. If we have a fancy-looking
Christopher Smith: Yes.
Keith Taff: docking station or very
Darren Rivera: Hmm.
Keith Taff: That's a nice requirement. Docking station.
Christopher Smith: So we're just gonna focus on the extras?
Keith Taff: I think so.
Christopher Smith: Yeah.
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Dorian Lyons: Yeah I think maybe we should do some research into what elderly people like to have in a
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: like to have extra in a new remote control.
Keith Taff: That's a good point. Um You said they easily get lost as well.
Dorian Lyons: Yes well fifty percent of the people indicated that remote
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: control tended to get lost.
Keith Taff: So maybe we should implement the audio sign, or something.
Dorian Lyons: Yeah that was what I suggested.
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Christopher Smith: Like with
Dorian Lyons: You
Christopher Smith: your
Dorian Lyons: have it
Christopher Smith: key-chain,
Dorian Lyons: on
Christopher Smith: if you
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Christopher Smith: whistle it goes
Dorian Lyons: Yeah
Christopher Smith: uh it makes
Darren Rivera: Hm.
Christopher Smith: a sound.
Dorian Lyons: you have it's on some phones too, which have a docking station.
Christopher Smith: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: And you just press a button and the phone goes ringing.
Keith Taff: Yeah. So
Dorian Lyons: So you know where it is.
Keith Taff: audio signal should be possible as well. I think it's not too expensive.
Darren Rivera: No.
Keith Taff: Uh another point is the L_C_D_ screen. Um I don't know if that will rise the cost too much,
Christopher Smith: Y
Keith Taff: because
Christopher Smith: i um I think we'll have to choose between the docking station or the screen, 'cause
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Christopher Smith: it's uh
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Keith Taff: It will be too much as well.
Dorian Lyons: I think since a lot of people indicated that a new remote control is hard to learn, and we're focusing on elderly people here which tend to have a hard time understanding new devices, it might be a good idea to have just a little screen on it, which would explain a button if you press it. Which would tell you what it does.
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: And it wouldn't have to be touchscreen or
Keith Taff: Based.
Dorian Lyons: a very expensive
Darren Rivera: Okay.
Dorian Lyons: screen, but
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: Just the L_C_D_. Oh just the normal screen.
Dorian Lyons: Just a small
Keith Taff: That's a good
Dorian Lyons: screen
Keith Taff: idea.
Dorian Lyons: with two
Keith Taff: So Some extra info. Feedback.
Dorian Lyons: Yeah.
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: I think that's a good idea as well.
Dorian Lyons: But I dunno if that would
Keith Taff: As the small
Dorian Lyons: that would
Keith Taff: screen.
Dorian Lyons: fit into the costs.
Keith Taff: Extra button info. I think that should be possible as well. Um let's see what did we say. Mm. More. Should be fancy to, fancy design, easy to learn. Few buttons, we talked about that. Docking station, L_C_D_. Um general functions Yeah. 'Kay. And default materials. I think that's a good idea as well, because um elderly people don't mind if it's a titanium cover or just a plastic one. So
Dorian Lyons: No.
Keith Taff: that
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Keith Taff: doesn't really matter. So I think
Dorian Lyons: I think
Keith Taff: we
Dorian Lyons: probably
Keith Taff: nee
Dorian Lyons: elderly people would be a little bit more careful with their remote controls than youngsters.
Keith Taff: Uh let's um specify the target group. Because are we talking about elderly elderly people or people from forty to eighty. Because I think what we're going to design now is for people above sixty, maybe.
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Dorian Lyons: Yeah.
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: Uh what do we want?
Dorian Lyons: I think
Keith Taff: If we want um a with uh for example the the telephone for elderly people, we can target the real elderly people.
Dorian Lyons: I think that would be a If we should do something like that it would be a, I think it would be really good for uh for the image of the company.
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Dorian Lyons: And I think, I think there would be a good market for it.
Keith Taff: So that's
Dorian Lyons: If
Keith Taff: the
Dorian Lyons: we're able to really bring an innovative product.
Keith Taff: Now you're talking about sixty to eighty for example.
Dorian Lyons: Yeah the really
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Dorian Lyons: But
Keith Taff: Sixty.
Dorian Lyons: I'd have to look into that a little more.
Keith Taff: Okay. And different cultures. Are we
Christopher Smith: Well I don't think they have different television sets uh
Darren Rivera: Mm.
Keith Taff: Okay.
Christopher Smith: in uh every country.
Keith Taff: No.
Darren Rivera: No.
Christopher Smith: 'Cause
Keith Taff: We've got five minutes
Darren Rivera: So
Keith Taff: left just
Darren Rivera: 'Kay.
Keith Taff: now.
Dorian Lyons: 'Kay.
Keith Taff: Small warning.
Dorian Lyons: And with uh the little screen in it, which explains the buttons.
Keith Taff: Should
Dorian Lyons: You could I think we n it would be a lot easier to adapt it to different cultures.
Keith Taff: Yeah. In different languages, you
Dorian Lyons: Yeah.
Keith Taff: know.
Christopher Smith: Yeah.
Keith Taff: Yeah.
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: or you have to put a
Darren Rivera: Right.
Keith Taff: language button in it, but that will be
Darren Rivera: No.
Keith Taff: a bit unnecessary
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: I think.
Dorian Lyons: Yeah.
Keith Taff: It's better to put it on different markets with it all.
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Christopher Smith: Yeah.
Keith Taff: Okay. So that's the the target. Uh then a few small things. Uh okay. I will put the minutes in the project uh project document folder. Um what we're going to do for the next meeting is Christopher Smith will do the components concept, User Interface Designer the user interface concept, and the trend-watching. So just keep in mind the things we've said about the target group, uh requirements, and the trends which are uh going on. And uh specific instructions will be sent to you by uh the personal coach.
Dorian Lyons: 'Kay.
Keith Taff: So um I thank you for this meeting. And I think we have a lunch-break now.
Dorian Lyons: That's good.
Darren Rivera: Yeah.
Keith Taff: So that's a good thing. | Keith Taff stated the agenda and Dorian Lyons discussed what functions are most relevant on a remote, what the target demographic is, and what his vision for the appearance of the remote is. Dorian Lyons also brought up the idea to include a docking station to prevent the remote from getting lost and the idea to include an LCD screen. Darren Rivera pushed for a user-friendly interface with large buttons, a display function, a touchscreen, and the capability of controlling different devices. Christopher Smith discussed the interior workings of a remote and Keith Taff briefed the team on some new requirements they are to abide by. The team then discussed teletext, the target demographic, the buttons the remote should have, the idea of marketing a remote designed for the elderly, an audio signal which can sound if the remote is lost, LCD screens, and language options. | 1 | amisum | train |
Robert Hebert: Okay. Uh good afternoon.
Sammie Moran: Good afternoon.
Robert Hebert: This is our third meeting already. I hope you enjoyed your lunch. I did anyway. Um let's see. Presentation three. Okay this is um the second phase uh we're going to discuss today. It's the conceptual design meeting. And a few points of interest in this meeting um are the conceptual specification of components. Uh conceptual specification of design. And also trend-watching. Um these are hopefully the points you addressed in uh your pre uh presentations going show Sammie Moran in a few minutes. Um but first I'll show you the agenda. Uh first the opening. Then we have three presentations. Uh after that we have to come to a decision on remote control concepts. How we're going to make it. And then we're closing. We have about forty minutes. Uh so I suggest let's get started. Uh did someone encounter any problems during the preparation? No?
Christian Rodriguez: No.
Robert Hebert: Everything fine? That's nice. Then a little uh thing about the last meeting. Uh these are the points um we agreed on. The requirements and the target market. Uh requirements are uh teletext, docking station, audio signal, small screen, with some extras that uh button information. And we are going to use default materials. Um does somebody have any comments on these requirements? Maybe? No? These are just the the things we thought of, so maybe if you figured something else or thought of something else, just let Sammie Moran know. And maybe we can uh work it out. And we're going to target uh sixty to to eighty year old customers. So now everybody knows what we're do we're doing, um I suggest let's get started with the presentations. So shall we keep the same uh line-up as uh last time?
Sammie Moran: Sure.
Robert Hebert: Okay.
Sammie Moran: I'll start off then.
Robert Hebert: Good luck.
Sammie Moran: Doh.
Sammie Moran: 'Kay I'm uh gonna inform you about the trend-watching I've done over the past few days. Um we've done some market research. We distributed some more enquetes, questionnaires. And um besides that um I deployed some trend-watchers to Milan and Paris to well get all of the newest trends. And I've consulted some additional trend-watch trend-watchers, after the original trend-watchers return, about what the the best design would be. Um okay these are some overall findings. Um most important thing is the fancy design. Um the research indicated that that was by far the most important factor. Um innovativeness was about half as important as the fancy design. By innovativeness this means um functions which are not featured in other remote controls. Um about half of, half as important as the innovativeness was the was easy to use. Um for our um group, we're focusing on the people of sixty to eighty y years old, this is um, these factors are slightly more equal. 'Kay these are some more group specific findings. Uh the older people prefer dark colours. Uh they like recognisable shapes, and familiar material. And our surveys have indicated that especially wood is pretty much the material for older people. Um this is, this image will give you a little bit of an impression about um the look-and-feel that um the remote should have. Um this leads us to some personal preferences. Uh the remote control and the docking station should uh blend in in the in the room. Um so this would mean no uh eye-catching designs. Just keep it simple and Well the docking station and small screen would be our main points of interest, because this would be the These would uh be the innovativeness in the remote control. So this would be very important that we at least include these features. Um well the trend-watchers I consulted advised that it b should be, the remote control and the docking station should be telephone-shaped. So you could imagine that uh the remote control will be standing up straight in the docking station. This is not really This is pretty much a new shape to uh older people. So they would prefer uh a design where the remote control just lies flat in the docking station. So it would be kinda more telephone-shaped. Um besides that we would advise um to bring two editions, one with a wood-like colour and maybe feel, and one with a grey-black colour. The wood-like for the more uh exclusive people. People with more money. Uh the grey-black colour for well people with less means. That would be all.
Robert Hebert: Okay. Thank you. Any questions about the
Sammie Moran: Any
Robert Hebert: the trends?
Sammie Moran: questions?
Robert Hebert: Mayb
Christian Rodriguez: Mm no.
Robert Hebert: No? Okay, we go on to the next one.
Christian Rodriguez: Um 'kay um. uh some uh research uh a about um designing of an interface. Um the uh last meeting uh we had a about um uh using a f few buttons. So uh um uh that's w what I what I want to uh uh to do in uh our design. So um finding an attractive uh way to control uh the remote control. Um the uh I found some uh something about uh speech uh recognition. So maybe uh we uh uh that. Uh and uh using a little uh display. So um findings. Um yeah just um we have just to focus on the primary um functions. So uh only uh buttons uh for uh sound, um for uh on-off, um uh shifting u up uh sa uh ca channel or uh down shifting down. Um uh let's see. Um yeah and Uh we uh need some uh new a attractive functions uh uh which attract uh uh people for using it. So uh it's uh like a speak uh speech uh recognition and um a special button for selecting uh subtitles. Just uh what we uh mentioned uh last uh meeting. Um and yeah overall um user-friendly. So uh using uh large large buttons. Um It's uh possible to uh uh to make um quite cheap uh system for uh speech uh recognition. Um you can think about um uh when you lost your um remote control, you can uh call it and um it gives an um sig signal. So uh uh yeah. And and uh for uh shifting up a sen uh c ch channel or uh for um uh putting out uh sound or something, you can uh just give a sign uh say um sound off or A and uh yeah. Television uh put the sound off uh put the sound off uh. Um Let's see. Uh yeah. I was thinking about the special uh button for uh subtitles, um just one button to keep it uh simple. Uh one push on the button uh you get uh uh small uh subtitles. Um double push push um, if double click, um so uh you get uh big uh subtitles, for uh people uh um uh which c f uh who can't uh read small uh subtitles. So uh Um Yeah and w we have to keep uh in general buttons uh so um we've got um the buttons we have to use. The on-off, sound on-off, sound higher or lower, um the numbers, uh zero to uh uh nine. Um the general buttons m more general b one button for shifting up and shifting down uh channel. Um also we want to uh use a little d display uh for um for displaying the uh the functions of the buttons. And um we can uh build in a function f which uh shows the channel or some uh which the t television is on. So um made a little uh picture of uh it. Um See. Um yeah. Just um we can put uh the on-off button uh over in this uh corner, um almost uh e all uh remote controls uh are using a on-off button on that place. Um so uh people uh will uh recognise uh um the button. So um D display uh of it, it's uh just a small display. Uh um you can put it uh on top. Um it's uh most uh uh place where people uh, most of looks at. So uh um and a special uh button for shifting up uh and uh shifting down uh channel, um it's uh on place where um the thumb of of the So you you can uh easily uh shift up or shift down. Um it's uh quite uh handy place. So um and uh all the f functions for subtitle uh one button, uh for sound uh Uh and uh for our design, um uh we have to discuss about it uh I think uh so uh the form of it so
Robert Hebert: Okay.
Christian Rodriguez: And that's it.
Robert Hebert: Uh thank you.
Miguel Carmon: Okay. About the components design. Um for the energy source we can use a basic battery or, a as an optional thing, a kinetic energy, like in a watch, which you just shake and it produces energy. But if we choose for that option, the docking station would c become obsolete. So I don't think it's really an option. Uh for the casing, uh the uh manufacturing department can deliver uh a flat casing, single or double curved casing. we're gonna use. It's uh doesn't uh imply any technical restrictions. Uh as a case supplement, we could um, I thought of that l later, uh a rubber uh belt, like a anti-slip. Uh for the b buttons, we can use plastic or rubber. And the chip-set, um it says simple here, but it should be advanced, because we're using an L_C_D_ uh screen. And as uh the trend-watcher presentation showed, um people like wood, but it raises the price and it doesn't really fit the image, unless we would start two product lines. Form should follow function overall. Um well the kinetic energy source is rather fancy. But depends on what we want. I think we should disc discuss that. Um for the case, uh the supplement and the buttons, it really depends on the designer. And the chip-set uh really should be advanced because otherwise uh it would really be a simple uh remote control. And that's it.
Robert Hebert: Okay. Thank you. So that brings us to the discussion about our concepts. Mm. 'Kay.
Robert Hebert: So these are the points we have to discuss. Um first I think we can talk about the energy source, since that's um has a pretty big influence on production price, uh and image. Uh so uh f I think first of all we have to see uh it is possible to introduce kinetic energy
Miguel Carmon: Yes
Robert Hebert: in our
Miguel Carmon: w
Robert Hebert: budget,
Miguel Carmon: there
Robert Hebert: I think.
Miguel Carmon: there are four options. We could use the basic normal battery.
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Miguel Carmon: Uh a hand dynamo. But I don't think that's really an option.
Robert Hebert: Okay.
Miguel Carmon: You don't wanna swing before you can watch television.
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Miguel Carmon: Uh solar cells. But not every room is very
Christian Rodriguez: Mm.
Miguel Carmon: light so it's
Robert Hebert: No.
Miguel Carmon: not a very good option. Or the kinetic energy.
Robert Hebert: Yeah. Okay.
Sammie Moran: And how exactly does the kinetic energy work?
Miguel Carmon: Well
Sammie Moran: You
Miguel Carmon: y
Sammie Moran: just
Miguel Carmon: you basically shake your
Sammie Moran: You
Miguel Carmon: remote,
Sammie Moran: use it and
Miguel Carmon: and
Sammie Moran: it
Miguel Carmon: then it
Sammie Moran: works.
Miguel Carmon: powers up. Yeah.
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: Okay.
Christian Rodriguez: Nah.
Sammie Moran: Well personally I don't think that older people like to shake their remote control before they use it.
Miguel Carmon: Yeah. That's true.
Sammie Moran: And besides that you mentioned it would make the docking station obsolete.
Miguel Carmon: Oh.
Sammie Moran: And I think our docking station could be one of the marketing issues with which we can um get great popularity for our product.
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Christian Rodriguez: But
Sammie Moran: Um
Christian Rodriguez: what's
Sammie Moran: wel
Christian Rodriguez: the function? Yeah f for loading up uh the batteries.
Sammie Moran: Yeah you could load
Christian Rodriguez: B
Sammie Moran: up the
Christian Rodriguez: b
Sammie Moran: batteries, you could um insert the find the lost remote control function in there.
Christian Rodriguez: Okay but uh it won't use uh much e energy uh I I believe. Uh it's uh just a small display so I believe uh it will run on one battery for um six months or f or or more. So
Robert Hebert: Uh
Christian Rodriguez: I believe one battery uh is just enough. Uh so
Robert Hebert: Uh well I think
Sammie Moran: That's true.
Robert Hebert: uh elderly people just like to have everything in place. And I don't think they they like uh remotes just laying everywhere in their rooms.
Christian Rodriguez: Okay.
Robert Hebert: So maybe a docking station will help them give the remote
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: a
Christian Rodriguez: That's
Robert Hebert: place.
Christian Rodriguez: true. Yeah.
Robert Hebert: And also what you said. Um you can introduce voice recognition by uh finding back
Christian Rodriguez: Mm-hmm.
Robert Hebert: your remote.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: But I think it's um more efficient and cheaper to put it in the docking station. So you have a but button on your docking station which you can push, and then it starts beeping.
Christian Rodriguez: Okay.
Robert Hebert: And then we can we can still use
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: the voice recognition, but maybe then for only the the channels.
Christian Rodriguez: Uh.
Robert Hebert: That's
Sammie Moran: I'm wondering
Robert Hebert: safe.
Sammie Moran: um what will the voice recognition mean for the production price?
Robert Hebert: Yeah. That's a good
Miguel Carmon: Mm
Robert Hebert: point.
Miguel Carmon: I don't have any information on pricing. So I'll have to ask the manufacturing department.
Christian Rodriguez: Mm.
Sammie Moran: 'Cause in our earlier um market research, if you'd allow Sammie Moran to
Robert Hebert: Yeah,
Sammie Moran: go
Robert Hebert: sure.
Sammie Moran: to the flat board,
Robert Hebert: Go
Sammie Moran: SMARTboard.
Robert Hebert: ahead.
Sammie Moran: Um so it was open here. Um we also um asked if w they would, if people would pay more for speech recognition in a remote control. Well you can see here, our target group would not do that.
Robert Hebert: No.
Sammie Moran: So if that would increase the price for which we're selling our remote control
Christian Rodriguez: Mm.
Sammie Moran: I would greatly advise not to do it.
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: I think that would be better to uh insert in our other product, that is meant for the
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: younger people.
Miguel Carmon: But that
Christian Rodriguez: 'Kay.
Miguel Carmon: would also go for the L_C_D_ screen then I guess. It's a bit higher percentage, but
Sammie Moran: Um well this is Yeah but this is here the question was, would you prefer it. So that doesn't really mean they wouldn't pay extra for it. And on top of that the L_C_D_ screen would um help in making the remote control easier to use.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: And
Miguel Carmon: Okay.
Sammie Moran: I think a voice recognition function would not make the remote control much
Robert Hebert: Easier
Sammie Moran: easier
Robert Hebert: to
Sammie Moran: to use.
Robert Hebert: use? No, I think that's a good point.
Christian Rodriguez: But uh is uh our uh research um about um bi large uh L_C_D_ sh uh display, or uh just a small one uh we want to uh use?
Sammie Moran: Um well this was for like an L_C_D_ screen like you would have on a on the the most advanced mobile phones.
Christian Rodriguez: Okay.
Sammie Moran: So pretty large.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: Yeah. I personally think the L_C_D_ screen we wanna use, with the extra information, I think nobody has anything against it. Because
Christian Rodriguez: No.
Robert Hebert: it's just uh some extra information, and it's easy to ignore as well.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: So if you don't wanna use it you just don't use it. And um yeah I think the um Maybe we have to uh discard the voice recognition. Because it will increase cost uh signifi uh significantly. And I don't think the I don't think it will be a lot easier to use, as well.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: So that brings us back to the energy. If we don't have the voice recognition, it will it won't use a lot of energy to use.
Christian Rodriguez: Mm-hmm.
Robert Hebert: Um So in that case we could use kinetic uh energy, but I think just a simple battery which you can reload on a docking station is just as good. And much cheaper as well.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: So
Miguel Carmon: And that's the best choice.
Robert Hebert: Okay let Sammie Moran just choose for the battery. That brings us to the chip.
Miguel Carmon: Well there isn't any choice there because
Robert Hebert: Just
Miguel Carmon: we're using
Robert Hebert: the advanced.
Miguel Carmon: the the the the display. So it's gotta be advanced.
Robert Hebert: Okay,
Sammie Moran: 'Kay.
Robert Hebert: advanced chip. And then we get to the point of the case. Um which brings us a little bit back to marketing as well. Uh if we wanna choose for wood or the black and grey. Or both? Um as we saw there is not Yeah wood is a lot more expensive to produce.
Sammie Moran: Mm-hmm.
Robert Hebert: Um but I think it will attract elderly people who wanna have something exclusive, which they can show off to their
Sammie Moran: Mm-hmm.
Robert Hebert: grandkids. Look I've got a new remote
Sammie Moran: Well
Robert Hebert: control,
Christian Rodriguez: Uh
Robert Hebert: and uh
Christian Rodriguez: I
Sammie Moran: And
Christian Rodriguez: dunno.
Sammie Moran: I think most important factor there is the wooden colour. So it wouldn't actually have to be wood,
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: if it's just
Robert Hebert: That's right.
Sammie Moran: wood-coloured.
Christian Rodriguez: Mm.
Robert Hebert: But with colour was a lot more expensive? Or?
Miguel Carmon: Mm I dunno.
Robert Hebert: You don't know?
Miguel Carmon: I'll have to uh
Robert Hebert: I think
Miguel Carmon: research.
Robert Hebert: so because Yeah.
Sammie Moran: Probably.
Christian Rodriguez: Mm.
Robert Hebert: It's a lot more difficult to to handle and to to get in the right shape.
Christian Rodriguez: Uh is it possible uh to make um changeable uh case. So um uh you 'cause uh Yeah with uh mobile phones uh uh so uh like the Nokia
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Christian Rodriguez: mobile phones, uh when you can change the case of it.
Robert Hebert: Change
Christian Rodriguez: So
Robert Hebert: the cases. Yeah.
Christian Rodriguez: maybe it's possible uh possibility. So um um you have just to make one um standard um remote control,
Robert Hebert: You can sell the cases.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: Yeah I. think that's a very good option. Because um then you can advertise as well with the Give your grandfather a new case
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: for his remote control, or whatever. Because that's a it's something extra, it's something other remotes don't have,
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: which we can
Sammie Moran: Yeah
Robert Hebert: get a great
Sammie Moran: that
Robert Hebert: advantage
Sammie Moran: is true.
Robert Hebert: point. So and then you can make them with colour. Black and grey, other colours
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: as well.
Sammie Moran: Yeah. We would have to look carefully into the design
Robert Hebert: Costs.
Sammie Moran: though. 'Cause we would have to make one w uh control which would fit in with a wooden cover and a plastic cover.
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: The more original one, or the more standard one.
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: So that would
Robert Hebert: So you suggest we should design two different telephones on
Sammie Moran: Well
Robert Hebert: which
Sammie Moran: I wouldn't
Robert Hebert: you can
Sammie Moran: design
Robert Hebert: apply,
Sammie Moran: a telephone but
Robert Hebert: yeah remote controls, on which you can apply different case covers,
Sammie Moran: Well no I
Robert Hebert: for
Sammie Moran: think
Robert Hebert: example.
Sammie Moran: w we should just, we should then just design one um
Robert Hebert: Remote.
Sammie Moran: one remote, but it would have to be fancy with either the wood cover or the
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: plastic one.
Robert Hebert: Okay.
Sammie Moran: So, but that shouldn't be too much of a problem.
Robert Hebert: So everybody's okay with the changing covers?
Miguel Carmon: Yes.
Robert Hebert: I
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: think that's a good uh good option. Changing case covers.
Sammie Moran: Um I heard our Industrial Designer talk about uh flat, single and double curved.
Miguel Carmon: Yes.
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: explain that a little more?
Miguel Carmon: Well the the general like most older remotes are flat, just straight.
Sammie Moran: Mm-hmm.
Miguel Carmon: And uh our d manufacturing department can also deliver single curved or double curved ca curved cases.
Sammie Moran: And what would single curved and double curved mean?
Miguel Carmon: Um it would just only affect the form, for as far as I know. So it's j really just up to the design department what we're gonna use.
Sammie Moran: Okay.
Miguel Carmon: It doesn't really matter for the price or the functionality.
Sammie Moran: So we can pretty much just
Miguel Carmon: Pick one
Sammie Moran: do whatever
Miguel Carmon: you like,
Sammie Moran: we want.
Miguel Carmon: yes.
Robert Hebert: Mm.
Sammie Moran: 'Kay.
Robert Hebert: Okay.
Sammie Moran: That's good.
Robert Hebert: Uh but the form has to be um It has to It's has to be possible to stand up? Or just only to
Sammie Moran: No
Robert Hebert: lie down?
Sammie Moran: just to lie down.
Christian Rodriguez: okay.
Robert Hebert: And the the
Sammie Moran: We'll
Robert Hebert: cover
Sammie Moran: go for that.
Robert Hebert: of the the docking station is also on top of the television then? Or not?
Sammie Moran: Well or besides it.
Robert Hebert: And you can just yeah then click it in. That's okay. Um so the interface. What type of interface do we want to use? Um maybe you can make a little drawing of it on the
Sammie Moran: Mm-hmm.
Robert Hebert: on the the board.
Christian Rodriguez: Mm.
Robert Hebert: Does somebody have ideas for a form or
Christian Rodriguez: Uh we can just use the regular form of it, but it's um not quite uh fancy. So um Yeah.
Sammie Moran: Um you uh said you wanted to put the um changing channels button on the right side, so you could,
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: so your thumb would be easily
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: Well uh I think that was a very good point 'cause I pointed out earlier that a lot of remotes cause R_S_I_. So that would be great for that. Um I thought maybe we could just make one of those buttons on both the left and the right side.
Christian Rodriguez: For
Sammie Moran: For
Christian Rodriguez: uh
Sammie Moran: left-handed users
Christian Rodriguez: Uh for Yeah yeah.
Sammie Moran: also.
Robert Hebert: Yep.
Christian Rodriguez: Mm. Yeah we um Is it possible to um program it s so uh you got on the left side uh or on the right side uh buttons for for shifting u up and shifting up? And on the uh other uh uh o other side uh buttons for uh shifting, uh for for the sound?
Sammie Moran: For the
Christian Rodriguez: Or
Sammie Moran: volume.
Christian Rodriguez: Or isn't
Sammie Moran: Um
Christian Rodriguez: it?
Robert Hebert: Mm.
Sammie Moran: well that could Yeah we could do that but I'm not sure if that would be very good for the easy, ease of
Robert Hebert: Usabili
Sammie Moran: use.
Robert Hebert: Yeah
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah
Robert Hebert: ease
Christian Rodriguez: okay.
Robert Hebert: of use will be a lot more difficult, and then it's
Christian Rodriguez: Uh.
Sammie Moran: But if we would make um a changing channels and changing volume button on both sides, that would certainly yield great options for the design of the remote.
Christian Rodriguez: Mm.
Sammie Moran: 'Cause it could be made all symmetrical and stuff.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah but
Robert Hebert: But you have extra buttons.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: So people can get confused.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: That is true.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: Especially if they have the same writings on it.
Christian Rodriguez: See um yeah. Or we have to make a left uh
Robert Hebert: Can't
Christian Rodriguez: For
Robert Hebert: we make
Christian Rodriguez: lefties
Robert Hebert: uh
Christian Rodriguez: and
Robert Hebert: Can't we make a remote which you can flip over and use on the same
Christian Rodriguez: Um
Robert Hebert: functions as the normal one?
Christian Rodriguez: You mean um
Robert Hebert: Then you have
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah
Robert Hebert: to
Christian Rodriguez: if
Robert Hebert: Let's see if I ca A blank one. And then you get
Robert Hebert: Here's a little L_C_D_ screen. Uh now I have to think.
Robert Hebert: It's a plus and a min. No it's not very handy I think.
Christian Rodriguez: Mm
Robert Hebert: Because
Christian Rodriguez: no.
Robert Hebert: the plus and the min will be opposite and
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: all kinds of No that's not gonna work. I guess. Maybe
Christian Rodriguez: Um
Robert Hebert: we should Yeah. But is it a problem that left-handed persons use a different hand? I think the functions are that basic that nobody should have any problems with uh
Sammie Moran: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: choosing a channel
Sammie Moran: That is
Robert Hebert: or
Sammie Moran: true.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah. It's just uh u using uh your thumb.
Robert Hebert: Y
Christian Rodriguez: So
Robert Hebert: yeah.
Christian Rodriguez: um
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Christian Rodriguez: it's
Robert Hebert: I think we could just uh leave it a normal shape.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Miguel Carmon: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: Uh but maybe we have to make it a l a bit more fancy. In one or ano another way.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah. Um
Miguel Carmon: I think we should start by by choosing a case. Because that's the basis
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah
Miguel Carmon: you're building on.
Christian Rodriguez: yeah.
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: Um
Miguel Carmon: So I could
Robert Hebert: yeah
Miguel Carmon: draw
Robert Hebert: just
Miguel Carmon: them out. Let's look at the flat case. Oh. It's from the side so it's
Christian Rodriguez: Mm-hmm.
Sammie Moran: Mm-hmm.
Miguel Carmon: rather normal.
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Miguel Carmon: The the single curved so I'm not really sure what they're gonna look like, but I think it's something like this.
Miguel Carmon: So this type should be better for you or better Should prevent
Robert Hebert: Easier?
Miguel Carmon: repetitive strain injury a bit. And the double curved s looks something like this I guess.
Christian Rodriguez: Mm.
Miguel Carmon: So th those are the three options we have.
Robert Hebert: 'Kay.
Sammie Moran: Mm.
Robert Hebert: I suggest um the single curved, because maybe the curve is pretty good to put the the screen in. Uh so that elderly people can uh use the remote control and at the same time look easily at the screen, because it's a bit,
Christian Rodriguez: So um
Robert Hebert: it has a bit of a angle.
Christian Rodriguez: Do you say this um S uh Uh you got like uh sort of a I believe There?
Sammie Moran: Mm-hmm.
Christian Rodriguez: So um you want to put a display over here? Or not?
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: I think so. Yeah.
Christian Rodriguez: Um Yeah.
Robert Hebert: But
Christian Rodriguez: Uh
Robert Hebert: now it's
Christian Rodriguez: we can make it
Robert Hebert: Do
Christian Rodriguez: um
Robert Hebert: you have it upside down or
Christian Rodriguez: Mm?
Robert Hebert: Do you
Christian Rodriguez: That's
Robert Hebert: have it
Christian Rodriguez: the top. So
Robert Hebert: this
Christian Rodriguez: uh
Robert Hebert: that's
Christian Rodriguez: this
Robert Hebert: top?
Christian Rodriguez: top. This down.
Robert Hebert: Okay.
Christian Rodriguez: Um maybe it's possible to uh make this side like um Let's see. Um Colour uh okay. Uh to make this side um like mm the right colour. Um bit like so uh um in the form of your hand. So um Uh it's an
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Christian Rodriguez: So so the remote control have to um lay in your hand. So uh it's possib um yeah for
Robert Hebert: So
Christian Rodriguez: s
Robert Hebert: get
Christian Rodriguez: so
Robert Hebert: your
Christian Rodriguez: and
Robert Hebert: mouse. Yeah.
Christian Rodriguez: And to put uh the the buttons for um changing uh the channel uh over here uh
Robert Hebert: Yeah. That's a good one.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Miguel Carmon: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: But I think it's better to put the screen uh on top.
Christian Rodriguez: Uh
Robert Hebert: So just
Christian Rodriguez: rem
Robert Hebert: flip it a hundred and eighty degrees around then you
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah
Robert Hebert: get
Christian Rodriguez: but this place um
Robert Hebert: here. If you can have this one, you turn it like this. And then flip it upside down.
Christian Rodriguez: Uh it's Yeah I dunno um
Robert Hebert: Because uh maybe your hand is in the way, if you have the display
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: Mm-hmm.
Robert Hebert: here.
Miguel Carmon: It's more logical to have it on top as well because,
Robert Hebert: I think i
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah
Miguel Carmon: like on your mobile phone,
Christian Rodriguez: so
Miguel Carmon: it's always above.
Sammie Moran: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: On top.
Christian Rodriguez: So
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Miguel Carmon: Oh maybe you should just s start on a blank page.
Sammie Moran: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: So then we get
Robert Hebert: Here's That's the curve.
Christian Rodriguez: Five minutes.
Robert Hebert: Here the display, and then buttons. Yeah and then we can have a little bit off here and here maybe. Just that's for left hand and right hand users.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: Mm-hmm.
Robert Hebert: And then h the rest of the buttons over
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: here.
Christian Rodriguez: But um the on-off button, um still on the top
Robert Hebert: Yeah
Christian Rodriguez: uh
Robert Hebert: still
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: here jus
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: That's
Sammie Moran: And I'd prefer the corners to be round.
Robert Hebert: Yeah.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah. 'Kay.
Sammie Moran: Think
Robert Hebert: Should
Sammie Moran: that would
Robert Hebert: be
Sammie Moran: be
Robert Hebert: more
Sammie Moran: better.
Robert Hebert: bit more friendly, yeah.
Sammie Moran: Friendly on the eye.
Robert Hebert: 'Kay. Supplements. That's okay. Where's my mouse? Then We've got a general idea of the concepts and the materials we're going to use. So now for the next meeting uh we'll have to look at the look-and-feel design. It's important that the corporate design image uh is going to be in the remote. So check out the corporate website maybe. The user interface design, it's the same story. And product evaluation. So Miguel Carmon and User Interface Designer are going to work together on this one. But you're going to get your instructions I think sended by the coach. So just um I will put these um minutes on the in the folder.
Miguel Carmon: Okay.
Robert Hebert: And then we're going to uh try to finish our project, and uh make a good design for all the grandfathers and grandmothers, I think. Which are Uh let's see. I'm not sure if you're going to start right away to work together or I think you're going to fill in the questionnaires first.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Sammie Moran: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: And then you'll get a message.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: So that's uh basically it. Maybe this one? Then we can save this one in the folders group. Uh yes, it's here.
Sammie Moran: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: SMARTboard, there it it. So if you wanna have a look at it, it's over there in the projects folder.
Christian Rodriguez: Yeah.
Robert Hebert: And then I guess we'll start in thirty minutes again. Thank
Sammie Moran: Very
Robert Hebert: you.
Sammie Moran: good.
Miguel Carmon: Okay.
Christian Rodriguez: Okay. | Robert Hebert opened the meeting and recapped the decisions made in the previous meeting. Sammie Moran discussed his personal preferences for the design of the remote and presented the results of trend-watching reports, which indicated that there is a need for products which are fancy, innovative, easy to use, in dark colors, in recognizable shapes, and in a familiar material like wood. Christian Rodriguez discussed the option to include speech recognition and which functions to include on the remote. Miguel Carmon discussed which options he preferred for the remote in terms of energy sources, casing, case supplements, buttons, and chips. The team then discussed and made decisions regarding energy sources, speech recognition, LCD screens, chips, case materials and colors, case shape and orientation, and button orientation. | 1 | amisum | train |
Ernesto Whitaker: So
Ernesto Whitaker: Hello.
Dennis Cleaver: Good afternoon. Sorry I'm a little late.
Ernesto Whitaker: No problem
Dennis Cleaver: Got stuck in the traffic.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay. That's possible on uh this time of day. Starts at three o'clock. Uh
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Uh, let Dennis Cleaver see. Our fourth and last meeting. There he is. Yes. Okay this our last meeting. In this meeting we will discuss our final design. And we will do some evaluation about the, not only the product, but also the project. And then we're going to close the project today as well. So after this you be free to go and uh spend all your money. And this uh design, detailed design meeting uh we will discuss uh the look-and-feel of the design, the usability interface design, and we will do the product evaluation. Um, in order to do that we have this agenda. We'll have the prototype presentation first. Then we will set up some evaluation cri um criteria. Then we will look at the finance. Uh we will have to see if everything we wanna do is also possible within our budget. Because everything costs money, and the more functions you wanna have the more money it will cost. So we have to see if it fits within the twelve and a half Euro per remote. But we will see that later. Then we will do the project uh evaluation, and the closing after that. We've got forty minutes. So we will be finished at half past three. But first um we will do the this is prototype presentation. So, if some
Richard Conorich: Okay.
Ernesto Whitaker: yeah if somebody wants step forward.
Richard Conorich: Well this what Dennis Cleaver Richard came up with. The default spot for the on-off button. The mute button just below that. Then there's the volume and channel selectors. Simple plus-minus button. Uh we thought of a help button. If you hold it and you press another button, uh the help goes to the L_C_D_ screen. Then there's the zero to one to zero buttons. A button for teletext. A button for the subtitles. And the company logo. And uh we'll have to see from testing uh how the users take it.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay.
Dennis Cleaver: Um, is this the moment where we
Christian Page: So
Dennis Cleaver: ask or can ask questions about the functionality?
Richard Conorich: Sure
Christian Page: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: uh
Christian Page: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: just pop in at any time.
Dennis Cleaver: Um, when you're in teletext there usually are buttons where you just you just press it and you g go to the next teletext page.
Christian Page: Uh, uh the uh as th as the normal uh remote controls uh So um You put it uh you um came in uh page uh one hundred. Now
Dennis Cleaver: Mm-hmm.
Christian Page: you can use the normal uh one to zero buttons. And you But you can also uh use the um button th for uh changing the S so shifting.
Dennis Cleaver: Okay.
Christian Page: yeah shifting up in on t on t down. So
Dennis Cleaver: Okay. Um Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay. Uh but um I thought in a few meetings earlier we uh uh tried to keep it uh simple.
Christian Page: Oh yeah?
Ernesto Whitaker: Uh just a few buttons and large buttons. But uh I think these are altogether quite a quite a few buttons. So I'm wondering if we if we neely really need all of those buttons.
Richard Conorich: I think if you look at most controls, they've got more buttons than this.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's right.
Richard Conorich: And
Christian Page: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: well the on-off button, it's it's a necessity. You
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: can't drop that one. The volume and channel buttons, you need you obviously need those those.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: The mute button could be replaced uh by pressing the volume-down button twice. So we could cancel that one. I think the help button really is necessary
Christian Page: Yeah
Richard Conorich: because
Christian Page: yeah.
Richard Conorich: there's no other way to know when someone wants to know what a button does.
Ernesto Whitaker: Mm.
Christian Page: Uh, or you can build in uh when you press uh one button uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Long
Christian Page: uh
Ernesto Whitaker: time.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. If
Christian Page: But
Ernesto Whitaker: you put
Christian Page: m Yeah. We disc discuss that already. But uh we think uh old people uh don't know that uh option. So uh they just put in uh put press uh the button and uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. Okay.
Richard Conorich: Well, you can't leave out the number buttons I guess.
Christian Page: And uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: And
Ernesto Whitaker: Uh teletext and subtitles are
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: yeah
Christian Page: Oh.
Ernesto Whitaker: necessary.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay.
Richard Conorich: So it's rather basic already.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah. Think so. That's what I pointed out earlier. If you just make a for just the T_V_ there's just not much to gain here.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yep. Okay. So we had somebody about th interfa Something about the design of the buttons there?
Richard Conorich: Yeah, they're It's
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Just n normal
Richard Conorich: rather
Ernesto Whitaker: plain
Richard Conorich: hard
Christian Page: Yeah,
Richard Conorich: to
Christian Page: it
Richard Conorich: draw
Ernesto Whitaker: buttons.
Richard Conorich: on the white-board. But they're supposed to be equal sized, round, with a with a little logo on it for the for the volume, the
Christian Page: Yeah
Richard Conorich: the triangle
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: yeah.
Richard Conorich: and
Christian Page: Just
Richard Conorich: stuff.
Christian Page: to recognise
Ernesto Whitaker: 'Kay.
Christian Page: it, so
Richard Conorich: Just for
Christian Page: uh
Richard Conorich: recognition.
Christian Page: Uh yeah and now we don't need uh LEDs or um
Ernesto Whitaker: No.
Christian Page: Y uh s some uh remote controls uh do it also,
Ernesto Whitaker: No.
Christian Page: but um uh because we use the little display we don't uh have to use it. Uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: so
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay.
Richard Conorich: So and for the materials we've just chosen for rubber buttons.
Christian Page: Nay.
Richard Conorich: With
Ernesto Whitaker: Yep.
Richard Conorich: a a different colour than the case. So they jump out.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay.
Richard Conorich: And uh that's about it.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's nice. Then because we only have thirty minutes left, I will move on to the finance part, which is pretty exciting, to see if it's all possible what we wanna do. And I can tell you that we're going to have a pretty hard time producing this for twelve and a half Euros.
Christian Page: Mm.
Ernesto Whitaker: If we see I don't know if I've filled in correctly, so just correct Dennis Cleaver if you see uh something wrong. I counted two batteries. But maybe we can also use one. I don't know if it's
Dennis Cleaver: Since
Ernesto Whitaker: possible.
Dennis Cleaver: it rechargeable.
Ernesto Whitaker: It's rechargeable. That's
Christian Page: Yeah
Ernesto Whitaker: right.
Christian Page: we can u just uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay. That's two Euros off.
Christian Page: 'Kay.
Ernesto Whitaker: We need the advanced chip. So there's
Richard Conorich: Yep.
Ernesto Whitaker: not much to uh to save there. Here we have the single curves. Uh we can see that the difference between uncurved and the single curved is one Euro.
Christian Page: Mm.
Ernesto Whitaker: Um, I don't know, but I think the single curved is good for design,
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: and also for the display to have a prominent place on the remote control.
Richard Conorich: Yes.
Ernesto Whitaker: I think we have to keep that.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Then we have the case material supplements. It's plastic. It's the cheapest one we need. So that's uh not much to save either. But then the biggest costs are the buttons. So maybe we really should try to
Christian Page: Okay.
Ernesto Whitaker: discard some buttons to uh keep our costs low.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Because you have to we will have to get the twelve and a half Euros at the end. Um, so if we Let's fir first count
Christian Page: Uh
Ernesto Whitaker: the buttons we have now. Because
Christian Page: Sixteen,
Ernesto Whitaker: I
Christian Page: I believe so.
Ernesto Whitaker: Sixteen. Nah, that will be even more then. Eighteen Euros. So,
Christian Page: Uh seventeen.
Ernesto Whitaker: seventeen.
Dennis Cleaver: Um
Christian Page: Uh with the help button.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay,
Richard Conorich: Yep.
Ernesto Whitaker: including the
Dennis Cleaver: Damn.
Ernesto Whitaker: help?
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. Uh seventeen. I think we can uh discard the help and the mute button uh by pressing down volume long, or pressing down a a number
Richard Conorich: Yep.
Ernesto Whitaker: long. That saves us uh one Euro already. 'Cause then we have got fifteen I think?
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: Wouldn't Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Fifteen
Dennis Cleaver: No.
Ernesto Whitaker: buttons.
Dennis Cleaver: That wouldn't be an option.
Ernesto Whitaker: And
Dennis Cleaver: Uh,
Ernesto Whitaker: this
Dennis Cleaver: d
Ernesto Whitaker: is
Dennis Cleaver: I assume you'd count the volume and channel thingies for two buttons each, right?
Ernesto Whitaker: No those are one,
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: I think.
Dennis Cleaver: Well, think
Christian Page: Where
Dennis Cleaver: actually
Christian Page: did
Dennis Cleaver: there're two
Christian Page: uh
Dennis Cleaver: buttons,
Christian Page: Uh,
Dennis Cleaver: aren't they?
Christian Page: it's just one button. But, um Yeah. There were uh two uh for one big button. But they are uh more expensive than the small ones. Uh, yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah
Christian Page: So
Ernesto Whitaker: but th it's not stated in this
Christian Page: It's just a.
Ernesto Whitaker: files. So maybe we can we can even make one button with the volume and the channel in one, by
Dennis Cleaver: Well
Ernesto Whitaker: pressing
Dennis Cleaver: I was thinking, maybe you could just integrate three of those numbers to one button.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's possibility as well.
Dennis Cleaver: That would cut the cost.
Ernesto Whitaker: So And it's good for the design as well. So you can make Uh let's see. If you make this
Ernesto Whitaker: Looks a bit like uh a cross. Plus. Min.
Christian Page: But I don't don't know if if it's
Ernesto Whitaker: Uh s yeah
Christian Page: cheaper.
Ernesto Whitaker: channel.
Christian Page: So uh,
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah
Christian Page: we've
Ernesto Whitaker: w
Christian Page: still got four buttons, but just um So
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah th I think they count uh the materials.
Christian Page: You got uh not not a butt button itself, but uh on the um
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah on the chip there.
Christian Page: Yeah. On
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: the chip
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Christian Page: you've got still
Dennis Cleaver: Mm-hmm.
Christian Page: uh four
Ernesto Whitaker: That's
Christian Page: uh
Ernesto Whitaker: right. That's right.
Christian Page: four buttons. So
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: But I think because we have the advanced chip
Christian Page: Yeah, but
Ernesto Whitaker: we can just count this as one button. But No but I
Dennis Cleaver: But,
Ernesto Whitaker: think
Dennis Cleaver: I think this really is four buttons anyhow.
Richard Conorich: Yes.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. Maybe it is, but then it seems to Dennis Cleaver that it's impossible to get the twelve and a half Euros. Also the
Dennis Cleaver: Yes.
Ernesto Whitaker: L_C_ display,
Richard Conorich: Uh that's
Ernesto Whitaker: I
Richard Conorich: that's
Ernesto Whitaker: think
Richard Conorich: a big
Ernesto Whitaker: it's,
Richard Conorich: cost.
Ernesto Whitaker: I think it's too expensive for the display we use.
Richard Conorich: If we leave out the display we can also save money on the chip.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's right, but what's the big advantage of our remote then?
Dennis Cleaver: Only the docking station, I guess.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: Which isn't the the docking station isn't even in this c s schematic.
Ernesto Whitaker: No.
Richard Conorich: So it's not even
Ernesto Whitaker: That's
Richard Conorich: taken
Ernesto Whitaker: extra.
Richard Conorich: into the price.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's extra. That's right.
Dennis Cleaver: Maybe we should to a different supplier.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's an option. Poland. Something.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Polish supplier. Don't you think we can, if we can count this as v as one button, and integrate th uh these buttons in three, then we save a lot of money as well.
Richard Conorich: We we could save money on it. But would it make the remote more usable for elderly people?
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah, that's what I'm wondering.
Richard Conorich: My mother can't even send send an S_M_S_ message. So
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. That's a point.
Dennis Cleaver: Um
Christian Page: Are we gonna buy a um a remote control uh when you can uh use it? So um Yeah. We m uh we must um stay below the um below um twelve uh fifty or
Ernesto Whitaker: Yep.
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Christian Page: Can't uh go um
Ernesto Whitaker: No.
Dennis Cleaver: Well, since the market research indicated that older people spend their money easier, more easy, maybe it's feasible to just put the price of the remote up a little. Especially since we have those
Christian Page: Nay.
Dennis Cleaver: nice features.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah but uh we have to stick to the twelve and a half Euros. We don't have any more budget to
Richard Conorich: The margin
Ernesto Whitaker: develop
Christian Page: Is it
Richard Conorich: will
Christian Page: impossible
Richard Conorich: get
Ernesto Whitaker: it.
Richard Conorich: too small.
Christian Page: to
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: But it
Ernesto Whitaker: So
Christian Page: is possible to make one uh for uh twelve fifty. I don't think
Ernesto Whitaker: It
Christian Page: so.
Ernesto Whitaker: is. If
Dennis Cleaver: It
Ernesto Whitaker: you
Dennis Cleaver: would
Ernesto Whitaker: leave
Dennis Cleaver: be a be
Ernesto Whitaker: out
Dennis Cleaver: a
Ernesto Whitaker: the L_C_
Dennis Cleaver: pretty
Christian Page: S
Dennis Cleaver: rigid
Ernesto Whitaker: display.
Dennis Cleaver: one.
Ernesto Whitaker: And if you use
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: less buttons. Say
Richard Conorich: Ten.
Christian Page: But,
Ernesto Whitaker: Or you can
Christian Page: you can't use
Ernesto Whitaker: take
Christian Page: uh
Ernesto Whitaker: the single chip. There it is.
Christian Page: Yeah. But we want to make a
Ernesto Whitaker: But then
Christian Page: uh
Ernesto Whitaker: w
Christian Page: so uh uh fancy and a good uh Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Good looking.
Christian Page: Uh, wi with n Oh, with uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: attractive uh o options. So uh, you can stay uh below uh twelve fifty. So
Ernesto Whitaker: I think
Dennis Cleaver: Or
Ernesto Whitaker: it's
Dennis Cleaver: b
Ernesto Whitaker: uh difficult as well, but
Dennis Cleaver: Basically becoming a choice between like either a good remote and a higher production cost, or just
Richard Conorich: No remote.
Dennis Cleaver: any other remote control.
Ernesto Whitaker: Or we can leave out the ten buttons and take one scroll wheel for the programme numbers.
Christian Page: Scroll-wheel's
Ernesto Whitaker: Then w
Christian Page: one.
Ernesto Whitaker: Because
Richard Conorich: That's
Ernesto Whitaker: then
Christian Page: No, it
Ernesto Whitaker: we save ten buttons. Then
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: we have five and one. And and see. If we have this one and we've got the advanced W uh,
Richard Conorich: We're getting closer.
Ernesto Whitaker: we're getting
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: close.
Dennis Cleaver: But how does scroll-wheel work here?
Ernesto Whitaker: Then you will Or maybe you can um scroll. If you scroll you will see the numbers on the L_C_D_ display. Until you've
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: got the right number, then you push it.
Dennis Cleaver: That would bring up the price of the scroll-wheel also.
Ernesto Whitaker: Alright.
Dennis Cleaver: Integrated
Ernesto Whitaker: It's gotta
Dennis Cleaver: scroll-wheel
Ernesto Whitaker: scroll and
Christian Page: Mm.
Ernesto Whitaker: push.
Dennis Cleaver: push-button.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay but
Dennis Cleaver: But
Ernesto Whitaker: then you
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: you can push uh some other button as well.
Richard Conorich: You could just not scroll for a half a second.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: So
Ernesto Whitaker: That's right. So
Richard Conorich: you
Ernesto Whitaker: if
Richard Conorich: won't
Ernesto Whitaker: you scroll
Richard Conorich: need a button.
Ernesto Whitaker: to a number and then you wait a half second, then it g turns to that channel.
Dennis Cleaver: I think that would be like the end of our usability.
Christian Page: D yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: But it would definitely crop cost, a lot.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah, but
Ernesto Whitaker: And we need the battery. And the regular chip is not possible? It has to be advanced?
Richard Conorich: If you want to use an L_C_D_ screen you
Ernesto Whitaker: It has
Richard Conorich: you need
Ernesto Whitaker: to be
Richard Conorich: an advanced
Ernesto Whitaker: advanced.
Richard Conorich: chip, yes.
Christian Page: Hmm.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. Okay. And we can save a Euro by a flat design. That's an option we can
Richard Conorich: Yep.
Christian Page: Ja ja.
Ernesto Whitaker: Then we're almost there.
Richard Conorich: Yeah if you v could just leave out one more button.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. So if we
Christian Page: Yeah, or we have to uh skip the subtitle uh button.
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah but I think
Christian Page: So
Ernesto Whitaker: that's
Christian Page: Yeah
Ernesto Whitaker: That is a big advantage, if we're
Christian Page: Yeah it's a big advantage. But
Ernesto Whitaker: But
Christian Page: um,
Ernesto Whitaker: Can we use
Christian Page: it's
Ernesto Whitaker: can't we integrate the teletext and the subtitles in one button?
Richard Conorich: I
Christian Page: Uh,
Richard Conorich: think
Christian Page: yeah.
Richard Conorich: so. Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: Well,
Ernesto Whitaker: If you push
Dennis Cleaver: think it's
Ernesto Whitaker: it
Dennis Cleaver: pretty much
Ernesto Whitaker: three
Dennis Cleaver: the
Ernesto Whitaker: times?
Christian Page: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: teletext subtitles are right now you just push the teletext button, go to page eight eight eight,
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: and
Christian Page: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: teletext disappears. But the subtitles stay there.
Christian Page: But if you push
Dennis Cleaver: I
Christian Page: the
Dennis Cleaver: think that's
Christian Page: teletext
Dennis Cleaver: the case on
Christian Page: button
Dennis Cleaver: most
Christian Page: twice
Richard Conorich: What if you have to scroll
Christian Page: It's
Richard Conorich: to page
Christian Page: uh
Richard Conorich: eighty eight? Eight hundred eighty eight.
Christian Page: One
Ernesto Whitaker: Ah that's
Christian Page: m uh
Ernesto Whitaker: not
Dennis Cleaver: Well,
Ernesto Whitaker: really
Dennis Cleaver: that could
Ernesto Whitaker: that
Dennis Cleaver: be
Christian Page: one
Dennis Cleaver: just
Christian Page: b uh, a
Dennis Cleaver: uh
Christian Page: few
Dennis Cleaver: like the
Christian Page: buttons.
Dennis Cleaver: scroll to eight, click, scroll to eight, click, scroll to eight, click.
Richard Conorich: Yeah. Okay.
Dennis Cleaver: But then again that would be d j just pretty much not an option for older people, who don't
Richard Conorich: No.
Dennis Cleaver: even know what a scroll-wheel is.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: Holding a
Ernesto Whitaker: No.
Dennis Cleaver: remote with which they expect to have like ten buttons for the numbers one to zero. With only five buttons on it. And a scroll-wheel.
Ernesto Whitaker: I think if you make a good advertisement uh on television and in the in the guide, you can explain to the people how to use the scroll wheel. If you just make it real simple. Because it saves it saves a lot of money. And we can keep our L_C_D_ screen, which can provide extra information. How to use the scroll wheel. How to use the other
Dennis Cleaver: True.
Ernesto Whitaker: bu buttons
Dennis Cleaver: True.
Ernesto Whitaker: as subtitles.
Christian Page: Hmm.
Ernesto Whitaker: And it's good for the innovative design as well. If you would erase these. Mm eraser?
Ernesto Whitaker: And we put uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Looks a bit odd maybe.
Dennis Cleaver: That's a pretty big scroll wheel.
Ernesto Whitaker: That is
Ernesto Whitaker: Something like that. Then, yeah. We've got the scroll-wheel. One, two, three, four, five buttons, if we erase this one.
Ernesto Whitaker: And these are two buttons then.
Richard Conorich: We could make two buttons out of that. And just um If you press the volume button you
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: can control the volume with the scroll-wheel. So that would save two buttons. If you do
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: the same for the channel.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's really a good good idea, I think. And it will make the use of the scroll wheel
Richard Conorich: More
Ernesto Whitaker: uh
Richard Conorich: obvious.
Ernesto Whitaker: more obvious indeed. So we make one for the volume, one for the channel.
Ernesto Whitaker: Plus scroll.
Richard Conorich: So if we
Ernesto Whitaker: That's right. So we've got one, two, three. Yeah, we can leave the teletext in if we want.
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's m
Richard Conorich: So
Ernesto Whitaker: that's better.
Dennis Cleaver: So this is five
Richard Conorich: If
Dennis Cleaver: buttons.
Richard Conorich: we leave out all those buttons, perhaps you can go with the flat flat case. And make it smaller overall. So
Ernesto Whitaker: Y
Richard Conorich: if
Ernesto Whitaker: yeah.
Richard Conorich: you put the the volume and channel buttons on the same height as the on-off button, the
Ernesto Whitaker: Mm yeah.
Richard Conorich: screen right behi under that, than the scroll button
Ernesto Whitaker: Uh yeah,
Richard Conorich: you
Ernesto Whitaker: and then
Richard Conorich: get
Ernesto Whitaker: you can
Richard Conorich: a a much smaller remote.
Christian Page: Uh yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's right.
Richard Conorich: And it
Ernesto Whitaker: So
Richard Conorich: sh
Ernesto Whitaker: we can decrease this one to four buttons.
Richard Conorich: Yeah?
Dennis Cleaver: Right now we have five.
Christian Page: But uh, you can make a f quite a big uh remote remote control for uh just the same price as a small one.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: Just uh
Ernesto Whitaker: That's
Christian Page: you
Ernesto Whitaker: no problem.
Christian Page: only have to pay for the double curved or single curved. It uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: it's a bit uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. It's uh it's more the moulds in which they are being made, I think. Single
Dennis Cleaver: Mm.
Ernesto Whitaker: curved is really easy to just fill in. And cases come right out of the machine. And single curved you have to have a different uh different machine, than a flat one. I think this is a really easy one. Um, what does everybody think about a flat or a single curved design? Freek, what do you think?
Dennis Cleaver: Well, I still think we should go for the single curve design.
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: But then again,
Richard Conorich: Richard's argument was
Dennis Cleaver: all
Richard Conorich: very
Dennis Cleaver: these
Christian Page: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: changes
Richard Conorich: good.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: are not
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: really okay
Ernesto Whitaker: Yep.
Dennis Cleaver: with Dennis Cleaver. But since
Ernesto Whitaker: We have to cut costs.
Dennis Cleaver: we just have to.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. Yeah
Dennis Cleaver: I'd
Ernesto Whitaker: I'm
Dennis Cleaver: rather
Ernesto Whitaker: ag
Dennis Cleaver: just go to the board and
Ernesto Whitaker: Ask for more
Dennis Cleaver: get
Ernesto Whitaker: money.
Dennis Cleaver: us to spend eighteen dollars a a
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: remote.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. I am agreeing
Dennis Cleaver: Or do
Ernesto Whitaker: with
Dennis Cleaver: some
Ernesto Whitaker: the
Dennis Cleaver: market
Ernesto Whitaker: usability.
Dennis Cleaver: research and
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: see what the options are.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. But th um I think we can then keep the single curved one. Just to express our L_C_D_ screen a bit more.
Richard Conorich: Yep.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: So
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: people will use it more, and especially for the help functions, it will be good if we have scroll bar, scroll button. It will be necessary to have good help function, as well.
Ernesto Whitaker: So this is scroll.
Ernesto Whitaker: I think it was better to have this price list a bit earlier. Before
Dennis Cleaver: Yes.
Ernesto Whitaker: we went on to
Dennis Cleaver: Definitely.
Ernesto Whitaker: the
Christian Page: The th
Ernesto Whitaker: to the whole design. But I'm glad we could make a bit.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: It's pretty different, if you
Dennis Cleaver: It's
Ernesto Whitaker: saw
Dennis Cleaver: pretty
Ernesto Whitaker: the
Dennis Cleaver: different.
Ernesto Whitaker: last one
Dennis Cleaver: But
Ernesto Whitaker: than this one.
Dennis Cleaver: this is not really like for the group we were making our remote.
Christian Page: No.
Dennis Cleaver: This will really require a lot of marketing
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. It will.
Dennis Cleaver: to get this to sell.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: 'Cause
Christian Page: But um
Dennis Cleaver: if older people like familiar forms and familiar stuff. This is not familiar for them.
Ernesto Whitaker: No, but
Dennis Cleaver: So
Ernesto Whitaker: I
Dennis Cleaver: we're
Ernesto Whitaker: think
Dennis Cleaver: gonna have to do a lotta convincing them.
Ernesto Whitaker: I think the most
Christian Page: But they know the scroll-buttons from uh old radios. Uh they cal also uh buttons like that for uh
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's right.
Christian Page: changing uh channels. So
Ernesto Whitaker: We can let
Christian Page: maybe it's
Ernesto Whitaker: l
Christian Page: uh
Ernesto Whitaker: We can stick it out, a bit. Like a old old
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: buttons.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Maybe that's recognisable for them as well.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. That's a good one. So, I'm afraid we have to move on. And it's uh it's b uh less frightening, I think. If they see this design they think oh, there are only five buttons, and uh
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: But
Dennis Cleaver: That's
Ernesto Whitaker: we
Dennis Cleaver: true.
Ernesto Whitaker: will see.
Dennis Cleaver: Might uh might be confusing too.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. That's
Dennis Cleaver: They'd
Christian Page: Mm-hmm.
Ernesto Whitaker: definitely
Dennis Cleaver: be like, what?
Ernesto Whitaker: right.
Dennis Cleaver: Only five buttons?
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: But very special, so uh
Ernesto Whitaker: I would buy
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: it.
Dennis Cleaver: But you're not sixty.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's right. I would buy it if I was six. No I don't know. What it costs under twelve and a half Euros? No? Uh, yes they are.
Christian Page: No.
Ernesto Whitaker: No. But we can go on with the project evaluation.
Dennis Cleaver: Mm-hmm.
Ernesto Whitaker: Let's see. I can sit down I think. We still have fifteen minutes left, so we're nice on schedule.
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Um, the project process.
Dennis Cleaver: So um, I like set up all these criteria. And
Ernesto Whitaker: Evaluation
Dennis Cleaver: evaluation
Ernesto Whitaker: criteria.
Dennis Cleaver: of the
Ernesto Whitaker: That's right. That was the
Dennis Cleaver: thingy.
Ernesto Whitaker: the point I forgot. I should There we are. Evaluation criteria.
Dennis Cleaver: Thank you.
Ernesto Whitaker: Go ahead. We've got five minutes I think for those criteria.
Dennis Cleaver: Five more minutes?
Ernesto Whitaker: No we've got fifteen minutes but
Dennis Cleaver: Okay.
Ernesto Whitaker: Uh yes. What?
Dennis Cleaver: 'Kay so I did some literature study study, and analysis of the requirements we set up earlier.
Ernesto Whitaker: Uh yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: Translated it into criteria, which would be these. Um, is the remote fancy? The shape, look and feel. Innovative? What new functions are there? Uh, easy to use? Uh, learnability is a very important factor here. Uh, is it functional? Are there not too many functions uh among the functions? And are the those functions that are there, are they useful? And the cost. The target group. Is the remote really for the group we're making it for? And recognability. If our company is If it is easily recognisable that our company made it? And So we're supposed to evaluate it right now.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay.
Dennis Cleaver: Let's see. Oh I have to say this was a little hard, because the minutes of our last meeting were not here.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah, that's
Christian Page: Mm.
Ernesto Whitaker: because my pen failed to upload his data.
Dennis Cleaver: Okay.
Christian Page: Yeah?
Ernesto Whitaker: I
Dennis Cleaver: Interesting.
Ernesto Whitaker: tried to but it's uh it's giving errors by downloading
Dennis Cleaver: So
Ernesto Whitaker: the software.
Christian Page: Mm. 'Kay.
Dennis Cleaver: Is the design fancy, on a scale of one to seven?
Ernesto Whitaker: I think it's fancy.
Richard Conorich: Six.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: Uh six.
Dennis Cleaver: We all go for six?
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Six.
Dennis Cleaver: Good. Um, is the design innovative?
Ernesto Whitaker: Very.
Christian Page: Mm.
Dennis Cleaver: I think so, with
Christian Page: Sh
Dennis Cleaver: our L_C_D_
Ernesto Whitaker: Subtitles,
Dennis Cleaver: screen, docking station,
Ernesto Whitaker: buttons.
Dennis Cleaver: scroll-buttons.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Seven.
Dennis Cleaver: Seven?
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. So we've got twenty cents for our docking station, huh?
Dennis Cleaver: Should be do-able.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. That's right.
Dennis Cleaver: Is the design easy to use?
Christian Page: Mm. Not
Ernesto Whitaker: That's
Christian Page: really.
Ernesto Whitaker: a bit dodgy.
Dennis Cleaver: Well Would be for us. But
Christian Page: For old people
Ernesto Whitaker: I would
Christian Page: I
Ernesto Whitaker: say
Christian Page: I
Ernesto Whitaker: four.
Richard Conorich: Four
Christian Page: W
Richard Conorich: or five.
Ernesto Whitaker: Four
Richard Conorich: Yes.
Ernesto Whitaker: or
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: five between.
Christian Page: Four.
Ernesto Whitaker: Between four or five.
Dennis Cleaver: I'd go for four, too.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. Is it functional?
Dennis Cleaver: Is the design functional? Um, do we have all functions that we want to include?
Ernesto Whitaker: Yes.
Christian Page: N Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: I think we do. Do we have too many functions?
Richard Conorich: No.
Ernesto Whitaker: No.
Christian Page: No.
Dennis Cleaver: I don't think so. It's pretty slim.
Ernesto Whitaker: Think it's uh seven.
Dennis Cleaver: Seven. and do we um take care of the biggest frustrations of the remote control? Like it getting lost and
Christian Page: Mm
Dennis Cleaver: R_S_I_
Richard Conorich: Mm, we haven't
Christian Page: m
Richard Conorich: thought of that one.
Dennis Cleaver: influences?
Ernesto Whitaker: It was.
Dennis Cleaver: Think we do.
Ernesto Whitaker: I had them worked out. Mm. They are ugly, not very functional, and getting lost.
Dennis Cleaver: Are the
Christian Page: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: production costs within the preset limits? Well they are now.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: Does the design fit the group of focus?
Richard Conorich: I think
Christian Page: Mm,
Richard Conorich: that's a three.
Christian Page: th yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: No I think
Dennis Cleaver: I think
Ernesto Whitaker: with our
Dennis Cleaver: it doesn't.
Ernesto Whitaker: new
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: radio button, I think it's uh
Christian Page: Uh
Ernesto Whitaker: I think it's better.
Christian Page: We have to test
Dennis Cleaver: I don't
Christian Page: it s
Dennis Cleaver: know.
Christian Page: But
Richard Conorich: I still I think it's
Dennis Cleaver: I think
Ernesto Whitaker: I think
Richard Conorich: too
Ernesto Whitaker: it
Richard Conorich: m too fancy. Too too
Dennis Cleaver: I think
Richard Conorich: flashy.
Dennis Cleaver: a radio button is not exactly what older people expect to have a remote control.
Christian Page: Uh, yeah, true.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. I would give it a four.
Dennis Cleaver: I'm not sure. I think I'd go for two.
Christian Page: I go for three. So
Ernesto Whitaker: Then we have to do the three. It's the
Dennis Cleaver: 'Kay.
Dennis Cleaver: Is the company company recognisable?
Ernesto Whitaker: Yes
Christian Page: Yeah
Ernesto Whitaker: it
Christian Page: yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: Well,
Ernesto Whitaker: is.
Dennis Cleaver: we have the logo there.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: So
Ernesto Whitaker: And they wanna put fashion in their products. Uh in the slogan of the company. And we have the removable front cases.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: So,
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: I think it's very recognisable. Yep.
Dennis Cleaver: So that will be this. I was also supposed to calculate the score, but thought we would have another private
Ernesto Whitaker: We've got a calculate
Dennis Cleaver: thingy after
Ernesto Whitaker: it.
Dennis Cleaver: this.
Ernesto Whitaker: Mm?
Richard Conorich: Twendag
Dennis Cleaver: Is this
Richard Conorich: sieven
Dennis Cleaver: Like after
Richard Conorich: an
Dennis Cleaver: this,
Richard Conorich: twendag.
Dennis Cleaver: are we done? Or
Ernesto Whitaker: N We've gonna
Dennis Cleaver: We're gonna
Ernesto Whitaker: We're
Dennis Cleaver: go
Ernesto Whitaker: going
Dennis Cleaver: to our
Ernesto Whitaker: to
Dennis Cleaver: other
Ernesto Whitaker: evaluate
Dennis Cleaver: room again.
Ernesto Whitaker: it.
Dennis Cleaver: Well, anyhow. These are seven factors times seven is forty something. Two? No. Nine?
Ernesto Whitaker: Forty nine.
Dennis Cleaver: Uh, minus one. Minus three, minus four. Minus four. So that would be minus eight. Forty one
Ernesto Whitaker: Forty one.
Dennis Cleaver: out of forty nine.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's Around
Dennis Cleaver: Okay.
Ernesto Whitaker: eighty percent. What is it?
Dennis Cleaver: Guess I'll just type that in on the bottom here.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's eighty four percent. I
Christian Page: Hmm.
Ernesto Whitaker: think that's a pretty nice score.
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: Hmm. 'Kay. So that will be the evaluation.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay. Thank you. So, that brings us to the project evaluation. Yep. Thank you. Project process. Did we move through the right phases, you think? Along the process?
Richard Conorich: Yes.
Christian Page: Yeah. But it
Dennis Cleaver: Think we should have a should have had the finance thingy a lot earlier.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's right.
Dennis Cleaver: In the design phase.
Ernesto Whitaker: So lack of information about prices.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: That's
Dennis Cleaver: Definitely.
Richard Conorich: true.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay. Uh Okay. Satisfaction. Was there room for creativity?
Dennis Cleaver: No.
Ernesto Whitaker: No?
Dennis Cleaver: Not too much. No.
Ernesto Whitaker: It's because of the finance sheet.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: Yeah, there w there was enough
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah,
Richard Conorich: room,
Dennis Cleaver: true.
Richard Conorich: but the finance
Dennis Cleaver: But
Ernesto Whitaker: The
Richard Conorich: uh
Ernesto Whitaker: room
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: was Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: And I would've liked to go for the younger users also. And just to be able to access internet and get something of your own.
Christian Page: Mm.
Ernesto Whitaker: Restrictions. Internet access. 'Kay. Leadership. Was it clear what everybody had to do uh according to their roles and functions?
Richard Conorich: Yes.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah?
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Teamwork? Did
Christian Page: So
Ernesto Whitaker: it work out? Working together? Also, you two of you with the uh
Richard Conorich: Yes, was okay.
Ernesto Whitaker: last
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: phase? Nice.
Richard Conorich: The tasks are very structured, so you can just do step by step and
Christian Page: Mm-hmm.
Dennis Cleaver: Mm-hmm.
Richard Conorich: it's very easy.
Ernesto Whitaker: tasks. Okay. Were the means sufficient for the tasks uh we had to do? Or were they too much?
Richard Conorich: Well,
Christian Page: Mm.
Richard Conorich: the smart-board, the d d drawing is just a pain in the ass, but
Ernesto Whitaker: Smart-board.
Richard Conorich: The digital the digital pen is very nice.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: If it wants
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Christian Page: But
Ernesto Whitaker: to download its uh
Richard Conorich: Yes.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Christian Page: Uh
Ernesto Whitaker: data. Failed download. Smart-board was irritating. So you rather wanted to have a flip-over? Or something
Richard Conorich: A flip-over
Ernesto Whitaker: else?
Christian Page: Yeah. A flipper's
Richard Conorich: or a more
Christian Page: uh easier,
Richard Conorich: precise
Christian Page: so
Richard Conorich: uh
Christian Page: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Faster
Richard Conorich: digit
Ernesto Whitaker: as well,
Richard Conorich: Yes.
Ernesto Whitaker: I think. Yeah. Flip-over.
Christian Page: But if you want to share uh of uh when you make um a picture like this uh on the presentation, it's easier to uh share it with uh other people. Uh so uh you can sh
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: save it uh and uh put it on the internet, or uh uh in shared f uh folder or uh sh uh shared
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah,
Christian Page: directory.
Dennis Cleaver: I tried to
Christian Page: So
Dennis Cleaver: open the file
Christian Page: So
Dennis Cleaver: on my laptop,
Christian Page: Yeah?
Dennis Cleaver: but
Richard Conorich: No.
Christian Page: No?
Richard Conorich: Didn't work.
Dennis Cleaver: not possible.
Ernesto Whitaker: Uh you need a smart board uh
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: application I think.
Christian Page: T can uh
Ernesto Whitaker: But
Christian Page: can you
Ernesto Whitaker: I think
Christian Page: export
Ernesto Whitaker: you can
Christian Page: it uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: like a
Ernesto Whitaker: Should be possible.
Dennis Cleaver: no.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah you can export it as image. Must Yeah must be
Dennis Cleaver: Should've done that then.
Ernesto Whitaker: So the sharing of the information was uh was okay?
Dennis Cleaver: Pen is here.
Richard Conorich: Yes.
Ernesto Whitaker: Uh, network.
Christian Page: Uh.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah, pen is here on the table.
Christian Page: Uh, yeah. So you
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: can Uh
Dennis Cleaver: Mm.
Ernesto Whitaker: It's
Christian Page: It's
Ernesto Whitaker: possible.
Christian Page: possible.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay.
Christian Page: Okay.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's nice. Have we found new ideas for having this kind of meetings? Or
Christian Page: Um, yeah
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: Um it's uh easier to uh to do the th things that are like that on a computer.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: Uh, so uh just l uh
Ernesto Whitaker: So
Christian Page: like uh at u university uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: So
Ernesto Whitaker: So everybody
Dennis Cleaver: Mm-hmm.
Ernesto Whitaker: puts his own score. And
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: then
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: it mediates the score, and
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: you can get one
Richard Conorich: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. That's better. So that's uh How do we call?
Ernesto Whitaker: Evaluation criteria.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay. Mm, any more ideas? Or questions about the project? Or about the product?
Christian Page: Mm.
Ernesto Whitaker: Because I think then that we get to our last sheet. Are the costs within the budget?
Christian Page: Mm yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: They are.
Richard Conorich: Considering
Ernesto Whitaker: Do we
Richard Conorich: we are not going to make a docking station.
Ernesto Whitaker: Docking station. That's a good point. But maybe because of the docking station the price of the remote can also be a little bit higher?
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Uh
Richard Conorich: Perhaps.
Ernesto Whitaker: and I think you can compensate that as well.
Christian Page: Mm.
Ernesto Whitaker: So I think that shouldn't be the biggest problem, because it's very cheap to make as well.
Richard Conorich: Mm-hmm.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Do we think we gonna get the twelve and a half million? Or what was it?
Dennis Cleaver: Fifty grand.
Ernesto Whitaker: Fifteen fifteen million. I think we will. If we gonna export this product. It's
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: innovative. Especially in America. People are pretty decadent.
Christian Page: Yeah. Mm.
Ernesto Whitaker: Sometimes.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah, still I
Christian Page: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: think I mean if we're n gonna make a scroll-button anyway
Ernesto Whitaker: You
Dennis Cleaver: it'd
Ernesto Whitaker: can
Dennis Cleaver: be
Ernesto Whitaker: do
Dennis Cleaver: more
Ernesto Whitaker: more.
Dennis Cleaver: for the younger people than for the older people.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: Ah.
Dennis Cleaver: So maybe we should just re-focus.
Ernesto Whitaker: Just put it on the market for everybody. You
Christian Page: Ah.
Dennis Cleaver: Or
Ernesto Whitaker: can
Dennis Cleaver: specifically for
Ernesto Whitaker: you
Dennis Cleaver: younger
Ernesto Whitaker: can change
Dennis Cleaver: people.
Ernesto Whitaker: markets where by changing the front covers.
Christian Page: Ah.
Ernesto Whitaker: That's one thing you can
Dennis Cleaver: That's true.
Ernesto Whitaker: change it with. So you can also try to uh reach the younger people by uh putting fancy covers on on the market. Just as a test. See how it works. That's I think a good advantage.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah, I think then it would be way more uh popular with younger people than it is, than would be with older people.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Dennis Cleaver: Even if it were their covers.
Christian Page: Hmm.
Ernesto Whitaker: Uh, uh
Dennis Cleaver: But
Ernesto Whitaker: then I think we can have our little celebration, right now. That's it.
Dennis Cleaver: Party party.
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah. I think we still have to fit in one more questionnaire.
Christian Page: Where's the champagne?
Dennis Cleaver: 'Kay.
Ernesto Whitaker: I think. I don't know. I didn't get a message from the from ending of the
Christian Page: Uh, I believe y uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Oh
Dennis Cleaver: Oh
Ernesto Whitaker: I
Dennis Cleaver: you
Ernesto Whitaker: think
Dennis Cleaver: did.
Ernesto Whitaker: I have one now. Five more minutes? Oh that's
Christian Page: Okay.
Ernesto Whitaker: nice. Then we still have some questions. If somebody has some questions they can ask them now. Or we can put these in the project folder as well.
Dennis Cleaver: Mm-hmm.
Ernesto Whitaker: Maybe that's
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Export as picture, I think.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Hmm. This is another network, I guess.
Ernesto Whitaker: Does somebody see the project folder? I don't. Hmm. My Documents.
Christian Page: Uh maybe uh they will save it. So uh
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah, I'll just
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah,
Ernesto Whitaker: put it
Dennis Cleaver: it
Ernesto Whitaker: in
Dennis Cleaver: probably
Ernesto Whitaker: My Documents
Dennis Cleaver: will.
Ernesto Whitaker: and uh That's okay.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay. I think I'm going to make our final presentation now.
Dennis Cleaver: Oh yeah, you're supposed to make
Ernesto Whitaker: And then
Dennis Cleaver: a final
Ernesto Whitaker: I will be back in about ten minutes to show you the final presentation.
Christian Page: Okay.
Richard Conorich: Okay.
Ernesto Whitaker: Summary of the project.
Dennis Cleaver: Are we supposed to go into our own rooms again?
Christian Page: Uh maybe we have to fill uh another
Ernesto Whitaker: Yeah.
Christian Page: questionnaire.
Ernesto Whitaker: Questionnaire.
Christian Page: So uh
Ernesto Whitaker: I think you
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: all get a questionnaire in
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: in your room.
Christian Page: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: And then I'll meet you in I think about ten minutes,
Richard Conorich: Okay.
Ernesto Whitaker: or something.
Christian Page: Okay.
Ernesto Whitaker: Okay. Thank you. Hopefully my pen will download its software.
Dennis Cleaver: Yeah.
Ernesto Whitaker: Oh. Or data.
Dennis Cleaver: That'd be nice. | In the detailed design meeting the team created a prototype. Along with buttons for numbers, channel selector, volume, mute, on-off, teletext, and subtitles, the prototype included an LCD screen and a help button for functional information. One rechargable battery, single-curve form and plastic case, brought the total cost to 17 Euros. To reduce this cost, it was decided to replace most buttons with a scrollwheel. The remaining buttons were one for channel selection, one for volume (both assisted by the scrollwheel), teletext, on-off and the help button. A suggestion to target the product to a younger or perhaps more general group was met with approval. All these components were re-arranged in a revised prototype. It was evaluated on a scale from 1 to 7 on the basis of the following criteria: fancy design (6), technological innovation (4), functionality (7), consideration of the target group (3). The remote was also recognisable as a fashionable Real Reaction product. The project process was deemed well-structured, although everyone thought it would have been better had they known the component prices at an earlier stage. Teamword and leadership were good, but room for creativity impeded by budget constraints. | 1 | amisum | train |
Andrew Lee: Good morning.
Andrew Lee: Sorry? Yeah, busy job.
Andrew Lee: Good morning.
Andrew Lee: So Oh, good morning everyone.
Chad Hodge: Good morning.
Donald Showers: Good morning.
Andrew Lee: I'd uh like to welcome you to our first meeting. I've prepared a little presentation. My name is and uh I hope you will introduce yourself uh in a few minutes, as will I. Um I'm Andrew Lee of this project, and uh, well I will tell you on what actually is the project. This is uh the agenda for our first meeting. Um this is the opening, then we will get I will hope we will get acquainted to each other. We'll do a little tool training with these two things. We'll take a look at the project plan. Uh there will be time for discussion. Actually we have to discuss because we have to create a product. And then we will close this session. Um but first of all we I'd like to uh introduce you to this room. Um as you probably have noticed there are little black uh fields on the table. Um you have to put your laptop exactly in that field so the little cameras can see your face. Um there are cameras everywhere around the room especially here for your face, of course, and this isn't a pie, it's a a set of microphones and there are microphones here also. But please uh don't be afraid of them. They won't hurt you.
Donald Showers: Well
Andrew Lee: Um well uh I said I'm Andrew Lee and uh I'm hoping uh for a good project and uh I'd like to hear uh who you are and what your functions are uh on this project. Let's start with the ladies.
Donald Showers: Well uh I'm and my uh function is User Interface Design, I think. So uh that's Charles Norden.
Chad Hodge: Okay, uh I'm uh I'm Chad Hodge and I uh hope to uh look forward to uh a very uh pleasing uh end of this uh project.
Andrew Lee: Okay, so
Donald Showers: Charles Norden too.
Andrew Lee: I.
Charles Norden: My name's. I'm uh Marketing Expert My. job is in the company to promote company or promote products to the customers. So I also h hope we have a pleasant uh working with uh with each other.
Andrew Lee: Okay, well we have some expertise from uh different pieces of the of the company. That's good. Um well I said uh we're working on a project and the aim for the project is to to create a to design a new remote control which uh has to be original, trendy and of course, user friendly. And uh I hope we have the expertise to create such a project such a product. Um the way we hope to achieve that is uh the following methods. It consists of three phases, namely the functional design, conceptual design and detailed design. As you can see, all of these phases consists of two parts, namely individual work part and a meeting where we will discuss uh our work so far. Okay. But first I will uh tell you something about the tools we have here. I already talked about the cameras and microphones, but they are not of uh much use to us. Uh we will have to take advantage of these two things. They are smart boards. As you can see, you can give a presentation on them. And uh this one here is a white board. I will uh instruct you about that soon. Um as you also noticed uh this presentation document is in our uh project folder and every document you put in this folder uh is uh it is possible to show that here in our meeting room. Um and yeah there are available on both smart boards but I think we will uh mainly use this one for the documents in the shared folder. As you can see, this is the same tool bar uh as is located here. Um the most functions uh we will use will be to to add a new page, um uh to go back and forward between pages, and of course uh to save it every now and then. Um and this is the pen with which you can draw on the board, for instance like this if everything's okay, but I first have to put it on the pen, you see I'm new to it too. Um and then you can
Donald Showers: Oh.
Andrew Lee: write things like test or whatever you want. As you can see you have to move it a little bit slow, it's not such a fast board, it's a smart board but also a slow board. Uh but you can write things and of course you can also, when you click here, uh erase things, so we have uh est left. And um you can also delete an entire page, but we ask you not to do that. Just simply create a new one and uh start all over because we want to save all the results. Um does everyone understand this
Donald Showers: So
Charles Norden: Mm-hmm.
Donald Showers: we
Chad Hodge: Yeah.
Donald Showers: can't erase
Andrew Lee: nice application?
Donald Showers: anything.
Andrew Lee: Well you can erase it with the eraser, but uh you shouldn't delete an entire page, but just
Donald Showers: Right.
Andrew Lee: create a
Charles Norden: S
Andrew Lee: new blank one. I will delete this one now because we don't use it yet.
Donald Showers: Alright.
Andrew Lee: But you can of course erase when you make a mistake, but don't uh delete entire pages. And you can also um let's see I think it's here uh change the uh colour of your pen, for instance take a blue one and uh change the line width like to five. Um that's what you will need for our first exercise, because I'm uh going to ask you to draw your favourite animal. It's also to gets to know each other because um
Chad Hodge: Okay.
Andrew Lee: I'm asking three things, uh for that uh drawing, to do it on a blank sheet, with different colours and I just showed you how to pick a colour, pen widths which I also showed you. Um and a favourite characteristic can be just uh one word. Well I'm not very good at drawing, but I will uh go first and um try to draw Or maybe you should guess what I'm drawing, eh.
Charles Norden: Good.
Chad Hodge: Hmm.
Charles Norden: No.
Donald Showers: It's a sheep.
Charles Norden: Dinos
Chad Hodge: Seal,
Charles Norden: Dinosaur.
Chad Hodge: a seal.
Charles Norden: Beaver.
Chad Hodge: A be
Donald Showers: A beaver.
Andrew Lee: Well
Donald Showers: It's
Andrew Lee: it uh
Donald Showers: weird.
Andrew Lee: could be everything.
Chad Hodge: Mm. With a tail and a mouth.
Andrew Lee: Maybe when I put on
Donald Showers: It has wings?
Charles Norden: Turtle.
Andrew Lee: this thing it could be a turtle,
Chad Hodge: Snail.
Andrew Lee: or a snail, and
Donald Showers: Well the snail doesn't have legs.
Chad Hodge: Okay.
Andrew Lee: But a turtle has. And those are slow. And I hope our project group will not be slow, but we will uh work to a good result and do it uh as fast as we can. Okay, time for another animal. Would you like to go next?
Chad Hodge: Sure.
Charles Norden: No problem. No problem.
Donald Showers: Oh right.
Charles Norden: Mm. It was four months?
Charles Norden: Nice, okay.
Donald Showers: Well.
Chad Hodge: The hell.
Charles Norden: To make it a little bit easier.
Donald Showers: It's a giraffe.
Chad Hodge: Make that cute.
Charles Norden: No, it's a giraffe. 'Kay. I think it's r uh to recognise as
Donald Showers: Yes.
Charles Norden: a giraffe.
Andrew Lee: Mm-hmm.
Donald Showers: Giraffe.
Charles Norden: Yeah, the favourite charis characteristic is that the long neck, it can reach everything. And I hope I can also reach a lot with this project. So that's my favourite animal.
Andrew Lee: Okay.
Charles Norden: Anything else you need
Andrew Lee: Could
Charles Norden: to
Andrew Lee: you
Charles Norden: know?
Andrew Lee: write the words, uh underneath it?
Charles Norden: Oh,
Andrew Lee: Or more words.
Charles Norden: uh
Chad Hodge: Tall.
Charles Norden: Tall. So, 'kay.
Donald Showers: Should I uh Alright. So I can draw, but uh Uh. Well. Oh.
Chad Hodge: B
Charles Norden: It's a mouse.
Chad Hodge: Bunny rabbit.
Charles Norden: A bunny rabbit.
Donald Showers: Oh wrong one. Uh. Well uh you can guess what it is, I hope.
Charles Norden: Uh-huh. No problem.
Donald Showers: It's a rabbit.
Andrew Lee: Little rabbits.
Donald Showers: And uh well uh it's uh quick, I guess.
Donald Showers: That's uh my uh favourite animal.
Andrew Lee: Okay,
Chad Hodge: Okay.
Andrew Lee: thank you. And our final drawing.
Charles Norden: Bob Ross.
Charles Norden: Dolphin.
Donald Showers: A dolphin.
Chad Hodge: Okay, um.
Chad Hodge: Uh I uh draw I I've drawn a dolphin because of its intelligence. One of the
Donald Showers: Right.
Chad Hodge: most intelligent uh
Andrew Lee: Mm-hmm.
Chad Hodge: animals in our world.
Donald Showers: Well.
Chad Hodge: Yeah
Donald Showers: With
Chad Hodge: intelligent.
Donald Showers: an E_.
Chad Hodge: I've I've uh Eraser.
Donald Showers: You can try out the eraser now.
Chad Hodge: Pen. Well not perfect, but okay.
Andrew Lee: Okay, well thank you very much. I can see we have some uh drawing talent uh in this group,
Donald Showers: Not
Andrew Lee: huh?
Donald Showers: really.
Andrew Lee: Well, nice animals, nice words. Sounds good. Um back to business, back to the money part. Um from the finance department I have learned that we are aiming for a selling price of twenty five Euros. And we're hoping for a aim of fifty million Euros and uh we are hoping to achieve that uh by aiming for an international market. And the production cost will be twelve Euro fifty max. Okay, well it's time uh for some discussion. I've wrote down some examples here of what we can can speak about. Uh what's your experience with remote controls, um what kind of ideas do you have to design a new remote control, maybe for which market segments should we aim, or should we aim for all segments. Uh well actually I'd like to hand the word uh back to you. What's your experience with remote control?
Chad Hodge: A
Donald Showers: I
Chad Hodge: lot
Donald Showers: always
Chad Hodge: of buttons.
Donald Showers: lose them.
Charles Norden: Yeah.
Chad Hodge: And you always lose them.
Donald Showers: Yes.
Chad Hodge: A lot of buttons which
Donald Showers: Yeah.
Chad Hodge: you don't use
Andrew Lee: Mm-hmm.
Chad Hodge: or who you don't use
Charles Norden: Complex.
Chad Hodge: Complex.
Donald Showers: Yeah.
Chad Hodge: Not user friendly.
Charles Norden: No.
Donald Showers: search for the buttons, which one is
Charles Norden: No.
Donald Showers: which and uh
Charles Norden: Boring.
Andrew Lee: Boring, it's not fun to use a
Charles Norden: No.
Andrew Lee: remote.
Chad Hodge: Mm.
Charles Norden: Black, all black.
Donald Showers: Well.
Andrew Lee: Mm-hmm.
Charles Norden: So,
Chad Hodge: Black colours.
Charles Norden: yeah.
Andrew Lee: Well maybe we should try to make it fun.
Charles Norden: Mm-hmm.
Chad Hodge: They use batteries and batteries uh and poor signal.
Andrew Lee: Mm-hmm.
Charles Norden: Yeah.
Chad Hodge: Uh.
Charles Norden: The the
Donald Showers: Perhaps that
Charles Norden: angle
Donald Showers: you have a
Charles Norden: you
Donald Showers: lot
Charles Norden: have
Donald Showers: of
Charles Norden: to use.
Donald Showers: road remotes r road
Charles Norden: You had different
Donald Showers: con
Charles Norden: remote
Donald Showers: remote
Charles Norden: controls
Chad Hodge: Yeah,
Donald Showers: controls.
Chad Hodge: different
Charles Norden: for
Chad Hodge: remote
Charles Norden: different
Chad Hodge: controls,
Charles Norden: devices.
Donald Showers: Yes,
Chad Hodge: yeah.
Donald Showers: perhaps
Charles Norden: Yes.
Donald Showers: you can integrate them or something.
Chad Hodge: Uh for the use of different
Donald Showers: Yes.
Chad Hodge: uh devices.
Charles Norden: Yeah.
Donald Showers: Your
Andrew Lee: Mm-hmm.
Donald Showers: stereo and your T_V_ and uh. Perhaps
Charles Norden: Yeah
Donald Showers: that's
Charles Norden: but
Donald Showers: an idea.
Charles Norden: then again you you still have a lot of buttons,
Donald Showers: Yeah, that's right.
Charles Norden: so
Chad Hodge: Yeah but
Donald Showers: And
Chad Hodge: you could
Donald Showers: which you
Chad Hodge: uh
Donald Showers: don't
Chad Hodge: I
Donald Showers: use.
Chad Hodge: thin uh there's a possibility to g uh to uh to put those buttons uh behind some uh kind of uh
Charles Norden: Flap
Chad Hodge: protection so
Charles Norden: yeah.
Chad Hodge: that
Donald Showers: Right.
Chad Hodge: if y y you only get to see them when you need 'em.
Charles Norden: Yeah, okay, that's possible,
Chad Hodge: That's possible, so that
Charles Norden: but it'll
Chad Hodge: you only
Charles Norden: get very
Chad Hodge: get the
Charles Norden: big the
Donald Showers: Yeah.
Charles Norden: the remote
Chad Hodge: No
Charles Norden: control.
Chad Hodge: n
Donald Showers: You
Chad Hodge: n no,
Donald Showers: should
Chad Hodge: just
Donald Showers: just give it to.
Chad Hodge: Uh for example you got th uh the same size uh remote control you use everyday, but um
Charles Norden: Mm-hmm.
Chad Hodge: the usual buttons such as uh um zapping uh as you call it in Dutch. Uh and the volume
Donald Showers: Changing
Chad Hodge: control
Donald Showers: channel.
Chad Hodge: uh are only the only possible buttons uh to use directly.
Andrew Lee: Mm-hmm.
Charles Norden: Mm-hmm.
Chad Hodge: Or uh
Charles Norden: numbers.
Chad Hodge: the numbers, of course. But uh
Charles Norden: On and off.
Chad Hodge: not uh the buttons used to search on the the channels on your television. You only use those uh the first time, or.
Charles Norden: Yeah, play,
Chad Hodge: So.
Charles Norden: pause, stop.
Chad Hodge: Uh.
Andrew Lee: Mm-hmm. So maybe a a minimalist design,
Chad Hodge: Yeah,
Andrew Lee: the
Chad Hodge: I
Andrew Lee: least
Chad Hodge: think so,
Andrew Lee: uh possible
Donald Showers: Yes.
Chad Hodge: yeah.
Andrew Lee: amount uh of buttons.
Donald Showers: But you should make sure that you have every button they need on it.
Charles Norden: Mm-hmm,
Donald Showers: Because
Charles Norden: of
Donald Showers: uh
Charles Norden: course.
Donald Showers: things for uh teletext, I dunno
Chad Hodge: Yeah,
Donald Showers: uh, w what's
Chad Hodge: uh
Donald Showers: the name?
Chad Hodge: teletext.
Andrew Lee: Mm-hmm.
Chad Hodge: think so. Okay.
Andrew Lee: So you don't want to bother people with uh loads of buttons, but
Charles Norden: No.
Andrew Lee: on the other hand they need many buttons so they don't have to get out of their seat.
Donald Showers: Yeah.
Charles Norden: Yeah.
Donald Showers: But
Chad Hodge: Right.
Charles Norden: Because I think a market will be all kind of people. Elderly p el elderly,
Donald Showers: But if
Charles Norden: young
Donald Showers: if it's
Charles Norden: people,
Donald Showers: if it's international
Charles Norden: so.
Donald Showers: you should uh look in think in Britain they have uh different things they can do with the T_V_, or so uh that you can choose what you want to see. I dunno if you should uh take that in consideration, or
Chad Hodge: Uh.
Donald Showers: that you just should aim for the normal T_V_s that uh
Charles Norden: Yeah
Chad Hodge: Yeah
Charles Norden: I
Chad Hodge: I
Charles Norden: think
Chad Hodge: I understand.
Charles Norden: that's the better
Donald Showers: And
Charles Norden: one,
Donald Showers: the B_B_C_.
Charles Norden: because I think if you you're going to target a lot of people and the whole world and only Britain then I think
Donald Showers: Yes.
Chad Hodge: No.
Charles Norden: the cost will uh rise higher than the twelve fifty, I think.
Donald Showers: Yeah, I don't know if the
Charles Norden: I think
Donald Showers: they have
Charles Norden: the
Donald Showers: that anywhere
Charles Norden: aim is
Donald Showers: else,
Charles Norden: better to
Donald Showers: though.
Charles Norden: use uh the whole world and Britain,
Chad Hodge: Yeah.
Charles Norden: yeah.
Donald Showers: Yeah, we can leave
Chad Hodge: When I think
Charles Norden: Not
Chad Hodge: of
Donald Showers: that.
Charles Norden: that
Chad Hodge: it
Charles Norden: much.
Chad Hodge: uh I think the main idea uh of this remote remote control is uh to make it user friendly. So uh I think uh when p uh when uh the customers will buy this remote control, they already have uh the remote control which uh companies uh
Charles Norden: Mm.
Donald Showers: Yeah.
Chad Hodge: uh
Charles Norden: Standard
Chad Hodge: with uh
Charles Norden: deliver.
Chad Hodge: the the standards uh remote control with which comes uh with the television.
Andrew Lee: Mm-hmm.
Charles Norden: Mm.
Chad Hodge: So uh it only has to have uh the most used buttons. You don't have to integrate the buttons to search the channels on your television. In
Charles Norden: No
Chad Hodge: those
Donald Showers: Well but
Charles Norden: but
Chad Hodge: in
Donald Showers: but
Chad Hodge: that
Donald Showers: then you have to to
Charles Norden: Yeah.
Donald Showers: find your other remote
Charles Norden: Yeah,
Donald Showers: control if
Charles Norden: th
Donald Showers: you want to search.
Charles Norden: it
Donald Showers: That's
Charles Norden: it's
Donald Showers: not
Charles Norden: I think
Chad Hodge: Yeah but
Charles Norden: that's
Chad Hodge: I
Charles Norden: not
Chad Hodge: but it is impossible to uh to accommodate uh accommodate uh all the buttons on the s on the difference different
Donald Showers: Yeah, that's
Chad Hodge: televisions sets
Donald Showers: right.
Chad Hodge: on one remote control. It's impossible.
Charles Norden: Yeah, okay.
Chad Hodge: Because uh for example Sony television uh has the opportunity to s to make uh uh to make it possible for to see on one side of the screen uh teletext, and on the other side
Charles Norden: No.
Chad Hodge: uh just
Donald Showers: Yeah
Chad Hodge: n uh regular
Donald Showers: that's
Chad Hodge: television.
Donald Showers: uh.
Chad Hodge: Uh
Charles Norden: I think n m n most televisions nowadays do this.
Chad Hodge: Yeah, but uh they
Donald Showers: Well
Chad Hodge: don't
Donald Showers: not everywhere.
Chad Hodge: use
Charles Norden: So
Chad Hodge: the same signal,
Charles Norden: I think numerals.
Chad Hodge: uh on remote control. Because you can't use a Panasonic uh remote control on a on a Philips television.
Charles Norden: Yeah, but then you have to choose the this always with r universal remotes you have to choose
Donald Showers: Yeah, you
Charles Norden: the
Donald Showers: can choose
Charles Norden: code.
Donald Showers: the code.
Charles Norden: You
Chad Hodge: Okay.
Charles Norden: can use which which
Chad Hodge: Okay.
Charles Norden: type of television you have. That's no problem.
Chad Hodge: Okay.
Charles Norden: But I think like the two pages on the same screen, like teletext and normal television, that's that's nowadays standard, I think.
Chad Hodge: Okay, but uh I think that most people uh th uh will buy the remote control because because uh
Charles Norden: Simplicity.
Chad Hodge: the first they lost the one they lost first one or
Charles Norden: Yeah.
Chad Hodge: the first one is broken, so
Charles Norden: Yeah, yeah.
Chad Hodge: uh uh perhaps they have a got a an older television,
Charles Norden: Mm-hmm.
Chad Hodge: so that option is not
Donald Showers: Yeah.
Charles Norden: Yeah
Chad Hodge: uh
Charles Norden: g available.
Chad Hodge: optional for those uh people.
Donald Showers: But
Charles Norden: True.
Donald Showers: the people have a new television, and c if you look into the future, then they want will
Chad Hodge: Yeah,
Donald Showers: want
Charles Norden: Yeah.
Donald Showers: the button, if
Chad Hodge: yeah.
Donald Showers: their thing is broke.
Chad Hodge: So we should take that in consideration.
Donald Showers: Yeah.
Charles Norden: Mm-hmm.
Andrew Lee: Mm-hmm.
Charles Norden: Mm-hmm.
Andrew Lee: Okay, well any more ideas?
Chad Hodge: Oh mm, no.
Charles Norden: Of course.
Andrew Lee: No?
Donald Showers: Guess not.
Chad Hodge: Things'll come up.
Charles Norden: Yeah.
Andrew Lee: Okay, yeah well we have some time. Let's see what more I have to tell you. I don't think there is much left. Nope. We're starting to close. Um our next meeting uh will start well we're a little bit early, but our next meeting will start in in thirty minutes. In the meantime uh there's time for some uh individual actions. Um, as you can see, the different roles have uh different tasks. And there's a ping. Is it my laptop?
Charles Norden: Yeah.
Andrew Lee: Yep.
Chad Hodge: Stop the meeting
Andrew Lee: Ah
Chad Hodge: now.
Donald Showers: Yeah meeting will close
Andrew Lee: well
Donald Showers: in five
Andrew Lee: that's
Donald Showers: minutes.
Andrew Lee: good, five minutes and uh the meeting's over, uh
Chad Hodge: Okay.
Andrew Lee: right on schedule. Um Charles Norden will uh will take a look at the user requirement specification. Donald Showers will work out the technical functions design. And this was the Interface Designer? Or
Donald Showers: Hmm
Andrew Lee: the Interaction
Chad Hodge: Mm.
Donald Showers: hmm.
Andrew Lee: Designer. Or what was
Donald Showers: No
Chad Hodge: No?
Charles Norden: Interface.
Donald Showers: interface.
Andrew Lee: it, I_D_? Interface Designer, okay, first guess was right. Uh will take a look at the the working design.
Chad Hodge: No, the Industrial
Donald Showers: No
Chad Hodge: Designer
Donald Showers: the
Chad Hodge: will take
Donald Showers: Yeah.
Chad Hodge: a look at the working design, and the in uh usability interaction
Andrew Lee: Industrial Designer, okay,
Chad Hodge: Yeah, okay.
Andrew Lee: sorry.
Chad Hodge: Okay.
Andrew Lee: Let's just use the acronyms.
Donald Showers: So
Andrew Lee: Um and of course specific instructions uh will be sent to you uh through your personal coach.
Donald Showers: So I should look at uh what you should be able to do with the remote, or uh, or how
Andrew Lee: Uh
Donald Showers: I don't
Andrew Lee: well
Donald Showers: really
Andrew Lee: those instructions will be uh
Donald Showers: Right.
Andrew Lee: in the email you will receive
Donald Showers: Alright.
Andrew Lee: uh shortly, I hope.
Donald Showers: Charles Norden too.
Andrew Lee: And of course you have your own uh expertise. Well uh
Charles Norden: Uh-huh.
Andrew Lee: that was what I had to say. Uh
Chad Hodge: Okay.
Andrew Lee: are there any more questions?
Charles Norden: No.
Chad Hodge: No.
Andrew Lee: No? Okay well I think then we have to head uh back to our offices and uh start working.
Charles Norden: I have one
Chad Hodge: Okay.
Charles Norden: question.
Andrew Lee: Okay, one question?
Chad Hodge: Oh.
Charles Norden: Where does it says we have to make a remote, because I presumed She didn't know who. Okay, no, no problem.
Andrew Lee: Okay we're still going.
Chad Hodge: No problem.
Charles Norden: No
Andrew Lee: Okay,
Charles Norden: problem.
Andrew Lee: well I expect
Chad Hodge: Okay.
Andrew Lee: everything will be much clearer with the
Charles Norden: Yeah.
Andrew Lee: instructions we will receive uh shortly.
Charles Norden: Mm-hmm.
Donald Showers: Alright.
Andrew Lee: Okay well
Chad Hodge: Alrighty.
Andrew Lee: uh see you all in about thirty minutes, then.
Donald Showers: Yeah.
Chad Hodge: Okay.
Andrew Lee: Thank you very much.
Donald Showers: Yeah. Okay. | Andrew Lee acquainted the team with the tools and equipment around them and then had the team members introduce themselves by name and what role they had in the project. Andrew Lee then introduced the upcoming project along with more tools and equipment to the team members. The team members then participated in an exercise in which they drew their favorite animals. After the drawing exercise, Andrew Lee talked about the project finances and production costs. The team then discussed their experiences with remotes and various features to consider when producing a remote. | 1 | amisum | train |
James Cornish: Good morning, again.
Howard Rosario: One question.
Paul Krigger: Yeah. Choose
Howard Rosario: Send.
Paul Krigger: a number?
Howard Rosario: Submit.
Humberto Scott: Yep yep yep yep.
James Cornish: All
Howard Rosario: Mm.
James Cornish: set?
Humberto Scott: Mm-hmm.
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
James Cornish: Good Okay. Let's see what we can find here. Okay. A very warm welcome again to everyone. Um here we are already at our uh functional design meeting. Um and this is what we are going to do. The opening, which we are doing now, um and the special note, I'm project manager but on the meetings I'm also the secretary, which means I will make uh minutes as I did of the previous meeting. And uh I put these as fast as possible in the uh project folder, so you can see them and review what we have discussed. Um if I'm right, there are three presentations, I guess each one of you has prepared one?
Paul Krigger: Yes.
James Cornish: Good. And um we will also take a look at new project requirements, um if you haven't heard about them yet. And then of course we have to take a decision on the remote control functions and we have some more time, forty minutes. But I think we will need it. Um well I don't know who wants to go first with his presentation.
Howard Rosario: I'll go first. Okay.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: I'll go first
Paul Krigger: Well.
James Cornish: You
Howard Rosario: yeah.
James Cornish: can go first, okay.
Humberto Scott: Well, shall I go first with the users?
Paul Krigger: Well
Humberto Scott: I think well okay no problem.
James Cornish: Is there
Paul Krigger: everybody
James Cornish: an order? I
Paul Krigger: already
James Cornish: haven't
Paul Krigger: has
Humberto Scott: Ja
Paul Krigger: his presentation,
Humberto Scott: precies, ja precies,
Paul Krigger: so
Howard Rosario: So.
Humberto Scott: ja precies
Paul Krigger: you can adjust
Howard Rosario: Huh?
Paul Krigger: it.
Howard Rosario: Okay, um
James Cornish: And one question, uh your name Denni, is it with a
Humberto Scott: E_I_E_.
James Cornish: I_E_ E_I_E_, okay. Thank you.
Howard Rosario: Okay, um I wanted to explain the working design of the remote control. It's possibly very handy if you want to uh design one of those. Um well so it basically works uh as I uh uh r wrote down uh in this uh little uh summary. Uh you press a button, uh that's when you do pr example when you uh want to turn up the volume, um a little connection is made uh the the rubber uh button just presses on a
James Cornish: Sorry.
Howard Rosario: on a little print plate uh which uh makes uh uh a connection that uh gives the chips, uh which is uh mounted beneath those uh that plastic of a rubber button. Uh senses that a connection has been made, and know and knows what button you pressed, becau uh for example the the volume up or volume down button. Um uh the the chip uh makes a Morse code uh like uh signal which uh then is si uh signalled to uh several transistors which makes uh which sends the signal to a little let. You know what a let is?
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Okay. And that makes uh the the infra-red lights signal which is sent to the television set. Uh which has a sensor in it to uh sense uh the signal of the infra-red. That's basically uh how it works. Um the findings uh uh that I found uh searching up some uh detailed information about the remote controls, are that uh they are very easy to produce, uh it is pis uh it's possible to uh make them in mass production because it is as eas it is as easy as uh printing a page, uh just uh fibreglass plate um is b uh is uh covered with uh some uh coatings and uh uh and chips. Uh and the technology's already available, we don't have to find out how remote controls uh have to work or uh how that how uh to make some chips that are possible to uh to to transmit those uh signals. Uh I made a little uh uh animation of about how a tran our
Paul Krigger: Oh
Howard Rosario: uh
Paul Krigger: right.
Howard Rosario: remote controller works.
Humberto Scott: Animation.
Howard Rosario: we tel
Paul Krigger: There is something turning.
Howard Rosario: There.
James Cornish: Yeah, it's a little bug it's in the in the smart board.
Howard Rosario: Okay. Uh well the sub-component, I suppose that you understand what a sub-component is, is f in this example it's the button. Uh when it is pressed down, um, the switch is ter is uh is switched on, so with uh the wire is sent to the to the chip in uh co-operation with the battery of course, because to make uh a a signal possible you have to have some sort of uh li uh a d ad uh electronic uh
Humberto Scott: Infrared light.
Howard Rosario: Yes, uh, okay. Um w after it's being composed by the chip uh the signal uh is transported uh to the infra-red bulb, and from there it signals a Morse code-like signal to the to the b to the bulb in uh in the television set. Okay. S Uh I wrote down some personal preferences about uh the remote control. Of course it is very handy if the remote control is hand held, so you don't have to uh uh wind it up or something, or just is it's it's very light to uh to make uh to use it. Uh I personally uh pref prefer that uh it would be p uh come available in the various colours, and uh easy to use buttons. But I suppose that the one of the other team members
Paul Krigger: Yeah, I've got
Howard Rosario: uh
Paul Krigger: it there too.
Howard Rosario: uh thought of that uh too. And it is possible for several designs and um easy to use b uh sorry, easy to use buttons. Perhaps soft touch, uh touch screen uh buttons because uh the rubber buttons are always uh uh they uh slightly uh they can be slightly damaged, uh so the numbers on the buttons are not possible uh to read anymore. And uh well as I said uh before th uh we can uh make several designs.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Okay, well, that's my contribution to this meeting, and uh
Humberto Scott: To this meeting.
James Cornish: Okay,
Howard Rosario: two
James Cornish: thank
Howard Rosario: of
James Cornish: you.
Howard Rosario: these this
Paul Krigger: Shall
Howard Rosario: meeting.
Paul Krigger: I go uh next?
James Cornish: Yep.
Howard Rosario: So.
Paul Krigger: 'Kay.
James Cornish: Please.
Paul Krigger: So.
Humberto Scott: Smoking.
Paul Krigger: Well uh, my name's, and I looked at uh technical functions design of the remote. Uh I did this by uh looking at examples other remote controls, of how they uh they look, and information from the web that I found. Um well what I found was that uh th the actual use of the remote control is to send messages to television set, how you uh d what you described uh just early. And this can be all sorts of medsa messages, turn it on, turn it off, uh change the channel, adjust volume, that kind of thing. Uh play video, teletext, but also t uh play C_D_ if you use it your C_D_ player the remote control will that one. There are some uh examples of remote controls. You can see they are very different. The one has got all the functions that you could possibly need and an lot of uh buttons etcetera. And the other is uh more user friendly, little with big buttons. And uh not n all the the the the stuff you can do with it, but uh the the essential stuff is there. Um I guess you could better y you should look at a a user centred uh approach, because the customers have to use them and and if they don't think it's usable they won't uh buy it. A lot of buttons they may think from I don't need s as much as that. Uh, well perf personal preferences is is uh a simple remote, with uh the basic functions that you can need that you could use. But uh keep in mind the new functions of T_V_ what we discussed earlier, split screen and uh is that a function that you should have? Because all the T_V_s will have them. Or because of only a few and isn't really necessary. And then uh make it I would make so that you can could uh use it on more than one appliance. If you have one that uh uh does with the vi the the video, it could also work with uh with the stereo, because play is play and stop stop and that sort of thing. The shu c you could reuse the buttons so that you don't have to have a lot of buttons for uh anything. And it should be a user friendly, clear buttons, and not too much. And that is my presentation.
James Cornish: Okay,
Howard Rosario: Okay.
James Cornish: thank you.
Humberto Scott: 'Kay. Check.
Paul Krigger: You must still have it open.
Humberto Scott: Kijke
Humberto Scott: 'Kay, so. We're going to j discuss the functional requirements of the remote, that m that means that functions user n want to have on the remote control, or just Yeah, and the users, actually. The methods I I prefer is we're going to look which section of the users we are going to focus a l on more. Are the younger people going to buy the remote control or the elderly people? And then tho that section we're going to focus and adjust the remote more to that section than the whole user section. Okay. Some data. Younger people, from sixteen to thir forty five um years are more interested in fj features like L_C_D_ screens, speech recognition e etcetera. And we possess about two third of the market from in that range of age. The elderly people, from forty five years to sixty five years are not that much interested in features, and we possess less than two third, that's two fifth, of the market share in that area. Goed so.
Howard Rosario: Hmm.
Humberto Scott: 'Kay. Findings. Fifty percent of the users lose their remote often. So we don't have to make it very small,
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: like uh like a mobile phone or something, but some somewhat bi bigger than small, so you don't lose it that much anymore. Seventy five percent of the users also find it ugly,
Howard Rosario: Mm.
Humberto Scott: and fif seventy five of the users zap a lot, so the buttons sh should be that small, or shouldn't be that complex because we have to search for the buttons, which one are you going to use. Next. Important issues about the remote. I think it would be better with a personal reference, but okay. Remote control has to have to have a low power usage, because s w seventy five percent of the users only zap one time an hour, so the power usage is also one one time an hour, or so, with a high power usage we would use a lot of but batteries. The volume button and the channel buttons are the two most important buttons on the remote control, so those they those have to h be find very easily. And have to be somewhat like bigger etcetera. It has also be have to find easily when the label is gone. My colleague
Howard Rosario: Mm.
Humberto Scott: also announced it that labels should be scratched off
Paul Krigger: Hmm.
Humberto Scott: or would be s uh senden okay. So uh if that's k uh if that's the problem, you also have to find it easily on the remote. Buttons. Like what all colleagues said, have to have to be minimalized. or should be covered, or in L_C_D_ screen. L_C_D_ screen is easy because we have the L_C_D_ screen, we have the various options. Put one option and then you have the all the buttons of that options, so the other options would be gone. And you don't see the buttons. So L_C_D_ screens should be easy, but an L_C_D_ screen, the problem with the L_ sc L_C_D_ screen is that elderly people fr from forty five to for sixty five years don't use the L_C_D_ screen a lot. So we have to that keep that in mind that if you're going to implement L_C_D_ screen, you don't have to make it that hard to learn or to use.
Howard Rosario: Uh L_C_D_ screen as in uh touch screen?
Humberto Scott: Yeah, touch screen,
Howard Rosario: Okay.
Humberto Scott: yeah. The last but not least, younger people are more critical about the features. Because they use the remote control often more often, and are more technical than the ol older people. And the older people spend more money,
Paul Krigger: Mm.
Humberto Scott: and easily on a remote control.
Howard Rosario: 'Kay.
Humberto Scott: So we have to keep in mind to to focus not a lot not that much on the younger pep younger people, but also somewhat on the elderly people. And on my personal preferences, I don't have any mo more time to come with that, but like I said, L_C_D_ screen is easily to use because you have you can implement a lot of buttons in one remote with not that much buttons. And it should be easy to use. Especially the volume buttons, the channel buttes buttons and the number buttons to zap through the channels. And that is it.
Howard Rosario: Okay.
James Cornish: Okay,
Paul Krigger: Oh right.
James Cornish: thank you. Um, well thank you all, huh. I dunno uh did everyone receive an email with uh the new project requirements?
Paul Krigger: No.
James Cornish: No? Well,
Paul Krigger: Res I did not.
Howard Rosario: No.
Paul Krigger: Perhaps the rest?
James Cornish: then I think it's a good thing
Humberto Scott: Ja,
James Cornish: that I made a separate slide of them so you can all read them. Oh, well not in this presentation. Hmm. Should be in there. Well, I can tell you them uh from my laptop. Um teletext does has become outdated since the popularity
Paul Krigger: Oh.
James Cornish: of the internet. So that's uh the first thing we I think we should pay less attention to uh teletext. Uh the remote control should only be used for the television, otherwise the project becomes more complex, which endangers the time to market, and of course would make it more costly, I think. Um our current customers are within the age group of forty plus, and new product should reach a new market with customers that are younger than forty, and you talked about that before. And uh a last point, but also very important, our corporate image should stay recognisable in our products, which means that our uh corporate colour and slogan must be implemented in the new design. So we have to keep that in mind. Um well uh according to our agenda it's then time to take a decision on the remote control functions.
Paul Krigger: Mm.
James Cornish: So, who has any idea about what should be on it, and what shouldn't?
Paul Krigger: Well you said it should only
Humberto Scott: Be television.
Paul Krigger: uh work with one appliance? Or with one uh d che only the T_V_?
James Cornish: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
James Cornish: Only be used
Paul Krigger: And
James Cornish: for television.
Paul Krigger: the video also, or not uh?
Humberto Scott: Only
James Cornish: Well
Humberto Scott: the
James Cornish: it
Humberto Scott: television.
James Cornish: says only for television here,
Paul Krigger: Oh.
James Cornish: huh.
Paul Krigger: Alright. Okay.
James Cornish: Makes it a lot easier, huh?
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Mm.
Humberto Scott: So yeah, then you can yeah. Requirements, no? Functions.
James Cornish: Mm-hmm.
Paul Krigger: Then it should
Howard Rosario: Yeah for
Paul Krigger: have uh on, off,
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: Standby
Paul Krigger: and
Humberto Scott: the
Paul Krigger: uh
Humberto Scott: basics
Howard Rosario: options, yeah?
Humberto Scott: then by a volume, channel, one till two zero
Howard Rosario: Uh yeah.
Humberto Scott: numbers on it,
Paul Krigger: Yeah. And per
Humberto Scott: oh teletext
Paul Krigger: perhaps uh
Humberto Scott: doesn't have to be?
Paul Krigger: No.
Humberto Scott: Um
Paul Krigger: Well uh uh
Humberto Scott: other functions.
Paul Krigger: yes yes s
Humberto Scott: Yeah
Paul Krigger: sh A button
Humberto Scott: I had
Paul Krigger: where you can uh change from one number to two
Howard Rosario: Two
Paul Krigger: numbers.
Howard Rosario: s two
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: two digits,
Humberto Scott: yeah.
Howard Rosario: oh
Paul Krigger: Can
Howard Rosario: okay.
Paul Krigger: you Don't know
Howard Rosario: Yeah
Paul Krigger: if
Howard Rosario: I
Paul Krigger: that's
Howard Rosario: understand
Paul Krigger: got a name,
Howard Rosario: what
Humberto Scott: I
Howard Rosario: you
Humberto Scott: think
Paul Krigger: but
Howard Rosario: mean.
Humberto Scott: it's I
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: think it's easy to implement a button with a s s what which especially do that, because some T_V_s, if you press the t one and then the two,
Howard Rosario: It makes
Humberto Scott: it
Howard Rosario: it twelve,
Humberto Scott: be between
Howard Rosario: yeah.
Humberto Scott: five secs it make twelve,
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: and that's
Howard Rosario: Indeed.
Paul Krigger: S
Howard Rosario: Okay.
Humberto Scott: that's not relaxed
Howard Rosario: Well, not
Humberto Scott: to
Howard Rosario: really
Humberto Scott: user.
Howard Rosario: And and there are some models that don't uh accommodate that function. So
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: d uh wh the Philip's television makes it possible in that indeed to uh press one and then two to
Humberto Scott: So
Howard Rosario: make
Humberto Scott: that
Howard Rosario: uh
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: the
Humberto Scott: it easy
Howard Rosario: uh tj
Humberto Scott: and
Howard Rosario: to reach
Humberto Scott: fast.
Howard Rosario: channel twelve. But
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: uh all the television makes uh use of those button
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: where you first press that button and then press two digits to uh
Paul Krigger: Yeah, so you
Howard Rosario: to get
Paul Krigger: should have that one on.
Howard Rosario: Uh yeah, think so.
Paul Krigger: Mute misschien
Humberto Scott: plus, or?
Paul Krigger: also.
Howard Rosario: Mm.
James Cornish: Uh well new product should reach a market with customers that are younger than forty, and now
Humberto Scott: Forties,
James Cornish: we have
Humberto Scott: okay
James Cornish: current
Humberto Scott: because
James Cornish: customers uh of forty plus.
Humberto Scott: because younger people as Uh younger people have now, sixteen till to twenty five age, are f eighty one percent interested in L_C_D_ screen. From twenty six to thirty five have sixty six percent, and thirty six to forty five, fifty five percent, so I think to um Because on most recog remote controls um the print plate will be broken how much, two years. You have to press h very hard
Howard Rosario: Mm-hmm.
Humberto Scott: to go to the
James Cornish: Mm-hmm.
Humberto Scott: next channel. With the L_C_D_ screen it's easier because you only have to wipe the screen to uh
Howard Rosario: Yeah, we we
Humberto Scott: for
Howard Rosario: could
Humberto Scott: fingerprint,
Howard Rosario: yeah.
Humberto Scott: and then you
Howard Rosario: But
Humberto Scott: can
Howard Rosario: I
Humberto Scott: use
Howard Rosario: think
Humberto Scott: it
Howard Rosario: that
Humberto Scott: again.
Howard Rosario: uh that collides with our mission to make it very cheap. Because
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: L_C_D_
Humberto Scott: okay.
Howard Rosario: screens are very expensive.
Humberto Scott: Yeah but
Howard Rosario: A touch
Humberto Scott: a
Howard Rosario: screen
Humberto Scott: you don't
Paul Krigger: An
Humberto Scott: know
Howard Rosario: uh probably uh even more. So,
Humberto Scott: True.
Howard Rosario: true, true. But uh Well um an L_C_D_ screen uh, how was the information?
Humberto Scott: Yeah, it only says that this perce percentage like L_C_D_ screen. Because, yeah and it says that younger age between sixteen and forty five highly interesting features more critical.
Howard Rosario: So
Humberto Scott: And if
Howard Rosario: perhaps
Humberto Scott: the only f
Howard Rosario: we should we should focus on that L_C_D_ screen.
Humberto Scott: Yeah, because our target is sixteen to forty five.
Paul Krigger: But,
Howard Rosario: Yeah but uh will
Paul Krigger: do you
Howard Rosario: we not uh exceed our uh our
Humberto Scott: Yeah you don't
Howard Rosario: uh production
Humberto Scott: know how much it costs.
Howard Rosario: uh
Humberto Scott: Yeah, you don't know how much it costs, the L_C_D_ screen.
Howard Rosario: Is it possible to find out, anyway?
Humberto Scott: No, I don't have
Howard Rosario: You
Humberto Scott: any
Howard Rosario: know?
Humberto Scott: costs here, I only have percentages.
Paul Krigger: But if you would do an L_C_D_ screen do we have don don't you have any buttons? Or because
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: if it only directs at the T_V_, then you only have uh I don't know what you want to
Howard Rosario: No, an
Paul Krigger: do
Howard Rosario: L_C_D_
Paul Krigger: with
Howard Rosario: screen's
Paul Krigger: the L_C_D_
Howard Rosario: just
Paul Krigger: screen.
Howard Rosario: like uh like a drawn here. Um just uh displays several buttons,
Paul Krigger: Yeah?
Howard Rosario: for example um if you wanted the minimal uh use b uh buttons, such as channel and volume, you just h uh displays four buttons on the screen
Paul Krigger: Oh right,
Howard Rosario: and
Paul Krigger: so you
Howard Rosario: it's
Paul Krigger: can
Howard Rosario: possible to p uh press them down,
Paul Krigger: Oh,
Howard Rosario: just like a touch screen.
Paul Krigger: yeah alright. So you can adjust which buttons you want on that
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: s
Humberto Scott: if
Paul Krigger: screen.
Howard Rosario: Yeah,
Humberto Scott: you
Howard Rosario: we
Humberto Scott: want
Howard Rosario: can make
Humberto Scott: to adjust,
Howard Rosario: it possible
Humberto Scott: like
Howard Rosario: to do that,
Humberto Scott: for
Howard Rosario: yeah.
Humberto Scott: example, adjust the audio settings, you press audio on the touchscreen and you get
Howard Rosario: Yeah
Humberto Scott: the buttons for
Howard Rosario: yeah.
Humberto Scott: audio settings,
Paul Krigger: Yeah alright, oh right.
Humberto Scott: so the other buttons are gone.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Yeah, yeah.
James Cornish: So we're going for an L_C_D_ screen?
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: I
Paul Krigger: Would
Humberto Scott: think
Paul Krigger: be yeah.
Humberto Scott: it's the most
Howard Rosario: That's
Humberto Scott: easier
Howard Rosario: my
Humberto Scott: thing,
Howard Rosario: uh
Humberto Scott: yeah.
James Cornish: And hoping that when we produce a lot it won't be too expensive.
Humberto Scott: No.
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: Well we had twelve fifty, I guess,
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: for uh
Howard Rosario: Twelve
Paul Krigger: production?
Howard Rosario: fifty.
Paul Krigger: Yeah. I dunno how expensive an
Howard Rosario: Um.
Paul Krigger: L_C_D_ screen is. Any guesses?
Howard Rosario: Well I suppose wi if the mar if our um if the i if the young people are interested in L_C_D_ screens, we should
Humberto Scott: Highly.
Howard Rosario: make 'em.
James Cornish: Mm-hmm.
Howard Rosario: And
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: if that is
Paul Krigger: But
Howard Rosario: our d uh market share to uh and our goal to uh deliver those uh remote
Paul Krigger: But
Howard Rosario: controls
Paul Krigger: he also said that we should not only focus on the younger people, but also on the older,
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: and will
Humberto Scott: but
Paul Krigger: they use it if it only has an
Humberto Scott: Um,
Paul Krigger: L_C_D_ screen?
Humberto Scott: s forty six to forty five, thirty three percent, and sixty fifty six to sixty five twelve percent. But
Paul Krigger: Oh, so
Humberto Scott: our
Paul Krigger: still a little
Humberto Scott: our
Paul Krigger: bit people
Humberto Scott: our what's it, project requirements are the new products should be reached for new
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: markets, to customers that are
Paul Krigger: Yeah
Humberto Scott: younger
Paul Krigger: that's
Humberto Scott: than forty.
Paul Krigger: right. But you don't want to alienate the other uh
Humberto Scott: No, that not now, but, so
Paul Krigger: But if they also buy it then it's alright. I guess.
Humberto Scott: Yeah, but market share fro for for
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: forty years and younger is higher than that of sixty five
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: and younger.
Paul Krigger: Alright.
James Cornish: Okay, so
Paul Krigger: An
James Cornish: L_C_D_ it is?
Paul Krigger: Yes.
Howard Rosario: Mm.
James Cornish: Okay.
Howard Rosario: It's treasure.
James Cornish: And
Howard Rosario: I
James Cornish: what
Howard Rosario: hope
James Cornish: else?
Howard Rosario: we uh h and
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: let's
Humberto Scott: i
Howard Rosario: hope to
Humberto Scott: i if
Howard Rosario: reach
Humberto Scott: it
Howard Rosario: those uh
Humberto Scott: Yeah, if it costs
Howard Rosario: those sales.
Humberto Scott: gets too much, too expensive, then yeah, we should be sticking to rubber buttons.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Yeah, can you um uh s I think that that they will send you some information about uh the cost of L_C_D_ uh
Humberto Scott: N
Howard Rosario: screens.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: nothing, no costs at all.
Howard Rosario: Uh
Paul Krigger: But
Howard Rosario: so if
Paul Krigger: perhaps
Howard Rosario: you
Paul Krigger: later,
Howard Rosario: uh Yeah,
Paul Krigger: so uh
Howard Rosario: so if you uh you receive an email about that, uh can you post it in the
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: or shouldn't
Humberto Scott: in
Howard Rosario: we post that in uh our projects mail uh folder.
Humberto Scott: I think
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: that should yeah I think we all get the costs of everything.
Paul Krigger: I
Howard Rosario: Because you are
Paul Krigger: don't
Howard Rosario: the the Marketing uh
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: Expert.
Humberto Scott: okay, I'll I'll
Howard Rosario: I
Humberto Scott: post
Howard Rosario: uh
Humberto Scott: it.
Paul Krigger: Well perhaps we should have a backup plan that we would use buttons
Howard Rosario: Yeah sure,
Paul Krigger: if it's
Howard Rosario: sure.
Paul Krigger: uh
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
James Cornish: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: too expensive.
James Cornish: okay. But for now
Humberto Scott: Okay,
James Cornish: it's L_C_D_.
Humberto Scott: L_C_D_,
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: yeah.
James Cornish: Okay.
Humberto Scott: Then you have the seventy five percent of users find it r ugly.
Paul Krigger: The L_C_D_?
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: Oh
Humberto Scott: and
Paul Krigger: that's
Humberto Scott: eighty
Paul Krigger: a
Humberto Scott: percent
Paul Krigger: bit of a problem.
Humberto Scott: of the users would spend more money with a when a remote would look fancy.
Paul Krigger: Oh, that's
Howard Rosario: Mm.
Paul Krigger: a bit of a problem.
Humberto Scott: Tha i l i it'll look fancy with
Howard Rosario: It's
Humberto Scott: L_C_D_
Howard Rosario: looks fancy
Humberto Scott: screen.
Howard Rosario: one yeah, of L_C_D_
Paul Krigger: Yeah, but
Howard Rosario: screen.
Paul Krigger: they
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: don't they
James Cornish: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: don't like it. They think it's ugly. When it has an L_C_D_
Humberto Scott: Yeah, just
Paul Krigger: screen.
Humberto Scott: a the plain remotes, not not specific L_C_D_ remotes.
Paul Krigger: Oh, alright, I thought that you said that.
Humberto Scott: So
James Cornish: Yeah, and maybe you can make something fancy out of an L_C_D_ remote,
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
James Cornish: because it's new,
Humberto Scott: Mm-hmm.
James Cornish: as far as I know.
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: Mm yeah.
Humberto Scott: of course. And
Howard Rosario: And
Humberto Scott: then
Howard Rosario: then
Humberto Scott: you have
Howard Rosario: not
Humberto Scott: the other
Howard Rosario: yeah.
Humberto Scott: thing, that seventy five percent zap a lot, but that's
Howard Rosario: Um.
Humberto Scott: not a f question with the L_C_D_ screen. Only thing you have to do is wipe the screen off once each time,
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: to get all the fingerprints off it.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Mm. Okay?
James Cornish: Okay, what else does our remote need?
Humberto Scott: Um
Paul Krigger: A mute button.
James Cornish: Mute button.
Humberto Scott: Mm-hmm.
Paul Krigger: I think.
Humberto Scott: The most important
Paul Krigger: And
Humberto Scott: things on a f on an on an uh remote control are channel selection, volume con selection,
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: and power s power usage.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: And a teletext, but that
Paul Krigger: But
Humberto Scott: is not of the question. Other things are
Paul Krigger: you put a button of
Humberto Scott: Sorry?
Paul Krigger: for teletext on the for the people who want to use it?
Humberto Scott: Yeah, it
Paul Krigger: Remembering
Humberto Scott: could be.
Paul Krigger: we have got a big remote
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: that you have to fill.
James Cornish: Mm-hmm. Yeah, and we could make an a a separate menu on the L_C_D_
Humberto Scott: Yeah, teletext.
James Cornish: uh
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
James Cornish: screen
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
James Cornish: for teletext.
Howard Rosario: And there's
Humberto Scott: And
Howard Rosario: also
Humberto Scott: other
Howard Rosario: a
Humberto Scott: other less important things are screen settings, audio settings, and channel settings,
Paul Krigger: Yeah, they
Humberto Scott: but
Paul Krigger: are less important, but I think they should
Humberto Scott: Less important.
Paul Krigger: be there,
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: or not?
Humberto Scott: should be there, but not
Howard Rosario: A sh but in a sub sub-menu
Humberto Scott: press
Howard Rosario: or
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: something
Humberto Scott: sub-menu,
Howard Rosario: like that.
Humberto Scott: yeah.
Howard Rosario: Uh I think it's also important to uh make it possible to um how do you call it in English, uh, to not use batteries, and use ac uh bat uh batteries to uh
James Cornish: Mm-hmm.
Paul Krigger: Like with
Howard Rosario: to be
Paul Krigger: a with
Howard Rosario: yeah
Paul Krigger: a mouse, you
Howard Rosario: yeah sure.
Paul Krigger: have not,
Howard Rosario: Indeed.
Paul Krigger: yeah.
Howard Rosario: So uh you can mount uh the the the uh
Humberto Scott: Yeah, in a breath it's
Howard Rosario: uh the remote control to um
James Cornish: Mm-hmm.
Humberto Scott: Charted.
Paul Krigger: We should think
Howard Rosario: to refill
Paul Krigger: of the twelve fifty
Howard Rosario: the
Paul Krigger: we have but
Humberto Scott: Yeah, but we don't
Paul Krigger: I
Humberto Scott: we
Paul Krigger: don't
Humberto Scott: don't
Paul Krigger: know
Humberto Scott: have
Paul Krigger: how
Humberto Scott: any
Paul Krigger: much
Humberto Scott: costs
Paul Krigger: that's
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: going
Humberto Scott: now, so
Paul Krigger: to uh
Howard Rosario: Okay,
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: because i uh when you get an L_C_D_ screen, you run it on batteries,
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: the batteries will be uh empty
Humberto Scott: Yeah
Howard Rosario: very
Humberto Scott: e
Howard Rosario: soon,
Humberto Scott: e power
Howard Rosario: very
Humberto Scott: supply
Howard Rosario: fast.
Humberto Scott: is one of
Paul Krigger: You
Humberto Scott: the
Paul Krigger: should
Humberto Scott: most important things.
Paul Krigger: Perhaps you should be able to
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: to switch the control off. If you have an L_C_D_ screen that's burns all the time I dunno.
Howard Rosario: Yeah, yeah. Yeah.
Paul Krigger: You shouldn't on and off because that's ver extra, that you have t first you have to turn the remote on, and then you can uh
James Cornish: Mm-hmm.
Howard Rosario: Uh
Paul Krigger: I don't
Humberto Scott: Yeah, I
Paul Krigger: know.
Humberto Scott: think it's it's not that easy because I don't think people will like it who who uh that you have to turn it on
Paul Krigger: Nee
Humberto Scott: first
Paul Krigger: that's
Humberto Scott: and then
Paul Krigger: that's
Humberto Scott: use it, so
Paul Krigger: uh yeah.
Humberto Scott: I think it's better when th the T_V_ shuts down, the remote shuts down.
Paul Krigger: But
Howard Rosario: And
Paul Krigger: then you
Howard Rosario: go
Paul Krigger: can't
Howard Rosario: to standby mode when you don't use
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: it, so that
Paul Krigger: Yeah yeah au automac matically, that it
Howard Rosario: Yeah, automatically.
Paul Krigger: yeah.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: After two
Humberto Scott: After
Howard Rosario: minutes
Humberto Scott: two
Howard Rosario: or three
Humberto Scott: minutes, yeah
Howard Rosario: minutes,
Humberto Scott: two three
Howard Rosario: something
Humberto Scott: minutes,
Howard Rosario: like
Humberto Scott: yeah.
Howard Rosario: that.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
James Cornish: Yeah. And maybe a low battery indicator?
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
James Cornish: On the screen.
Howard Rosario: Sure.
Humberto Scott: Yeah. And then b that uh before an hour when its get again gets empty.
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: Then you have plenty of time to recharge it, of put
Howard Rosario: Mm.
Humberto Scott: it in a recharger. Charger.
James Cornish: So we are going for the for the recharger.
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
James Cornish: Okay.
Humberto Scott: if it's. Uh.
Paul Krigger: If it's sensible.
Humberto Scott: Yeah, because when you're watching T_V_,
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: you're zapping and you have to put it in a recharger,
Paul Krigger: Yeah,
Humberto Scott: and I don't
Paul Krigger: b when
Howard Rosario: No,
Humberto Scott: think
Paul Krigger: the
Humberto Scott: it
Paul Krigger: batteries
Howard Rosario: when you
Paul Krigger: are low
Howard Rosario: when you're done with s uh w uh
Humberto Scott: Yeah, okay, but then we
Howard Rosario: watching
Humberto Scott: have to be
Howard Rosario: your
Humberto Scott: sure
Howard Rosario: television,
Humberto Scott: that the
Howard Rosario: you
Humberto Scott: the
Howard Rosario: have
Humberto Scott: the
Howard Rosario: to put
Humberto Scott: the batteries
Howard Rosario: it
Humberto Scott: go hours, six hours, five,
Howard Rosario: Yeah sure,
Humberto Scott: six hours,
Paul Krigger: But you'll
Howard Rosario: of course.
Humberto Scott: then.
Paul Krigger: also forget to put it in,
Humberto Scott: Yeah, then
Paul Krigger: because
Howard Rosario: Yeah,
Humberto Scott: you have
Paul Krigger: you
Howard Rosario: but
Humberto Scott: a problem.
Paul Krigger: throw it on the couch and you don't remember.
Howard Rosario: But you also forget to buy batteries,
Paul Krigger: Yeah. That's
Howard Rosario: and
Paul Krigger: right.
Howard Rosario: then you can you can't use it, so
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: I
Humberto Scott: Or we have to be sure that the batteries last couple of days when they're recharged.
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: So.
Paul Krigger: Well I think the batteries should should w should work a lot longer than a couple of days,
Humberto Scott: Yeah because
Paul Krigger: or not?
Humberto Scott: you have b but
Paul Krigger: 'Cause
Humberto Scott: you have L_C_D_ screen.
Paul Krigger: Yeah, that's right,
Humberto Scott: High power
Paul Krigger: but
Humberto Scott: usage.
Howard Rosario: High power user cell, i uh it should be uh a standard move to to put your remote control in the charger when you're done
Humberto Scott: Yes.
Howard Rosario: watching television, that's also a a a great advantage because you can't lose it anymore. Because you are
Humberto Scott: True.
Howard Rosario: obliged to uh put it in the charger
Humberto Scott: Yeah. Yeah.
Howard Rosario: and not
Humberto Scott: True.
Howard Rosario: to uh leave it in a couch uh between some cushions.
Paul Krigger: Yeah. Right.
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: Okay.
Humberto Scott: you made a point there.
Paul Krigger: But
James Cornish: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: then you also
James Cornish: also.
Paul Krigger: have to s have somewhere where you can put a remo recharger near your couch because otherwise you have to
Humberto Scott: Yeah, otherwise
Paul Krigger: walk
Humberto Scott: all
Paul Krigger: a
Humberto Scott: your
Paul Krigger: long
Humberto Scott: yeah.
Paul Krigger: way when you twoft want to turn on the T_V_.
Humberto Scott: Just a small device.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Yeah it
Humberto Scott: Plug
Paul Krigger: I think
Howard Rosario: hasn't
Humberto Scott: it in,
Howard Rosario: It
Paul Krigger: everything
Howard Rosario: doesn't
Humberto Scott: that's
Howard Rosario: have
Humberto Scott: it.
Paul Krigger: has
Howard Rosario: to be big.
Paul Krigger: it
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: for
Humberto Scott: like a
Paul Krigger: and
Humberto Scott: like
Paul Krigger: I
Humberto Scott: telephone
Paul Krigger: guess.
Humberto Scott: charger or something.
Howard Rosario: Yeah just just a cable, or
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: a even a a a a a charger where you can mount it on.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Something like that, just u
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Okay.
Paul Krigger: Alright.
James Cornish: Okay, well
Humberto Scott: It has to be
James Cornish: I've
Humberto Scott: easy to use also, or
James Cornish: Yeah,
Humberto Scott: things.
James Cornish: you have some more points.
Humberto Scott: Uh market share, speaker re speech recognition. I think.
Howard Rosario: Functional designs uh for the elderly uh you could make it possible to enlarge the screen, so make
Humberto Scott: Also.
Howard Rosario: it possible to not uh display uh a button at ten points uh,
Humberto Scott: Well I
Howard Rosario: or
Humberto Scott: think that this should be standard. Large
Howard Rosario: Yeah but it is
Humberto Scott: button
Howard Rosario: uh one
Humberto Scott: large
Howard Rosario: of the functions
Humberto Scott: buttons.
Howard Rosario: you have to uh specify.
Humberto Scott: Yeah? Okay.
Howard Rosario: Because we can look at uh uh perhaps uh forty buttons at a screen, but the elderly only look at two buttons. Okay.
James Cornish: And you said something about speech recognition?
Humberto Scott: Yeah, it
Howard Rosario: Speech
Humberto Scott: says also
Howard Rosario: recognition?
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Hello. Twelve Euro twelve
Paul Krigger: Yeah,
Humberto Scott: Twelve.
Paul Krigger: twelve
Howard Rosario: Euro
Paul Krigger: fifty,
Howard Rosario: fifty.
Paul Krigger: twelve fifty.
Humberto Scott: That's an also ninety one percent sixteen to twenty five, twenty six to thirty five years, seventy six percent, and thirty six to forty five, thirty five percent.
Paul Krigger: So it's pretty
Howard Rosario: Well,
Paul Krigger: big.
Howard Rosario: spread
Humberto Scott: But
Howard Rosario: it by a
Humberto Scott: then
Howard Rosario: big
Humberto Scott: I
Howard Rosario: market.
Humberto Scott: I I
James Cornish: Even bigger than for L_C_D_.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: W I know let's do a speech.
Howard Rosario: Well let's leave out all the remote controls and just put a
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: microphone
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: on top
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: of the television to
Humberto Scott: Ninety. Twenty five.
Paul Krigger: You can clap
Howard Rosario: Yeah
Paul Krigger: or something.
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: channel.
Howard Rosario: Turn volume up.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Hey, that that's an idea.
Paul Krigger: Now you shouldn't say the wrong thing, I dunno.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Okay, well that should it has to be remote control, not
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: twelve.
Paul Krigger: But they want to talk into the remo remote
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: control,
Howard Rosario: Sure
Paul Krigger: or
Howard Rosario: why
Paul Krigger: something,
Howard Rosario: not
Paul Krigger: or?
Humberto Scott: Is
Howard Rosario: why
Humberto Scott: this
Howard Rosario: not
Humberto Scott: only would you would you pay more for speech recognition in a remote control. It's
Howard Rosario: Yeah,
Humberto Scott: the only thing it says.
Howard Rosario: mm.
Paul Krigger: Oh, but do we want to implement that, or?
Humberto Scott: I think an L_C_D_ screen should be suf sufficient.
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
James Cornish: But when you look at the percentages
Humberto Scott: Yeah, it says a lot, but
Howard Rosario: Perhaps the options
James Cornish: Speech
Howard Rosario: should
James Cornish: recognition
Howard Rosario: be uh
James Cornish: scores even higher, huh?
Howard Rosario: Why not?
James Cornish: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: Why not?
James Cornish: well, maybe because of the cost, but uh
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
James Cornish: nobody knows uh how
Howard Rosario: Let's
James Cornish: much
Howard Rosario: hope uh
James Cornish: uh
Paul Krigger: I
Humberto Scott: No
Paul Krigger: know
Howard Rosario: to have
Humberto Scott: I
James Cornish: it
Humberto Scott: think
Howard Rosario: some
Humberto Scott: I
James Cornish: will
Howard Rosario: uh
Humberto Scott: think
James Cornish: cost
Humberto Scott: it's
Howard Rosario: d
Humberto Scott: better to have
James Cornish: uh.
Humberto Scott: L_ L_C_D_ screen, because in the area of tw thirty six to forty five, we have about thirty percent of the market share in in our hands, and fifty five of those people want L_C_D_ screen and thirty five want speech recognition. So I think it's better to keep it with L_C_D_ screen.
Paul Krigger: Mm.
James Cornish: But would it be useful to imple implement both?
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
James Cornish: On one remote?
Humberto Scott: if the
Paul Krigger: Well
Humberto Scott: costs
James Cornish: Or
Humberto Scott: al allow it.
James Cornish: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: I
James Cornish: I
Paul Krigger: don't
James Cornish: dunno.
Paul Krigger: know if that can be done with the cost of twelve fifty.
Humberto Scott: Nee.
Paul Krigger: With that uh
Humberto Scott: If it should be done, if it could be done,
Paul Krigger: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: We
Humberto Scott: I
Howard Rosario: should
Humberto Scott: won't
Howard Rosario: do
Humberto Scott: matter.
Howard Rosario: it.
Paul Krigger: but how
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: would
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: you
Howard Rosario: Sure.
Paul Krigger: like to implement that, that you say volume up, and then it goes
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: up,
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: or? Uh.
Howard Rosario: Certain systems already exist, I think.
Humberto Scott: Mm-hmm.
Paul Krigger: Then you also have to have different languages if we go international. Then uh
Humberto Scott: True.
Paul Krigger: it's y
Howard Rosario: True,
Paul Krigger: it's
Howard Rosario: yeah.
Paul Krigger: yours to do
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: a
Humberto Scott: True.
Paul Krigger: French and
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: Dutch and English and
Humberto Scott: But that should
Howard Rosario: This should be
Humberto Scott: also
Howard Rosario: uh accommodated
Humberto Scott: be with f
Howard Rosario: with some software,
Humberto Scott: should be also with L_C_D_
Howard Rosario: uh,
Humberto Scott: screen.
Howard Rosario: uh. Yeah.
Humberto Scott: Because then I think in Chinese
Paul Krigger: Yeah,
Humberto Scott: is
Paul Krigger: that's
Humberto Scott: different
Paul Krigger: right.
Humberto Scott: written, volume is different written than um
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: Swahili
Howard Rosario: Right.
Humberto Scott: or something.
Howard Rosario: Swahili.
Paul Krigger: Yeah you
Howard Rosario: Swahili.
Paul Krigger: can use icons for the
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: Ja, well possible.
Paul Krigger: a speaker and uh
Howard Rosario: Indeed.
Paul Krigger: But if that's better
Humberto Scott: Yeah, yeah
Paul Krigger: than
Humberto Scott: yeah
Paul Krigger: language
Humberto Scott: yeah.
Paul Krigger: for
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: the for the remote.
Howard Rosario: So we want to uh yeah it's international
Paul Krigger: Then it's
Howard Rosario: uh
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: okay. Okay.
Humberto Scott: 'Kay, what else?
James Cornish: So, no speech recognition? Or
Paul Krigger: Well, if it could be done, we
Humberto Scott: Yeah, we
Howard Rosario: Y
Humberto Scott: have
Howard Rosario: it
Humberto Scott: to
Howard Rosario: should
Humberto Scott: keep
Howard Rosario: be done.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: If it could be done, should be done.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
James Cornish: Yeah, and then we have different languages.
Paul Krigger: Yeah, that should be uh
Howard Rosario: That's not so difficult
Paul Krigger: anything matters.
Howard Rosario: at all,
James Cornish: Okay,
Howard Rosario: because
James Cornish: just make
Howard Rosario: I
James Cornish: a separate
Howard Rosario: already
James Cornish: remote
Howard Rosario: use
James Cornish: for
Howard Rosario: on several
James Cornish: each uh
Howard Rosario: voice operated systems, and they are all possible to uh not all, but
Paul Krigger: Well, you
Humberto Scott: I think
Paul Krigger: sh
Humberto Scott: it's
Paul Krigger: you
Humberto Scott: difficult.
Paul Krigger: should to adjust the thing.
Humberto Scott: Every language of dialects
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: I think it's very differen difficult.
Paul Krigger: And you have to speak the so that it
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: can understand.
Humberto Scott: I think it can't be implemented, but maybe
Paul Krigger: You could use that n as an option,
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: if you
Humberto Scott: 's
Paul Krigger: have
Humberto Scott: an option, yes.
Paul Krigger: money left, or something.
Howard Rosario: Yeah, sure, indeed.
Humberto Scott: Fifty Euro cents.
Paul Krigger: Yeah. Let's do speech.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: For speech recognition.
James Cornish: Okay, so we only do this when we have enough money left.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
James Cornish: Okay. Well I've written down an an on or off button, volume selection, channel selection, uh the digits from one to zero, huh. Um or from zero to nine. Uh a digits button to switch uh between one and two digits, mute button, a separate menu for teletext, a battery indicator. Um we're going to use a docking station and uh probably L_C_D_ and if there's enough money, speech recognition.
Paul Krigger: Mm.
James Cornish: And uh the possibility to uh enlarge buttons or to have large buttons
Humberto Scott: Mm,
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: yes.
Paul Krigger: I
James Cornish: in
Paul Krigger: With
James Cornish: general.
Paul Krigger: uh teletext if it wasn't ver very important,
Humberto Scott: No,
Paul Krigger: it was
Humberto Scott: but
Paul Krigger: but You also now have colours. I don't know if we should implement that.
Humberto Scott: Curved?
Paul Krigger: Yeah, when you press the red button, you go to page one hundred two, and when you press the
Howard Rosario: Uh yeah.
Paul Krigger: I don't know if we should
Humberto Scott: Um.
Paul Krigger: implement that, because it says that teletext not really
Howard Rosario: S
Paul Krigger: important,
Howard Rosario: Shortcuts.
Paul Krigger: but
Howard Rosario: Uh.
Paul Krigger: yeah, the shortcut,
Humberto Scott: I
Paul Krigger: and
Humberto Scott: think
Paul Krigger: you can't
Humberto Scott: we should
Paul Krigger: go
Humberto Scott: we
Paul Krigger: to
Humberto Scott: could
Paul Krigger: sport.
Humberto Scott: that we could also implement a audio settings, screen settings and channel settings, but as sub-menus.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Mm.
Humberto Scott: D Mainly if you turn the uh remote control on, you have to u you have to see from one till zero, channel and volume. And if you want to use teletext screen or audio, then you can
Howard Rosario: Sh
Humberto Scott: press it.
Howard Rosario: Yeah,
Humberto Scott: It
Howard Rosario: just
Humberto Scott: should be
Howard Rosario: just
Humberto Scott: available
Howard Rosario: sub-menu.
Humberto Scott: but not
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: 'Cause
Howard Rosario: Not
Paul Krigger: it should
Howard Rosario: directly
Humberto Scott: not
Paul Krigger: be there.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: uh available.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Okay.
James Cornish: Okay, too much teletext support, but in a separate menu, and
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Mm.
Paul Krigger: So actually it is there but it's
Humberto Scott: Yeah, but
Paul Krigger: just
Humberto Scott: s
Paul Krigger: not r ready
Howard Rosario: Directly
Paul Krigger: there.
Howard Rosario: available.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: So does it confuse uh the
Paul Krigger: You'll
Howard Rosario: user?
Paul Krigger: have to search
Humberto Scott: They'd
Paul Krigger: for
Humberto Scott: have
Paul Krigger: it.
Humberto Scott: to be easy
Howard Rosario: Uh.
Humberto Scott: to use.
Howard Rosario: I'll search um. If you want to use teletext, you can push the teletext
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: button and then the options uh become available.
Paul Krigger: Yeah, that's a
Humberto Scott: The sign of it.
James Cornish: Okay, but no more buttons or functions, or?
Humberto Scott: Uh,
Howard Rosario: No.
Paul Krigger: I guess
Humberto Scott: no.
Paul Krigger: not.
Humberto Scott: What else can you do with
Paul Krigger: We've
Humberto Scott: a
Paul Krigger: got
Humberto Scott: television?
Paul Krigger: anon
James Cornish: Aren't we forgetting something
Paul Krigger: Have got got
James Cornish: very
Paul Krigger: two
James Cornish: important?
Paul Krigger: examples here, but I don't think there's anything
Humberto Scott: Uh
Paul Krigger: we're missing.
Humberto Scott: play, pause, doesn't n need to be
Paul Krigger: Well, we
Humberto Scott: there.
Paul Krigger: don't have the video orders
Humberto Scott: Yes, so this is your presentation. We could check the other remote controls with
Paul Krigger: Yeah, you
Humberto Scott: technical
Paul Krigger: could look
Humberto Scott: functions.
Paul Krigger: here all the the
Humberto Scott: Which ones were yours?
Paul Krigger: Uh th th th th I don't know, technical
Humberto Scott: Techni
Paul Krigger: functions. They're a bit small, you can we should stretch them, because
James Cornish: Ping.
Humberto Scott: Ja ja ja ja ja. Technical functions. Yeah okay.
Paul Krigger: I guess we've got them all.
Humberto Scott: Uh I think I go to have volume, mute but I Yeah. Very slow. Yeah, the zoom buttons.
Paul Krigger: And for a T_V_?
Humberto Scott: Yeah, b wide
Paul Krigger: Can you zoom
Humberto Scott: screen,
Paul Krigger: in a T_V_?
Humberto Scott: high screen, different
Paul Krigger: Or
Humberto Scott: things
Paul Krigger: that
Humberto Scott: you
Paul Krigger: you
Humberto Scott: have,
Paul Krigger: can put 'em on uh on
Humberto Scott: yeah different
Paul Krigger: on wide
Humberto Scott: uh
Paul Krigger: and
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: yeah. But that should also be a sub then, a sub uh menu
Howard Rosario: Menu.
Humberto Scott: Yeah
Paul Krigger: thing.
Humberto Scott: it should be available, but then in separate screen settings or something.
Paul Krigger: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: Mm.
Paul Krigger: so we should also implement se screen settings.
Humberto Scott: Yeah, screen settings, audio settings,
Paul Krigger: Oh
Humberto Scott: teletext
Paul Krigger: right.
Humberto Scott: settings you have.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: Channel settings.
Paul Krigger: Yeah, so you can program
Humberto Scott: So those
Paul Krigger: the
Humberto Scott: four, and of course the main.
Paul Krigger: Yeah, so the first you see the main, and the other ones you can
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: uh go
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: to uh
Humberto Scott: Like tap screens or something
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: or, I dunno.
Paul Krigger: I
Humberto Scott: Something
Paul Krigger: hope we can do this.
Howard Rosario: There are a
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: lot of options
Humberto Scott: if
Howard Rosario: depending
Humberto Scott: uh
Howard Rosario: uh on what kind of television you got. 'Cause if you don't got a wide screen television you don't need the uh
Humberto Scott: No, you don't
Howard Rosario: the screen
Humberto Scott: yu a
Howard Rosario: settings
Humberto Scott: no you then
Howard Rosario: uh
Humberto Scott: you
Howard Rosario: for
Humberto Scott: don't no ni
Howard Rosario: uh
Humberto Scott: don't then you don't use it.
Howard Rosario: Yeah and if the television does not support such uh operations
Humberto Scott: Mm-hmm.
Paul Krigger: We don't have to use that top. Yeah.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: So you leave it alone.
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: Yeah. Or it could be possible to have a a standard version of the remote,
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: an expanded version.
Paul Krigger: And do we want them in different colours,
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: or And
Humberto Scott: Colours.
Paul Krigger: and the buttons, should they have
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: colours?
Howard Rosario: Colours I think the main colour of the
Paul Krigger: Oh but we
Howard Rosario: remote
Paul Krigger: don't have
Howard Rosario: control
Paul Krigger: any buttons.
Howard Rosario: is uh the colour of the L_C_D_ screen.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: I
James Cornish: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Because
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: we don't
Humberto Scott: then
Howard Rosario: want
Humberto Scott: defines
Howard Rosario: a lot
Humberto Scott: itself.
Howard Rosario: a devi yeah
Humberto Scott: Because
Howard Rosario: a device
Humberto Scott: uh
Howard Rosario: self s g
Humberto Scott: how many percent? Eighty percent?
Paul Krigger: They think it's ugly,
Humberto Scott: Would spend
Paul Krigger: right?
Humberto Scott: more money if it looks fancy.
Howard Rosario: Okay, so use uh very uh lot of peo
Paul Krigger: Perhaps you can uh make adjustable fronts, like with the telephones.
Howard Rosario: Adjust with phones, yes
Paul Krigger: You can uh But
Howard Rosario: Okay.
Paul Krigger: I
Howard Rosario: Twelve
Paul Krigger: don't
Howard Rosario: Euro fifty.
Paul Krigger: think that uh
Howard Rosario: Well, make it available in different colours, you mean? Sure.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: Red, white, blue, black.
Humberto Scott: Rasta
James Cornish: And a see-through
Humberto Scott: colours.
Howard Rosario: Grey.
James Cornish: uh
Howard Rosario: Yeah
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: sea view,
Humberto Scott: Yeah, see
Howard Rosario: yes,
Humberto Scott: through version.
Howard Rosario: Simpson's versions and
Humberto Scott: Yeah. If you press a button, it turns green.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
James Cornish: Okay,
Howard Rosario: Leave.
Paul Krigger: A
James Cornish: well
Paul Krigger: disco version.
James Cornish: that's the
Paul Krigger: Five minutes?
James Cornish: signal for las final five minutes. Um so I have uh the things I just read. Um then we have uh separate menus for teletext, screen settings, audio settings, and
Howard Rosario: Yeah.
James Cornish: what else?
Humberto Scott: Channel settings?
Paul Krigger: Oh yeah, right.
James Cornish: Channel
Paul Krigger: So you
James Cornish: settings.
Paul Krigger: can program the T_V_.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
James Cornish: Okay.
Humberto Scott: Mm.
Paul Krigger: Perhaps you should you'd throw them on on in one pile. So, options, and then you sub them.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Paul Krigger: Otherwise
Humberto Scott: Could
Paul Krigger: you
Humberto Scott: be possible.
Paul Krigger: have all those teletext, perhaps teletext
Howard Rosario: Mm.
Paul Krigger: not, but
Humberto Scott: Or like uh you
James Cornish: No,
Humberto Scott: have
James Cornish: we
Humberto Scott: a menu
James Cornish: said teletext
Humberto Scott: button, you
James Cornish: also
Humberto Scott: press
James Cornish: a separate menu.
Humberto Scott: Yeah, or
Paul Krigger: Yeah,
Humberto Scott: otherwise
Paul Krigger: but I
Humberto Scott: you have a menu button, press menu then you have uh
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: main uh menu search uh all the all the settings.
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
James Cornish: Okay,
Paul Krigger: But
James Cornish: but we can work that out
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
James Cornish: later,
Humberto Scott: no problem.
James Cornish: I guess. So
Humberto Scott: Yep.
James Cornish: we're having a a general menu with the most used functions, uh teletext, screen settings, audio settings, channel settings, and maybe there are options for the remote itself? Like
Paul Krigger: I don't
James Cornish: uh
Paul Krigger: know.
James Cornish: large icons or small icons and
Humberto Scott: Um,
James Cornish: I don't know what
Howard Rosario: No.
James Cornish: else, but
Humberto Scott: I think b because we don't have a lot of buttons on the one screen, I
Paul Krigger: Or
Humberto Scott: think
Paul Krigger: do we
Humberto Scott: the
Paul Krigger: have
Humberto Scott: buttons
Paul Krigger: any buttons?
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: On the
Humberto Scott: but
Paul Krigger: remote.
Humberto Scott: but or
Paul Krigger: Which
Humberto Scott: like
Paul Krigger: one?
Humberto Scott: you have you only have channel button or volume button. Those buttons
Paul Krigger: But
Humberto Scott: you
James Cornish: Yeah,
Humberto Scott: can
Paul Krigger: that's
James Cornish: but
Paul Krigger: also
James Cornish: on
Humberto Scott: you
James Cornish: the
Humberto Scott: can
James Cornish: L_C_D_,
Paul Krigger: in the L_C_D_,
James Cornish: huh?
Paul Krigger: right?
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
James Cornish: Right, yeah, okay.
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: So we don't
Humberto Scott: th
Paul Krigger: have any normal buttons
Humberto Scott: No, no
Paul Krigger: that
Humberto Scott: normal
Paul Krigger: uh No,
Humberto Scott: buttons,
Paul Krigger: alright.
Humberto Scott: yeah. Maybe only the on and o
Paul Krigger: Yet
Humberto Scott: on
Paul Krigger: on
Humberto Scott: and off
Paul Krigger: and off
Humberto Scott: button.
Paul Krigger: is
James Cornish: But
Paul Krigger: p is
James Cornish: we don't
Paul Krigger: perhaps
Howard Rosario: Uh
Humberto Scott: But
James Cornish: need
Howard Rosario: not
Humberto Scott: I don't
James Cornish: a special
Howard Rosario: button
Paul Krigger: you kno
Humberto Scott: think
James Cornish: we don't need a special options menu for the remote itself.
Humberto Scott: Mm,
Paul Krigger: No,
Humberto Scott: no.
Paul Krigger: no.
James Cornish: Okay.
Paul Krigger: Oh well, you should be able to set which T_V_ you have. If you
Howard Rosario: Yeah
Paul Krigger: have
Howard Rosario: sure, of
Paul Krigger: if
Howard Rosario: course
Paul Krigger: you
Howard Rosario: you need
Paul Krigger: have uh
Howard Rosario: uh a settings button, uh or a settings option for the remote control.
Paul Krigger: Yeah. But isn't idea to use uh uh what you said, uh normal on and off button for the T_V_,
Humberto Scott: No no
Paul Krigger: that
Humberto Scott: no,
Paul Krigger: you
Humberto Scott: because
Paul Krigger: don't have
Humberto Scott: we
Paul Krigger: to
Humberto Scott: we
Paul Krigger: use a
Humberto Scott: discussed that you could charge it, otherwise is it it jumps to stand-by mode
Paul Krigger: Yeah
Humberto Scott: automatically.
Paul Krigger: but but not for the remote but for the T_V_, that
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: you
Humberto Scott: but
Paul Krigger: use
Humberto Scott: a T_V_ of course, th that's the I think that's a best thing is that to implement that one in the menu with the volume and channel.
Paul Krigger: But a not as normal button,
Humberto Scott: No.
Paul Krigger: in the L_C_D_, yeah.
James Cornish: Well maybe there should be a separate button apart from the L_C_D_, because you can't turn it on when the L_C_D_ is off. So how do you turn the thing on? There has to be a
Paul Krigger: No you just
James Cornish: on button
Paul Krigger: tap
James Cornish: on the remote,
Paul Krigger: I
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
Paul Krigger: think.
Humberto Scott: you
Howard Rosario: Just
Humberto Scott: tap.
Howard Rosario: tap
James Cornish: huh?
Howard Rosario: it.
Humberto Scott: Touch
James Cornish: Tap
Humberto Scott: screen,
James Cornish: the thing. Okay.
Humberto Scott: yeah then it's turn
James Cornish: And then
Humberto Scott: turn off,
James Cornish: the television
Humberto Scott: turn on.
James Cornish: is on also, or just the remote?
Humberto Scott: No, just the remote. A television
James Cornish: Sure.
Paul Krigger: But
Humberto Scott: don't have to be on, that one you can
Howard Rosario: Yeah, it
Humberto Scott: press
Howard Rosario: should
Humberto Scott: on,
Howard Rosario: be in standby mode,
Humberto Scott: yeah stand-by,
Howard Rosario: but
Humberto Scott: then press on remote, press on and then T_V_ should be available.
Paul Krigger: Yeah a yeah.
Humberto Scott: Or not.
Paul Krigger: I don't know whether it's handy to have a n a normal on button, a r just uh
Humberto Scott: Separate.
Paul Krigger: rubber uh for for T_V_, so you can turn it on and then you can choose the channel. Otherwise you I don't know whether or not that's
Howard Rosario: A A A normal button
Paul Krigger: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: on the remote control,
Paul Krigger: yeah.
Howard Rosario: or norm?
Paul Krigger: To turn it on. Of or you should put it in the L_C_D_ screen.
Howard Rosario: Yeah, because uh when you touch the L_C_D_ screen when it is in standby mode, it should pop on.
Paul Krigger: Yeah, I have, yeah.
James Cornish: Okay,
Howard Rosario: Wh uh why
James Cornish: well
Howard Rosario: would it be a a need to have a normal button?
Paul Krigger: Well I I guess if you use the L_C_D_ screen, you first have to search where is the on button, then you uh you you then turn it, and then the T_V_ goes on. But if you have a normal on button on the on the remote, then you do the on, and then you search the channel which you want.
Humberto Scott: Yeah, but I think the re the remote control, if you press tap the screen, it always should jump to the screen which has the volume button, channel
Howard Rosario: Mm.
Humberto Scott: button, and of course of also the on and off button.
Paul Krigger: Oh right.
Howard Rosario: I think it looks a lot more fancy if
Paul Krigger: Yeah,
Howard Rosario: you use
Paul Krigger: I think
Howard Rosario: uh
Paul Krigger: so too.
Howard Rosario: if
Paul Krigger: Otherwise
Howard Rosario: you don't have any
Paul Krigger: y
Howard Rosario: buttons
Paul Krigger: wet e k
Howard Rosario: on
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: the s on
James Cornish: Yeah.
Humberto Scott: Yeah.
Howard Rosario: on remote control.
James Cornish: So actually we're going to create a a button-less uh
Paul Krigger: Yeah.
James Cornish: remote. No buttons at all. Okay, well that's might be a unique selling point, huh for
Humberto Scott: Mm-hmm.
James Cornish: a remote.
Paul Krigger: If we can afford
James Cornish: Okay, well
Paul Krigger: it.
Humberto Scott: Yeah,
James Cornish: I
Humberto Scott: if we
James Cornish: guess
Humberto Scott: can afford
James Cornish: we have to
Humberto Scott: it. Yeah.
James Cornish: postpone
Howard Rosario: Oh, okay
James Cornish: further discussion to uh our next meeting, because we're running out of time. Um for now, we're having a lunch break,
Howard Rosario: Oh.
James Cornish: and then there will be uh half an hour for the uh next share of individual work. I will uh write uh minutes, if I can create them out of this. And
Howard Rosario: Mm.
James Cornish: uh put them in the the project documents uh folder. And here are the individual actions for the for the other roles. And of course specific instructions will be sent to you again by your uh personal coach.
Paul Krigger: Alright.
James Cornish: Luckily as we are. Okay, well thank you very much,
Humberto Scott: Mm-hmm.
James Cornish: for now, and uh
Paul Krigger: Lunch.
James Cornish: have a nice lunch, huh?
Howard Rosario: Okay. Food.
Paul Krigger: Should we put this back in our rooms, or uh?
Howard Rosario: Yeah, think so.
Paul Krigger: Yeah. | James Cornish opened the meeting and then Howard Rosario discussed the interior workings of a remote along with his personal preferences for the appearance of a remote. Paul Krigger discussed the technical functions of a remote and indicated that a user centered approach to designing the interface would be preferable. Humberto Scott discussed the functional requirements of a remote and user tendencies in using remotes. Humberto Scott indicated that an ideal remote would include an LCD screen, would not be too small in size, and is easy to use. James Cornish briefed the team on some new requirements and led them in a discussion in which the team discussed their target group and made decisions on the appearance and functions of their upcoming product. | 1 | amisum | train |
Richard Bishop: Good.
Donald Ramesh: Beep. Oh.
Ernest Wright: What?
Richard Bishop: So uh welcome everyone.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: Um as you may have noticed I uh created separate folders because it was uh
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: tending to get a little busy in our uh shared project documents uh folder. I don't know if everybody uh put their own uh documents in the right folder, which is for now the detailed design meeting.
John Carmichael: That's new one?
Ernest Wright: We
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: didn't make any uh
Donald Ramesh: Uh, we should save that
Ernest Wright: Oh in
Richard Bishop: Then I'll move
Donald Ramesh: one.
Richard Bishop: this
Ernest Wright: Didn't
Richard Bishop: one.
Ernest Wright: we just do that?
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, save in the folder.
Ernest Wright: Oh.
Donald Ramesh: Save as project.
Richard Bishop: Oh no, this is just one big document, so you can leave that wherever it is.
Donald Ramesh: Oh, okay. Hmm hmm.
Richard Bishop: And evaluation left. Okay.
Donald Ramesh: Agenda.
Richard Bishop: Well not main documents this time.
Ernest Wright: Hmm?
Richard Bishop: Oh uh yes. I have it open myself I guess. Um well the detailed design meeting Huh? We're finally getting somewhere hopefully. Um what are we going to do? I've opened it already. Um I'm still going to take some minutes,
Donald Ramesh: Oh, sorry.
Richard Bishop: and if I'm right, you two are going to give a prototype presentation?
Ernest Wright: We could.
Richard Bishop: Aren't you? Yes, you are. And uh m did you do something with evaluation criteria?
John Carmichael: Yep. Yep.
Richard Bishop: Good. And we have a correct agenda. And uh then we have to look at something which is less nice, the finance uh aspect, whether we can afford what we have designed, and
Ernest Wright: Oops.
Richard Bishop: if we can we can uh commence the final part which is the production or project evaluation, how did we work together and what are the results, and how happy are we with those. Okay, well finance uh will be later. Now I'd like to give the word to you two.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Okay. Get up stand up.
Ernest Wright: Well
Donald Ramesh: just
Ernest Wright: uh we
Donald Ramesh: 'Kay.
Ernest Wright: made a prototype. We first start with the overall uh This
Donald Ramesh: View.
Ernest Wright: is about the total remote control. We made it
Donald Ramesh: Just example colour, so
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: uh there's one the colours we would to uh see
Ernest Wright: It's a fresh
Donald Ramesh: our.
Ernest Wright: colour. And uh the screen light blue. Oh uh this the scroll button and the microphone on the on the sides here under. And the R_ and R_ logo, it just says R_ and R_ now, but uh
Donald Ramesh: Okay?
Ernest Wright: Any questions so far?
John Carmichael: Big microphone.
Donald Ramesh: yeah, just
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: uh just an idea about
John Carmichael: Oh okay.
Donald Ramesh: how to m th that could also be
John Carmichael: That's
Donald Ramesh: possible.
John Carmichael: the place where it's going to be, not
Donald Ramesh: Uh
John Carmichael: the size.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: well, it's an idea in a
Ernest Wright: Oh y
Donald Ramesh: so.
Ernest Wright: you perhaps you should make it a bit big, so people know it's there and uh
Donald Ramesh: Do not forget it.
Ernest Wright: Uh
John Carmichael: Mm-hmm.
Donald Ramesh: To function it it doesn't really have to be sm uh big of course.
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: Hmm.
John Carmichael: okay.
Donald Ramesh: The microphone
John Carmichael: Of course.
Donald Ramesh: could be just a minor uh hole
John Carmichael: Mm.
Donald Ramesh: uh
John Carmichael: Mm,
Donald Ramesh: on the left
John Carmichael: th yeah.
Donald Ramesh: uh button.
John Carmichael: Small.
Donald Ramesh: Okay um we also made some uh ideas about how uh the options menu would work. Uh using the scroll button on sides uh y uh I uh um
Ernest Wright: You push the scroll button
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, you push the scroll button
Ernest Wright: and it's claps out if there's
Donald Ramesh: and a drop
Ernest Wright: a
Donald Ramesh: down menu or a pull out menu comes out and uh you get uh you get the options uh becoming available. For example uh T_V_ settings, uh
Ernest Wright: Remote settings,
Donald Ramesh: remote
Ernest Wright: et cetera.
Donald Ramesh: settings, et cetera.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: So uh you can scroll down too with the scroll uh button, uh as you can see oh, it's here, just push it in, uh the menu comes out like this and uh i it all becomes visible.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Um
Ernest Wright: And you could also touch it so that it comes
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: out, and
Donald Ramesh: that's c
Ernest Wright: and use
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: the the the scroll thing as a with your fingers.
Donald Ramesh: Indeed.
Ernest Wright: Yes.
Donald Ramesh: Okay, um it's also uh nice to see that um we made a small uh menu, uh the options menu uh becoming available when pressing the uh scroll uh button, and the opportunity to use the teletext, whi which is used uh which should still be used and we think that it's uh very handy to put it uh not uh under the options menu, but in uh Yes. In an apart uh
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: So a separate button
Donald Ramesh: In a separate
Richard Bishop: for
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: button,
Richard Bishop: for text,
Donald Ramesh: yeah.
Richard Bishop: okay.
Ernest Wright: Perhaps we should use the teletext sign in p
Donald Ramesh: A sign,
Ernest Wright: yeah.
Donald Ramesh: yeah, just like Okay, indeed.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Okay, we can
Ernest Wright: Forgot.
Donald Ramesh: uh modify that later. Okay. Would you like to make any comments about next
Ernest Wright: Uh
Donald Ramesh: uh
Ernest Wright: well, this is the total interface uh that f of the L_C_D_ screen. Uh the numbers, which is pretty straight forward. We put ano an an extra button in. We can erase it, but It's the button where you can switch channels. just when you are one and you go to two, you can or if you go to five, you can go back to one with that button. Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: Previous page,
Ernest Wright: that
Donald Ramesh: yeah,
Ernest Wright: one, yeah.
Donald Ramesh: indeed.
Ernest Wright: It has a name. And uh
Donald Ramesh: Oh my God.
Ernest Wright: uh we put that in, I thought it would be handy there. Uh this the one number or two numbers button. Below that, the page and the sound. And uh in the middle the the mute. Uh battery indicator. It's
Donald Ramesh: It's
Ernest Wright: it's
Donald Ramesh: quite
Ernest Wright: a bit
Donald Ramesh: large.
Ernest Wright: big. And this is the uh the on off uh knop, the stand by uh knop. Or at least it should look like it. And the options uh
Donald Ramesh: Okay.
Ernest Wright: of teletext.
Donald Ramesh: You can see very clearly now that the uh teletext and options menu isn't uh taking uh much uh uh it's taking much part of the screen, so it's very uh when you uh when you use it, doesn't uh become irritating to see. 'Cause
Ernest Wright: Huh.
Donald Ramesh: if you put it on the top you always get see the the options menu. 'Cause people regularly uh read from left top to right down, so
Richard Bishop: Mm-hmm.
Ernest Wright: Yeah. Well this about it, I think.
Donald Ramesh: Okay.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Huh.
Richard Bishop: Thank you.
Ernest Wright: I will put
Richard Bishop: Looks
Ernest Wright: it
Richard Bishop: good.
Ernest Wright: back on the on
Richard Bishop: And
Ernest Wright: the
Richard Bishop: I
Ernest Wright: nice
Richard Bishop: just missed
Ernest Wright: green.
Richard Bishop: when I was typing The R_R_ stands for?
Ernest Wright: That's the logo of the
Richard Bishop: Logo, okay.
Ernest Wright: Yeah. It's th th
Richard Bishop: Okay well
Ernest Wright: right now it's only R_ R_, but uh
Donald Ramesh: Full screen.
Richard Bishop: I would have recognised
John Carmichael: Shit.
Richard Bishop: it if it were the right colours of course.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Alright.
Ernest Wright: Sorry.
John Carmichael: 'Kay.
Richard Bishop: Okay, the
Ernest Wright: Oh full screen,
Richard Bishop: evaluation
Ernest Wright: yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Huh.
Richard Bishop: criteria, huh?
John Carmichael: Evaluation. 'Kay, my task was this time to put up a questionnaire by we can evaluate of the remote control by the questions we requirements from the of the users My name, my job, okay.
Donald Ramesh: My name,
John Carmichael: The methods.
Donald Ramesh: my job.
John Carmichael: Questionnaire with seven point scale from one to seven, from true to false, like
Ernest Wright: Right.
John Carmichael: question, is remote big enough, we can say it's true or it's false by steps. One means absolutely not true, seven means true.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: The three important things of refa
Donald Ramesh: Sorry, you used the PowerPoint
John Carmichael: are uh from th of this year is are, is the remote control fancy enough,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: is it in innovative enough, and is it easy enough to use. And then evaluation itself. Uh.
Donald Ramesh: What?
John Carmichael: So.
Donald Ramesh: Bling.
John Carmichael: Okay.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: First question. Is the design fancy enough?
Ernest Wright: Well
John Carmichael: Project Manager, what do you think?
Richard Bishop: Well it's looks fancy, especially with the
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: green colour.
John Carmichael: But does it
Richard Bishop: And the the curves which we decided, huh?
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: Only what happened to the single curve we spoke
Donald Ramesh: Now uh
Richard Bishop: about
Ernest Wright: It uh
Donald Ramesh: the single
Ernest Wright: oh
Richard Bishop: last
Ernest Wright: it's
Richard Bishop: meeting?
Donald Ramesh: curved
Ernest Wright: in the background.
Donald Ramesh: idea was
Ernest Wright: Oh.
Donald Ramesh: uh Yeah, okay, you ge um
Ernest Wright: Y you should make uh a sideways
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: uh view.
Donald Ramesh: The sideways view, uh that that that
Ernest Wright: It
Donald Ramesh: ma
Ernest Wright: will be, I guess. Oh,
Donald Ramesh: Ho not
Ernest Wright: we
Donald Ramesh: that
Ernest Wright: can
Donald Ramesh: pen. Not that
Ernest Wright: Oh
Donald Ramesh: pen.
Ernest Wright: g I would
Richard Bishop: Well it might
Ernest Wright: smart
Richard Bishop: work one
Ernest Wright: board.
Richard Bishop: time, huh.
Ernest Wright: Uh can I draw here or uh
Donald Ramesh: Suppose so.
John Carmichael: Think.
Ernest Wright: Ooh.
Donald Ramesh: Ah.
John Carmichael: Yeah, yeah,
Donald Ramesh: Oh
John Carmichael: you can.
Donald Ramesh: my
Ernest Wright: So
Donald Ramesh: God, it
Ernest Wright: it
Donald Ramesh: works.
Ernest Wright: would be uh something like this from the side, but with a bit of uh curve here, right?
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, that's the single curve indeed.
Ernest Wright: Yeah. So if you v flip it like this.
Donald Ramesh: Yep.
Richard Bishop: Okay.
Ernest Wright: Here's
Donald Ramesh: That's
Ernest Wright: yeah.
Donald Ramesh: not very i it's also uh very handy if you make a side curve way to make the the remote control very thin at the bottom uh at a bottom at a bottom. Uh make it uh rather thick on the top, because uh on the top it has uh the screen, which takes uh in some uh space, and the batteries can be located over there,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: so
Ernest Wright: So
Donald Ramesh: uh
Ernest Wright: you just make the back of this part a bit bigger, so that
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: it lays
John Carmichael: Isn't
Ernest Wright: a
John Carmichael: going
Ernest Wright: bit
John Carmichael: to
Ernest Wright: o
John Carmichael: be a little bit heavy at the top?
Donald Ramesh: No.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, that's a bit of problem maybe.
John Carmichael: With two batteries, the whole print plate and t and
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: top, and if you're holding it
Ernest Wright: I think yeah, the
John Carmichael: quite
Ernest Wright: battery
John Carmichael: a
Ernest Wright: should
John Carmichael: lot
Ernest Wright: be in here,
John Carmichael: I think
Ernest Wright: because it's
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: just nothing,
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: so if you could
Donald Ramesh: Okay, indeed. Yeah.
Ernest Wright: Yeah. 'Cause
Richard Bishop: Okay,
Ernest Wright: otherwise
Richard Bishop: but we
Ernest Wright: I
Richard Bishop: have
Ernest Wright: think
Richard Bishop: to
Ernest Wright: i
Richard Bishop: rate uh
John Carmichael: Yeah, we have to rate.
Richard Bishop: these things
John Carmichael: Is
Richard Bishop: now?
John Carmichael: it
Richard Bishop: Okay.
John Carmichael: fancy enough? True is one, false is seven. So fancy enough means, does it comes to the younger people and the elder people.
Ernest Wright: I think it
Donald Ramesh: I think
Ernest Wright: does.
Donald Ramesh: so.
John Carmichael: I think
Ernest Wright: I
Donald Ramesh: It's pretty
Ernest Wright: if you
Donald Ramesh: fancy.
Ernest Wright: don't make it green, then the elder people won't won't
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: like
John Carmichael: I have
Ernest Wright: it.
John Carmichael: to agree, all the colour colours don don
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: you
John Carmichael: doesn't
Donald Ramesh: get
John Carmichael: matter
Donald Ramesh: th
John Carmichael: that m that much now, it's
Richard Bishop: Mm-hmm.
John Carmichael: only design.
Ernest Wright: I think it does.
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
John Carmichael: And the design.
Richard Bishop: Well I think
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: uh especially because of the microphone and the L_C_D_ screen
Ernest Wright: Yeah. I don't know
Richard Bishop: also.
Ernest Wright: whether older people will use
Richard Bishop: Very
Ernest Wright: it,
Richard Bishop: new
Ernest Wright: but
Richard Bishop: thing. Well
John Carmichael: So
Richard Bishop: Fancy
Ernest Wright: I
Richard Bishop: the
Ernest Wright: would
Richard Bishop: old
Ernest Wright: make it
Richard Bishop: people
Ernest Wright: a two
Richard Bishop: will.
Ernest Wright: or something.
John Carmichael: A two?
Ernest Wright: Yeah. Huh?
Donald Ramesh: It's true, it's a one.
Ernest Wright: Alright, it's a one.
Donald Ramesh: Very
Ernest Wright: Oh
Donald Ramesh: fancy.
Richard Bishop: No, it's a two.
Ernest Wright: it's a one.
Richard Bishop: Little bit strange we have to judge that ourselves, huh?
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: I n used I wouldn I should use that one, but it doesn't
Ernest Wright: But it's a one uh
John Carmichael: Okay,
Ernest Wright: Maybe
John Carmichael: no
Ernest Wright: uh
John Carmichael: it's two? True is a one.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Very true, is it very true or isn't that true?
Richard Bishop: Well
Ernest Wright: Well
Richard Bishop: I'd
Ernest Wright: they
Richard Bishop: say
Ernest Wright: think
Richard Bishop: two
Ernest Wright: it's very
Richard Bishop: on a scale
Ernest Wright: true, but
Donald Ramesh: It's very
Ernest Wright: uh
Donald Ramesh: true,
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: because
John Carmichael: I think
Donald Ramesh: we designed
John Carmichael: two.
Donald Ramesh: it to be very fancy, so
Ernest Wright: Yeah, but
Donald Ramesh: It's very fancy, I think.
Ernest Wright: We should
Donald Ramesh: Have you ever
Ernest Wright: perhaps
Donald Ramesh: seen a remote control like this?
Richard Bishop: No, okay well,
Donald Ramesh: No,
Richard Bishop: that's
Donald Ramesh: okay,
Richard Bishop: true.
Donald Ramesh: so
John Carmichael: That's
Ernest Wright: That
Donald Ramesh: so
John Carmichael: fancy
Ernest Wright: not.
Donald Ramesh: it's fancy.
John Carmichael: enough.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Then?
Richard Bishop: Okay, one two. That doesn't matter that much,
John Carmichael: Okay.
Richard Bishop: so
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: make it a one.
John Carmichael: Let's give it a two. Is it innovative?
Ernest Wright: I think
John Carmichael: Enough.
Ernest Wright: it is, because it has
Richard Bishop: Yeah
Ernest Wright: an L_C_D_
Richard Bishop: m
Ernest Wright: screen, a mi microphone.
Donald Ramesh: And uh
John Carmichael: We have
Ernest Wright: It's
John Carmichael: for
Ernest Wright: from
John Carmichael: the search
Ernest Wright: rubber.
Donald Ramesh: uh the scroll
John Carmichael: function.
Donald Ramesh: is rubber,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: so s
John Carmichael: The scroller
Donald Ramesh: Eno
John Carmichael: a bit I think
Donald Ramesh: enough
John Carmichael: it's
Donald Ramesh: to
Ernest Wright: It's
Donald Ramesh: I
Ernest Wright: a one
Donald Ramesh: think.
John Carmichael: it's a
Ernest Wright: I
John Carmichael: one
Ernest Wright: think.
John Carmichael: yeah. True. Also huh uh-huh the buttons, are they easy to find? That was a big requirement of the old people.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, because they're right on your screen. So you can use the b the the arrows.
Donald Ramesh: Huh.
Ernest Wright: They're right on your screen, so I don't know where you'd
Donald Ramesh: With the ones
Ernest Wright: search.
John Carmichael: Are all the buttons
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: easy to find? Not only this buttons, all the buttons.
Ernest Wright: Well, I think they are. The
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: options are it uh little bit harder, but if you
Donald Ramesh: Take
Ernest Wright: touch
Donald Ramesh: a harder
Ernest Wright: the
Donald Ramesh: look,
Ernest Wright: options
Donald Ramesh: yeah,
Ernest Wright: then
Donald Ramesh: sure.
Ernest Wright: it's uh
John Carmichael: I think th it's
Donald Ramesh: It's easier
John Carmichael: easy t
Donald Ramesh: than the regular uh remote control.
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
John Carmichael: I
Richard Bishop: and
John Carmichael: think
Richard Bishop: you use
John Carmichael: this is easy
Richard Bishop: these
John Carmichael: now.
Richard Bishop: buttons
John Carmichael: I think
Richard Bishop: the most,
John Carmichael: th I think
Richard Bishop: huh?
John Carmichael: the
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
John Carmichael: options
Richard Bishop: So
John Carmichael: buttons are not the the easiest way to to
Ernest Wright: No they're not, but they're
John Carmichael: to
Ernest Wright: they're
John Carmichael: handle.
Ernest Wright: they are easy to find.
John Carmichael: True. I
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
John Carmichael: would rate
Donald Ramesh: they
John Carmichael: it
Donald Ramesh: are
John Carmichael: a
Donald Ramesh: a lot easier to find than uh th than on the regular remote controls where you have
Ernest Wright: Oh.
Donald Ramesh: to uh find out what which sign or icon means on uh every
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: button.
John Carmichael: okay,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: that's true, that's
Donald Ramesh: So
Richard Bishop: So
John Carmichael: true.
Donald Ramesh: you have t you
Richard Bishop: which
Donald Ramesh: have to use the
John Carmichael: But
Donald Ramesh: the
John Carmichael: that's
Donald Ramesh: the
John Carmichael: that's vantage
Donald Ramesh: manual
John Carmichael: of L_C_D_
Donald Ramesh: to
John Carmichael: screen,
Donald Ramesh: understand
John Carmichael: you can have
Donald Ramesh: most
John Carmichael: text.
Richard Bishop: So
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: which number are we going
Ernest Wright: I would
Richard Bishop: to
Donald Ramesh: I
Richard Bishop: fill
Ernest Wright: say
Donald Ramesh: think
Richard Bishop: in?
Donald Ramesh: it's
Ernest Wright: yeah.
Donald Ramesh: uh it's a two,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: at least.
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
Richard Bishop: A
Ernest Wright: you
Richard Bishop: two,
Ernest Wright: can make
Richard Bishop: yeah?
Ernest Wright: it a two.
Richard Bishop: Two,
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: three
Donald Ramesh: It's not
Richard Bishop: and
Donald Ramesh: perfect,
Richard Bishop: what do you
Donald Ramesh: but
Richard Bishop: think?
John Carmichael: I think it's a three.
Donald Ramesh: A three?
Richard Bishop: Okay,
Donald Ramesh: And
Richard Bishop: so
Donald Ramesh: why
Richard Bishop: we
Donald Ramesh: is
John Carmichael: I
Richard Bishop: have
Donald Ramesh: that?
John Carmichael: personally
Richard Bishop: two,
John Carmichael: think, because
Richard Bishop: two,
John Carmichael: I d I don't
Richard Bishop: three.
John Carmichael: think i maybe it's easy to use, it has to be easy to find right away. I I think if you have the button at the right, I don't think you can find the option
Ernest Wright: Yeah, but
John Carmichael: button
Ernest Wright: you don't have
John Carmichael: that
Ernest Wright: t
John Carmichael: easy.
Ernest Wright: have to use the button on the right.
John Carmichael: You
Ernest Wright: You
John Carmichael: can
Ernest Wright: can touch it.
John Carmichael: touch it.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: It said bo
Ernest Wright: You you
Donald Ramesh: both
Ernest Wright: can touch
Donald Ramesh: the
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: options.
Ernest Wright: options.
John Carmichael: okay, but you have y then you have here s written option on here, the teletext button, right?
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Okay, then okay, good. Then I think also two, yeah.
Ernest Wright: You can touch options and
Richard Bishop: A
Ernest Wright: it's
Richard Bishop: two,
Ernest Wright: comes
Richard Bishop: okay,
Ernest Wright: out.
John Carmichael: Yep.
Donald Ramesh: A
Richard Bishop: because
Donald Ramesh: two,
Richard Bishop: we have
Donald Ramesh: a two.
Richard Bishop: to
Ernest Wright: The uh the
Richard Bishop: It's
Ernest Wright: um
Donald Ramesh: Uh
Richard Bishop: the
Donald Ramesh: the
Richard Bishop: box
Donald Ramesh: next
Richard Bishop: below
Ernest Wright: Below.
Donald Ramesh: question
Richard Bishop: it, huh?
Donald Ramesh: the next question. Oh my God.
Richard Bishop: Otherwise we have two results in one question.
Ernest Wright: It's different.
Richard Bishop: Okay, next
John Carmichael: It's
Richard Bishop: question.
John Carmichael: easy to use, as well for younger as elderl elderly people.
Ernest Wright: For young people I think it's easy to use.
John Carmichael: Young means
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
John Carmichael: sixteen
Donald Ramesh: I was
John Carmichael: to forty years.
Donald Ramesh: uh
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: And elderly from forty
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
John Carmichael: eight to their
Ernest Wright: I think
John Carmichael: death.
Ernest Wright: it's
Donald Ramesh: I think it's the most useful uh remote control ever to be manufactured.
Richard Bishop: Okay, you're very enthusiastic
John Carmichael: Also
Richard Bishop: about
Ernest Wright: In the entire
Richard Bishop: your
John Carmichael: if
Richard Bishop: own
John Carmichael: you're
Richard Bishop: design,
Ernest Wright: mankind.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
John Carmichael: sixty
Donald Ramesh: but
Richard Bishop: huh?
Donald Ramesh: because
John Carmichael: years
Donald Ramesh: it has
John Carmichael: old
Donald Ramesh: the regular uh controls, li uh as you can see in the screen now, and uh So it's
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: t I think it's really easy to use. You want
John Carmichael: Also
Donald Ramesh: these options
Richard Bishop: As well for
Donald Ramesh: to
Richard Bishop: the for the older
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Richard Bishop: people?
John Carmichael: as well
Donald Ramesh: Uh sure.
John Carmichael: as your if you're fif sixty years old,
Ernest Wright: Yeah, but uh
John Carmichael: you're holding one of those things in your
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
John Carmichael: hand No,
Ernest Wright: right?
John Carmichael: but we're going
Ernest Wright: So
John Carmichael: to th make this f for a all kind of people,
Richard Bishop: And
John Carmichael: so it it
Richard Bishop: would
John Carmichael: it
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
Richard Bishop: it
John Carmichael: has
Ernest Wright: okay,
Richard Bishop: be easy
John Carmichael: to
Ernest Wright: but
John Carmichael: be
Ernest Wright: so
Richard Bishop: for them
Ernest Wright: they could
Richard Bishop: to use the speech recognition?
Ernest Wright: Uh I think it is. If they read a manual.
Richard Bishop: Because that might
John Carmichael: If
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
John Carmichael: you
Richard Bishop: Okay,
John Carmichael: read
Donald Ramesh: Perhaps
John Carmichael: the
Richard Bishop: well
Donald Ramesh: that
John Carmichael: manual,
Donald Ramesh: is
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: one of the
Ernest Wright: alright.
Donald Ramesh: most
John Carmichael: always.
Donald Ramesh: uh
Richard Bishop: M
Ernest Wright: Because
Richard Bishop: maybe
Donald Ramesh: Uh
Ernest Wright: it
Donald Ramesh: because
Richard Bishop: that's
Ernest Wright: it's
Richard Bishop: the
Donald Ramesh: a lot
Richard Bishop: most
Ernest Wright: not
Donald Ramesh: of
Ernest Wright: it's
Richard Bishop: user
Ernest Wright: not
Richard Bishop: friendly
Ernest Wright: it's
Richard Bishop: and
Ernest Wright: it's not
Richard Bishop: easy to
Ernest Wright: uh difficult.
Richard Bishop: use.
Ernest Wright: You say you say uh
Donald Ramesh: Channel
Ernest Wright: record
Donald Ramesh: one, channel four, yeah.
Ernest Wright: to to the to the speech recognition, then you say the question and the answer. And that's everything it does, the speech recognition.
Richard Bishop: Yeah, well maybe that would make it even
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: more easy to use for
Ernest Wright: I
Richard Bishop: them.
Ernest Wright: think it would
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: make
Donald Ramesh: I think
Ernest Wright: it uh
Donald Ramesh: it does.
John Carmichael: So
Donald Ramesh: Because all the people who can't uh
Ernest Wright: I would make it two.
John Carmichael: Also two?
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Uh
John Carmichael: Not
Donald Ramesh: a
John Carmichael: a seven
Donald Ramesh: two.
John Carmichael: for this?
Donald Ramesh: Sure, two. Oh.
Richard Bishop: I'd say three.
Ernest Wright: Three?
John Carmichael: I would also say three.
Ernest Wright: Oh.
Richard Bishop: Okay,
Ernest Wright: You?
Richard Bishop: so we have three three two two or
Donald Ramesh: Two.
Ernest Wright: Oh. Well
Richard Bishop: So what are we going to do?
Ernest Wright: Two and a
Richard Bishop: Okay, a three, I see.
Ernest Wright: half.
Richard Bishop: Uh
Ernest Wright: Three?
Donald Ramesh: Give
Ernest Wright: No.
Donald Ramesh: John Carmichael more.
Richard Bishop: Another question.
John Carmichael: Remotes overwhelmed with buttons.
Ernest Wright: No.
Donald Ramesh: No.
Richard Bishop: No.
John Carmichael: No, that that's that's
Ernest Wright: But
John Carmichael: yeah.
Ernest Wright: um I mean,
John Carmichael: Tha
Ernest Wright: that's
John Carmichael: that's a one,
Ernest Wright: definitely
John Carmichael: I think,
Ernest Wright: one.
John Carmichael: that's definitely
Donald Ramesh: That's
John Carmichael: a
Donald Ramesh: definitely
John Carmichael: one.
Donald Ramesh: our
Ernest Wright: Oh nee,
Donald Ramesh: uh
Ernest Wright: oh seven is it? It is.
John Carmichael: No? Oh
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
John Carmichael: yeah.
Ernest Wright: uh the remote
Donald Ramesh: A
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: false,
Ernest Wright: score.
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: yeah.
Richard Bishop: but I think you should make it one scale with with one
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Richard Bishop: being good and
John Carmichael: I think
Richard Bishop: seven being
John Carmichael: isn't,
Richard Bishop: bad, because
John Carmichael: this
Richard Bishop: otherwise
John Carmichael: has to be
Richard Bishop: we can't uh
John Carmichael: something
Ernest Wright: It's not
John Carmichael: like
Ernest Wright: overwhelmed.
Richard Bishop: calculate anything
John Carmichael: isn't
Richard Bishop: from
John Carmichael: overwhelmed.
Richard Bishop: the
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: results, so
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, indeed.
John Carmichael: True.
Richard Bishop: Okay,
Ernest Wright: Yep.
Richard Bishop: a one, because we designed for that,
John Carmichael: Remote
Richard Bishop: huh?
John Carmichael: control has uh colours that different
Ernest Wright: Yes.
John Carmichael: that meet different target groups.
Ernest Wright: 'Cause we make them in different colours, so
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: that they
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: uh
Donald Ramesh: is optional.
John Carmichael: That's
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
John Carmichael: true.
Richard Bishop: and I though w we had about single colours, but you can also make uh a wood colour, not just one single colour but a
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: wood-like
Donald Ramesh: Huh.
Ernest Wright: That it that it looks
Richard Bishop: thing, can't
Ernest Wright: like
Richard Bishop: you?
Ernest Wright: wood,
John Carmichael: Also
Ernest Wright: like
John Carmichael: with
Ernest Wright: something,
John Carmichael: rubber?
Ernest Wright: yeah. Uh I think you
Richard Bishop: Whether
Ernest Wright: can.
Richard Bishop: it looks like wood, it isn't w it
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Richard Bishop: isn't
John Carmichael: okay.
Richard Bishop: wood but
Ernest Wright: It it feels like rubber,
Richard Bishop: You can make
Ernest Wright: but
Richard Bishop: a print on rubber, can't you?
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Yeah?
Ernest Wright: Well
Richard Bishop: So
Ernest Wright: but
Richard Bishop: that's
Ernest Wright: then
Richard Bishop: a one
Ernest Wright: when
Richard Bishop: then,
Ernest Wright: you
Richard Bishop: huh?
Ernest Wright: scratch it it does come
John Carmichael: That's
Ernest Wright: off.
John Carmichael: a one? Okay.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, it
Ernest Wright: So
Donald Ramesh: is
Ernest Wright: that's
Donald Ramesh: it is
Ernest Wright: a bit
Donald Ramesh: harder
Richard Bishop: Do you
Donald Ramesh: to
Richard Bishop: have many questions?
John Carmichael: Uh I have
Donald Ramesh: to like
Richard Bishop: Oh, okay well
Ernest Wright: Oh we have
Donald Ramesh: Geez.
Ernest Wright: time.
Richard Bishop: Yeah, but we have
Donald Ramesh: We're
Richard Bishop: We
Donald Ramesh: getting
Richard Bishop: also
Donald Ramesh: paid. We're
Richard Bishop: We
Donald Ramesh: getting paid.
John Carmichael: The material
Richard Bishop: have to get
John Carmichael: used
Richard Bishop: to the
John Carmichael: is
Richard Bishop: money.
John Carmichael: spongy, that that's uh that's a one, that's m rubber.
Ernest Wright: What?
Richard Bishop: What
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
Richard Bishop: spongy.
Ernest Wright: yeah, it's very spongy.
Donald Ramesh: Uh.
John Carmichael: Yeah, I th
Ernest Wright: Oh but not it's not very
John Carmichael: think
Ernest Wright: spongy,
John Carmichael: it's not
Ernest Wright: because
John Carmichael: the
Ernest Wright: it's
John Carmichael: most
Ernest Wright: hard rubber.
John Carmichael: spongy thing.
Ernest Wright: I think it's a three.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: it's a three,
Richard Bishop: Uh-huh, yeah.
Donald Ramesh: because you want to make it uh
Ernest Wright: Hard
Donald Ramesh: rather
Ernest Wright: but
Donald Ramesh: flexible but not too flexible,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: because
Ernest Wright: You can
Donald Ramesh: it has
Ernest Wright: break
Donald Ramesh: a L_C_D_
Ernest Wright: it.
Donald Ramesh: screen.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Remote control
Donald Ramesh: Hard
John Carmichael: is hard to
Donald Ramesh: to
John Carmichael: lose.
Donald Ramesh: lose, yeah it sh
Ernest Wright: Y yeah, you could you
Donald Ramesh: and
Ernest Wright: could
Donald Ramesh: it's
Ernest Wright: call
Donald Ramesh: easy
John Carmichael: Y
Donald Ramesh: to
Ernest Wright: it.
John Carmichael: you
Donald Ramesh: find.
John Carmichael: can't you can't lose it if you're sixty years old. If first time see the thing you didn didn't adjust uh set the microphone, and then you
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
John Carmichael: lose it, then you have lost
Ernest Wright: y you
John Carmichael: it.
Ernest Wright: can lose it, but it isn't hard to lose.
John Carmichael: It isn't hard, no. I think I think this is a two, personally.
Ernest Wright: Two. That it's hard to lose?
John Carmichael: No.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, it it is
Donald Ramesh: Isn't hard
Ernest Wright: there's
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: the
Donald Ramesh: to
Ernest Wright: it's
Donald Ramesh: lose.
Richard Bishop: so isn't
Ernest Wright: a six,
Richard Bishop: hard to lose
Ernest Wright: you think?
Donald Ramesh: Isn't hard to lose, yeah.
Richard Bishop: you.
John Carmichael: Isn't hard to lose.
Ernest Wright: So it's a two. Yeah, you can lose it, so I don't
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: you can make
John Carmichael: You
Ernest Wright: it
John Carmichael: can't
Ernest Wright: a
John Carmichael: lose
Ernest Wright: three
John Carmichael: it.
Ernest Wright: I It
John Carmichael: Or
Ernest Wright: does have
John Carmichael: if you're
Ernest Wright: an
John Carmichael: you're
Ernest Wright: a
John Carmichael: sixty
Ernest Wright: built in
John Carmichael: years
Ernest Wright: function.
John Carmichael: old,
Richard Bishop: Yeah, but a har
John Carmichael: your demands
Richard Bishop: A hard to lose is good. So it should this
Ernest Wright: Nee.
Richard Bishop: question should be hard to lose.
Ernest Wright: Hard
Richard Bishop: It's
Ernest Wright: to
Richard Bishop: difficult
Ernest Wright: lose.
Richard Bishop: to lose
Ernest Wright: Oh
Richard Bishop: it.
Ernest Wright: right.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, this this is
Ernest Wright: It
Donald Ramesh: hard
Ernest Wright: is
Donald Ramesh: to
Ernest Wright: hard
Donald Ramesh: lose.
Ernest Wright: to lose. Yeah, so then this is it
Donald Ramesh: This
Ernest Wright: is almost
John Carmichael: I
Richard Bishop: A two.
John Carmichael: think
Ernest Wright: true, so a two.
John Carmichael: yeah,
Richard Bishop: A two.
John Carmichael: I think also.
Donald Ramesh: Two, yeah.
Richard Bishop: Okay.
Donald Ramesh: And most all because of the option to
John Carmichael: Huh?
Donald Ramesh: Whoa.
Ernest Wright: Ooh.
Richard Bishop: Yeah, it's okay. That happens above also.
Ernest Wright: Oh.
Donald Ramesh: Uh.
Richard Bishop: But
John Carmichael: Yeah?
Richard Bishop: maybe when you scroll away
John Carmichael: Oh, okay.
Richard Bishop: and back it will be normal, but Yep.
John Carmichael: No.
Richard Bishop: Oh,
Ernest Wright: Oh well,
Richard Bishop: it
Ernest Wright: it
Richard Bishop: isn't,
Ernest Wright: doesn't.
Richard Bishop: well okay. Remember.
Donald Ramesh: put the cor cursor on
John Carmichael: Okay
Donald Ramesh: the.
John Carmichael: okay okay. Remote
Donald Ramesh: Click.
John Carmichael: control mainly be sold to younger people.
Donald Ramesh: True.
Ernest Wright: I think it will,
John Carmichael: Yeah?
Donald Ramesh: True.
Ernest Wright: yeah.
John Carmichael: True? Very true?
Donald Ramesh: Uh
Ernest Wright: Uh
Donald Ramesh: yeah.
John Carmichael: No,
Donald Ramesh: Uh
Richard Bishop: There.
Ernest Wright: well I
John Carmichael: I don't think very true because
Ernest Wright: a
John Carmichael: the colours.
Ernest Wright: a two.
John Carmichael: We have the colours. Um we have the buttons is aren't that that much.
Donald Ramesh: Materials, yeah.
John Carmichael: Nah, the material isn't that
Ernest Wright: It's
Donald Ramesh: Uh
Ernest Wright: it's
Donald Ramesh: okay.
Ernest Wright: much more younger.
John Carmichael: So I don
Donald Ramesh: So ma
John Carmichael: I
Donald Ramesh: uh make
John Carmichael: think
Donald Ramesh: it make
John Carmichael: I
Donald Ramesh: it a
John Carmichael: think
Donald Ramesh: two.
John Carmichael: it's a three.
Richard Bishop: Well I think it's it's uh a lower number, so better because w we designed it for young people
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: especially,
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: I
John Carmichael: but
Ernest Wright: think
John Carmichael: I
Ernest Wright: it's
John Carmichael: uh
Ernest Wright: a
Richard Bishop: didn't
Ernest Wright: two
Richard Bishop: we?
Ernest Wright: but
John Carmichael: Okay, okay.
Richard Bishop: What do you think?
John Carmichael: I think
Richard Bishop: Questions?
Donald Ramesh: A
John Carmichael: because
Donald Ramesh: two? I think it's two.
Richard Bishop: Two.
John Carmichael: yeah?
Donald Ramesh: I think it's two
Richard Bishop: Uh-huh.
Donald Ramesh: too, two too too.
Ernest Wright: Two two two. Let's make everything
John Carmichael: In
Ernest Wright: a
John Carmichael: the
Ernest Wright: two.
John Carmichael: features?
Richard Bishop: Dissatisfy younger people.
Ernest Wright: Younger
Richard Bishop: Um
Ernest Wright: people. It
Donald Ramesh: Well
Ernest Wright: has
Donald Ramesh: perhaps not.
Ernest Wright: What
John Carmichael: Because younger
Ernest Wright: did
John Carmichael: peoples are cr critical and they wanted a lot of features on
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: this thing.
Ernest Wright: Well
Donald Ramesh: Well,
Ernest Wright: that it
Donald Ramesh: n
Ernest Wright: doesn't.
Donald Ramesh: not exactly but uh uh if it had some games on it or something like
Ernest Wright: Yeah
Donald Ramesh: that,
Ernest Wright: bu but
Donald Ramesh: but it's for a remote control I think it i
Ernest Wright: I think
Donald Ramesh: it would
Ernest Wright: they
Donald Ramesh: satisfy
Ernest Wright: like the speech.
Donald Ramesh: those needs. Yeah, the
Ernest Wright: You
Donald Ramesh: speech
Ernest Wright: could call
Donald Ramesh: possibility,
John Carmichael: L_C_D_
Ernest Wright: to your uh
John Carmichael: screen
Ernest Wright: yeah,
Donald Ramesh: the colours.
Ernest Wright: and
John Carmichael: and scroll.
Ernest Wright: the screen,
Donald Ramesh: Scroll
Ernest Wright: yeah.
Donald Ramesh: options, yeah.
John Carmichael: I I think they'll be quite met with their expectations.
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: Right,
John Carmichael: No.
Ernest Wright: that that that
Richard Bishop: It
Ernest Wright: those
Richard Bishop: has
Ernest Wright: are features.
Richard Bishop: relatively
John Carmichael: It's three
Richard Bishop: few
John Carmichael: features,
Richard Bishop: features,
John Carmichael: basically,
Richard Bishop: with
John Carmichael: the L_C_D_ touch screen is feature.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
John Carmichael: The
Ernest Wright: No, aren't
John Carmichael: microphone
Ernest Wright: the features
John Carmichael: is a feature.
Ernest Wright: the microphone's feature and that you can change the channel's feature, and that you can change
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: the volume is feature, and that you can change the options of the remote,
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: uh uh
John Carmichael: okay.
Richard Bishop: Ours
Ernest Wright: something
Richard Bishop: had other
Ernest Wright: like that.
Richard Bishop: features with
John Carmichael: I think
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: yeah, and then you have the
Donald Ramesh: The
John Carmichael: audio
Donald Ramesh: easy
John Carmichael: settings,
Donald Ramesh: volume
John Carmichael: channel
Donald Ramesh: up
John Carmichael: setting,
Donald Ramesh: button.
Ernest Wright: Those
John Carmichael: video
Ernest Wright: are
John Carmichael: settings.
Ernest Wright: features.
Donald Ramesh: Remote younger people usually use the remote control to put on the volume.
John Carmichael: Yeah yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Turn uh turn
John Carmichael: So I've
Donald Ramesh: up
John Carmichael: chos
Donald Ramesh: the volume.
John Carmichael: I shou I think it's it's it's a one.
Ernest Wright: Enough features?
John Carmichael: Personally, yeah. I think once you've 'cause you have the channel features b uh you have the uh screen features, audio features, the you have all buttons on it which you'd like, microphone extra, L_C_D_ screen extra, scroll thing extra.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: Okay, you think one, what do you think?
Ernest Wright: I think
Richard Bishop: You.
Ernest Wright: two or three.
Richard Bishop: three, yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Two.
Richard Bishop: I'd say three, so
Ernest Wright: Yeah. Yeah
Richard Bishop: two
Ernest Wright: uh
John Carmichael: Make
Richard Bishop: it
Ernest Wright: a
John Carmichael: it
Richard Bishop: is
Ernest Wright: two
Richard Bishop: then
John Carmichael: make
Richard Bishop: or
John Carmichael: it a
Ernest Wright: a
John Carmichael: two.
Ernest Wright: two.
Donald Ramesh: One two three.
John Carmichael: Or make
Ernest Wright: Just
John Carmichael: it
Ernest Wright: another
John Carmichael: uh
Ernest Wright: two.
John Carmichael: a fucking
Ernest Wright: We
John Carmichael: two.
Ernest Wright: like
Donald Ramesh: Right.
Ernest Wright: two.
John Carmichael: You can see the remote control is R_ and R_.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, there's
Donald Ramesh: Uh.
Ernest Wright: R_ and
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: R_ in front.
Richard Bishop: Yep.
Ernest Wright: Uh it's not the colour, so maybe you should make two, but it has R_ and
John Carmichael: Has
Ernest Wright: R_.
John Carmichael: oh yeah, do did have nah y you have the black one.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: And we'll probably make also a yellow one.
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: but not R_
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: and R_
Richard Bishop: maybe
Ernest Wright: yellow
Richard Bishop: maybe
Ernest Wright: I think.
Richard Bishop: two. Well m th
John Carmichael: Maybe
Richard Bishop: but
John Carmichael: two.
Richard Bishop: the logo
Donald Ramesh: Okay, true,
Richard Bishop: is on
Donald Ramesh: yeah.
Richard Bishop: on the front, so
Ernest Wright: One
John Carmichael: X_
Ernest Wright: d on i
John Carmichael: marks
Ernest Wright: it's
John Carmichael: spot.
Ernest Wright: the
Richard Bishop: a two,
Ernest Wright: colours
Richard Bishop: yeah, that's
Ernest Wright: and the
John Carmichael: And the menu is avail that is available is easy to use.
Ernest Wright: I think it is, but I don't know what you think.
Donald Ramesh: I think it's easier to use than a regular remote control,
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: because
John Carmichael: tha
Donald Ramesh: when
John Carmichael: that's
Donald Ramesh: you push
John Carmichael: so true.
Donald Ramesh: on the options menu, you get the the the various options uh entirely explained.
John Carmichael: Mm-hmm.
Donald Ramesh: Entirely explained. Instead of uh just finding out what an icon means on a button.
John Carmichael: Mm-hmm. Yeah,
Ernest Wright: And
John Carmichael: uh
Ernest Wright: you can navigate easier,
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, you
Ernest Wright: because
Donald Ramesh: can navigate.
Ernest Wright: wi with the you have to push the the the arrows and with a normal
Donald Ramesh: Uh.
Ernest Wright: T_V_ uh remote.
John Carmichael: I think that wou that would be quite hard to learn
Donald Ramesh: You're not
John Carmichael: to
Donald Ramesh: satisfied,
John Carmichael: use it.
Donald Ramesh: okay.
John Carmichael: No, I'm
Donald Ramesh: Let's start
John Carmichael: not not
Donald Ramesh: over
John Carmichael: convinc.
Donald Ramesh: again then.
Ernest Wright: Yeah. Let's make a different remote.
John Carmichael: Let's go th
Ernest Wright: Well
John Carmichael: for
Ernest Wright: Menu.
John Carmichael: I think it would be a t yeah, two.
Ernest Wright: A two?
John Carmichael: Now lower.
Donald Ramesh: A two.
Richard Bishop: Oh,
Ernest Wright: We only
Richard Bishop: well
Ernest Wright: have
Richard Bishop: that's
Ernest Wright: twos.
Richard Bishop: that's pretty good, huh?
Donald Ramesh: Oh yeah, I think so. Yeah.
Ernest Wright: Uh just
John Carmichael: So
Ernest Wright: twos.
John Carmichael: okay,
Donald Ramesh: And
Ernest Wright: One
Donald Ramesh: three.
John Carmichael: we
Ernest Wright: three
John Carmichael: have
Ernest Wright: and a few ones.
John Carmichael: one three, a one, that that have to got
Ernest Wright: Two threes.
John Carmichael: up. Two two two
Ernest Wright: We
John Carmichael: two
Ernest Wright: m
John Carmichael: two.
Ernest Wright: mostly have twos,
John Carmichael: So two, yeah.
Ernest Wright: so it's pretty good.
John Carmichael: The average is a two.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: That
Donald Ramesh: The average.
John Carmichael: is quite good
Ernest Wright: Yeah. I think
John Carmichael: in my
Ernest Wright: so
John Carmichael: opinion.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: too.
Donald Ramesh: I think so.
John Carmichael: That
Ernest Wright: We
John Carmichael: Ooh.
Ernest Wright: can be happy.
Donald Ramesh: Save.
John Carmichael: Ooh.
Ernest Wright: Yeah. What is it? It's like a bug
Donald Ramesh: It's
Ernest Wright: or
Donald Ramesh: a fly.
Ernest Wright: something. A fly, yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Oh m
Ernest Wright: A f butterfly.
John Carmichael: Top.
Ernest Wright: Yeah. That's it.
John Carmichael: Okay.
Richard Bishop: That was your evaluation uh
John Carmichael: Yes.
Richard Bishop: show, okay, so we don't
Ernest Wright: Sure.
Richard Bishop: have to calculate anything because of um
John Carmichael: No, it's
Richard Bishop: these
John Carmichael: two.
Richard Bishop: results. Okay, good.
John Carmichael: The
Ernest Wright: It's
John Carmichael: average
Ernest Wright: good.
John Carmichael: is two.
Richard Bishop: Um
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: let's see oh, it isn't asked to save but it did
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: already
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: Exactly.
John Carmichael: I uh uh I uh
Richard Bishop: And
John Carmichael: saved
Richard Bishop: this
John Carmichael: it.
Richard Bishop: Everything okay. Well, the next part uh might be a little bit difficult to do in a group, but I am willing to try it. Because we are going to look at the finance and I have
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: a nice Excel sheet to do that.
Ernest Wright: Redesign. No.
Richard Bishop: And um I'm not sure if I put it in the project folder. look on that. Um and we're going to calculate the production costs,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: and if they are uh under or at twelve Euro fifty, we're good,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: and if they're not we're going to uh re-design,
Ernest Wright: So we're going
Richard Bishop: but
Ernest Wright: to
Richard Bishop: we have to do that
Ernest Wright: erase
Richard Bishop: uh
Ernest Wright: features
Richard Bishop: very
Ernest Wright: or
Richard Bishop: very
Ernest Wright: something.
Richard Bishop: quick I think, yes. Um I don't know if I
Ernest Wright: Do you have the cost or uh
Richard Bishop: put the Excel sheet in the
Ernest Wright: Let's hope.
Richard Bishop: n not in the
John Carmichael: f
Ernest Wright: We're going
Richard Bishop: folder.
John Carmichael: fifty
Ernest Wright: to be here
John Carmichael: five
Richard Bishop: I
Ernest Wright: at eight
John Carmichael: Euros.
Ernest Wright: o'clock.
Richard Bishop: think it's I think it's still in my own documents folder.
Ernest Wright: We're goin still going to be here at eight o'clock.
John Carmichael: No.
Ernest Wright: I doubt
Richard Bishop: Oh shit.
Ernest Wright: it. Perhaps we've got features that don't exist
John Carmichael: Yeah
Ernest Wright: in the Excel
John Carmichael: mm
Ernest Wright: sheet.
John Carmichael: yeah, maybe.
Richard Bishop: So
John Carmichael: The microphone.
Ernest Wright: No, it was in my uh my
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: information,
Donald Ramesh: It
Ernest Wright: so
Donald Ramesh: i
John Carmichael: Yeah?
Ernest Wright: uh
Donald Ramesh: It wasn't too much.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: maybe you're going scrap
Donald Ramesh: As well as the L_C_D_ screen.
John Carmichael: scrap
Donald Ramesh: Whoa.
John Carmichael: it.
Richard Bishop: Okay,
Ernest Wright: Well,
Richard Bishop: well
Ernest Wright: if it doesn't
Richard Bishop: this is
Ernest Wright: work
Richard Bishop: it. Um maybe I could ask one of you to uh fill it in, so that I can also uh
Ernest Wright: I
Richard Bishop: take
Ernest Wright: want
Richard Bishop: minutes,
Ernest Wright: to fill it in,
John Carmichael: No prob.
Ernest Wright: but uh
Richard Bishop: and uh maybe the other can uh use that thing to count uh numerous
John Carmichael: Ah.
Richard Bishop: functions.
Ernest Wright: But you should uh
John Carmichael: Count
Ernest Wright: direct
John Carmichael: it? Li like write
Richard Bishop: Well
John Carmichael: it
Richard Bishop: we have to
John Carmichael: be
Richard Bishop: count some things and we have to think about some things.
Donald Ramesh: Count it.
Richard Bishop: But
Donald Ramesh: You
Richard Bishop: you have
Donald Ramesh: got
Richard Bishop: to fill
Donald Ramesh: Excel
Richard Bishop: in
Donald Ramesh: to count.
Richard Bishop: this
Ernest Wright: The number
Richard Bishop: column,
Ernest Wright: of
Richard Bishop: huh? No, uh count uh number of functions, because
Donald Ramesh: Oh okay.
Richard Bishop: for every button you have to
Donald Ramesh: Well
Richard Bishop: pay
John Carmichael: Ah,
Richard Bishop: and
Donald Ramesh: I dra
John Carmichael: okay,
Donald Ramesh: uh
Richard Bishop: there are
Donald Ramesh: Danny,
Richard Bishop: different screen
Donald Ramesh: Danny,
Richard Bishop: shots,
John Carmichael: cool.
Richard Bishop: so
John Carmichael: Huh?
Donald Ramesh: I'll do that, because
John Carmichael: Yeah?
Richard Bishop: or
John Carmichael: Oh,
Donald Ramesh: I draw
Richard Bishop: different
John Carmichael: yea yeah,
Donald Ramesh: the
John Carmichael: you
Donald Ramesh: uh
John Carmichael: design
Richard Bishop: different
John Carmichael: it.
Richard Bishop: screens, so
Ernest Wright: We've got a battery, one or t two batteries,
John Carmichael: Um
Ernest Wright: or not? nee one battery, with two small batteries.
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: Yeah, but it's it's more about the energy source, huh? Do you
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: use a hand dynamo, a battery,
Ernest Wright: I would do a battery
Richard Bishop: kinetic or solar
Ernest Wright: we do.
Richard Bishop: cells?
John Carmichael: Solar
Ernest Wright: Right?
John Carmichael: cell. No it took
Ernest Wright: A
Richard Bishop: We'll
Donald Ramesh: No,
Ernest Wright: battery.
John Carmichael: a
Donald Ramesh: no
Richard Bishop: wait.
John Carmichael: battery?
Donald Ramesh: solar cell, no no no no.
Ernest Wright: One battery, right?
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: No
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: hand dynamo. Hand
Ernest Wright: Electronics,
John Carmichael: We have
Ernest Wright: simple chip advanced chip, right?
John Carmichael: No, we have sample speaker.
Donald Ramesh: On advanced chip.
John Carmichael: But b al but we also have sample speaker, do
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: yeah.
Ernest Wright: so this one and this one. Uh we
John Carmichael: Oh,
Ernest Wright: ha
John Carmichael: we
Ernest Wright: we
John Carmichael: already
Ernest Wright: have um
John Carmichael: on
Ernest Wright: single
John Carmichael: nine.
Ernest Wright: what? Are we? Oh yay.
John Carmichael: We have double curved.
Donald Ramesh: Single nee single
Ernest Wright: The single.
Donald Ramesh: curved.
John Carmichael: Single.
Donald Ramesh: Double curved was uh uh see uh ju three dimensional. But it isn't three dimensional,
John Carmichael: This
Ernest Wright: Oh
Donald Ramesh: it
John Carmichael: one
Donald Ramesh: isn't
John Carmichael: is
Ernest Wright: the
Donald Ramesh: curved
Ernest Wright: the it's
Donald Ramesh: in
Ernest Wright: not
Donald Ramesh: a
Ernest Wright: going to
Donald Ramesh: l
Ernest Wright: work uh people. We have
John Carmichael: This
Ernest Wright: rubber.
John Carmichael: one is curved like this, right.
Richard Bishop: I'll just
John Carmichael: It's
Richard Bishop: fill it
John Carmichael: curved
Richard Bishop: in.
John Carmichael: like
Donald Ramesh: No
John Carmichael: this.
Donald Ramesh: no no, single
Richard Bishop: Um
Donald Ramesh: curved
Richard Bishop: rubber
Donald Ramesh: is like
Richard Bishop: indeed?
Donald Ramesh: this.
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: Uh
John Carmichael: bu
Donald Ramesh: that's
John Carmichael: what
Donald Ramesh: the only curve you made, not th uh curved like that. That's uh
John Carmichael: Oh, but we have curves like it and it. There are two curves,
Ernest Wright: Thirteen?
John Carmichael: right? Oh, okay I understand, I
Donald Ramesh: Huh?
John Carmichael: understand.
Ernest Wright: With a scroll wheel, right?
John Carmichael: Rubber.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: Is he integrated? No, eh? I
John Carmichael: Push
Ernest Wright: don't
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
John Carmichael: button.
Ernest Wright: know.
John Carmichael: No, we don't have push
Donald Ramesh: we gotta
John Carmichael: button.
Donald Ramesh: integrate scroll wheel and push button, because when you push it and you w it won't just pu
Ernest Wright: Oh
Donald Ramesh: uh
Ernest Wright: yeah,
Donald Ramesh: makes
Ernest Wright: right,
Donald Ramesh: possible
Ernest Wright: we want
Donald Ramesh: to s
Ernest Wright: it to it's not it's not no.
John Carmichael: L_C_D_
Donald Ramesh: Not going
John Carmichael: display.
Donald Ramesh: to work? Okay.
Ernest Wright: Yep. Fifteen, oh, too bad.
Donald Ramesh: Okay um
Ernest Wright: Oh but with special colour we have. A special form, right?
Donald Ramesh: But now button supplements. We don't got the button supplements.
Ernest Wright: Oh, we don't have any buttons, so
John Carmichael: Eighteen and a half,
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
John Carmichael: damn.
Ernest Wright: we need to uh
John Carmichael: We
Donald Ramesh: Damn.
John Carmichael: have to lower it with six points.
Ernest Wright: No,
Donald Ramesh: Okay.
Ernest Wright: uh we have fifteen and
John Carmichael: Twelve and half.
Ernest Wright: oh, right. We could lose the curve.
Donald Ramesh: Nah.
John Carmichael: We could use
Ernest Wright: Yeah, I
Donald Ramesh: We
Ernest Wright: would
Donald Ramesh: could
Ernest Wright: lose
Donald Ramesh: lose
Ernest Wright: the curve.
Donald Ramesh: the scroll wheel. You could make it just a regular scroll wheel.
Ernest Wright: But you can't push it, so
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: you have
Donald Ramesh: if you
Ernest Wright: to
Donald Ramesh: can't
Ernest Wright: tap.
Donald Ramesh: push it you have to tap the the options window uh button here and then uh scroll down with the d with uh with uh the
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: button.
Ernest Wright: alright.
Richard Bishop: Yeah, I think that will
Ernest Wright: So
Richard Bishop: be
Ernest Wright: normal scroll wheel?
Richard Bishop: our best
Donald Ramesh: Normal scroll
Richard Bishop: bet.
Donald Ramesh: wheel.
Ernest Wright: And I think we should lose
John Carmichael: I think
Ernest Wright: the curve.
John Carmichael: we should
Donald Ramesh: Lose
John Carmichael: scrap the sample speaker. It's four pri it four units.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, but if you would i it is a new feature, it it's something
Donald Ramesh: Okay, so
Ernest Wright: special.
Donald Ramesh: we don't exactly need the single
John Carmichael: But w
Donald Ramesh: We
John Carmichael: d
Donald Ramesh: don't need
John Carmichael: wha
Donald Ramesh: a curve.
Ernest Wright: No,
Donald Ramesh: 'S possible
Ernest Wright: the curve
Donald Ramesh: to
John Carmichael: Curved
Donald Ramesh: lose
Ernest Wright: doesn't
John Carmichael: then
Donald Ramesh: curve.
John Carmichael: it
Ernest Wright: really
John Carmichael: will be square.
Ernest Wright: No, then it will won't uh stand up from the table. Then
Donald Ramesh: Okay.
John Carmichael: Was
Ernest Wright: it
John Carmichael: that
Ernest Wright: would
John Carmichael: does
Ernest Wright: just
John Carmichael: that mean to it,
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
John Carmichael: single
Donald Ramesh: that's
John Carmichael: curve?
Donald Ramesh: meant
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: with scr uh with s curve. The curve is uh in a dimension.
John Carmichael: Okay.
Donald Ramesh: If you make it a flat
Ernest Wright: So
Donald Ramesh: one, s n it's no curve, you got
Ernest Wright: We would
Donald Ramesh: no
Ernest Wright: lose
Donald Ramesh: curves.
Ernest Wright: this one?
John Carmichael: Yeah, but tha that
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
John Carmichael: that
Donald Ramesh: okay.
John Carmichael: only is one.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, we
Donald Ramesh: No,
Ernest Wright: could
Donald Ramesh: two.
Ernest Wright: s yeah, a bit.
John Carmichael: No, one.
Ernest Wright: Sixteen
Donald Ramesh: Oh,
Ernest Wright: point
Donald Ramesh: okay,
Ernest Wright: three.
Donald Ramesh: indeed.
John Carmichael: So we don't
Ernest Wright: So we
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: still
John Carmichael: we also have to
Donald Ramesh: Is it possible to make
Ernest Wright: Could could we do it on a regular chip on print or something?
John Carmichael: No, otherwise we don't have an L_C_D_ screen.
Ernest Wright: No? Ma
Donald Ramesh: No.
Ernest Wright: y you just can't
Richard Bishop: And
Ernest Wright: do that,
Richard Bishop: what did
Ernest Wright: or
Richard Bishop: you
Ernest Wright: uh
Richard Bishop: change? You changed the
Ernest Wright: We changed th
Richard Bishop: uh scroll wheel and
Ernest Wright: Yeah, and the
John Carmichael: Single
Ernest Wright: single curved
John Carmichael: curved.
Ernest Wright: to uncurved.
Richard Bishop: Oh,
John Carmichael: Flat.
Richard Bishop: but it's just one
John Carmichael: Yeah, so that does doesn't
Richard Bishop: point,
John Carmichael: doesn't
Ernest Wright: No.
Richard Bishop: so
John Carmichael: that mu
Richard Bishop: maybe
John Carmichael: I think
Richard Bishop: you should should uh
John Carmichael: Scrap sample speaker?
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
John Carmichael: That
Richard Bishop: you
John Carmichael: that's
Donald Ramesh: The
Richard Bishop: should
Donald Ramesh: sample
John Carmichael: uh
Donald Ramesh: speaker
Richard Bishop: you
Donald Ramesh: is
Richard Bishop: should
Donald Ramesh: two d
Richard Bishop: drop
Donald Ramesh: wait,
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
Richard Bishop: the
Ernest Wright: but
Donald Ramesh: f s
Ernest Wright: it's
Richard Bishop: speech
Donald Ramesh: four
Ernest Wright: t
Donald Ramesh: points.
Richard Bishop: recognition.
John Carmichael: Yes, four points.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, but
Richard Bishop: And
Ernest Wright: it
Richard Bishop: then
Ernest Wright: is
Richard Bishop: you can
Ernest Wright: uh
Richard Bishop: keep the curve.
Ernest Wright: it it is a new feature, it
Richard Bishop: Or
Ernest Wright: is
Richard Bishop: can't
Ernest Wright: something
Richard Bishop: you?
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, uh
Ernest Wright: special.
Donald Ramesh: becau
John Carmichael: Yeah, but
Donald Ramesh: uh
John Carmichael: what what
Donald Ramesh: when
John Carmichael: else
Donald Ramesh: you lose
John Carmichael: what else
Donald Ramesh: the
John Carmichael: uh do you want to scrap? F You have
Ernest Wright: I
John Carmichael: to
Ernest Wright: don't
John Carmichael: we
Ernest Wright: know.
John Carmichael: have to scrap four points.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, that's difficult.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: Or make it on a hand dynamo, but I
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: don't think that
John Carmichael: Ma
Richard Bishop: will
John Carmichael: make
Richard Bishop: work.
John Carmichael: it with wood instead of rubber?
Donald Ramesh: No, that's no. Make it
Ernest Wright: Uh.
Donald Ramesh: w uh when you made it uh uh uh a remote control of wood?
John Carmichael: Yeah, it
Donald Ramesh: You don't
John Carmichael: it
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
John Carmichael: i
Ernest Wright: We
Donald Ramesh: make
Ernest Wright: could
Donald Ramesh: a
Richard Bishop: mm-hmm.
Donald Ramesh: remote
Ernest Wright: make it
Donald Ramesh: control
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: titanium
Donald Ramesh: of
John Carmichael: it also
Donald Ramesh: Ah.
Ernest Wright: instead of rubber.
John Carmichael: uh it also takes one point less.
Richard Bishop: Yeah, but uh a wooden remote control only helps for
Ernest Wright: Oh.
Richard Bishop: uh
Ernest Wright: Oh can I ask something?
Richard Bishop: old people we discussed,
Ernest Wright: What is
Richard Bishop: yes?
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: special colour? Is that the wood uh wood uh
John Carmichael: I think it is.
Ernest Wright: this,
Donald Ramesh: It
Ernest Wright: we
Donald Ramesh: isn't.
Ernest Wright: have to have that one too?
Donald Ramesh: What?
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: Yeah, but it's only a half. But I think the only option is to
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: drop the uh
John Carmichael: Sample speaker.
Donald Ramesh: To knock
Richard Bishop: sample
Donald Ramesh: the sample
Richard Bishop: speaker.
Donald Ramesh: speaker, yeah. And sample sensor.
Ernest Wright: Th then we still have too much
John Carmichael: Yeah, okay,
Ernest Wright: if
John Carmichael: three.
Ernest Wright: we
Donald Ramesh: But
Ernest Wright: use
Donald Ramesh: m
Ernest Wright: the
John Carmichael: Point
Donald Ramesh: yeah,
Ernest Wright: uh
John Carmichael: three.
Donald Ramesh: course, but
Ernest Wright: Yeah, we we
Donald Ramesh: What
Ernest Wright: scrap
Donald Ramesh: we'll
Ernest Wright: that
Donald Ramesh: have.
Ernest Wright: one?
John Carmichael: Huh?
Donald Ramesh: Let's make it thirteen or fourteen.
John Carmichael: Point twelve.
Ernest Wright: See, a po three. We need point three.
John Carmichael: That's a scroll wheel.
Ernest Wright: Uh it's a colour. Don't
Donald Ramesh: A colour.
Ernest Wright: make it wood.
John Carmichael: Yeah, but a wood
Ernest Wright: Make
John Carmichael: we can
Ernest Wright: it
John Carmichael: make
Ernest Wright: uh
John Carmichael: it brown, dark brown, not wood.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, but it's it's special colour, is it
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: a all
Donald Ramesh: special colours,
Ernest Wright: kind of colours?
Donald Ramesh: fruity colours.
Ernest Wright: It's also green
John Carmichael: Is it
Ernest Wright: or
John Carmichael: also
Ernest Wright: uh
John Carmichael: no
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
John Carmichael: that that's just normal colour fruit colours. Normal
Ernest Wright: Yeah, but it's
John Carmichael: colours,
Ernest Wright: a special
John Carmichael: yellow
Ernest Wright: colour than just rubber colour. You have to add something to the rubber to make it green.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: You don't say here's green rubber.
Donald Ramesh: They don't
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: sell
John Carmichael: but then
Donald Ramesh: green
John Carmichael: I
Donald Ramesh: rubber
John Carmichael: d I
Donald Ramesh: plants.
John Carmichael: don't think we can ever make
Donald Ramesh: Alright.
John Carmichael: to a twelve and half.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, you can, you should you have to lose
John Carmichael: But then we have to scrap L_C_D_ display, we have to scrap uh
Ernest Wright: No, it is
Donald Ramesh: No
John Carmichael: s
Ernest Wright: the scroll
John Carmichael: advanced
Donald Ramesh: no no.
Ernest Wright: wheel,
John Carmichael: chip.
Ernest Wright: I guess.
John Carmichael: No then we have to scrap everything we got because how many colours we gonna make? Five?
Donald Ramesh: If we lose
John Carmichael: Then we have
Donald Ramesh: the
John Carmichael: two.
Donald Ramesh: scroll wheel and make it totally uh depending uh dependent on
John Carmichael: S
Donald Ramesh: uh the
Ernest Wright: A
Donald Ramesh: touch
John Carmichael: touch.
Ernest Wright: push,
Donald Ramesh: screen
Ernest Wright: yeah.
Donald Ramesh: then it's possible to make.
John Carmichael: Then we
Donald Ramesh: And
John Carmichael: can make
Donald Ramesh: then you
John Carmichael: add
Donald Ramesh: can
John Carmichael: two colours
Donald Ramesh: and then you can
John Carmichael: on
Donald Ramesh: add
John Carmichael: it.
Donald Ramesh: to the colours.
John Carmichael: Yeah, two colours it.
Donald Ramesh: Special c
Ernest Wright: Switch
Donald Ramesh: Okay,
Ernest Wright: colours.
Donald Ramesh: if you lose uh if you lose
Ernest Wright: It
Donald Ramesh: the
Ernest Wright: was such a great idea.
Donald Ramesh: You lose
John Carmichael: They can
Donald Ramesh: this one,
John Carmichael: add
Donald Ramesh: you got
John Carmichael: two
Donald Ramesh: eleven
John Carmichael: colours.
Donald Ramesh: point five and you make i and then you can make uh the spec single curve, for example.
John Carmichael: But the colours. Um how ma uh the colours like l she told, is that all the colours we add or
Donald Ramesh: How d uh uh how many
Ernest Wright: What
Donald Ramesh: colours?
Ernest Wright: do you mean?
Donald Ramesh: Special colours, all the colours you want, because
John Carmichael: Yeah, but
Donald Ramesh: you
John Carmichael: we
Donald Ramesh: want
John Carmichael: we
Donald Ramesh: to make
John Carmichael: we
Donald Ramesh: p
John Carmichael: are we have yellow, red, uh black, titanium.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, but uh when you use more than one colour, it's a special colour.
John Carmichael: Ah
Ernest Wright: Oh.
John Carmichael: okay.
Ernest Wright: But I think
Donald Ramesh: I
Ernest Wright: when
Donald Ramesh: suppose.
Ernest Wright: you use the colour that's not originally the rubber then you use special colour, 'cause you have
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: to add
John Carmichael: Yeah, but
Ernest Wright: it.
John Carmichael: the rubbers alls original black.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, so you always lose the special colour. You co you could
John Carmichael: Yeah
Ernest Wright: make
John Carmichael: b
Ernest Wright: it always black,
John Carmichael: Yeah, but
Ernest Wright: like
John Carmichael: we're
Ernest Wright: normal
John Carmichael: gonna make
Ernest Wright: remote.
John Carmichael: it yellow uh red, and then you add you have two special colours on top of the one
Donald Ramesh: Nee
John Carmichael: we have now.
Donald Ramesh: we we also want to make
Ernest Wright: Oh right,
Donald Ramesh: ano another
Ernest Wright: yeah.
Donald Ramesh: colour.
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: we
John Carmichael: but
Ernest Wright: should
John Carmichael: m
Ernest Wright: u Yeah. We have to make this like four or five
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: or something.
John Carmichael: because
Ernest Wright: That's what
John Carmichael: we have
Ernest Wright: it means.
John Carmichael: more colours than only black.
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: but isn't it
John Carmichael: I
Richard Bishop: per
John Carmichael: then I think
Richard Bishop: remote
John Carmichael: I p
Richard Bishop: that
John Carmichael: I don
Richard Bishop: you
John Carmichael: I
Richard Bishop: pay?
John Carmichael: don't think they John Carmichael mean
Ernest Wright: Oh right,
Richard Bishop: Half?
John Carmichael: they're special
Ernest Wright: yeah. Is it per remote?
Richard Bishop: I think
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: you pay half per remote.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, that's right,
Richard Bishop: So
Ernest Wright: and
Richard Bishop: each
Ernest Wright: you
Richard Bishop: remote
Ernest Wright: one colour
Richard Bishop: with
Ernest Wright: per
Richard Bishop: a special
Ernest Wright: remote.
Richard Bishop: colour.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, indeed,
Ernest Wright: So then
Donald Ramesh: yeah.
Ernest Wright: it is one.
Donald Ramesh: You don't need four of those
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: uh
John Carmichael: okay
Donald Ramesh: four
John Carmichael: okay,
Donald Ramesh: of
John Carmichael: true.
Donald Ramesh: those special colours in one
John Carmichael: True,
Donald Ramesh: in
John Carmichael: true.
Donald Ramesh: one remote.
Ernest Wright: No.
Richard Bishop: I
John Carmichael: We
Richard Bishop: hope.
John Carmichael: have two points spare.
Richard Bishop: So the
John Carmichael: Nee
Richard Bishop: battery,
John Carmichael: one point.
Richard Bishop: we
Ernest Wright: One.
Richard Bishop: have um advanced chip on print.
Ernest Wright: So it would be curved, single curve.
Richard Bishop: Because of thing
Ernest Wright: Or not?
Richard Bishop: Yeah, well
Donald Ramesh: Hmm.
Richard Bishop: you can at least make it curved again.
Ernest Wright: So
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: y
Donald Ramesh: single
Ernest Wright: you just
Donald Ramesh: curve.
Ernest Wright: can't make a nice remote.
Richard Bishop: Because that was
Ernest Wright: It's
Richard Bishop: very important,
Ernest Wright: too
Richard Bishop: huh?
Ernest Wright: bad for the speaker.
Richard Bishop: So it's curved, it's still that so we we dropped the speech recognition
Ernest Wright: Should
John Carmichael: Mm
Ernest Wright: we
Richard Bishop: together
Ernest Wright: change
John Carmichael: yep.
Richard Bishop: with
Ernest Wright: that
Richard Bishop: the speaker.
Ernest Wright: tha that that's a one if not, or
Richard Bishop: We
Ernest Wright: not?
Richard Bishop: dropped the scroll wheel.
Ernest Wright: Could you copy it? And
Richard Bishop: And
Ernest Wright: make
Richard Bishop: the rest
Ernest Wright: it uh
Richard Bishop: is the same, huh?
John Carmichael: Y yea the
Richard Bishop: Am I right? Yes.
John Carmichael: scroll wheel
Ernest Wright: The
John Carmichael: is
Ernest Wright: entire
John Carmichael: dropped.
Ernest Wright: uh
Donald Ramesh: Uh.
John Carmichael: Yep.
Donald Ramesh: Huh.
Ernest Wright: Perhaps you can then copy page or so. Ooh.
Ernest Wright: No.
Donald Ramesh: Okay.
Ernest Wright: Oh you you made the entire could you
Donald Ramesh: Undo, undo. Undo.
Ernest Wright: Oh not Well.
Donald Ramesh: So, 'kay. Twenty minutes?
Ernest Wright: Would you? By the Perhaps you can save this one, and then copy or something. Add it copy page. Select all.
Richard Bishop: No, but you c yeah.
Ernest Wright: Alright, something went wrong.
John Carmichael: Tap.
Richard Bishop: Okay, but this this new remote
Ernest Wright: It
Richard Bishop: we
Ernest Wright: doesn't
Richard Bishop: can afford.
Ernest Wright: work. Let's forget.
John Carmichael: It should've work.
Donald Ramesh: Okay, so you had this list at start?
Richard Bishop: Hmm?
Donald Ramesh: Alright.
Richard Bishop: No,
Donald Ramesh: When
Richard Bishop: I hadn't.
Donald Ramesh: did you receive this list?
Richard Bishop: I just received it.
Donald Ramesh: Ah okay.
Ernest Wright: Yeah. Oh ignore
Richard Bishop: They
Ernest Wright: that.
Richard Bishop: don't work so hard at the finance department.
Donald Ramesh: Ah okay. I
Ernest Wright: Well, so
Donald Ramesh: suppose this is a Okay, so
Ernest Wright: Too
Donald Ramesh: we
Ernest Wright: bad.
Donald Ramesh: lose the scroll wheel,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: the s
Ernest Wright: The microphone.
Richard Bishop: Yeah, and that's it.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: And the microphone.
Ernest Wright: A and we changed something, I guess, or not? We Oh no.
John Carmichael: Yep.
Donald Ramesh: Okay.
Richard Bishop: Twelve Euro fifty. Um and did you try to make a new design, or what
Ernest Wright: Yeah, I tried
Richard Bishop: were you trying
Ernest Wright: to copy
Richard Bishop: to do?
Ernest Wright: that one, but it didn't work.
Richard Bishop: It didn't work.
Ernest Wright: So we could fix it like tha that it's like this.
Richard Bishop: Hmm. Strange.
Ernest Wright: You could select it all, but then
Donald Ramesh: Strange.
Ernest Wright: you can't erase.
Richard Bishop: Oh, you
Donald Ramesh: You
Richard Bishop: can
Donald Ramesh: can only re
Richard Bishop: arrange
Donald Ramesh: erase?
Ernest Wright: Erase.
Donald Ramesh: Oh.
Ernest Wright: When you saw th li uh Earlier when we selected it, w
Donald Ramesh: Uh,
Ernest Wright: I couldn't erase anything.
Donald Ramesh: no.
Richard Bishop: Hmm, can't you then just say copy?
Donald Ramesh: Bling.
Richard Bishop: New page. Paste. Yes.
Donald Ramesh: Ah.
Richard Bishop: Select none.
Ernest Wright: Just
Donald Ramesh: just
John Carmichael: just
Donald Ramesh: up
Ernest Wright: tap
Donald Ramesh: somewhere
John Carmichael: tap
Donald Ramesh: b uh
Ernest Wright: somewhere.
John Carmichael: somewhere.
Donald Ramesh: besides it, right.
Richard Bishop: Okay,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: and now you can erase.
Ernest Wright: I don't think I can, but uh we can try.
Donald Ramesh: Uh,
Richard Bishop: Well
Donald Ramesh: we already
Richard Bishop: it
Donald Ramesh: try.
Richard Bishop: should be possible.
Ernest Wright: Oh, yeah, no,
Richard Bishop: Oh
Ernest Wright: ha-ha.
Richard Bishop: no. Well
John Carmichael: No?
Richard Bishop: you can draw over it with white
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
Richard Bishop: uh
Ernest Wright: we
Richard Bishop: pen.
Ernest Wright: tried it earlier.
Richard Bishop: Oh.
Ernest Wright: It's very much work.
Richard Bishop: Yeah. Sorry. Well but that's also useful for the evaluation, because I think uh we
John Carmichael: Evaluation
Richard Bishop: have a prototype
John Carmichael: drops.
Richard Bishop: now which we can afford and uh we only need to draw a little bit to get a good uh design. Doodle. And I think we should then move on to the production evaluation because of the time.
John Carmichael: And erase the mic.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, goodbye mic.
Donald Ramesh: All I need is no mic.
Richard Bishop: Let's see,
Ernest Wright: Oh, I
Richard Bishop: we
Ernest Wright: already erased
Richard Bishop: can
Ernest Wright: half of the line.
Richard Bishop: save this now.
Donald Ramesh: Bon chance
Richard Bishop: And move back to here.
Ernest Wright: Too bad, oh.
Ernest Wright: Like this?
Richard Bishop: Mm-hmm.
Ernest Wright: Still looks nice.
Richard Bishop: And then all green. Okay, well thank you.
Ernest Wright: Oh,
John Carmichael: Looks
Ernest Wright: that's
John Carmichael: like a
Ernest Wright: erase.
John Carmichael: iPod.
Richard Bishop: Oh, no.
Donald Ramesh: No,
Richard Bishop: Hey,
Donald Ramesh: add
Richard Bishop: but you can erase that.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, that's a bit
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: weird.
Richard Bishop: Uh-oh.
Ernest Wright: Oh,
Donald Ramesh: S
Ernest Wright: now
Donald Ramesh: Difference
Ernest Wright: I'm line.
Donald Ramesh: between lines and text and the pen.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Oh.
Richard Bishop: Right.
John Carmichael: All I need is mic.
Richard Bishop: And you can't erase this? Hmm,
Ernest Wright: No,
Richard Bishop: strange.
Ernest Wright: it's weird.
Richard Bishop: Okay, well uh just leave it at this and
John Carmichael: Station
Richard Bishop: quickly save.
John Carmichael: page.
Richard Bishop: Um
Donald Ramesh: Huh,
Richard Bishop: and
Donald Ramesh: looks
Richard Bishop: then
Donald Ramesh: fucking
Richard Bishop: we
Donald Ramesh: boring
Richard Bishop: are going
Donald Ramesh: now.
Richard Bishop: to the project or product evaluation. We just did our project evaluation. Um well, I think I can sit for that since it's almost my final slide. Um what did you think about uh the process? How satisfied are we?
Donald Ramesh: Deadlines were sometimes very short.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: Mm-hmm.
Ernest Wright: Bu but stressful.
Donald Ramesh: But
Ernest Wright: You think,
Donald Ramesh: And
Ernest Wright: no,
Donald Ramesh: stressful.
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: my presentation isn't ready.
John Carmichael: I think we it should be b it would be better if we worked a little bit together.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Now
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
John Carmichael: we worked through each other,
Richard Bishop: And you could
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
John Carmichael: something
Richard Bishop: ask
Ernest Wright: you had information
John Carmichael: he
Richard Bishop: things.
John Carmichael: said
Ernest Wright: I didn't
John Carmichael: yeah,
Ernest Wright: have and
John Carmichael: and
Ernest Wright: then
John Carmichael: you
Ernest Wright: uh
John Carmichael: had information I also had,
Ernest Wright: Oh
John Carmichael: so
Ernest Wright: right.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
John Carmichael: some some things I had
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
John Carmichael: in my presentation, they already told, so
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: And for John Carmichael it sometimes was a surprise who was going to present what, huh?
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: And
John Carmichael: So
Richard Bishop: uh
John Carmichael: yeah, that I don't think that is the best way to work
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
John Carmichael: at
Ernest Wright: No.
John Carmichael: for such
Richard Bishop: So you would
John Carmichael: project.
Richard Bishop: say uh communicate during our individual
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Richard Bishop: uh
John Carmichael: no, or
Richard Bishop: work.
John Carmichael: maybe session of five minutes together or something, and then work
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
John Carmichael: separate.
Donald Ramesh: but
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: but why not work here together,
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: for
Ernest Wright: you
Donald Ramesh: example?
Ernest Wright: could
Donald Ramesh: Why should we be separated from each other
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: in those difference uh different
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: rooms?
Richard Bishop: Mm-hmm. Well,
Ernest Wright: I think
Richard Bishop: probably
Ernest Wright: so too.
Richard Bishop: to simulate the whole working uh
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, but then you
Richard Bishop: process,
Ernest Wright: can work
Richard Bishop: huh,
Ernest Wright: together
Richard Bishop: th you
Ernest Wright: too when
Richard Bishop: can't have a meeting uh for
John Carmichael: Yeah m yeah,
Richard Bishop: several
John Carmichael: like she
Richard Bishop: weeks.
John Carmichael: told. Then you can work together too by mail or by, I dunno, chat, something,
Donald Ramesh: Huh, oh
John Carmichael: but now
Richard Bishop: No.
Donald Ramesh: right.
Ernest Wright: A chat
John Carmichael: we're
Ernest Wright: would also
John Carmichael: completely
Ernest Wright: be uh
John Carmichael: separated from each other. I don't think that was the best way, but
Donald Ramesh: But the technology was uh fantastic.
John Carmichael: Yeah, the technology's
Ernest Wright: Well,
John Carmichael: okay.
Ernest Wright: I I don't really like the board, it doesn't really work
Donald Ramesh: Work
Ernest Wright: great.
John Carmichael: Yeah
Donald Ramesh: now?
John Carmichael: okay, but I don
Ernest Wright: Sometimes
John Carmichael: I do
Ernest Wright: I think.
John Carmichael: I think becau that's
Donald Ramesh: Perhaps
John Carmichael: because
Donald Ramesh: it is e
Ernest Wright: It does work, but sometimes it doesn't erase
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: or it doesn't
Donald Ramesh: perhaps
Ernest Wright: uh
Donald Ramesh: it is easier to get one of those uh dig digital pens or so and
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: to uh and lay it next to that keyboard over
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: there. So you
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: can draw
John Carmichael: like
Donald Ramesh: uh
John Carmichael: the
Donald Ramesh: see
John Carmichael: f
Donald Ramesh: it
John Carmichael: like
Donald Ramesh: over
John Carmichael: a
Donald Ramesh: th on the screen.
John Carmichael: plotters
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: or
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
John Carmichael: something, yeah. Yep yep yep yep yep.
Richard Bishop: So
Ernest Wright: But
Richard Bishop: you don't think the SMARTboard is is really useful or
Donald Ramesh: It's
Ernest Wright: Well
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: useful,
Ernest Wright: it is
John Carmichael: it
Ernest Wright: useful,
John Carmichael: is useful,
Donald Ramesh: but not
Ernest Wright: but
John Carmichael: but
Donald Ramesh: m
Ernest Wright: it doesn't really work all the
John Carmichael: No.
Ernest Wright: time.
Donald Ramesh: Because
Ernest Wright: Th
Donald Ramesh: when you
Ernest Wright: the
Donald Ramesh: put this
Ernest Wright: pen
Donald Ramesh: pen
Ernest Wright: doesn't
Donald Ramesh: on the screen uh uh
Ernest Wright: The
Donald Ramesh: for
Ernest Wright: line
Donald Ramesh: exam
Ernest Wright: is
Donald Ramesh: and
Ernest Wright: a bit off.
Donald Ramesh: line is d being drawn at at two or three centimetres uh below.
Richard Bishop: Yeah, so it's maybe a bit unnatural
John Carmichael: Yep.
Donald Ramesh: Alright.
Richard Bishop: also.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, you can point to where you want the line to be. But
Donald Ramesh: The project uh because of the deadlines you didn't had the time to uh have, you didn't have time to uh to make a very uh qualitati qualitative uh presentation.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: So you used uh this uh the different PowerPoint presentations uh in which you put your uh material in the Oh.
Richard Bishop: That wasn't John Carmichael. Uh
Donald Ramesh: Wasn't John Carmichael.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: so um the means, we discussed the smart board, and what about uh this digital pen?
Ernest Wright: I
John Carmichael: I didn't use it at all.
Ernest Wright: I I used it, it it was you can use it, it's quite handy
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: But
Ernest Wright: I
Donald Ramesh: I
Ernest Wright: think.
Donald Ramesh: didn't
Richard Bishop: well
Donald Ramesh: I uh
Richard Bishop: I use it as a a normal pen and and and only you use it to uh
Ernest Wright: Yeah, I used it to
Richard Bishop: get
Ernest Wright: y
Richard Bishop: it
Ernest Wright: to
Richard Bishop: on the computer, huh?
Ernest Wright: Yeah, it did work
Donald Ramesh: I
Ernest Wright: pretty
Donald Ramesh: used
Ernest Wright: well.
Donald Ramesh: it too, but oh well.
John Carmichael: I
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
John Carmichael: didn't
Ernest Wright: I don't think
John Carmichael: use.
Ernest Wright: why you would want to use it
Donald Ramesh: Yeah,
John Carmichael: No
Donald Ramesh: because
Ernest Wright: actually,
John Carmichael: yeah.
Donald Ramesh: it
Ernest Wright: but
Donald Ramesh: shou
Ernest Wright: it it does work.
Donald Ramesh: To
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: make some
John Carmichael: It
Donald Ramesh: designs,
John Carmichael: is it
Donald Ramesh: it
John Carmichael: is
Donald Ramesh: is
John Carmichael: yeah,
Donald Ramesh: very
John Carmichael: it
Donald Ramesh: easy.
John Carmichael: is easy for to design something and
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
John Carmichael: then load it in your computer.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, and then you can show it to everybody.
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: But to write it th yeah.
John Carmichael: Yeah. It's
Ernest Wright: It doesn't
John Carmichael: b
Ernest Wright: really
John Carmichael: bi
Ernest Wright: write
John Carmichael: little bit
Ernest Wright: normally.
John Carmichael: too big to write.
Ernest Wright: It's a bit
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, it's too big, it's too fat.
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Fat document, those.
Richard Bishop: Okay, um and what about the teamwork?
John Carmichael: Team work was okay.
Ernest Wright: I think it was great,
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: yeah.
Richard Bishop: well I think so too.
John Carmichael: Only thing
Richard Bishop: we
John Carmichael: that we worked through, past each other.
Donald Ramesh: Right.
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
John Carmichael: With some things
Richard Bishop: but that
John Carmichael: that
Richard Bishop: was
John Carmichael: was only problem,
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
John Carmichael: but
Ernest Wright: but it
Richard Bishop: it
Ernest Wright: was
Richard Bishop: was
Ernest Wright: because
Richard Bishop: our assignment,
Ernest Wright: we didn't uh
Richard Bishop: huh?
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Yeah yeah yeah, but furthermore
Richard Bishop: Okay, and maybe I
John Carmichael: better.
Richard Bishop: should walk out of the room when you discuss uh this point, the leadership.
John Carmichael: That's
Ernest Wright: I thought it was good, but
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
John Carmichael: yeah,
Ernest Wright: uh Yeah.
John Carmichael: no prob. Ah.
Richard Bishop: Yeah well,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: okay.
Donald Ramesh: Not too much, not too too too
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: too.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Okay.
Richard Bishop: And creativity? Well, when we look at this I'd say we have been creative, huh? But
Ernest Wright: Well.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, or the room for it
Richard Bishop: There
Donald Ramesh: was
Richard Bishop: was
Donald Ramesh: the idea
Richard Bishop: room
Donald Ramesh: to
Richard Bishop: for
Donald Ramesh: be creative, so
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: You got some standard ideas in your head
John Carmichael: Mm-hmm.
Donald Ramesh: and this what came
Ernest Wright: And
Donald Ramesh: out.
Ernest Wright: you get get stuff from the
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: from the computer, but
Donald Ramesh: The information uh was sometimes uh a
John Carmichael: Little bit uh
Donald Ramesh: little
John Carmichael: lo
Donald Ramesh: bit too late
John Carmichael: yeah.
Donald Ramesh: or
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Too late it it it
Ernest Wright: You just
John Carmichael: took
Ernest Wright: sit
John Carmichael: a lot
Ernest Wright: there
John Carmichael: of
Ernest Wright: for
John Carmichael: time
Ernest Wright: ten
John Carmichael: before
Ernest Wright: minutes.
John Carmichael: you got your
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
John Carmichael: ema yeah.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, where is that
John Carmichael: I played
Ernest Wright: email?
John Carmichael: I think seven times Solitaire something.
Richard Bishop: You did? Well,
Ernest Wright: Oh
Richard Bishop: I didn't have
Ernest Wright: did you?
Richard Bishop: time
Ernest Wright: Is
Richard Bishop: for
Ernest Wright: it
Richard Bishop: that.
Ernest Wright: on there?
John Carmichael: Wha
Ernest Wright: Is it on there? I didn't find the
Richard Bishop: At
John Carmichael: Oh
Richard Bishop: some
Ernest Wright: didn't
John Carmichael: right,
Richard Bishop: times
John Carmichael: it is
Richard Bishop: I
Ernest Wright: look
John Carmichael: there.
Ernest Wright: but uh I
Richard Bishop: Sometimes
Donald Ramesh: Was
Richard Bishop: I
Donald Ramesh: searching
Richard Bishop: received
Donald Ramesh: and searching.
Richard Bishop: like like five
Ernest Wright: didn't
Richard Bishop: emails
Ernest Wright: look, but
Richard Bishop: at at one moment,
John Carmichael: No,
Richard Bishop: and then
John Carmichael: I I never got that.
Ernest Wright: I
John Carmichael: I
Ernest Wright: got like
John Carmichael: always
Ernest Wright: one email after ten minutes or something.
John Carmichael: N yeah.
Richard Bishop: I even got spam. Or something like that.
Ernest Wright: That's what we
John Carmichael: So
Ernest Wright: said.
John Carmichael: does this I think lik oh and information was a bit low I think,
Ernest Wright: And
John Carmichael: sometimes,
Ernest Wright: it not a lot
John Carmichael: in in
Ernest Wright: uh
John Carmichael: in in the beginning I didn't understand what what to do.
Ernest Wright: No, the
Donald Ramesh: No,
Ernest Wright: first
Donald Ramesh: w
Ernest Wright: one.
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: I
Ernest Wright: I
Donald Ramesh: didn't
Ernest Wright: didn't
John Carmichael: like
Donald Ramesh: know
Ernest Wright: know
John Carmichael: I
Ernest Wright: uh
John Carmichael: with with the remote and I never new we have t we had
Donald Ramesh: Make
John Carmichael: to uh
Donald Ramesh: a r yeah.
John Carmichael: yeah made
Ernest Wright: nee.
John Carmichael: a made a rec a remote control.
Ernest Wright: And I didn't know what to do for the first ten minutes before
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: we got here,
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: so I
John Carmichael: so
Ernest Wright: went, right.
Donald Ramesh: No stepping on the table and then
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: looking at the internet
Richard Bishop: And I
Ernest Wright: Just
Richard Bishop: was
Ernest Wright: looking
Donald Ramesh: page.
Richard Bishop: working
Ernest Wright: at the
Richard Bishop: and
Ernest Wright: screen
Richard Bishop: working
Ernest Wright: and
Richard Bishop: and work
Ernest Wright: uh
Donald Ramesh: No.
Richard Bishop: Okay,
John Carmichael: So, yeah.
Richard Bishop: well um but after all we can say uh we are satisfied, but it it could've been uh better.
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: When we get uh when we have we would have gotten uh more information.
John Carmichael: Mm-hmm.
Ernest Wright: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, more
John Carmichael: Faster.
Donald Ramesh: information
Ernest Wright: an
Donald Ramesh: about the costs.
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, that will be handy.
Donald Ramesh: First of all I didn't think uh that we were able to make an L_C_D_ screen uh first point, but uh it
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: was possible uh
John Carmichael: Yeah, it only
Donald Ramesh: uh,
John Carmichael: costs four units. Uh
Donald Ramesh: yeah.
Ernest Wright: Yea
John Carmichael: yeah.
Ernest Wright: uh
Richard Bishop: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: so tha actually you could make an L_C_D_ screen but no mic, or it could make mic but no L_C_D_
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: screen,
Richard Bishop: that
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: was a bit
Ernest Wright: when you
Richard Bishop: mean
Ernest Wright: look at
Richard Bishop: to
Ernest Wright: that.
Richard Bishop: put
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: it in the end. And uh what were the other points to to improve this whole
Ernest Wright: Uh,
Richard Bishop: process?
John Carmichael: Um
Ernest Wright: I dunno.
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: Think that's about it.
John Carmichael: Nothing.
Ernest Wright: Hmm.
John Carmichael: I think we got it
Ernest Wright: Heavier
John Carmichael: already.
Ernest Wright: um less heavy laptops.
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Uh.
Richard Bishop: they're
Donald Ramesh: Faster
Richard Bishop: pretty heavy.
Donald Ramesh: laptop.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Uh. They
Ernest Wright: But
Donald Ramesh: were
Ernest Wright: that's not
Donald Ramesh: they
Ernest Wright: really
Donald Ramesh: were just
John Carmichael: And
Ernest Wright: uh
Donald Ramesh: fine.
John Carmichael: furthermore the the the network was okay.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Everything
Donald Ramesh: Uh.
John Carmichael: you loaded was also
Ernest Wright: Yeah, everything
John Carmichael: av available
Ernest Wright: worked.
John Carmichael: there.
Donald Ramesh: Right.
Richard Bishop: And
John Carmichael: So
Richard Bishop: so more time uh w might have improved the the quality of work,
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: is what
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: you say. Okay.
John Carmichael: Yeah, but that It's now half past four half past three, so
Ernest Wright: Yeah, but it's just the the off hours between
John Carmichael: Yeah,
Ernest Wright: that
John Carmichael: okay.
Ernest Wright: you will work alone.
John Carmichael: Yeah, okay.
Ernest Wright: Then it pops up pop up screen came.
John Carmichael: Mm-hm.
Ernest Wright: Five
John Carmichael: Mm.
Ernest Wright: minutes in the meeting.
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Mm.
Ernest Wright: No.
Richard Bishop: Okay, so more time during the individual work phases.
Ernest Wright: Huh.
Richard Bishop: Um okay well uh I just got my warning for the last five minutes,
Ernest Wright: You
Richard Bishop: so
Ernest Wright: did?
Richard Bishop: I'll
Ernest Wright: Well
Richard Bishop: move on to I guess my last slide, yes, which is the closing. Well uh, we managed, but we did it very quickly. I don't know if that's the best way to when it isn't is it when it is too expensive to quickly re-arrange it
Ernest Wright: Oh,
Richard Bishop: and say, okay,
Ernest Wright: right.
Richard Bishop: this is it, but we
Ernest Wright: Well
Richard Bishop: had to do it, huh, because we have to have a design, and that is within the budget. And we evaluated. Maybe we should re-evaluate uh the product, but we did that before, and we also evaluated the project. And I think uh everybody's uh very happy. At least I am, with the results, so
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: uh celebration,
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: well, for the three of you,
Ernest Wright: Champagne.
Richard Bishop: because uh I have to write the final report now. But uh well, thank you very much for
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: your co-operation, and I had
Donald Ramesh: Yeah, sure.
Richard Bishop: a very
John Carmichael: No prob.
Richard Bishop: nice day so far.
Donald Ramesh: Oh thank
John Carmichael: Mm-hmm.
Donald Ramesh: you.
Richard Bishop: Okay.
Ernest Wright: Do we get another email?
Donald Ramesh: Bling.
John Carmichael: I
Donald Ramesh: You're fired.
John Carmichael: think
Richard Bishop: Um
John Carmichael: you do.
Ernest Wright: I I think we have to fill in a questionnaire again, but
Richard Bishop: Yeah I have t I think we also have to go to our own rooms again, but
Ernest Wright: We do?
Donald Ramesh: Mm.
Richard Bishop: um well I at least. But maybe you can try uh to make a screen shot of this, so I can try
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: to include it in the final report.
Ernest Wright: Uh th that that one?
Donald Ramesh: You cannot you
Richard Bishop: Yeah,
Donald Ramesh: can save
Ernest Wright: You
Donald Ramesh: it.
Ernest Wright: can
Richard Bishop: maybe.
Ernest Wright: just
Richard Bishop: wants
Ernest Wright: Yeah, but it's
Richard Bishop: to,
Ernest Wright: it
Richard Bishop: but
Ernest Wright: isn't
Richard Bishop: at least
Ernest Wright: a picture
Richard Bishop: this one.
Ernest Wright: or, well, is
Richard Bishop: I
Ernest Wright: it?
Richard Bishop: know,
Donald Ramesh: You s
Richard Bishop: we
Donald Ramesh: uh
Richard Bishop: should remove
Donald Ramesh: file
Richard Bishop: this,
Donald Ramesh: save
Richard Bishop: but it won't
Donald Ramesh: as the
Richard Bishop: h
Donald Ramesh: J_ PEG
Richard Bishop: Okay.
Donald Ramesh: J_ PEG.
Richard Bishop: And uh please put it in the project folder then, huh.
John Carmichael: Can you find it as a J_ PEG?
Donald Ramesh: No.
Ernest Wright: No, isn't possible. But you can make a screen shot, I think.
Richard Bishop: Okay, well I uh
John Carmichael: No.
Donald Ramesh: No.
Richard Bishop: I hereby officially close the meeting
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Okay.
Richard Bishop: and uh I hope to see you uh soon.
John Carmichael: In
Donald Ramesh: In
Ernest Wright: Uh
Donald Ramesh: about five
Ernest Wright: oh,
Donald Ramesh: minutes.
John Carmichael: uh
Ernest Wright: export.
Richard Bishop: Well, I think we'll be a bit a
Donald Ramesh: Ah.
Richard Bishop: bit longer, but okay. Well, happy celebration, huh?
Donald Ramesh: Oh thank you.
Ernest Wright: Images.
Donald Ramesh: Whoo-hoo. Let's
John Carmichael: Celebra
Donald Ramesh: let's have party.
John Carmichael: Or
Ernest Wright: How big do you want
Donald Ramesh: Let's
Ernest Wright: the images?
Donald Ramesh: have some fun.
John Carmichael: shouldn't I?
Richard Bishop: How big?
Donald Ramesh: Huh?
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Richard Bishop: Uh not too big.
Ernest Wright: This one?
John Carmichael: Six
Richard Bishop: Whatever
John Carmichael: hundred.
Richard Bishop: you think
John Carmichael: No,
Richard Bishop: is good.
John Carmichael: I yeah.
Donald Ramesh: No that uh is one
John Carmichael: I
Donald Ramesh: thousand
John Carmichael: think
Donald Ramesh: twenty
John Carmichael: eight hundred
Donald Ramesh: four.
John Carmichael: six hundred is better.
Ernest Wright: This one?
John Carmichael: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah. If it browse.
John Carmichael: Nah, name.
Ernest Wright: Um
Donald Ramesh: Desktop.
Ernest Wright: Well it isn't on the desktop.
John Carmichael: Hey.
Donald Ramesh: Mm? I do not know.
Ernest Wright: You can only save it in my documents.
Donald Ramesh: Oh?
John Carmichael: Oh my God.
Donald Ramesh: Yeah.
Ernest Wright: Oh. Oh, alright. Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Okay.
Ernest Wright: Yeah. Yeah. Three. Can
John Carmichael: Ten.
Ernest Wright: we stay here?
John Carmichael: Yeah. Ten.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
John Carmichael: Uh.
Donald Ramesh: Okay.
Ernest Wright: Yeah, alright. Why can't we stay here?
Donald Ramesh: Alright.
Ernest Wright: Yeah.
Donald Ramesh: Oh.
John Carmichael: Celebration time, come on.
Donald Ramesh: Oh.
John Carmichael: Peace out nigger. Entree | Richard Bishop opened the meeting and then Ernest Wright and industrial designer presented their prototype for the remote which featured an LCD screen, a scroll button, and a battery indicator. John Carmichael conducted a project evaluation of the prototype. The team found the remote to be fancy, innovative, fairly easy to use, available in different colors, fairly spongy, difficult to misplace, and targeted to younger people. Richard Bishop then led the team in calculating the production costs of their remote. The team had difficulty in meeting the the target cost and had to eliminate some of the more expensive components they had hoped to include in their design. Richard Bishop then led the team in an evaluation of the project process. The team found the project stressful, the equipment useful, the information available to them lacking, and their laptops to be slow and heavy. | 1 | amisum | train |
Thomas Morasca: Mm uh.
Andrew Westfall: We're
Thomas Morasca: Mm.
Andrew Westfall: the first.
Thomas Morasca: We're first.
Andrew Westfall: Marketing Expert yes,
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm.
Charles Slaybaugh: So you found your spots.
Andrew Westfall: Yes.
Thomas Morasca: Move
Andrew Westfall: Bling
Thomas Morasca: to the
Andrew Westfall: bling.
Thomas Morasca: meeting room.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Thomas Morasca: Okay.
Andrew Westfall: Right.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
Andrew Westfall: Uh where has my screen gone?
William Collins: Hi.
Thomas Morasca: Hello, good day.
William Collins: Oh yeah,
Andrew Westfall: Hmm.
William Collins: we have to talk in, huh.
Thomas Morasca: Yep.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah. My screen is gone. Oh.
Charles Slaybaugh: It's called black.
Thomas Morasca: Kick-off meeting, wow.
William Collins: I'm
Thomas Morasca: It's uh
William Collins: afraid
Thomas Morasca: looks
William Collins: I'm a
Thomas Morasca: uh
William Collins: bit
Thomas Morasca: nice.
William Collins: slow for this stuff uh.
Thomas Morasca: Hmm?
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
William Collins: I'm afraid I'm a bit too slow. I don't know how much preparation you guys
Thomas Morasca: Yeah.
William Collins: did, but not
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
William Collins: a lot.
Thomas Morasca: No, it's it was uh
Charles Slaybaugh: You
Thomas Morasca: not enough.
Charles Slaybaugh: see this beautiful presentation.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah. Very
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay
Andrew Westfall: nice.
Charles Slaybaugh: let's get started.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh I sort of prepared this. Uh opening acquaintance, tool training, uh how to use the things here.
Andrew Westfall: Mm.
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh project plan discussion, and yeah then the rest of the meeting.
William Collins: Mm-hmm.
Charles Slaybaugh: Um we're supposed to develop a new remote control, that's both original, trendy and user-friendly. So, hope you have good ideas. I don't.
Thomas Morasca: I did my best.
William Collins: Not
Charles Slaybaugh: we're
William Collins: yet.
Charles Slaybaugh: work we're working uh from top to bottom. Uh functional design, then we do some in individual work, then we have a meeting to discuss the results, etcetera etcetera. And at the end of the day we should have a prototype drawn up. Uh we have available the smart board and the whiteboard. Um uh we should take some practice. I have some instructions now to do that.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh well you know how to the documents work. So Uh this for toolbar. You see it next. Um we have a pen. And we can use this pen to perform.
William Collins: Operations.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yes. So It doesn't always work. Yes.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay so you can draw.
Andrew Westfall: Draw.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay
Andrew Westfall: Alright.
Charles Slaybaugh: and in the format menu you can select colour and line width, etcetera etcetera.
Andrew Westfall: 'Kay.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay? Uh Okay. Each of you can uh take some practice and you should draw an animal. Uh you should explain Uh with different colours and with different pen widths. And you should explain why you draw that particular animal. So, Julian.
Thomas Morasca: Okay.
Andrew Westfall: Don't take up too much space.
Thomas Morasca: Um yeah.
William Collins: Different pen widths, how do you do that?
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh with the format menu.
William Collins: Oh okay.
Charles Slaybaugh: And use different colours etcetera.
William Collins: Are
Charles Slaybaugh: And
William Collins: you serious?
Charles Slaybaugh: what's that supposed to be?
Thomas Morasca: It's a
Andrew Westfall: Should it
Thomas Morasca: giraffe.
Andrew Westfall: be one
Thomas Morasca: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Oh yeah. Oh yeah four legs.
Thomas Morasca: Okay.
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh-huh.
Andrew Westfall: Giraffe's yellow.
Thomas Morasca: Uh it needs some uh some yellow uh Oh format.
Andrew Westfall: Can you use one blank sheet per drawing? Or
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
Andrew Westfall: y you must save it at the end and then
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah you can press the next button, which is uh yeah.
Thomas Morasca: That's some spots.
Charles Slaybaugh: I'll show
William Collins: I
Charles Slaybaugh: you.
William Collins: in the file option menu.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah. In file menu.
Andrew Westfall: Okay, then m make a new one.
William Collins: How much time do we have to draw anyway? 'Cause I can
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
William Collins: take forever on this.
Thomas Morasca: Okay. Do I have to explain uh why I chose this uh this animal?
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
Thomas Morasca: I think it's a it's a great animal.
Charles Slaybaugh: What is it?
Thomas Morasca: It's a it's a giraffe.
Charles Slaybaugh: A giraffe okay.
Thomas Morasca: Yeah,
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah
Thomas Morasca: that's
Charles Slaybaugh: I see
Thomas Morasca: a
Charles Slaybaugh: a long neck but
Andrew Westfall: It's more like a dinosaur.
Thomas Morasca: Um Okay I'll will give it an uh an eye.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
Andrew Westfall: Uh.
Charles Slaybaugh: That's nice of you.
Thomas Morasca: Hey. Come on.
Andrew Westfall: Some leaf to eat.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay. Yeah pretty good. Uh could you press the next uh
Thomas Morasca: The next? Yes.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay. Then
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: uh.
Thomas Morasca: Here you go.
Andrew Westfall: Thanks.
Thomas Morasca: Hmm.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
William Collins: Is this part of our a acquai or introduction
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah
William Collins: to each
Charles Slaybaugh: sorry,
William Collins: other?
Charles Slaybaugh: introduction
Andrew Westfall: Uh
Charles Slaybaugh: and get acquainted and
William Collins: Alright.
Charles Slaybaugh: That's the idea, so
William Collins: Uh. Your line broke.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah. Alright. It's
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah
Andrew Westfall: not
Charles Slaybaugh: it's
Andrew Westfall: that
Charles Slaybaugh: a bit
Andrew Westfall: fast.
Charles Slaybaugh: slow, so
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
Andrew Westfall: I see. It misses the spot.
Charles Slaybaugh: pressure.
William Collins: I'm guessing a turtle. No. I'm kidding.
Andrew Westfall: I say good guess. Uh
Charles Slaybaugh: Why a turtle?
William Collins: Because of its shell.
Andrew Westfall: Because it's slow.
Charles Slaybaugh: It's
Thomas Morasca: 'Cause
Charles Slaybaugh: slow.
Thomas Morasca: it's so 'cause it's
Charles Slaybaugh: You
Thomas Morasca: green.
Charles Slaybaugh: were slow too so
Andrew Westfall: Yeah I was a bit slow too.
William Collins: Dude you're
Andrew Westfall: So
William Collins: a good drawer.
Andrew Westfall: Uh some other line uh width uh
William Collins: Do you have a turtle pet?
Andrew Westfall: No.
William Collins: Uh okay.
Andrew Westfall: I dunno. Does it have legs?
William Collins: Yeah yeah
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah
William Collins: yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: sure.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah?
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah not exactly legs but
William Collins: Stumpy
Charles Slaybaugh: More
William Collins: stuff.
Charles Slaybaugh: like fins or
Andrew Westfall: It's more like a tank. Yeah that's fins but I don't
William Collins: They
Andrew Westfall: know
William Collins: kind
Andrew Westfall: where.
William Collins: of l look like mole legs. With sharp nails
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
William Collins: on.
Andrew Westfall: Some spots. Ah some eye.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah it's l looks
Andrew Westfall: Yeah
Charles Slaybaugh: very friendly.
Andrew Westfall: that's a fr friendly turtle I guess. Yeah well I think it's uh fair enough.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah okay.
William Collins: A little tail maybe.
Andrew Westfall: Right. I don't know what the position is. Does it have ears?
William Collins: Uh no.
Charles Slaybaugh: No.
Andrew Westfall: No.
Thomas Morasca: No.
Andrew Westfall: Oh okay.
William Collins: The little holes
Andrew Westfall: Can you
William Collins: maybe.
Andrew Westfall: erase ears or
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah yeah yeah.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah?
Charles Slaybaugh: There's a a gum,
Andrew Westfall: Alright.
Charles Slaybaugh: gum
Andrew Westfall: Eraser.
Charles Slaybaugh: to.
William Collins: And
Andrew Westfall: So
William Collins: why did you choose this animal?
Charles Slaybaugh: He
Andrew Westfall: I
Charles Slaybaugh: said
Andrew Westfall: dunno.
Charles Slaybaugh: it was slow.
Andrew Westfall: I it just came into my mind. So
William Collins: Alright.
Andrew Westfall: there's no particular reason I pen.
Charles Slaybaugh: I like it.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah. Well I'm guess I'm done.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
Andrew Westfall: That's my turtle.
Charles Slaybaugh: Your turn
William Collins: Alright.
Charles Slaybaugh: Niels.
Andrew Westfall: How to select the next or
Charles Slaybaugh: The next
Andrew Westfall: here.
Charles Slaybaugh: yeah.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah. Here you go.
Charles Slaybaugh: Makes new
William Collins: Colours
Charles Slaybaugh: paper.
William Collins: were under format right?
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
William Collins: Let's see.
Charles Slaybaugh: Orange.
William Collins: How am I gonna do this? Um
William Collins: Mm uh.
Thomas Morasca: A rabbit I
Charles Slaybaugh: Kangaroo.
Thomas Morasca: think. Kangaroo.
William Collins: Not quite actually.
Thomas Morasca: Fox.
Andrew Westfall: A fox yeah. Firefox.
Charles Slaybaugh: Dog.
William Collins: No.
Charles Slaybaugh: Cat.
William Collins: Aye.
Charles Slaybaugh: It's a cat.
William Collins: It's a cat.
Thomas Morasca: Mm.
William Collins: Not
Andrew Westfall: A cat
William Collins: quite
Andrew Westfall: who
William Collins: yet
Andrew Westfall: had an
William Collins: through.
Andrew Westfall: accident or
Charles Slaybaugh: Why a cat?
William Collins: Uh yeah I dunno. They're my favourite pets.
Charles Slaybaugh: You have some uh?
William Collins: Uh I have colour already. Yeah I'm not so good at drawing with this kind of st Oh shit. Um
Charles Slaybaugh: The pen, yeah.
William Collins: Excuse my language.
Charles Slaybaugh: Sure.
William Collins: I don't know how to draw its face. But you get the idea. It's
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
William Collins: a cat. It's
Charles Slaybaugh: Alright.
William Collins: my favourite uh pet animal, 'cause they're cute, they're independent and cuddly, I dunno.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
William Collins: That's it. Or do I
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
William Collins: need to use more colours and
Charles Slaybaugh: I think it's okay.
William Collins: Alright.
Charles Slaybaugh: You get idea
William Collins: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: right? Okay um we have a financial aspect to this project. Um we can sell them at twenty five Euros. Uh the aim is to reach uh uh to sell as much as fifty million Euros. Uh that's quite a big amount of money. And the production cost should be the half of the selling price.
William Collins: So we have
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay
William Collins: to s
Charles Slaybaugh: now it's time for some discussion.
Thomas Morasca: Okay.
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh
Thomas Morasca: What uh what uh do you want to discuss?
William Collins: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah. We should get started.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Thomas Morasca: Yep.
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh I'm taking notes.
Andrew Westfall: Okay. Great.
Charles Slaybaugh: Um we each have a specific task, as I saw in my mail.
William Collins: Mm-hmm.
Charles Slaybaugh: I
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: didn't know if you received the same mail. Yeah?
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
William Collins: I guess so.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay
William Collins: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: so the um uh this industrati Industrial Designer should produce a working design. Am I correct?
William Collins: True.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay. Uh Thomas Morasca should specify the technical functions. Right?
Thomas Morasca: Yep.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah? And the Marketing uh Expert should come up with user requirements.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh did any of you already do some work on this part or
William Collins: Well I started making an overview for myself, um what I had to do, 'cause we have three design steps and in every step I have
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
William Collins: a s specific task to perform or whatever.
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
William Collins: So I had to uh, I dunno, make an overview for myself about
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
William Collins: what I have to do, and kind of let it work in to get ideas about
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm. And
William Collins: well how
Charles Slaybaugh: do you
William Collins: I
Charles Slaybaugh: have
William Collins: have to fill
Charles Slaybaugh: any
William Collins: it.
Charles Slaybaugh: ideas about the product
William Collins: Well I started
Charles Slaybaugh: uh so far?
William Collins: I started with the first phase, I think was the functional.
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
William Collins: And uh let's see I had to focus on the working design, which
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
William Collins: you said. How does the apparatus work? And well I basically had two points. Uh according to the coffee uh machine example,
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
William Collins: I have batteries to supply energy, and we ye use button presses to activate or deactivate certain functions on
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
William Collins: the T_V_.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
William Collins: And that's basically all I have so far.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah I got another point. It uses infrared light
Thomas Morasca: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: to communicate
Thomas Morasca: Wireless
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: the
Thomas Morasca: uh
Charles Slaybaugh: signal
Thomas Morasca: huh.
Charles Slaybaugh: to
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: the
William Collins: Alright.
Charles Slaybaugh: T_V_ apparatus or stereo.
William Collins: Yeah.
Andrew Westfall: So that's very common.
Thomas Morasca: Uh it's uh some buttons for for the on off function. You d you already told that. And for the changing up to the to all the channels and changing the volume. That
William Collins: Yeah.
Thomas Morasca: are the the basic options for a remote control.
William Collins: Yeah I kept it global 'cause that it activates or deactivates specific functions, 'cause
Thomas Morasca: Okay,
William Collins: I wasn't
Thomas Morasca: yeah.
William Collins: thinking yet about that. I mean, you wanna ch ch flip
Thomas Morasca: Yeah.
William Collins: the channel but you might wanna use teletext also.
Thomas Morasca: Yep.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
William Collins: I dunno what the word is in English. Uh
Charles Slaybaugh: Same I believe.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh and what did Andrew Westfall do?
Andrew Westfall: Uh well from a marketing uh perspective, um well the function des design phase uh consists out of the user requirements.
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
Andrew Westfall: Um what needs and desires are to be fulfilled? So there are a few means to reach that um by by doing research
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
Andrew Westfall: uh to see what existing products are there out in the market. I mean, what functions do they
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm.
Andrew Westfall: have. Um especially what are their shortcomings? Are there any
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
Andrew Westfall: new functions uh which can be added to our
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
Andrew Westfall: product? Um therefore we have to to do some internet search.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yep.
Andrew Westfall: For example for um well what kind of applications do current remote controls support, and what are f featur features of uh current and future televisions?
Charles Slaybaugh: Yes.
Andrew Westfall: So we can see uh what needs to be supported. Um and we can interview current users and future users. What w what would
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
Andrew Westfall: they like to see uh on a new remote control?
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
Andrew Westfall: Um especially for future users, uh I'm thinking of early adopters, because they they use new technology first,
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
Andrew Westfall: and they play with a lot of tools and stuff so maybe they have some good ideas to uh
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
Andrew Westfall: to add.
Charles Slaybaugh: And you can get that information?
Andrew Westfall: I think I can get that information, yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay. That
Andrew Westfall: So
Charles Slaybaugh: would be very handy.
Andrew Westfall: yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Um but have you any idea so far as what uh the user requirements are?
Andrew Westfall: No n not specifically. More
Charles Slaybaugh: No?
Andrew Westfall: to how to get them and
Charles Slaybaugh: No
Thomas Morasca: I
Charles Slaybaugh: okay.
Thomas Morasca: got some uh requirements it has
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah?
Andrew Westfall: Yeah?
Thomas Morasca: uh it has to be user-friendly.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
William Collins: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Of course.
William Collins: Obviously.
Thomas Morasca: Uh really easy to use buttons, not not uh very small buttons, but not the the also the big big buttons, but just normal buttons. It has to be a small unit. It has to be uh yeah, you can take it with you uh everywhere in in your house. So it has n has not to be l yeah, gigantic uh
Charles Slaybaugh: Big,
Thomas Morasca: machine.
Charles Slaybaugh: mm-hmm.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Thomas Morasca: Uh and a and a good uh zapping range.
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh what do you mean by that?
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Thomas Morasca: Uh the distance uh from your television to your uh remote control has to be, uh yeah um yeah, quite a big distance.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Thomas Morasca: It has to be capable for zapping uh
Andrew Westfall: From the other end of the
Thomas Morasca: Yeah.
Andrew Westfall: room or something? Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay um Well I don't think I have anything more to add at the moment. Um I think the best is to go to work.
William Collins: Whoa. Is that you or
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
William Collins: alright.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
Andrew Westfall: Any more points to discuss?
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah. I think we can go ahead with what we have. I will summarise the things we discussed and put it in the project folder. Uh the use of William Collins can work on the working design, etcetera etcetera. And it seems you get more information by email.
Andrew Westfall: Alright.
Charles Slaybaugh: So
William Collins: Alright.
Thomas Morasca: Okay.
Charles Slaybaugh: that was it for Andrew Westfall.
Andrew Westfall: 'Kay. Thanks.
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh
Thomas Morasca: Are you going to put the the notes on the
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah,
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: in the project
Andrew Westfall: The pro
Charles Slaybaugh: folder.
Andrew Westfall: okay.
Thomas Morasca: Okay.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
William Collins: Alright.
Charles Slaybaugh: I'm writing very fast.
Thomas Morasca: Yeah.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah. Okay.
Charles Slaybaugh: Hope it's readable.
Andrew Westfall: Uh.
Thomas Morasca: Yep.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay
Andrew Westfall: I guess
Charles Slaybaugh: um
Andrew Westfall: so.
Charles Slaybaugh: anything more you want to add to the discussion?
William Collins: Well no I'm just a bit wondering what we're gonna do the next uh
Thomas Morasca: Yeah. Do we only have
William Collins: session?
Thomas Morasca: to to do uh phase one, the functional design uh?
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah. Because then we have a
Thomas Morasca: After that we are going to the conceptual uh
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah. We're just
Charles Slaybaugh: Y
Andrew Westfall: working
Charles Slaybaugh: you
Andrew Westfall: the three
Charles Slaybaugh: do some
Andrew Westfall: phases.
Charles Slaybaugh: individual work, we have meeting, individual work, meeting. And at the end of the day we have a final meeting. And then I have to prepare uh I have to defend our design, so make it good.
William Collins: Yeah
Andrew Westfall: Okay.
William Collins: okay. We'll do our
Thomas Morasca: Okay.
William Collins: best.
Charles Slaybaugh: I
Andrew Westfall: Better
Charles Slaybaugh: depend
Andrew Westfall: make it
Charles Slaybaugh: on you.
William Collins: I am gonna work on the conceptual design already 'cause
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah?
William Collins: yeah it's
Charles Slaybaugh: If
William Collins: fairly
Charles Slaybaugh: you can mix
William Collins: important
Charles Slaybaugh: it it's okay.
William Collins: to know what kind of components we want
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
William Collins: to put in.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
William Collins: Do we I mean, is it gonna be a multimedia control centre? Do we want to be able to use the video recorder
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
William Collins: with it?
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
Andrew Westfall: That is my question also because like
Charles Slaybaugh: Well
Andrew Westfall: new
Charles Slaybaugh: I
Andrew Westfall: new
Charles Slaybaugh: think
Andrew Westfall: functions
Charles Slaybaugh: that is the user
Andrew Westfall: Requirements.
Charles Slaybaugh: requirements part.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: As to what
William Collins: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: they want.
William Collins: True.
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh do they want all those functions on
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: that small
William Collins: But but we
Andrew Westfall: Unit.
William Collins: need good communication
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
William Collins: about this stuff, 'cause I have to f put the components into the design.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Morasca: I would
William Collins: So
Thomas Morasca: first
William Collins: if
Thomas Morasca: m
William Collins: I don't know what
Andrew Westfall: Yeah
William Collins: components
Andrew Westfall: well
William Collins: to put in,
Andrew Westfall: I I was
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah
William Collins: it's kind
Thomas Morasca: Yeah.
William Collins: of
Charles Slaybaugh: I
William Collins: hard.
Charles Slaybaugh: understand.
Thomas Morasca: I I think we have first to start with the basic functions
Andrew Westfall: Yeah
Thomas Morasca: and we can uh
Andrew Westfall: well
Charles Slaybaugh: You
Thomas Morasca: expand
Charles Slaybaugh: can
Andrew Westfall: like
Charles Slaybaugh: always
Andrew Westfall: l
Thomas Morasca: them.
Charles Slaybaugh: add
Andrew Westfall: li
Charles Slaybaugh: a
Andrew Westfall: like
Charles Slaybaugh: few
Andrew Westfall: some
Thomas Morasca: Yeah.
Andrew Westfall: like some some remotes who are out there, which I know, there's one button which is very easy to switch between devices.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
Andrew Westfall: So you can switch to your video and
Charles Slaybaugh: Hmm,
Andrew Westfall: then
Charles Slaybaugh: the
Andrew Westfall: the same
Charles Slaybaugh: C_D_
Andrew Westfall: buttons
Charles Slaybaugh: player.
Andrew Westfall: control your video.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
Thomas Morasca: Yeah.
Andrew Westfall: And another function I'll think of switch to your media centre, because that's getting very popular.
William Collins: Yeah
Andrew Westfall: And
William Collins: so
Andrew Westfall: then use your Windows media centre under your T_V_ with the same remote control.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
Andrew Westfall: So
William Collins: Okay.
Andrew Westfall: with the switch, one single switch
William Collins: Yeah
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
William Collins: I I know what you mean, but you'll ne need several other buttons for a video
Andrew Westfall: S
William Collins: player. You need a play
Charles Slaybaugh: Mm-hmm.
William Collins: and a forw fast forward and a stop
Andrew Westfall: Yeah
William Collins: function.
Andrew Westfall: records
William Collins: And
Andrew Westfall: and
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
William Collins: you
Andrew Westfall: stuff
William Collins: you
Andrew Westfall: like
William Collins: don't
Andrew Westfall: that.
William Collins: need that for a T_V_.
Andrew Westfall: No.
William Collins: And and for a t uh teletext
Charles Slaybaugh: You need additional
William Collins: you need
Charles Slaybaugh: yeah.
Thomas Morasca: Yeah.
William Collins: additional buttons as well, so
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
William Collins: I kind of need
Charles Slaybaugh: Uh
William Collins: to know what we uh need.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
William Collins: Whatever, I'll just put my ideas in uh
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
William Collins: in here and then we can
Andrew Westfall: In
William Collins: discuss
Andrew Westfall: the project
William Collins: it
Andrew Westfall: uh
William Collins: with the next uh
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah. We could just start with the assumption
William Collins: meeting.
Charles Slaybaugh: that's only for T_V_ and video. And um reserve the possibility to add
William Collins: Okay.
Charles Slaybaugh: other features. So
William Collins: Okay.
Charles Slaybaugh: we have a basic starting point and you can always extend that so make sure it's extendible.
Thomas Morasca: Yeah
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
William Collins: Alright.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
Thomas Morasca: it it has yeah it has to be user-friendly. So it's hasn't it's yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Th the least amount of
Thomas Morasca: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: functions possible so it's
Thomas Morasca: Okay.
Charles Slaybaugh: easier to get to know
William Collins: Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: how it
Thomas Morasca: Yeah.
William Collins: I
Charles Slaybaugh: works etcetera.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
William Collins: understand. Yeah.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah? Okay
William Collins: Alright.
Andrew Westfall: Yes.
Charles Slaybaugh: and uh I'll see you again uh when the computer tells us to.
William Collins: Yeah.
Thomas Morasca: Can we
Andrew Westfall: Half
Thomas Morasca: leave now
Andrew Westfall: an hour.
Thomas Morasca: or
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah, you're di dismissed.
William Collins: Thanks.
Andrew Westfall: You're fired.
Charles Slaybaugh: Not yet.
Andrew Westfall: No.
Thomas Morasca: Mm.
William Collins: Alright.
Charles Slaybaugh: Okay.
Andrew Westfall: Alright let's move on.
Charles Slaybaugh: Let's see what we got to do.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah.
William Collins: See you later.
Andrew Westfall: Yeah
Thomas Morasca: Okay.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah.
Andrew Westfall: see you later.
Thomas Morasca: Good luck.
Charles Slaybaugh: Yeah. Thank you.
Andrew Westfall: Well good luck.
William Collins: What the | When the meeting begins Charles Slaybaugh lists the agenda and then describes the project, which is to develop a new remote control that is original, trendy, and user-friendly. The group practices using the smart board by choosing an animal to draw and then explaining why they picked it. Charles Slaybaugh goes over the product budget and they proceed to have discussion. They each identify their individual tasks during each phase based on their role in the group. They briefly discuss characteristics of a desirable remote, including medium size buttons, small unit, and work within a good zapping range. The team again discusses their individual responsibilities and move on to ponder whether the remote will be multifunctional or only for the TV. They decide to first assume it is only for TV and video, but allowing the possibility to add more features. They close the meeting upon establishing what each person will do. | 1 | amisum | train |
James Bentz: Hello. 'Kay.
Francis Torres: You
David Conley: It's
Francis Torres: all saw the newsflash? Or you got the same
Kevin Smith: Yeah
Francis Torres: message?
Kevin Smith: I I just saw it one minute ago
David Conley: I don't
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: When.
David Conley: know.
Kevin Smith: I
Francis Torres: sorry.
Kevin Smith: uh
David Conley: I didn't it yet I think.
James Bentz: Newsflash? D
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: did I miss something?
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: Yeah
Francis Torres: I received
Kevin Smith: pretty much.
Francis Torres: an email so I thought I I can't mail you so I thought I'd just drop it in the
David Conley: Hey what's
Francis Torres: folder,
David Conley: wrong with my
Francis Torres: but
David Conley: computer?
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: Is it unlocked?
Kevin Smith: Mm.
James Bentz: No.
Kevin Smith: Yeah that's my presentation.
Francis Torres: Woah. I uh
David Conley: Huh?
James Bentz: Mm.
Francis Torres: kind of opened it.
Kevin Smith: Mm?
David Conley: What the
Kevin Smith: Oh
Francis Torres: Uh
Kevin Smith: right.
James Bentz: I think you have to uh change
Francis Torres: Okay.
James Bentz: your desktop uh size.
Kevin Smith: Ooh.
Francis Torres: 'Kay. Everybody ready?
David Conley: Not
Kevin Smith: Well
David Conley: really. Sorry.
Francis Torres: No
James Bentz: computer
Francis Torres: no
James Bentz: is
Francis Torres: no.
James Bentz: uh not functioning?
Francis Torres: Yes yes yes.
Kevin Smith: Alright.
David Conley: Okay. Where
Francis Torres: Okay.
David Conley: do I find this? I'm not so g display huh?
James Bentz: Uh display. And then uh
David Conley: Appearance?
James Bentz: settings?
Kevin Smith: Huh.
James Bentz: Mm I'm not sure
Kevin Smith: You
James Bentz: I.
Kevin Smith: read the newsflash?
James Bentz: No.
Francis Torres: 'Kay.
David Conley: No what
Kevin Smith: Hmm.
David Conley: was
Francis Torres: Can
David Conley: it
Francis Torres: we
David Conley: about?
Francis Torres: get started or is there some pressing
David Conley: Yeah my computer is
Francis Torres: issue?
David Conley: not functioning properly.
Francis Torres: Oh no pressing. Did you plug in the power cable when you come back?
David Conley: Yeah yeah. No but my screen is reduced in size.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: What?
Francis Torres: That's difficult. Yeah.
David Conley: Yeah. Feedback.
Kevin Smith: Hmm.
James Bentz: Okay.
David Conley: Okay.
Kevin Smith: alt delete.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
James Bentz: Format.
Francis Torres: Format save.
Kevin Smith: So it doesn't draw the attention away.
David Conley: This is
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: dreadful.
James Bentz: I made uh uh my own map.
David Conley: No not
Francis Torres: Oh
David Conley: this,
Francis Torres: yeah
David Conley: but
James Bentz: It's
Francis Torres: sure.
James Bentz: a
David Conley: the task.
Francis Torres: You have Playstation also?
James Bentz: Yeah.
David Conley: No. okay. No I just flapped it, closed it, took it here and then this happened.
David Conley: Ah. Uh where was it? In settings? Okay. Alright. Thank you.
Francis Torres: Huh.
David Conley: Do you guys like your tasks?
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: I spent a lot of time thinking about what I was gonna do
James Bentz: Yeah
David Conley: and then
James Bentz: wa wa you actually
David Conley: a couple of minutes before this I get my function you know
James Bentz: Yeah.
David Conley: the information that I need.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: So
James Bentz: But
David Conley: frustrating.
James Bentz: it's not clear what you have to
David Conley: So
James Bentz: to to type
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: uh
Kevin Smith: I I
James Bentz: type
Kevin Smith: had
James Bentz: in your
Kevin Smith: a whole
James Bentz: presentation.
Kevin Smith: idea and then just
David Conley: Yeah
Kevin Smith: was typing it and oh. I to do that so
David Conley: Yeah
Kevin Smith: switch.
David Conley: exactly. This presentation is mainly based on my own ideas 'cause I hadn't time to intergrate tha the information yet
Kevin Smith: Mm.
David Conley: so
James Bentz: Yeah.
David Conley: Really annoying.
Francis Torres: Okay. So there we are again.
Kevin Smith: By your humble P_M_.
Francis Torres: Yeah. Okay this is the agenda. Um we have three presentations, I heard.
James Bentz: Really.
Francis Torres: Yeah really. So who wants to start?
Kevin Smith: Yeah that's fine.
David Conley: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: We have to start it right away?
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Functional?
Francis Torres: Uh this is you?
Kevin Smith: Yeah functional requirements.
Francis Torres: 'Kay.
Kevin Smith: Alright. I'm gonna talk about functional requirements. Um Well uh some research has be done uh has been done. Uh observing of one hundred uh subjects in the usability lab using a remote control. Uh and they also filled in a questionnaire. The findings were um, well you can see them for yourself. They disliked the look-and-feel of current remotes controls. Users think they're ugly. Um they do not match the the operating behaviour of the users. So they they d they don't match what they want to have on it. Um they are often lost somewhere in the room. Um it takes too much time to learn how to use a new remote control. And they're bad for R_S_I_. I don't know uh how a user can reach that but okay. Um
David Conley: Ts
Kevin Smith: there is also uh was also some research on uh the most relevant and and and irrelevant uh f functions. Uh most irrelevant and less used were audio settings, mono, stereo, uh pitch, bass. Um screen settings for brightness and colour and stuff like that. Um but they are used. I mean the
David Conley: So they do need to be in the
Kevin Smith: Yeah they
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: do need to be on the on the remote control. I
David Conley: Alright.
Kevin Smith: mean if you can't control the the sound settings I mean if you dislike a very uh loud bass or something, you you need to change that. So um
Francis Torres: often.
David Conley: By
Kevin Smith: yeah
David Conley: the way my
Kevin Smith: we have
David Conley: T_V_
Kevin Smith: to. We
David Conley: doesn't
Kevin Smith: c we c
David Conley: have an equ equaliser
Kevin Smith: Yeah
David Conley: but
Kevin Smith: I mean w
David Conley: okay.
Kevin Smith: we can't
Francis Torres: Next
Kevin Smith: my my
Francis Torres: generation
Kevin Smith: T_V_ has,
Francis Torres: does.
David Conley: No.
Kevin Smith: but
David Conley: Alright.
Kevin Smith: we we can leave them uh away. Uh most relevant, uh most used functions, uh they speak for themselves I guess. Uh power button, uh channel, volume selection. Uh teletext but we can skip that because I saw the newsflash, and teletext is so outdated that it it's i
Francis Torres: N not
Kevin Smith: should
Francis Torres: used
Kevin Smith: not
Francis Torres: anymore.
Kevin Smith: be used uh any more in the future. So forget this one.
James Bentz: Okay.
Kevin Smith: Uh channel settings, so for programming uh your channels in in the
David Conley: By
Kevin Smith: right
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: the
Kevin Smith: order.
David Conley: way where did you guys get that newsflash
James Bentz: Yeah.
David Conley: from? I
Kevin Smith: Yeah,
David Conley: didn't
Kevin Smith: on
David Conley: get
James Bentz: I
David Conley: anything.
James Bentz: was wondering
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: on
James Bentz: uh
Kevin Smith: the project uh
Francis Torres: Not by mail. I receiv the mail but you don't. So
Kevin Smith: No
James Bentz: But you
Kevin Smith: so it's
James Bentz: you've
Kevin Smith: a text
James Bentz: got more
Kevin Smith: file
James Bentz: information
Kevin Smith: n in the project
James Bentz: than
Kevin Smith: folder. So teletext
James Bentz: uh.
Kevin Smith: can be skipped.
Francis Torres: That's in the presentation, so
David Conley: Alright.
Kevin Smith: Um there was some research on new features in a remote control. Uh about an L_C_D_ screen uh and speech recognition. Well we got an update for the for the audience. Or the the the targeted group. So it's above forty I guess.
Francis Torres: Uh
Kevin Smith: The
Francis Torres: below
Kevin Smith: new product?
Francis Torres: I believe.
Kevin Smith: Or below
Francis Torres: Yeah below forty.
Kevin Smith: because that's pretty relevant.
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Smith: I thought I read
Francis Torres: Our
Kevin Smith: a
Francis Torres: current customers are in the age group forty plus.
Kevin Smith: Yeah?
Francis Torres: And the new product should reach new markets, which is
Kevin Smith: Below?
Francis Torres: the customers below forty.
Kevin Smith: Okay well
James Bentz: But where did you get
Kevin Smith: that's
James Bentz: uh
Francis Torres: That's
James Bentz: that
Francis Torres: in
James Bentz: information?
Francis Torres: a newsflash.
Kevin Smith: that's in the newsfla okay
James Bentz: Okay.
Kevin Smith: that's a good to know. Um because you see see
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: a clear distinction between the age groups, concerning the features. I mean uh above forty people are not so interested uh not so interested in a screen or speech recognition. Uh but below that age they uh they pretty much are. So I think we can build that in. Um Yeah well we can skip this part as well, because I thought I read above forty so we could skip the features, but we just have to build them in because uh they find it very interesting. Um well we have to keep all the classic functions but make the buttons as user-friendly as possible. Um and and also there's so not only the design of the bus uh buttons but o how you can push them, and stuff like that. So the physical uh aspect of it. Um And I think and certainly for for the for the lower age groups, uh nice design, which uh does not make the remote control in your room. It's it's
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: actually a part of your interior, of of your design in your room. So it's the people can say, well what's that, well that's my remote control, so it's d
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: it has to look nice and feel nice, and and have all the functions
Francis Torres: But
Kevin Smith: that
Francis Torres: it also
Kevin Smith: uh
Francis Torres: needs to have corporate identity.
Kevin Smith: Yeah so the the logo has to be uh
Francis Torres: Present and the colours.
Kevin Smith: present yeah, and the colours as well.
Francis Torres: So we can't change much of that.
David Conley: Do we have
Kevin Smith: Yeah
David Conley: uh
Kevin Smith: so
David Conley: yeah.
Kevin Smith: but I I don't think that's that's a problem because the thing
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Smith: has to have a colour anyway,
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Smith: and
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: most of the times there is a brand present on it. So
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: I think that's not gonna
Francis Torres: Okay.
Kevin Smith: gonna affect it very uh very much. Well that are the the consequences uh on a marketing uh part.
David Conley: Alright.
Kevin Smith: Yes.
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: 'Kay. It's open already so you can use to
James Bentz: Mm.
Francis Torres: find yours.
James Bentz: It's
Francis Torres: F_ five.
James Bentz: F_ five. Okay. Oh.
Francis Torres: Go Jurgen.
James Bentz: What is this? Oh no. How do I uh
Francis Torres: You pressed alt F_ four?
James Bentz: No no no. I pressed the mouse button.
Francis Torres: Oh great.
David Conley: It's th that's the self-destruct button.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Yeah. Uh
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: maybe you can do it from your computer
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: so
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: Um
Francis Torres: talk
Kevin Smith: Just
Francis Torres: us through
James Bentz: if you
Francis Torres: it.
James Bentz: all go
Kevin Smith: yeah.
James Bentz: stand around
Francis Torres: Yeah.
James Bentz: uh Computer
Kevin Smith: Sure.
David Conley: Alright.
James Bentz: Um
Francis Torres: That's nice.
James Bentz: No.
Francis Torres: F_ five.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
James Bentz: Okay.
Kevin Smith: Alright.
James Bentz: I uh had uh two examples.
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
James Bentz: Um this one is the the yeah the advanced one with a lot of options and functions and
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
James Bentz: buttons. This
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: the easy one I think we have to to combine them.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
James Bentz: And
David Conley: Mm-hmm.
James Bentz: uh yeah merge the best functions of all examples.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
James Bentz: Um but yeah the the age is uh under
Francis Torres: The
James Bentz: forty?
Francis Torres: mm
Kevin Smith: Yeah
Francis Torres: yeah.
Kevin Smith: and
James Bentz: So we
Kevin Smith: and and marketing research stated that that that kind of users are not afraid of of a lot
James Bentz: Okay
Kevin Smith: of functions.
James Bentz: so so we have the option
Kevin Smith: So not
James Bentz: for
Kevin Smith: not
James Bentz: more
Kevin Smith: too much
James Bentz: functions.
Kevin Smith: but yeah.
James Bentz: Um yeah.
David Conley: And we do have to integrate the screen and the the speech
Kevin Smith: the speech recognition yeah.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: alright.
James Bentz: Uh yeah this this one we can remove for kids. It's just only for adults so uh we can uh use some advanced options.
Kevin Smith: Yeah from
James Bentz: But
Kevin Smith: age of sixteen
James Bentz: Yeah
Kevin Smith: so
James Bentz: but I
Kevin Smith: yeah.
James Bentz: prefer we we uh use the the basic options uh yeah. We have to to make them very easy so
Kevin Smith: Mm.
James Bentz: for just
David Conley: Mm-hmm.
James Bentz: uh zapping around the channels you can just push one button.
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
James Bentz: But if you want to to use your your video recorder or something else, you should use use an uh an advanced option.
Kevin Smith: Yeah but uh the the newsflash also stated that it should control only one device,
James Bentz: Okay
Kevin Smith: only
James Bentz: one
Kevin Smith: your
James Bentz: device.
Kevin Smith: television.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: So
Kevin Smith: So
Francis Torres: n
James Bentz: I
Francis Torres: it's
James Bentz: didn't
Kevin Smith: w
Francis Torres: very easy.
James Bentz: see.
Francis Torres: Now
James Bentz: Okay
Francis Torres: yeah
Kevin Smith: So
Francis Torres: it's okay.
Kevin Smith: there are not extra options in this case,
James Bentz: and
Kevin Smith: but
Francis Torres: Okay.
Kevin Smith: uh
James Bentz: I also uh yeah. W yeah. We have to make it fashionable.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: Like
Francis Torres: Yeah.
James Bentz: you uh said uh before. Uh yeah the basic functions. Um yeah only use a extra function if they are really needed.
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: so maybe you can hide them or something.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah well what what we can do with the screen is is all the the configuration options, you can put that in the screen.
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: And the
Francis Torres: you make
Kevin Smith: and
Francis Torres: a
Kevin Smith: the
Francis Torres: screen menu or something.
Kevin Smith: yeah screen
David Conley: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: menu to to to uh
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: to do that, and then the basic function just on the device itself. So it
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Smith: looks very simple and all the advanced features are hidden in the screen,
Francis Torres: Yeah
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: uh
Francis Torres: and
Kevin Smith: with
Francis Torres: the other
Kevin Smith: a clear
Francis Torres: oth
Kevin Smith: menu.
Francis Torres: other uh functionality is the screen. What does the screen do?
Kevin Smith: Uh.
David Conley: Alright.
James Bentz: Did I
Kevin Smith: What
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: are
James Bentz: uh
Kevin Smith: wh
James Bentz: did I break
Francis Torres: It's
James Bentz: it?
Francis Torres: low power.
Kevin Smith: What.
Francis Torres: So what does the screen do? They said they needed it but what does it do? What do they want with the screen?
James Bentz: For for the advanced functions I think.
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: Yeah
Francis Torres: that's what
Kevin Smith: well
Francis Torres: we make
Kevin Smith: it
Francis Torres: it up.
Kevin Smith: yeah
Francis Torres: So
Kevin Smith: it didn't
Francis Torres: but
Kevin Smith: it
Francis Torres: what did
Kevin Smith: didn't
Francis Torres: the marketing
Kevin Smith: say what they want to do with
Francis Torres: No.
Kevin Smith: the screen. Well I, my guess is it's it's pretty handy for advanced
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: uh
Francis Torres: okay it's
Kevin Smith: advanced
Francis Torres: handy.
Kevin Smith: functions.
Francis Torres: With
James Bentz: Like searching
Francis Torres: no predefined
James Bentz: for channels and
Francis Torres: uh
Kevin Smith: Yeah searching
David Conley: Ah look.
Kevin Smith: for channels, programming
David Conley: We
Kevin Smith: them.
David Conley: have
James Bentz: Yeah.
David Conley: your uh oh never mind.
Francis Torres: We're back online.
James Bentz: Okay. That's uh I'm al I'm almost finished so
Francis Torres: Okay.
James Bentz: Um the we have to to to watch out for the i if we make it f very fashionable, it it the functional functionality will go down. So we have to make uh a compromise between functionality and fashional
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
James Bentz: fashionable
Francis Torres: Content and form.
James Bentz: yeah
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: content and form.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
James Bentz: Now that that was
Francis Torres: That was
James Bentz: uh
Francis Torres: the end.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: was the end.
David Conley: Okay.
James Bentz: Yes.
Francis Torres: Okay.
David Conley: Well my presentation is a bit uh sucky.
Kevin Smith: Well you can improvise
Francis Torres: Uh which one
Kevin Smith: right?
Francis Torres: is it? Technical functions?
David Conley: Yeah a little bit. Uh
Francis Torres: This one?
David Conley: no. No no.
Francis Torres: Functional requirements?
David Conley: Yeah I think that would be it then.
Francis Torres: No.
Kevin Smith: So we we
David Conley: I
Kevin Smith: can
David Conley: have
Francis Torres: You
David Conley: no
Kevin Smith: go
Francis Torres: didn't
David Conley: idea.
Kevin Smith: for
Francis Torres: put it in? Or
David Conley: That w.
Francis Torres: it's
David Conley: Let Kevin Smith check.
Francis Torres: not really English.
David Conley: I know.
Francis Torres: Uh kick off. Oh working design I got it.
David Conley: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: So we can go for the look-and-feel of the the left example, and then a screen on top of it.
Francis Torres: Here you go.
David Conley: Alright how do I uh skip pages?
Francis Torres: Just uh press uh yeah.
David Conley: The keys
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: yeah? Alright. Um yeah well I was working on this before I got my information. So I was just working off the top of my head and
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
David Conley: using my colin common knowledge about uh remote controls. And well the info on the website which
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
David Conley: came too late. Um so I didn't really know what kind of functions we had to put into it yet. So
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
David Conley: uh uh this is basically an overview of what we discussed in our last uh meeting. Those were my uh starting
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
David Conley: points. Uh I was working on a s yeah on a schedule, and I was supposed to do it like this. But um yeah then uh the information came and it was kind of exact with all the steps in the remote control that I had to follow, so I was
Francis Torres: Mm.
David Conley: trying to organise them for myself. And then make the
Kevin Smith: Design?
David Conley: the
Francis Torres: Design
David Conley: design,
Francis Torres: yeah.
David Conley: a
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: the actual design, but I never came around to do that. So
Kevin Smith: Okay.
David Conley: I'm not really sure what I'm supposed to say about it. I mean everything speaks for itself I guess. Mean you press a button
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
David Conley: um the it tru goes, it sends a signal to a chip, which uh translates it into infrared signal of certin spatial frequencies.
Kevin Smith: Yeah
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Smith: frequency. Yeah.
David Conley: And uh or temporal fr frequencies actually. And then uh through a uh transformer, it
Francis Torres: Yeah
David Conley: the
Francis Torres: decoder.
David Conley: signal gets boosted and then sent to the to the receiver on the T_V_ and the T_V_ will translate it into a function. Um Yeah well this was actually all I
Francis Torres: Blank.
David Conley: got around to do.
Francis Torres: Yeah
David Conley: I mean
Francis Torres: okay.
James Bentz: Yeah.
David Conley: I
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: dunno if I'm too slow for this stuff, but uh
Francis Torres: Work harder.
James Bentz: Okay shou should
David Conley: Yeah.
James Bentz: we make a list
David Conley: Whatever.
James Bentz: of the of all the functions we want
Francis Torres: Yeah.
James Bentz: uh
Francis Torres: Uh
Kevin Smith: Yeah we want to incorporate in
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: uh into it.
Francis Torres: 'Kay. Um for those that didn't see yet um the basic new requirements of the management were no teletext, only for T_V_. Uh it should be designed for a use g uh group below forty, but I don't think it's w wrong if we can uh target the current customer group as well.
Kevin Smith: Mm.
Francis Torres: And uh the corporate identity should be clear in the design of the remote control. And we have to decide on the functions, and on the, let's see what was it, uh the target group. We have to make be clear what that is.
Kevin Smith: group of users, or
Francis Torres: Yeah users.
Kevin Smith: because it says below forty I mean.
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: I guess
Francis Torres: so
Kevin Smith: that's that's
Francis Torres: I think
Kevin Smith: the tar
Francis Torres: it's easy but
James Bentz: But
Kevin Smith: yeah
James Bentz: uh it's
Kevin Smith: uh or male
James Bentz: it's also
Kevin Smith: and female
James Bentz: for children or just
Kevin Smith: Uh
James Bentz: uh
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: six
Francis Torres: it's below forty so we
Kevin Smith: the
Francis Torres: can
Kevin Smith: marketing
Francis Torres: decide
Kevin Smith: research
Francis Torres: where
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: to
Kevin Smith: started on s on the age of sixteen. Sixteen
James Bentz: Okay.
Kevin Smith: to twenty five, twenty five to thirty five,
Francis Torres: Okay.
Kevin Smith: thirty five to forty five, something like that. So
Francis Torres: So
Kevin Smith: um
Francis Torres: below forty is okay. But we need an lower level which to s uh
Kevin Smith: How
Francis Torres: focus.
Kevin Smith: do you mean?
Francis Torres: So is it from sixteen to forty? Is it from twenty to forty? Is
Kevin Smith: Uh
Francis Torres: it from
Kevin Smith: sixteen
Francis Torres: thirty?
Kevin Smith: to forty.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Yeah?
Kevin Smith: Well
James Bentz: We we
Francis Torres: 'Kay.
James Bentz: have to
Kevin Smith: I I guess people of sixteen are are quite used to technology.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: So they they adapt to it pretty soon I guess.
James Bentz: And if we have a larger public we have uh yeah more options to
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: to uh sell our product.
David Conley: Yeah so what we might wanna do is uh yeah cust I have customised the screen functions, if you know what I mean. The
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
David Conley: uh younger users are more acquainted with these kind of machines so they can use more advanced functions. But maybe elderly people don't understand it so well, so they need a simpler remote.
Francis Torres: Design.
David Conley: And
Francis Torres: Mm.
David Conley: yeah that you can choose what the design displays, or
James Bentz: Yeah
David Conley: wha whatever.
James Bentz: that's that's why uh I wanted to to make yeah two uh different uh yeah groups of functions. The the simple functions for for the the whole public,
David Conley: Yeah.
James Bentz: and the the advanced options for the younger people yeah who are
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
James Bentz: more yeah
David Conley: Experienced
Francis Torres: And
James Bentz: experienced
Kevin Smith: But
Francis Torres: maybe
David Conley: yeah.
Kevin Smith: uh all
James Bentz: with
Kevin Smith: incorporated
James Bentz: uh
Francis Torres: y
Kevin Smith: in the screen or or just
James Bentz: Na
Kevin Smith: on the remote itself?
James Bentz: I w I should uh put uh the the yeah the extra advanced options on the onto the onscreen display.
Kevin Smith: Yeah
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: like like you have a visual of the of the brightness with with
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: a kind
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: of sliding bar and
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: a bus and and stuff like that for sound and and vis and and visuals?
Francis Torres: So is you should have a menu for all the the functions
Kevin Smith: Uh you can make
Francis Torres: you don't
Kevin Smith: a
Francis Torres: use regular
James Bentz: Yeah.
Francis Torres: and which
Kevin Smith: if you
Francis Torres: are
Kevin Smith: make a drawing.
Francis Torres: Yeah. Aye yeah.
Kevin Smith: Uh Uh.
Francis Torres: Shall I uh
Kevin Smith: Uh black's okay. And draw it very big. Oh.
Francis Torres: Yeah. It's okay.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: no, it doesn't have line control, so
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Yeah we get the
Kevin Smith: Yeah well, this is basically uh
David Conley: The remote?
Kevin Smith: it's alright
Francis Torres: The remote,
Kevin Smith: the remote?
Francis Torres: yeah?
Kevin Smith: Um
Francis Torres: Basic.
Kevin Smith: well usually the power button
Francis Torres: Is on
Kevin Smith: is
Francis Torres: top.
Kevin Smith: on top I
Francis Torres: Which
Kevin Smith: guess.
Francis Torres: should be easy, easily reached with the thumb.
Kevin Smith: Yeah so
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: it should fit right
James Bentz: L left
Kevin Smith: in into
James Bentz: top
Kevin Smith: your
James Bentz: or
Kevin Smith: hand.
James Bentz: right uh top?
Kevin Smith: Right.
Francis Torres: T I s should
David Conley: Right
James Bentz: Yeah,
Kevin Smith: Right.
David Conley: top.
James Bentz: right.
Francis Torres: said
Kevin Smith: I
Francis Torres: right.
Kevin Smith: most people
Francis Torres: Because
Kevin Smith: are right-handed so
James Bentz: Okay.
David Conley: Yeah
Francis Torres: yeah.
David Conley: definitely.
Kevin Smith: maybe left-handed special addition, but okay. If you put it like like here. Or something. I dunno. Um then you could put a screen, like on a mobile phone, also on top I guess.
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
James Bentz: Yeah but if you are using the the normal functions, the the basic functions, you normally
Francis Torres: Do
James Bentz: press
Francis Torres: the
James Bentz: them
Francis Torres: also
James Bentz: on the
Francis Torres: with the thumb.
James Bentz: u yeah.
Francis Torres: So it should be a little bit longer so that you can put your uh thumb, also reach the middle. Or you should screen at the bottom and then you can see it very clearly.
Kevin Smith: Okay so y yeah you have you have it
Francis Torres: You
Kevin Smith: in your hand,
Francis Torres: you need
Kevin Smith: and the
Francis Torres: to
Kevin Smith: screen is below,
Francis Torres: be able to hold it so
Kevin Smith: and
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: the buttons are in the middle.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Okay for example if you put the screen here, it's more about the functions now than the
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: than the layout.
Francis Torres: okay that's true. Layout. That's
Kevin Smith: Doesn't
Francis Torres: for the
Kevin Smith: work too well. It's uh it's bent.
Francis Torres: I can't help it.
James Bentz: You broke it.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Man.
Kevin Smith: Right.
Francis Torres: Yeah okay.
Kevin Smith: Okay you get it. Uh for example if y if you put all the Right.
Francis Torres: You want the normal piece of paper? And you have a pen?
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: And might be
Kevin Smith: Maybe
David Conley: easier
Kevin Smith: this.
David Conley: huh?
Kevin Smith: kind of works.
Francis Torres: Yeah?
Kevin Smith: Like if you have like uh ten buttons for for all the for all
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Smith: the channels, um
Francis Torres: Uh.
Kevin Smith: and here one for
Francis Torres: And the
Kevin Smith: for
Francis Torres: for flipping up
James Bentz: Yeah
Francis Torres: and down.
James Bentz: yeah. And volume control.
Kevin Smith: Yeah that that usually uh
David Conley: Yeah
Kevin Smith: like
David Conley: I
Kevin Smith: here, here, here, here.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: So
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: you have up and down for the for the channels,
Francis Torres: And left
Kevin Smith: and left
Francis Torres: to right.
Kevin Smith: and right for the volume
Francis Torres: And
Kevin Smith: uh
Francis Torres: those can also be used for the menu.
David Conley: Yeah exactly. I thought
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: but this is really your department,
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: that we need just the functional display
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: and
Francis Torres: Yeah
David Conley: four
Francis Torres: okay
David Conley: cursors.
Francis Torres: but this is function
Kevin Smith: And
Francis Torres: so
Kevin Smith: you you have
Francis Torres: if
David Conley: And
Francis Torres: you can use them for multiple
Kevin Smith: most
Francis Torres: things
Kevin Smith: of the time you
David Conley: Yeah
Kevin Smith: have
David Conley: okay.
Kevin Smith: one button in the middle. It
Francis Torres: For
Kevin Smith: says
Francis Torres: the menu.
Kevin Smith: menu,
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: and then if you press it you the screen gets activated and then you can use these buttons
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
David Conley: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: to scroll up and down and left and right to go into functon and then just
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: mo most of the time this menu button is also like okay, to to confirm a a kind
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: of action. So you scroll into it, okay. You select a function like v like uh bass. You just adjust it with these two buttons.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Then okay to confirm, and then uh on on each on each screen there's there should be an option to go back to a to a upper level. And then
David Conley: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Smith: finally say okay, exit. Or or one button to exit it.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Uh in one time I dunno, that's not really my department. That's more your uh your department to
James Bentz: And
Kevin Smith: to
James Bentz: do
Kevin Smith: uh
James Bentz: we need
Kevin Smith: to
James Bentz: a a logo on our uh remote control, or
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: But it should be if the screen is here then the logo should be like
James Bentz: On the left
Kevin Smith: on
James Bentz: uh
Kevin Smith: on top,
James Bentz: top
Kevin Smith: yeah.
James Bentz: yeah.
Kevin Smith: I mean it's uh
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: Yeah but that depends on where you put the screen. But
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: it's essential that there is a screen.
Kevin Smith: Yeah I mean the position of the screen is also more essential than I mean we we look where we have space left and then put the logo over there.
Francis Torres: Yeah. And
Kevin Smith: But um
Francis Torres: for the speech uh recognition part, if we want to incorporate that, we need a microphone.
Kevin Smith: Yeah so it should be I mean if you have it in your hand here, should be on top somewhere,
Francis Torres: Yeah. This
Kevin Smith: maybe.
Francis Torres: would be uh
David Conley: Why
Kevin Smith: I
David Conley: did
Kevin Smith: mean
David Conley: we
Kevin Smith: i
David Conley: wanna put the display in the bottom?
Francis Torres: No that's not s sure so
Kevin Smith: That's
David Conley: Okay.
Kevin Smith: not sure but
Francis Torres: uh
Kevin Smith: it's
James Bentz: Yeah
Francis Torres: we need
James Bentz: may
Francis Torres: a
James Bentz: maybe
Francis Torres: display.
David Conley: Because
James Bentz: because
David Conley: yeah
James Bentz: you're
David Conley: if you use the functions your hand will block the display.
James Bentz: Yeah okay but only for the basic functi if you're going to use the advanced option, you're going to press the the menu button and then yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah I mean a screen on top looks more
David Conley: Normal
Kevin Smith: lo
David Conley: for logical
Kevin Smith: logical to Kevin Smith. Also
James Bentz: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: t
Kevin Smith: because people use m mobile phones and
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: they also
Francis Torres: they're
Kevin Smith: have
Francis Torres: used
Kevin Smith: the screen
Francis Torres: to it.
Kevin Smith: on top.
James Bentz: Okay the yeah.
Kevin Smith: So
James Bentz: That's possible.
Kevin Smith: you you just have to reach a little bit for the power button.
David Conley: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: I mean if you grab
David Conley: On
Kevin Smith: it.
David Conley: once it's on it's on.
Kevin Smith: But
David Conley: You don't need
Kevin Smith: most
David Conley: the
James Bentz: Yeah,
David Conley: power
Kevin Smith: most
David Conley: button.
James Bentz: okay.
Kevin Smith: of the times if a if if a T_V_'s on standby people just press a channel
James Bentz: Okay we put it on top.
Kevin Smith: to put it on. So we put this on top,
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: and then make the corporate logo like over here. R_R_. And j and the microphone, I mean it can be very small. If you look at your mobile phones
David Conley: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: are some stripes, little little holes.
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
David Conley: Maybe on the top or even on the side.
Kevin Smith: Yeah maybe on the side. I mean
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: if the if
Francis Torres: but
Kevin Smith: the
Francis Torres: then
Kevin Smith: microphone
Francis Torres: it's possible
Kevin Smith: is
Francis Torres: that
Kevin Smith: good.
Francis Torres: you cover it with your hand so
David Conley: True.
Kevin Smith: Yeah
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: okay. So
Francis Torres: I think
Kevin Smith: on
Francis Torres: that
Kevin Smith: the on
Francis Torres: top
Kevin Smith: the
Francis Torres: is
Kevin Smith: top
Francis Torres: the best
Kevin Smith: is
Francis Torres: option.
Kevin Smith: better.
David Conley: But if you uh if you hold the ma the remote like this, if you put it on the top on the side I dunno.
Francis Torres: Yeah okay.
David Conley: Should be able to
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: work.
Francis Torres: Depends
David Conley: Never mind.
Francis Torres: on the sensitivity of the microphone,
David Conley: Can we
Francis Torres: but
David Conley: leave
Francis Torres: I
David Conley: this
Francis Torres: think
David Conley: up to
Francis Torres: that's
David Conley: you?
Francis Torres: okay.
Kevin Smith: Yeah it doesn't matter that much. So but um the screen is on top? Which functions did we have left? I mean this is basically numbers,
Francis Torres: Volume.
Kevin Smith: volume, uh channel
Francis Torres: Up.
Kevin Smith: up and down.
Francis Torres: Channel up and down,
Kevin Smith: Screen
Francis Torres: and the control
Kevin Smith: is over
Francis Torres: of
Kevin Smith: there.
Francis Torres: the advanced options.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: So
James Bentz: If
Francis Torres: maybe
James Bentz: we
Francis Torres: it, we should decide what advanced options we want to put in the L_C_D_ screen.
Kevin Smith: Yeah. That's uh that's a good one.
David Conley: Yeah so we we needed to integrate the sound and uh and image options right?
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Yeah
David Conley: Like
Francis Torres: so sounds?
David Conley: uh bass uh
Kevin Smith: Sound?
David Conley: so we need kind of an equaliser. If
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: you
Kevin Smith: Equaliser. So if you have sound But not too advanced. I mean most T_V_s use only treble
James Bentz: Yeah it
Francis Torres: Yeah
James Bentz: it's
Kevin Smith: and
Francis Torres: and
James Bentz: just
Kevin Smith: bass.
Francis Torres: they're
James Bentz: a remote control
David Conley: Yeah treble,
James Bentz: so
Francis Torres: They're
David Conley: middl
Francis Torres: not used
David Conley: middle,
Francis Torres: often
David Conley: bass or something.
Francis Torres: so
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah. It's uh pretty hard to write.
David Conley: Ah as.
Kevin Smith: Mm.
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: Okay
Francis Torres: just
Kevin Smith: but you have sound?
Francis Torres: Yeah sounds.
Kevin Smith: Yeah just
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: oh y you have digital uh better write it down over there yeah.
Francis Torres: Of course.
Kevin Smith: So you have sound.
Francis Torres: I'm just a secretary.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Coffee?
Kevin Smith: Uh
David Conley: Yes
Kevin Smith: yeah sound
David Conley: please.
Kevin Smith: and then within sound I guess treble and bass?
Francis Torres: Treble bass.
David Conley: the mono stereo option?
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Uh
Kevin Smith: Also.
David Conley: And then
Francis Torres: Pitch I believe,
David Conley: pitch.
Francis Torres: yeah.
Kevin Smith: Pitch. Yeah. But pitch, isn't that yeah that's the the height
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: The fr
Kevin Smith: of the
David Conley: yeah
Kevin Smith: tone.
David Conley: the frequency of the tones, yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah okay,
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: wh why
Francis Torres: and
Kevin Smith: would you
Francis Torres: mono
Kevin Smith: use that?
Francis Torres: stereo.
David Conley: Yeah
Kevin Smith: If
David Conley: isn't
Kevin Smith: people
David Conley: that
Kevin Smith: like
David Conley: that
Kevin Smith: talk
David Conley: depends
Kevin Smith: like uh
David Conley: on the on the signal of the of what program you're watching.
Francis Torres: Mm.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: And also the tuning part?
Kevin Smith: Programming part.
Francis Torres: Yeah programming.
Kevin Smith: Uh
Francis Torres: So channel programming?
Kevin Smith: so we have sound, yeah? Channel programming.
David Conley: And yeah in the functionality of the
James Bentz: Television uh
David Conley: no no
James Bentz: itself
David Conley: of the
James Bentz: uh
David Conley: remote uh do do we want uh the buttons to make sound when you press them? As a confirmation
James Bentz: Mm.
David Conley: or whatever
Kevin Smith: Mm.
David Conley: you know? I dunno.
Francis Torres: Mm.
Kevin Smith: I think it g it gets annoying. I mean
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: most mobile
James Bentz: We
Kevin Smith: phones
James Bentz: we could make
Kevin Smith: used
James Bentz: an option
Kevin Smith: that in the
James Bentz: for
Kevin Smith: beginning
James Bentz: it, but
Kevin Smith: but
James Bentz: uh you can disable
David Conley: Under
James Bentz: s
David Conley: the a yeah advanced option
James Bentz: Yeah.
David Conley: menu you can put those things.
James Bentz: But
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: uh the the television itself has also the the options brightness and uh screen colour etcetera. So
Francis Torres: Contrast yeah.
James Bentz: yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah but people don't want to sit on their knees on their knees in front of their television
Francis Torres: Mm.
Kevin Smith: with
Francis Torres: No.
Kevin Smith: only three buttons
Francis Torres: Uh,
Kevin Smith: then it's very hard to
Francis Torres: so contrast,
Kevin Smith: y
David Conley: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: yeah contrast and brightness?
Francis Torres: bright,
Kevin Smith: Yeah those are the most
Francis Torres: uh
Kevin Smith: used I guess. If
Francis Torres: And
Kevin Smith: you look
Francis Torres: the others
Kevin Smith: at your
Francis Torres: were
Kevin Smith: monitor.
Francis Torres: in your presentation right? So I can
Kevin Smith: Well
Francis Torres: just copy those?
Kevin Smith: yeah well I guess that these were the only ones, I guess.
Francis Torres: Okay. It's easy.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: But so
Kevin Smith: I
David Conley: we have
Kevin Smith: will look
David Conley: we
Kevin Smith: it up.
David Conley: have T_V_ options, which is all this.
Francis Torres: Yeah the
David Conley: The
Francis Torres: button
David Conley: sound,
Francis Torres: options and
David Conley: sound
Francis Torres: the
David Conley: and
Francis Torres: L_C_D_
David Conley: image.
Francis Torres: options.
David Conley: And you have in that uh the
Francis Torres: Indeed.
David Conley: indeed the remote control options.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: So we need two menus kind of thing.
Francis Torres: Yeah you have basically a button menu, which you can use directly, uh
David Conley: Uh-huh.
Francis Torres: according to the old principle. And the L_C_D_ options are activated by some some software options, thats communicates with the infrared
Kevin Smith: Yeah
Francis Torres: uh
Kevin Smith: with the chip
Francis Torres: decoder
Kevin Smith: and
Francis Torres: yeah.
Kevin Smith: then I mean
Francis Torres: So you
Kevin Smith: Uh
Francis Torres: You have an additional processor and
Kevin Smith: yeah.
Francis Torres: and
Kevin Smith: Well
Francis Torres: software part.
Kevin Smith: yeah we have
David Conley: Alright.
Francis Torres: Compared
Kevin Smith: power button,
Francis Torres: to o
Kevin Smith: whether that's present.
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Smith: Channel volume selection present. Uh numbers present. Yeah a audio
Francis Torres: L_
Kevin Smith: settings,
Francis Torres: s
Kevin Smith: mono, stereo, pitch, bass,
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: treble. Screen settings, brightness and colour.
Francis Torres: Colour. Yeah I
Kevin Smith: Yeah
Francis Torres: I call
Kevin Smith: con
Francis Torres: it
Kevin Smith: contrast
Francis Torres: contrast.
Kevin Smith: is
Francis Torres: Yeah I make it c colour.
Kevin Smith: Yeah okay, colour and brightness.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Um and what you say, channel settings or channel programming? So you you have an option to to start scanning all the frequencies,
Francis Torres: Yeah and automatically
Kevin Smith: and when it encounters
Francis Torres: um
Kevin Smith: one, well it shows on your T_V_.
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Smith: And then you can um Uh and then you can select uh a number in your
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: remote
Francis Torres: so
Kevin Smith: on
Francis Torres: I've
Kevin Smith: which
Francis Torres: g
Kevin Smith: you want
Francis Torres: channel
Kevin Smith: to save
Francis Torres: program
Kevin Smith: it.
Francis Torres: is autoseek?
Kevin Smith: Yeah, autoseek.
Francis Torres: Uh name a channel, or
Kevin Smith: Well most T_V_s automatically display the name, which they get through the cable.
Francis Torres: Oh they get automatic names,
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: okay.
Kevin Smith: So you only have to choose the position on your It only has to match the the channel frequency on your T_V_,
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: with with the with the position on your T_V_ and and so your remote.
Francis Torres: Yeah but
David Conley: Help.
Francis Torres: can you also say I want f uh Veronica on the channel number uh five or
Kevin Smith: If you already programmed it.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: If you want to move it.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah that should be possible too.
Francis Torres: How do you call that?
Kevin Smith: Yeah how do you call that? Mm? Wait you you should be able to to browse through a list or something, which w displays all the all
Francis Torres: Channels?
Kevin Smith: the values, all the channels
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: which are possible. I mean like one to
Francis Torres: Ninety
Kevin Smith: f thirty
Francis Torres: nine or something.
Kevin Smith: of or ninety
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: or whatever. Just browse through it and then um in some kind of way see if it if it if
Francis Torres: S
Kevin Smith: it is programmed.
Francis Torres: swap channels? Can
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: I call it that?
Kevin Smith: Swap channels.
Francis Torres: Swap's good option. Okay. Uh
Kevin Smith: So
Francis Torres: other
Kevin Smith: you
Francis Torres: functions?
Kevin Smith: most of the time if you if you swap it S uh let's say for example you have uh R_T_L_ five on on channel five. And Veronica on channel eight and you want to move Veronica to channel five, um most of the times you override the previous uh the
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Smith: previous one.
Francis Torres: Okay. Well that's 's up to uh
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Mister User Interface
Kevin Smith: It's
Francis Torres: Designer.
Kevin Smith: it's pretty
James Bentz: Okay.
Kevin Smith: uh yeah I mean you have to look on on the menu
David Conley: working
Kevin Smith: on
David Conley: design.
Kevin Smith: the T_V_.
David Conley: Doch.
Francis Torres: Also. That's
David Conley: He only
Francis Torres: you're
David Conley: has to figure out how it has to look. And how
James Bentz: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Yeah but also,
David Conley: to use
Francis Torres: which buttons you have to press to get a certain result? And
David Conley: Yeah okay. But
Francis Torres: the working design was to specify how ph the physical interation between the components was, as I believe.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: You did your homework. But um yeah.
Kevin Smith: Or or is
David Conley: Okay.
Kevin Smith: it too hard to to ju to just do it all on your remote? To programme the channels?
David Conley: No
Francis Torres: No
David Conley: no.
Francis Torres: I
James Bentz: No
David Conley: It should
Francis Torres: don't
Kevin Smith: Uh.
James Bentz: that's
David Conley: be
Francis Torres: think
David Conley: able
Francis Torres: so.
David Conley: to do
Francis Torres: But
David Conley: any remote.
Francis Torres: I think the communication with the television is difficult. But that's
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: not our part.
Kevin Smith: No.
Francis Torres: We don't have to design a protocol so
David Conley: No.
Kevin Smith: That's true. That's true.
David Conley: Thank god.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: Okay
Kevin Smith: So we have a figure a figure out a way to to do that easily. I mean th the autoseek is is not a problem. I mean
Francis Torres: No
Kevin Smith: you uh you
Francis Torres: that's
Kevin Smith: uh current
Francis Torres: the
Kevin Smith: channel and then then it just says, uh on which number do you want to save this, and you just press a number on your remote, and then say confirm, okay, and then it's it's saved. It's easier, it's it's it's harder to, if you have already programmed it,
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: to to swap. So
Francis Torres: So
Kevin Smith: we have
Francis Torres: but
Kevin Smith: to think of something for
Francis Torres: Um
Kevin Smith: that.
Francis Torres: James Bentz can design a menu for all these function
Kevin Smith: Yeah
Francis Torres: I put them on
Kevin Smith: k
Francis Torres: the.
James Bentz: On
Kevin Smith: kind
James Bentz: the
Kevin Smith: of structure
James Bentz: uh
Kevin Smith: into
James Bentz: yeah can
Kevin Smith: layers.
James Bentz: you i make a a map with with all the yeah 'cause it's now there are lots and lots of documents
Francis Torres: Yeah. Yeah
James Bentz: and
Francis Torres: I can. I'll just try to reorganise uh things.
Kevin Smith: So
Francis Torres: Um So you design the basic function menu for the L_C_D_ screen? Uh um
Kevin Smith: And and
Francis Torres: I think
Kevin Smith: the layout of of the thing
Francis Torres: th
James Bentz: The
Kevin Smith: itself.
James Bentz: the layout
Francis Torres: I think
James Bentz: of
Francis Torres: the
James Bentz: the
Francis Torres: yeah
James Bentz: remote
Francis Torres: the layout
James Bentz: control?
Francis Torres: of the screen and I think you can concentrate more on the button placement and the placement of the uh screen itself on the.
James Bentz: Isn't that more the the u uh the user interface
Francis Torres: No I d
James Bentz: part?
Francis Torres: I think that's more in.
David Conley: Uh all the functional uh aspects of the
Kevin Smith: Maybe
David Conley: remote
Kevin Smith: more on
David Conley: I think are in my department.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: I have to know what it has to do, so if you wanna you know the changing the channels kind of s thing is, I
Francis Torres: Okay.
David Conley: have to integrate
Francis Torres: So
David Conley: that
Francis Torres: he's
David Conley: in the
Francis Torres: layout
David Conley: design.
Francis Torres: and you're function.
David Conley: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Form function okay.
David Conley: I think
Kevin Smith: Okay.
David Conley: that's a that's a good
James Bentz: But
David Conley: separation.
James Bentz: do I have to to uh to yeah to make the the menu layout also? Or
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: Mm.
James Bentz: Are
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: you going to do that?
Kevin Smith: Yeah I guess
James Bentz: Yeah?
Kevin Smith: so.
James Bentz: I
Francis Torres: I
James Bentz: I'm
Francis Torres: think
James Bentz: going
Francis Torres: i that's
James Bentz: to make
Francis Torres: your department
James Bentz: yeah
Francis Torres: yes,
James Bentz: o okay.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: because
David Conley: Yeah
Francis Torres: w he
David Conley: we have
Francis Torres: already
David Conley: to
Francis Torres: knows
David Conley: kind
Francis Torres: what
David Conley: of work together.
James Bentz: Yeah.
David Conley: If
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: if I make the the
Francis Torres: But we're not allowed.
David Conley: the yeah the menu like, I have to state which function has to be in the menu, and then you have to decide, it's,
James Bentz: Yeah.
David Conley: in a in a way that b is user-friendly.
James Bentz: Okay Y. you you are going to make a list of what functions are uh are going to to be on
Francis Torres: Yeah.
James Bentz: the the screen, the
David Conley: Yeah.
James Bentz: menu screen. And I'm going to make a a nice menu uh
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: with
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: I think yeah.
Kevin Smith: With with
James Bentz: with pages
Kevin Smith: some l
James Bentz: and
Kevin Smith: with some layers in it. So
James Bentz: yeah.
Francis Torres: Yeah and also
Kevin Smith: some menus.
Francis Torres: make clear which buttons to press to get certain result,
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: because that's always the difficulty. Every device has its own
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Well I guess this this button, the the the okay,
Francis Torres: Menu okay.
Kevin Smith: menu
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: okay. Or you can incorporate two uh difference uh different buttons. Uh like uh for your mobile phone. Um so this is only for to get in the menu, or to exit it.
Francis Torres: Mm.
Kevin Smith: And then one to confirm, and one to go one step
Francis Torres: Back.
Kevin Smith: back.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: So it's like the the save button on your your mobile phone, if you have a Nokia or like that. Or the or the no button.
David Conley: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Smith: To go one step back you it's only two extra buttons,
James Bentz: Yeah. W
Kevin Smith: but if
James Bentz: we
Kevin Smith: it if it's very clear that they are for the screen
James Bentz: Uh I think we have to to group, to make two groups. Um the one group for the for the display, and one group for the basic functions, and
David Conley: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Yeah but they're incorporated?
James Bentz: Yeah okay
Kevin Smith: Yeah
James Bentz: but
Francis Torres: Up
Kevin Smith: because
James Bentz: we
Francis Torres: and down
James Bentz: we
Kevin Smith: this
James Bentz: have
Francis Torres: is
James Bentz: a
Kevin Smith: this
James Bentz: m
Kevin Smith: is used for both.
James Bentz: yeah but maybe that's that's not uh yeah if
Francis Torres: Smart?
James Bentz: you're if you're z zapping uh with your uh yeah remote control, you can press the the menu button, and then you are suddenly into the the
Kevin Smith: Into
James Bentz: yeah the
Kevin Smith: your
James Bentz: display.
Kevin Smith: screen. Okay. So you l should
David Conley: You wanna
Kevin Smith: leave
David Conley: separate
Kevin Smith: the menu
David Conley: uh.
Kevin Smith: button out of here.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: And and just
Francis Torres: Put
Kevin Smith: put
James Bentz: Yeah
Francis Torres: it
Kevin Smith: it
Francis Torres: on
Kevin Smith: under
James Bentz: j
Francis Torres: top.
Kevin Smith: the screen,
James Bentz: just
Kevin Smith: the screen
James Bentz: just group group the yeah we make these the advanced functions and these the basic functions.
Francis Torres: Mm-hmm.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: So we make a yeah a line between them.
Kevin Smith: But we should place the screen on top, right?
Francis Torres: Well
James Bentz: F oh yeah. Okay yeah we swap uh
Francis Torres: But
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: that's
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: uh J Jurgen's department.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: So we
Kevin Smith: You
James Bentz: make
Kevin Smith: just
James Bentz: it a
Kevin Smith: you just find out
Francis Torres: You just make the layout.
Kevin Smith: and.
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: You do we do the extra two buttons or not?
James Bentz: Uh
David Conley: I think you should.
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: It's easier. If you put too many functions in one button it gets confusing.
Francis Torres: Yeah
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: okay. That's true.
James Bentz: So we have a a menu button and a s
Francis Torres: And to, okay and back,
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: also.
James Bentz: Okay. Okay and back
Kevin Smith: Yeah,
James Bentz: button.
Kevin Smith: or confirm
Francis Torres: And
Kevin Smith: and
Francis Torres: of
Kevin Smith: back.
Francis Torres: course the four
Kevin Smith: Whatever.
Francis Torres: arrows.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: No.
Francis Torres: But those are still y doubly used.
Kevin Smith: Should
Francis Torres: Both
Kevin Smith: we save
Francis Torres: the L_C_D_
Kevin Smith: this picture, or or you know
James Bentz: Yeah
Kevin Smith: what it looks
James Bentz: I'm I'm
Kevin Smith: like?
James Bentz: not s clear about uh the the extra two buttons. We have a menu button
Francis Torres: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: and
Kevin Smith: That that just to
James Bentz: That's
Kevin Smith: to activate
James Bentz: the the one
Kevin Smith: the screen.
James Bentz: with the yeah okay.
Kevin Smith: So
Francis Torres: Menu button access the menu in the L_C_D_ screen.
Kevin Smith: And then with these buttons,
Francis Torres: You can navigate.
Kevin Smith: woa, y you navigate.
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: But you can also navigate the channels. And
James Bentz: Okay
Francis Torres: the volume.
James Bentz: so that that's not uh Yeah
Francis Torres: Those
James Bentz: that
Francis Torres: are
James Bentz: Those are
Francis Torres: both both
James Bentz: multifunctional.
David Conley: Hey
Francis Torres: yeah.
David Conley: is it interesting for users if we put LED lights under the buttons? So that if you uh press on the menu function that only the buttons that are
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: used for the menu are ligh
Kevin Smith: L
David Conley: li
Kevin Smith: l
David Conley: light
Kevin Smith: litten
David Conley: up.
Kevin Smith: up yeah.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: That's very
Francis Torres: Oh
Kevin Smith: good idea.
Francis Torres: five minutes.
David Conley: N
Kevin Smith: Alright. Yeah that's
Francis Torres: Light
Kevin Smith: a good idea
Francis Torres: uh
Kevin Smith: because then it becomes clear which buttons are active now, which you can use.
David Conley: Yeah and then it's also easier to integrate several functions in one button.
Francis Torres: Yeah
James Bentz: Yeah.
Francis Torres: sure. Okay.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Um
Kevin Smith: So
Francis Torres: Anything else?
Kevin Smith: Those buttons are are
David Conley: I think
Kevin Smith: lit
David Conley: not.
Kevin Smith: up. But just one thing. Should we use those two? Them? Or only this to to scroll? And
Francis Torres: I've
Kevin Smith: then use the two functional buttons to confirm, to go into something? Oh no we have to use this to adjust
Francis Torres: Volume.
James Bentz: Yeah.
David Conley: Yeah
Kevin Smith: some
David Conley: keep
Kevin Smith: some
David Conley: it
Kevin Smith: bars?
David Conley: optional 'cause maybe you can you know go left to right and up and down
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: in a in one menu.
Kevin Smith: And maybe we should use this also as an okay button, still. And then just only a back button.
Francis Torres: Well we
James Bentz: No
David Conley: The
Francis Torres: have
David Conley: pr
Francis Torres: those buttons. We
David Conley: the
Francis Torres: use
David Conley: problem
Francis Torres: all four.
David Conley: with the okay button in the middle is, sorry
Francis Torres: Yeah okay
Kevin Smith: Yeah?
Francis Torres: go ahead.
David Conley: sorry, uh is uh if you're pressing up and down, you can easily press the okay once you, when
James Bentz: Yeah.
David Conley: you're not already at your
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
David Conley: choice.
James Bentz: So maybe make one uh one okay button
Kevin Smith: And
James Bentz: and
Kevin Smith: one
Francis Torres: Yeah
Kevin Smith: back.
James Bentz: and
Francis Torres: that was
James Bentz: one
Francis Torres: already
James Bentz: navigation
Francis Torres: decided.
James Bentz: button. Yeah the with with the the channel and the volume uh yeah m a multifunctional navigation button.
Francis Torres: Okay that's what we decided
James Bentz: Yeah
Francis Torres: earlier
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: on.
James Bentz: okay.
Francis Torres: Right okay.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Francis Torres: So
David Conley: You wanna close down
Francis Torres: yeah I wanna close
David Conley: huh?
Francis Torres: down.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: I have to, sorry.
David Conley: That's
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: it's
David Conley: okay.
Francis Torres: not because I don't like you but yh we have lunch break,
David Conley: Already.
Francis Torres: and then we can work for thirty minutes, and I have to write very fast to make the minich min minutes.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
Francis Torres: And then uh we'll see
David Conley: Alright. How m how long is the lunchbreak?
Francis Torres: I don't know.
Kevin Smith: We have to
Francis Torres: Nobody
Kevin Smith: ask.
Francis Torres: told Kevin Smith.
David Conley: Okay.
James Bentz: But do we have to write uh to write down uh the our stuff now? Or first lunchbreak?
Francis Torres: No I
James Bentz: Because
Francis Torres: th
James Bentz: I
Francis Torres: believe there's first lunch break.
James Bentz: I've everything in my head now so
Francis Torres: Yeah. Or you
David Conley: Mm.
Francis Torres: can just
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: Yeah?
James Bentz: Yeah.
Francis Torres: 'Kay.
Kevin Smith: Yes.
James Bentz: 'Kay.
Francis Torres: I think
David Conley: This is
Francis Torres: you can put uh the laptop back in the room and
James Bentz: Yeah.
Kevin Smith: Yeah.
James Bentz: Yes sir.
Kevin Smith: Time pressure.
Francis Torres: 'Kay. Yeah it's a lot of pressure.
David Conley: Yeah. Sorry for my uh
Francis Torres: That's
David Conley: not
Francis Torres: okay.
David Conley: finished presentation uh.
Francis Torres: Oh
James Bentz: Oh
Francis Torres: yeah.
James Bentz: no
Kevin Smith: Yeah we'll kick your ass later. No.
James Bentz: no.
David Conley: Bring it on.
Kevin Smith: Uh.
Francis Torres: I
Kevin Smith: Aye
Francis Torres: don't know if it works but it
Kevin Smith: Y
Francis Torres: should
Kevin Smith: you
Francis Torres: be
Kevin Smith: saved
Francis Torres: saved.
Kevin Smith: it? Does it save automatically in the project folder? Or
Francis Torres: Yeah. It's uh
Kevin Smith: Okay. We'll see. Just
Francis Torres: Should
Kevin Smith: put back
Francis Torres: be
Kevin Smith: my
Francis Torres: here.
Kevin Smith: laptop.
Francis Torres: Smart board.
Kevin Smith: Alright.
Francis Torres: Don't know if
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: you can use it but
Kevin Smith: Yeah you can open it with the picture
James Bentz: And
Kevin Smith: preview
James Bentz: uh we
Kevin Smith: or
James Bentz: have
Kevin Smith: stuff
James Bentz: to make
Kevin Smith: like that.
James Bentz: uh some maps with uh with the all the the data we uh
Francis Torres: Yeah.
James Bentz: gathered.
Francis Torres: I try to organise it by these three. Yeah yeah
James Bentz: It's it's just my own map so
Francis Torres: yeah.
James Bentz: I put everything into the
Francis Torres: I don't really mind. I just put the minutes here and we'll see.
James Bentz: But you got some extra information uh
Francis Torres: Yeah that's in the functional design uh folder.
James Bentz: Okay.
Francis Torres: Yeah. Yeah that's just basically what I just showed.
James Bentz: But where do you did you get the newsflash?
Francis Torres: Yeah. Yeah I got it by
James Bentz: You're the only one
Francis Torres: yeah.
James Bentz: uh okay.
Francis Torres: I'm
Kevin Smith: internet.
Francis Torres: gonna get kicked if I don't do it so
James Bentz: Okay.
David Conley: Alright.
Kevin Smith: Alright.
James Bentz: Yeah.
Francis Torres: Make Kevin Smith proud.
David Conley: I'll try to. So first we have a lunchbreak now?
Francis Torres: Yeah.
David Conley: Alright.
Francis Torres: I believe so. just ask.
David Conley: Mm-hmm. I dunno where she. | Kevin Smith reported on research which shows that users think most remotes are ugly, easily lost and bad for RSI. Audio settings are rarely used, and the power, channel and volume buttons are used most often. The remote should be user-friendly and have a good look and feel. Kevin Smith and project manager described the new requirements that the target group is users under 40, the remote should not include teletext, should be only for TV, and should feature the corporate logo. James Bentz showed examples of two contrasting remotes, recommending that they should use the best features of both. The group decided to use an LCD screen and speech recognition. David Conley described how a remote works, and explained that his presentation was incomplete because he had not received the necessary information in time. The group discussed what functions to include and the layout of the remote, and Kevin Smith drew a possible design on the board. They decided to have buttons for the basic functions and make the advanced functions accessible through the screen. They also discussed what buttons would be needed to navigate the menu on the LCD screen. | 1 | amisum | train |
Micheal Marlow: Hello. Yes, I made it. English from on. Drawing or
Arthur Stanley: Yeah just testing.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Mm?
Charles Perez: Just
Arthur Stanley: English.
Charles Perez: kidding. So annoying.
Arthur Stanley: Break is over.
Micheal Marlow: Ooh it works.
Arthur Stanley: Whoo. Spicy.
Micheal Marlow: Spicy. Where are are all the other presentations?
Charles Perez: I just put it in the in the shared folder so
Micheal Marlow: The
Charles Perez: it should
Micheal Marlow: conceptual
Charles Perez: be
Micheal Marlow: or
Charles Perez: yeah I think so. Yeah, conceptual design.
Micheal Marlow: Ah.
Charles Perez: What or whatever
Micheal Marlow: Because
Charles Perez: does it
Micheal Marlow: I see only my own presentation
Charles Perez: No no no, can you go back one?
Micheal Marlow: yeah.
Charles Perez: Uh 'cause it has to be PowerPoint pre yeah
Micheal Marlow: This?
Charles Perez: components design, that's it.
Micheal Marlow: I'll just put it
Arthur Stanley: So,
Micheal Marlow: in there.
Arthur Stanley: he's coming.
Charles Perez: I did
Micheal Marlow: Or not.
Charles Perez: get a bit more done than the
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Charles Perez: last time,
Arthur Stanley: Oh
Charles Perez: 'cause
Arthur Stanley: okay.
Charles Perez: I knew that I didn't have time so I just copy and paste everything into
Micheal Marlow: Ah,
Charles Perez: the
Micheal Marlow: I can't
Arthur Stanley: Ah.
Micheal Marlow: cut and paste it into
Arthur Stanley: She.
Micheal Marlow: the
Arthur Stanley: You
Micheal Marlow: other
Arthur Stanley: can
Micheal Marlow: folder
Arthur Stanley: look
Micheal Marlow: but
Arthur Stanley: at the final report, 'cause I have to record everything we are deciding and such, so
Micheal Marlow: Move to
Arthur Stanley: I'm
Micheal Marlow: meeting
Arthur Stanley: trying
Micheal Marlow: room.
Arthur Stanley: to write it down between everything else.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Sometimes I have these pop-ups or these sounds and there's nothing there,
Arthur Stanley: Oh.
Charles Perez: and
Micheal Marlow: Yeah Micheal Marlow too,
Charles Perez: also with I don't know how to use PowerPoint, so it takes Micheal Marlow forever to get something done with
Gary Mayes: I
Charles Perez: it.
Gary Mayes: I've got the same problem as well.
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah. Here we go again. Welcome.
Charles Perez: Thi
Arthur Stanley: we have again three presentations and then we have to decide on what concepts the phone has to f the remote control has to support. So
Charles Perez: Mm-hmm.
Arthur Stanley: who wants go.
Micheal Marlow: Yes.
Charles Perez: Who
Arthur Stanley: Yes?
Charles Perez: wants to start?
Micheal Marlow: Micheal Marlow first or
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Gary Mayes: Oh.
Arthur Stanley: sure.
Gary Mayes: No.
Arthur Stanley: Doesn't matter.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: yeah.
Gary Mayes: No problem
Micheal Marlow: Alright. Did you open it already or
Arthur Stanley: No.
Micheal Marlow: no. Ah. Ah. Yes.
Micheal Marlow: So welcome to the marketing presentation once again. Um this time about trendwatching. Uh well there has been inv investigation again, in the in the remote control market. Uh it shows a number of developments. Uh I will address them uh in a moment. Um fashion watch watchers uh have detected the trends for young public, because that's our public. Um well fruit and vegetables will be will be the most important theme for clothing, uh shoes and furniture. And the feel of the material is expected to be spongey. So um the developments I will address them oh yeah well this is the fruit and vegetables looks of fresh bright colours. So to give you an idea. Um well the developments? Uh development one. Uh well most important aspect for remote control happens to be a fancy look-and-feel. Instead of the current uh functional look-and-feel. Um well fancy stands for an original look-and-feel of the case and the interface. And the second most important aspect is that a remote control should be technological uh innovative. Um well it stands for the use of technical features that do not exist in current remote controls. I think we pretty much covered that with our screen and um
Charles Perez: Sound.
Micheal Marlow: and speech recognition, so
Charles Perez: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: I
Charles Perez: yeah
Micheal Marlow: don't
Charles Perez: uh uh.
Micheal Marlow: expect that to be a problem. And the third development um is that the remote control should be easy to use. Um Well the first aspect uh was twice as important as the second aspect,w which was twice as important as the third aspect. So
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Micheal Marlow: um that kind of gets you this ratios. So fancy look-and-feel uh is the most important uh point of attention. Uh so the fruits and vegetables in combination with the spongey material. Um well technolog technological innovation, we've covered that pretty much I guess. Um and easy to use, I don't think that will be problem. So my point of attention is especially this part. That this
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: will be a crux. So that was the marketing uh presentation. I had only one document left.
Charles Perez: And shall I go first?
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: So
Gary Mayes: No. I
Charles Perez: I
Gary Mayes: I don't mi I don't mind. That's
Micheal Marlow: So kind of this
Charles Perez: Yeah?
Gary Mayes: Do you want to go first? Okay.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah yeah sure.
Micheal Marlow: So
Arthur Stanley: No.
Micheal Marlow: a k
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: a small example. Kind of this this look. Uh nothing about the buttons but just
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: sponge kind of thing, and and some fruit and colours I dunno. Just made a quick design.
Arthur Stanley: Cool.
Gary Mayes: It's better
Micheal Marlow: Alright.
Gary Mayes: than than
Charles Perez: Alright.
Gary Mayes: my uh drawing.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah you're just the user interface hmm?
Gary Mayes: Yeah
Charles Perez: Uh
Gary Mayes: okay but I
Charles Perez: components.
Gary Mayes: have to design the
Arthur Stanley: Yeah layout.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Oh no.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah okay.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah. It's okay.
Arthur Stanley: You probably opened it.
Charles Perez: Yeah true. Um
Arthur Stanley: F_ five.
Micheal Marlow: F_ five.
Charles Perez: Alright. So I'm dealing with the components design. Um let's see. I uh used some design examples we had uh from similar products. And I used uh possibilities from our manufacturing department about current components which will have to be implemented in the design. That's why I had to, wanted to go first. Well they gave Micheal Marlow um an idea about what people want. We're f mainly focusing on this group, but I want to make the distinction clear. Uh I could not drag the pictures into the the slides so s so I don't have examples of how it looks like. But it comes down to what you uh what you think we should do with the spongey and the fruity looking uh type. If you, the young dynamic people want soft primary colours uh, which looks like fruits you know, you can and shapes that are curved and not uh solid straight lines anymore. So this basically um yeah goes on to what you were mentioning earlier. There is a lot of um factors involved in choosing the components. There's a lot of options that we have to discuss. Uh for example the energy source. we have four types. The basic battery. Uh we have a hand dynamo, which we yeah we Dutch refer
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: to it as the kneipgatt. Uh the kinetic provision of energy which means if you move the thing, if you shake it. Which will be fun for toddlers right, if they wanna
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: use the And uh of course solar cells. But I dunno how we would use that into the
Micheal Marlow: Wi
Charles Perez: design of the actual product. So
Micheal Marlow: an indoors.
Charles Perez: uh
Micheal Marlow: Oh.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Charles Perez: my
Arthur Stanley: okay.
Charles Perez: yeah
Arthur Stanley: Calculator's
Charles Perez: also
Arthur Stanley: can do it.
Charles Perez: also in you know countries where there's n isn't much light like in Scandinavia, they wouldn't be y able to use it half
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: of the year you know. So
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: that's
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Charles Perez: not cool either. So um for the uh a case, there's uh the traditional uncurved flat hard case. Single curved, which means that it has uh curves in one dimension. Or the double curved. Um I wasn't able to finish my uh personal preferences sheet, but well you know that we will have to go for the double curved 'cause it's daring and different from what we have now.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Uh the case materials. Well we have all kinds of hard uh materials like the the hard plastic, the wood and the titanium. I would definitely go for rubber 'cause it fits most in what people wanna see nowadays.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Um poo, this is a lot of text. I wasn't able to organise this yet. We have yeah several uh interface designs. Uh we can use a scroll buttons for the menus, but we already kind of decided to go for
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: the
Gary Mayes: Pushbuttons.
Charles Perez: f for the pushbuttons,
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: for the the arrow buttons. So that's
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: not really interesting. Electronics? Yeah, maybe we wanna decide on what electronics to use the advanced chip I think is easiest to implement uh for the production, 'cause they they can print it better. Um Yeah. I think this is about it. Yeah I was working on some per personal preferences. I first uh chose for the battery, 'cause yeah I'm traditional and that's the most obvious, easiest choice to go to. But I really think that we should maybe uh think about the kinetic energy, where
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: you have to move the thing to
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: be able to
Gary Mayes: As
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: use
Gary Mayes: an optional
Charles Perez: it.
Gary Mayes: uh feature. Or combine uh both with with one uh
Micheal Marlow: I
Arthur Stanley: Uh
Micheal Marlow: guess
Arthur Stanley: I
Micheal Marlow: we
Charles Perez: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: can
Arthur Stanley: think
Micheal Marlow: only
Charles Perez: maybe
Arthur Stanley: you
Micheal Marlow: choose
Charles Perez: we
Arthur Stanley: can only
Micheal Marlow: one.
Arthur Stanley: fit one uh source of energy
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Arthur Stanley: on the
Charles Perez: I can imagine that the kinetic uh type energy source would be more expensive to make. But it is more longlasting, that the people don't have to ever buy batteries again.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: And it's more fun.
Arthur Stanley: I
Charles Perez: And
Arthur Stanley: didn't
Charles Perez: it's also
Arthur Stanley: receive
Charles Perez: more fun
Arthur Stanley: any
Charles Perez: yeah.
Arthur Stanley: info
Charles Perez: I always chuck
Arthur Stanley: uh.
Charles Perez: my uh remote control
Micheal Marlow: Yeah,
Charles Perez: around, so
Micheal Marlow: just
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: playing with it and especially when the material's rubber. It can
Arthur Stanley: S
Micheal Marlow: be done, I mean,
Arthur Stanley: yeah it's
Micheal Marlow: you can't
Arthur Stanley: safe.
Micheal Marlow: harm
Charles Perez: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: it,
Charles Perez: y
Micheal Marlow: so it's a
Gary Mayes: And
Micheal Marlow: perfect
Gary Mayes: throw
Charles Perez: exactly.
Gary Mayes: it.
Micheal Marlow: combination
Charles Perez: You
Micheal Marlow: I
Charles Perez: don't
Micheal Marlow: guess.
Charles Perez: have to be scared about bouncing it off the g floor and breaking it or whatever.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Charles Perez: So that's the end of it.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: So
Charles Perez: Uh
Arthur Stanley: 'Kay next.
Charles Perez: go ahead.
Micheal Marlow: So double curved is like this, this, this, or
Charles Perez: No it means curved in two dimensions. So uh w single curved? Uh let's say would be a b square box,
Micheal Marlow: Mm.
Charles Perez: but then with curves on one dimension.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: And double curved would means that it would have curves
Micheal Marlow: Also in
Charles Perez: curves
Micheal Marlow: in
Arthur Stanley: Uh
Micheal Marlow: height?
Charles Perez: in every direction.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah
Charles Perez: Like
Micheal Marlow: okay.
Charles Perez: three
Arthur Stanley: Okay.
Charles Perez: D_.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Can we uh
Gary Mayes: One
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: one uh very important thing I was uh yeah thinking about is the speech uh option. We were going to use that.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: Yeah. So um Yeah um yeah that's one thing uh which I'm not sure uh of how to implement it uh into the
Charles Perez: Design?
Arthur Stanley: Well
Gary Mayes: remote control.
Arthur Stanley: the visual representation is not
Gary Mayes: No okay
Arthur Stanley: there with
Gary Mayes: but
Arthur Stanley: speech
Gary Mayes: it
Arthur Stanley: but
Gary Mayes: has
Arthur Stanley: you
Gary Mayes: to be
Arthur Stanley: can
Gary Mayes: combined with with the menu uh for functions and
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: So
Arthur Stanley: Just
Gary Mayes: okay.
Arthur Stanley: yeah. I think you can just uh match the speech commands with the functions
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: that are already present.
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Arthur Stanley: So
Micheal Marlow: Yeah with
Arthur Stanley: I don't
Micheal Marlow: the programme.
Arthur Stanley: think you have to design anything
Gary Mayes: But do uh j do
Arthur Stanley: else
Gary Mayes: we
Arthur Stanley: for that.
Gary Mayes: uh do the speech just for the basic options, for the simple buttons?
Arthur Stanley: Both.
Gary Mayes: For for everything, also for
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: the advanced options? Okay. Uh we have this very uh basic uh trendy design. Everybody says it so that's what's uh yeah um Yeah in the in the last uh meeting we uh we were yeah putting the the simple and the advanced options separated. That's yeah obvious. Um yeah. Pressing the the menu option uh will disable uh all other options on your uh remote control. And only the the L_C_D_ panel will uh light up and then you can only uh change the yeah
Micheal Marlow: And
Gary Mayes: the options.
Micheal Marlow: and the and the buttons that you need to
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: control
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: it, I guess.
Gary Mayes: Um yeah design has to be very attractive but that's your your op your yeah. you have to uh delete this but this
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: is the the the simple uh layout. Uh display on the upper side with the the menu button and maybe a some sort of cancel button or save button.
Arthur Stanley: That
Gary Mayes: I'm
Arthur Stanley: would be the back.
Gary Mayes: The
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: back.
Arthur Stanley: Back and okay.
Micheal Marlow: Back
Gary Mayes: Back
Micheal Marlow: and okay.
Gary Mayes: and okay yeah. Uh
Arthur Stanley: You did read the minutes I wrote?
Gary Mayes: What?
Arthur Stanley: You did read the minutes I wrote?
Gary Mayes: A little
Charles Perez: I
Gary Mayes: bit I think but not not
Arthur Stanley: Oh okay
Gary Mayes: everything w
Arthur Stanley: 'cause I pretty much summed up all the buttons there
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Arthur Stanley: were. So
Gary Mayes: Oh I uh didn't read that.
Arthur Stanley: I hate
Gary Mayes: But
Arthur Stanley: doing work for nothing.
Gary Mayes: But this is the the basic uh design uh for the for the m yeah for the buttons. Um I wanted to to categorise everything. Uh with a speech display uh yeah, sound, everything you you noted in your uh minutes. Um every pushbutton has uh has its own uh LED light. So
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Gary Mayes: you can uh yeah change uh m make it more trendy for for younger people. And uh if there are older people they wanted more uh yeah more uh luxurous so that's an a also an option. Um that was it.
Arthur Stanley: That was it?
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Okay. Uh again. Ugh.
Arthur Stanley: Okay so what we have to decide is what kind of components do we use? Uh energy source, chip type, case type. And user interface. But I didn't see a clear distinction between these so I think what we have is okay. So we only, we already decided that kinetic would be the choice for energy.
Micheal Marlow: No.
Arthur Stanley: Uh the case would be doubly curved.
Micheal Marlow: Rubber
Arthur Stanley: So
Charles Perez: And
Micheal Marlow: material.
Charles Perez: rubber. Rubber material.
Arthur Stanley: Rubber material. And that's the only thing we have left.
Charles Perez: Yeah we need the the chip on print to be able to support the the screen and uh
Arthur Stanley: Oh okay.
Charles Perez: and f
Arthur Stanley: No it's easy.
Charles Perez: audio function.
Micheal Marlow: So that's uh is that is that the advanced chip?
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Advanced
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: chip.
Micheal Marlow: Wow.
Arthur Stanley: Okay.
Charles Perez: you would have a simple chip, just for pressing
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: buttons. But we need more.
Micheal Marlow: Alright. Kinetic.
Charles Perez: I'm just thinking,
Arthur Stanley: Too.
Micheal Marlow: Double
Charles Perez: this
Micheal Marlow: curved.
Charles Perez: is not my department, but I I'm not sure what this is gonna cost, to be able to
Arthur Stanley: Uh
Charles Perez: m
Arthur Stanley: I didn't get any info on this. So
Charles Perez: So 'cause we need to sell it for twenty five Euro a piece.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: That's gonna be difficult huh?
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: The cost of making it should be twelve and a half?
Arthur Stanley: I have total
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: here.
Charles Perez: Yeah
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Charles Perez: yeah
Arthur Stanley: I
Charles Perez: yeah.
Arthur Stanley: don't know. I didn't get any information about that
Gary Mayes: We're
Arthur Stanley: so
Gary Mayes: going to produce it in uh China so it's no problem.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Child labour man, we love it.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah, so it's
Arthur Stanley: Who doesn't.
Micheal Marlow: cheap.
Arthur Stanley: Uh let's see. Is there a new thing?
Micheal Marlow: Um well the interface type supplements.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah the interface, maybe can
Gary Mayes: Uh it's it's quite
Arthur Stanley: Ooh.
Gary Mayes: difficult because we we haven't got all the options uh
Arthur Stanley: No. Uh
Gary Mayes: yeah.
Arthur Stanley: do you have a picture of doubly curved case? And could you put that in the group folder?
Charles Perez: Um
Arthur Stanley: Of the project folder.
Charles Perez: let Micheal Marlow see. Wait a sec.
Micheal Marlow: If you go to your homepage or something, you should
Charles Perez: Yeah I'm going there now.
Micheal Marlow: get your own information.
Charles Perez: Inspiration.
Micheal Marlow: I got my fresh and fyoo fruity uh picture uh also uh
Charles Perez: Well
Micheal Marlow: over there,
Arthur Stanley: Ah
Micheal Marlow: so
Arthur Stanley: you didn't draw it yourself.
Micheal Marlow: No.
Arthur Stanley: Ah.
Micheal Marlow: Too less time.
Charles Perez: Um
Micheal Marlow: Yeah,
Charles Perez: yeah maybe
Micheal Marlow: also the
Charles Perez: it's
Micheal Marlow: menu. Yeah
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: that that
Gary Mayes: This
Micheal Marlow: w
Gary Mayes: is the the menu I was
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: uh looking uh
Micheal Marlow: Yeah I
Charles Perez: Maybe
Micheal Marlow: was thinking
Charles Perez: it's easier
Micheal Marlow: of that
Gary Mayes: at.
Micheal Marlow: also, with with a
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: with a
Arthur Stanley: Arrow.
Micheal Marlow: uh arrow.
Gary Mayes: Arrow yeah.
Micheal Marlow: So
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: that indicates that there's an menu under that menu.
Charles Perez: Yeah. Yeah perfect.
Micheal Marlow: So
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Maybe
Arthur Stanley: 'S
Charles Perez: it's easier
Arthur Stanley: the target
Charles Perez: if you guys
Arthur Stanley: group.
Charles Perez: come
Gary Mayes: S
Charles Perez: over
Gary Mayes: yeah.
Charles Perez: here. S
Micheal Marlow: Oh
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: yeah.
Charles Perez: see
Arthur Stanley: sure.
Charles Perez: this is the the the standard traditional type, where the form uh yeah serves the function, you know. It's like really basic. But this m is more appealing to old people and we don't
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: want that. This is what we're looking for. And th that means curved in both dire dire uh dimensions.
Arthur Stanley: Oh okay.
Charles Perez: Not only
Arthur Stanley: I
Charles Perez: like
Arthur Stanley: see.
Charles Perez: this but
Arthur Stanley: Yeah also like
Charles Perez: it has
Arthur Stanley: this.
Charles Perez: to
Arthur Stanley: So
Charles Perez: be
Arthur Stanley: you can hold it.
Charles Perez: exactly. It has to be kind of instead of the PlayStation, the module. It has to be like the the Game Cube, you know, where
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: your thumbs would be laying in the instrument and it has to
Gary Mayes: But
Charles Perez: be
Gary Mayes: it
Charles Perez: nice
Gary Mayes: has also
Charles Perez: to hold.
Gary Mayes: to it
Charles Perez: And
Gary Mayes: it has also to be uh luxurous uh for for yeah rich people. Th
Charles Perez: It ha
Gary Mayes: this looks a little bit like like for
Arthur Stanley: The
Gary Mayes: only
Arthur Stanley: children's
Gary Mayes: for children.
Arthur Stanley: story. Yeah I've
Charles Perez: Yeah
Arthur Stanley: got
Charles Perez: but
Arthur Stanley: it.
Charles Perez: that's
Gary Mayes: So
Charles Perez: that's the
Arthur Stanley: Distinction.
Charles Perez: the problem
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: uh yeah the dilemma actually, 'cause we wanna appeal to the to the young public with fancy with flashy colours, and with a lot of shape. And Yeah,
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: and the and
Gary Mayes: The
Charles Perez: the rubber,
Gary Mayes: colour
Charles Perez: it it will look cheap always,
Gary Mayes: Yeah. Okay
Charles Perez: you know,
Gary Mayes: but
Charles Perez: with the
Gary Mayes: the the colours, you you can make it uh make the colours with LEDs uh beneath the the buttons. If you
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Gary Mayes: press a button and you can disable the the colour LEDs for for people that don't like it.
Micheal Marlow: Mm.
Charles Perez: There is mobile phones, in which you can change the colour also of the
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: lights. Maybe we should consider this function.
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Charles Perez: To customise it and so I mean kids can make it look more flashy with different kinds of colours
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: and people who want something, you know,
Arthur Stanley: Different.
Charles Perez: different, or more uh design,
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Charles Perez: they can go for one colour like uh for example this uh photo
Arthur Stanley: Camera.
Charles Perez: th camera.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah. Cool. S underwater
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: uh
Arthur Stanley: submarine.
Micheal Marlow: yeah.
Charles Perez: Personally I think it's really ugly.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Just
Arthur Stanley: Well
Charles Perez: give Micheal Marlow the thing that it's inside there
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: maybe
Gary Mayes: Very
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Charles Perez: I'm
Gary Mayes: cheap
Arthur Stanley: but
Charles Perez: too old
Arthur Stanley: this
Gary Mayes: uh
Charles Perez: for
Gary Mayes: cheap
Charles Perez: this
Arthur Stanley: this
Charles Perez: stuff.
Gary Mayes: look.
Arthur Stanley: the is for the.
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Okay.
Charles Perez: So
Arthur Stanley: Uh
Charles Perez: those I think are all my oh.
Arthur Stanley: Ah yeah bright colours.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah. Also a
Charles Perez: And
Micheal Marlow: kind
Charles Perez: this
Micheal Marlow: of
Charles Perez: is,
Micheal Marlow: rubber uh
Charles Perez: this is with the curved that I mean.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: That's singly curved.
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Okay.
Charles Perez: Yeah?
Micheal Marlow: That should be nice.
Arthur Stanley: Well we could make a compromise between that. But I don't know if it's worth the effort.
Charles Perez: A compromise between what?
Arthur Stanley: Uh instead of doubly curved we take a single curved. So to
Micheal Marlow: So
Arthur Stanley: appeal
Micheal Marlow: s
Arthur Stanley: a
Charles Perez: This,
Arthur Stanley: little more to the
Charles Perez: this
Arthur Stanley: all
Charles Perez: would
Arthur Stanley: the public.
Charles Perez: be uh single curved uh?
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah there's only in in this dimension.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Like this.
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: So curvy or not.
Arthur Stanley: Also.
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah
Charles Perez: Exactly. Exactly.
Micheal Marlow: so we keep it singly c single curved then?
Arthur Stanley: Yeah that would be an option. I don't know what you think.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: I think the I mean our aim is to make something different right? To
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: make something new.
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Charles Perez: I would go for the double curved.
Arthur Stanley: Okay.
Charles Perez: And
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Charles Perez: I I'm
Arthur Stanley: I'd agree.
Charles Perez: I'm thinking uh you know uh a drawing palette,
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Charles Perez: where you have the shape for your thumb. So it kind of holds nicely, something
Gary Mayes: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: like that.
Gary Mayes: but if
Charles Perez: Well
Gary Mayes: you
Charles Perez: this
Gary Mayes: if
Charles Perez: is
Gary Mayes: you make
Charles Perez: really
Gary Mayes: it
Charles Perez: your
Gary Mayes: more
Charles Perez: decision
Gary Mayes: curved
Charles Perez: but
Gary Mayes: we we can make more and more options for buttons. If you have uh it have it in your hand, you you you are not only um yeah you don't need one dimension but you can use other dimensions for pressing the the buttons.
Charles Perez: Yeah. As well. You can make a trigger button
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: or something like that.
Gary Mayes: Something to shoot at your television
Charles Perez: Yeah or that that is the confirmation button or
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Charles Perez: something,
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: that you scroll with your thumb, with the arrows,
Gary Mayes: That's
Charles Perez: and then confirm.
Gary Mayes: yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Charles Perez: That would be a nice way to use it but I mean, yeah, I'm thinking big already, and we need something
Arthur Stanley: Different.
Charles Perez: that well that
Arthur Stanley: Stands
Charles Perez: that you
Arthur Stanley: out.
Charles Perez: can able to use in
Arthur Stanley: Or
Charles Perez: one hand I think.
Arthur Stanley: Oh yeah a one hand uh
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: solution.
Micheal Marlow: So from top view it looks kinda like this. But from the side you you can have it also in a kind of shape. Maybe because
Arthur Stanley: can
Micheal Marlow: the
Arthur Stanley: turn it
Micheal Marlow: the screen
Arthur Stanley: maybe.
Micheal Marlow: is on top you
Arthur Stanley: To switch
Micheal Marlow: can have
Arthur Stanley: from buttons to interface hmm. If you turn it a little.
Micheal Marlow: Maybe you can c have this kind of shape. A little upwards. So that the screen is more
Arthur Stanley: Oh yeah. Least you
Micheal Marlow: towards
Arthur Stanley: can easily
Micheal Marlow: yourself,
Arthur Stanley: see it.
Micheal Marlow: so you can easily see your screen.
Charles Perez: How
Micheal Marlow: Well well
Charles Perez: about
Micheal Marlow: you have it in your hand so it's a kind of an angle from your eyes to the screen. So this this
Charles Perez: Mm-hmm.
Micheal Marlow: is so the screen is positioned over here. Oh. Something like that. And the buttons are more, well it's very thick now but
Charles Perez: Yeah I understand what you mean.
Micheal Marlow: That's uh
Charles Perez: How
Micheal Marlow: that's
Charles Perez: about we do a uh a pop-up screen, like the laptop.
Arthur Stanley: If
Charles Perez: So
Arthur Stanley: you can
Charles Perez: that
Arthur Stanley: uh flip.
Charles Perez: the only the simple functions will be visible at first.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah? That
Charles Perez: And
Micheal Marlow: that
Charles Perez: then
Micheal Marlow: you can
Charles Perez: if
Micheal Marlow: press
Charles Perez: you want
Micheal Marlow: it and then it comes up? Or
Charles Perez: Yeah. Something like that.
Arthur Stanley: Uh so you have a the the side view.
Micheal Marlow: But then the side view can be straight. If you have a pop-up screen. But I dunno if that's too expensive.
Arthur Stanley: So
Micheal Marlow: I
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: and
Micheal Marlow: mean
Arthur Stanley: you
Micheal Marlow: maybe
Arthur Stanley: want
Micheal Marlow: it's
Arthur Stanley: to
Micheal Marlow: too much
Arthur Stanley: be able to make this.
Charles Perez: No uh like I would draw it like this. Let's say this is the side view. That you have a a screen that will come up here, and can go down that way. If you know what I mean.
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Charles Perez: So that it would come
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: up like that.
Arthur Stanley: Okay so the buttons are on top here, and you flip it over that
Charles Perez: Yeah
Arthur Stanley: way.
Charles Perez: or preferably even keep the simple buttons here,
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: and then under the screen even you
Micheal Marlow: Oh
Arthur Stanley: Oh
Charles Perez: could put
Micheal Marlow: the advanced
Charles Perez: more
Arthur Stanley: yeah. Yeah
Charles Perez: more
Micheal Marlow: buttons.
Arthur Stanley: yeah
Charles Perez: advanced
Arthur Stanley: yeah
Charles Perez: buttons.
Micheal Marlow: Right.
Arthur Stanley: yeah. Right.
Gary Mayes: That's
Arthur Stanley: Yeah that's good
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: idea.
Gary Mayes: the the more advanced options were uh for the for the menu.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: But
Charles Perez: F
Gary Mayes: you
Charles Perez: for
Gary Mayes: you
Charles Perez: the
Gary Mayes: want
Charles Perez: L_C_D_ menu
Gary Mayes: okay.
Charles Perez: right?
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: You just
Charles Perez: So
Gary Mayes: want to hide them all? The
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: No not all
Charles Perez: w
Gary Mayes: oh.
Arthur Stanley: because
Charles Perez: w
Arthur Stanley: you need most of them, the arrow buttons. But you can hide the okay and the back
Gary Mayes: Yeah
Arthur Stanley: uh
Gary Mayes: yeah
Arthur Stanley: button.
Gary Mayes: yeah.
Arthur Stanley: And the menu button also because when you flip it open
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: and you can maybe even drop the menu button because maybe if you flip it open it will auto activate
Charles Perez: Oh
Arthur Stanley: amauto uh uh automatically.
Charles Perez: Activate and th the yeah.
Micheal Marlow: So okay b but you have t you need some button to flip this
Arthur Stanley: Why? You
Micheal Marlow: open.
Arthur Stanley: could
Charles Perez: True.
Arthur Stanley: just
Charles Perez: True.
Arthur Stanley: make it mechanical.
Charles Perez: But you can make a, yeah, you can make a trigger here. You
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: know a simple uh
Micheal Marlow: Yeah and
Charles Perez: with
Micheal Marlow: it
Charles Perez: a
Micheal Marlow: says menu and it flips open and
Gary Mayes: That's
Micheal Marlow: then you have the buttons to control
Gary Mayes: but it's it's
Micheal Marlow: it, in combination
Gary Mayes: not
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: with your
Gary Mayes: it's not very uh
Charles Perez: Exactly.
Gary Mayes: very strong uh yeah if you drop it one time.
Micheal Marlow: True. It uh c it can
Charles Perez: Well
Micheal Marlow: go open.
Charles Perez: yeah the the idea
Arthur Stanley: If you
Charles Perez: of
Arthur Stanley: cover
Charles Perez: it was,
Arthur Stanley: it with rubber.
Charles Perez: is that because you close it, you cover the L_C_D_ screen and it won't be vulnerable to scratches or whatever.
Micheal Marlow: An adv
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Micheal Marlow: an
Arthur Stanley: Mm.
Micheal Marlow: adv and it will be
Charles Perez: And
Micheal Marlow: covered in some kind of uh thin rubber layer or something
Charles Perez: Exactly.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: like that.
Arthur Stanley: So
Charles Perez: Exactly.
Arthur Stanley: it can bounce.
Charles Perez: We just have to
Micheal Marlow: Yeah,
Charles Perez: make sure that the closing
Micheal Marlow: uh
Charles Perez: mechanism
Micheal Marlow: It's
Charles Perez: won't
Micheal Marlow: very
Charles Perez: break.
Micheal Marlow: no it's
Charles Perez: Th
Micheal Marlow: very
Charles Perez: it's
Micheal Marlow: strong.
Charles Perez: very solid
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: yeah.
Arthur Stanley: okay so that that may work.
Charles Perez: That actually will offer some extra
Arthur Stanley: Okay
Charles Perez: protection
Arthur Stanley: but then we still
Charles Perez: for
Arthur Stanley: have
Charles Perez: the
Arthur Stanley: the the the thing of the the the shape.
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Yeah
Arthur Stanley: What
Charles Perez: I was
Arthur Stanley: kind of
Charles Perez: thinking, if if you have your hand, it this is your th
Arthur Stanley: Harder.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah the lower part doesn't work I guess, so maybe you should try it over there.
Charles Perez: Okay. If this is your thumb, and this is your hand like that. With your uh wrist. That you, that it would be kind of shape like this, you know. So it's easier to hold in your hand, to
Gary Mayes: But
Charles Perez: y
Gary Mayes: when
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: you are
Charles Perez: f
Gary Mayes: left-handed, that's that's a problem.
Charles Perez: Uh yeah. Yeah of course. Yeah
Arthur Stanley: Maybe
Charles Perez: then w
Arthur Stanley: can design
Charles Perez: then you would
Arthur Stanley: two versions.
Charles Perez: have to
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: But that's
Charles Perez: to make
Gary Mayes: that's
Charles Perez: it like
Gary Mayes: very expensive
Charles Perez: this. Like
Gary Mayes: uh
Charles Perez: like you drew here.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: And maybe th then make this thicker also than the centre. Give it
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm. And
Charles Perez: I would
Arthur Stanley: ergonomical
Charles Perez: give it a female
Arthur Stanley: shape.
Charles Perez: shape but uh
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: yeah. Anyway.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: The female shape yeah. With two
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Obviously.
Gary Mayes: We we could make some some
Charles Perez: Make
Gary Mayes: rubber
Charles Perez: it more appealing
Gary Mayes: uh
Arthur Stanley: uh
Charles Perez: to
Gary Mayes: some
Charles Perez: guys.
Gary Mayes: rubber uh yeah
Charles Perez: I mean
Gary Mayes: mouse, with which you can change
Arthur Stanley: Oh
Gary Mayes: uh
Arthur Stanley: yeah. Some
Gary Mayes: and
Arthur Stanley: uh
Gary Mayes: so if you
Arthur Stanley: k esk uh yeah.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah but but that's optional for later I guess. I
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: mean, we have to
Charles Perez: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: make
Charles Perez: but we have hardware inside, which is so it has to have some sort of
Gary Mayes: Some
Charles Perez: basic shape.
Gary Mayes: yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: we we better
Arthur Stanley: yeah.
Charles Perez: And
Micheal Marlow: so
Charles Perez: also
Micheal Marlow: choose
Charles Perez: the screen,
Micheal Marlow: one
Charles Perez: you cannot mould it. You
Gary Mayes: No
Charles Perez: know
Gary Mayes: no no
Charles Perez: kind
Micheal Marlow: Yeah
Gary Mayes: no.
Charles Perez: of thing.
Micheal Marlow: so okay we should better choose one sh one shape.
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: But that's the kind of the idea, so it lays good in the hand, and then
Charles Perez: And then
Micheal Marlow: on
Charles Perez: you can
Micheal Marlow: on the side with with your
Charles Perez: You
Micheal Marlow: thumb,
Charles Perez: can place the screen
Micheal Marlow: you
Charles Perez: here,
Micheal Marlow: you can
Charles Perez: which can
Micheal Marlow: you can
Charles Perez: come.
Micheal Marlow: use, yeah, you
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: can use the button option
Charles Perez: And but then I w I
Arthur Stanley: spongey?
Charles Perez: would
Micheal Marlow: Spongey.
Charles Perez: I would do the arrows here, kind of thing.
Micheal Marlow: Spongey can be reached
Charles Perez: Those buttons?
Micheal Marlow: by means of
Charles Perez: And the simple buttons here, so
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: that
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: And and the and the control thngs in the middle? The the
Charles Perez: I Uh
Micheal Marlow: the
Charles Perez: y
Micheal Marlow: arrows?
Charles Perez: eah
Gary Mayes: No
Charles Perez: that's
Gary Mayes: the
Charles Perez: what
Gary Mayes: arrow's
Charles Perez: I mean. The
Gary Mayes: over
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: arrows
Gary Mayes: here.
Charles Perez: over here,
Micheal Marlow: Yeah
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: and
Micheal Marlow: and then
Charles Perez: here the
Micheal Marlow: numbers.
Arthur Stanley: Buttons.
Charles Perez: s simple uh
Arthur Stanley: Okay.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah. Alright.
Arthur Stanley: I think that uh
Micheal Marlow: Uh
Arthur Stanley: it's a nice design.
Micheal Marlow: pretty nice design. Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: It's cool.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah it looks uh pretty fancy.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: or do we wanna make its shape look like a banana or something? I dunno.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah that's
Micheal Marlow: Uh bananas wierd shape and other fruits also, so
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: it's better to have um some sort of basic print and then a fruit print in some primary uh colours.
Charles Perez: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: I
Charles Perez: we
Micheal Marlow: don't
Charles Perez: could
Micheal Marlow: know
Charles Perez: make
Micheal Marlow: what what colours should the basic print be like? Like some soft
Arthur Stanley: Orange or
Micheal Marlow: green
Arthur Stanley: something.
Micheal Marlow: or something? Or
Gary Mayes: Or blue?
Micheal Marlow: and then
Gary Mayes: Dark blue or
Micheal Marlow: Oh yeah yeah, dark blue and then
Charles Perez: We should use
Micheal Marlow: and then very bright, uh a yellow
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: banana, an orange, uh a green apple, stuff like that, with very uh bright tones I guess.
Arthur Stanley: Mm.
Charles Perez: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: So
Charles Perez: w
Micheal Marlow: you have
Charles Perez: we
Micheal Marlow: something
Charles Perez: need very
Micheal Marlow: like
Charles Perez: primary colours, like
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: bright red, bright yellow.
Gary Mayes: Yeah but the primary colours w we can uh create with the with the LEDs on the on the remote
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: control.
Charles Perez: Yeah okay
Gary Mayes: If
Charles Perez: yeah.
Gary Mayes: you we uh yeah. If you make it uh just a yeah bl give it a blue colour, then it's just a neutral colour, also for the for the more uh yeah for the people.
Micheal Marlow: Mm. That
Arthur Stanley: Huh
Micheal Marlow: doesn't
Arthur Stanley: cool.
Micheal Marlow: really work. To draw,
Arthur Stanley: No it's.
Micheal Marlow: I guess. Oh. What's
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: this?
Arthur Stanley: it's text.
Micheal Marlow: Right.
Arthur Stanley: N
Micheal Marlow: Hm.
Arthur Stanley: no you have to exit. You
Gary Mayes: So
Arthur Stanley: could
Gary Mayes: that's
Arthur Stanley: also make line with uh
Micheal Marlow: Yeah. Two hours further.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: thickness. Oh.
Gary Mayes: So that's blue.
Micheal Marlow: Oh. Wh why not go for the twenty?
Arthur Stanley: Mm. Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: Mm.
Micheal Marlow: That's
Arthur Stanley: Y
Micheal Marlow: what I call painting. So that's that's a dark blue basic colour
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: I guess.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah and then on
Micheal Marlow: It's pretty
Arthur Stanley: top
Micheal Marlow: nice.
Arthur Stanley: of that.
Micheal Marlow: And then uh Oh
Arthur Stanley: Some
Micheal Marlow: Yeah
Arthur Stanley: yellow.
Micheal Marlow: with some some yellow banana
Arthur Stanley: Banana colour.
Micheal Marlow: Like.
Charles Perez: And how about some uh some flashing standby lights? Like you have on the Samsung, well I don't like to call brands phones, the you know that 'cause I remember from one of our first meetings that uh people lose their uh remote controls often.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah?
Charles Perez: So it not not only in in the colours of the LEDs, that we want something to keep it visible at all times, or
Micheal Marlow: How do you mean?
Charles Perez: Um
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: Some
Arthur Stanley: if
Micheal Marlow: some
Arthur Stanley: you
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: if flashing colour so you can't lose it, basically.
Charles Perez: Yeah. Exactly.
Arthur Stanley: Well I
Gary Mayes: Maybe
Arthur Stanley: think
Gary Mayes: a
Arthur Stanley: it's a bit too much but
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah an orange. Well alright well this
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: is more like purple I guess, but
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: it's should be more real dark blue, so the contrast with the with the fruit objects is uh pretty
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: high.
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: So uh yeah. That would be a nice uh nice device
Gary Mayes: And
Micheal Marlow: I guess.
Gary Mayes: which which colour should uh should I give the the display? Uh Or
Arthur Stanley: Who?
Micheal Marlow: I mean, the the colour of the background of the
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: display?
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Ah well I don't guess it s has to be a
Arthur Stanley: And then you
Micheal Marlow: sixty
Arthur Stanley: can use yellow
Micheal Marlow: uh
Arthur Stanley: or semething.
Micheal Marlow: sixty six five thousand uh
Arthur Stanley: Why
Micheal Marlow: colour,
Arthur Stanley: not?
Micheal Marlow: so yeah too expensive.
Arthur Stanley: Aye.
Micheal Marlow: So
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: just just a a blue blue
Gary Mayes: Mm.
Micheal Marlow: backlight or
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: something like that. Green is too old-fashioned. But blue,
Charles Perez: As
Micheal Marlow: blue's
Charles Perez: long
Micheal Marlow: okay.
Charles Perez: as you loo
Micheal Marlow: J
Charles Perez: use uh high contrast between the the background and the foreground colour.
Gary Mayes: Yeah maybe
Charles Perez: So
Arthur Stanley: Like
Charles Perez: that
Gary Mayes: a
Charles Perez: people
Arthur Stanley: this.
Charles Perez: with
Gary Mayes: maybe
Charles Perez: uh
Gary Mayes: a white
Charles Perez: with
Gary Mayes: a white backlight?
Micheal Marlow: White backlight, and dark.
Gary Mayes: Dark uh letters, yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah. Whatever which is visible.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: I know you sh you should test it under uh under a light conditions. I mean it's hard
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: to tell
Charles Perez: And also
Micheal Marlow: uh I
Charles Perez: for
Micheal Marlow: dunno.
Charles Perez: people who are a bit colourblind.
Arthur Stanley: Colourblind yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah. True.
Arthur Stanley: No so that's mostly red and green I believe.
Micheal Marlow: Which which uh colour should the buttons be?
Gary Mayes: That's adjustable.
Arthur Stanley: Woah.
Micheal Marlow: Why
Arthur Stanley: All
Micheal Marlow: adjustable?
Arthur Stanley: all buttons?
Gary Mayes: Yeah? Or
Arthur Stanley: Okay.
Micheal Marlow: No
Gary Mayes: not.
Micheal Marlow: uh
Gary Mayes: That's how we are going to make it uh more trendy. Or is
Micheal Marlow: But
Gary Mayes: it uh too expensive?
Micheal Marlow: maybe I mean they
Arthur Stanley: It's
Micheal Marlow: have
Arthur Stanley: difficult.
Micheal Marlow: to they have to have some colour right? And if the background is
Arthur Stanley: Blue.
Micheal Marlow: very dark blue
Arthur Stanley: Maybe green.
Charles Perez: But don't we wanna make the background the the bright colo colours? So th the total
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Charles Perez: of the
Arthur Stanley: you can
Charles Perez: thing is very bright? Like the pictures I showed you guys. Those
Micheal Marlow: Yeah?
Charles Perez: things were all like like
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm
Charles Perez: bright
Arthur Stanley: flashy.
Charles Perez: red, bright red, flashy.
Micheal Marlow: So more like
Arthur Stanley: Mm bzz.
Micheal Marlow: Doesn't work very well. Uh. More like this colour.
Charles Perez: Yeah something like that, something that
Micheal Marlow: And then
Charles Perez: stands out more.
Micheal Marlow: then yellow and orange and red objects on it
Gary Mayes: Mm.
Micheal Marlow: or something.
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: But then then again, which colour should the buttons be? The the press buttons. Should they be white or black or
Arthur Stanley: Red maybe.
Gary Mayes: And it it looks
Micheal Marlow: Uh
Gary Mayes: quite
Arthur Stanley: Black.
Gary Mayes: cheap, that colour I think. It's it's not
Charles Perez: The green?
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah
Arthur Stanley: Why?
Micheal Marlow: but it's pretty
Gary Mayes: I dunno.
Micheal Marlow: fresh, on the
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: other side.
Arthur Stanley: So
Charles Perez: It's actually a pretty trendy colour at the moment.
Gary Mayes: It's it's trendy okay.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: But
Micheal Marlow: My couch
Gary Mayes: Mm.
Micheal Marlow: is in that colour.
Arthur Stanley: Ooh.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah. Well
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: it works pretty well. And then time was up.
Arthur Stanley: Uh not yet.
Micheal Marlow: Uh.
Charles Perez: Do you get a pop-up if
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Charles Perez: we
Arthur Stanley: within five minutes yeah.
Micheal Marlow: That
Charles Perez: Alright.
Micheal Marlow: you have five minutes
Arthur Stanley: Y left
Micheal Marlow: left or
Arthur Stanley: yeah left and then uh I have to kick you
Micheal Marlow: So
Arthur Stanley: out.
Micheal Marlow: something like this.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: That should be pretty nice colour. But maybe the buttons, all buttons in red is maybe a bad contrast for colourblind
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: people.
Arthur Stanley: yeah.
Charles Perez: No
Micheal Marlow: Because
Charles Perez: that's
Micheal Marlow: the
Charles Perez: actu
Micheal Marlow: of the
Gary Mayes: But
Micheal Marlow: green.
Gary Mayes: the but the buttons have their own LEDs or not?
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: They have LEDs but they
Charles Perez: Red
Arthur Stanley: have a colour.
Charles Perez: and green are actually the b the easiest to discriminate. Even for colourblind.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah?
Charles Perez: They will see one of each as grey.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: But if you use uh green on blue, those kind of colours will look the same.
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Micheal Marlow: Okay.
Charles Perez: I think.
Micheal Marlow: So red buttons are okay?
Charles Perez: I think so.
Gary Mayes: Okay. That
Arthur Stanley: You can
Gary Mayes: that's
Arthur Stanley: make
Gary Mayes: a
Arthur Stanley: them
Gary Mayes: default
Arthur Stanley: red.
Gary Mayes: uh setting. The the red buttons.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah. But I think you need to keep in mind that the LEDs are just extra light.
Micheal Marlow: How do you mean? Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Uh they they don't determine the colour
Gary Mayes: Okay. Yeah
Arthur Stanley: that much,
Gary Mayes: I I
Arthur Stanley: I
Gary Mayes: was
Arthur Stanley: think.
Gary Mayes: think about a red uh red LEDs and blue LEDs and
Arthur Stanley: 'Cause
Micheal Marlow: No
Arthur Stanley: you have to
Micheal Marlow: that's that's
Arthur Stanley: print
Micheal Marlow: too
Arthur Stanley: on
Micheal Marlow: busy
Arthur Stanley: them you
Micheal Marlow: I guess.
Arthur Stanley: have
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: a background. Each number is transparent.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Uh partly but you have to print on the number. Or the the sign.
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Arthur Stanley: So you can't
Micheal Marlow: You better
Arthur Stanley: change
Micheal Marlow: bet
Arthur Stanley: the colour so
Micheal Marlow: better better keep the LED and the button itself in the same colour
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: I guess. So just an extra
Arthur Stanley: Bit of light.
Charles Perez: You can
Micheal Marlow: bit of light
Charles Perez: what
Micheal Marlow: and
Charles Perez: we
Micheal Marlow: attention.
Charles Perez: should
Arthur Stanley: Bit
Charles Perez: do
Arthur Stanley: of feedback.
Charles Perez: I think is is make kind of a see-through plastic button, with
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: uh one coloured LED behind it.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: So that the whole button will shine
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Charles Perez: as the colour the And if you think about easy to use buttons, we have to, well we have to make it the shape so that it's easy to hold f for both hands, but also that you can reach the buttons
Arthur Stanley: Mm-hmm.
Charles Perez: with your thumb,
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: if
Arthur Stanley: Okay
Charles Perez: you hold
Arthur Stanley: with
Charles Perez: the machine.
Arthur Stanley: Uh Don't mean to discourage you but uh basically you two are going to work on the smartboard. Next thirty minutes to design
Charles Perez: Ah, right.
Arthur Stanley: something so
Micheal Marlow: Alright.
Arthur Stanley: And the You will do the evaluation.
Micheal Marlow: Of the product?
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Which we don't have yet.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah uh about
Micheal Marlow: So wh how should I do that?
Arthur Stanley: Yeah I don't know.
Micheal Marlow: Oh
Arthur Stanley: You
Micheal Marlow: okay.
Arthur Stanley: probably get a mail.
Micheal Marlow: Or you you or you send it to Micheal Marlow. Or just because
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: you are
Arthur Stanley: Once
Micheal Marlow: going
Arthur Stanley: they
Micheal Marlow: to
Arthur Stanley: are finished.
Micheal Marlow: design it
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: on this board right?
Arthur Stanley: Yeah but maybe you can do the evaluation you don't have to evaluate yet but you can make a procedure which to follow.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: I don't know.
Micheal Marlow: I I probably get instruction on that,
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: how to do that, so I make another presentation I guess.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: I kn I know what's gonna happen in
Arthur Stanley: About.
Micheal Marlow: in
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: yeah so
Arthur Stanley: You have the basic idea.
Micheal Marlow: I've a basic idea.
Arthur Stanley: And you two uh are going to do this.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: So
Arthur Stanley: Look-and-feel
Charles Perez: we're gonna work
Arthur Stanley: and
Charles Perez: here? On this sketchboard?
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: Good
Charles Perez: Alright.
Arthur Stanley: luck.
Charles Perez: Thanks.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah. Alright so that's
Arthur Stanley: So
Micheal Marlow: uh
Arthur Stanley: I uh make new page and uh be creative.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Alright.
Gary Mayes: But we have to do it at this moment, after
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Gary Mayes: th this
Arthur Stanley: you
Gary Mayes: meeting?
Arthur Stanley: have uh
Charles Perez: Thirty minutes.
Arthur Stanley: thirty minutes.
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Arthur Stanley: Then we have to uh see something
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: which we
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: can
Charles Perez: Alright.
Arthur Stanley: uh
Gary Mayes: Ah
Arthur Stanley: show
Gary Mayes: so this
Arthur Stanley: to the
Gary Mayes: is
Arthur Stanley: management.
Gary Mayes: basically the what what we are thinking about?
Charles Perez: Yeah. Shall
Arthur Stanley: I would
Charles Perez: we uh
Arthur Stanley: yeah.
Charles Perez: make a new uh
Gary Mayes: Yeah
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: l
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: let's just uh delete all
Arthur Stanley: Next.
Gary Mayes: these uh or
Charles Perez: Yeah, I just
Gary Mayes: Oh, next.
Charles Perez: make a new one.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Alright.
Arthur Stanley: Oh and save this uh board.
Charles Perez: Huh?
Arthur Stanley: Just
Charles Perez: Yeah
Arthur Stanley: save
Charles Perez: I'll just
Arthur Stanley: it.
Charles Perez: I'll just keep it there.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah okay but just press save and uh
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: It'll be fine.
Micheal Marlow: On the left. S so, yeah.
Charles Perez: Uh sorry.
Arthur Stanley: You can also include clip-art.
Charles Perez: Okay.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Current
Arthur Stanley: So if you'll
Charles Perez: colour?
Arthur Stanley: rather draw in paint or something
Charles Perez: So um
Gary Mayes: Okay. Uh
Charles Perez: Shall we make some outline sketches of the basic shape first?
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Because
Gary Mayes: And then after
Charles Perez: I
Gary Mayes: that we
Charles Perez: I
Gary Mayes: can make the user uh inter interface.
Arthur Stanley: then look.
Charles Perez: Yeah 'cause I have to uh focus on the on the
Micheal Marlow: This?
Charles Perez: basic look-and-feel
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: design.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: So how it's gonna look. And you have to think
Micheal Marlow: Uh
Charles Perez: uh
Micheal Marlow: pretty
Charles Perez: how we're
Micheal Marlow: accurate.
Charles Perez: gonna put the screen in it and those kind of things. So if I'm drawing and you think okay I'm not gonna be
Micheal Marlow: Oh
Charles Perez: able
Micheal Marlow: we
Charles Perez: to put
Micheal Marlow: skip
Charles Perez: a screen
Micheal Marlow: this I
Charles Perez: in
Micheal Marlow: guess.
Charles Perez: there,
Micheal Marlow: Sound
Charles Perez: you have to
Micheal Marlow: button
Charles Perez: correct.
Micheal Marlow: press.
Gary Mayes: Yep.
Charles Perez: Uh
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: do you mind if I
Arthur Stanley: You
Charles Perez: draw
Arthur Stanley: can also
Charles Perez: in black
Arthur Stanley: include
Charles Perez: then?
Arthur Stanley: it. It's
Charles Perez: For
Arthur Stanley: not much
Charles Perez: normal
Arthur Stanley: work.
Charles Perez: sketches.
Micheal Marlow: Light only
Gary Mayes: Oh
Micheal Marlow: button
Gary Mayes: no it's it's
Micheal Marlow: user
Gary Mayes: okay.
Micheal Marlow: ca user interaction.
Charles Perez: so we kind
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: of
Arthur Stanley: That's
Charles Perez: want
Arthur Stanley: included.
Charles Perez: the girlish
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: okay.
Micheal Marlow: So
Charles Perez: figure.
Micheal Marlow: the pl the plastic plastic buttons also help uh because of um they are only
Charles Perez: I'm
Micheal Marlow: lit
Charles Perez: not so good
Micheal Marlow: during
Charles Perez: at drawing.
Micheal Marlow: interaction. So
Charles Perez: Excuse Micheal Marlow?
Micheal Marlow: Well it's a good thing that the buttons aren't um, well that they are plastic, because then you can light up the light
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: on
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: when when they are usable.
Charles Perez: No uh uh.
Micheal Marlow: Maybe you should draw it very large
Gary Mayes: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: like this.
Gary Mayes: but
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: this part isn't uh functioning
Arthur Stanley: Sensitive.
Micheal Marlow: Oh
Gary Mayes: properly.
Micheal Marlow: right.
Charles Perez: How do we uh
Micheal Marlow: Erase?
Charles Perez: uh or insert text?
Arthur Stanley: I dunno. Maybe just start typing.
Gary Mayes: It's a bit
Charles Perez: Oh that's
Gary Mayes: uh
Charles Perez: a
Gary Mayes: large.
Charles Perez: bit big. Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: You also do the other sides. Not only on the front si uh the top
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Arthur Stanley: side
Charles Perez: Ex
Arthur Stanley: but
Charles Perez: exactly.
Arthur Stanley: also the the side view.
Gary Mayes: L
Charles Perez: Uh
Gary Mayes: let's make first the the the all
Arthur Stanley: Uh.
Gary Mayes: the views. The the front view, side view and the back view.
Charles Perez: Uh I thought for the side view, that
Arthur Stanley: Jesus.
Charles Perez: the w
Arthur Stanley: What
Charles Perez: the
Arthur Stanley: do
Charles Perez: basic
Arthur Stanley: I write
Charles Perez: section
Arthur Stanley: down?
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: would be rather
Arthur Stanley: Why can't
Charles Perez: uh
Arthur Stanley: I work here? This
Charles Perez: a bit
Arthur Stanley: is much
Charles Perez: thicker than the middle,
Micheal Marlow: Much
Charles Perez: where
Arthur Stanley: easier.
Charles Perez: you're
Micheal Marlow: easier,
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: holding
Micheal Marlow: yeah.
Charles Perez: it with your 'cause your
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: fingers have to fit underneath
Gary Mayes: The middle has
Charles Perez: and
Gary Mayes: to be
Arthur Stanley: Mm.
Gary Mayes: very small
Micheal Marlow: I don't
Gary Mayes: so
Micheal Marlow: see
Gary Mayes: you
Micheal Marlow: a
Gary Mayes: can
Micheal Marlow: sign that the meeting
Gary Mayes: have
Micheal Marlow: is over
Gary Mayes: it in your
Micheal Marlow: yet
Gary Mayes: hand.
Charles Perez: Exactly
Micheal Marlow: but
Arthur Stanley: No
Charles Perez: but
Arthur Stanley: so
Charles Perez: the
Arthur Stanley: I just
Charles Perez: uh
Arthur Stanley: work here
Charles Perez: but
Arthur Stanley: a
Charles Perez: the
Arthur Stanley: few minutes.
Charles Perez: upper
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: side has to be a bit more like that I think.
Gary Mayes: Yeah
Charles Perez: Uh don't
Gary Mayes: the display,
Charles Perez: you think?
Gary Mayes: we yeah we can
Charles Perez: So
Gary Mayes: put
Charles Perez: the
Gary Mayes: a
Charles Perez: display
Gary Mayes: display.
Charles Perez: we will put in here, the basic uh functions in here, where it's most reachable.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: The
Gary Mayes: The the
Charles Perez: The th
Gary Mayes: arrow functions.
Charles Perez: Exactly.
Gary Mayes: Yeah. Yeah.
Charles Perez: Oh. This is hard. What do don't have to draw it exactly do we?
Gary Mayes: No it's it's uh it's okay.
Charles Perez: Wait. Let Micheal Marlow try it one more time. Maybe I've uh it's easier if I draw it in once. Okay, of course it will become way more ugly.
Gary Mayes: You can make it m larger. Maybe it's easier to to draw uh
Charles Perez: Yeah. This'll take forever. It's fun to work with this pen. Um so, larger.
Micheal Marlow: Oh.
Gary Mayes: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: Wrong
Gary Mayes: that's
Charles Perez: And
Micheal Marlow: one.
Gary Mayes: that's the basic idea. Yeah.
Charles Perez: yeah. So side.
Arthur Stanley: Five minutes left before the meeting ends.
Charles Perez: 'Kay. Um other views?
Micheal Marlow: Alright.
Gary Mayes: Yeah only if you are going to put buttons on the side of the
Charles Perez: Uh
Gary Mayes: unit.
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: That's the question.
Micheal Marlow: But we we
Charles Perez: Let's fill i fill in the buttons later.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: So this is gonna be from the
Micheal Marlow: I is it if
Charles Perez: uh from
Micheal Marlow: if this is from the side woah.
Gary Mayes: From
Charles Perez: yeah
Gary Mayes: the
Charles Perez: yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Steady.
Charles Perez: Sorry.
Micheal Marlow: Because there the screen goes up like that right?
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: So then it's like this, or
Charles Perez: Yeah?
Micheal Marlow: that's not convenient because then you have the screen like this and look like the it's better to have it somewhat like this. Or does it flip
Gary Mayes: Yeah
Charles Perez: The
Gary Mayes: I'm
Charles Perez: the
Gary Mayes: I'm
Charles Perez: idea
Micheal Marlow: all the way?
Charles Perez: is that it has to flip up
Gary Mayes: May
Charles Perez: to here.
Gary Mayes: maybe it's it's easier to to integrate the the the L_C_D_ screen just into this this bubble.
Charles Perez: Okay.
Gary Mayes: Because it do doesn't have to flip then. Because
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: we have en enough
Charles Perez: Yeah yeah
Gary Mayes: space
Charles Perez: yeah.
Gary Mayes: for for making a an L_C_D. Because
Micheal Marlow: It's
Gary Mayes: here
Micheal Marlow: better to to
Charles Perez: True.
Micheal Marlow: have this like this I guess, and then flip it like
Gary Mayes: But why
Micheal Marlow: this.
Gary Mayes: why do we need uh the flipping uh
Charles Perez: you can adjust the angle to which it flips. So it can also from this angle, it can flip all the
Gary Mayes: Okay.
Charles Perez: way up to there.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: You can flip it up to there if you
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: want.
Micheal Marlow: So w yeah. But we still keep the flipping mechanism.
Charles Perez: Think
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: so.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah we keep the flip? Keep the
Charles Perez: Yeah
Arthur Stanley: flip
Charles Perez: because
Arthur Stanley: live.
Charles Perez: I think it will feel weird if you would make this smaller and this bigger or something that
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: I dunno.
Gary Mayes: Uh the the shape is okay but yeah? I don't see the the yeah why why we should use the the flipping uh mechanism.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Charles Perez: I
Gary Mayes: Because
Charles Perez: thought
Gary Mayes: we
Charles Perez: it would be cool.
Gary Mayes: Okay yeah. It's it's for
Micheal Marlow: Yeah
Gary Mayes: for
Micheal Marlow: but
Gary Mayes: for
Micheal Marlow: maybe
Gary Mayes: more trendy uh
Micheal Marlow: Yeah but maybe we we should then
Gary Mayes: Because we have enough space. H here we got uh the basic functions,
Micheal Marlow: Yeah
Gary Mayes: the
Micheal Marlow: there the middle
Gary Mayes: the arrow uh yeah button.
Micheal Marlow: Sh sh shouldn't we integrate it?
Gary Mayes: Yeah and
Micheal Marlow: And then
Gary Mayes: then h we sh mm.
Micheal Marlow: like i oh th doh. Come on. So this is the shape. Oh. It hasn't
Charles Perez: It doesn't aim so well.
Micheal Marlow: Okay but the screen is a bit lower because if it falls
Gary Mayes: Yeah,
Micheal Marlow: on the other side,
Gary Mayes: then it's
Micheal Marlow: it doesn't fall on the screen. So there's a layer of rubber on
Charles Perez: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: the side.
Charles Perez: yeah yeah. Definitely.
Micheal Marlow: So no flipping but just
Gary Mayes: No flipping or
Arthur Stanley: No flipping?
Micheal Marlow: no.
Gary Mayes: you wanted the flipping so
Charles Perez: Yeah I guess but uh I mean
Gary Mayes: But
Charles Perez: most
Gary Mayes: if you
Charles Perez: votes
Gary Mayes: if you
Charles Perez: count right?
Gary Mayes: If you drop it it it just breaks. And it has to be very strong because of the. Yeah
Micheal Marlow: Throwing
Arthur Stanley: It's shaking.
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: and the kinetics. Oh.
Gary Mayes: kind of
Micheal Marlow: We
Charles Perez: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: better
Charles Perez: true
Micheal Marlow: make
Charles Perez: true.
Micheal Marlow: we better make it like this.
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Micheal Marlow: Eventually.
Arthur Stanley: Yeah just
Charles Perez: Yeah
Gary Mayes: And
Charles Perez: if
Arthur Stanley: light
Gary Mayes: it's
Charles Perez: you if
Arthur Stanley: on top.
Charles Perez: you're going
Gary Mayes: also
Charles Perez: for
Gary Mayes: for
Charles Perez: the kinetics
Gary Mayes: the for
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: the children, it's yeah for people
Arthur Stanley: Safer.
Gary Mayes: not sixteen years.
Arthur Stanley: Mm.
Micheal Marlow: Uh
Gary Mayes: But
Micheal Marlow: they
Arthur Stanley: Yeah
Gary Mayes: there
Micheal Marlow: are
Gary Mayes: are
Micheal Marlow: responsible
Arthur Stanley: okay
Gary Mayes: more
Arthur Stanley: that the
Micheal Marlow: enough
Arthur Stanley: target
Micheal Marlow: to have a mobile
Arthur Stanley: group.
Micheal Marlow: phone, so also to to
Gary Mayes: Yeah
Micheal Marlow: deal
Gary Mayes: okay.
Micheal Marlow: with their
Gary Mayes: That's true.
Micheal Marlow: uh remote uh control. Yes.
Gary Mayes: Okay. Yeah?
Arthur Stanley: Well.
Charles Perez: Yeah. I'm just
Arthur Stanley: I just
Charles Perez: thinking
Arthur Stanley: uh ended
Charles Perez: totally
Arthur Stanley: the meeting.
Charles Perez: different
Arthur Stanley: You
Charles Perez: designs
Arthur Stanley: two go
Charles Perez: also.
Arthur Stanley: design.
Gary Mayes: Okay
Charles Perez: Remember
Gary Mayes: wi
Charles Perez: that the weird pocketphone thingy
Arthur Stanley: Oh.
Charles Perez: which
Arthur Stanley: By the way.
Charles Perez: looked like
Arthur Stanley: Um
Charles Perez: kind of a Gameboy.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Maybe we should try something like that.
Arthur Stanley: I
Charles Perez: But yeah.
Arthur Stanley: uh thought up a name for our product.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah?
Charles Perez: Oh
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: right.
Arthur Stanley: It's called uh the Real Remote.
Micheal Marlow: Ooh.
Charles Perez: Alright.
Arthur Stanley: With a copyright sign after Real.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: The
Micheal Marlow: Alright.
Gary Mayes: Real Remote.
Charles Perez: Yeah. I like it. Okay.
Arthur Stanley: So
Micheal Marlow: Good.
Arthur Stanley: maybe
Charles Perez: This
Arthur Stanley: you
Charles Perez: can
Arthur Stanley: can
Charles Perez: go.
Arthur Stanley: include that somewhere.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah. We should work in our own room right? Or
Arthur Stanley: Yeah.
Charles Perez: Oh
Micheal Marlow: not?
Charles Perez: yeah we have to f uh include that in our design
Arthur Stanley: I don't see
Charles Perez: as
Arthur Stanley: any
Charles Perez: well.
Arthur Stanley: power cables here so
Charles Perez: Let's see.
Micheal Marlow: Yeah. Yes.
Charles Perez: What the hell's that?
Arthur Stanley: 'Kay.
Micheal Marlow: See you two
Gary Mayes: I think
Micheal Marlow: in half
Gary Mayes: uh
Micheal Marlow: an hour
Gary Mayes: it's
Micheal Marlow: uh
Gary Mayes: the sensors. Okay.
Charles Perez: Uh
Arthur Stanley: Good luck.
Gary Mayes: Yep. Okay that's the side. Ah it's it's okay. But do we want uh options on the on the side with the with the buttons?
Charles Perez: Yeah.
Gary Mayes: Or just
Charles Perez: I
Gary Mayes: leave
Charles Perez: think
Gary Mayes: it?
Charles Perez: we do.
Gary Mayes: Uh could make an uh a volume button uh scroll, volume button.
Charles Perez: Yeah or j or also scrolling for the m
Gary Mayes: For
Charles Perez: yeah.
Gary Mayes: menu.
Charles Perez: Yeah?
Gary Mayes: Or
Charles Perez: I dunno. We w kind of wanted to stick with the
Gary Mayes: Yeah. No,
Charles Perez: Yeah I'm just
Gary Mayes: yeah.
Charles Perez: thinking, if we i we wanna make something different right? So the with the scroll is is more futuristic than the standard arrow buttons.
Gary Mayes: Yeah.
Charles Perez: I think.
Gary Mayes: Mm. Yeah you are going to design it so. | Micheal Marlow talked about trendwatching and explained that the current trends are for fruit and vegetable themed products and products with a spongy texture. For users, the three most important aspects of a remote control are a fancy look and feel, technological innovation, and ease of use. Charles Perez talked about the options for energy source, case shape and material, and internal components. The group decided on using kinetic energy, and a double-curved rubber case. Gary Mayes talked about speech recognition and what functions will be controlled through buttons or the lcd screen menu. Arthur Stanley ran through the group's decisions so far and led a discussion of their remaining options, including the colour of the case and buttons, and whether the remote should flip open or not. | 1 | amisum | train |
Richard Strauss: Hello again.
Chester Young: Hi.
Jeremy Hodges: Hello.
Jeremiah Weal: Hey, Project Manager.
Jeremy Hodges: Um, Project Manager, I
Richard Strauss: Mm yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: have something tell you. I have a little problems with my laptop.
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Jeremy Hodges: And uh s s s so I had a little less time to complete.
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Jeremy Hodges: No, a little problem, uh big problem. I just thought
Jeremiah Weal: What was it,
Jeremy Hodges: Um,
Jeremiah Weal: problem?
Jeremy Hodges: it didn't work anymore.
Jeremiah Weal: The laptop?
Jeremy Hodges: The entire Windows uh
Jeremiah Weal: It hang hung.
Jeremy Hodges: It it hung.
Jeremiah Weal: Ha-ha. Oh. Project Manager.
Richard Strauss: Yes.
Jeremiah Weal: You're
Richard Strauss: Yes.
Jeremiah Weal: our Project Manager.
Richard Strauss: Your project manager. Welcome to the conceptual design meeting for Real Reaction. Uh, hello again. Uh it's uh the same as the last time. Uh uh, also this time there will be uh three presentations. And we um must uh reach a decision on uh the remote control concepts. Um uh, and the end, I uh, when I finish it off I have some uh input from uh a master class I uh visited. information.
Jeremy Hodges: During lunch, yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Master.
Jeremy Hodges: He's the master, yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Master
Richard Strauss: The
Jeremiah Weal: of
Richard Strauss: the the the the concepts on uh we uh where we uh must reach a decision on. Um uh, our from uh are of two sorts. Components concepts and user interface concepts. Uh, the first one is uh really about the the the the the total package uh with uh Well, we have decided to do a do the uh with a touch-screen that must be a case around it so uh it won't be uh uh as breakable. Uh how how about the energy? Can you uh can you reload it or uh just have batteries which you must exchange? Uh, the user interface concept. Uh, with the type and uh the the supplements. So uh where to put what button. And uh uh I would say uh Jans, can you begin?
Chester Young: Yeah, sure.
Richard Strauss: Okay. At the end, uh I will take notes uh
Chester Young: Okay.
Richard Strauss: and at the end of the minutes uh will uh be at the shared folder.
Chester Young: Uh, let Jeremiah Weal see. I think it's this one. Ha.
Jeremy Hodges: Wow.
Chester Young: Right. Uh, well, I'll be talking about the components. Uh, what I did was I reviewed previously used items uh by uh two two uh different uh age groups.
Richard Strauss: Mm-hmm.
Chester Young: Uh below forty five and above. And uh I just uh watch what the differences are and I checked uh, well, what what d do we want, and how we uh d aim a at uh the target group. Well uh what I found was that a senior um senior citizens uh
Jeremiah Weal: I'm sorry.
Chester Young: Ye Ah, it's
Jeremiah Weal: Okay.
Chester Young: it's
Jeremiah Weal: Go
Chester Young: okay.
Jeremiah Weal: on.
Chester Young: Uh They, well, they like more the they like the traditional materials, like wood and and such more. Wood and chrome. And uh uh they like uh straightforward shapes. Um, uh they they they they like luxurious uh styles, where whereas the young and dynamic, they like a more uh soft materials. Think of the Teletubbies, for instance. Uh uh, soft and fluffy and colourful and Well uh, shapes are curved and round. Y y you get the picture. And uh they like sports and gaming, and that gives them uh the vitality. Uh, so w well
Richard Strauss: One
Chester Young: uh, firs
Richard Strauss: one little question. Um
Chester Young: Yes.
Richard Strauss: about the the material.
Chester Young: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: Uh a soft material for a remote control?
Chester Young: No, I'll I'll get to that.
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Chester Young: You you'll see. Yeah.
Richard Strauss: Yeah. Thank you.
Chester Young: Uh, well f first off, let's start start with the energy. W I uh I had a choice between uh a few different uh sources.
Richard Strauss: Mm-hmm.
Chester Young: But uh the two basic sources that I found were the best possible were the battery uh versus kinetic. Uh kinetic, that's when you move something, then uh it gets energy. I figured, well that's ki kinda high-tech, when when you have a remote control that well, when you pick it up, it has power. That would be actually very nice, uh
Richard Strauss: Oh.
Chester Young: I figured. Well, we could also use a battery, that's a
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah
Chester Young: bit
Jeremiah Weal: but when the power gets low, you have to shake it or something?
Chester Young: Yeah. Yeah yeah, you c just you have to shake it around
Jeremiah Weal: Uh,
Chester Young: a little bit.
Jeremiah Weal: and
Chester Young: And
Jeremiah Weal: uh
Chester Young: then
Jeremiah Weal: uh
Chester Young: then it d then it has some more uh energy. Well,
Jeremiah Weal: Hmm.
Chester Young: y you could just go for a battery. Or you can go for both?
Jeremy Hodges: Oh, have you the option of using a solar panel
Chester Young: Yeah, I actually did. But uh the thing is about solar panel is you have to have l uh light. Well, sunlight preferably.
Jeremy Hodges: W
Chester Young: Uh,
Jeremy Hodges: nah.
Chester Young: and you you could you could use normal light, but uh
Jeremy Hodges: Mm.
Chester Young: you wouldn't get the same amount of energy that you would from a battery or something.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Chester Young: Uh for uh ultimate b uh n uh use of uh solar panels, you could actually use uh you could use uh solar panels, but uh you ha you'd have to implement them into uh the remote control, leaving you uh a bit less space for
Jeremiah Weal: Mm
Chester Young: the
Jeremiah Weal: yeah.
Chester Young: interface.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: It's too
Chester Young: So
Jeremiah Weal: less
Chester Young: uh
Jeremiah Weal: space.
Chester Young: so i i it it wo what's actually I I c just in f I've figured it out that well, uh seeing that you'll always be uh within the l uh distance of T_V_, and the from T_V_ there comes a a a whole bunch of light. So it would actually power itself uh from
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Chester Young: a T_V_. But, well you just take up all the space, and you
Jeremy Hodges: Okay.
Chester Young: wouldn't uh have the full amount of power actually used.
Richard Strauss: But you
Chester Young: So
Richard Strauss: prefer kinetic?
Chester Young: I I prefer kinetic because
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Chester Young: it's uh well, the costs aren't that much higher, and um, ju just a bit more high-tech than than a normal battery. I mean,
Richard Strauss: Yeah,
Chester Young: if
Richard Strauss: but you don't move a a remote control
Chester Young: No,
Richard Strauss: too
Chester Young: but
Richard Strauss: much.
Chester Young: uh d Well, you pick it up and you press buttons and y well,
Richard Strauss: And that's
Chester Young: you
Richard Strauss: enough to to keep the energy level uh
Chester Young: Yeah, well uh actually it is.
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Chester Young: And it it if it isn't, you just shake it a bit and and add add with power up again.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Chester Young: But, what l what Jarek said, you could you could use a battery that you'd just keep it on the recharging whenever it moves. And for rest, you'd just add juice on the battery.
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Jeremiah Weal: And when the battery doesn't work, I usually shake too. So Like slamming on
Chester Young: Exactly.
Jeremiah Weal: it. It's exactly the same.
Chester Young: And
Richard Strauss: Thank
Chester Young: so that
Richard Strauss: you, Tim.
Chester Young: Uh Uh well, f furthermore, you you we uh checked uh the cases. We have uh different options uh concerning the cases. You ha I you sim uh you simply add a basic uh standard uh model uh it was kind of square and uh I figured that's a bit boring. So you you we could go for uh the single curved or the double curved. Um, single curve, it's just a well, uh, you know, it's just uh a nice curve. Or but but you could go in a in an double curves. And that's like several different dimensions. That gives
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Chester Young: you an whole new uh
Richard Strauss: Dynamic
Jeremiah Weal: Hmm.
Chester Young: effec
Richard Strauss: dynamic look?
Chester Young: Yeah, that gives you a younger and uh more high-tech look, I f I figured. But, that uh we'll discuss later.
Jeremiah Weal: But, are you going to draw it?
Chester Young: What?
Jeremiah Weal: The
Chester Young: You
Jeremy Hodges: Th
Chester Young: want Jeremiah Weal to draw
Jeremy Hodges: th
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Chester Young: in
Jeremy Hodges: yeah.
Chester Young: three-D_?
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Uh, I c I can't imagine.
Chester Young: Uh,
Jeremiah Weal: I can't imagine
Chester Young: yeah, I ca
Jeremiah Weal: how
Chester Young: I
Jeremiah Weal: how
Chester Young: ca
Jeremiah Weal: how
Chester Young: I could
Jeremiah Weal: it
Chester Young: I
Jeremiah Weal: looks
Chester Young: could show
Jeremiah Weal: like.
Chester Young: you. I could show you. Well uh let's say y uh you uh
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Chester Young: Let's say that's your standard uh
Jeremiah Weal: Design.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Chester Young: That's a bit your d standard design.
Jeremiah Weal: Mm-hmm.
Chester Young: could actually go like uh something like this. And then uh in three-D_ effect you could go
Jeremy Hodges: Um
Jeremiah Weal: Uh
Chester Young: So y you you just Yeah, this is a this bit uh difficulty in I didn't take a major in art. So But but you could have uh uh a whole new uh the back
Jeremiah Weal: Oh,
Chester Young: back
Jeremiah Weal: okay.
Chester Young: the the the depth, you could you could uh just
Jeremiah Weal: Okay.
Chester Young: play around a bit with. You you don't have to use standard uh
Jeremiah Weal: Oh, okay.
Richard Strauss: A little artistic.
Chester Young: Yeah you could y It leaves more space for creativity.
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Jeremiah Weal: Okay.
Chester Young: Uh that might be an idea, but just a Well, furthermore, uh well, uh plastic versus rubber? You We could choose uh what uh what's better, plastic um or rubber. I I ch prefer rubber because it feels uh Yeah.
Richard Strauss: It's soft.
Chester Young: Yeah, it's soft and it's that
Richard Strauss: That's
Chester Young: I like
Richard Strauss: the material
Chester Young: soft.
Richard Strauss: the younger people want uh,
Chester Young: Yeah,
Richard Strauss: ain't
Chester Young: yeah
Richard Strauss: it?
Chester Young: I mean uh plastic uh is Plastic also has that cheap feeling to it, like plastic uh Your your I usually associate plastic with uh something that's cheap. Uh that's maybe just Jeremiah Weal, but Uh, we could uh uh, oh, talk about it later. Uh furthermore, buttons. Uh traditional uh or a touch screen. Well, we discussed it in a previous meeting, so I figured I'll just leave it at the L_C_D_. And uh chip set, well uh if we are going to use traditional buttons, we could go uh with a simple chip set. But uh if we decide to go on a n uh um L_C_D_ screen, we would use an uh we have to use an a advanced chip set. And that would bring uh the necessary costs with with it. So that's something we th have to keep in mind. If it isn't uh manageable uh budget-wise, we'd have to go over to uh to sim to simple buttons.
Jeremiah Weal: Well, I think uh we're going to sell tell ten millions of them. So uh I bet a big company in uh Korea or Taiwan, like uh Samsung,
Chester Young: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: can give us uh a big discount on the chips, so
Chester Young: Yeah, probably.
Jeremiah Weal: U usually, chips are uh aren't more expensive than one dollar.
Chester Young: Yeah, probably, but
Jeremiah Weal: So
Chester Young: But uh yeah, that's
Jeremiah Weal: That that
Chester Young: that's
Jeremiah Weal: shouldn't be a real issue,
Chester Young: That shouldn't
Jeremiah Weal: I think.
Chester Young: shouldn't be uh that big a issue. I'll I'll I'll just add, uh uh I put a big summary here, so we could discuss it a bit. Uh what i what are your ideas concerning battery versus kinetic?
Jeremy Hodges: Um, I think you should use kinetic as a back-up.
Chester Young: Yeah, you you you should we
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, a
Chester Young: should
Jeremiah Weal: combination.
Jeremy Hodges: A combination,
Chester Young: A combination.
Jeremy Hodges: yeah.
Chester Young: Uh, you use the battery and w charge it up with kinetic. When you pick it up, it
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Chester Young: charges up.
Jeremiah Weal: Like an uh aku uh
Chester Young: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Acu uh,
Chester Young: Yeah
Jeremiah Weal: yeah.
Chester Young: yeah, I know.
Jeremy Hodges: Okay. Yeah.
Richard Strauss: Just like the watch
Jeremiah Weal: Well,
Richard Strauss: from Seiko.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Psycho-kinetic.
Chester Young: Yeah, I con Exactly.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Chester Young: What uh what do you think? You agree?
Richard Strauss: I I uh I would prefer uh both uh too.
Chester Young: Yeah? Both?
Jeremiah Weal: Combine
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: them.
Richard Strauss: Combine them.
Chester Young: Okay. Uh, well that would bring the m m some more costs, but I mean the Who cares,
Jeremiah Weal: Okay.
Chester Young: right. That's Richard Strauss's
Jeremy Hodges: Buy
Chester Young: problem.
Jeremy Hodges: a fifty
Jeremiah Weal: Of
Jeremy Hodges: cents
Jeremiah Weal: course.
Jeremy Hodges: battery and uh
Jeremiah Weal: Fifty
Chester Young: Yeah,
Jeremiah Weal: cent.
Chester Young: well Fifty cent uh Uh, why doesn't And then we have single-curved versus double-curved. That
Jeremy Hodges: Well maybe I have something in my presentation to uh to cope with that.
Chester Young: Okay. No, we'll we'll just wait and uh Uh, plastic versus rubber.
Jeremiah Weal: Rubber.
Chester Young: Any ideas?
Richard Strauss: Rubber.
Chester Young: Uh,
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Chester Young: rubber?
Jeremy Hodges: Um,
Chester Young: You
Jeremy Hodges: isn't possible to make combination with kind of rubber is or bendable remotes where you've got a. Or do
Chester Young: Uh,
Jeremy Hodges: you
Chester Young: I
Jeremy Hodges: think
Chester Young: figured
Jeremy Hodges: it
Chester Young: it will be m rather than
Jeremy Hodges: Rubber
Chester Young: hard
Jeremy Hodges: casing,
Jeremiah Weal: Rather
Jeremy Hodges: yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: hard.
Chester Young: Nah, rubber c uh this is a casing, yeah. Rubber casing, because well if you use an uh d a touch-screen, uh it's just a casing uh around it. So um,
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Chester Young: you could go for plastic, but I figured
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Um,
Chester Young: I
Jeremy Hodges: well
Chester Young: I I
Jeremy Hodges: d
Chester Young: would choose rubber.
Jeremy Hodges: Maybe I can ask it right now the question that I have. Uh, is it possible uh of is it necessary to make a touch-screen square? It isn't, I think, yeah?
Chester Young: Well, m I don't know.
Jeremiah Weal: Well,
Chester Young: No.
Jeremiah Weal: I think that touch-screens are generally square.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Chester Young: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: But it's the
Jeremy Hodges: We're
Jeremiah Weal: case you put around it
Chester Young: That
Jeremiah Weal: that
Jeremy Hodges: We put
Chester Young: isn't
Jeremiah Weal: makes
Jeremy Hodges: fashion
Jeremiah Weal: the shape.
Jeremy Hodges: in electronics, so
Jeremiah Weal: Hmm?
Jeremy Hodges: maybe we can uh
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah okay, but if you have a square uh L_C_D_ screen,
Jeremy Hodges: Mm
Jeremiah Weal: and
Jeremy Hodges: yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: you put a case around it that has uh like bulbs or
Jeremy Hodges: Mm-hmm.
Jeremiah Weal: that that covers part of the L_C_D_ screen.
Chester Young: Yeah, that would
Jeremiah Weal: That
Chester Young: cover it. That that would solve
Jeremiah Weal: That's
Chester Young: the problem.
Jeremiah Weal: it's
Jeremy Hodges: Oh,
Jeremiah Weal: custom customisable
Jeremy Hodges: yeah. Okay,
Jeremiah Weal: and
Jeremy Hodges: I
Richard Strauss: Mm yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: I get it.
Chester Young: So mm Uh uh so uh so what are the opinions? Uh rubber or plastic? I I I prefer rubber.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, Jeremiah Weal too.
Richard Strauss: Jeremiah Weal too.
Jeremy Hodges: Okay.
Chester Young: Yeah, you
Richard Strauss: Yeah?
Chester Young: too? You sure? You
Jeremy Hodges: That's good.
Chester Young: you
Jeremy Hodges: Well,
Chester Young: you seemed
Jeremy Hodges: as
Chester Young: to hesitate
Jeremy Hodges: long a
Chester Young: a bit.
Jeremy Hodges: as long as it's it's uh it's firm, and you don't uh
Jeremiah Weal: Mm yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: it's not bendable or something, I th I think that goes too far.
Chester Young: Yeah, it it shouldn't it shouldn't
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Chester Young: flop over when you
Jeremy Hodges: Oh.
Chester Young: hold it in your hand uh No, that that that that's gonna The the chip set will hold it firm in place, and
Jeremy Hodges: Okay.
Chester Young: uh and and uh and a L_C_D_ screen also
Jeremy Hodges: It might even bounce back when you drop it on the floor.
Chester Young: Yeah it m might it might.
Jeremy Hodges: Okay.
Chester Young: Uh, tra uh traditional versus L_C_D_, well I figured we we all set on that. And uh, then also the simple versus advanced. Well I figure if we go for L_ L_C_D_, we we should have the advanced.
Richard Strauss: Mm
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: yeah.
Chester Young: So that shouldn't be a problem. Okay, well that's my uh
Richard Strauss: Thank you.
Chester Young: Uh, you're welcome.
Jeremiah Weal: Can I uh do my thing?
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: It uh
Richard Strauss: Do your thing,
Jeremy Hodges: Do
Richard Strauss: Tim.
Jeremy Hodges: your thing.
Richard Strauss: Bring it on.
Jeremiah Weal: Expert map. Okay uh Last week I went to uh Paris and Milan for some trend-watching. For marketing. Our research and development department and I went to Paris and Milan. In Paris and Milan, we uh asked different people, uh differing in age and in income, uh the amount of money to spend, um what they like in design uh and material nowadays. Findings. Our main audience, uh so that's people below forty, uh prefer the following. At first, the colours of fruit. Very basic colours, like Janus explained. Um, fresh colours, uh green, red, uh strawberry red, uh yellow, banana yellow. Um, considering material, um Yeah. They like spongy material,
Jeremy Hodges: Spongeball.
Jeremiah Weal: like yeah a sponge-ball. Like a s soft material. Janus
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: m uh mentioned it also. I think he did some uh some findings himself.
Chester Young: Well,
Jeremiah Weal: You
Chester Young: the Teletubbies
Jeremiah Weal: wer
Chester Young: sh
Jeremiah Weal: you weren't in Paris? Okay. Like this. Like big uh
Richard Strauss: Flashy.
Jeremiah Weal: g flashy colours.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Fresh. It's nice, I think. Okay, our secondary audience, uh people above forty a forty years in age, they like the dark traditional colours. Uh Yeah, uh materials like wood
Richard Strauss: Yeah,
Jeremiah Weal: that
Richard Strauss: but wood is not a not a material you which you build a a remote control of.
Chester Young: Well, you could.
Jeremiah Weal: No
Chester Young: You
Jeremiah Weal: n
Chester Young: you
Jeremiah Weal: j
Chester Young: could.
Jeremiah Weal: just
Richard Strauss: Yeah
Jeremiah Weal: j
Richard Strauss: but
Jeremiah Weal: just a w
Richard Strauss: never seen
Chester Young: Well uh
Richard Strauss: one.
Jeremy Hodges: It'll float.
Jeremiah Weal: No, okay, but just just a wooden uh
Richard Strauss: Case.
Jeremiah Weal: look.
Richard Strauss: Oh, a wooden
Chester Young: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: look, yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Like uh you have those fake uh
Jeremy Hodges: Tables.
Jeremiah Weal: fake panels on the floor. The that isn't wood anyway, but
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Jeremiah Weal: Okay? But, that's our secondary audience.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: So, uh we decided to take mm yeah the people below forty.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: So, that this doesn't apply. 'Kay, the third. Uh, there're some overall thoughts about new remote controls. They have to look fancy. Um, they should be technological in innovative. That means uh there have to be fancy things in. Uh, and easy to use. But that's common. My personal preferences. We have to aim at a mu at the main audience. And uh, therefore use fresh colours.
Richard Strauss: Would you prefer uh uh that you can choose the colour of your uh remote control
Jeremiah Weal: Uh,
Richard Strauss: or
Jeremiah Weal: I'll I'll come to that in a second
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Jeremiah Weal: point. Here, think about removable covers, as seen
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Jeremiah Weal: in mobile telephon telephone market. To customise your own remote control. Like the Nokia uh the
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: removable covers, uh just put a red
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Jeremiah Weal: on it and go to the shop and buy a green one. Uh, a third, material being used uh could well be stuff like rubber. Um, two advantages. Uh, it fits within the current market trends. And uh it adds safety to your remote uh when you drop it. So Uh to come back to your question, I think uh and the people in Milan and Paris also think that uh the rubber should be pretty hard. Like uh seen on regular mobile phones. Actually, they have a lot in common. The phones and the
Chester Young: Well, I actually saw a phone that you could use as a remote, so
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Ah.
Chester Young: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: Maybe
Jeremiah Weal: Okay.
Richard Strauss: you could use your remote as a phone.
Chester Young: Hey.
Jeremy Hodges: Hey.
Chester Young: That
Richard Strauss: There
Chester Young: might
Richard Strauss: are numbers
Chester Young: be a next
Richard Strauss: on
Chester Young: step.
Richard Strauss: it, so uh
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, exactly. Uh, in my second sheet of personal preferences, uh we have to reconsider the speech function uh recognition. Uh, it's very innovative. Innovative.
Richard Strauss: So that you say um S_P_S_S_, and it goes to
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah,
Richard Strauss: uh
Jeremiah Weal: like something.
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Jeremiah Weal: speech recognition and stuff. But, we have to keep the cost in uh in mind, but
Jeremy Hodges: Twelve
Jeremiah Weal: it
Jeremy Hodges: fifty uh
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, it it can be uh very expensive. 'Kay, second. Uh, building games like Snake or Tetris to amuse the younger users. Uh, also the link with uh mobile phones.
Richard Strauss: Yeah, but
Jeremiah Weal: Uh
Richard Strauss: you don't use that th games when you watching television,
Jeremiah Weal: No,
Richard Strauss: I think.
Jeremiah Weal: but
Chester Young: Well,
Jeremiah Weal: No,
Chester Young: yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: okay. But you don't use games when you're d when you're making a telephone call. It's just the same.
Jeremy Hodges: When your parents are watching some boring program, you can take the remote and do something else.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: Yeah, okay.
Jeremiah Weal: When you're at college.
Chester Young: You take
Jeremiah Weal: Uh
Richard Strauss: You
Chester Young: your
Richard Strauss: take
Chester Young: uh
Richard Strauss: your remote
Jeremy Hodges: Take
Chester Young: remote
Richard Strauss: control
Chester Young: with
Jeremiah Weal: No.
Chester Young: you to school.
Richard Strauss: with you.
Jeremiah Weal: You al you also take
Jeremy Hodges: it.
Jeremiah Weal: uh t you take your IPac and go uh play games. Yeah.
Chester Young: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah. Well, I do that, but Okay, and um And third, I stick with it, the log-in functionality uh with the slogan, take parental control to a new dimension.
Jeremy Hodges: Ooh.
Chester Young: Very
Jeremiah Weal: That's
Jeremy Hodges: S
Chester Young: nice.
Jeremiah Weal: it.
Richard Strauss: Uh great.
Jeremy Hodges: Mm-hmm.
Jeremy Hodges: In Okay. Um the interface contents. Well that's a just simple PowerPoint mock-up I want to m make it more as dynamic for you so I'll draw there. But, the main concept is um take one big touch screen. Um, always display the primary buttons clear and visible. Maybe even li like this with uh u uses of a lot of space. And uh make the menu structure changeable. So if you press um system, that's Yeah, well m multiple system options can, maybe five or ten or or one, can fit in. Or maybe even a step further when you want to um t um have some other options that are not programmable with one horizontal button. And um other buttons can may be displayed here if that's necessary. And um well, how do uh do we want to look at uh uh f um Yeah Does a remote look Well, it's you've gotta hold it in one hand. So um the middle like all remotes have to be in a little bit small, so you can put it in inside your hands. And some remotes you can use with your thumb. But I think that's too difficult for this one. So you can make it s a little broader. Yeah. And here? And maybe use your thumb on the on the main buttons. And use your other hands on the menu structure. So here are gonna be the program buttons. One, two, three, four, et cetera. And the the volume control and program control maybe. And, down here, um, I added, this could be one uh big L_C_D_. Um, the menu structure. So you can use it in uh in this way. Um One thing you've gotta keep in mind, keep the remote clear of too much functions at the same time. Um, know that if you are changing the menu structure here, um And well, I still believe you should keep displaying the buttons. But if you're programming the colour of the T_V_, do not display twenty other options that are possible. Just keep it as simple as uh as possible. And do not use too many levels. Do not have to select a screen first and then brightness and then colour and un-plus, and um push plus twenty times. But just the um uh just in one button if possible. And um, well, you kn you all know the T_V_ levels. Um, channel one, two. And when you get to n to uh to ten, ye and want to go back, uh well you have a problem. Just m most most modern T_V_s, you you press one zero, and it goes to ten. And else, to one and through after that. So the s a button less. And um, things like teletext, put them in the menu. Things like um um Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah. Uh, what do you think about a back-and-forth come-up uh button?
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah, yeah
Jeremiah Weal: L
Jeremy Hodges: w
Jeremiah Weal: like in uh internet
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah,
Jeremiah Weal: explorer.
Jeremy Hodges: I I find I must trying to uh tell it. And this is program uh plus and minus. Uh
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah okay, but does it that is for uh going from four to five.
Jeremy Hodges: Yes.
Jeremiah Weal: But if you go from two to
Jeremy Hodges: Or
Jeremiah Weal: eight,
Jeremy Hodges: if you're watching
Jeremiah Weal: and you want
Jeremy Hodges: Studio Sports on uh on seventeen,
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah,
Jeremy Hodges: and
Jeremiah Weal: and on
Jeremy Hodges: your
Jeremiah Weal: two.
Jeremy Hodges: wife is watching
Jeremiah Weal: That you
Jeremy Hodges: some
Jeremiah Weal: can switch
Jeremy Hodges: soap on
Jeremiah Weal: switch
Jeremy Hodges: two
Jeremiah Weal: easy.
Jeremy Hodges: Well yes, I think that's a good idea. But um, well m my preference
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah it
Jeremy Hodges: would
Jeremiah Weal: is.
Jeremy Hodges: to be put it in the menu structure.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: And if you're using that button a lot of times, well of course the menu will still be displayed on the screen. You just don't have to play games uh in-between. But if you're really switching between two channels, you won't have time uh
Jeremiah Weal: Mm
Jeremy Hodges: to
Jeremiah Weal: no.
Jeremy Hodges: d use the other options. Um, yeah already already told that.
Jeremiah Weal: That's
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: it.
Jeremy Hodges: That's my conclusion.
Jeremiah Weal: Okay.
Richard Strauss: Oh, okay. Uh I think we can discuss a little about the the three uh kind of revolutionary things uh Tim uh came with. The parental control, the games, and the voice recognition. Uh There's n not uh too much decision on uh that one so uh I think that parental control is a good function to uh to put in the remote. I don't know how you think
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: about it.
Jeremy Hodges: Well, I agree, just put it in the menu structure somewhere.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Um, yeah um system
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah but
Jeremy Hodges: properties, um parental control.
Jeremiah Weal: What I see uh How I see it is you put it on the the remote
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: and then you have like a Windows log-on screen with parents, children.
Jeremy Hodges: Mm.
Jeremiah Weal: Something
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: like that.
Jeremy Hodges: Um,
Jeremiah Weal: And w
Jeremy Hodges: w
Jeremiah Weal: when you want
Jeremy Hodges: well,
Jeremiah Weal: to use
Jeremy Hodges: yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: the parents uh option,
Jeremy Hodges: It it
Jeremiah Weal: you
Jeremy Hodges: has
Jeremiah Weal: have to
Jeremy Hodges: to be fast. You don't want to to go down and watch the news at eight o'clock and turn it on and wait twenty seconds for for uh the log-on screen and then remember your code and all kinds
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah,
Jeremy Hodges: of settings.
Jeremiah Weal: ok
Richard Strauss: No but I think most people uh find it uh much more important that their children don't watch uh sex or violence uh
Jeremy Hodges: Mm-hmm.
Richard Strauss: on the television, and uh wait
Jeremy Hodges: Why
Richard Strauss: uh ten or fifteen seconds
Jeremy Hodges: Mm-hmm.
Richard Strauss: longer, so they can uh finally watch it uh because
Jeremy Hodges: You c
Richard Strauss: of
Jeremy Hodges: may
Richard Strauss: that.
Jeremy Hodges: use
Richard Strauss: Uh
Jeremy Hodges: like when there's uh X_P_, uh a
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: simple log-on, d
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: you just
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: push uh one
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: or two
Jeremiah Weal: Pu
Jeremy Hodges: or
Jeremiah Weal: push
Jeremy Hodges: three.
Jeremiah Weal: parents.
Jeremy Hodges: And if
Jeremiah Weal: That
Jeremy Hodges: you push
Jeremiah Weal: then
Jeremy Hodges: parents,
Jeremiah Weal: then
Jeremy Hodges: then
Jeremiah Weal: then
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: you have to uh
Jeremy Hodges: To log in.
Jeremiah Weal: go to three-digit
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: uh
Jeremy Hodges: And if you
Jeremiah Weal: log-in.
Jeremy Hodges: puts a
Jeremiah Weal: Like
Jeremy Hodges: ye
Jeremiah Weal: two one three.
Jeremy Hodges: Uh-huh.
Jeremiah Weal: And it's in.
Jeremy Hodges: And
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: if you w you push p children, uh you don't have to uh
Jeremiah Weal: It automatically
Jeremy Hodges: log in, but
Jeremiah Weal: goes
Jeremy Hodges: you can only
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: watch uh children's channels or uh
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Okay. Well
Chester Young: I don't know if it's worth uh the time and effort we are going to spend on it. Because well it's a simple function, but it's gonna take a lot of resources and a lot of time um to programming it. Because you'll have to start working with the profiles and such.
Jeremiah Weal: Mm-hmm.
Chester Young: And I'm not sure if it's actually worth uh investing that much time and effort into it. I don't
Richard Strauss: Well
Chester Young: know
Richard Strauss: I
Chester Young: what
Richard Strauss: think that's a b there's a big market for it, because uh you
Jeremiah Weal: Mm yeah.
Richard Strauss: Yeah, you read many times in magazines same kind of stuff, and you heard on the news that uh that he Yeah,
Jeremiah Weal: V violent
Richard Strauss: they
Jeremiah Weal: T_V_.
Richard Strauss: believe that children uh are influenced by the television, and uh Well, we're we're aiming uh to uh below uh forty uh years. But there are a lot of uh people will below forty who have uh children
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: in young age uh who who want um to uh not watch uh violent or uh
Jeremy Hodges: Well, maybe um some idea on that.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Just make through a remote as it is,
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: but make an option to insert profiles, 'cause if my
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, of
Jeremy Hodges: grandad
Jeremiah Weal: course.
Jeremy Hodges: would buy this remote, he wouldn't want to bother with all all the all the
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: uh things to do. Just make it an option in menu, ins install powerful profiles or something.
Richard Strauss: Yeah yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: That's a that's a better idea?
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, w It just has to be w when it's deliver out of the store,
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: it has to be just simple and plain. But
Richard Strauss: Yeah, okay.
Jeremiah Weal: if you want to install it personally uh If I got kids, and I could choose between uh two remote controls. One
Richard Strauss: Yeah, with
Jeremiah Weal: uh
Richard Strauss: and one without.
Jeremiah Weal: w with parent control and one without, and I would would buy the one with.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Um, b
Jeremiah Weal: I
Jeremy Hodges: well,
Jeremiah Weal: th
Jeremy Hodges: still
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: some question I have about how to incorporate those ones. You're thinking about some channels they uh cannot see, but well, I I when I think, oh yeah, for the f for all the standard channels, and only for maybe after ten o'clock uh in the evening violent films and movies uh will come and uh maybe maybe some some timing uh will be uh needed
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: instead of uh of channels, because if you're watching uh, I don't know, you're in the at day uh, cartoons will come up m on maybe Friday night. I don't know.
Richard Strauss: Yeah, maybe it can work with show view. Uh, you you can control your video recorder with show view. Uh, when you tick in a number, it will uh start and end uh recording. But maybe there's some option that uh that t uh the kind of show view numbers are violent, and that they are blocked out.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah, the disadvantage vantage is that someone will has to send all the show-view numbers of the programs that
Richard Strauss: That's
Jeremy Hodges: they
Richard Strauss: true.
Jeremy Hodges: remotes
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: and edit it all, will have
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah
Jeremy Hodges: to
Jeremiah Weal: but
Jeremy Hodges: decide
Jeremiah Weal: yeah
Jeremy Hodges: uh
Jeremiah Weal: but that isn't possible.
Jeremy Hodges: That isn't possible.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Chester Young: But, well, if you want to I i i if we in incorporate uh the parental control, uh let's say we do, and and well whatever, cho uh child just goes up to the T_V_ and presses up for instance.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Chester Young: Well uh, nob nobody's stopping the child from uh well checking uh the channel.
Jeremiah Weal: Hmm.
Jeremy Hodges: Well,
Chester Young: But that
Jeremy Hodges: yeah you could say if parental control is only it it'll go from fourteen to sixteen with the page-up then, but
Chester Young: Well, I'm not sure because um for that
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Chester Young: to happen, you d you will have to receive a signal from the uh remote control, so it would, yeah, have to be constant uh constant signalling.
Jeremy Hodges: Mm-hmm.
Chester Young: What m what may be better is to incorporate an uh a separate device that uh that you can program with the remote control. And that uh provides parental control, for instance. And that's just an optional uh device. So there's n that's there's uh besides uh the remote control, you'll have a separate uh
Richard Strauss: I wouldn't put it in an optional device. That that then then then it becomes too much, I think.
Chester Young: Yeah?
Richard Strauss: If we do it, we
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah,
Richard Strauss: we
Jeremiah Weal: and
Richard Strauss: must do it in a kind of ways that like a profile, a parent profile, and a family
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah,
Richard Strauss: profile,
Jeremy Hodges: on a separate
Richard Strauss: and otherwise.
Jeremy Hodges: menu uh option.
Jeremiah Weal: And and you know w uh when you install another device, uh children can still go up to the T_V_, p pop open uh the thing
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: and and and g
Chester Young: Yeah,
Jeremiah Weal: go
Chester Young: that's
Jeremiah Weal: to a
Chester Young: true.
Jeremiah Weal: channel.
Chester Young: That's true, but uh at same instant, same happens when uh you have remote control.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, yeah of course.
Chester Young: So
Jeremiah Weal: But
Chester Young: But, only difference is uh the uh the people buying the remote control will now get the f added feature of parental control, and those
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Chester Young: people wouldn't uh necessary want it.
Jeremiah Weal: Ah it's Yeah.
Chester Young: So, you
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, okay.
Chester Young: you'd
Jeremiah Weal: But it's
Chester Young: be
Jeremiah Weal: just an an added feature
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Chester Young: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: feature.
Richard Strauss: Okay. And what do you uh guys think of the games in the voice recognition? I personally think that that becomes too much.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah, well yeah, I
Richard Strauss: It's more like it gets you to the functionality,
Jeremy Hodges: A mail
Richard Strauss: but
Jeremy Hodges: too from management that it's very popular to use voice recon recognition.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: But I don't think when you're watching T_V_ uh, hearing loud noises from
Jeremiah Weal: Mm yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: the T_V_,
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: someone screaming one, and you f the channel switches, uh Yeah.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, like f voice recognition is too much, I think.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: But
Richard Strauss: Okay. And games?
Jeremiah Weal: games. It doesn't
Chester Young: Yeah. I can
Jeremy Hodges: W
Chester Young: see games
Jeremy Hodges: you
Chester Young: happening.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: can put it on chip anyway, so
Chester Young: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: uh
Jeremiah Weal: That that
Richard Strauss: That
Jeremiah Weal: doesn't
Richard Strauss: would
Jeremiah Weal: c
Jeremy Hodges: As
Jeremiah Weal: that doesn't
Jeremy Hodges: long as
Jeremiah Weal: co
Jeremy Hodges: it's isn't a primary feature of the remote, but
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah,
Jeremy Hodges: uh
Jeremiah Weal: that that doesn't cost a lot of
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Jeremiah Weal: extra resources,
Richard Strauss: So
Jeremiah Weal: I
Richard Strauss: that
Jeremiah Weal: think.
Richard Strauss: will uh that that that must be in it, you think?
Chester Young: Yeah, that will be nice.
Richard Strauss: Okay. So the games uh are in it. The voice recognition are not. And the parental control are
Jeremy Hodges: Optional
Richard Strauss: optional?
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, it's
Jeremy Hodges: in
Jeremiah Weal: it's in it. But
Jeremy Hodges: But
Jeremiah Weal: too ma
Jeremy Hodges: how we do it?
Jeremiah Weal: I I think so, but
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Well, I think also it's a good idea, buts very difficult to incorporate. So we should make it too complex. Is
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Jeremy Hodges: t some menu uh function, you choose parental control, and maybe four files will emerge from menu where put
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: it on. But uh how how it's gonna work uh uh
Richard Strauss: Yeah,
Jeremy Hodges: will f
Richard Strauss: okay.
Jeremy Hodges: be a problem.
Richard Strauss: Uh, but uh will there uh uh Like the first idea uh from uh You can buy it without and uh with parental contr
Jeremy Hodges: Mm-hmm.
Richard Strauss: control? Or are we
Jeremy Hodges: Well
Richard Strauss: going to put it in and uh just
Jeremy Hodges: Ye
Richard Strauss: uh
Jeremy Hodges: I I think best would be uh to put it in and make
Jeremiah Weal: To put
Jeremy Hodges: it an menu option.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah,
Jeremy Hodges: You can
Jeremiah Weal: to
Jeremy Hodges: put
Jeremiah Weal: put
Jeremy Hodges: on
Jeremiah Weal: it in always.
Richard Strauss: Yeah?
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah. And you can just uh s when you buy it, you can select um personal preference, parental control on, and the password or
Richard Strauss: Mm yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: something.
Chester Young: Well, I don't know. I I figure if you had two different remotes, you could bo choose one with uh well uh uh a receiver in it. So you could actually easily uh build in uh parental control. But it would would be uh more expensive. So, a and that that way uh you could make cheap model and a expensive model. Could ma make the uh simple model and the deluxe model, uh for instance.
Jeremy Hodges: Oh, it's a p Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, but T_V_s aren't capable of sending.
Chester Young: Yes they are.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah?
Chester Young: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: I thought they were just
Richard Strauss: Yeah,
Chester Young: Yeah,
Richard Strauss: you yo
Chester Young: you you
Jeremiah Weal: a
Chester Young: have
Jeremiah Weal: able
Chester Young: some
Jeremiah Weal: to
Chester Young: T_V_s
Jeremiah Weal: receive.
Chester Young: any
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, some.
Richard Strauss: Yeah,
Jeremiah Weal: But
Richard Strauss: but most often
Chester Young: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: not.
Chester Young: That is true, that is true.
Jeremy Hodges: Well, maybe you just have to restrict it to what programs, where the parent says, you cannot watch channel seven, nine, and ten,
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: and you cannot watch all channels after ten o'clock. And there's just some little uh clock in
Chester Young: Well
Jeremy Hodges: the
Chester Young: yeah,
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah,
Jeremy Hodges: remote.
Chester Young: you could
Jeremiah Weal: j
Chester Young: you could easily
Jeremiah Weal: just some rules.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Chester Young: you could easily you could easily to the mote control. But you still have the problem about uh the television itself.
Jeremy Hodges: No, no, it's very simple. There uh th I h I've seen some of remotes who have a clock in it.
Chester Young: Yeah, yeah yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: So, the remote does doesn't transmit when it's after
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, okay.
Jeremy Hodges: twelve
Jeremiah Weal: But,
Jeremy Hodges: clock.
Jeremiah Weal: on the T_V_
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah?
Jeremiah Weal: at least my T_V_, is a is a compartment which you can press.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: And
Chester Young: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: there are buttons uh behind
Chester Young: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: it
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: which you can use, if
Jeremy Hodges: Well,
Jeremiah Weal: you d if
Jeremy Hodges: that's
Jeremiah Weal: you don't if you don't have a
Jeremy Hodges: To put it very blunt, that's not our problem. Just have um the parents buy uh some
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: glue and uh
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: It's not not a part of the remote.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, of course.
Chester Young: Yeah, that is true. Yeah, that is true.
Jeremy Hodges: You have to f
Chester Young: Yeah,
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Chester Young: you could you
Jeremy Hodges: Uh,
Chester Young: could you
Jeremy Hodges: or
Chester Young: could go
Jeremy Hodges: make
Chester Young: like
Jeremy Hodges: it ourselves
Chester Young: uh that
Jeremy Hodges: very
Chester Young: that would
Jeremy Hodges: diffic
Chester Young: actually make uh things a lot more easy. You
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Chester Young: could just blame it on television and
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Chester Young: uh make it their problem.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Chester Young: Yeah, I figured I figure we could do that. Yeah,
Jeremy Hodges: Okay.
Chester Young: yeah, sure.
Jeremiah Weal: Or
Chester Young: Uh,
Jeremiah Weal: j
Chester Young: I'm
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Chester Young: not sure what marketing thinks about it, but
Jeremiah Weal: Ah I have to uh consult my legal advisor about it.
Richard Strauss: Okay. So uh I think we have decided on the things that Uh from Janus, the energy, the combination between battery and kinetic. The case will be double-curved and uh rubber, in a fr flashy fruity colour uh that with cover is removable. The buttons will be uh touch-screen. Uh but there may not be too many buttons. And in the the menu structure, uh there must not to be uh Five minutes to go. Uh, too uh too many levels. And uh it must be easy to use. The parental control will be incorporated, but it must be not too complex. And the games are in it. So
Jeremy Hodges: Okay.
Richard Strauss: I think we have uh we
Jeremiah Weal: Consensus.
Richard Strauss: have decided uh, okay. Uh, little more.
Jeremiah Weal: Oh. Oh.
Jeremy Hodges: Oh.
Jeremiah Weal: I I have one thing left.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Maybe for uh Jerome.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah? I'm listening.
Jeremiah Weal: Um, the views. Maybe it's uh handy to build in an expert view and a simple view.
Richard Strauss: Like a like a moat or s or something.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Um,
Jeremiah Weal: Like at
Chester Young: User
Jeremiah Weal: In
Jeremy Hodges: well
Chester Young: profile.
Jeremiah Weal: the experts view, you have
Richard Strauss: Yeah,
Jeremiah Weal: a lot
Richard Strauss: but
Jeremiah Weal: of
Richard Strauss: you
Jeremiah Weal: more
Richard Strauss: have that
Jeremiah Weal: buttons.
Jeremy Hodges: What
Richard Strauss: in
Jeremy Hodges: I
Richard Strauss: the
Jeremy Hodges: was thinking about is just a menu structure, when you don't use it is simple.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: And
Richard Strauss: You
Jeremy Hodges: when
Richard Strauss: use
Jeremy Hodges: you push
Richard Strauss: the
Jeremy Hodges: uh system properties, uh entire list pops up with e ev all kind of f stuff you can program.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: Mm yeah, okay.
Richard Strauss: It's
Jeremiah Weal: Fairly
Richard Strauss: already
Jeremiah Weal: enough.
Richard Strauss: incorporated
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: a little in
Chester Young: Well
Richard Strauss: that
Chester Young: yeah, you
Richard Strauss: concept.
Chester Young: you could actually build in a function that you can program it yourself, for the more advanced users.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, wh which buttons you
Chester Young: Yeah,
Jeremiah Weal: like
Chester Young: which
Jeremiah Weal: or not.
Chester Young: buttons do you want to in it. Because you can
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Chester Young: you can like build in a back-forward button, and uh some po somebody would just want to watch two channels.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah. Just leave the other numbers away.
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Chester Young: Yeah, you could you could m have people want uh
Richard Strauss: We
Chester Young: want
Richard Strauss: take
Chester Young: that.
Richard Strauss: it to the other meeting, okay?
Jeremiah Weal: Okay.
Richard Strauss: I have a little
Jeremiah Weal: Go on.
Richard Strauss: w uh little
Chester Young: Ah, yeah,
Richard Strauss: chat
Chester Young: sure.
Richard Strauss: to do and uh then we uh
Jeremiah Weal: A
Richard Strauss: finish.
Jeremiah Weal: little
Richard Strauss: I went
Jeremiah Weal: chat.
Richard Strauss: to uh a master class and uh uh two things uh are uh are uh can come in handy uh for us. First thing uh is uh we talked about knowledge uh management. Knowledge engineering and uh uh the fact that uh that uh that the idea of knowledge, uh sharing and learning knowledge from other companies is uh like that. It's it's uh very hot at the moment, so it's it's mostly for the management expert to to look what other
Jeremiah Weal: Marketing.
Richard Strauss: uh marketing or did I said management?
Jeremiah Weal: Management.
Richard Strauss: Oh. Just talking about
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah,
Richard Strauss: myself.
Jeremiah Weal: that's my function,
Richard Strauss: Uh
Jeremiah Weal: to
Richard Strauss: W
Jeremiah Weal: Okay. Go on.
Richard Strauss: What other companies uh had to uh also with the the the the marketing campaign when they put on a newer remote, just some uh Yeah. Import export. And uh
Jeremy Hodges: Som
Richard Strauss: another
Jeremy Hodges: some
Richard Strauss: one.
Jeremy Hodges: bench-marker.
Richard Strauss: Uh, they're a ha they're at Yeah, benchmarking, that's the word I saw. I uh couldn't uh Okay, uh another uh thing is uh there were there there was a survey, and um uh it came out that um people like to buy things from a single large provider, instead of those who uh are partnering uh with us. So, we must uh we must bring it as if uh Real Reaction is uh is big company, uh a trustful company, and uh
Jeremiah Weal: How
Richard Strauss: it has m
Jeremiah Weal: I know a marketing name for our product.
Richard Strauss: Okay.
Jeremiah Weal: R_ th R_ to the third power. R_ three. Real Reaction remote.
Richard Strauss: I had a
Jeremy Hodges: Oh.
Richard Strauss: I had another idea to put uh uh the whole the whole idea of uh Real Reaction and uh uh uh
Jeremiah Weal: Mm-hmm?
Richard Strauss: a single brand and uh uh that kind of thing. When you uh put on remote, you see a kind of a just like when you telephone, you see a little
Jeremy Hodges: Uh,
Richard Strauss: uh animation.
Jeremy Hodges: logo.
Jeremiah Weal: Bling.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah?
Richard Strauss: Real Reaction remote.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: And uh with the with the with the motto, we put fashion in electronics. And
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: then you go uh
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah, okay, but it has to be like a split
Richard Strauss: The
Jeremiah Weal: second, because
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Jeremiah Weal: you have to put in a
Jeremy Hodges: Well,
Jeremiah Weal: code also and
Jeremy Hodges: you can show somebody a logo for point five seconds, they'll still remember it.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: Yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: And it it l
Richard Strauss: But
Jeremy Hodges: linger
Richard Strauss: w
Jeremy Hodges: on every time you see
Richard Strauss: th
Jeremy Hodges: it.
Richard Strauss: the idea from this uh thing is that we must present it as a as we are a a single large provider who will stand on our own.
Chester Young: Well, if you if you have the l L_C_D_ screen, you can you can uh have a small logo i uh at the
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Chester Young: bottom. And it could just stay
Jeremiah Weal: That
Chester Young: there.
Jeremiah Weal: spins
Richard Strauss: Mm
Jeremiah Weal: around
Richard Strauss: yep,
Chester Young: Yeah, that
Richard Strauss: yeah.
Chester Young: spins
Jeremiah Weal: like
Chester Young: around
Jeremiah Weal: all
Chester Young: or
Jeremiah Weal: the
Chester Young: something.
Jeremiah Weal: time.
Jeremy Hodges: Very annoying.
Richard Strauss: Also also.
Chester Young: Hmm.
Richard Strauss: But we we are uh
Jeremiah Weal: It it's just like a uh globe in Internet
Richard Strauss: Yeah
Jeremiah Weal: Explorer.
Richard Strauss: yeah y yeah
Chester Young: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: yeah.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Chester Young: Yeah, something
Richard Strauss: Okay,
Chester Young: like that.
Richard Strauss: but
Chester Young: A
Richard Strauss: uh
Chester Young: small icon.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah,
Richard Strauss: think about
Jeremy Hodges: I
Richard Strauss: that kind
Jeremy Hodges: It's
Richard Strauss: of
Jeremy Hodges: ok
Richard Strauss: things.
Jeremy Hodges: For
Richard Strauss: That's
Jeremiah Weal: Okay.
Richard Strauss: what they said
Jeremy Hodges: f
Richard Strauss: in the master class.
Jeremy Hodges: Oh, for the next meeting, right?
Richard Strauss: N Uh,
Jeremiah Weal: Who uh
Richard Strauss: next meeting starts in thirty minutes. So uh maybe you can go to Paris and Milan uh
Jeremiah Weal: Who
Richard Strauss: once again.
Jeremiah Weal: who gave you the master class?
Richard Strauss: The master class?
Jeremiah Weal: Ronald Betenberg?
Richard Strauss: Franz Mehler's.
Jeremiah Weal: Okay, thanks.
Richard Strauss: Uh, very special, uh next uh session. Uh idea that you uh the the industrial uh development uh centre and uh user interface uh will work together on a prototype. And uh will drawing it on the SMARTboard. So that's a kinda new uh thing.
Jeremiah Weal: Ah.
Richard Strauss: And um, Jeremiah Weal will uh will uh ke he will be keeping busy with the product uh evaluation. But the most uh specific instructions will be sent to you by email.
Jeremy Hodges: Um
Chester Young: So we're going to work together
Jeremy Hodges: Stay here
Chester Young: right
Jeremy Hodges: and
Chester Young: now?
Richard Strauss: Yeah, the well, uh dids this what I uh what I heard. I
Jeremiah Weal: In the master class.
Richard Strauss: Not in the master class.
Jeremiah Weal: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: So you uh just wait for the specific instructions and uh
Jeremy Hodges: P_.
Richard Strauss: But I think it was a very uh very good uh session, uh gentlemen.
Jeremy Hodges: Ah,
Chester Young: Definitely.
Jeremy Hodges: no new
Jeremiah Weal: Jeremiah Weal
Jeremy Hodges: email.
Jeremiah Weal: too.
Richard Strauss: I will
Jeremy Hodges: Okay.
Richard Strauss: thank you all.
Chester Young: Well thank you too.
Jeremy Hodges: Thank you. Thank
Richard Strauss: And
Jeremy Hodges: you
Richard Strauss: uh
Jeremy Hodges: very much.
Jeremiah Weal: Thank you too,
Richard Strauss: Give Jeremiah Weal
Jeremiah Weal: lord.
Richard Strauss: a good evaluation.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah. Uh-huh.
Jeremiah Weal: 'Kay guys,
Chester Young: You wish.
Jeremiah Weal: lot of success.
Chester Young: M
Jeremy Hodges: See you.
Chester Young: Aye? Cheers.
Richard Strauss: Cheers. See you in a half hour.
Chester Young: Hey.
Richard Strauss: But keep an eye on your uh
Chester Young: Yeah, uh
Richard Strauss: laptops
Chester Young: I'm not sure
Richard Strauss: for
Chester Young: if
Richard Strauss: a
Chester Young: we
Richard Strauss: real
Chester Young: uh we
Richard Strauss: uh
Chester Young: Because I saw something about individual actions.
Richard Strauss: Yeah, but th there's there's still the my uh instructions that you will work together.
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah. Here? Or uh
Richard Strauss: That's
Jeremy Hodges: Yeah.
Richard Strauss: not my problem.
Jeremy Hodges: If you got
Richard Strauss: Bye-bye.
Jeremy Hodges: a No. So Stupid
Chester Young: Well,
Jeremy Hodges: manager.
Chester Young: yeah.
Richard Strauss: Richard Strauss always works alone.
Chester Young: Right. Uh Do you have new email?
Jeremy Hodges: No. Don't
Chester Young: Hmm.
Jeremy Hodges: get what's | Richard Strauss went over the agenda. Chester Young gave a presentation about the options for power source, materials and components. He recommended using kinetic energy, and having a double-curved rubber case. The group decided to combine batteries and kinetic energy. Jeremiah Weal reported on current trends among young people for fresh fruity colours and spongy material. He explained that the remote should look fancy, and be technologically innovative and easy to use. He suggested using removable customisable covers, speech recognition, installing some games into the remote, and implementing a parental control feature. Jeremy Hodges talked about having a simple layout with not many buttons. Most features will be controlled through the menu. The group discussed the various options and decided to use games but not speech recognition. After a lot of discussion they decided to implement a simple parental control feature. Richard Strauss talked about what he had learned at a masterclass on knowledge management. The group discussed how to incorporate the company logo and motto onto the remote, including having an animated logo on the touch screen. Richard Strauss gave the group instructions about what to do before the next meeting. | 1 | amisum | train |
Merle Thompkins: Hello.
Merle Thompkins: Dang it.
Michael Feliciano: And then you have to place your laptop on the marked spot.
Merle Thompkins: Alright.
Michael Feliciano: It's important to place your laptop exactly on the marked spot over here.
Timothy Judy: Okay.
Timothy Judy: No, that's okay.
Timothy Judy: your mouse.
Merle Thompkins: What?
Timothy Judy: No mouse needed?
Merle Thompkins: I've got a touch-pad. Do you know
Timothy Judy: Mm.
Merle Thompkins: how how I can wake it up?
Timothy Judy: A touch-pad?
Merle Thompkins: No, my laptop.
Timothy Judy: Slap it.
Merle Thompkins: You with your brilliant ideas. I don't know if I can touch the power button. Do you know how how I can wake
Timothy Judy: Is
Merle Thompkins: it up?
Michael Feliciano: No. Yeah. Try the power button.
Merle Thompkins: Oh. Come on, move it.
Timothy Judy: Um
Merle Thompkins: Now, wake up, bitch.
Michael Feliciano: Huh.
Timothy Judy: F_ five. F_ five.
Randall Clark: I've lost my screen. Uh
Merle Thompkins: Yeah, so did I. I closed
Timothy Judy: I don't.
Merle Thompkins: it. That wasn that wasn't very smart, I guess. Get back to Merle Thompkins. Yes.
Randall Clark: I closed the
Merle Thompkins: I closed it.
Timothy Judy: You've got your name.
Michael Feliciano: Yeah, my name is name.
Merle Thompkins: No, I didn't restart it, I just closed it. Yes.
Timothy Judy: Hope it working.
Merle Thompkins: Alright.
Randall Clark: No.
Timothy Judy: Never close your laptop.
Michael Feliciano: Yeah? Everybody's ready?
Merle Thompkins: Great.
Timothy Judy: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: Great.
Merle Thompkins: Thanks.
Michael Feliciano: Well, welcome to the kick-off meeting. I uh forgot to put my name over here, it's uh it's Martin. Uh, so you all know. Well, this is the agenda for today. Well, the opening I'm doing right now. Uh, we gonna do some acquaintance acquaintance things. Uh give some um examples of the tool training, project plan discussion and the closing. We have twenty five minutes. Okay, the project aim is to design a new remote control.
Merle Thompkins: Mm-hmm.
Michael Feliciano: Uh, some of the oje objectives are that is has to be original, trendy, and user-friendly. So
Timothy Judy: Okay.
Michael Feliciano: now we all know what our goal is. Um, I oh forget I forget the whole acquaintance part, but we we all know each other. We all know each other's names. Joost,
Merle Thompkins: Yes.
Timothy Judy: What
Michael Feliciano: Guido,
Timothy Judy: is your
Randall Clark: Yes.
Timothy Judy: name?
Michael Feliciano: Antek.
Randall Clark: Antek.
Timothy Judy: Antek Ahmet.
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Timothy Judy: And
Michael Feliciano: I
Timothy Judy: Joost.
Michael Feliciano: think we uh al already uh
Timothy Judy: Okay.
Michael Feliciano: been through that part.
Timothy Judy: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: Okay, it consists of uh three levels of design. Uh we begin with the functional design, then we go to the conceptual design and the detailed design. Every uh level of design consists of some individual work, and we uh close it with a meeting. You all received an email with a example of our explanation of what uh the particular level of design uh means to the different uh functions, and uh you p you probably read that already,
Merle Thompkins: Yes.
Timothy Judy: Yes.
Michael Feliciano: so I don't have to tell you about that. Okay, first we're gonna um uh gonna try some different things with the tools we have over here, so you get acquainted with these uh um uh meeting tools. We have the smart-boards, uh the thes those two boards. This is the presentation boards, wh which one I'm using right now. You can uh um there's a document folder called um the sh shared document folder. You can upload your uh documents to that folder and then you can open them over here, so you can do your PowerPoint presentations on this screen. We also have the white-board. Uh, we're gonna
Timothy Judy: Can
Michael Feliciano: skip
Timothy Judy: we see the
Michael Feliciano: through
Timothy Judy: white-board
Michael Feliciano: th
Timothy Judy: on our laptops?
Michael Feliciano: No, no. Just on the on the screen over there.
Timothy Judy: that
Michael Feliciano: Oh, no.
Timothy Judy: X_B_K_
Michael Feliciano: Probably is, but I don't
Timothy Judy: but
Michael Feliciano: know if the software is on the laptop. Is is if it's mainly a thing for in the meeting, so I don't
Timothy Judy: Okay.
Michael Feliciano: think it's I don't know if it's important. This an explanation of the smart-boards. There is a tool-bar over here. It's quite simple. You have the the pen function, eraser function. It's like a very simple uh paint application. Uh, we well, we use the same file during uh the whole day, and uh you can make new sheets by uh by pu puttin pressing on the blank button. It works like this. Oh. If pen is selected, yes. Oh, no no.
Timothy Judy: With that pen?
Michael Feliciano: It's not But it is pen. It's not working like a pen yet.
Timothy Judy: Mm.
Michael Feliciano: Huh.
Michael Feliciano: Huh.
Timothy Judy: Mm.
Michael Feliciano: It's doing some stuff now.
Timothy Judy: Little bit
Michael Feliciano: So
Timothy Judy: slower.
Michael Feliciano: you can use a pen. You can use an eraser. And you can make new uh fi uh new blanks, and you can change uh the line width and the colour of the pen by pressing on forward, which y you have to select pen format. And then select current colour or line width. So, it's quite easy. Uh well, now you're all uh acquainted with the different tools. Right, we're gonna try out the electronic white-boards. Uh, every participant should draw his favourite animal and some of its favourite characteristics, on blank sheets with different colours, with different pen widths. Uh, I'll start off then. I'll use this uh same sheet. Alright. Oh, let Merle Thompkins think. Different colours. Oh.
Michael Feliciano: Well, I'm gonna draw um a p piranha. Uh, a fish.
Timothy Judy: piranha. Okay.
Michael Feliciano: Uh.
Michael Feliciano: Mm-hmm.
Timothy Judy: Oh.
Michael Feliciano: I'm gonna use some different colour now. Some a little white. Looks like a fish. Think it is. Oh.
Michael Feliciano: Oh. Uh, colour. This is black? I think so.
Timothy Judy: Yellow
Michael Feliciano: Oh. Oh, this is just uh useless uh drawings but Oh teeth. I need teeth. Well, they're not supposed to be green, or whatever colour this is.
Timothy Judy: Hmm.
Michael Feliciano: Okay. What was uh I have su to sum up
Timothy Judy: Different.
Michael Feliciano: its favourite characteris Well, I like its uh sharp razor sharp teeth. Plus, uh the the big uh forehead and uh a small uh, well a small actual face. And I like its overall uh aggressive look and Well, that's what I like about uh piranha.
Timothy Judy: Okay.
Michael Feliciano: I think that's kind of what uh the intention should be. Well, who wants to be next?
Merle Thompkins: Nobody, I guess.
Timothy Judy: I will
Michael Feliciano: You
Timothy Judy: try.
Michael Feliciano: go, Guido?
Timothy Judy: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Timothy Judy: I will try. Uh
Michael Feliciano: Uh, make a new sheet. Uh, it's by pressing on blank.
Timothy Judy: Blank?
Michael Feliciano: Yep.
Timothy Judy: Okay. Then pen again?
Michael Feliciano: Yep.
Timothy Judy: Okay. Okay, um
Merle Thompkins: Format.
Timothy Judy: control.
Timothy Judy: Uh Ah, purple. Um, I don't know what my uh favourite uh animal is, but the easiest animal I can think is is a bird. Uh I will
Merle Thompkins: You know,
Timothy Judy: That's my bird.
Merle Thompkins: I thought of that actually.
Timothy Judy: Yeah?
Merle Thompkins: Yeah.
Timothy Judy: Isn't it quite it's a little bit light. Uh, another colour maybe. A red one. A small one. Uh, line width. Two? Three. Oh that's okay. That's another one.
Michael Feliciano: Well, tell us something about
Timothy Judy: Ano
Michael Feliciano: uh your favourite characteristics of these uh particular
Timothy Judy: Uh
Michael Feliciano: birds.
Merle Thompkins: Its simplicity.
Timothy Judy: uh it's a Yeah, it's uh the most simple uh animal I know, I think. Um, I don't know. Maybe because uh there's there's some s uh free uh maybe in the sky
Michael Feliciano: Oh, okay.
Timothy Judy: or something like that.
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Timothy Judy: Maybe a little bit. Yeah. I don't know.
Michael Feliciano: Okay. No, uh
Timothy Judy: So
Michael Feliciano: it's clear.
Timothy Judy: more uh birds?
Michael Feliciano: N no no. We get your point.
Timothy Judy: Okay,
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Timothy Judy: okay,
Michael Feliciano: Who wants to be next?
Timothy Judy: okay.
Merle Thompkins: Yeah, whatever. I'll go next. Thanks. I haven't
Timothy Judy: M
Merle Thompkins: got a favourite animal too, so
Timothy Judy: Pictionary.
Merle Thompkins: Oh. What should I draw?
Timothy Judy: A cow.
Michael Feliciano: Oh.
Merle Thompkins: Thank you, I'll draw a penguin.
Timothy Judy: Okay.
Merle Thompkins: Yeah. I'll draw a penguin. Whatever. I can't draw, so you can start to laugh already.
Michael Feliciano: I'll do
Merle Thompkins: Whatever.
Michael Feliciano: so.
Merle Thompkins: Something like that.
Merle Thompkins: Come on.
Timothy Judy: Yeah, it's little bit hard.
Merle Thompkins: Mm hmm hmm, orange.
Timothy Judy: Orange, of course.
Merle Thompkins: Whatever.
Merle Thompkins: Oh, it's better than your bird.
Timothy Judy: Uh yeah.
Merle Thompkins: Everything's better than your bird.
Timothy Judy: Yeah. True.
Merle Thompkins: Whatever. Hey, it's blue. No. Whatever. Um, I like its ugliness and uh Yeah, whatever. The way it walks or whatever.
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Merle Thompkins: Your turn.
Randall Clark: 'Kay.
Merle Thompkins: Drawing.
Randall Clark: I'm going to draw a cat. I don't know why, but a cat is a very uh smart animal. And you can have them at home. Which is not as the case with uh with bingwings and
Michael Feliciano: Well, you can have a piranha at home.
Randall Clark: Ye yes,
Michael Feliciano: Huh.
Randall Clark: yeah.
Merle Thompkins: Or a line.
Timothy Judy: A little
Merle Thompkins: I
Timothy Judy: bit.
Merle Thompkins: mean a bird.
Timothy Judy: Yeah. Don't mess with my birds, yeah.
Merle Thompkins: Hmm. It's a handicapped
Randall Clark: from
Merle Thompkins: cat.
Randall Clark: it.
Timothy Judy: cat.
Michael Feliciano: I don't think uh I don't think uh Darwin would agree with that.
Randall Clark: It's Ah, it's not scared. He's crying but
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Merle Thompkins: He's crying because it's ugl because of his ugliness.
Michael Feliciano: What do you like about it then?
Randall Clark: Uh it's i most cats are small.
Michael Feliciano: Oh, okay.
Randall Clark: You can handle them.
Michael Feliciano: Okay. Okay. Okay,
Timothy Judy: Okay.
Michael Feliciano: and then we are uh through the tool training, I guess.
Merle Thompkins: I wouldn't call it training, but
Michael Feliciano: Okay, this is uh something about the project finance. The selling price of our remote control is gonna be twenty five Euros. And our profit aim is fifteen million Euros. We're very ambitious on this one. The market range is international, so it's gonna be sold world-wide, and the production cost should be a maximum of twelve Euro fifty per remote control. So that's clear. Yeah?
Timothy Judy: Okay.
Merle Thompkins: Alright.
Michael Feliciano: Okay, we're now gonna discuss some stuff when well, we're gonna brainstorm about uh what kind of kemoro romo remote control it's gonna be. Uh, well tell Merle Thompkins about your experiences with the remote controls. Do you have uh know what good experiences with remote controls? Or do they
Randall Clark: Yes.
Michael Feliciano: annoy you sometimes? Are they difficult to understand, or maybe they don't interact with different kind of uh
Timothy Judy: Hmm.
Michael Feliciano: equipment
Merle Thompkins: I don't
Michael Feliciano: very
Merle Thompkins: th
Michael Feliciano: well?
Merle Thompkins: I don't think the four of us got problems with remote controls, but
Michael Feliciano: Yeah,
Merle Thompkins: if
Michael Feliciano: okay.
Merle Thompkins: you see elderly people, all these buttons, and then they buy new
Timothy Judy: Different.
Merle Thompkins: T_V_ because their previous one was stolen or whatever.
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Merle Thompkins: And then a totally different remote control with with different functions on different places, and half of the functions a are removed, or whatever. Uh, so I think what we need is is a clear uh remote control with uh grouped buttons, you know. All th all the buttons which apply to the text functions in in one uh
Michael Feliciano: Different functions
Merle Thompkins: Well,
Michael Feliciano: of
Merle Thompkins: one
Michael Feliciano: of
Merle Thompkins: area or
Michael Feliciano: uh
Merle Thompkins: whatever, not like the button to enter text on top of the remote control and the button to um, yeah, to minimise it to this this or whatever o o
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Merle Thompkins: other functions totally somewhere else. I
Michael Feliciano: Yeah.
Merle Thompkins: think we should group them. And same
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Merle Thompkins: for the for the volume buttons and the
Michael Feliciano: And uh,
Merle Thompkins: the
Michael Feliciano: is
Merle Thompkins: t
Michael Feliciano: it gonna be a remote control that's um what it can be used for different kind of equipment, like your T_V_ and your
Merle Thompkins: Well
Michael Feliciano: home
Merle Thompkins: I was
Michael Feliciano: stereo?
Merle Thompkins: I was
Timothy Judy: Yeah.
Merle Thompkins: thinking
Michael Feliciano: Uh
Merle Thompkins: uh since a T_V_ is uh mostly used together with a V_C_R_ or D_V_D_ player or
Michael Feliciano: Mm-hmm.
Merle Thompkins: recorder, and not with a stereo,
Michael Feliciano: Mm-hmm.
Merle Thompkins: I think it should be good to include functions for V_C_R_s and D_V_D_ players,
Michael Feliciano: But uh,
Merle Thompkins: recorders.
Michael Feliciano: the D_V_D_ players and home cinema sets often
Merle Thompkins: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: double as stereo hi-fi sets probably. It's what, from
Timothy Judy: But
Michael Feliciano: my
Timothy Judy: isn't
Michael Feliciano: experience.
Merle Thompkins: I
Timothy Judy: it
Merle Thompkins: don't know. Hi-fi set is uh
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Merle Thompkins: not often used uh as I know of in combination with television.
Michael Feliciano: But we gonna
Timothy Judy: It's only for television, I thought.
Merle Thompkins: Yes.
Timothy Judy: Not
Michael Feliciano: Oh, it is only for televis
Timothy Judy: I thought it was only for television. So
Merle Thompkins: Yes, it is only for television,
Timothy Judy: so we
Merle Thompkins: but
Timothy Judy: probably
Merle Thompkins: uh
Timothy Judy: don't
Michael Feliciano: So wha
Timothy Judy: have
Michael Feliciano: what
Timothy Judy: to have to uh
Merle Thompkins: Well
Timothy Judy: have
Michael Feliciano: What
Timothy Judy: the functions
Michael Feliciano: wha
Timothy Judy: for D_V_D_ player
Michael Feliciano: what
Merle Thompkins: well
Timothy Judy: or
Michael Feliciano: uh
Merle Thompkins: we we're
Michael Feliciano: what
Merle Thompkins: gonna
Timothy Judy: V_C_R_.
Merle Thompkins: brainstorm
Michael Feliciano: document
Merle Thompkins: about that. If we think it's useful, we do it.
Michael Feliciano: But, where where did it uh Where did you find that?
Timothy Judy: Uh, in the email.
Michael Feliciano: Oh, okay.
Merle Thompkins: That's
Timothy Judy: I thought
Merle Thompkins: right. It's a television
Timothy Judy: it said
Merle Thompkins: remote
Timothy Judy: uh
Merle Thompkins: control. But
Timothy Judy: Yeah,
Randall Clark: Yes,
Timothy Judy: television
Merle Thompkins: I
Timothy Judy: remote
Merle Thompkins: was thinking
Timothy Judy: control.
Merle Thompkins: since it
Michael Feliciano: Yeah,
Merle Thompkins: is
Michael Feliciano: but
Merle Thompkins: useful
Michael Feliciano: most
Merle Thompkins: with
Michael Feliciano: television
Merle Thompkins: D_V_D_
Michael Feliciano: remote controls support other functions as well.
Randall Clark: Yes, that's
Michael Feliciano: So we can
Randall Clark: uh
Michael Feliciano: No,
Timothy Judy: True.
Randall Clark: something
Michael Feliciano: we
Timothy Judy: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: have to
Randall Clark: extras.
Michael Feliciano: think about that.
Timothy Judy: True.
Michael Feliciano: Okay, uh
Merle Thompkins: Yep.
Michael Feliciano: but uh we've gonna put some a uh is is it so user-friendliness, is a is a pri priority in this
Merle Thompkins: Yeah,
Randall Clark: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: case,
Merle Thompkins: also
Timothy Judy: Yeah,
Merle Thompkins: no
Michael Feliciano: or
Merle Thompkins: one's gonna
Timothy Judy: yeah.
Merle Thompkins: buy it.
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Timothy Judy: Yeah.
Merle Thompkins: I guess.
Randall Clark: Only the
Timothy Judy: True.
Randall Clark: experts.
Michael Feliciano: Well,
Merle Thompkins: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: this the maybe is uh some aspect of the uh, or or some point at at which we can excel by making it very useful. That w Well, then you're you're the usability uh man, so this uh gonna be a
Timothy Judy: Oh
Michael Feliciano: very
Timothy Judy: my
Michael Feliciano: important
Timothy Judy: God.
Michael Feliciano: task for you then.
Merle Thompkins: Yeah.
Timothy Judy: Okay.
Michael Feliciano: Okay. Well, other ideas? How can we make it trendy or something? Do uh by
Randall Clark: Uh,
Michael Feliciano: just sh shape
Randall Clark: to go
Michael Feliciano: and the look
Randall Clark: with
Michael Feliciano: of it?
Randall Clark: to go with fashion
Michael Feliciano: Maybe
Randall Clark: and
Michael Feliciano: a can opener underneath it? I don't
Timothy Judy: For the
Michael Feliciano: know.
Timothy Judy: bear.
Michael Feliciano: Or someth something
Timothy Judy: Uh
Michael Feliciano: special, like uh M_P_ three player inside
Timothy Judy: I
Michael Feliciano: of it,
Timothy Judy: I uh, no
Michael Feliciano: or uh
Timothy Judy: I
Michael Feliciano: Oh,
Timothy Judy: think
Michael Feliciano: well
Timothy Judy: it
Michael Feliciano: then the production costs are gonna be too high probably.
Merle Thompkins: Yeah,
Timothy Judy: Uh,
Merle Thompkins: way
Timothy Judy: I
Merle Thompkins: too
Timothy Judy: th
Merle Thompkins: high.
Timothy Judy: I think yo we have to keep it simple, to
Merle Thompkins: Yep.
Timothy Judy: get a whole market. It's international,
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Timothy Judy: so
Michael Feliciano: Maybe with different
Timothy Judy: we have
Michael Feliciano: type
Timothy Judy: to use
Michael Feliciano: of fronts
Timothy Judy: a standard.
Michael Feliciano: or uh Well, m has to be something
Merle Thompkins: Well that's an idea of course, yeah.
Michael Feliciano: spectacular or uh one which makes it We gonna skip back to the goals probably. Uh,
Merle Thompkins: Mm-hmm.
Michael Feliciano: original, trendly, and user-friendly Well, we al also already talked about user-friendliness.
Timothy Judy: Hmm.
Michael Feliciano: No, well something trendy and original, well that that goes hand in hand I guess.
Merle Thompkins: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: When something is original, it tends to be trendy, probably, or we should make it combination of that. 'Kay, so you the um technical part of the process is something you're gonna look after for, so you have to think about what kind of uh equipment you want to uh, you know, you want to manage with it. Well, and that's an important part for you then,
Timothy Judy: Use
Michael Feliciano: with
Timothy Judy: friendly.
Michael Feliciano: gogors regards to the user-friendly
Timothy Judy: Yep.
Michael Feliciano: part of it. Well, and you uh should look out for what makes it trendy. Well, you know, y like some special feature. Or some Does it does it gets
Merle Thompkins: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: some gadgetness or something.
Merle Thompkins: Yes, what the market wishes.
Michael Feliciano: Okay. Well, the closing. Next meeting starts in thirty minutes. Individual, I think so. The Randall Clark will w or the working design, of course, we will uh Already s said that. Timothy Judy is it a User Inter
Timothy Judy: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: User
Timothy Judy: Yeah,
Merle Thompkins: Yeah.
Timothy Judy: yeah.
Michael Feliciano: Interface
Timothy Judy: Interface
Michael Feliciano: the technical
Timothy Judy: d
Michael Feliciano: functions design. And the Management Expert of uh Merle Thompkins. User requirements specifi Well, this one was already clear to us. Specific instructions will be sent to you by your personal coach. I don't know how much time we have left. Oh, not many I guess. We started at twelve.
Merle Thompkins: You just got a message.
Michael Feliciano: Oh, and what does it said?
Merle Thompkins: And it said
Timothy Judy: Oh, I don't
Merle Thompkins: uh five minutes, so we
Michael Feliciano: W
Merle Thompkins: got four and a half.
Michael Feliciano: Okay, well um
Timothy Judy: I didn't get a message.
Merle Thompkins: No. He's the
Timothy Judy: Oh,
Merle Thompkins: whatever.
Timothy Judy: the Project
Randall Clark: Team
Timothy Judy: Manager.
Randall Clark: Leader.
Michael Feliciano: No,
Merle Thompkins: Team
Michael Feliciano: we're
Merle Thompkins: Leader.
Michael Feliciano: uh ahead of schedule then.
Merle Thompkins: He is the whatever.
Michael Feliciano: Yeah, close it. I'm
Timothy Judy: Okay.
Michael Feliciano: gonna make some minutes or take some minutes. And
Merle Thompkins: Yes.
Michael Feliciano: uh it's it's clear you can put the stuff in the project documents presentations.
Timothy Judy: Okay.
Michael Feliciano: You can all
Merle Thompkins: Project
Michael Feliciano: Or we're
Merle Thompkins: joc
Michael Feliciano: all uh
Merle Thompkins: project documents is for showing uh on the white-board.
Michael Feliciano: Yeah. Yeah,
Merle Thompkins: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: but we're all familiar with uh uh Microsoft PowerPoint, are
Merle Thompkins: Yes.
Michael Feliciano: we?
Timothy Judy: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: Yeah, okay. I'm
Merle Thompkins: Alright.
Michael Feliciano: gonna wri uh write some stuff down and then we're ready.
Merle Thompkins: Okay.
Michael Feliciano: Or we can leave already I guess. or
Merle Thompkins: Yeah.
Michael Feliciano: uh or sh or should we uh or is important that we leave at exact uh
Randall Clark: No.
Merle Thompkins: No.
Michael Feliciano: Okay.
Merle Thompkins: I don't think so.
Timothy Judy: I don't think
Merle Thompkins: Yes?
Timothy Judy: Oh
Michael Feliciano: Yes.
Merle Thompkins: Great.
Randall Clark: Oh.
Michael Feliciano: We'll see each other in uh thirty minutes.
Merle Thompkins: Yeah. Good luck.
Michael Feliciano: Yeah, good luck.
Timothy Judy: I will need it.
Merle Thompkins: I will need it. | Merle Thompkins and industrial designer had problems with their laptops. Michael Feliciano opened the meeting and introduced the project, to design a remote control. The remote should be trendy, original and user friendly. Michael Feliciano explained how to use the SMARTboard, and the group did a tool training exercise, using the SMARTboard to draw their favourite animals. Michael Feliciano talked about the budget and projected profit. The group discussed initial ideas for the remote, including that it should be a simple design with grouped buttons. They discussed whether the remote should include functions for controlling video and DVD players. Michael Feliciano went over the roles of the participants and closed the meeting. | 1 | amisum | train |
Orville Johnson: Here we go again.
Wendell Miller: My mouse is not working anymore.
Orville Johnson: Oh.
David Olson: Oh.
Wendell Miller: uh
Orville Johnson: Okay.
Wendell Miller: when I put it in, is is going to beep beep beep.
David Olson: Oh, I got a nice little screen over here. I got like this big black border uh on every side.
Claude Brady: Okay.
Orville Johnson: Mm, okay.
Claude Brady: Everybody ready?
David Olson: I'll I'll fix it.
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
David Olson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: Welcome
David Olson: whatever.
Claude Brady: at the
Orville Johnson: it's okay.
Claude Brady: functional design, again presented by Maarten. Uh this is the agenda, the opening. Uh, we've got three presentations. And I'm gonna show you some of the new projects requirements that were sent to David Olson. And we're gonna make a decision on the remote control functions. We have uh forty minutes.
David Olson: Yes.
Claude Brady: Oh, well this is the the closing already. So uh well we start off with the th the first presentation then. think
Orville Johnson: Okay.
Claude Brady: um in we have to do it in uh in right order. Maybe the
David Olson: I don't know what the right order is. So
Claude Brady: Well,
Orville Johnson: No.
Claude Brady: it
Wendell Miller: Huh.
Claude Brady: Oh that. It won't doesn't Maybe we should start with the the technical functions.
Wendell Miller: Okay, how
Claude Brady: Yeah?
Wendell Miller: can I get this on the
Claude Brady: Well it's you
Wendell Miller: whiteboard?
Claude Brady: dumped the file in the
Orville Johnson: In project.
Claude Brady: uh
Wendell Miller: Okay,
Claude Brady: in the sh in the project
Wendell Miller: I've done
Claude Brady: document
Wendell Miller: that.
Claude Brady: folder. You've already done that?
Orville Johnson: No
Wendell Miller: Yes.
Orville Johnson: can that open.
Claude Brady: Well let's close this one. We'll just uh open a new
Orville Johnson: Open
Claude Brady: one.
Orville Johnson: it there.
Claude Brady: Uh, well. Yes. Uh-oh. New thing. Oh yeah, uh I have to say something. Uh, due to some uh technical problems I haven't uh digitized the last uh the meeting minutes. But
David Olson: Mm-hmm.
Claude Brady: I'll uh make sure that uh happens next time.
Orville Johnson: Okay. About the
Claude Brady: And
Orville Johnson: get
Claude Brady: I'll get this one uh in digital uh form too.
Wendell Miller: 'Kay, we're going to um uh talk about working design. Um, the method of the remote control is uh electrical energy, it activates a chip uh in the remote.
Wendell Miller: the television. Mm, it's a nowadays very uh known, a known uh uh technology. Um, the known technology can make a cost very low. Uh, it's a wild uh a wide sale uh of uh remote controls in the world. And and the components are very uh very cheap. Um, Uh, diodes, uh bat batteries and uh uh LED lights, they're needed and they're uh everywhere available. Uh, again, it's a fair price. It's a common uh technology uh, like I told um Uh, the circuit board, it's the most um important uh um part of the remote control. Uh, we can use for that uh fibreglass with copper wires, it's it is uh can be made as fast as printing paper. It's uh it's
Claude Brady: Okay.
Wendell Miller: all very uh Yeah, they're making it uh all the time. Uh,
Claude Brady: Okay.
Wendell Miller: and it's not uh very specialised uh technology. I haven't come to here, but um I've got uh some uh images of uh remote controls. They were not uh very uh trendy or just uh just a remote control like everyone knows. So I don't know uh why I should put it here. Uh
Claude Brady: Okay. But it's the technical side of the remote control.
Wendell Miller: Yes, but uh I uh haven't made it
Claude Brady: Oh.
Wendell Miller: because uh of the time.
Claude Brady: Okay.
Wendell Miller: But
Claude Brady: Well, we'll we'll have to skip that part then.
Wendell Miller: What?
Orville Johnson: Okay.
Claude Brady: But you don't think it's a problem um to design uh the technical part of the remote control?
Wendell Miller: No.
Claude Brady: It's gonna be easy?
Wendell Miller: Yes.
Claude Brady: Okay.
Orville Johnson: But nothing restricted for user interface?
Claude Brady: Yeah.
Orville Johnson: With
Wendell Miller: Um,
Orville Johnson: technical
Claude Brady: M
Wendell Miller: no,
Orville Johnson: I don't know.
Wendell Miller: it's uh
Claude Brady: Okay.
Wendell Miller: it's just a part of uh a known technology, yeah.
Orville Johnson: 'Kay.
Wendell Miller: Remote control is nothing special nowadays.
Claude Brady: R
Orville Johnson: Okay.
Claude Brady: regardless of what type of functions we want to implement. Doesn't really matter.
Wendell Miller: Um
Orville Johnson: But I kind of
Wendell Miller: I don't
Orville Johnson: uh
Wendell Miller: think so,
Claude Brady: Okay.
Wendell Miller: because of
Orville Johnson: Yes.
Wendell Miller: the all
Claude Brady: Yeah,
Wendell Miller: the
Claude Brady: okay.
Wendell Miller: televisions uh
Orville Johnson: Uh
Wendell Miller: there are a few maybe a couple of televisions with the new functions,
Claude Brady: Okay.
Wendell Miller: but is it useful to put them on a on a standard uh remote?
Claude Brady: Well, we'll see. We'll see later on.
Orville Johnson: Well, the technical functions. Um, well I don't know if you got the same uh pictures as I got,
Claude Brady: No.
Orville Johnson: but
Wendell Miller: No.
Orville Johnson: uh I got these two, and I think they're we have to focus uh on uh the uh one hand the expert view or the novice user. th I think it's it's very much uh depending on the user requirements, I don't s uh know who's doing
Claude Brady: Well, uh will
Orville Johnson: t
Claude Brady: there be some uh user requirements later on?
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: The ones
Orville Johnson: but it
Claude Brady: I I've uh received
Orville Johnson: I think
Claude Brady: from
Orville Johnson: that's
Claude Brady: the account
Orville Johnson: very
Claude Brady: manager.
Orville Johnson: important to watch
Claude Brady: Yeah.
Orville Johnson: uh what kind of functions there we want to uh put in a remote control.
Claude Brady: Well, we'll keep this in mind, and then discuss it later on.
Orville Johnson: Yeah, well y we can put functions in it when uh yeah, when we uh get the user requirements
Claude Brady: Uh-huh.
Orville Johnson: uh and we can
Claude Brady: Okay,
Orville Johnson: update
Claude Brady: but this
Orville Johnson: it.
Claude Brady: real this uh big d uh distinction between this type of remote. we should we should choose one uh we should not compromise but uh really choose for uh expert
David Olson: Yes,
Claude Brady: viewer or novice
David Olson: I agree.
Claude Brady: v
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: Yeah? Well, what that's what you want trying to say.
Orville Johnson: Well, yeah w if you want try a a a huge market, if you want to reach a huge market, uh like elderly people and we have to choose for
Claude Brady: Okay.
Orville Johnson: novice user.
Claude Brady: Okay.
Orville Johnson: But I don't know. It's it's really um
Claude Brady: Yeah,
Orville Johnson: depending
Claude Brady: well
Orville Johnson: on how
Claude Brady: some
Orville Johnson: how
Claude Brady: of
Orville Johnson: how
Claude Brady: these
Orville Johnson: far
Claude Brady: Uh, yeah.
Orville Johnson: the the the remote controls are already in n um
Claude Brady: Well, some
Orville Johnson: in
Claude Brady: of
Orville Johnson: use.
Claude Brady: that will Yeah, but i but it will be more clear when we come to the uh u uh some of the new requirements.
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
David Olson: Yes.
Orville Johnson: probably,
Claude Brady: So
Orville Johnson: yeah. Uh well, there are l at least uh basic functions, uh like just th the channels uh one till nine, uh on and off switch, which must be clear with a red button or something like that. Um, most standard uh have volume, of course, and a mute function, and, of course, the next and previous channel. I think that's just basic what we need.
Claude Brady: Mm-hmm.
Orville Johnson: And from that on we can user requirements what we need more. Uh Yeah, I just um um I thought Joost was looking at the trendy the trends in the markets,
David Olson: Yes.
Orville Johnson: and I don't know if there uh are any um uh if you put more functions, more buttons, maybe it's com becoming less trendy or something like that. M you can just
David Olson: I haven't really found a
Orville Johnson: you
David Olson: conclusion
Orville Johnson: can k
David Olson: like that.
Orville Johnson: you can keep it in mind that.
David Olson: Yeah.
Orville Johnson: I don't know. Uh, I th I thought the the with less buttons you can make a more trendier uh
David Olson: Design.
Orville Johnson: yeah, more trendier design, I think. I think.
David Olson: Sounds interesting.
Orville Johnson: Yeah? Uh, well, that's all I have to say, I think.
Claude Brady: Okay.
Orville Johnson: Yeah, that
David Olson: Alright.
Orville Johnson: was it.
Claude Brady: Well, then David Olson can uh
David Olson: Yes.
Claude Brady: tell us something about the current market.
David Olson: Yeah. It's alright. Um
David Olson: Alright, done some requirements. Um yes. The working method um there were hundred uh uh w h one hundred people, uh how do you say uh, f watched using remote controls in the usability lab and they also uh filled out a questionnaire uh with a few questions. Uh, I've lined them up here. Uh, ask whether um common remote control looks good or not, about willingness to spend money on remote control, about zapping behaviour, and uh and stuff like that. I uh have found some interesting things. We do we do got a market. Um, three out of four people claim m uh to find remote controls ugly. So if we make a trendy design, we sure have seventy fi seventy five percent of the market, which you can reach. Um, three out of four users uh zaps a lot, as I uh quoted here from the uh results. Zap buttons are used one hundred and sixty eight times per hour. That's quite a lot. Um, relevant options are, of course, power buttons. Although, only used once per hour. Uh, channel selection, volume and buttons for text, and the more um, yeah, other functions, like audio settings, video settings, sound settings are not said to be very important and uh very much used. Furthermore, fifty percent says uh they only use ten percent of the buttons on a remote control. That doesn't say we got we can leave ninety percent off. But it sure um says we shouldn't make it too uh complicated. Fifty percent also claims uh to have lost a remote control very often in the room. And um an important thing here, the most important customers uh, which is over seventy percent of our market, is in the age range of thirty six to sixty five years old. And uh elderly people, our market, are less interested in uh nice features, but more willingly to spend more money on remote controls. So, what I was thinking oh, wrong side. We shouldn't implement too much features on uh on our remote control, because elderly people will get th lost. Group features for a higher usability, uh what I was claiming in the previous meeting. Um, all the settings, about audio settings, video settings and channel settings, which are not very often used, we could group them uh on one button and make them accessible uh in one menu button or whatever, because they are used very rarely and well, it uh there are a lot of options there, so we can really make uh yeah, how do you say, we can spare at buttons over there.
Claude Brady: Okay.
David Olson: And um, if you want to implement V_C_R_ and D_V_D_ options, group them in the button, not too uh Yeah. Small buttons, so they won't be very um, how do you say
Claude Brady: Visually presents.
David Olson: Yes, won't be very present, thank you. And a trendy look, well uh, although seventy percent of the market is uh consists of elderly people uh who don't really care for trendy looks or whatever, I guess it can do no harm to make it trendy for the other thirty percent. That was kind of what I found.
Claude Brady: Okay.
Orville Johnson: Okay.
David Olson: Okay.
Claude Brady: Well, then we I'm gonna show you some of the new project requirements and then we gonna discuss on uh
David Olson: Yes.
Claude Brady: what features we find important. Uh, well some of the uh new requirements make some of your findings quite uh irrelevant, I think. Because um uh s decided to put They have decide to put two additional requirements forward. Well, now I see
David Olson: Two?
Claude Brady: four. That's kinda strange. Well, they say tele teletext becomes outdated since the popularity of the internet. Well, I think
Orville Johnson: Well
Claude Brady: that may be so, but well, we can't just leave the teletext button off.
David Olson: No
Claude Brady: It's impossible,
Orville Johnson: No
David Olson: uh,
Orville Johnson: way.
Claude Brady: I
David Olson: I
Claude Brady: think.
David Olson: agree, I agree.
Claude Brady: So the compromise we could make is just to make one teletext button, you know, like on and off, and don't make a lot of special put a lot of special features on it to
David Olson: Not too
Claude Brady: make
David Olson: much,
Claude Brady: it transparent
David Olson: no.
Claude Brady: or You know, it's just you want you want to be able to make use of teletext, but not to play with it that much.
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: So we have to think of that. The remote control should only be used for television. Otherwise, the project becomes more complex, which endangers the time t t ma uh the time to market. So maybe we should leave all D_V_D_ and V_C_R_ related features
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: off completely.
David Olson: Okay.
Claude Brady: I don't know. I think that uh that's what they're trying to say. Uh, our current customers are within the age group of forty plus. New products should reach a new market with customers that are younger than forty. So you uh talked about the elderly who were willing
David Olson: Mm-hmm.
Claude Brady: to spend more on a remote control and who were interested. But, well, they're not relevant because we are aiming at a younger
David Olson: I don't really agree actually, to be honest. It's a very small market which we will approach then if we uh want to reach customers younger than forty. It's only like thirty percent of the total market.
Claude Brady: Yeah, but it is
David Olson: Mayb
Claude Brady: it's
David Olson: yeah?
Claude Brady: is a dif it's a fact that the th th that bigger market you're talking about, we already cover that. Our company already sells remote control to the older people, but we we also want, you know, a new customer group. That's the one we haven't covered yet. So I think that's what the problem is. We haven't
David Olson: Okay.
Claude Brady: got remote controls for uh Well
David Olson: Maybe
Claude Brady: I think, yeah.
David Olson: maybe we can compromise a little
Claude Brady: Yeah,
David Olson: bit.
Claude Brady: I think so. Maybe if
David Olson: Not
Claude Brady: it's
David Olson: too much then, bu
Claude Brady: no no,
David Olson: alright.
Claude Brady: but I think we have to just keep in mind what the older age group wants. So maybe we can make a remote control that's primarily interesting for the younger group, but isn't that bad for an older person either.
David Olson: Yes.
Claude Brady: Uh, our corporate image sh should stay recognisable in our products. Okay, something else nice to
Orville Johnson: But
Claude Brady: know.
Orville Johnson: what's our slogan?
Claude Brady: Sorry? Yeah,
Orville Johnson: The slogan uh
Claude Brady: you will have to look that up.
David Olson: Yeah, I'll have a look. We
Claude Brady: I
David Olson: put
Claude Brady: think it's
David Olson: the
Orville Johnson: Puts
Claude Brady: something
David Olson: fashion
Orville Johnson: fashion
Claude Brady: about
Orville Johnson: in
David Olson: in
Claude Brady: the
David Olson: electronics.
Orville Johnson: electronics.
Claude Brady: Oh, okay. I thought it w might be, let's make things better or something, but
David Olson: Sense
Orville Johnson: Sense
David Olson: and simplicity.
Orville Johnson: simplicity.
Claude Brady: Okay well, let's go back to the the agenda. So we've now had to the three presentations. We know about the new project requirements. That means we can uh well d yeah, discuss on the remote control functions. Well, if I can uh make a start, I think it's becoming more clear what kind of remote control it's gonna be, and I already talked about the maybe you have a f familiar with the rem remote control that has the the can opener underneath it. I think we're we're looking for some Yeah, we we're looking for a really simple remote control with only basic T_V_ functions. Y
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
David Olson: Well,
Claude Brady: well,
David Olson: to
Claude Brady: that
David Olson: be honest, if um our uh aim group is uh till forty, not
Claude Brady: Yeah.
David Olson: older than forty, maybe that's not very uh yeah, we don't really need
Claude Brady: Yeah.
David Olson: to have a simple remote control. I think we can implement more functions then, because um
Orville Johnson: Yeah, but
David Olson: basically
Orville Johnson: wha
David Olson: uh the younger people are more able to adapt to new technology and therefore
Claude Brady: Yeah, yeah. M
David Olson: will be a more
Claude Brady: yeah, that's
Orville Johnson: But
Claude Brady: why um well a lot of um the use the requirements the the account manager sent David Olson, I think they are are c are contradicting each other, because they want a simpler design,
David Olson: Yes.
Claude Brady: and no uh other uh s functions than just T_V_, but they s do aim at a younger
Orville Johnson: Yeah, but you
Claude Brady: Well,
David Olson: Yeah.
Orville Johnson: sai
Claude Brady: ma
Orville Johnson: you said that that a lot of functions aren't used. So why should j we put this function in?
David Olson: Well,
Orville Johnson: I
David Olson: I
Orville Johnson: think
David Olson: think
Orville Johnson: more I think uh people younger people are more looking for just a trendy look than uh more functions.
Claude Brady: But I think uh you we can make some discuss uh distinctions in uh what kin in the, know, th th in functions you have Y Well you have different kind of uh equipment in your room, like a t
David Olson: Yes.
Claude Brady: T_V_ and a D_V_D_ player. You can uh, know, you you can make very d you can put very detailed functions regarding the T_V_ set on your remote control uh with the with uh the, you know, audio settings and uh v uh screen settings. We don't want that. I think that was that became clear. We don't want. But w maybe we should put some func uh, I know that the younger people will most likely have a D_V_D_ player they want to, you know, they want to
David Olson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: uh
Orville Johnson: Yeah, but
David Olson: control.
Orville Johnson: uh you
Claude Brady: control,
Orville Johnson: said Yeah,
Claude Brady: remotely.
Orville Johnson: d yeah, but th the functions are not in the remote control we're making.
Claude Brady: No, yeah, th
Orville Johnson: It's
Claude Brady: th the
Orville Johnson: n
Claude Brady: user requirements of the the The new project requirements told
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: us not to But maybe w Yeah.
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: I think we maybe should Yeah, well we should uh put some functions for other maybe for other equipment on it. But just the basic functions. Maybe like rewind and wind, or n what d what
Wendell Miller: But
Claude Brady: do
David Olson: Not
Wendell Miller: you
Claude Brady: you
Wendell Miller: can
Claude Brady: guys
David Olson: much
Wendell Miller: put
David Olson: more
Claude Brady: think?
Wendell Miller: them
David Olson: than
Wendell Miller: under
David Olson: that.
Wendell Miller: the same button.
David Olson: Yep.
Claude Brady: Yeah, if as far as possible.
David Olson: Or we can u u we could put 'em behind the flip-flap or whatever. So
Claude Brady: But what
David Olson: t
Claude Brady: do you think? Do th should we implement features that uh uh or functions that to control other devices?
Orville Johnson: No.
Claude Brady: No, you don't think
Orville Johnson: No,
Claude Brady: so?
Orville Johnson: new requirements say
Claude Brady: Yeah,
Orville Johnson: no.
Claude Brady: the new requirements say so.
Orville Johnson: So
Wendell Miller: But you can put a play and stop and and
Claude Brady: Well, maybe
Wendell Miller: rewind.
Claude Brady: it's maybe
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: there
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: there there is
Orville Johnson: but
Claude Brady: something th m most of the time these functions don't support the particular device as well as their their own remote control. You know, a lot of D_V_D_ players have some tricky
Wendell Miller: Yes, but
Claude Brady: settings
Wendell Miller: we
David Olson: Y yes.
Claude Brady: with
Orville Johnson: I i if it's too simple uh th they won't use the remote control,
Claude Brady: Yep,
Orville Johnson: they
Claude Brady: exactly.
Orville Johnson: use their own th th with
Claude Brady: That's
Orville Johnson: lot
Claude Brady: that's
Orville Johnson: more
David Olson: But
Claude Brady: wha
Orville Johnson: functions.
David Olson: but for for example, V_C_R_, that's better example in this case.
Claude Brady: No no, you
Orville Johnson: No,
Claude Brady: don't
Orville Johnson: no.
Wendell Miller: Huh.
Claude Brady: No no, you
Orville Johnson: Exactly.
Claude Brady: don't need it. No, no.
David Olson: just play, stop, rewind and uh fast
Claude Brady: Okay,
David Olson: forward.
Claude Brady: but we have to think uh w we have to think D_V_D_ I th
David Olson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: uh,
David Olson: I know, but
Claude Brady: I
David Olson: uh
Claude Brady: guess, so um but uh from my experience it's kinda a lot of D_V_D_ players, you know, like forwarding, goes differently. Uh, you get two speed or eight speed or sixteen speed.
Orville Johnson: Mm, yeah.
Claude Brady: It's c sometimes a bit difficult. Maybe if we just leave the D_V_D_ functional m uh Well, I was thinking about putting it in, but concerning the project requirements and what you just
David Olson: Yes.
Claude Brady: said, I
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: think we m
Orville Johnson: but just
Claude Brady: should focus on the T_V_ then.
Orville Johnson: keep it simple and look more at
Claude Brady: And
Orville Johnson: th
Claude Brady: uh and it's just an uh a complimentary remote and not a universal one. If you want to
Orville Johnson: No.
Claude Brady: keep it simple, you can make a universal remote.
Orville Johnson: It's only for television.
Claude Brady: Okay.
Orville Johnson: So
Wendell Miller: Yes,
Claude Brady: It's
Wendell Miller: but
Claude Brady: just
Wendell Miller: there are
Claude Brady: a s it
Wendell Miller: there
Claude Brady: it should
Wendell Miller: are
Claude Brady: be something that is like a gadget on your coffee table, and it's just for when you you you jump on the couch, you pick up the
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: the the nice remote, the simple one, just
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: to put on the television,
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: nothing more.
Orville Johnson: nothing more.
Claude Brady: Okay.
Orville Johnson: Exactly.
David Olson: Alright.
Claude Brady: Um, but
Wendell Miller: But
Claude Brady: what
Wendell Miller: how wi how
Claude Brady: televis
Wendell Miller: will you be able to handle a whole market? There are uh a dozen of uh dozens of of remote controls
Claude Brady: Yeah, we
Wendell Miller: that
Claude Brady: we'll
Wendell Miller: have
Claude Brady: make w this one trendy.
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: And
Orville Johnson: The
Claude Brady: simple. Well,
Orville Johnson: user
Claude Brady: we we
Orville Johnson: interface
Claude Brady: will come to that,
Orville Johnson: is
Claude Brady: but
Orville Johnson: easy.
Claude Brady: ju first on the on the functions. So we should put uh zap buttons on it. Um, also
Orville Johnson: And the
Claude Brady: numbers,
Orville Johnson: basic
Claude Brady: to uh to
Orville Johnson: yeah,
Claude Brady: go to
Orville Johnson: basic
Claude Brady: the specific
Orville Johnson: functions,
David Olson: Yes,
Claude Brady: channels.
Orville Johnson: yeah.
David Olson: definitely, yeah.
Claude Brady: Uh,
Orville Johnson: It's too much integrated
Claude Brady: Okay,
Orville Johnson: in
Claude Brady: a
Orville Johnson: the
Claude Brady: t a
Orville Johnson: other.
Claude Brady: teletext button should be there. But
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: just one big teletext button, on and off. Probably.
David Olson: Yeah, and maybe two or three other options, but not nothing more than that. I think stop function is very useful. If you have a uh a page which consists of more pages, and you are not a very quick reader,
Claude Brady: Oh,
David Olson: then
Claude Brady: okay.
David Olson: I think it's very irritating if
Claude Brady: Yeah,
David Olson: the next
Claude Brady: but uh
David Olson: page
Claude Brady: I think
David Olson: shows
Claude Brady: that
David Olson: up,
Claude Brady: becomes
David Olson: but
Claude Brady: too difficult, it's not a very common function and people
David Olson: Well,
Claude Brady: will have
David Olson: I use
Claude Brady: to read
David Olson: it
Claude Brady: up
David Olson: very
Claude Brady: on
David Olson: regularly,
Claude Brady: their remote
David Olson: the action.
Claude Brady: then.
David Olson: I re I use it
Claude Brady: Yeah, yeah, but maybe
David Olson: quite often.
Claude Brady: you s yeah yeah, maybe y you do, but
Orville Johnson: Will
Claude Brady: I've never
Orville Johnson: you look
Claude Brady: heard of it in the first place. And we have to well
Orville Johnson: Look at the market.
Claude Brady: t yeah, and t and teletext is becoming outdated. We just want to see what programmes are on and what time it is probably. Yeah. I don't know. I think that that's kin getting too complex for our remote.
Orville Johnson: Well
Claude Brady: I don't
David Olson: Might
Claude Brady: know what
David Olson: be.
Claude Brady: you
David Olson: Might
Claude Brady: th guys think.
David Olson: be.
Orville Johnson: Yeah, I uh, it's Sunday I always use it for the uh yeah, for the soccer uh
Claude Brady: Yeah, but do you like to have a such a s stop button? Or do you think it uh I think it's a kind of uh uh
Orville Johnson: Well,
Claude Brady: very
Orville Johnson: uh
Claude Brady: rare and
Orville Johnson: when
Claude Brady: special
Orville Johnson: you uh
Claude Brady: function.
Orville Johnson: uh when you look uh for example um, a couple of weeks ago I looked at the for the flights, and
Claude Brady: Yeah.
Orville Johnson: there are a lot of flights
Claude Brady: Okay,
Orville Johnson: in
Claude Brady: it
Orville Johnson: one
Claude Brady: goes
Orville Johnson: page,
Claude Brady: Yeah, but
Orville Johnson: so
Claude Brady: that's
Orville Johnson: if
Claude Brady: kind of
Orville Johnson: if
Claude Brady: stuff
Orville Johnson: th
Claude Brady: we should do on the internet right now. That's
Wendell Miller: Yes,
Claude Brady: why
Wendell Miller: but you
Claude Brady: it was
Wendell Miller: could
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: uh
Wendell Miller: put
Claude Brady: said
Orville Johnson: but
Claude Brady: in the in the use in the r
Wendell Miller: on
Claude Brady: new requirements.
Wendell Miller: the z on the zap buttons you can put it to uh to uh access all the same pages. If you have
Claude Brady: Well
Wendell Miller: seven
Claude Brady: yeah uh,
Wendell Miller: pages,
Claude Brady: lots of
Wendell Miller: you
Claude Brady: new
Wendell Miller: can
Claude Brady: televisions
Wendell Miller: go up and down.
Claude Brady: can store pages, you know, and
Wendell Miller: Yes.
Claude Brady: then you can just skip manually through them using
Orville Johnson: True.
Claude Brady: I think we should just put one teletext button on it. Then we meet uh the new requirements. we also meet the other thin y you sh you just re we have to choose for the the simple design, I
Orville Johnson: A simple
Claude Brady: guess.
Orville Johnson: yeah.
Claude Brady: Okay. Um, well, what functions do we have to decide on? Or do we uh I dunno if we have t stif specifically name all the functions we n we want. We have the zap and uh the volume. Should we do m make them very big? The the the zap button. D
David Olson: I
Claude Brady: d
David Olson: think
Wendell Miller: Yes.
David Olson: the plus and the minus button
Claude Brady: Th that's
David Olson: should
Claude Brady: that's
David Olson: be uh
Claude Brady: that's considered to be
Orville Johnson: But
Claude Brady: trendy
David Olson: quite present,
Claude Brady: also.
Orville Johnson: trendy, yeah.
David Olson: yep.
Orville Johnson: I don't
Claude Brady: Or
Orville Johnson: know.
Claude Brady: maybe you should place them on a uh,
Wendell Miller: Maybe
Claude Brady: in a special
Wendell Miller: we can make
Claude Brady: way?
Wendell Miller: uh a kind of a joystick.
Claude Brady: Yeah, something or uh somethin special way to to zap through the it has to s it has to be yeah,
Orville Johnson: Original.
Claude Brady: and quick. You have
Orville Johnson: It was uh
Claude Brady: to use it very quickly.
David Olson: Yep.
Orville Johnson: True.
David Olson: If you grab the remote, your hands should be on top
Claude Brady: Yeah,
David Olson: of the plus.
Claude Brady: and it the buttons should make it um possible to to zap through your channels in a rapid at a rapid pace.
David Olson: Yes.
Claude Brady: Oh, what should we decide on then? I
Wendell Miller: But
Claude Brady: think in a in a case
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: of this simple remote control, the technical aspects which uh weren't worked out already, but it w shouldn't be a problem then.
Wendell Miller: No, it's o just signals uh
Claude Brady: Yep.
Orville Johnson: Maybe
Wendell Miller: and
Orville Johnson: uh
Wendell Miller: the television d uh does the rest.
Claude Brady: No, okay, but we don't have to uh, when we don't want to uh control other devices, I think
Wendell Miller: No.
Claude Brady: it makes it even more simple.
Orville Johnson: Uh maybe we uh uh the batteries maybe. If you use large batteries or small batter batteries.
Wendell Miller: The most
Claude Brady: I think
Wendell Miller: standard batteries.
Claude Brady: I think
David Olson: I
Claude Brady: that
David Olson: think
Claude Brady: we
Orville Johnson: Yeah?
Claude Brady: should
David Olson: double
Claude Brady: use
David Olson: A_.
Claude Brady: uh d yeah, not
David Olson: Yep.
Claude Brady: not uh the b the watch kind th the most uh Well, it has to be simple, and I
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
David Olson: The
Claude Brady: wi
David Olson: most ordinary uh
Claude Brady: Which are most likely
David Olson: batteries.
Claude Brady: to be found somewhere in
Orville Johnson: Okay.
Claude Brady: the house, you know.
David Olson: Yep.
Claude Brady: Oh. How much time do we ha we have left uh? M
David Olson: I
Claude Brady: m
David Olson: think
Claude Brady: m more
David Olson: about
Claude Brady: than thirty
David Olson: twenty minutes.
Claude Brady: minutes? Uh ten twenty minutes.
Wendell Miller: But
Claude Brady: Well,
Wendell Miller: i
Orville Johnson: Early
Claude Brady: uh these
Orville Johnson: break.
Claude Brady: these shouldn't
Wendell Miller: in a way we have to be uh uh special.
Claude Brady: Yeah. Yeah, okay. But that's that's Do you uh have you have you think about tha thought about that? How we can what the extra touch can be.
Wendell Miller: Maybe
Claude Brady: Do you suggest
Wendell Miller: th m
Claude Brady: design or the shape or some gadget f f kind of feature or Well, it was something about how we lose them. Maybe it should be a remote control when you you clap you hands it makes some noise or some gadget kind of thing.
David Olson: I think
Orville Johnson: To
David Olson: that's
Orville Johnson: find
David Olson: n
Orville Johnson: him.
David Olson: that's more
Claude Brady: Yeah.
David Olson: for
Orville Johnson: That's
David Olson: a
Orville Johnson: maybe yeah.
David Olson: for an age range or uh ten to twelve or whatever.
Claude Brady: I don't know. I don't know. Nah, um a lot of people like to have such kind kind of kind of gay kind of things. It w it w should be like a birthday present or something that you give
David Olson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: someone, and it is
David Olson: yeah,
Claude Brady: i
David Olson: that's
Claude Brady: has
David Olson: good
Claude Brady: something
David Olson: one,
Claude Brady: nice.
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
David Olson: yep.
Claude Brady: Or maybe it w should have a big uh light that can flash or something on it, or maybe it should or an or the like the the can opener. Maybe it contains some feature that you don't normally link to a remote control. I think it's very impor because we're gonna make such a basic
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: remote control, we have to do something to make it special. It's gonna cost twenty five Euros.
David Olson: Ye I think the can opener i is a brilliant idea actually, because
Claude Brady: Yeah, but
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: the
Orville Johnson: but
Claude Brady: well,
David Olson: television
Orville Johnson: that's
Claude Brady: it's already been
David Olson: and
Claude Brady: done.
David Olson: beer
Orville Johnson: yeah.
David Olson: is not a rare combination.
Claude Brady: Nah. Yeah, that's true. But and I think it's gonna be uh very uh it has to be sturdy or something, so maybe with
David Olson: Yes.
Claude Brady: with bouncing pads so that you can just throw it on the floor or something. it
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: has to be used something special,
David Olson: Yep.
Claude Brady: and you really it has to, you know y not s people, when they buy it, they have to think, well this one lasts for a long time. We're really gonna use them. Not some thing you you throw away next week, you know.
David Olson: No, that's true.
Claude Brady: So maybe uh that's i I think that's when uh when we decide on these type of functions, know, basic functions, uh it's very important to find something like this. So there's a very important task for you. And maybe we can all think
Orville Johnson: Be
Claude Brady: about
Orville Johnson: original,
Claude Brady: it.
Orville Johnson: yeah.
Claude Brady: Uh, also for you maybe, when t you it's very nice when you can be entra when you can be trendy, and and
Orville Johnson: Mm-hmm.
Claude Brady: uh and al as in a
Orville Johnson: And
Claude Brady: friend
Orville Johnson: use
Claude Brady: use
Orville Johnson: friendly,
Claude Brady: friendly as well,
Orville Johnson: yeah.
Claude Brady: you know. So
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: big buttons, flashy design,
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: and maybe some kind of gadget kind of thing.
Orville Johnson: Must
Claude Brady: Uh-huh.
David Olson: Yeah,
Orville Johnson: brain-storm.
David Olson: a swapable front or whatever.
Claude Brady: Yeah, or just different colours would be uh I don't know if people also wanna spend more money on fronts for their uh
Orville Johnson: Well
Wendell Miller: For
Claude Brady: remote
Wendell Miller: the remote
Claude Brady: control. It
Wendell Miller: control.
Claude Brady: could be be Yeah, you never know, but
Orville Johnson: Why not?
David Olson: Yeah.
Orville Johnson: More money for us.
Claude Brady: But it and
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: I think we have to make it quite big.
Orville Johnson: Quite big.
David Olson: Yes,
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: Yeah,
Orville Johnson: you
David Olson: definitely,
Orville Johnson: think?
David Olson: definitely.
Wendell Miller: That's
Claude Brady: people
Wendell Miller: to be uh
Claude Brady: So,
Wendell Miller: a
Claude Brady: and and
Wendell Miller: formed
Claude Brady: also
Wendell Miller: for
Claude Brady: because
Wendell Miller: your hand.
Claude Brady: uh it is expensive. If you want it to be something, you know, it's ha doesn't have much functions want to be
David Olson: Yes,
Claude Brady: you
David Olson: it
Claude Brady: don't want to
David Olson: it
Claude Brady: get
David Olson: it
Claude Brady: it l
David Olson: should be
Claude Brady: make
David Olson: f
Claude Brady: it
David Olson: be visible nearly anywhere in the room. As I uh as I said during my
Claude Brady: Mm-hmm.
David Olson: presentation, fifty percent
Claude Brady: And
David Olson: uh
Claude Brady: shou and should ni
David Olson: o
Claude Brady: look nice when you put it on a table. I I think you m might wanna put it
Orville Johnson: A
Claude Brady: uh
Orville Johnson: standard or
Claude Brady: yeah,
Orville Johnson: something.
Claude Brady: that it it it it stands up.
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: Yeah, you have to put it on its So it's like a vase or uh something you put on a table.
David Olson: A face? Or uh yeah,
Claude Brady: no
David Olson: yeah.
Claude Brady: no,
David Olson: Yeah.
Wendell Miller: More
Claude Brady: put
Wendell Miller: like
Claude Brady: stuff
Wendell Miller: a joystick
Claude Brady: inside it. But,
Wendell Miller: then.
Claude Brady: it's like like a statue or something
David Olson: Yeah, yeah, I see what you
Orville Johnson: It's
David Olson: mean,
Orville Johnson: like you have
David Olson: yep.
Orville Johnson: uh four phones.
Claude Brady: Yeah yeah, but
Orville Johnson: Something
Claude Brady: yeah, but you
Orville Johnson: like that.
Claude Brady: also can put it somewhere
David Olson: If you do that, but
Claude Brady: near
David Olson: I don't
Claude Brady: the window
David Olson: know
Claude Brady: in
David Olson: if that's possible
Claude Brady: That it's
David Olson: within
Claude Brady: it's
David Olson: the
Claude Brady: fashionable.
David Olson: production cost of twelve and a half Euros.
Claude Brady: I I don't
David Olson: I in in the base we could like make uh a button, and if you push it, the remote control itself s makes noise.
Claude Brady: Oh,
David Olson: That's
Claude Brady: yeah.
David Olson: probably stupid, but uh as I found here uh, fifty percent, was it fifty?
Wendell Miller: But that's
David Olson: Uh
Wendell Miller: that's
David Olson: fifty
Wendell Miller: fun
David Olson: percent
Wendell Miller: for the first time, and then
David Olson: fifty
Wendell Miller: the second
David Olson: percent often loses remote control.
Claude Brady: Yeah, but but when you when it gets lost, how can you press the button to make
David Olson: No
Claude Brady: it
David Olson: uh, of the base the the the
Claude Brady: Oh,
David Olson: the
Claude Brady: okay.
David Olson: the
Orville Johnson: On the television.
David Olson: the the thing you put it in.
Orville Johnson: Oh, like
Claude Brady: Uh,
Orville Johnson: this.
Claude Brady: that's
David Olson: If
Claude Brady: kind
David Olson: an
Claude Brady: of nice.
David Olson: a button in in that
Wendell Miller: Or you
Claude Brady: And
David Olson: uh
Wendell Miller: can
Claude Brady: then also you don't even need batteries, because you can make it uh chargeable.
Orville Johnson: A char chargeable.
David Olson: Yeah, you
Wendell Miller: Yeah.
David Olson: can
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
David Olson: ma make rechargeable one, yeah.
Claude Brady: Yeah,
David Olson: Why
Claude Brady: that
David Olson: not.
Claude Brady: w yeah, but yeah, the pro No, well I think that it might
Orville Johnson: Why
Claude Brady: be
Orville Johnson: not.
Claude Brady: t p Well, nee but we don't Yeah. Maybe you, but we don't know much about production cost, but when you you can imagine that when you spend twenty five Euros on a remote control and it's a basic
Wendell Miller: With recharger.
Claude Brady: remote control, then the then the money there must be money to spend on that kind of st you know, rechargeable
David Olson: It should only
Claude Brady: units.
David Olson: cost twelve and a half Euros, of course. Aye?
Claude Brady: Yeah, but we would d ma
Orville Johnson: Production.
Claude Brady: we'd do it in Taiwan and So, it's not gonna be that expen
David Olson: Yeah, okay.
Orville Johnson: It should be
Claude Brady: Uh
Orville Johnson: possible.
Claude Brady: I I think it's a great idea.
Orville Johnson: a good idea.
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: S some kind of be
Orville Johnson: To make
Claude Brady: I've
Orville Johnson: a
Claude Brady: never
Orville Johnson: base
Claude Brady: seen that
Orville Johnson: or
Claude Brady: before,
Orville Johnson: something?
Claude Brady: and you make it uh um be uh, you see it with uh the mo the mouses nowadays.
David Olson: Yes. Yes, definitely. Yeah.
Wendell Miller: Yes, but is that handy?
Claude Brady: Well, I well it's really ch you can recharge it, so you ha never have the battery
Orville Johnson: It's
Claude Brady: problem.
Orville Johnson: it's
Claude Brady: That's
Orville Johnson: it's
Claude Brady: one.
Orville Johnson: it's
Claude Brady: And uh you can always
Wendell Miller: But
Claude Brady: find
Orville Johnson: it's not
Claude Brady: your
Wendell Miller: but
Orville Johnson: the
Claude Brady: remote
Orville Johnson: purpose
Claude Brady: control
Wendell Miller: remote
Orville Johnson: to
Claude Brady: up
Orville Johnson: be handy,
Wendell Miller: controls
Orville Johnson: it's
Wendell Miller: remote controls nowadays can can last uh two years, three years, with with t two batteries.
Claude Brady: Uh, okay. Well, maybe yeah, you could
Wendell Miller: And
Claude Brady: when
Wendell Miller: then
Claude Brady: that's
Wendell Miller: you
Claude Brady: when it's too costly, you could probably skip the recharger, but you will you do need uh also an uh, also you would need a battery in the the base unit as well, you know. Does
Wendell Miller: Yes.
Claude Brady: it makes
David Olson: Well
Claude Brady: it kinda
David Olson: y
Wendell Miller: Or
David Olson: you you could connect that to two hundred to twenty volts, of course.
Orville Johnson: Mm.
Claude Brady: Yeah,
David Olson: I
Claude Brady: yeah.
David Olson: don't know.
Claude Brady: Okay.
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: Yeah.
Orville Johnson: but that's not it's ugly,
Claude Brady: Yeah, but
Orville Johnson: I think.
Claude Brady: then it's very easy to make it also a rechargeab I don't think that is gonna cost much to make it also a recharge
Orville Johnson: No.
Claude Brady: function in it.
David Olson: On the other hand, if you don't do it, we can also make a nice bay. I mean, it looks trendy and still still put a bleep function in it, but
Claude Brady: Yeah.
David Olson: um I think the bay is definitely uh
Claude Brady: I think it's a good idea. And make it, you know, we we um Well, we uh it's it isn't a t a most uh costly uh remote control. We can save on the on the functions. We just put some simple button in, make it big and sturdy, nothing more, and just make s sure there's some noise that it can make, or probably some kind of cheap light thing around it or that it uh that it lights
David Olson: Sure,
Claude Brady: up,
David Olson: why not.
Claude Brady: it's also
David Olson: Yep.
Claude Brady: nice. And if you put it away, I think it's uh w
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: we have to we uh that's uh it's
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: not a easy market. We have to something special.
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: And for twenty five
Orville Johnson: True.
Claude Brady: Euros people want something remote c special from your mote control,
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: and we
David Olson: Definitely.
Claude Brady: can't deliver that in r with uh regards to the functions, because we aren't gonna
David Olson: With eye
Claude Brady: put
David Olson: candy, ear candy, whatever.
Claude Brady: Yeah.
David Olson: Yeah, definitely.
Claude Brady: And then uh when make it, you know, nice looking shape and this and then you also you got the stand-up thing. Yeah. I think
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: I think
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: it's a
Orville Johnson: it
Claude Brady: good
Orville Johnson: must
Claude Brady: idea.
Orville Johnson: be must be a gadget to have.
Claude Brady: Yeah.
David Olson: Definitely, yeah.
Claude Brady: Oh, if it let's well, we will see what's possible concerning the the costs, and if it's possible we'll do that.
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: And we even try to save up on other stuff to make sure we can do such a thing. And the first thing we the most likeable thing to to n to skip is then probably the recharge function or something. If that's too expensive,
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: we won't
Orville Johnson: we
Claude Brady: do
Orville Johnson: c
Claude Brady: that. But it would be nice.
David Olson: It would be nice,
Claude Brady: It's
David Olson: yes.
Claude Brady: the idea. I know that batteries last long nowadays. And and what people just think about, well, I'll never have to buy any r batteries again, so y b because it's very annoying when your battery is empty. And you know then when you haven't batteries around, and probably for two weeks, your remo I've
David Olson: Most televisions
Claude Brady: experienced that
David Olson: break
Claude Brady: that
David Olson: down before the battery pack is empty, so
Claude Brady: Yeah, okay.
David Olson: yes.
Claude Brady: So, easy functions. Well, we will we will I think we'll work that out, zapping, numbers on it,
Orville Johnson: Or just
Claude Brady: bi
Orville Johnson: give a beep when the battery's out or uh down.
David Olson: Yeah, why
Claude Brady: Yeah.
David Olson: not.
Claude Brady: But it's also annoying. 'cause as
David Olson: Hmm.
Claude Brady: long as it stays as it ke keeps working, you're not
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: very motivated to do something about it.
Orville Johnson: true.
Claude Brady: Then
David Olson: No,
Claude Brady: it
David Olson: that's
Claude Brady: beeps
David Olson: true.
Claude Brady: all the time and. You don't want to have ever have those problems, and you won't have if if you have the rechargeable. And you don't have to use the unit, you can also put it on the side if people don't like it. Uh,
David Olson: Why
Claude Brady: i i in
David Olson: not.
Claude Brady: the in
Wendell Miller: But
Claude Brady: the ma
Wendell Miller: you pay for it.
Claude Brady: Yeah, but it w I mean, if if they pay for it because they think, oh, that's a great idea, I'm gonna use it. And when it, you know, when time goes by and they think, well, I'll never put him in the recharger, I think last long enough, then they put it on side and they can use it now and then. Then when they look get m I I I know for sure that everybody who buys this remote control, within a couple of months of they will be in the situation that they they're seeking for the remote control, they wanna see something
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: quick and uh just push the button and th uh, I think
David Olson: Bleep
Claude Brady: it's brilliant.
David Olson: bleep bleep, oh there it is, yeah.
Claude Brady: Yeah,
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: I've never
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: it's so simple, but I've never seen it.
David Olson: No.
Orville Johnson: And you can leave
David Olson: Nearly.
Claude Brady: M
Orville Johnson: it just there.
Claude Brady: maybe we should really do this.
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: Okay now, well, how much time have we got left? These clocks aren't uh synched.
Orville Johnson: Yes.
Claude Brady: Oh, now I've put uh well, it is twenty p
Orville Johnson: Yeah, I'll
Claude Brady: Okay, so we have ten minutes or something?
David Olson: Something like that, yeah.
Claude Brady: Yeah, but we're uh we're done.
Orville Johnson: Uh
Claude Brady: I
Orville Johnson: fifteen
Claude Brady: think.
Orville Johnson: minutes.
Claude Brady: We've decided on the functions. Well, there is some oh. There is a closing sheet. We have lunch break, and then we have thirty minutes of individual work.
David Olson: Oh.
Claude Brady: Oh okay, I'll make sure I'll I had some problems with uh the digitising the the first minutes, the the s the next minutes won't be a problem, but I'll try to make sure the first one will be in the folder too, but maybe it won't work, but you'll see. I think these
David Olson: We'll
Claude Brady: are
David Olson: see.
Claude Brady: more important than the first ones, so
Orville Johnson: Can you make an uh uh a part of f folder for the minutes maybe? That not not
David Olson: Maarten,
Orville Johnson: everything
David Olson: five
Orville Johnson: in one
David Olson: minutes.
Orville Johnson: one
Claude Brady: Oh,
Orville Johnson: uh
Claude Brady: five minutes.
Orville Johnson: folder.
Claude Brady: Yeah, because uh I I d I did uh the first minutes I did were were were a bit scratchy, you know. Then I did a s second one with a nicer layout, which I could uh, know, use for the other ones well, but uh I d think uh I forgot to do put done under the first one, and when you go write
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: a second uh it's get it's not working when you try to write second
Orville Johnson: Maybe.
Claude Brady: uh paper
David Olson: No, that's
Claude Brady: or
David Olson: true
Claude Brady: something.
David Olson: uh, yeah.
Claude Brady: And then you you had to overwrite it or someth I don't know. Becau I d uh, it was not my uh pen.
David Olson: Should we by the way draw um
Claude Brady: this kind of
David Olson: on
Claude Brady: looks
David Olson: our nice
Claude Brady: you like.
David Olson: whiteboard, um a little uh idea of
Claude Brady: Of the shape.
David Olson: yeah.
Orville Johnson: Or the
Claude Brady: Yeah,
Orville Johnson: sh
Claude Brady: probably,
David Olson: I
Claude Brady: it
David Olson: dunno.
Claude Brady: would be nice.
David Olson: Has anyone got um
Orville Johnson: Do you get
David Olson: a
Orville Johnson: an idea
David Olson: little
Orville Johnson: of
David Olson: bit
Orville Johnson: the shape?
David Olson: detailed ideas about the shape? I don't,
Wendell Miller: Maybe like
David Olson: for one.
Wendell Miller: this pen.
David Olson: A bit bigger I guess,
Claude Brady: No,
David Olson: but
Claude Brady: bigger.
Orville Johnson: A little bit bigger, yeah but
David Olson: The shape is nice, it's um something different, and
Wendell Miller: It
David Olson: we
Wendell Miller: has
David Olson: want
Wendell Miller: to feel
David Olson: we
Wendell Miller: nice
David Olson: want
Claude Brady: Well,
David Olson: that.
Wendell Miller: in
Claude Brady: I
Wendell Miller: your hand.
Claude Brady: I
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: I have to say, I have this uh can opening remote control in my head most of all, or I think some maybe we should no, that will be too
Orville Johnson: Oh, uh
Claude Brady: costly.
Orville Johnson: look uh look
Claude Brady: We shou
Orville Johnson: at
Claude Brady: we
Orville Johnson: the
Claude Brady: could
Orville Johnson: pictures.
Claude Brady: also, that was a would also be an idea, but I don't think it I don't know if it exists already, you should like make Alessi or something design it.
David Olson: Okay, yeah.
Claude Brady: That would also be nice. But that's
David Olson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: gonna
David Olson: but
Claude Brady: then you c then you
David Olson: twelve
Claude Brady: don't
David Olson: and a half Euros? Uh
Claude Brady: Yeah, but then you don't have t yeah it that's not something i that's in the production cost a one it's a one time, you know s was it's a single cost.
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: Yeah, m but but then you can nah, I don't thin I think that it would be more expensive, because I've bought the Alessi stuff more often and even small pencil holders or something are more expensive.
David Olson: Yeah, that's true.
Claude Brady: Would be a nice idea though. I don't know. I think it uh has to be a r it has to have round forms or something. Like something like that or so or so
David Olson: Something like that is very ergonomic.
Claude Brady: And on th and then uh
David Olson: So
Claude Brady: s a base unit underneath it. It's also round. Put it in there uh wire on it. Maybe
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: uh, I don't know, some some lights, a big but well.
Orville Johnson: Yeah, flash lights at the
Claude Brady: Volume and
Orville Johnson: side.
Claude Brady: programme,
Orville Johnson: At
Claude Brady: yeah.
Orville Johnson: the side,
David Olson: Yes,
Orville Johnson: or something
David Olson: volume and
Orville Johnson: like
David Olson: programme
Orville Johnson: that.
David Olson: should be there I guess, because you
Claude Brady: And
David Olson: hands
Claude Brady: some
David Olson: wi
Claude Brady: of the
David Olson: uh y
Claude Brady: extra
David Olson: your
Claude Brady: funct
David Olson: hands will be in the smaller part.
Claude Brady: Some of the
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: extra functions over here.
David Olson: Yeah, and
Claude Brady: Numbers.
David Olson: the numbers on top,
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
David Olson: I guess.
Claude Brady: And and lights? How we're g well, maybe uh s a ring of no, no, you have to Maybe on the side
David Olson: Maybe
Claude Brady: of it.
David Olson: ro roun rounds uh
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
David Olson: uh
Orville Johnson: side
David Olson: l
Orville Johnson: of
David Olson: sorry.
Orville Johnson: it.
Claude Brady: Along
Orville Johnson: Just
Claude Brady: the side
Orville Johnson: two LEDs
Claude Brady: uh strip
Orville Johnson: or something
Claude Brady: of yeah.
Orville Johnson: on the side.
David Olson: Maybe lights
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
David Olson: also around the volume and the p the plus minus programme buttons.
Claude Brady: Yeah, but I also meant the
David Olson: Oh.
Claude Brady: the blinking li w you know, the ones that also blink when you try to uh uh locate your remote.
David Olson: Okay.
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: Well,
Orville Johnson: Well, uh
Claude Brady: theys have
Orville Johnson: probably
Claude Brady: to be
Orville Johnson: at the side. You know look
Claude Brady: Yeah.
Orville Johnson: at the front,
Claude Brady: Yeah,
Orville Johnson: but
Claude Brady: yeah. Exactly. When you you see it from the side, then it would look just like that.
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: And
Orville Johnson: exactly,
Claude Brady: then you have
Orville Johnson: and then there is yeah.
Claude Brady: a strip of uh lights or
Orville Johnson: Yeah,
Claude Brady: something.
David Olson: Okay, yeah.
Orville Johnson: something like that, yeah.
Claude Brady: Well, uh I think it's nice, for one thing. maybe put something on top of it or, you know, like that's
Orville Johnson: No.
Claude Brady: looks funny. I don't know.
Orville Johnson: No.
Claude Brady: Or some
David Olson: I
Claude Brady: bump.
David Olson: think I think
Claude Brady: Maybe
David Olson: that'll
Claude Brady: some
David Olson: be too big tha
Claude Brady: Yeah?
David Olson: too big then.
Orville Johnson: Bumper or something.
Claude Brady: We'll have to think about it. I think we're
David Olson: Yeah.
Claude Brady: we're done.
Orville Johnson: Yeah.
David Olson: Yes, we are.
Claude Brady: We can
Orville Johnson: Lunch
Claude Brady: save
Orville Johnson: break.
David Olson: Alright.
Claude Brady: this one.
David Olson: Yes, I guess it's lunch time.
Orville Johnson: Okay then.
Claude Brady: Mm mm.
David Olson: I don't know. Half and hour? I thought
Orville Johnson: Okay,
David Olson: our
Orville Johnson: five
David Olson: next uh
Orville Johnson: uh
David Olson: next individual round was half an hour.
Claude Brady: Yeah, that was what
David Olson: I don't
Claude Brady: uh
David Olson: know about the lunch break.
Claude Brady: Mm, we'll hear about it.
David Olson: Well
Orville Johnson: Oh. | Claude Brady opened the meeting. Wendell Miller reported on working design, explaining how a remote control works and describing its main components. Orville Johnson talked about what functions should be included. He suggested they should focus on either expert or novice users. The basic functions should include an on/off switch, buttons for channels one to nine, volume, mute and buttons for next and previous channel. He suggested that a trendy design should not have many buttons. David Olson reported on user requirements, including how users rated the importance of different features. He stressed that a trendy design is important, that users zap a lot, and that remotes often get lost. Claude Brady informed the group of new requirements. The remote is only for TV, should not include a teletext feature, and should feature the company colour and slogan. The group discussed what functions and features the remote should have, and whether to include DVD/VCR controls, a teletext button, stop button, changeable covers, and a base/recharger with locator function. The group also discussed making the remote a rounded, ergonomic shape, and using flashing lights to help locate it when lost. | 1 | amisum | train |
Harry Esterbrook: Okay, welcome to the detailed design meeting. Again, I'm gonna take minutes. Oh, we're gonna have a prototype presentation first. Uh, who's gonna give the prototype presentation? You two guys?
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay. Go ahead.
Peter Terrell: coffee.
Salvatore Bartels: 'Kay, we've made a prototype Um, we've got uh uh our aspects from the last meeting. Uh, especially we looked at the form, material and the colour. Um, we've uh drawn here the p prototype. The logo is uh is uh is pretty uh obvious to see on the on the remote control, but it is necessary when you want to build your uh company f to a level higher. Um, our interface elements, there are shown in the drawing. Maybe you can uh point them uh The functions.
Peter Terrell: Uh well, the uh all the functions are discussed uh I think the most of the functions are uh uh obvious. Uh, it's a little bit. Uh, power button. Uh then the the the nine uh channels. Uh the volume uh uh at the side, and the other side is the programmes. And then we had uh just uh two buttons, we place them in the middle, uh the menu, and for the teletext
Harry Esterbrook: Oh no,
Peter Terrell: that
Harry Esterbrook: the
Sammy Huston: Alright,
Peter Terrell: was th
Harry Esterbrook: the
Sammy Huston: I
Harry Esterbrook: the mute button misses now.
Peter Terrell: Oh,
Harry Esterbrook: Do y do
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: you
Peter Terrell: the mute
Harry Esterbrook: did
Peter Terrell: button.
Salvatore Bartels: But
Harry Esterbrook: we want
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Harry Esterbrook: to
Salvatore Bartels: that
Harry Esterbrook: have a m
Salvatore Bartels: It's
Harry Esterbrook: mute button?
Salvatore Bartels: uh here
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: then, in the middle.
Sammy Huston: Alright,
Harry Esterbrook: Huh.
Sammy Huston: and uh you gotta point out which is the volume um uh button
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Sammy Huston: and
Salvatore Bartels: um
Sammy Huston: which is the programme button.
Salvatore Bartels: we've
Peter Terrell: Well,
Salvatore Bartels: disc
Peter Terrell: yeah mo uh mo Yeah, well most of them are right-handed.
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: Most
Sammy Huston: but
Salvatore Bartels: of
Sammy Huston: you
Salvatore Bartels: the users
Sammy Huston: you gotta make it clear on the on
Salvatore Bartels: Yes, y
Peter Terrell: Yeah
Salvatore Bartels: there
Peter Terrell: well,
Salvatore Bartels: there will be
Peter Terrell: I
Salvatore Bartels: a p a
Peter Terrell: don't
Salvatore Bartels: little
Peter Terrell: have time in
Salvatore Bartels: a
Peter Terrell: uh
Salvatore Bartels: little
Peter Terrell: anymore
Salvatore Bartels: P_ on
Peter Terrell: on the
Salvatore Bartels: that and
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: a little
Sammy Huston: and a and
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Sammy Huston: a triangle
Peter Terrell: Oh yeah, just
Sammy Huston: on that.
Peter Terrell: progr
Salvatore Bartels: yeah.
Peter Terrell: programme
Sammy Huston: Yes.
Peter Terrell: above,
Sammy Huston: Next
Peter Terrell: I think.
Sammy Huston: to that I kinda miss a zero actually.
Harry Esterbrook: Wait, there's was one thing I wanted to ask. Uh, there are different ways for remote to uh do like uh d I call it teens and twenties. Uh, y
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: th th th the two numbers.
Sammy Huston: All n no, that's um
Peter Terrell: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: It's a television.
Peter Terrell: true,
Sammy Huston: kinda dependent
Peter Terrell: yeah.
Sammy Huston: on the television.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Peter Terrell: Uh
Harry Esterbrook: but do we have do we need extra buttons, for example
Sammy Huston: I
Peter Terrell: Uh
Sammy Huston: think
Harry Esterbrook: some uh some
Peter Terrell: I
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Peter Terrell: think
Harry Esterbrook: have to
Peter Terrell: so.
Salvatore Bartels: yes, you have you have a lot of standard buttons that has to be uh on it, uh
Sammy Huston: Yeah, I think
Salvatore Bartels: th
Sammy Huston: you
Salvatore Bartels: with
Sammy Huston: should
Salvatore Bartels: the
Sammy Huston: add
Salvatore Bartels: one and a double
Peter Terrell: Zero?
Salvatore Bartels: uh uh
Sammy Huston: A cross, or whatever.
Peter Terrell: May
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, but you
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Peter Terrell: maybe
Salvatore Bartels: yes.
Harry Esterbrook: don't
Sammy Huston: line.
Peter Terrell: here?
Harry Esterbrook: you don't actually need them, becau b l a lot of remote controls work that y when y that you when you fir you push the
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: one first, then
Peter Terrell: And
Harry Esterbrook: you
Peter Terrell: then
Harry Esterbrook: have
Peter Terrell: a second.
Sammy Huston: No,
Harry Esterbrook: a
Sammy Huston: that's
Harry Esterbrook: couple
Sammy Huston: dependent
Harry Esterbrook: of seconds
Sammy Huston: on the television.
Harry Esterbrook: No, I don't think so.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes, you have
Sammy Huston: I
Salvatore Bartels: televisions,
Sammy Huston: do know so.
Salvatore Bartels: then you have to,
Peter Terrell: Is
Salvatore Bartels: you
Peter Terrell: it
Salvatore Bartels: know, you
Peter Terrell: depending
Salvatore Bartels: have to
Peter Terrell: on television?
Salvatore Bartels: uh press
Harry Esterbrook: Nah, I
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: don't think so really, because you have a I know some remote controls that don't have these buttons, but you still can, know, obviously you can still
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Harry Esterbrook: select the twenty uh
Salvatore Bartels: but
Harry Esterbrook: a number in the
Salvatore Bartels: but
Harry Esterbrook: twenty
Salvatore Bartels: a lot
Harry Esterbrook: or
Sammy Huston: Yes,
Harry Esterbrook: in the
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Harry Esterbrook: ten.
Sammy Huston: but uh uh no uh remote control nowadays are um they come with the television. Or actually, the other way around. But
Harry Esterbrook: No, I think uh I really think it's n because you can when when you put a button on it with like one and uh then a dash,
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: it's the same thing as when you just push the one, because it i it first
Salvatore Bartels: Yes, but
Harry Esterbrook: gives you the functionality of that that uh separate button you also had to
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Harry Esterbrook: uh
Sammy Huston: well
Harry Esterbrook: apply.
Sammy Huston: but su
Salvatore Bartels: some
Sammy Huston: If
Salvatore Bartels: televisions don't accept uh
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: that
Harry Esterbrook: because
Salvatore Bartels: that
Harry Esterbrook: that's i it's for television. It's exact the same thing.
Salvatore Bartels: No, no, but
Sammy Huston: No no no. So some
Salvatore Bartels: s
Sammy Huston: television respond differently. Look, if uh i
Harry Esterbrook: No,
Sammy Huston: i
Harry Esterbrook: listen listen. When you push the button, the remote control gives a signal. I in th in the first place
Sammy Huston: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: it gives a signal which it would also send when you put a separate button on it.
Sammy Huston: Yes, that's
Harry Esterbrook: The one
Sammy Huston: true.
Harry Esterbrook: with dash, that signal gi and when y whe when you don't push another button on the remote control within five seconds, then the remote control
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: gives a signal for channel one.
Peter Terrell: True.
Sammy Huston: No
Harry Esterbrook: I think it works that way,
Sammy Huston: No, it
Harry Esterbrook: really.
Sammy Huston: it it works uh if you haven't got uh a special button for it, uh if you push a one, then on your television there will appear a one and a a line,
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, but it's exact
Sammy Huston: which is
Harry Esterbrook: the same
Sammy Huston: an empty space.
Harry Esterbrook: that w would
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Harry Esterbrook: appear
Salvatore Bartels: but
Harry Esterbrook: when
Salvatore Bartels: some
Harry Esterbrook: you put a separate button
Salvatore Bartels: some
Harry Esterbrook: push
Salvatore Bartels: old
Harry Esterbrook: a separate
Salvatore Bartels: televisions
Harry Esterbrook: button.
Salvatore Bartels: uh you have to uh click on uh a special button, uh then you go to a a next level, you can push two buttons.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, but you don't
Sammy Huston: Yep.
Harry Esterbrook: underst uh you don't
Sammy Huston: True.
Harry Esterbrook: understand my point. I think
Salvatore Bartels: You want
Harry Esterbrook: it's exact the same thing
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Harry Esterbrook: when
Salvatore Bartels: but
Harry Esterbrook: y
Salvatore Bartels: some television don't support it.
Harry Esterbrook: No, but
Peter Terrell: But
Harry Esterbrook: then
Peter Terrell: the ex
Harry Esterbrook: they would a would also support that button, because it's the same thing. Listen, with that that's that special but button you're talking about, eh? That's just a signal to recei ju they send a t signal to the v tv T_V_ that they have to put a one in on your screen and a dash, which you can pu so you can uh still put another number on it. When you don't have that separate button, and you push y one, it's exactly the same thing. Do y you the remote control gives that same signal
Sammy Huston: No, s
Harry Esterbrook: as
Sammy Huston: some
Salvatore Bartels: No,
Harry Esterbrook: it would
Salvatore Bartels: a remote
Harry Esterbrook: give
Salvatore Bartels: can
Harry Esterbrook: when
Sammy Huston: some
Harry Esterbrook: you only
Sammy Huston: televisions
Harry Esterbrook: had
Sammy Huston: need the input first
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah.
Sammy Huston: uh
Salvatore Bartels: Yes, so
Sammy Huston: and
Salvatore Bartels: they
Harry Esterbrook: But
Salvatore Bartels: need
Harry Esterbrook: you
Sammy Huston: and
Harry Esterbrook: give
Sammy Huston: you c
Harry Esterbrook: the input.
Salvatore Bartels: no, they
Harry Esterbrook: You
Salvatore Bartels: need
Harry Esterbrook: push the one. That's the same thing as the button
Sammy Huston: No, that's
Harry Esterbrook: with
Sammy Huston: not
Harry Esterbrook: the one
Sammy Huston: true.
Harry Esterbrook: and it
Sammy Huston: It's
Harry Esterbrook: yes it
Sammy Huston: simply
Harry Esterbrook: it is.
Sammy Huston: not
Harry Esterbrook: Think
Sammy Huston: true.
Harry Esterbrook: about it.
Sammy Huston: It's simply
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: No,
Sammy Huston: not
Salvatore Bartels: but
Sammy Huston: true.
Peter Terrell: You
Sammy Huston: Uh
Peter Terrell: uh you can
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Peter Terrell: wai when you push the one you can show on the telly a one and just a dash,
Harry Esterbrook: And it's the same
Peter Terrell: and then
Harry Esterbrook: thing
Peter Terrell: wait
Harry Esterbrook: what happens
Peter Terrell: uh
Harry Esterbrook: and
Peter Terrell: two
Harry Esterbrook: a g remote
Peter Terrell: uh seconds
Harry Esterbrook: control
Peter Terrell: or something
Harry Esterbrook: gives another signal after five seconds that is just one.
Sammy Huston: No, remote control doesn't give signal after five seconds. Remote control is a stupid thing. If you push a button, it sends
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Sammy Huston: it
Harry Esterbrook: that's
Sammy Huston: immediately
Harry Esterbrook: true.
Sammy Huston: to to the television.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, but I m uh but it's I I know for sure that some televisions that w th th the
Salvatore Bartels: Yeah,
Harry Esterbrook: remote
Salvatore Bartels: it
Harry Esterbrook: control supplied, only ha has the c these buttons with a one and a dash and a two and a dash, but when you use a bu a n remote control that doesn't sport these buttons, it still works. But okay,
Sammy Huston: No,
Harry Esterbrook: we
Sammy Huston: definitely
Harry Esterbrook: we'll impl
Sammy Huston: not.
Peter Terrell: We'll discuss
Sammy Huston: Definitely
Peter Terrell: them
Sammy Huston: not.
Peter Terrell: in the usability lab.
Harry Esterbrook: No, we'll apply
Peter Terrell: Uh eva
Harry Esterbrook: them then
Peter Terrell: evaluation.
Harry Esterbrook: for now.
Peter Terrell: I don't know uh I don't know if if it's
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, app
Peter Terrell: it's
Harry Esterbrook: just apply
Peter Terrell: necessary.
Harry Esterbrook: them next to the zero, the one and the
Peter Terrell: Yeah?
Harry Esterbrook: two. Yeah, I think so. Yeah, for now, if we don't know for sure whether
Peter Terrell: Okay.
Salvatore Bartels: And
Sammy Huston: Yes.
Salvatore Bartels: the button for the SCART uh
Peter Terrell: Ach.
Salvatore Bartels: audio video uh external
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah but
Salvatore Bartels: input.
Sammy Huston: Uh, you can access
Harry Esterbrook: okay.
Sammy Huston: that uh via zero, and
Harry Esterbrook: What
Sammy Huston: then
Harry Esterbrook: I said
Sammy Huston: minus,
Harry Esterbrook: about
Sammy Huston: I
Harry Esterbrook: uh
Sammy Huston: guess.
Harry Esterbrook: the remote control sending
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: another signal, that that might
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: not be true, but I still think i it it all T_V_s in some ways support it, I don't know.
Salvatore Bartels: No, no.
Harry Esterbrook: I think it's more c is m maybe we don't uh we both don't really understand how it i how it really works, but I think there's more to in than wha
Salvatore Bartels: Uh,
Harry Esterbrook: than
Salvatore Bartels: remote
Harry Esterbrook: what you
Salvatore Bartels: control
Harry Esterbrook: just said.
Salvatore Bartels: sends one signal at one button uh press.
Harry Esterbrook: I do think that uh m
Salvatore Bartels: Uh,
Harry Esterbrook: T_V_s
Salvatore Bartels: some
Harry Esterbrook: support mur multiple kind of remote
Salvatore Bartels: N
Harry Esterbrook: controls.
Salvatore Bartels: some televisions
Harry Esterbrook: M
Salvatore Bartels: when when you want to go further than uh ten
Harry Esterbrook: Th won't work wi
Salvatore Bartels: No,
Harry Esterbrook: with
Salvatore Bartels: you
Harry Esterbrook: uh
Salvatore Bartels: have to you have to
Harry Esterbrook: to
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Harry Esterbrook: have that
Salvatore Bartels: give
Harry Esterbrook: special
Salvatore Bartels: the television
Harry Esterbrook: button.
Salvatore Bartels: uh two or more signals. When you uh press one button, you give one signal. And the older televisions need more signals to go a level higher. But
Sammy Huston: Yep.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay, well we'll see.
Salvatore Bartels: When you make the technology that that it will uh give more signals, it could work, but Just a basic idea of of of the most uh most y most common uh and simple uh operations on the
Sammy Huston: Okay.
Salvatore Bartels: remote.
Sammy Huston: I kinda miss the docking station.
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes. It's here on the
Peter Terrell: Well it yeah, uh there's nothing
Salvatore Bartels: We came
Peter Terrell: I
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Peter Terrell: think it's pretty basic, the the there's
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Peter Terrell: no fu there's
Sammy Huston: No
Peter Terrell: one
Sammy Huston: nothing
Peter Terrell: there's one
Sammy Huston: really
Peter Terrell: button,
Sammy Huston: trendy about it.
Peter Terrell: that's wha there's there's there's one function and that's n the one
Salvatore Bartels: But
Peter Terrell: button
Salvatore Bartels: maybe we can
Sammy Huston: The
Peter Terrell: when
Sammy Huston: button.
Peter Terrell: you want to find
Salvatore Bartels: maybe
Peter Terrell: it.
Salvatore Bartels: we can make the docking station uh uh a bit standard for for uh the other products we sell, because Real Real Reaction sells more products than only remote controls.
Sammy Huston: Yep.
Salvatore Bartels: So maybe we can uh use the docking station, for example, uh M_P_ three players or or uh uh hearing devices.
Sammy Huston: I think that's very difficult, because of different shapes of uh
Salvatore Bartels: Yes, but
Sammy Huston: uh
Salvatore Bartels: when
Sammy Huston: devices.
Salvatore Bartels: you put that same volt voltages on it, you can put uh when
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: the
Sammy Huston: of course.
Salvatore Bartels: when the when uh o the the the lowest part of it, when
Sammy Huston: Mm-hmm.
Salvatore Bartels: it's o the same as the other products, you can put it all on the same uh
Sammy Huston: Well it it got it it has got to fit into the shape, of course.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes, but we can make
Sammy Huston: The technology and the voltage can be the same. That's uh that's true. But uh i if you all make the m having a bottom like this,
Salvatore Bartels: No, we
Sammy Huston: then
Salvatore Bartels: can
Sammy Huston: they
Salvatore Bartels: make
Sammy Huston: all
Salvatore Bartels: uh make
Sammy Huston: fit.
Salvatore Bartels: the most lowest part all the same.
Sammy Huston: Yeah, that's true, but uh
Salvatore Bartels: When when the the recharger has a has a bit what points out, we can place all on top of it.
Sammy Huston: Yes, but
Salvatore Bartels: Just
Sammy Huston: uh
Salvatore Bartels: have
Sammy Huston: I
Salvatore Bartels: to
Sammy Huston: I
Salvatore Bartels: be
Sammy Huston: g
Salvatore Bartels: big enough for the
Sammy Huston: Shouldn't
Salvatore Bartels: biggest
Sammy Huston: it fall then? It isn't going to fall down? That's a bit uh yeah, I
Salvatore Bartels: No,
Sammy Huston: think
Salvatore Bartels: when you make it large enough no it it will not. But then it's
Sammy Huston: No, but
Salvatore Bartels: a little
Sammy Huston: if
Salvatore Bartels: bit
Sammy Huston: if like this, I'll I'll point it out, if you got uh
Salvatore Bartels: But
Sammy Huston: a
Salvatore Bartels: it's just
Sammy Huston: a a
Salvatore Bartels: an
Sammy Huston: base
Salvatore Bartels: idea.
Sammy Huston: a base like this, I won't draw it really. If you got a base which is uh
Salvatore Bartels: But
Sammy Huston: as
Salvatore Bartels: it's flat
Sammy Huston: big as this
Salvatore Bartels: it's flat as as this, so we can p make all the products
Peter Terrell: You can.
Salvatore Bartels: as flat as this.
Sammy Huston: Yeah
Peter Terrell: But
Sammy Huston: sure,
Peter Terrell: i
Sammy Huston: but
Peter Terrell: i
Sammy Huston: if
Peter Terrell: i
Sammy Huston: you
Peter Terrell: it's
Sammy Huston: got if
Peter Terrell: backwards.
Sammy Huston: you got a tiny player, it can
Salvatore Bartels: Yes, but when you make uh uh
Peter Terrell: But
Salvatore Bartels: a bit
Peter Terrell: it's it's
Salvatore Bartels: of
Peter Terrell: backwards.
Salvatore Bartels: big
Peter Terrell: It's leaning. It's leaning backwards, I think, in
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Peter Terrell: the in the
Sammy Huston: Uh, wha
Peter Terrell: docking
Sammy Huston: what
Peter Terrell: station.
Sammy Huston: you could do if you uh from the bottom oh, right,
Peter Terrell: That's text.
Sammy Huston: help.
Harry Esterbrook: But
Sammy Huston: Uh, you could make like a hole in it, you know,
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Sammy Huston: of uh in in
Salvatore Bartels: little
Sammy Huston: the
Salvatore Bartels: holer littler Uh, little
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: products go deeper
Sammy Huston: That
Salvatore Bartels: in
Sammy Huston: i
Salvatore Bartels: it.
Sammy Huston: that is possible,
Harry Esterbrook: Well let's
Sammy Huston: yep.
Harry Esterbrook: ha let's talk about the docking station later, because uh maybe
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Harry Esterbrook: we have
Sammy Huston: sure,
Harry Esterbrook: we
Sammy Huston: you're right.
Harry Esterbrook: have to uh consider the docking station anyway, because we have some uh
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: cost
Salvatore Bartels: And
Harry Esterbrook: issues
Salvatore Bartels: uh uh
Harry Esterbrook: still
Sammy Huston: Oh.
Harry Esterbrook: to come. But we
Salvatore Bartels: the
Harry Esterbrook: have
Salvatore Bartels: f
Harry Esterbrook: to look
Salvatore Bartels: the
Harry Esterbrook: n I
Salvatore Bartels: look
Harry Esterbrook: don't
Salvatore Bartels: and
Harry Esterbrook: know.
Salvatore Bartels: feel would be great on this uh remote control,
Sammy Huston: I don't
Salvatore Bartels: because
Sammy Huston: like the colours.
Salvatore Bartels: uh you always uh will uh pick up the remote control in
Sammy Huston: Mm-hmm.
Salvatore Bartels: the in the smallest uh area.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: Then your uh left thumb of uh your right thumb is uh near the programme uh button, which is the most common used uh function, and all the other buttons are available for your uh thumb. So it's
Harry Esterbrook: Okay.
Salvatore Bartels: it's it's really good design.
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: Yes.
Sammy Huston: Alright.
Harry Esterbrook: That's it?
Salvatore Bartels: Yes, uh on the side uh there will be a strip of rubber, and in the middle uh there is uh a hard
Sammy Huston: The light.
Salvatore Bartels: uh a hard material, a bit hard plastic with a light uh behind it.
Sammy Huston: Okay. And other lights?
Harry Esterbrook: I think added lights
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Harry Esterbrook: are gonna
Salvatore Bartels: we can
Harry Esterbrook: be a problem
Salvatore Bartels: make also
Harry Esterbrook: too.
Salvatore Bartels: n neon lights on it, or or the buttons
Sammy Huston: No, o on
Salvatore Bartels: that
Sammy Huston: the on
Salvatore Bartels: can
Sammy Huston: the
Salvatore Bartels: make
Sammy Huston: front.
Salvatore Bartels: uh light
Sammy Huston: Yeah, okay.
Salvatore Bartels: on it.
Sammy Huston: Maybe the uh the logo.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Peter Terrell: lights?
Salvatore Bartels: But, it will also
Sammy Huston: Yeah, why not?
Salvatore Bartels: uh uh use batteries, and do we
Sammy Huston: Of
Salvatore Bartels: want
Sammy Huston: course.
Salvatore Bartels: to
Harry Esterbrook: Okay.
Peter Terrell: Mm.
Harry Esterbrook: For now, uh this is uh is good enough.
Sammy Huston: Okay.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, what was uh on the
Salvatore Bartels: The all the aspects of the interface buttons were uh
Harry Esterbrook: Okay, but in the oh yeah, the colour, one colour for the rubber, isn't
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: it? Then we're gonna do the buttons in the i are we're gonna have rubber buttons. And
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: they're be
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: a
Sammy Huston: Uh,
Harry Esterbrook: they'll
Sammy Huston: in
Harry Esterbrook: be
Sammy Huston: the same
Harry Esterbrook: in the same
Sammy Huston: colour
Harry Esterbrook: colour
Sammy Huston: as the
Harry Esterbrook: as
Sammy Huston: side.
Harry Esterbrook: the rubber on the side.
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Sammy Huston: Yeah, I think
Harry Esterbrook: Okay.
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Sammy Huston: I think
Harry Esterbrook: And
Sammy Huston: that'll be
Harry Esterbrook: I
Sammy Huston: good.
Harry Esterbrook: think we
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: should use a a darker colour for the um plastic, and maybe some more m brighter and flashy
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Harry Esterbrook: stuff
Salvatore Bartels: maybe we can use
Sammy Huston: Yes.
Salvatore Bartels: on the on the lights on the side we can use uh uh multiple uh lights, so it will uh
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, we'll talk about the lights later.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: 'Cause
Sammy Huston: Yep.
Harry Esterbrook: I also don yeah, it's depends on the costs and such.
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: But uh, and we have to agree uh upon the exact colours, but may I dunno if that's important, but we'll talk about that later. Okay, for now this
Sammy Huston: We
Harry Esterbrook: is
Sammy Huston: will.
Harry Esterbrook: this is okay. Um, the next p y you gonna give a presentation too? Uh, I have to see the agenda.
Sammy Huston: Well,
Salvatore Bartels: No.
Sammy Huston: uh yeah, I I'm gonna do something right there, yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: Detail design.
Sammy Huston: We gotta do that on the right the most right-most screen, because
Harry Esterbrook: Evaluation
Sammy Huston: the leftmost
Harry Esterbrook: criteria.
Sammy Huston: Yep, that's Sammy Huston.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay.
Peter Terrell: Okay.
Sammy Huston: Alright. I will be needing that image, so leave it please. Um Go away. Right, we're gonna evaluate that design according to a few points. Um, we g the four of us are going to do that um together. I wanna have a colour over here, come on. Right, the remote is not ugly, a bit weird sentence, but the positive things has to be on the left, so I said not ugly instead of ugly. Uh, what would you say, we we gotta give points to uh to all of these to evaluate uh that design, and please forget the drawing skills of these guys.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay.
Sammy Huston: The remote control is not ugly. How do you feel?
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, I think four maybe would be appropriate, because it's Yeah, maybe it really depends on taste. Uh, I mean it's kind of, our design. It's
Sammy Huston: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: so
Salvatore Bartels: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: if maybe a lot of people find it really ugly, you know, o other people find it really cool.
Sammy Huston: Background colour.
Harry Esterbrook: I don't know or uh I don't know how you
Sammy Huston: How
Salvatore Bartels: I
Harry Esterbrook: Casting.
Sammy Huston: do
Salvatore Bartels: think
Sammy Huston: you guys feel?
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: I think the the fronts will give it a more uh uh uh less uglier uh side, because you can uh make
Sammy Huston: The different
Salvatore Bartels: it in your
Sammy Huston: designs.
Salvatore Bartels: own yes, you can
Sammy Huston: Yes.
Salvatore Bartels: make it in your own uh
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Sammy Huston: Okay.
Salvatore Bartels: more to your own personality or or house
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: style.
Harry Esterbrook: but we d we didn't we're we're not planning to use fronts, I believe.
Sammy Huston: No, not not fronts, but
Harry Esterbrook: With
Peter Terrell: No,
Harry Esterbrook: a
Sammy Huston: different
Peter Terrell: not
Harry Esterbrook: colour
Peter Terrell: fronts.
Sammy Huston: designs.
Harry Esterbrook: a co a
Peter Terrell: Different
Harry Esterbrook: colours.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Peter Terrell: designs.
Harry Esterbrook: Oh, okay.
Sammy Huston: And
Peter Terrell: Different
Sammy Huston: that's still
Peter Terrell: colours
Sammy Huston: uh
Peter Terrell: maybe, yeah.
Sammy Huston: uh, yeah, is is uh is a little
Harry Esterbrook: Okay, but
Sammy Huston: personal touch, I guess.
Harry Esterbrook: Oh, maybe
Sammy Huston: What?
Harry Esterbrook: we should do three or something that w you know, our
Sammy Huston: Yeah, wha wha what would you uh
Salvatore Bartels: Or
Sammy Huston: guys
Salvatore Bartels: forty.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah.
Sammy Huston: uh think? Personally. Personally.
Peter Terrell: We can make it a one.
Sammy Huston: Yes, but what is it?
Salvatore Bartels: I think two or three.
Peter Terrell: Mm yeah.
Sammy Huston: Guido?
Peter Terrell: I agree.
Sammy Huston: Two or three.
Peter Terrell: Um,
Sammy Huston: I
Peter Terrell: I
Sammy Huston: was
Peter Terrell: uh I go for the positive. So I go for two.
Sammy Huston: I was thinking about three, so I guess
Harry Esterbrook: Uh, I was thinking about four, so I think three is uh
Sammy Huston: three
Peter Terrell: Okay,
Sammy Huston: is
Peter Terrell: three.
Sammy Huston: uh a bit uh oh, what am I doing? I'll mark it. The remote control's uh uh that n makes uh zapping easy.
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah well, let that
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: let's make that
Peter Terrell: Two.
Harry Esterbrook: a one.
Sammy Huston: Yeah?
Peter Terrell: One. One.
Sammy Huston: Antek,
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Sammy Huston: you agree?
Peter Terrell: Okay yeah, I'll I'll
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Peter Terrell: agree.
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: That's one thing for
Sammy Huston: You're
Peter Terrell: I'm
Harry Esterbrook: sure.
Sammy Huston: not
Peter Terrell: the I'm
Sammy Huston: Antek.
Peter Terrell: the usability, so
Sammy Huston: totally agree. The remote control the remote control's relevant buttons are prominently visible.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, two or
Peter Terrell: The
Harry Esterbrook: a one, I guess. It's something we really put work into.
Sammy Huston: Yeah, I yeah. I
Salvatore Bartels: It's
Sammy Huston: would
Salvatore Bartels: all
Sammy Huston: say
Salvatore Bartels: about
Sammy Huston: a one
Salvatore Bartels: the buttons.
Sammy Huston: because uh every button is uh uh relevant. And our oh yeah, it's a b yeah. Yeah? Alright. That's a one? You agree?
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah.
Sammy Huston: The remote control hasn't got too much redundant or unneeded buttons. I think we
Harry Esterbrook: But
Sammy Huston: totally
Peter Terrell: Well
Sammy Huston: succeeded there.
Harry Esterbrook: Well
Sammy Huston: Oh
Harry Esterbrook: maybe a two, because of the menu button
Peter Terrell: Yeah, well
Harry Esterbrook: or
Peter Terrell: menu
Harry Esterbrook: something.
Sammy Huston: Yeah, that's
Peter Terrell: Yeah,
Sammy Huston: true.
Peter Terrell: maybe.
Harry Esterbrook: And
Sammy Huston: That's
Salvatore Bartels: Also,
Harry Esterbrook: telete
Sammy Huston: true.
Salvatore Bartels: the the the buttons of the one, the two, the
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: the digits,
Harry Esterbrook: we don't know if the uh they're necessary.
Salvatore Bartels: o
Sammy Huston: the the yeah, m
Salvatore Bartels: they're
Sammy Huston: well,
Salvatore Bartels: used
Sammy Huston: you
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Sammy Huston: d
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Sammy Huston: you've got a point.
Harry Esterbrook: I think a two.
Peter Terrell: Yeah, true.
Salvatore Bartels: Can yes,
Peter Terrell: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: three,
Peter Terrell: I
Salvatore Bartels: two.
Harry Esterbrook: Came
Peter Terrell: agree.
Harry Esterbrook: a long way,
Sammy Huston: Two
Harry Esterbrook: but
Sammy Huston: or three?
Harry Esterbrook: not we didn't not uh
Peter Terrell: Mm two.
Sammy Huston: Two?
Salvatore Bartels: But
Sammy Huston: Antek.
Salvatore Bartels: you can't make a remote control without them,
Peter Terrell: Because
Salvatore Bartels: because
Peter Terrell: we got
Sammy Huston: Nay that that that's true, that's true. They're definitely needed.
Harry Esterbrook: No, w
Sammy Huston: So
Harry Esterbrook: w it can also always be more simplistic,
Sammy Huston: we put
Harry Esterbrook: but
Sammy Huston: it on a
Harry Esterbrook: two
Sammy Huston: two?
Harry Esterbrook: is yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Sammy Huston: The remote control has got a really trendy look.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes. A one.
Sammy Huston: Maarten.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, uh
Peter Terrell: Well.
Harry Esterbrook: a t I think a two. Yeah yeah, y i it's hard to say from this picture.
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: We we've tried to make it uh the the best trendy
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: look uh ever.
Sammy Huston: Ever, yeah. Guido.
Harry Esterbrook: But
Peter Terrell: Uh,
Harry Esterbrook: I do
Peter Terrell: I will
Harry Esterbrook: think
Peter Terrell: I
Harry Esterbrook: it's
Peter Terrell: will
Harry Esterbrook: more
Peter Terrell: make it a three, because uh yeah. I
Harry Esterbrook: But I
Peter Terrell: I
Harry Esterbrook: do
Peter Terrell: th
Harry Esterbrook: think that it's more trendy than beautiful.
Sammy Huston: Yeah, uh
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Sammy Huston: I agree. I agree.
Harry Esterbrook: So so I think
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: maybe it has
Peter Terrell: True,
Harry Esterbrook: to score
Peter Terrell: yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: higher uh on this
Sammy Huston: I was
Harry Esterbrook: than
Sammy Huston: planning
Harry Esterbrook: on the
Sammy Huston: to give it a two, uh where I give the not ugly uh
Harry Esterbrook: A th a three.
Sammy Huston: oh, yeah, that's true. You agree on the two?
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: I i uh when you compare to the
Sammy Huston: Great. Remote control hasn't got too much redundant or unneeded
Harry Esterbrook: Uh uh
Sammy Huston: buttons.
Harry Esterbrook: what's the difference
Sammy Huston: Uh, I
Harry Esterbrook: with
Sammy Huston: copied that one. Well, uh forget that.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay.
Sammy Huston: Um Go away. Remote control has got innovative technology implanted.
Peter Terrell: No.
Salvatore Bartels: No.
Harry Esterbrook: No.
Peter Terrell: We're not
Salvatore Bartels: No,
Peter Terrell: well, maybe the
Salvatore Bartels: not
Peter Terrell: the
Salvatore Bartels: L_C_D_,
Peter Terrell: the on the side.
Salvatore Bartels: so.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, but we uh you mean the rubber stuff?
Sammy Huston: Yeah, and the light.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Peter Terrell: And the
Harry Esterbrook: but
Peter Terrell: light
Harry Esterbrook: we have
Peter Terrell: maybe.
Harry Esterbrook: t
Salvatore Bartels: But
Harry Esterbrook: we
Salvatore Bartels: that
Harry Esterbrook: have
Salvatore Bartels: that's
Harry Esterbrook: to talk
Salvatore Bartels: not
Harry Esterbrook: about
Salvatore Bartels: innovative.
Harry Esterbrook: the lights
Peter Terrell: But
Harry Esterbrook: uh. And
Sammy Huston: Well,
Harry Esterbrook: I don't
Salvatore Bartels: Lights
Sammy Huston: I
Harry Esterbrook: u
Sammy Huston: g
Harry Esterbrook: also it's also really not innovative,
Salvatore Bartels: lights are
Harry Esterbrook: it's more
Sammy Huston: It's not seven?
Harry Esterbrook: No, six.
Peter Terrell: Well, six.
Harry Esterbrook: Or seven maybe, yeah.
Peter Terrell: No, six.
Salvatore Bartels: Six.
Harry Esterbrook: Or
Sammy Huston: Why
Harry Esterbrook: six.
Sammy Huston: uh why not
Peter Terrell: Six.
Sammy Huston: a seven?
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, mine is seven.
Salvatore Bartels: Because we've tried to make it a little bit innovative,
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: but it but
Sammy Huston: How?
Salvatore Bartels: it
Harry Esterbrook: Uh it's uh depends on the on the
Salvatore Bartels: With
Harry Esterbrook: maybe
Salvatore Bartels: the lights it it's it's kind of future
Harry Esterbrook: No,
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Harry Esterbrook: I
Sammy Huston: you
Harry Esterbrook: think
Sammy Huston: think
Harry Esterbrook: I
Sammy Huston: the lights
Harry Esterbrook: think
Sammy Huston: are
Harry Esterbrook: actually
Sammy Huston: innovative?
Harry Esterbrook: it's a seven maybe, but there's nothing innovative about it.
Sammy Huston: Well, it's n true. Uh, I agree, m but
Salvatore Bartels: But still you can retrieve it when it's when it's gone, with the
Peter Terrell: Innovative in
Salvatore Bartels: with
Peter Terrell: generally
Sammy Huston: I'll
Peter Terrell: or just
Sammy Huston: Yeah, you
Peter Terrell: f
Sammy Huston: you didn't draw the
Peter Terrell: original
Sammy Huston: docking station.
Peter Terrell: for
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: N no
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: The docking
Harry Esterbrook: no,
Sammy Huston: it
Harry Esterbrook: t.
Sammy Huston: it's
Salvatore Bartels: station
Peter Terrell: A docking
Salvatore Bartels: is a
Peter Terrell: station
Salvatore Bartels: is a little
Sammy Huston: I
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Sammy Huston: think
Salvatore Bartels: bit
Harry Esterbrook: I
Peter Terrell: is
Harry Esterbrook: mean
Sammy Huston: I
Harry Esterbrook: the
Peter Terrell: innova
Salvatore Bartels: innovative.
Sammy Huston: think
Harry Esterbrook: dock station,
Sammy Huston: with its
Harry Esterbrook: but but uh, I think
Salvatore Bartels: It's
Harry Esterbrook: the
Salvatore Bartels: a part of the remote.
Sammy Huston: I think
Harry Esterbrook: the docking
Sammy Huston: more
Harry Esterbrook: station,
Sammy Huston: m
Harry Esterbrook: it's gonna be a kind of a problem.
Peter Terrell: Okay.
Salvatore Bartels: And with the speaker
Harry Esterbrook: But
Sammy Huston: Uh that
Salvatore Bartels: on the
Sammy Huston: that's
Salvatore Bartels: there's
Sammy Huston: n
Salvatore Bartels: also a
Harry Esterbrook: Well,
Salvatore Bartels: speaker.
Harry Esterbrook: let's leave it open for uh for us later to see what, because we have to reevaluate anyway. Well I i
Salvatore Bartels: Okay.
Harry Esterbrook: yeah. No?
Sammy Huston: No uh, well, the agenda says evaluate now, so I think we
Harry Esterbrook: Okay, for now it's a six
Sammy Huston: It's
Harry Esterbrook: or a seven
Sammy Huston: it's a six.
Harry Esterbrook: uh, sev six
Peter Terrell: Six.
Harry Esterbrook: maybe, because
Salvatore Bartels: But the retrieval
Sammy Huston: That m
Salvatore Bartels: or
Sammy Huston: f
Salvatore Bartels: the
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Sammy Huston: for the retrieval
Harry Esterbrook: but I don't
Sammy Huston: function.
Harry Esterbrook: I don't know if it's very inno yeah.
Sammy Huston: Yeah. I think that's very innovative for a
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Sammy Huston: remote
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Sammy Huston: control.
Harry Esterbrook: v
Salvatore Bartels: how would you innovate a remote control more?
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, more through uh like function T_V_ functionalities
Salvatore Bartels: To put it on your
Harry Esterbrook: and
Salvatore Bartels: head.
Harry Esterbrook: no no, you know what I mean. You have must be innovative technology for remote controls, but more
Sammy Huston: Yeah
Harry Esterbrook: in
Sammy Huston: sure,
Harry Esterbrook: how
Sammy Huston: but
Harry Esterbrook: you control stuff, not in how you find your yeah. Yeah,
Sammy Huston: But I
Harry Esterbrook: it's
Sammy Huston: d I definitely don't think
Harry Esterbrook: that's
Sammy Huston: it's
Harry Esterbrook: that's
Sammy Huston: a five,
Harry Esterbrook: think
Sammy Huston: but
Harry Esterbrook: about it la later on and uh
Sammy Huston: Remote control is easy to use.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, as a a
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: one or a two ma
Peter Terrell: Yeah,
Harry Esterbrook: uh
Peter Terrell: a
Harry Esterbrook: at least.
Peter Terrell: two.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Sammy Huston: I think a two. Yeah?
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, it's good.
Peter Terrell: More
Sammy Huston: Come
Peter Terrell: two.
Sammy Huston: on. The remote control hasn't got uh.
Harry Esterbrook: No, I would have seen that one before. Oh, you skipped one uh
Sammy Huston: I've just filled uh
Harry Esterbrook: Uh, here.
Sammy Huston: Go away.
Salvatore Bartels: You like the buttons.
Sammy Huston: I found twelve questions so much, but it still is
Harry Esterbrook: Remote
Sammy Huston: ten.
Harry Esterbrook: control will be bought by
Sammy Huston: It will be bought by people under the age of forty.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah.
Peter Terrell: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: Definitely.
Salvatore Bartels: In
Harry Esterbrook: Well
Salvatore Bartels: in and comparing with uh people of th of
Sammy Huston: No
Salvatore Bartels: the age
Sammy Huston: no no.
Salvatore Bartels: above?
Harry Esterbrook: Uh,
Sammy Huston: No,
Harry Esterbrook: just
Sammy Huston: just
Harry Esterbrook: in general.
Sammy Huston: if they if they buy it.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, a two.
Salvatore Bartels: We don't know.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: But
Harry Esterbrook: but
Sammy Huston: Yeah, what
Harry Esterbrook: I think
Sammy Huston: do you think?
Harry Esterbrook: I
Peter Terrell: Yeah,
Harry Esterbrook: think two.
Peter Terrell: I think two, yeah. I agree.
Sammy Huston: Antek?
Peter Terrell: Two.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes, two, but only in c when you compare it with with elderly.
Harry Esterbrook: Uh, that
Sammy Huston: No,
Harry Esterbrook: is
Sammy Huston: that's
Harry Esterbrook: not the
Sammy Huston: no
Harry Esterbrook: question.
Sammy Huston: comparison.
Harry Esterbrook: It's just w it will be bought by people under forty. Yeah, you can yeah, you can be very
Sammy Huston: And I don't
Harry Esterbrook: picky about
Sammy Huston: mean
Salvatore Bartels: This
Harry Esterbrook: it.
Salvatore Bartels: is
Sammy Huston: two
Salvatore Bartels: just
Sammy Huston: people.
Salvatore Bartels: guessing.
Harry Esterbrook: Ah yeah, just make it we'll make
Salvatore Bartels: Make
Sammy Huston: W
Harry Esterbrook: it
Salvatore Bartels: it
Harry Esterbrook: a
Sammy Huston: w
Salvatore Bartels: a
Harry Esterbrook: two.
Salvatore Bartels: two. When it succeeds, uh it can get a two, mu
Sammy Huston: Right, the rem The remote control has
Harry Esterbrook: Oh
Sammy Huston: recognisable
Harry Esterbrook: no.
Sammy Huston: corporate image, colour,
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah.
Sammy Huston: logo or slogan.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, you have
Peter Terrell: We don't
Harry Esterbrook: make
Peter Terrell: have
Harry Esterbrook: an
Peter Terrell: the slogan though.
Harry Esterbrook: slogan is quite obvious.
Sammy Huston: Oh, the slogan.
Harry Esterbrook: Oh the oh
Sammy Huston: Can
Harry Esterbrook: sorry,
Sammy Huston: we see the slogan?
Harry Esterbrook: no, not not the slogan.
Peter Terrell: The logo.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: A logo.
Harry Esterbrook: you can put that on the side if if we would like
Peter Terrell: Underneath
Harry Esterbrook: to.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Peter Terrell: it
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Peter Terrell: or something.
Salvatore Bartels: encrypted uh with
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, and I will
Sammy Huston: Are
Harry Esterbrook: I
Sammy Huston: we
Harry Esterbrook: th
Sammy Huston: gonna do that?
Harry Esterbrook: still think it's gonna be a two
Peter Terrell: A
Harry Esterbrook: or
Peter Terrell: three.
Harry Esterbrook: a three. Maybe
Peter Terrell: Three.
Harry Esterbrook: a three this time.
Peter Terrell: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Peter Terrell: a three.
Sammy Huston: Three? I agree. Because of the slogan
Harry Esterbrook: And
Sammy Huston: Remote
Harry Esterbrook: uh
Sammy Huston: control's got a basic design intended uh for
Harry Esterbrook: Uh,
Sammy Huston: novice
Harry Esterbrook: it's a one
Sammy Huston: users.
Harry Esterbrook: or a two.
Peter Terrell: Yeah, two.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Sammy Huston: Two?
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Peter Terrell: Two.
Harry Esterbrook: make it a two.
Sammy Huston: Two. Alright. We gotta add up the scores now to see our total average. Four, five, seven, nine. Forget that. Fifteen, seventeen, twenty one, twenty four, twenty six. Twenty six. It's a two point six.
Harry Esterbrook: It's not that bad.
Sammy Huston: Alright, we yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, and that's mostly the inno when we uh score higher on innovative technology, we would score two,
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: which is
Sammy Huston: True.
Harry Esterbrook: uh quite a great score. Okay. Uh, this is was uh the evaluation?
Sammy Huston: This was my evaluation.
Harry Esterbrook: Because I
Sammy Huston: So
Harry Esterbrook: I still think that the most important part
Sammy Huston: We did
Harry Esterbrook: of this
Sammy Huston: a pretty
Harry Esterbrook: meeting
Sammy Huston: nice
Harry Esterbrook: still has
Sammy Huston: job until now.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah.
Sammy Huston: Um, is this your
Salvatore Bartels: Is there something
Sammy Huston: Whatever.
Salvatore Bartels: after this uh meeting?
Sammy Huston: Well, I think
Salvatore Bartels: Or
Sammy Huston: we gotta fill out
Peter Terrell: No.
Sammy Huston: another questionnaire.
Salvatore Bartels: Okay.
Peter Terrell: Okay, yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: Still opened or uh Yeah.
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay, finance. Because um
Peter Terrell: Shoot.
Harry Esterbrook: I received
Sammy Huston: A five.
Harry Esterbrook: uh a spreadsheet.
Sammy Huston: A five.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, but I uh actually don't need this presentation, I guess. Oh.
Sammy Huston: Doesn't matter.
Harry Esterbrook: I'm gonna open the spreadsheet and we're gonna work this out together, because I didn't really fin uh I have a. Didn't really finish it. Well, we uh We'll see. We'll stumble upon some problems.
Sammy Huston: We probably will.
Harry Esterbrook: I probably have already opened it here. try it again. First of all, the mm all the docking station and costs and such are not included in this list. But let's let's st start with beginning. We include one battery. I i uh I'll explain its Uh, the the components are listed over here. Uh, price is given. We um
Sammy Huston: The amount, yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: yeah, we we uh indicate the amount of components of the specif specific component, how much we need of them. And then uh, we'll uh calcula Don't watch the number yet. I don't know if it's filled in properly. Okay, we need one battery. One battery. I think
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: one battery is enough. We don't need kinetic, solar cells, hand dynamo. A s okay, this this is a p first problem. Uh, I think we should know how many simple chips, regular
Salvatore Bartels: Uh it's
Harry Esterbrook: chips
Salvatore Bartels: it's one one chip, but but you have to choose one from it.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay. But
Salvatore Bartels: The simple chip is e enough I I think, but with
Sammy Huston: I
Salvatore Bartels: the
Sammy Huston: don't
Salvatore Bartels: lights
Sammy Huston: know
Salvatore Bartels: with the lights and the retrieval,
Harry Esterbrook: Where
Salvatore Bartels: it
Harry Esterbrook: did
Salvatore Bartels: can
Harry Esterbrook: we
Salvatore Bartels: be
Harry Esterbrook: find
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Harry Esterbrook: this information?
Sammy Huston: I
Harry Esterbrook: Was
Sammy Huston: haven't
Harry Esterbrook: it
Sammy Huston: got an idea on on which we need to use, really.
Salvatore Bartels: No, uh
Harry Esterbrook: I think
Peter Terrell: No.
Salvatore Bartels: I
Harry Esterbrook: it was uh your job in the first uh meet Uh, f your first presentation to make this clear, but
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: then you
Salvatore Bartels: my
Harry Esterbrook: had some
Salvatore Bartels: my
Harry Esterbrook: t
Salvatore Bartels: my
Harry Esterbrook: time problems.
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Harry Esterbrook: But do you th you do you know what chip we need?
Salvatore Bartels: The the email I got said uh simple chip, but when we put in the speaker and the retriever uh device,
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: it will uh cost a a bit more, like I think the advanced chip maybe.
Sammy Huston: And how do you know? I mean, you got that email.
Salvatore Bartels: Bec
Sammy Huston: Did it point out
Harry Esterbrook: Maybe you can
Sammy Huston: what
Salvatore Bartels: No,
Harry Esterbrook: uh look
Sammy Huston: to
Salvatore Bartels: the
Sammy Huston: use
Harry Esterbrook: it up
Sammy Huston: them
Harry Esterbrook: right
Sammy Huston: for?
Harry Esterbrook: now.
Salvatore Bartels: they didn't know about a retriever or a
Harry Esterbrook: Okay, but
Salvatore Bartels: speaker
Harry Esterbrook: okay.
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Harry Esterbrook: When we
Salvatore Bartels: in
Harry Esterbrook: don't
Salvatore Bartels: it.
Harry Esterbrook: when we leave the uh retriever and such aside, what
Salvatore Bartels: Then it's a simple chip.
Harry Esterbrook: then it would be a simple chip. And with the retriever, it would be an advanced chip.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Sammy Huston: Alright,
Salvatore Bartels: I
Sammy Huston: well,
Salvatore Bartels: I I s I
Sammy Huston: point out the advanced chip for now, I guess.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay.
Salvatore Bartels: That will be enough
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: for
Harry Esterbrook: but
Salvatore Bartels: future
Harry Esterbrook: it will
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Harry Esterbrook: it
Salvatore Bartels: recommendations.
Harry Esterbrook: will it will be cause a lot of problems. The sample sensor sample speaker. What is it m is that the speaker we were t I don't know what it is.
Salvatore Bartels: I don't know it uh either.
Sammy Huston: I don't know.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay, we went for the double-curved case
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: made out of plastic and rubber. And with a special colour. I guess that's what we were
Peter Terrell: Well, special colour.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, I don't know about the special colour,
Salvatore Bartels: Otherwise,
Harry Esterbrook: but
Sammy Huston: I
Salvatore Bartels: you
Sammy Huston: don't
Peter Terrell: I
Salvatore Bartels: get
Peter Terrell: don't
Sammy Huston: know
Harry Esterbrook: I
Sammy Huston: if
Harry Esterbrook: think
Sammy Huston: it's
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Sammy Huston: very special.
Harry Esterbrook: w
Salvatore Bartels: a
Harry Esterbrook: uh
Salvatore Bartels: standard uh plastic colour.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, I think we uh
Peter Terrell: Mm
Harry Esterbrook: we have
Peter Terrell: okay.
Harry Esterbrook: special
Salvatore Bartels: Standard
Harry Esterbrook: colours.
Salvatore Bartels: rubber.
Sammy Huston: Alright, that's okay.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay,
Salvatore Bartels: St
Harry Esterbrook: then the push-button, I was just counting them. Uh, I think you have to indicate the amount of push-buttons we want to use, isn't it?
Peter Terrell: Whoa, it's
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Peter Terrell: a little
Harry Esterbrook: Well that's bit of a problem, because
Peter Terrell: That's huge.
Harry Esterbrook: I re but I really don't understand that, because I can imagine a remote control with far more push-buttons, and it wouldn't be possible according to this
Peter Terrell: No.
Harry Esterbrook: uh
Peter Terrell: We have
Harry Esterbrook: sheet.
Peter Terrell: the simplest
Sammy Huston: No.
Peter Terrell: buttons.
Salvatore Bartels: No, it's only
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: uh when you use push-buttons, it will cost that much.
Sammy Huston: I don't think so,
Salvatore Bartels: If you
Sammy Huston: because
Salvatore Bartels: use a
Sammy Huston: it
Salvatore Bartels: scroll-wheel
Harry Esterbrook: Ah.
Sammy Huston: says amount.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, it
Sammy Huston: The
Harry Esterbrook: wouldn't
Sammy Huston: the the yellow row is the amount
Harry Esterbrook: Fill
Sammy Huston: of
Harry Esterbrook: in the number of components you plan to use in the and the total cost I don't know.
Salvatore Bartels: Maybe
Harry Esterbrook: I
Salvatore Bartels: it's the kind of push-buttons. You can have f four kind of push-buttons. Rubber.
Peter Terrell: Uh, one til
Salvatore Bartels: You
Peter Terrell: nine.
Salvatore Bartels: can have
Peter Terrell: Is that
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Peter Terrell: one or is that nine
Harry Esterbrook: And I count them
Peter Terrell: buttons?
Harry Esterbrook: like this. One two three uh four five six seven eight nine ten
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: eleven twelve and thirteen. Because Oh, this is oh, this is one, okay. Twelve, okay, then it would be eighteen, because uh, I uh rated them as uh um
Sammy Huston: To
Harry Esterbrook: as
Sammy Huston: n
Harry Esterbrook: uh
Sammy Huston: that's
Salvatore Bartels: Different,
Sammy Huston: total
Harry Esterbrook: uh uh separate
Sammy Huston: of four
Harry Esterbrook: buttons.
Sammy Huston: buttons.
Salvatore Bartels: yes.
Harry Esterbrook: Yes. And
Sammy Huston: I
Harry Esterbrook: plus
Sammy Huston: think
Harry Esterbrook: these
Sammy Huston: that
Harry Esterbrook: two, f uh plus the mute button, and it's will be uh eighteen.
Sammy Huston: Eighteen. One two three four five, si
Salvatore Bartels: Why is that so uh expensive.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, I don't understand. Y I do I don't get the point, because it's would be s relatively so expensive, just these m small buttons.
Peter Terrell: Is it cents, the the the fifty cents
Sammy Huston: Fifty cents
Peter Terrell: a button?
Sammy Huston: for one single stupid button.
Salvatore Bartels: So, whe
Peter Terrell: No
Salvatore Bartels: when
Peter Terrell: way.
Salvatore Bartels: you so
Harry Esterbrook: Well,
Salvatore Bartels: then
Harry Esterbrook: okay, well
Salvatore Bartels: it
Harry Esterbrook: well let's make it just one.
Salvatore Bartels: It's eighty percent of the price of the of
Harry Esterbrook: Here,
Salvatore Bartels: the
Harry Esterbrook: now
Salvatore Bartels: amount
Harry Esterbrook: it's
Salvatore Bartels: of
Harry Esterbrook: now it's already
Sammy Huston: Yeah, exactly. Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: s shall we just give our own interpretation to, because else we would really have a problem. It would be impossible to make
Sammy Huston: I can't
Harry Esterbrook: it
Sammy Huston: I
Peter Terrell: It's
Sammy Huston: I
Peter Terrell: way
Sammy Huston: I couldn't understand it if it was fifty cents per uh uh per button.
Salvatore Bartels: When you have the
Sammy Huston: Really.
Salvatore Bartels: same amount of button, you have to put in wi in your carton. Board.
Harry Esterbrook: And and less
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: And then throw
Harry Esterbrook: buttons
Sammy Huston: yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: it
Harry Esterbrook: than this isn't possible. This is
Peter Terrell: No,
Harry Esterbrook: the most
Peter Terrell: no
Harry Esterbrook: simple
Peter Terrell: no.
Harry Esterbrook: yeah, it is possible, but
Salvatore Bartels: But
Harry Esterbrook: I've
Salvatore Bartels: whe
Harry Esterbrook: never seen one before.
Salvatore Bartels: I've seen
Sammy Huston: No,
Salvatore Bartels: one
Sammy Huston: really.
Salvatore Bartels: uh one remote control
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: with
Harry Esterbrook: without
Salvatore Bartels: only the
Harry Esterbrook: the numbers.
Salvatore Bartels: pu yeah, only
Harry Esterbrook: That's
Salvatore Bartels: with
Harry Esterbrook: possible.
Salvatore Bartels: uh page up, page down
Peter Terrell: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: and
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: volume,
Harry Esterbrook: we could
Peter Terrell: uh
Harry Esterbrook: skip
Salvatore Bartels: but
Harry Esterbrook: the numbers.
Sammy Huston: Yeah, but
Salvatore Bartels: but
Sammy Huston: I d I wouldn't want to own that. Really.
Peter Terrell: That's still
Salvatore Bartels: Uh, it's it's
Peter Terrell: four.
Salvatore Bartels: still for little children. They can handle that remote
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: control, but
Harry Esterbrook: Then uh,
Salvatore Bartels: but
Harry Esterbrook: teletext
Salvatore Bartels: it isn't fo
Harry Esterbrook: would also be im impossible.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes, it's for it's li uh it's
Peter Terrell: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: just for
Peter Terrell: that's
Salvatore Bartels: a
Peter Terrell: no
Salvatore Bartels: little
Harry Esterbrook: Okay,
Peter Terrell: option,
Harry Esterbrook: we'll
Peter Terrell: that's
Harry Esterbrook: we'll
Peter Terrell: no
Harry Esterbrook: just
Peter Terrell: option.
Harry Esterbrook: okay. But then still, when we there's no room for a docking station or something. Tha w Le let's see th we have uh oh yeah, button supplements. We'll give the buttons special colour. We'll give them a special form. Uh, I think we should mark the special form thing, because it this will be some special forms incorporated in these big buttons, I guess.
Peter Terrell: A special colour, why a special colour?
Harry Esterbrook: Because the buttons will be uh d will be matching colour
Peter Terrell: But
Harry Esterbrook: between
Peter Terrell: wha what
Harry Esterbrook: the buttons
Peter Terrell: s what
Harry Esterbrook: and the
Peter Terrell: special?
Harry Esterbrook: rubber surroundings.
Salvatore Bartels: Otherwise,
Harry Esterbrook: I think that's
Peter Terrell: Okay,
Salvatore Bartels: it
Harry Esterbrook: the what
Peter Terrell: yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: they mean by a special colour.
Salvatore Bartels: Otherwise
Sammy Huston: I
Peter Terrell: Uh,
Sammy Huston: don't think
Peter Terrell: yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: it
Sammy Huston: the special
Harry Esterbrook: I
Salvatore Bartels: would
Harry Esterbrook: think
Salvatore Bartels: be
Sammy Huston: form
Harry Esterbrook: all
Salvatore Bartels: the
Harry Esterbrook: the
Sammy Huston: is
Harry Esterbrook: special
Sammy Huston: really true.
Harry Esterbrook: colour things have to be marked over here, because that's what we were planning to do, making it
Salvatore Bartels: Special form also, it says.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, special
Sammy Huston: Is it?
Harry Esterbrook: material r also, because i has rubber. And the buttons have to be rubber.
Salvatore Bartels: What is the normal material?
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Peter Terrell: Plastic.
Sammy Huston: I dunno.
Salvatore Bartels: Sh
Peter Terrell: Plastic,
Salvatore Bartels: yeah.
Peter Terrell: I think.
Salvatore Bartels: Classic?
Peter Terrell: Plastic.
Sammy Huston: Plastic.
Salvatore Bartels: Oh, plastic.
Harry Esterbrook: 'Kay, but the problem now is that the There's no such thing as a docking station in this list, but we can all imagine that it would be impossible to
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: make a docking station for thirty cents.
Salvatore Bartels: But we can uh sell the remote control and uh sell the docking station
Harry Esterbrook: Separately.
Peter Terrell: Se
Salvatore Bartels: yes.
Peter Terrell: no no
Salvatore Bartels: And
Peter Terrell: no.
Salvatore Bartels: and but we don't have to tell it, but what we can say of can um almost make it impossible to buy a remote control without the docking station.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, yeah. Yeah, but I do like the idea, but we yeah. It uh but it then the docking station isn't relevant for this project anymore, but we can
Sammy Huston: No.
Salvatore Bartels: No, but you
Harry Esterbrook: but then
Salvatore Bartels: otherwise you can't
Harry Esterbrook: you
Salvatore Bartels: retrieve
Harry Esterbrook: still have to use
Salvatore Bartels: it.
Harry Esterbrook: we have to find out what chip we u need.
Sammy Huston: Yeah, I really don't get it. I mean if it's a simple chip, then
Harry Esterbrook: I think
Sammy Huston: we
Harry Esterbrook: we
Sammy Huston: suddenly
Harry Esterbrook: can agree
Sammy Huston: got
Harry Esterbrook: on this.
Sammy Huston: two
Harry Esterbrook: I
Sammy Huston: Euros and
Harry Esterbrook: I
Sammy Huston: thirty
Harry Esterbrook: think
Sammy Huston: cents.
Harry Esterbrook: the special colour thing has to be uh marked. 'Cause I think we
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Harry Esterbrook: uh
Sammy Huston: yep.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, I think that's what what what they uh
Salvatore Bartels: But for
Harry Esterbrook: mean
Salvatore Bartels: two Euros
Sammy Huston: I think so,
Salvatore Bartels: and
Sammy Huston: too.
Salvatore Bartels: thirty cents, we uh we don't get a docking station.
Sammy Huston: Oh, I don't know.
Harry Esterbrook: But can we find out uh about uh this chips? Because when we don't need a d a docking station, then probably we also have only we also need a simple chip.
Peter Terrell: And then we can get a docking
Harry Esterbrook: And maybe
Peter Terrell: station.
Harry Esterbrook: then we can do something extra.
Salvatore Bartels: For
Harry Esterbrook: Oh, n uh oh, still oh, it's gonna get more expensive with. Two. Then we have some money left. We can put then
Salvatore Bartels: For two Euros.
Harry Esterbrook: We can put a scroll-wheel on it or something. Yeah, well who knows.
Sammy Huston: Uh why? I
Harry Esterbrook: Or
Sammy Huston: mean
Harry Esterbrook: a little
Sammy Huston: i
Harry Esterbrook: bit
Sammy Huston: i if
Harry Esterbrook: of tin
Sammy Huston: you
Harry Esterbrook: titanium.
Sammy Huston: if it would cost two Euros, that had a total a total thing, it would be nice too, I mean uh we're not gonna add uh
Peter Terrell: But what
Sammy Huston: a trip
Peter Terrell: what
Sammy Huston: to
Peter Terrell: can
Sammy Huston: Hawaii
Peter Terrell: we do
Sammy Huston: to
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Sammy Huston: it.
Harry Esterbrook: or we can ki do the kinetic cells. That's also maybe an idea.
Peter Terrell: But uh what can we do with the simple chip and what's difference
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah that's
Peter Terrell: with
Harry Esterbrook: what
Peter Terrell: a
Harry Esterbrook: then
Peter Terrell: regular
Harry Esterbrook: what he has
Peter Terrell: chip
Harry Esterbrook: to find
Peter Terrell: and a advanced
Harry Esterbrook: out. Maybe you can
Peter Terrell: chip?
Harry Esterbrook: uh find it in your email right now, then we know
Peter Terrell: If if
Harry Esterbrook: then we
Peter Terrell: i
Harry Esterbrook: exactly know what it will cost us. Maybe is that that's nice to know.
Peter Terrell: Regular chip and because we don't have uh special functions to use uh
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, bu bu but
Peter Terrell: in advanced
Harry Esterbrook: when we
Peter Terrell: chip, for example.
Sammy Huston: I
Harry Esterbrook: yeah,
Sammy Huston: like the hand dynamo part.
Harry Esterbrook: but when we skip when we um when we don't use the do we're not gonna make the docking station, then we still yeah, we need something else maybe to make it kind of special, because that was our our special feature.
Sammy Huston: We can make a plain
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Sammy Huston: docking station for two Euros.
Peter Terrell: We'll
Sammy Huston: I
Peter Terrell: go
Sammy Huston: mean
Peter Terrell: back uh
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, okay,
Peter Terrell: tomorrow.
Harry Esterbrook: you can also do that, but maybe
Sammy Huston: Wi wi without recharge
Harry Esterbrook: It still is a special remote control cons uh you know, wi its form is special
Sammy Huston: Yeah, but but
Harry Esterbrook: and
Sammy Huston: we can make a docking
Harry Esterbrook: material.
Sammy Huston: station for two Euros uh if you don't put the recharge function in it. I mean, it has a shape.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, but
Sammy Huston: Of
Harry Esterbrook: for
Sammy Huston: course
Harry Esterbrook: two
Sammy Huston: it has
Harry Esterbrook: Euros,
Sammy Huston: a shape, but
Harry Esterbrook: then
Sammy Huston: i
Harry Esterbrook: we have
Sammy Huston: i
Harry Esterbrook: still maybe we have to use the advanced chip, then two Euros isn't even possible.
Sammy Huston: Why should that not be possible?
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, then because then we'd thirty cents left.
Sammy Huston: No, for for the uh for the docking station if you do if you choose the simple chip.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, but yeah, I don't know, because maybe d uh yeah, we have to find
Peter Terrell: That's
Harry Esterbrook: out with
Peter Terrell: the
Harry Esterbrook: the
Peter Terrell: question.
Harry Esterbrook: simple chip.
Peter Terrell: If we do i do we need an advanced chip, or
Sammy Huston: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Peter Terrell: is
Harry Esterbrook: and
Peter Terrell: it
Harry Esterbrook: w
Peter Terrell: okay
Harry Esterbrook: and and
Peter Terrell: f
Harry Esterbrook: we
Salvatore Bartels: It
Harry Esterbrook: uh need
Salvatore Bartels: isn't
Harry Esterbrook: f
Salvatore Bartels: in my
Harry Esterbrook: and
Salvatore Bartels: information,
Harry Esterbrook: what is this? Sample
Salvatore Bartels: so
Harry Esterbrook: sensor
Salvatore Bartels: I don't know
Harry Esterbrook: sample
Salvatore Bartels: it uh
Harry Esterbrook: speaker.
Salvatore Bartels: either. It isn't in my information, I uh I I've got a schematic view of the remote control, but nothing about uh advanced chips or
Harry Esterbrook: You can look at it for s presentation. S technical functions?
Peter Terrell: No.
Salvatore Bartels: Uh I've got here
Peter Terrell: No
Salvatore Bartels: in
Peter Terrell: no,
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Peter Terrell: they were uh mine,
Salvatore Bartels: I will
Peter Terrell: yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: put
Harry Esterbrook: Oh.
Salvatore Bartels: a I will put a page on it. When my mouse works again.
Harry Esterbrook: Oh, oh oh. Hey. Oh.
Salvatore Bartels: My mouse is uh
Sammy Huston: Dead.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Sammy Huston: Reanimate it.
Salvatore Bartels: Oh.
Peter Terrell: Died.
Salvatore Bartels: Ah, I've got it. I will put uh my email on the the network.
Sammy Huston: What the hell are these?
Salvatore Bartels: It's on it.
Sammy Huston: Oh, whatever.
Peter Terrell: Yeah, it's open.
Harry Esterbrook: Mm. I don't think here
Peter Terrell: It's circuit
Harry Esterbrook: it's in
Peter Terrell: board.
Harry Esterbrook: here already.
Peter Terrell: It's only just
Harry Esterbrook: It's nothing about
Peter Terrell: basics
Harry Esterbrook: s yeah.
Peter Terrell: for for
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Peter Terrell: At the end circuit
Sammy Huston: This isn't helpful.
Peter Terrell: there is an infrared
Harry Esterbrook: No.
Peter Terrell: LED.
Harry Esterbrook: But i in the presentation of yours, there was also something about different components. Which one was it?
Peter Terrell: Components design.
Harry Esterbrook: Functional requirements?
Salvatore Bartels: Um
Sammy Huston: No, that was my presentation.
Peter Terrell: Components design maybe.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Peter Terrell: N on
Salvatore Bartels: that
Peter Terrell: top.
Salvatore Bartels: was mine.
Harry Esterbrook: Ah. Ah yes, it was the second one.
Salvatore Bartels: But that was my second
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Sammy Huston: It's
Harry Esterbrook: it was
Sammy Huston: already
Harry Esterbrook: your second
Sammy Huston: open.
Harry Esterbrook: your first presentation.
Sammy Huston: It's at the bottom.
Peter Terrell: Working
Harry Esterbrook: Sorry?
Peter Terrell: design.
Sammy Huston: It's uh at your task bar.
Peter Terrell: Yeah, but it's the the other one.
Sammy Huston: Oh.
Salvatore Bartels: Mm
Harry Esterbrook: Uh,
Peter Terrell: Was it
Harry Esterbrook: this
Peter Terrell: working
Harry Esterbrook: is n this
Sammy Huston: Sorry.
Peter Terrell: design
Harry Esterbrook: is not this
Peter Terrell: or components design?
Harry Esterbrook: n that's not the right one. I don't oh.
Sammy Huston: Okay, sorry.
Harry Esterbrook: No, this is the other one. Or maybe something is uh maybe there's something abo in in these
Peter Terrell: Chip set.
Salvatore Bartels: But this is the same uh This is o only the possibilities.
Harry Esterbrook: Here.
Salvatore Bartels: Yeah. We can use a simple, a regular, or advanced chip.
Sammy Huston: Yeah, nice.
Peter Terrell: The
Sammy Huston: I it
Peter Terrell: display
Sammy Huston: doesn't say
Peter Terrell: requires
Sammy Huston: anything.
Harry Esterbrook: You know
Peter Terrell: an
Harry Esterbrook: that
Peter Terrell: advanced
Harry Esterbrook: a push-button
Peter Terrell: chip.
Harry Esterbrook: requires a simple chip, but a scroll-wheel, it it Sammy Huston requires
Salvatore Bartels: Ah, okay.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay, so we only
Peter Terrell: Requires.
Harry Esterbrook: need a simple chip.
Salvatore Bartels: With the light.
Peter Terrell: Little lights. Yeah, but that that's just the same as the
Harry Esterbrook: No no, that's
Peter Terrell: the LED.
Harry Esterbrook: just a simple chip.
Sammy Huston: That's not needed.
Harry Esterbrook: A scroll-wheel it s uh only states that a scroll-wheel requires a regular chip, and that a display requires an advanced chip. So, we don't
Sammy Huston: A display
Harry Esterbrook: need any of them.
Sammy Huston: uh is, of course, uh for showing
Salvatore Bartels: L_C_D_.
Sammy Huston: letters. For showing text.
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Sammy Huston: I don't think that uh
Peter Terrell: No.
Sammy Huston: just a l a little light
Peter Terrell: I think uh the uh normal uh simple chip will
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Peter Terrell: be okay.
Sammy Huston: I agree.
Harry Esterbrook: And what's the sample sensor slash sample speaker?
Salvatore Bartels: Maybe you can say against the remote uh page uh
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: f uh page up, page
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: down.
Sammy Huston: I guess so too.
Peter Terrell: Yeah, true.
Sammy Huston: Next
Peter Terrell: Well, that's not
Sammy Huston: channel.
Peter Terrell: too what we want.
Sammy Huston: No. Well, we might want it, but
Harry Esterbrook: Okay.
Salvatore Bartels: All in twelve
Harry Esterbrook: Back
Salvatore Bartels: Euros.
Harry Esterbrook: to the costs.
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: Twelve Euros and fifty cents.
Harry Esterbrook: So we're
Peter Terrell: So,
Harry Esterbrook: gonna
Peter Terrell: simple
Harry Esterbrook: use the simple
Peter Terrell: chip is okay.
Harry Esterbrook: chip.
Sammy Huston: Great. Delete. Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: And the lights. Where uh are the lights?
Peter Terrell: lights, yeah, there's no
Sammy Huston: Well, there're three, I guess.
Peter Terrell: category.
Harry Esterbrook: Nah, there is some money left to be spent.
Peter Terrell: Can we do it wi within
Sammy Huston: I think
Peter Terrell: two
Sammy Huston: we can make a docking
Peter Terrell: two Euro?
Sammy Huston: station.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay, but what we have to think
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: about now is that is is it still a special remote control? But I mean it isn't it hasn't got any innovative technology, we aren't gonna apply any uh innovated innovative te technology anyway, I think.
Peter Terrell: Mm-hmm.
Harry Esterbrook: I don't I don't see any possibility to do so, because it would wouldn't fit our
Peter Terrell: But it's
Harry Esterbrook: defi
Peter Terrell: original.
Harry Esterbrook: design philosophy. But
Sammy Huston: No,
Harry Esterbrook: what
Sammy Huston: that's
Harry Esterbrook: w is there
Sammy Huston: true.
Harry Esterbrook: some extra maybe I think maybe the kinetic thing is something. Instead of the rechargeable the rechargeable thing was something to um know, so y so people wouldn't
Sammy Huston: M
Harry Esterbrook: have
Sammy Huston: bu
Harry Esterbrook: to worry about their batteries anymore. Maybe we if we put the kinetic
Salvatore Bartels: But
Harry Esterbrook: thing
Salvatore Bartels: but
Harry Esterbrook: in
Salvatore Bartels: sometimes
Harry Esterbrook: it
Salvatore Bartels: you put
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: a
Harry Esterbrook: you leave the p yeah, I know, but still I they will think about that. I mean if
Salvatore Bartels: Kinetics
Harry Esterbrook: you u
Salvatore Bartels: aren't uh nowadays only used in watches and
Harry Esterbrook: The
Salvatore Bartels: that's
Harry Esterbrook: uh
Salvatore Bartels: because
Harry Esterbrook: it's made
Salvatore Bartels: you're always
Harry Esterbrook: for
Salvatore Bartels: walking.
Harry Esterbrook: s people well, the they don't if it was uh uh r useless technology, they wouldn't put it uh as a possibility.
Salvatore Bartels: Uh solar cells
Harry Esterbrook: And i
Salvatore Bartels: are
Harry Esterbrook: it
Salvatore Bartels: useless.
Harry Esterbrook: it
Sammy Huston: Or the hand
Harry Esterbrook: th th
Sammy Huston: dynamo
Harry Esterbrook: the the target
Sammy Huston: dynamo
Harry Esterbrook: the target uh group are people who zap regularly and throw with their remote control as a matter of speaking.
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: Because I think it when when there w was a remote control where it was useful to have a kinetic uh uh power source, then it would be this one. Because it's one it gets thrown around thrown around a lot and it gets used a lot Hey that maybe that's
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Harry Esterbrook: cool
Sammy Huston: but but
Harry Esterbrook: that's a cool thing
Sammy Huston: if
Harry Esterbrook: about
Sammy Huston: we ca
Harry Esterbrook: it, you know. You don't use batteries. I've never seen it before in a remote control.
Sammy Huston: I don't
Peter Terrell: But
Sammy Huston: know
Peter Terrell: then
Sammy Huston: if
Peter Terrell: we could make a docking station.
Sammy Huston: Five minutes.
Harry Esterbrook: No, we we we can't make a docking station anyway.
Sammy Huston: That's not true.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, we can als or uh also m we we can make
Sammy Huston: We can
Harry Esterbrook: one
Sammy Huston: make
Peter Terrell: Wow,
Sammy Huston: a docking
Peter Terrell: w
Sammy Huston: station
Peter Terrell: why
Harry Esterbrook: we
Sammy Huston: for
Harry Esterbrook: can
Peter Terrell: no
Sammy Huston: two
Harry Esterbrook: still
Peter Terrell: li
Sammy Huston: thirty.
Harry Esterbrook: make
Peter Terrell: Look at now, we got two
Sammy Huston: Two
Salvatore Bartels: Fo
Sammy Huston: thirty.
Peter Terrell: two thirty left.
Sammy Huston: We
Salvatore Bartels: for
Sammy Huston: can
Peter Terrell: Ca
Sammy Huston: make
Peter Terrell: can't
Salvatore Bartels: a docking
Sammy Huston: a docking
Peter Terrell: we
Salvatore Bartels: station.
Peter Terrell: make
Sammy Huston: station.
Peter Terrell: a docking station
Sammy Huston: Sure.
Peter Terrell: of that?
Salvatore Bartels: With a cable, with uh buttons on it,
Sammy Huston: Sure.
Salvatore Bartels: with retrieval uh device
Peter Terrell: I don't
Salvatore Bartels: in
Peter Terrell: know.
Salvatore Bartels: it.
Sammy Huston: The power device is is i i is very cheap. That's just a regular uh power cable and
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Sammy Huston: whatever.
Harry Esterbrook: but be serious, then uh the
Salvatore Bartels: Wi
Harry Esterbrook: docking station will be
Peter Terrell: Well, we
Harry Esterbrook: a
Salvatore Bartels: with
Harry Esterbrook: fifth
Peter Terrell: we
Salvatore Bartels: a
Peter Terrell: uh
Salvatore Bartels: button
Harry Esterbrook: of the price
Salvatore Bartels: to
Harry Esterbrook: of the remote control.
Sammy Huston: So.
Salvatore Bartels: wi with a button to retrieve it, so it will beep. Uh,
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Salvatore Bartels: so it's uh wireless
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, but we uh
Salvatore Bartels: technology.
Harry Esterbrook: we don't inc we haven't looked at the these costs of the speaker and other stuff. I don't think it's realistic for you to do so.
Sammy Huston: Well then it's a useless project.
Salvatore Bartels: Look at the case,
Harry Esterbrook: Oh, because
Salvatore Bartels: the case
Harry Esterbrook: we
Salvatore Bartels: the case of of uh of
Peter Terrell: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Peter Terrell: then we don't have
Harry Esterbrook: We well
Peter Terrell: any
Harry Esterbrook: look
Peter Terrell: innovation
Harry Esterbrook: at all the special
Peter Terrell: things.
Harry Esterbrook: stuff we have. Colour a the colours are special, the form is special. It th this is whole concept. Uh
Sammy Huston: Can't
Harry Esterbrook: maybe
Sammy Huston: we
Harry Esterbrook: it
Sammy Huston: uh
Harry Esterbrook: with the kinetic thing, I think we could do uh do a compromise uh with the kim
Sammy Huston: Can't
Harry Esterbrook: kinetic
Sammy Huston: we say fifteen
Harry Esterbrook: thing.
Sammy Huston: Euros? No, sta yeah
Harry Esterbrook: Uh, no.
Sammy Huston: I mean
Salvatore Bartels: No, then we have to sell it for thirty Euros.
Sammy Huston: No.
Peter Terrell: No, we
Salvatore Bartels: It's
Peter Terrell: only
Salvatore Bartels: the
Peter Terrell: make less profit of it.
Sammy Huston: You can sell for twenty seven and a half. Then you make as much profit as
Peter Terrell: No.
Sammy Huston: you would with twelve and a half production costs.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, I don my suggestion is to just forget about the whole docking station thing and make it uh like a Uh uh I I I I still fee I also feel this concept of making it kinetic, because of the you know, it g
Sammy Huston: I
Harry Esterbrook: it
Sammy Huston: don't
Harry Esterbrook: gives
Sammy Huston: think
Harry Esterbrook: something
Salvatore Bartels: Maybe we
Harry Esterbrook: dynamic
Salvatore Bartels: can uh can
Harry Esterbrook: to the
Salvatore Bartels: do
Harry Esterbrook: remote
Salvatore Bartels: it both.
Harry Esterbrook: control.
Salvatore Bartels: Maybe we can do it both uh in the in the in the remote. Battery and kinetic.
Sammy Huston: No.
Harry Esterbrook: No, that wouldn't n no.
Sammy Huston: Thirteen twenty.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, and it is also not a good it's not you
Sammy Huston: And
Harry Esterbrook: have
Sammy Huston: I think
Harry Esterbrook: to really
Sammy Huston: only
Harry Esterbrook: do it only kinetic, you don't want it to think about batteries anymore.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes, but
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Salvatore Bartels: when
Sammy Huston: but only
Salvatore Bartels: it's then
Sammy Huston: kinetic,
Salvatore Bartels: when it
Sammy Huston: then you
Harry Esterbrook: No
Salvatore Bartels: then you
Sammy Huston: gotta
Harry Esterbrook: no.
Salvatore Bartels: have to shake it uh and all when it's when it's empty.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah,
Sammy Huston: You you gotta
Harry Esterbrook: it's
Sammy Huston: throw
Harry Esterbrook: great.
Sammy Huston: uh throw it through the room like twenty times an hour,
Harry Esterbrook: No
Sammy Huston: really.
Harry Esterbrook: no no. No no, this is very sophisticated technology technology. When you
Salvatore Bartels: You
Harry Esterbrook: use
Salvatore Bartels: asked
Harry Esterbrook: it
Salvatore Bartels: for
Harry Esterbrook: your
Salvatore Bartels: three
Harry Esterbrook: remote
Salvatore Bartels: d
Harry Esterbrook: like once a day, or maybe even less i i
Salvatore Bartels: No,
Harry Esterbrook: it
Salvatore Bartels: that's n that's not true. Uh,
Sammy Huston: No.
Salvatore Bartels: a watch is uh kinetic
Harry Esterbrook: It
Salvatore Bartels: because you walk
Harry Esterbrook: We
Salvatore Bartels: all
Harry Esterbrook: can
Salvatore Bartels: the time.
Harry Esterbrook: make it yeah no. Becau be but a remote control gets why do they state that this technology
Salvatore Bartels: Yes,
Harry Esterbrook: can be
Salvatore Bartels: solar
Harry Esterbrook: used if
Salvatore Bartels: cells
Harry Esterbrook: it
Salvatore Bartels: are also stated.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, m but a w uh uh n uh a calculator also works on r on
Salvatore Bartels: Why
Harry Esterbrook: solar
Salvatore Bartels: don't
Harry Esterbrook: cells.
Salvatore Bartels: we use solar cells then?
Harry Esterbrook: Because I think the d whole dynamic part, do you know, appeals to Sammy Huston qui uh thinking of our design philosophy, you know, with the rubber parts and uh sturdiness of the thing, and y when you move it around a lot, then people find the idea funny that when I move my
Salvatore Bartels: That's
Harry Esterbrook: remote
Salvatore Bartels: true.
Harry Esterbrook: control around
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Harry Esterbrook: and
Sammy Huston: it's funny for a week. I guess something like that, where you have to move it around very frequently, is demotivating.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, but you don't have to. Trust Sammy Huston. The idea of this technology is that you don't think about it, it just happens.
Sammy Huston: No, I I don't move my uh my
Harry Esterbrook: Okay,
Salvatore Bartels: Oui.
Sammy Huston: remote
Harry Esterbrook: then we
Sammy Huston: control
Harry Esterbrook: d Okay,
Sammy Huston: very
Harry Esterbrook: well
Sammy Huston: much,
Harry Esterbrook: y we don't
Sammy Huston: seriously.
Harry Esterbrook: have to do it, but what that would just have a lack of key features, you know. You m have to put something on your box. You have to make people buy it and uh We can really can do the docking thing, uh it's not yeah, uh we can do it, but it's would be a
Salvatore Bartels: You
Harry Esterbrook: easy
Salvatore Bartels: can
Harry Esterbrook: way
Salvatore Bartels: do
Harry Esterbrook: out.
Salvatore Bartels: it for fifty cents.
Sammy Huston: Well, we've got more than fifty Cents.
Salvatore Bartels: The c
Harry Esterbrook: Okay, but
Salvatore Bartels: The
Harry Esterbrook: we
Salvatore Bartels: case
Harry Esterbrook: have to grou
Salvatore Bartels: the
Harry Esterbrook: to
Salvatore Bartels: case
Harry Esterbrook: agree upon
Salvatore Bartels: alone
Harry Esterbrook: something,
Salvatore Bartels: is is
Harry Esterbrook: because
Salvatore Bartels: is
Harry Esterbrook: uh
Salvatore Bartels: uh
Harry Esterbrook: we only have a minute left or so.
Salvatore Bartels: the case alone for uh remote control is at least one Euro. Then we have one Euro thirty for the whole
Harry Esterbrook: No
Salvatore Bartels: docking
Harry Esterbrook: no,
Salvatore Bartels: station.
Harry Esterbrook: it's not possible. Okay, w b we can s we can leave it on be well then then th it's this is then then our concept is ready.
Peter Terrell: Cheap remote control.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, we make some extra profit of
Sammy Huston: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: it.
Sammy Huston: No, we won't, but that's
Salvatore Bartels: But now
Sammy Huston: um something else. No, this
Peter Terrell: It
Sammy Huston: not
Peter Terrell: w it
Sammy Huston: gonna
Peter Terrell: won't
Sammy Huston: sell.
Peter Terrell: tell, but
Harry Esterbrook: Huh,
Sammy Huston: No.
Harry Esterbrook: any ideas?
Sammy Huston: Of course not.
Peter Terrell: No, uh, n no
Salvatore Bartels: Great. It's great.
Peter Terrell: Yeah, we
Salvatore Bartels: Our
Peter Terrell: just
Salvatore Bartels: remote
Peter Terrell: have
Salvatore Bartels: control.
Peter Terrell: to go all what we did today again. You have to do it over.
Sammy Huston: We come back tomorrow, okay?
Peter Terrell: Yeah.
Harry Esterbrook: No
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Harry Esterbrook: no uh there's
Peter Terrell: the
Harry Esterbrook: still there's still
Salvatore Bartels: Seventy
Harry Esterbrook: someth concept
Salvatore Bartels: Euros.
Harry Esterbrook: and something special left. I mean we're gonna it's gonna excel in
Peter Terrell: No,
Harry Esterbrook: in
Peter Terrell: but
Harry Esterbrook: on in
Peter Terrell: no.
Harry Esterbrook: the the range in the field of design and and uh looks and feel. That's what it's makes it special. Yeah, and I would li I would have liked a kinetic part as well, to give it some just to give it some extra special feature, and uh I know it will work, but uh it's it's an They're they're not putting technologies on this, but if it if it was impossible to to make it happen.
Salvatore Bartels: Why not a hand dynamo then?
Harry Esterbrook: Okay, well we leave it like this. Then it's c
Peter Terrell: Yeah,
Harry Esterbrook: then we're yeah.
Peter Terrell: yeah.
Sammy Huston: We can't do anything else. Warning, finish meeting now.
Salvatore Bartels: We're done.
Harry Esterbrook: Okay,
Salvatore Bartels: Is this it?
Harry Esterbrook: project e uh well,
Sammy Huston: Yeah,
Harry Esterbrook: we were gonna
Sammy Huston: sure.
Harry Esterbrook: what look take
Salvatore Bartels: Okay.
Harry Esterbrook: a look at the last sheet.
Sammy Huston: No, we can't.
Harry Esterbrook: Yeah, we have to Yeah, it's
Peter Terrell: No.
Sammy Huston: Yes, yes.
Salvatore Bartels: Yes.
Sammy Huston: Celebration. I don't see why, but
Salvatore Bartels: Where's the champagne?
Sammy Huston: I think we gotta fill out another questionnaire, to be honest.
Peter Terrell: Yeah?
Salvatore Bartels: I don't uh hear a bell.
Sammy Huston: No, not yet. Alright,
Peter Terrell: We
Sammy Huston: I'll
Peter Terrell: can
Sammy Huston: see
Peter Terrell: do
Sammy Huston: you
Peter Terrell: it
Sammy Huston: guys
Peter Terrell: here
Sammy Huston: in
Peter Terrell: then.
Sammy Huston: a minute.
Salvatore Bartels: Bye.
Sammy Huston: I
Peter Terrell: Can
Sammy Huston: don't
Peter Terrell: we
Sammy Huston: think
Peter Terrell: can't
Sammy Huston: so.
Peter Terrell: we do it here?
Sammy Huston: I don't know. I don't I don't think so.
Salvatore Bartels: Uh-huh. Just fill that one in.
Peter Terrell: Yeah, we're doing now. But it's. Oh, okay.
Harry Esterbrook: Uh, I
Peter Terrell: Nice.
Harry Esterbrook: don't know. | Harry Esterbrook opened the meeting. Peter Terrell and industrial designer presented the prototype design. The remote has buttons for power, mute, teletext, volume and channel up/down, and nine numbered channel buttons. The group discussed what buttons would be needed to enter channels 10 and above. They discussed adapting the docking station so it could be used with other products but did not make a decision. The remote is plastic with different coloured rubber strips on the sides and rubber buttons. Sammy Huston led the product evaluation. The group were generally satisfied with the design but did not think the remote was technologically innovative. The overall score was 2.6. The group worked out the manufacturing costs. The group had problems figuring out the cost of the docking station and buttons, and did not know which kind of chip to use. They discussed using kinetic energy to make the remote more technologically innovative but decided against it. They eventually decided that they could not afford a docking station. They did not have time to evaluate the project process before the end of the meeting. | 1 | amisum | train |
Anthony Cole: I dunno. Throwing away my toothpick.
Jonathan Chaplin: Hi there.
Grant Giordano: Yo. Ow.
Anthony Cole: 'Kay.
Grant Giordano: Uh
Anthony Cole: Nice user interface.
Grant Giordano: Yeah. What the Uh Yeah well, ja well let's just start.
Anthony Cole: 'Kay.
Grant Giordano: I've uh made a presentation
Anthony Cole: Right let's
Grant Giordano: uh
Anthony Cole: see it.
Grant Giordano: but uh I'll open it on the Smartboard, so we can all see it. So it's in the project documents because that's what we can find here. Well. Very nice. Well this is called the the the kick-off meeting. So uh I'm Grant Giordano, so I had to fill it in,
Anthony Cole: 'Kay.
Grant Giordano: and uh hmm. Oh sorry. And an uh a nice agenda. Uh we'll do the opening and then uh we'll meet each other, what uh we already do, so, that's not uh very much trouble. I'll I'll show you the the tools we have here, so that we can all use them. Then uh we'll look at the project plan from uh Real Reaction. We'll discuss about our first ideas about the project, and then uh we'll close the meeting, and then we can uh individually uh do our things and then uh we'll get back here. So this the opening we'll uh We have to uh design a new television remote control. You have heard that uh already I think, so.
Anthony Cole: Mm-hmm.
Grant Giordano: Um we want it to be original, so a nice uh a nice new design. Uh trendy, it's also for young people, and we have to just uh make it uh modern. And uh friendly, so size does matter. And uh Well it has to be a have the the right uh the right buttons on the right place, that kin
Timothy Alvarez: Mm-hmm.
Grant Giordano: those kind of things. Other uh There happen to be uh three stages. functional, conceptual, and d detailed design. Um so every time we we'll do some individual work, get meeting, talk about it, uh and then go into the next phase. That's just it. Um We have uh these two Smartboards. Um well as I just showed, there's a project management folder, a project document folder on the desktop. It just works exactly the same as a computer. You just uh click on the on the folder and you open the everything you you put in it with your laptop. So you can uh make uh Words Excel, everything. Um and the w the r uh the rest uh also works the same so uh when you open a notepad you uh you just get your uh things, you can uh draw. This is a uh well a drawing board. you have a these different uh functions on the board. You can see them there. So you have a a nice pen, and it's works just like a bal ball pen. This is just a. I want to uh Oh yeah. Of course w doesn't work any more.
Timothy Alvarez: Maybe you should try write on the on the big uh Does it? Yeah.
Grant Giordano: Yes I
Timothy Alvarez: It
Grant Giordano: will
Timothy Alvarez: works.
Grant Giordano: eraser so. It's
Timothy Alvarez: Wonderful.
Grant Giordano: fantas fantastic. We can uh uh well you can save a file. So if uh we draw we have to save everything. Don't throw anything away.
Timothy Alvarez: Mm-hmm.
Grant Giordano: Uh just we can start a new one, and we just go on, and don't throw anything away. Just uh let them all uh stand here. We can delete, but we don't do that. Um you can here select a pen, you can draw anything you want. It's a bit uh childish you have to write. It's not as fast as you w you know it, but it does work sometimes. Well it's just like a normal uh paint. So it's gone.
Timothy Alvarez: Alright, yep.
Grant Giordano: Well we are designers, so we have to have a a more uh a Smartboard. So that's fantastic. Um well this uh speaks for itself. We going to try it. So um we all uh are going to uh draw a nice animal on this board, not my idea.
Anthony Cole: Alright, your favourite animal?
Grant Giordano: Yes our your favourite. So um I'm to going to have to draw a kangaroo, but I'm going d I'm not going to. I'm just uh going to uh well draw a nice uh beast w I dunno
Anthony Cole: Grizzly
Grant Giordano: what I'm going
Anthony Cole: bear.
Grant Giordano: to design. Oh um doesn't
Timothy Alvarez: I hope
Grant Giordano: oh.
Timothy Alvarez: this was part of the
Grant Giordano: Yeah,
Timothy Alvarez: assignment
Grant Giordano: 'kay.
Timothy Alvarez: and not uh your uh
Grant Giordano: Hmm?
Timothy Alvarez: I hope this was part of the assignment and not uh your personal uh enjoyment.
Grant Giordano: I just said it's
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Grant Giordano: not my idea but I am Grant Giordano, and officially this is my idea.
Timothy Alvarez: I I
Grant Giordano: So
Timothy Alvarez: I I understand.
Anthony Cole: We're kinda
Timothy Alvarez: Alright.
Anthony Cole: losing time, though.
Grant Giordano: what?
Anthony Cole: We're losing time,
Grant Giordano: Ah
Anthony Cole: but
Timothy Alvarez: so start
Grant Giordano: the first the first meeting is just a bit uh loose,
Anthony Cole: Alright.
Grant Giordano: loosen up, a bit uh meeting each other well uh uh
Timothy Alvarez: Yep
Grant Giordano: nice yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: yes.
Grant Giordano: Sh I hope our Industrial Designer does this better because uh this is
Timothy Alvarez: Don't
Grant Giordano: uh
Timothy Alvarez: count it
Grant Giordano: No so a a few
Anthony Cole: Do
Grant Giordano: legs.
Anthony Cole: we have to guess? A
Grant Giordano: Yes yes guess.
Anthony Cole: hippo?
Grant Giordano: Well
Timothy Alvarez: I
Grant Giordano: I should make it an hippo now.
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: think it's a mouse or a rat.
Grant Giordano: No I don't think so.
Timothy Alvarez: Oh. Oh I know it.
Grant Giordano: Well what is it, huh?
Timothy Alvarez: It's
Anthony Cole: I
Timothy Alvarez: a
Anthony Cole: don't
Timothy Alvarez: hedgehog.
Anthony Cole: know how to call it.
Grant Giordano: Yeah
Anthony Cole: A hedgehog?
Grant Giordano: difficult English word. I didn't knew it myself.
Timothy Alvarez: Well I'm amazed uh about your uh drawing skills.
Grant Giordano: Our characteristics sum it up. Well it's uh very uh painful those kind of thing. So we can uh just uh
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah.
Grant Giordano: We're going back and now uh our Industrial Designer can
Anthony Cole: Alright.
Grant Giordano: uh draw its
Timothy Alvarez: I
Grant Giordano: uh
Timothy Alvarez: am the Industrial
Grant Giordano: most
Timothy Alvarez: Designer.
Grant Giordano: favourite animal. Huh.
Timothy Alvarez: Chief, I am Timothy Alvarez.
Grant Giordano: Oh uh but this uh marketing designer.
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah. I think It's pr it resembles the animal drawn by.
Anthony Cole: It's.
Grant Giordano: what kind of animal is that then?
Timothy Alvarez: I think can I say it?
Anthony Cole: Yeah sure. It's a rabbit. Well Looks very nice, right?
Grant Giordano: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: It looks amazing.
Grant Giordano: No no no. What are you going to do?
Jonathan Chaplin: We want to erase it.
Grant Giordano: No no. No no save it and start a new uh save it
Anthony Cole: Yes.
Timothy Alvarez: These are very
Grant Giordano: and start
Timothy Alvarez: impor
Grant Giordano: a new black uh doc a
Timothy Alvarez: These
Grant Giordano: blank
Timothy Alvarez: are very
Grant Giordano: document.
Timothy Alvarez: important documents, of course, uh these drawings,
Grant Giordano: Yeah well we have
Timothy Alvarez: uh
Anthony Cole: Yes
Grant Giordano: to save
Anthony Cole: uh
Grant Giordano: everything so now
Anthony Cole: right.
Grant Giordano: um the next one uh
Anthony Cole: You go man.
Grant Giordano: and then save
Jonathan Chaplin: Thanks.
Grant Giordano: it and start an blank document. Yeah. There's also different colours and different uh well pen widths uh the line the the thickness thickness. So
Anthony Cole: Alright.
Grant Giordano: um well you should uh try it but uh
Anthony Cole: I should have made mine a white rabbit.
Grant Giordano: Well y y y you could have but uh.
Timothy Alvarez: And he deliberately
Grant Giordano: It
Timothy Alvarez: draws
Grant Giordano: speaks for
Timothy Alvarez: a
Grant Giordano: itself.
Timothy Alvarez: animal we don't know the English word for.
Grant Giordano: What the
Timothy Alvarez: It looks like an uh
Grant Giordano: uh just a duck.
Timothy Alvarez: It looks like that beast from Sesame Street.
Grant Giordano: Nice.
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah.
Jonathan Chaplin: Big bird.
Grant Giordano: Is
Anthony Cole: You're
Grant Giordano: it
Anthony Cole: standing
Grant Giordano: a duck?
Anthony Cole: in front
Timothy Alvarez: It's
Anthony Cole: of it, I
Timothy Alvarez: it's
Anthony Cole: can't see
Timothy Alvarez: uh
Grant Giordano: Is it a plane?
Anthony Cole: it. Alright, thank you. Yeah it's a bird, but what kind of bird?
Grant Giordano: It doesn't draw uh
Timothy Alvarez: Do we have
Grant Giordano: circles
Timothy Alvarez: to uh
Grant Giordano: uh that easy uh.
Anthony Cole: You have to push harder.
Grant Giordano: Yeah
Jonathan Chaplin: Mm.
Grant Giordano: just a bit a bit childish, a bit.
Timothy Alvarez: But we have uh
Anthony Cole: Release
Timothy Alvarez: do
Anthony Cole: your anger.
Timothy Alvarez: we have to name the specific species of the bird?
Jonathan Chaplin: Uh
Timothy Alvarez: No?
Jonathan Chaplin: no I don't. It's just a bird.
Timothy Alvarez: Well
Grant Giordano: Well
Timothy Alvarez: wonderful.
Grant Giordano: uh save the document and then uh And then a a new blank document for. uh will uh
Jonathan Chaplin: Here
Grant Giordano: choose
Jonathan Chaplin: you go.
Grant Giordano: a new colour and a new pen width so w
Timothy Alvarez: Why
Grant Giordano: we can
Timothy Alvarez: do
Grant Giordano: all
Timothy Alvarez: I
Grant Giordano: see
Timothy Alvarez: have to
Grant Giordano: it.
Timothy Alvarez: do the difficult tasks? Uh
Grant Giordano: No well first
Timothy Alvarez: pen
Grant Giordano: yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: yeah that's.
Grant Giordano: And then you go to format I think,
Timothy Alvarez: Uh current
Grant Giordano: and
Timothy Alvarez: colour.
Grant Giordano: current colour you choose a new colour. And
Timothy Alvarez: I
Grant Giordano: a
Timothy Alvarez: like
Grant Giordano: new
Timothy Alvarez: uh
Jonathan Chaplin: Mm.
Timothy Alvarez: oh they don't have pink. Oh b oh think this
Grant Giordano: pen
Timothy Alvarez: is uh
Grant Giordano: width uh also format. It's not like in paint.
Timothy Alvarez: Uh? Uh
Grant Giordano: Line width. And you can choose
Timothy Alvarez: Line
Grant Giordano: a nice
Timothy Alvarez: width.
Grant Giordano: one.
Jonathan Chaplin: Width.
Grant Giordano: Width width.
Timothy Alvarez: Uh
Grant Giordano: With each other.
Timothy Alvarez: fifteen. And
Jonathan Chaplin: Hmm.
Timothy Alvarez: I can draw?
Grant Giordano: Yeah. So. Just
Timothy Alvarez: Uh
Grant Giordano: a wa that's the way we do it's quite easy.
Anthony Cole: Hmm.
Grant Giordano: Mm-hmm.
Jonathan Chaplin: It's a pussy cat.
Anthony Cole: It's a cat.
Grant Giordano: Oh Pussy.
Timothy Alvarez: Oh the line width is too thick, but oh
Grant Giordano: Well
Timothy Alvarez: well.
Grant Giordano: then you change it. And erase things.
Timothy Alvarez: Uh.
Grant Giordano: What?
Anthony Cole: It's a pig.
Timothy Alvarez: It smiles nicely.
Grant Giordano: Super pig.
Timothy Alvarez: Now I have to change the line width. Uh one.
Grant Giordano: So
Timothy Alvarez: These are whiskers, you know.
Grant Giordano: Yeah yeah yeah
Anthony Cole: Right.
Grant Giordano: we know.
Timothy Alvarez: Uh well I think it's obvious right now.
Grant Giordano: Yes alright. It's a cat.
Anthony Cole: No it looks great.
Timothy Alvarez: Miaow. Well if this isn't obvious
Grant Giordano: Well well um
Anthony Cole: Just save it.
Grant Giordano: Yeah
Timothy Alvarez: I'll
Grant Giordano: save
Timothy Alvarez: save
Grant Giordano: it
Timothy Alvarez: it alright uh save.
Grant Giordano: and start a new blank document.
Timothy Alvarez: Uh yeah uh blank.
Grant Giordano: Yep. So that's uh what we're going to use when we uh need it.
Timothy Alvarez: Well
Anthony Cole: Oh great.
Timothy Alvarez: I feel comfortable
Grant Giordano: Well
Timothy Alvarez: now. Thanks for
Grant Giordano: it's
Timothy Alvarez: this
Grant Giordano: terrific,
Timothy Alvarez: exercise.
Grant Giordano: eh?
Anthony Cole: It's good
Timothy Alvarez: I feel
Anthony Cole: for group spirit.
Timothy Alvarez: totally at ease.
Grant Giordano: Yeah
Jonathan Chaplin: It
Grant Giordano: that's it.
Jonathan Chaplin: certainly is.
Grant Giordano: We're one big happy family now.
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah something like that.
Grant Giordano: Well then uh the serious uh stuff. We're we want to sell it at twenty five Euros internationally um so um but we dunno what exactly th i it is in dollars, but uh twenty five Euros. Our profit aim is, worldwide, fifty million Euros.
Timothy Alvarez: So
Grant Giordano: So I didn't uh exactly uh calculate how much we have to sell. we want to keep it our costs at twelve and a half Euros so, keep uh that in mind when we uh talk about our uh materials an f and stuff,
Anthony Cole: Right.
Timothy Alvarez: Alright.
Grant Giordano: and uh marketing uh research. Now then we all uh we can uh sit down and discuss uh what do we think about our current remote controls, first about design uh about uh aim in the market etcetera?
Anthony Cole: Right.
Grant Giordano: Well uh we c we can sit down uh because uh presentation can wait. We can uh take notes and uh Well who has uh some uh remarks about the current uh remote controls?
Timothy Alvarez: Well
Grant Giordano: Please?
Timothy Alvarez: I I didn't have to prepare anything about uh
Grant Giordano: No uh
Timothy Alvarez: it's
Grant Giordano: I
Timothy Alvarez: not,
Grant Giordano: did.
Timothy Alvarez: it's it's not my task to uh talk about uh experience with current remote controls, but uh
Grant Giordano: Well uh just w we're uh four uh if
Anthony Cole: I think
Grant Giordano: we if
Anthony Cole: it's
Grant Giordano: we would
Anthony Cole: im
Grant Giordano: just have one then
Anthony Cole: it's important to uh look at uh the remote controls of our competitors.
Grant Giordano: Yeah.
Anthony Cole: Get the good points uh try to merge them into one universal remote control.
Grant Giordano: Yeah yeah.
Anthony Cole: On our corporate site I saw uh a new D_V_D_ player uh we're gonna produce.
Grant Giordano: Yep.
Anthony Cole: Maybe it's important
Grant Giordano: That's alright.
Anthony Cole: to make it compatible with the D_V_D_ player
Grant Giordano: That would be a nice idea, yes.
Anthony Cole: so you can uh use your television and your D_V_D_ player with the same uh remote
Grant Giordano: Yep
Anthony Cole: control.
Grant Giordano: yep yep.
Anthony Cole: Furthermore it's important to make it uh acceptable for the whole world, for different cultures, maybe, because we want to we want to well fifty million?
Grant Giordano: Yes fifty
Timothy Alvarez: Mm-hmm.
Grant Giordano: million is our aim to
Anthony Cole: Yeah
Grant Giordano: a profit,
Anthony Cole: yeah
Grant Giordano: so.
Anthony Cole: so a lot of people have to be able to use it.
Timothy Alvarez: No but
Anthony Cole: So
Timothy Alvarez: uh the
Jonathan Chaplin: Easy
Timothy Alvarez: b
Jonathan Chaplin: to
Timothy Alvarez: the
Jonathan Chaplin: learn.
Timothy Alvarez: buttons have to
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: uh have to have uh international recognisable buttons and uh
Anthony Cole: Yeah that's right.
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Grant Giordano: Yes.
Timothy Alvarez: and numbers and uh that every culture in uh, yeah, people in every
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: country can recognise.
Grant Giordano: I'll make uh notes and then uh maybe uh well I'll put it in the project uh folder when I'm done uh
Anthony Cole: Mm-hmm.
Grant Giordano: just now.
Timothy Alvarez: Alright.
Jonathan Chaplin: I also
Grant Giordano: Well
Jonathan Chaplin: think
Anthony Cole: Right.
Jonathan Chaplin: we should
Grant Giordano: yeah?
Jonathan Chaplin: not add too many buttons. Modern
Grant Giordano: No
Jonathan Chaplin: day uh remotes have
Grant Giordano: that's right. Y
Jonathan Chaplin: too
Grant Giordano: y
Jonathan Chaplin: much
Grant Giordano: you
Jonathan Chaplin: buttons
Grant Giordano: don't use
Jonathan Chaplin: I think.
Grant Giordano: uh the half of them that's that's
Jonathan Chaplin: Precisely.
Grant Giordano: culture uh international.
Anthony Cole: Maybe we could make one button to switch between D_V_D_ player and T_V_
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Anthony Cole: and make the other buttons uh multi-functional or something.
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah
Grant Giordano: Yes.
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah so
Jonathan Chaplin: indeed.
Timothy Alvarez: it doesn't uh become too complicated with too much buttons
Anthony Cole: Yeah
Timothy Alvarez: and
Anthony Cole: right.
Timothy Alvarez: uh
Grant Giordano: Yep, and maybe we do uh we even have uh more than just a D_V_D_ player. Don't we have uh other uh
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah
Grant Giordano: ou
Jonathan Chaplin: we should make it compatible
Timothy Alvarez: And stereo
Grant Giordano: Uh.
Jonathan Chaplin: perhaps with everything
Timothy Alvarez: uh s
Jonathan Chaplin: we use,
Timothy Alvarez: uh
Grant Giordano: We also
Timothy Alvarez: audio
Jonathan Chaplin: we
Grant Giordano: uh
Jonathan Chaplin: uh
Grant Giordano: just
Timothy Alvarez: installations.
Jonathan Chaplin: we make?
Grant Giordano: uh released a T_F_T_ uh
Anthony Cole: Yeah so
Grant Giordano: thing
Anthony Cole: but
Grant Giordano: I saw.
Anthony Cole: th that's kind kind of standard T_ television
Grant Giordano: Yeah.
Anthony Cole: so
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Anthony Cole: it also works on that.
Grant Giordano: Yep.
Jonathan Chaplin: And I think the people who who will buy our uh remote already have some experience with remotes. So we can keep
Timothy Alvarez: Most
Jonathan Chaplin: that in
Timothy Alvarez: people
Jonathan Chaplin: mind.
Timothy Alvarez: do, yeah.
Grant Giordano: Well yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: It doesn't it
Grant Giordano: It doesn't
Timothy Alvarez: doesn't
Grant Giordano: have
Timothy Alvarez: have to
Grant Giordano: to
Timothy Alvarez: be
Grant Giordano: be, but
Jonathan Chaplin: W
Grant Giordano: we can.
Jonathan Chaplin: well it's a n it's a new remote and you don't buy a remote if you don't have anything to uh
Grant Giordano: Well
Jonathan Chaplin: to control with it.
Grant Giordano: except
Anthony Cole: Yeah but
Grant Giordano: if we deliver it together with
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah.
Grant Giordano: our D_V_D_.
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah alright,
Anthony Cole: We need to
Jonathan Chaplin: but
Anthony Cole: to keep it consistent with other d uh
Grant Giordano: Yeah
Timothy Alvarez: Well.
Grant Giordano: because we look at competitors and w if we pick up the good things about that and give it a nice design
Timothy Alvarez: Hmm.
Anthony Cole: Yeah but it's
Timothy Alvarez: It
Anthony Cole: it
Timothy Alvarez: has to be
Anthony Cole: has
Timothy Alvarez: different
Anthony Cole: to be
Timothy Alvarez: and
Anthony Cole: useable.
Timothy Alvarez: familiar at the same time.
Grant Giordano: Yes.
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah. Yeah we could use
Grant Giordano: Yep.
Jonathan Chaplin: another form or shape or colour,
Timothy Alvarez: yeah
Jonathan Chaplin: that
Timothy Alvarez: the shape
Jonathan Chaplin: kind of
Timothy Alvarez: will
Jonathan Chaplin: things.
Timothy Alvarez: will have to be recognised. I thought about uh like most uh remote controls uh are uh a long box shaped thing
Grant Giordano: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: you can make it uh triangle shaped, but that's
Jonathan Chaplin: Well
Timothy Alvarez: not
Jonathan Chaplin: we
Timothy Alvarez: uh
Jonathan Chaplin: we
Timothy Alvarez: very
Jonathan Chaplin: could
Grant Giordano: Oo
Jonathan Chaplin: make
Timothy Alvarez: recognisable.
Jonathan Chaplin: more
Anthony Cole: No.
Jonathan Chaplin: more oval or something, and
Timothy Alvarez: Oval?
Jonathan Chaplin: and
Grant Giordano: N we can
Timothy Alvarez: I
Grant Giordano: use
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah
Grant Giordano: uh
Jonathan Chaplin: or
Grant Giordano: it
Jonathan Chaplin: so
Grant Giordano: as a as a game pad. So
Timothy Alvarez: Mm.
Jonathan Chaplin: Well yeah it's new.
Anthony Cole: Not with two hands.
Grant Giordano: one hand has the beer, so
Anthony Cole: Yeah
Grant Giordano: the other
Anthony Cole: yeah
Grant Giordano: hand
Anthony Cole: yeah, right.
Grant Giordano: uh
Anthony Cole: No
Jonathan Chaplin: but young people want something different and it is
Grant Giordano: Well i
Anthony Cole: Yeah but
Grant Giordano: we already
Anthony Cole: it's
Grant Giordano: uh
Anthony Cole: quite important
Grant Giordano: one of
Anthony Cole: that
Grant Giordano: our
Anthony Cole: it
Grant Giordano: aims
Anthony Cole: fits.
Grant Giordano: is that it has to be original
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Grant Giordano: and
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: Oh
Grant Giordano: trendy
Timothy Alvarez: but it ha it has to be
Grant Giordano: so
Timothy Alvarez: m yeah. But you still have to know it's a remote and not another
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah
Grant Giordano: Well
Jonathan Chaplin: alright.
Grant Giordano: there has been done a lot of researches about remotes uh we have to we can imagine uh because it's a long time uh on the market. So
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah.
Grant Giordano: the the form will have been uh tested out so
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah so the long box uh shaped thing must be uh, yeah, useful
Grant Giordano: Yes.
Timothy Alvarez: or
Grant Giordano: Well
Timothy Alvarez: else uh they would have been ano another
Grant Giordano: for Anthony Cole personally
Timothy Alvarez: shape.
Grant Giordano: I have a a lot of remotes uh at home but those ones that have a a round ending and uh well uh just an uh square uh middle I don't like to use them. I have uh have to it has to fit my hands.
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Grant Giordano: When it falls over it and I just have and then the button
Anthony Cole: It shouldn't
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah.
Anthony Cole: be
Grant Giordano: that
Anthony Cole: boxy.
Grant Giordano: I use most
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah a lo
Grant Giordano: has to be
Timothy Alvarez: the
Grant Giordano: here.
Timothy Alvarez: long box shape yeah. You have to
Grant Giordano: It f it fits
Timothy Alvarez: use
Anthony Cole: Nah
Grant Giordano: your hands
Timothy Alvarez: one hand.
Grant Giordano: and then you just push the button that you use most
Anthony Cole: I don't
Grant Giordano: with
Anthony Cole: agree with the long box
Grant Giordano: thumb.
Anthony Cole: uh shape it
Timothy Alvarez: Why not?
Anthony Cole: it has to be custom made for the hand.
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah it doesn't fit.
Grant Giordano: Tho
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Grant Giordano: tho those new D_V_D_
Timothy Alvarez: But
Grant Giordano: players
Timothy Alvarez: it
Grant Giordano: on
Timothy Alvarez: does
Grant Giordano: the
Timothy Alvarez: fit
Grant Giordano: market
Timothy Alvarez: in the hand if
Grant Giordano: do
Timothy Alvarez: you hold
Grant Giordano: have
Timothy Alvarez: it like
Grant Giordano: those.
Timothy Alvarez: this, and you
Anthony Cole: Yeah
Timothy Alvarez: can
Anthony Cole: but
Timothy Alvarez: make
Anthony Cole: if
Timothy Alvarez: it another
Anthony Cole: you shape
Timothy Alvarez: shape, but
Anthony Cole: it
Timothy Alvarez: then you have
Jonathan Chaplin: No if y
Anthony Cole: If
Jonathan Chaplin: if you look at new Phillips uh D_V_D_ with their uh remotes
Grant Giordano: D_V_D_ players. Yes.
Jonathan Chaplin: pl players they they are the new remotes aren't box shaped.
Timothy Alvarez: W
Jonathan Chaplin: They're
Timothy Alvarez: no
Jonathan Chaplin: all
Timothy Alvarez: w
Anthony Cole: No
Jonathan Chaplin: um
Timothy Alvarez: what else? I di
Anthony Cole: that's
Jonathan Chaplin: Well
Anthony Cole: ol old fashioned.
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah well
Anthony Cole: I
Timothy Alvarez: but
Anthony Cole: can
Timothy Alvarez: uh
Anthony Cole: imagine
Timothy Alvarez: what
Jonathan Chaplin: Yes uh
Timothy Alvarez: what
Anthony Cole: that us
Timothy Alvarez: what do you suggest then?
Jonathan Chaplin: Well
Anthony Cole: Well
Jonathan Chaplin: most of of them are are somewhat thicker at the end, and
Anthony Cole: Yeah right.
Jonathan Chaplin: get um yeah thinner
Anthony Cole: It
Jonathan Chaplin: towards
Anthony Cole: fits
Jonathan Chaplin: the
Anthony Cole: in your
Jonathan Chaplin: uh
Anthony Cole: palms.
Jonathan Chaplin: the other end.
Timothy Alvarez: Hmm.
Jonathan Chaplin: Mm.
Timothy Alvarez: Well but it's still then uh the the long box, uh but then with some
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah it
Timothy Alvarez: uh round uh
Anthony Cole: Hmm?
Grant Giordano: Well
Timothy Alvarez: round
Grant Giordano: A
Timothy Alvarez: forms
Anthony Cole: Um.
Timothy Alvarez: in it to fit
Grant Giordano: it
Timothy Alvarez: your
Grant Giordano: h
Timothy Alvarez: hand,
Grant Giordano: it has
Timothy Alvarez: but it's
Grant Giordano: it it
Timothy Alvarez: it's
Grant Giordano: has
Timothy Alvarez: still
Grant Giordano: a that's tha th th shape that it fits your hand.
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah yeah al alright but
Grant Giordano: That's
Timothy Alvarez: but it's still it's still sort of box, yeah. It it has
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah
Timothy Alvarez: round forms
Jonathan Chaplin: yea
Timothy Alvarez: but it in the end it's
Anthony Cole: Well
Timothy Alvarez: still the box, so that's what I mean.
Anthony Cole: Yeah but it has it has to fit your hand.
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah yeah I
Anthony Cole: It
Timothy Alvarez: understand,
Anthony Cole: shouldn't
Timothy Alvarez: but
Anthony Cole: be too boxy, you know.
Timothy Alvarez: no no
Anthony Cole: It's
Jonathan Chaplin: Hmm.
Timothy Alvarez: I don't mean an entire box like completely
Anthony Cole: No no no.
Timothy Alvarez: square but a also with round edges of course, but
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: in in in at the end it's still this long
Anthony Cole: Yeah it should be
Timothy Alvarez: box shape with convenient uh round uh shapes uh
Anthony Cole: Right maybe
Timothy Alvarez: to
Anthony Cole: something
Timothy Alvarez: fit.
Anthony Cole: like this or
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah
Anthony Cole: and then
Timothy Alvarez: yes
Anthony Cole: a
Timothy Alvarez: I
Anthony Cole: button
Timothy Alvarez: thought
Anthony Cole: here
Timothy Alvarez: about
Anthony Cole: to
Timothy Alvarez: something
Anthony Cole: switch
Timothy Alvarez: like
Anthony Cole: between
Timothy Alvarez: that.
Anthony Cole: different systems like D_V_D_
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah.
Anthony Cole: player and so you can
Timothy Alvarez: A big
Anthony Cole: I've
Timothy Alvarez: recognisable button on top or something.
Anthony Cole: Yeah right, and I do think we have to keep this kind of idea
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Anthony Cole: with the with the numbers and
Grant Giordano: We have five minutes left. So
Timothy Alvarez: The
Anthony Cole: Right.
Timothy Alvarez: buttons should uh also be not too small, not too big, of course, and
Grant Giordano: Yes
Timothy Alvarez: uh
Grant Giordano: uh that's
Timothy Alvarez: n uh uh not too
Grant Giordano: yep.
Timothy Alvarez: close
Anthony Cole: But it
Timothy Alvarez: uh
Anthony Cole: should be
Timothy Alvarez: together.
Anthony Cole: possible to to um make it ap apparent that there are two functions for every button.
Grant Giordano: Yep.
Anthony Cole: So
Timothy Alvarez: Uh-huh.
Anthony Cole: there has to be some space between the buttons.
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah of course
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: uh to uh to uh to have icons to explain the different
Anthony Cole: Yeah right
Timothy Alvarez: functions.
Anthony Cole: right,
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah.
Anthony Cole: and maybe we should use colours.
Timothy Alvarez: Colours,
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah
Timothy Alvarez: yeah.
Jonathan Chaplin: maybe we can um just like on cell phones those um well
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Jonathan Chaplin: you can you can put on on them,
Grant Giordano: Ha.
Jonathan Chaplin: and
Anthony Cole: That's
Jonathan Chaplin: so
Anthony Cole: kinda
Jonathan Chaplin: you can
Anthony Cole: trendy.
Jonathan Chaplin: customise your uh your own remote with different colours or or special
Anthony Cole: Yeah right.
Jonathan Chaplin: paint jobs I dunno
Grant Giordano: Sound
Jonathan Chaplin: but
Grant Giordano: nice. Yes.
Timothy Alvarez: I think we have to talk also about uh the the materials for um.
Jonathan Chaplin: Well
Grant Giordano: Well it's just uh about our first ideas now so I think individually we'll have to uh come up with ideas for the next meeting about
Anthony Cole: Right.
Grant Giordano: these materials
Anthony Cole: But
Grant Giordano: and markets etcetera.
Timothy Alvarez: Already
Grant Giordano: Yes?
Anthony Cole: I think
Timothy Alvarez: thought
Anthony Cole: it's
Timothy Alvarez: about
Anthony Cole: uh
Timothy Alvarez: something tha
Anthony Cole: it's important to uh notate all the the decisions that
Grant Giordano: Yes.
Anthony Cole: we make, so we
Grant Giordano: Well thirty minutes we have.
Timothy Alvarez: Mm-hmm.
Grant Giordano: So um This is about uh what we are going to uh do uh. You'll get specific instructions when you're back in your
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Grant Giordano: room so uh it's uh logical uh. I think.
Anthony Cole: No problem.
Grant Giordano: Oh and uh that's uh that's all. So we'll just get a notice that the the meeting is uh over.
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah now we
Grant Giordano: Yeah
Timothy Alvarez: can still talk about the material,
Grant Giordano: yes
Timothy Alvarez: we
Grant Giordano: say.
Jonathan Chaplin: Mm.
Timothy Alvarez: have some some minutes left uh I w wrote down uh that the case should be plastic of course, hard plastic,
Anthony Cole: Yeah. Yeah it shouldn't be too heavy.
Timothy Alvarez: No n
Grant Giordano: Well
Timothy Alvarez: n
Grant Giordano: I have had remotes that um they had uh the function of the buttons was about uh uh a layer over the buttons and when I've had use it much it was gone.
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah
Anthony Cole: Yeah
Jonathan Chaplin: that's
Anthony Cole: yeah
Grant Giordano: So
Jonathan Chaplin: bad,
Grant Giordano: it
Anthony Cole: yeah.
Grant Giordano: has
Jonathan Chaplin: yeah.
Grant Giordano: to be made in the buttons I think. It has to uh not
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah
Grant Giordano: be
Jonathan Chaplin: that's
Grant Giordano: loose.
Jonathan Chaplin: important.
Timothy Alvarez: Mm. Alright. And of course there are several electrical cables in it to uh
Grant Giordano: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: to connect things uh
Grant Giordano: Is there an a
Timothy Alvarez: to
Grant Giordano: universal
Timothy Alvarez: each other.
Grant Giordano: uh universal way of um transmitting from the remote to the television so it's all about uh
Anthony Cole: Yeah
Timothy Alvarez: I
Anthony Cole: it's
Timothy Alvarez: think
Anthony Cole: univ
Timothy Alvarez: so.
Anthony Cole: yeah
Timothy Alvarez: It's
Anthony Cole: yeah
Timothy Alvarez: a
Anthony Cole: yeah.
Grant Giordano: It's not that
Timothy Alvarez: a
Grant Giordano: in
Timothy Alvarez: common
Grant Giordano: China
Timothy Alvarez: stan
Grant Giordano: it's
Timothy Alvarez: standard
Grant Giordano: different?
Timothy Alvarez: way
Anthony Cole: Yep.
Timothy Alvarez: infrared beams an infrared beam
Grant Giordano: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: I think.
Grant Giordano: But y you can have uh of
Anthony Cole: And you can
Grant Giordano: course
Anthony Cole: use
Grant Giordano: different between D_V_D_s and televisions
Timothy Alvarez: It it's
Grant Giordano: and between
Timothy Alvarez: a we we make an a universal remote
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: so it ha has to work with uh all
Grant Giordano: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: kinds of brands
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: and
Jonathan Chaplin: But
Timothy Alvarez: things.
Jonathan Chaplin: our T_V_s are mostly made in China and that sort of country, so
Grant Giordano: Probably yes. China rules.
Timothy Alvarez: And have well yeah I've wrote something down about how it works. The user presses a button and with an infrared beam
Anthony Cole: But
Timothy Alvarez: it signals the television
Anthony Cole: are
Timothy Alvarez: set accordingly, but that's pretty obvious, I think.
Anthony Cole: Are we going w uh with the front uh fronts uh idea?
Grant Giordano: Well I think uh w we can
Anthony Cole: I
Grant Giordano: look
Anthony Cole: think
Grant Giordano: into that in the
Anthony Cole: we
Grant Giordano: in
Anthony Cole: should
Grant Giordano: the next
Anthony Cole: make
Grant Giordano: uh
Anthony Cole: it universal
Grant Giordano: thirty minutes. Yeah.
Anthony Cole: and you can always use a front front on it, you know? You can use it just plain
Grant Giordano: Yes.
Anthony Cole: but you can
Grant Giordano: Well j
Anthony Cole: To make it
Grant Giordano: just
Anthony Cole: more trendy.
Grant Giordano: y you get a n a normal front with it, but you
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Grant Giordano: can change them
Anthony Cole: Right.
Grant Giordano: uh when
Jonathan Chaplin: Yes.
Grant Giordano: you buy the
Anthony Cole: Right.
Jonathan Chaplin: Yes.
Grant Giordano: And we should uh dispatch those kind of fronts fronts
Jonathan Chaplin: Mm.
Grant Giordano: a a around the world so
Jonathan Chaplin: Well you
Grant Giordano: uh
Jonathan Chaplin: can make
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Jonathan Chaplin: profit with them, and it's a way to make them trendy.
Grant Giordano: Well th those fifty million don't uh don't se sells itself so we have to uh make uh some extra effort like fronts
Timothy Alvarez: Well
Grant Giordano: uh.
Anthony Cole: Yeah
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah
Anthony Cole: right.
Timothy Alvarez: but
Jonathan Chaplin: alright.
Timothy Alvarez: th but the standard front will be uh just grey or something
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah
Timothy Alvarez: uh b a simple
Grant Giordano: Yes.
Jonathan Chaplin: normal.
Timothy Alvarez: colour not
Grant Giordano: Yeah
Timothy Alvarez: not very flashy.
Jonathan Chaplin: No
Grant Giordano: well it has
Jonathan Chaplin: a colour
Grant Giordano: to
Jonathan Chaplin: everyone
Grant Giordano: it h it
Jonathan Chaplin: accepts.
Grant Giordano: has to fit the the te television and D_V_D_ set we are going to sell, so if they are
Jonathan Chaplin: Mm.
Grant Giordano: uh black
Timothy Alvarez: Pink television
Grant Giordano: and black
Timothy Alvarez: sets
Grant Giordano: black
Jonathan Chaplin: Mm.
Grant Giordano: and silver
Timothy Alvarez: pink
Grant Giordano: we'll
Timothy Alvarez: remote,
Anthony Cole: Yeah
Grant Giordano: make them
Anthony Cole: yeah
Grant Giordano: black
Anthony Cole: yeah.
Grant Giordano: and silver
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Grant Giordano: so.
Jonathan Chaplin: standard.
Anthony Cole: But people of often don't like bright colours or something. We have to make it grey or s or black.
Jonathan Chaplin: Well young people
Anthony Cole: Yeah but
Jonathan Chaplin: s
Anthony Cole: then
Jonathan Chaplin: li
Anthony Cole: you can use a a front.
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah yeah, yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: Alright.
Grant Giordano: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: I must not forget my pen the next
Grant Giordano: Well if
Timothy Alvarez: time.
Grant Giordano: if you yeah. If you have a a a television room for little children and you make a if if you buy a a pink front they'll they'll love it.
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Anthony Cole: Yeah
Grant Giordano: I
Anthony Cole: that's
Grant Giordano: think.
Anthony Cole: right. Yeah
Grant Giordano: But that's uh marketing
Anthony Cole: or a t
Grant Giordano: uh research
Anthony Cole: Teletubby
Grant Giordano: you
Anthony Cole: front.
Grant Giordano: can uh you can ask
Anthony Cole: Yeah
Grant Giordano: uh.
Anthony Cole: yeah yeah. I will investigate.
Grant Giordano: Yes. Well our user interface you can uh maybe uh I don't know what your specific instructions will be, but uh probably about uh the precision of the buttons and and those kind of things and what buttons will have to be on the uh remote. And you will look into the technical design and um form, I think.
Timothy Alvarez: Mm yeah
Grant Giordano: Or something
Timothy Alvarez: also the
Grant Giordano: like
Timothy Alvarez: the
Grant Giordano: that.
Timothy Alvarez: look and feel uh of the
Grant Giordano: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: the remote's also my task, yeah.
Grant Giordano: Yeah.
Anthony Cole: Right.
Jonathan Chaplin: What's the uh url or the website
Timothy Alvarez: Yeah
Jonathan Chaplin: 'cause
Timothy Alvarez: I uh
Jonathan Chaplin: I didn't
Timothy Alvarez: w was wondering that too. Y
Grant Giordano: Euro?
Jonathan Chaplin: get
Timothy Alvarez: you
Anthony Cole: It's
Timothy Alvarez: went to the company website.
Grant Giordano: Well
Anthony Cole: Yeah yeah
Grant Giordano: it
Anthony Cole: yeah
Grant Giordano: it
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah.
Grant Giordano: it's
Anthony Cole: just if
Grant Giordano: if
Anthony Cole: you start
Grant Giordano: you uh
Anthony Cole: up your Internet
Timothy Alvarez: It's
Anthony Cole: Explorer
Timothy Alvarez: the the
Jonathan Chaplin: Oh
Timothy Alvarez: the start
Jonathan Chaplin: oh right
Timothy Alvarez: uh starting
Jonathan Chaplin: oh
Timothy Alvarez: page
Anthony Cole: Yeah.
Timothy Alvarez: uh
Jonathan Chaplin: well I didn't uh use it.
Grant Giordano: Finish meeting now. Oh alright. Well uh we're going to back uh
Jonathan Chaplin: Yes.
Grant Giordano: back into our rooms so
Anthony Cole: Well that's great.
Jonathan Chaplin: Next meeting is in
Grant Giordano: In thirty
Anthony Cole: Thirty
Grant Giordano: minutes,
Anthony Cole: minutes.
Jonathan Chaplin: Thirty
Grant Giordano: but uh
Jonathan Chaplin: minutes.
Grant Giordano: I think it will be you will be warned uh through
Jonathan Chaplin: Yeah
Grant Giordano: your laptop
Jonathan Chaplin: alright it's
Grant Giordano: uh
Jonathan Chaplin: it's handy to
Grant Giordano: to get
Jonathan Chaplin: know
Grant Giordano: over here. I'll have to restore
Timothy Alvarez: Very handy
Grant Giordano: my uh
Timothy Alvarez: to know.
Grant Giordano: my desktop uh because
Anthony Cole: It's
Grant Giordano: uh
Anthony Cole: totally broken.
Grant Giordano: it's it's the half of the normal size.
Timothy Alvarez: Right see you in half
Grant Giordano: Oh
Jonathan Chaplin: Oh.
Timothy Alvarez: an hour
Grant Giordano: right,
Timothy Alvarez: then.
Grant Giordano: oh.
Jonathan Chaplin: Goodbye.
Timothy Alvarez: W
Grant Giordano: Ma
Anthony Cole: Oh
Jonathan Chaplin: S.
Grant Giordano: W that was a nice meeting.
Timothy Alvarez: Right uh see you in thirty
Grant Giordano: Yeah,
Timothy Alvarez: minutes then.
Grant Giordano: see you. | After introducing the remote control objective, Grant Giordano demonstrated the SmartBoard technology they would be using. They tested it by drawing animals. Grant Giordano informed the group of the budget, before beginning the discussion of current remotes and initial ideas. They considered taking the best of their competitors designs and making a multifunction remote. It needs to be useable internationally, with few buttons. The considered options for the shape of the remote control, imagining how it would fit in the hand. The group ended the discussion by touching very briefly on some materials issues, and discussed remote covers. | 1 | amisum | train |
Arthur Orenstein: Great man. Who starts?
David Finley: Well I'll uh start just with another presentation,
Arthur Orenstein: Alright,
David Finley: then
Arthur Orenstein: great.
David Finley: we can uh look at th at the agenda uh for this meeting.
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
David Finley: Okay. I've put some uh new things in the in the map.
Arthur Orenstein: Mm-hmm.
David Finley: Uh oh. This is it. I don't know the shortcut, so Ah F_ five. Well our functional design meeting, that's the stage we're in.
Michael Nagase: Mm.
David Finley: And you also ha all three of you have uh prepared something about it.
Arthur Orenstein: Yes.
David Finley: Well in uh just have a look at the notes from the previous meeting, what we uh thought we had dec decided. But uh Uh then we'll uh look at uh the three uh presentations uh from you.
Arthur Orenstein: 'Kay.
David Finley: I think you have prepared uh all
Michael Nagase: Well,
David Finley: three
Michael Nagase: yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
David Finley: uh? Um we'll look at th the new project requirements we uh I dunno. Y you also have uh received that mail, the new project requirements from our bosses?
Michael Nagase: No.
Arthur Orenstein: No.
David Finley: Oh I've received a mail
Arthur Orenstein: You're the
David Finley: with
Arthur Orenstein: only one.
David Finley: uh some additional requirements,
Michael Nagase: Oh
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
David Finley: and I'll have a look if Well I think we should show them before your presentations, because it's not really uh smart uh to uh to include some things uh we can't, because of the new requirements.
Arthur Orenstein: 'Kay.
David Finley: Well um then we can make some decisions about our remote control functions. We have to deb we have to decide it in this meeting what our function will be. And then uh we can discuss uh some more closely.
Michael Nagase: We have
David Finley: Uh
Michael Nagase: forty minutes for this uh discussion?
David Finley: Uh yeah, I think so.
Michael Nagase: Alright.
David Finley: Well uh the closing uh we'll not uh look at it yet.
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
David Finley: Um now I'll look at show this board. Um Well uh notes, first meeting. Now. I gave a disc a a presentation. Uh we familiarised ourself with the boards and then we discussed some first ideas. So we said that uh we have to merge the strong points from our uh competitors,
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
David Finley: and uh look at their uh remote controls. We should make it uh compatible with our new D_V_D_ and other releases we have, our technical releases.
Michael Nagase: Huh?
David Finley: Uh not too many one buttons. One recognisable button in the middle, where you do the most important functions with. And um well they can have two functions, because uh you have a D_V_D_ and a television.
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
David Finley: Um the design has to fit the hand, be original, but also be familiar. It's uh one of our ideas. Yeah well that wa It's just thirty minutes ago, so it's not quite uh
Michael Nagase: Mm-hmm, now it's right.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
David Finley: But well I have to do it. The materials uh well should be hard plastic with rubber from, and uh well the labelling of the buttons should be indestructible. It should
Michael Nagase: It's
David Finley: be
Michael Nagase: meant
David Finley: uh recognisable
Michael Nagase: to be easily
David Finley: at
Michael Nagase: wiped
David Finley: all
Michael Nagase: out,
David Finley: times.
Michael Nagase: yeah.
Joshua Coleman: Mm.
David Finley: Yes.
Arthur Orenstein: Okay.
David Finley: Well fronts were to be just like mobile telephones. And uh the technical aspects um And also labelling of the buttons, the functions should be universal standards. Well that's just uh some ideas from the first meeting.
Michael Nagase: Mm-hmm.
David Finley: It's quite logical al all of it. Um now the new project requirements, I'll just show them. I got this mail from uh our bosses. Well, teletext goes out.
Joshua Coleman: Oh.
David Finley: We will not use teletext.
Arthur Orenstein: Okay.
David Finley: Maybe
Michael Nagase: I I
David Finley: a
Michael Nagase: disagree,
David Finley: new sort
Michael Nagase: but
David Finley: of thing,
Michael Nagase: uh it's
David Finley: but
Michael Nagase: not
David Finley: n
Michael Nagase: uh t
David Finley: but not teletext.
Michael Nagase: it's not my place to
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: disagree I guess.
David Finley: the second is a bit sh pity because we just said
Joshua Coleman: Oh.
David Finley: we wanted to d include the D_V_D_ and they don't want it, because
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
David Finley: of our time we have for this project.
Michael Nagase: Oh, alright.
Joshua Coleman: Oh that's a shame.
David Finley: So that's a shame, because uh especially for the third requirement we want to reach people under the thirty years. Because uh we don't have those customers a lot at th at this point. Um well it's a bit pity because it's just those people want to have uh one remote control for all those technical devices they
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
David Finley: can uh
Arthur Orenstein: But let's
David Finley: reach
Arthur Orenstein: forget
David Finley: it.
Arthur Orenstein: about it. It's just time-consuming,
David Finley: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: so we uh have to go
David Finley: Well
Arthur Orenstein: on.
David Finley: and uh our corporate image should stay rec recognisable in our products. So uh we have to uh use uh maybe a slogan, maybe a colour, and um Yeah well uh on our remote controls the design has to be uh, well as we already said a actually, uh familiar.
Arthur Orenstein: Yes.
David Finley: Uh not only just uh the shape but also our company.
Michael Nagase: Yeah, we are a real fashionable company. I read uh I read it
David Finley: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: on the
David Finley: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Mm.
Michael Nagase: I didn't know what company we were, but we uh especially trendy uh
David Finley: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: trendy trendy stuff. So it
David Finley: Okay.
Michael Nagase: has to be uh a modern design. That's important to know, uh when you design a thing of course.
David Finley: Yes. I I uh noted uh our uh slogan that we have, our company. It's uh we mm put the fashion in electronics.
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
David Finley: So maybe that's a slogan we can put uh somewhere on our remote control or something.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: Alright then um we're going to uh have
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
David Finley: three presentations. You want to start?
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah. I think I have to start.
David Finley: Oh you have to start? I didn't see anything about uh
Arthur Orenstein: Oh no,
David Finley: who had to
Michael Nagase: The
Arthur Orenstein: no
David Finley: start.
Michael Nagase: order?
Arthur Orenstein: problem.
Michael Nagase: No.
David Finley: Well
Joshua Coleman: Mm.
David Finley: s
Arthur Orenstein: I
David Finley: then start.
Arthur Orenstein: just have to uh to think which file's mine, 'cause I was uh bit in a hurry.
David Finley: Okay. Well uh
Arthur Orenstein: I think it's this one. But I'm not sure.
David Finley: You
Arthur Orenstein: Hmm?
David Finley: already uh opened uh
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
David Finley: PowerPoint.
Arthur Orenstein: S Right. Yes. This is it.
David Finley: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Well, I'm going to tell you something about functional requirements.
David Finley: Mm-hmm.
Arthur Orenstein: Um to start with these points. Uh next sheet? Um at first I tell you something about what people dislike about the current uh controls, because it's uh a smart thing to exclude those things. Uh, furthermore it's very important what they do like and what they do use. Um then I tell something about um the most important issues. So we have to focus on those three thing three things. And in the end I'll um show you our target audience or our target product users, customers. Well, um the first findings are that people um think most controls are very kind of ug ugly. That's seventy five per cent of the current users. They don't like it, so we might think about fronts in that section. Um They also say, that's about uh I thought it was fifty per cent, uh that more money will be spent on uh better looking controls. So it's very important that you design a a nice looking control. Um the current user uses his machine just about well all of the time for a few functions. Uh, almost every user uses it d the the control for just ten per cent of its capacity. So it's really important to make the the buttons for the common uh tasks kind of big or kind of uh flashy. Furthermore, it's uh seventy five per cent of the users uh zaps a lot. Thus it might be uh might be smart to make a a big uh zapping button or something in the middle, so you can reach it with your thumb.
Michael Nagase: You can
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
Michael Nagase: zap away.
David Finley: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: yeah right. Right. A lot of losers um users lose their controls in their in their living room. So it might be sensible to make some kind of a button on your television, that's your um your control beeps or something, that you can find
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: this very easily. I dunno, maybe that's
David Finley: Well
Arthur Orenstein: an idea. 'Cause it's
Michael Nagase: Oh.
Arthur Orenstein: uh a big I think fifty per cent of the users loses his its control,
Michael Nagase: Oh?
David Finley: It should
Arthur Orenstein: within the
David Finley: actually
Arthur Orenstein: same room.
David Finley: uh It
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: should actually be loose from the television, because it can also be used for other televisions. So if you deliver a small uh click-on device that you can put on your television, that bleeps to your remote control,
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah
David Finley: everyone
Arthur Orenstein: but what
David Finley: can
Arthur Orenstein: if
David Finley: use
Arthur Orenstein: you lose
David Finley: it.
Arthur Orenstein: your click-on device?
David Finley: No you can click it on your television.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah but if someone d somebody else uses it in ano other room or something?
David Finley: Yeah in another room, yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Nee
David Finley: Well
Arthur Orenstein: but it it specifically
David Finley: yes.
Arthur Orenstein: says it's uh the the control is lost in the same room.
Michael Nagase: Mm-hmm.
David Finley: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: So Well a beeping
David Finley: Well
Arthur Orenstein: device would
David Finley: we'll
Arthur Orenstein: be
David Finley: have a look at it, yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Uh furthermore the learning time is a problem. Uh thirty four thirty four per cent um thinks it's it's too uh too difficult to learn. So the the learning curve should be very short uh for the dumbest people should be able to use it.
Michael Nagase: I think our uh user uh expert should also consider manual a manual for the remote, of course.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah
Michael Nagase: Uh
Arthur Orenstein: but people don't read manuals.
Michael Nagase: I didn't read it? Oh,
Arthur Orenstein: No.
Joshua Coleman: No.
Michael Nagase: alright. users to uh add one? Do you think?
Joshua Coleman: I don't think
Arthur Orenstein: I think you should put more time in the in the design of uh
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: pick up and use,
Michael Nagase: Mm-hmm.
Joshua Coleman: Yes
Arthur Orenstein: than
Joshua Coleman: you should
Arthur Orenstein: a manual.
Joshua Coleman: You should
Michael Nagase: Yeah alright.
David Finley: Yep.
Joshua Coleman: could take
Michael Nagase: Because
Joshua Coleman: a look at
Michael Nagase: they don't
Joshua Coleman: it
Michael Nagase: use
Joshua Coleman: and
Michael Nagase: it?
Joshua Coleman: and
Michael Nagase: Alright.
Joshua Coleman: and know how it how it's supposed to work.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah. Right.
David Finley: but it c
Arthur Orenstein: And
David Finley: can
Arthur Orenstein: it should
David Finley: be very
Arthur Orenstein: be consistent
David Finley: short.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah but
Arthur Orenstein: with consistent
Joshua Coleman: nobody reads
Arthur Orenstein: with older
Joshua Coleman: a manual
Arthur Orenstein: remotes.
Joshua Coleman: about a remote control, I think.
David Finley: Yes okay.
Michael Nagase: Well maybe for
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
Michael Nagase: the If you don't recognise a button who d who d who do I call uh wh
Joshua Coleman: Yeah right.
Michael Nagase: when I don't
Joshua Coleman: It sh it
Michael Nagase: know
Joshua Coleman: should
Michael Nagase: it?
Joshua Coleman: be there, the manual. But but not to how the remote. Only
Arthur Orenstein: And we don't have much time. So it's better to uh put our attention to the the design. So you can pick up and use it, than
David Finley: Well
Arthur Orenstein: I
David Finley: we
Arthur Orenstein: think.
David Finley: are a design
Joshua Coleman: Hmm.
David Finley: team, we can say to some uh writer uh make a manual
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah
David Finley: point.
Arthur Orenstein: right,
Michael Nagase: Isn't it
Arthur Orenstein: right.
Michael Nagase: part of
David Finley: So
Michael Nagase: the of the u No. No.
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: Never mind.
David Finley: we'll have a look.
Arthur Orenstein: Next
David Finley: Um
Arthur Orenstein: point.
David Finley: yes?
Arthur Orenstein: Um R_S_I_. Well that's about twenty per cent I thought. But uh the designer should uh take it uh should uh Wie zeg
Michael Nagase: Consider
Arthur Orenstein: ik dat?
Michael Nagase: the m
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, consider the consequences of using your remote. It
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: should be a good in your hand.
Michael Nagase: Mm-hmm.
David Finley: Yep.
Arthur Orenstein: Right, this is the most important part. Um, we're Like the requirements said, we're gonna specify of we're gonna target a younger audience. Um, that's about sixty per cent of the market, so it's uh quite important. Um research shows that they like to have a little L_C_D_ screen on their on their uh zapping uh device. Uh I
David Finley: Well
Arthur Orenstein: thought it was the age between sixteen and twenty, ninety nine per cent of uh the people like that. So it's very important we should definitely have that in our uh designs.
David Finley: Well with twelve Euro fifty as production cost, we can't
Michael Nagase: It's
David Finley: uh
Michael Nagase: going
David Finley: afford
Michael Nagase: to be expensive.
David Finley: an
Joshua Coleman: No.
David Finley: L_C_D_
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
David Finley: uh
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah but they think it's really important. So if
David Finley: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: we want to s If we have a big If we make lots of uh of the stuff, maybe we can uh buy it very cheap, I dunno. We have to uh
Michael Nagase: Well we'll
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: uh consider it uh.
David Finley: Yeah well uh it's
Michael Nagase: We'll
David Finley: your
Michael Nagase: think abo
David Finley: your task
Michael Nagase: we'll think
David Finley: to uh look into the costs uh of
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
David Finley: those uh
Arthur Orenstein: I don't know. I don't have any information on
David Finley: Nigh
Arthur Orenstein: that. So
Michael Nagase: No, we'll
David Finley: I
Michael Nagase: look
David Finley: know.
Michael Nagase: we'll look into that later.
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
Michael Nagase: Alright?
Arthur Orenstein: And uh another thing is uh speech uh recognition. They also like that, but research is very uh costly.
Joshua Coleman: I
Arthur Orenstein: So
Joshua Coleman: think that's uh difficult to realise also.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, but it it might be important for
Michael Nagase: We
Arthur Orenstein: the sale.
Michael Nagase: have very demanding clients.
David Finley: It's not yet a standard uh development uh those
Joshua Coleman: No and we have
David Finley: so
Joshua Coleman: customers in multiple
David Finley: We
Arthur Orenstein: think
David Finley: sh
Joshua Coleman: uh
Arthur Orenstein: L_C_D_ is
Joshua Coleman: countries
Arthur Orenstein: more
Joshua Coleman: I think.
Arthur Orenstein: reachable than the speech
David Finley: Yeah
Arthur Orenstein: recognition.
David Finley: absolutely.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: So we might consider L_C_D_ screens.
Michael Nagase: Yeah, yeah, alright. Well
Joshua Coleman: No.
Michael Nagase: we'll consider both and and see what uh what what we can find, I think.
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
David Finley: Yep.
Michael Nagase: We don't rule them out uh yet.
David Finley: 'Kay.
Arthur Orenstein: Alright. Um, I think that's it. Um
David Finley: Alright.
Arthur Orenstein: I think it is sensible to u uh to take this take these points into the notes.
David Finley: Yes.
Arthur Orenstein: So you can Right.
David Finley: Well you I c I can uh still see your presentation.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah. Right.
David Finley: It's in the Well uh next um I dunno who is next. You uh got uh
Michael Nagase: Shall I give
Joshua Coleman: Oh
Michael Nagase: a
Joshua Coleman: you
Michael Nagase: technical
Joshua Coleman: go.
Michael Nagase: talk?
David Finley: Yes.
Michael Nagase: Alright.
David Finley: Well go ahead.
Michael Nagase: Well uh it is my task to uh explain uh or to point out a working design.
David Finley: Yip.
Michael Nagase: We have that here. Okay, how do you enlarge it, so that
David Finley: F_
Michael Nagase: you can
David Finley: five.
Michael Nagase: have the F_ F_ five.
David Finley: F_ five.
Michael Nagase: Yep.
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
Michael Nagase: Well, the working design, that's my uh
Arthur Orenstein: Next button.
Michael Nagase: Well alright uh, you know who I am and what I do. So uh we have this. It's a bit uh unclear because I wanted to copy paste something. It
Arthur Orenstein: Oh
Michael Nagase: was
Arthur Orenstein: right.
Michael Nagase: originally in black and white but it became black and
Arthur Orenstein: Purple.
Michael Nagase: purple. But I think you can read it.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, yeah,
Michael Nagase: Um
Arthur Orenstein: yeah. A bit.
Michael Nagase: well um I think it's important uh for you to realise the basic function of a remote control. Uh well you can see uh
Arthur Orenstein: Maybe you can select it. So it uh inverts.
Michael Nagase: And I then can select I can select on the
Arthur Orenstein: the
Michael Nagase: dings It
Arthur Orenstein: p the
Michael Nagase: goes
Arthur Orenstein: whole
Michael Nagase: to the next
Arthur Orenstein: picture.
Michael Nagase: page.
Arthur Orenstein: Nah, uh
David Finley: Click.
Arthur Orenstein: never mind.
Michael Nagase: Well, you can read it, it's not
Joshua Coleman: Yeah,
Michael Nagase: too difficult.
Joshua Coleman: go
Michael Nagase: Meanwhile,
Joshua Coleman: ahead.
Michael Nagase: this is a schematic uh um view of uh how a basic remote control works. You have uh basically uh the energy, the power of the of the remote control, uh and the sender, w which is the LED, the the the the the the the the the bulb that sends the the infrared
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: beam to the, no, to the set.
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
Michael Nagase: And uh the source is of course the user. Uh the user interface is um uh the the the buttons of course. And the the user interface sends uh the the different signals of the different buttons to the chip, and the chip uh sends it to the LED, and the LED sends it to the receiver. That's the that's the basic
David Finley: Yep.
Michael Nagase: idea. Very basic. Um well I have uh uh put it in a in in in a a couple of basic steps. Uh the remote uh is basically just waiting for a user to press a key. It does nothing until uh of course uh the key is pressed. The key a signal to a chip, uh the chip senses the connection. uh and recognise the key. So well you understand. The chip uh produces Morse code, um a specific code to indicate that specific button that is pressed, of course. And it uses transistors in the in the remote control to amplify and to send uh that signal again to the to the LED, which is the bulb, of course. Now the LED produces an infrared beam and signals the, well it's uh very simple, and signals the
David Finley: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: uh signals to the sensor on the T_V_ set, and the T_V_ set uh also recognises the the the signal, and performs the assigned task.
David Finley: So it is also why we have to have a button that says uh I'm now busy with a D_V_D_ uh if we had done that. And a
Michael Nagase: Ah
David Finley: button
Michael Nagase: bu Yeah,
David Finley: for
Michael Nagase: but we don't.
David Finley: T_V_.
Michael Nagase: Uh we No
David Finley: So
Michael Nagase: no, but Yeah. Exactly. Uh well this is uh the basic uh function of a remote. I've some couple of pictures here. It's a very basic one. And uh if we if we're going to add an uh an uh L_C_D_ screen to it, it uh won't look anything like this, but This is very basic uh basically the the shape of um of a remote control. It has uh very little buttons and But it it uh it's it's quite um Yeah, you can easily recognise the buttons. They're uh far enough apart and an anything. It's not very um
Joshua Coleman: High
Michael Nagase: uh
Joshua Coleman: tech.
Michael Nagase: not very high-tech uh indeed, and it's not very user-friendly. So we have to uh change a little bit uh to that, uh so that uh it becomes more user-friendly, and that uh problems like uh R_S_I_ and uh those kinds
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
Michael Nagase: of thing don't don't
Arthur Orenstein: Can I say
Michael Nagase: oc
Arthur Orenstein: something?
Michael Nagase: don't occur. Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Um I have a table here about uh the l the relevance of the buttons. Uh the power button is used very much, channel selection, volume and teletext. Well teletext is not an option,
Michael Nagase: Mm-hmm.
Arthur Orenstein: so that uh But I think it's very important to make um the power, channel and volume buttons uh near to the thumb, so you can't have R_S_I_ uh consequences.
Michael Nagase: Yeah, because they are the the most important buttons
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
Michael Nagase: and you can
Arthur Orenstein: Make
Michael Nagase: immediately
Arthur Orenstein: them big, make them easy to uh
David Finley: Well
Arthur Orenstein: to press.
Michael Nagase: You
Joshua Coleman: You
Michael Nagase: don't
David Finley: but
Joshua Coleman: can
Michael Nagase: have
Joshua Coleman: also
Michael Nagase: to look and
David Finley: but
Michael Nagase: and
Joshua Coleman: like
Michael Nagase: search for them.
David Finley: if you have
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
David Finley: um the most used buttons all in one place, and you keep making the same um well moves.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
Joshua Coleman: Yeah,
Arthur Orenstein: right.
Joshua Coleman: I was
David Finley: But
Joshua Coleman: thinking
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
David Finley: if
Joshua Coleman: you
David Finley: y if
Joshua Coleman: can
David Finley: you would put it at a different place, then you have to move your hands, and that's
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
Joshua Coleman: Are
David Finley: on
Arthur Orenstein: that's
Joshua Coleman: some
David Finley: of
Arthur Orenstein: right.
David Finley: the things
Joshua Coleman: of the
David Finley: about R_S_I_.
Arthur Orenstein: That's right.
Joshua Coleman: the
Arthur Orenstein: That's right.
Michael Nagase: Well
Joshua Coleman: the
Michael Nagase: you
Joshua Coleman: um
Arthur Orenstein: We
Michael Nagase: you can't have any uh every button under the thumb, of course.
David Finley: No but the most
Arthur Orenstein: But
David Finley: important buttons m maybe you can just put them a bit apart
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
David Finley: so you would
Arthur Orenstein: That's very important. And
David Finley: reject R_ R_S_I_ R_S_I_.
Joshua Coleman: Maybe you can make, for for channel changing, two little buttons on the side of the remote, so you can just do like this. Like
David Finley: Yes
Joshua Coleman: some
David Finley: I've saw
Joshua Coleman: uh
David Finley: that on m on mi mobile telephones
Joshua Coleman: little
David Finley: they also
Joshua Coleman: uh
Arthur Orenstein: But
David Finley: have
Arthur Orenstein: is
Joshua Coleman: Gameboy
David Finley: uh
Arthur Orenstein: that
David Finley: those
Arthur Orenstein: is
Joshua Coleman: things
David Finley: buttons.
Arthur Orenstein: that useable?
Joshua Coleman: or some Hmm?
Arthur Orenstein: Do people, uh when they pick up a remote, know that they have to do that? It's
Joshua Coleman: Well
Arthur Orenstein: a f it's a new feature,
David Finley: Well it
Arthur Orenstein: you
David Finley: it's
Arthur Orenstein: can
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: make make
Joshua Coleman: Yeah alright,
Arthur Orenstein: a double
Joshua Coleman: but
Arthur Orenstein: feature l like a button on the top and under
Joshua Coleman: Yeah,
Arthur Orenstein: it.
David Finley: Well
Joshua Coleman: but
David Finley: also i
Joshua Coleman: if
David Finley: if
Joshua Coleman: you s
David Finley: someone
Joshua Coleman: say
David Finley: puts
Joshua Coleman: them
David Finley: picks
Joshua Coleman: up
David Finley: up
Joshua Coleman: and down,
David Finley: his uh
Joshua Coleman: they they'll
David Finley: remote
Joshua Coleman: understand it, I think.
David Finley: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: Eighty
Michael Nagase: Well,
Joshua Coleman: per cent would.
David Finley: If someone puts up i uh picks up his remote, and he picks up it he he touches the side then
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
David Finley: he's a already
Arthur Orenstein: he feels
David Finley: on the next
Arthur Orenstein: it immediately.
David Finley: channel.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah
David Finley: That's
Joshua Coleman: that's
David Finley: very
Joshua Coleman: true.
David Finley: irritating,
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, that's right.
David Finley: I think.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah
David Finley: Well.
Joshua Coleman: but
Arthur Orenstein: Right, continue. Sorry.
Michael Nagase: But in e in any case the
David Finley: No.
Michael Nagase: the basic function should be uh indeed, and as you say at the thumb. I think that's a good idea, and uh and that the less important uh buttons, like the the the different channels, uh the numbers one two three four five as well, should be uh yeah well not in reach, because uh they don't use it uh all the time. Well it's uh pretty pretty
David Finley: Yep.
Michael Nagase: basically uh as you said. And I have some pictures of the inside workings, but uh I don't want to get too technical, because
David Finley: Mm-hmm.
Michael Nagase: uh that's not uh very uh
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, that's
Michael Nagase: useful
Arthur Orenstein: right.
David Finley: That's
Michael Nagase: for
David Finley: your
Michael Nagase: you.
David Finley: part of the job.
Michael Nagase: So yeah exactly this is uh how it uh looks from the inside.
David Finley: Yep.
Michael Nagase: And uh well that's about it I think. Oh yeah, I still have this. Oh I had to delete this, but I had to make a schematic
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
Michael Nagase: uh of the of the new But I had too
David Finley: Okay.
Michael Nagase: too little time, but uh don't uh
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: don't look at it please.
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
Michael Nagase: I I think
David Finley: we understand.
Michael Nagase: it's it's clear uh
David Finley: We understand.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
Michael Nagase: how
Arthur Orenstein: it's
Michael Nagase: it
Arthur Orenstein: clear.
Michael Nagase: works. Alright.
David Finley: Oh right,
Michael Nagase: That's
David Finley: no.
Michael Nagase: the most important thing.
David Finley: Nice.
Michael Nagase: Alright.
David Finley: Then
Michael Nagase: Uh
David Finley: uh Mike can uh give the third presentation. How
Michael Nagase: Right.
David Finley: late is did we start his presentation
Arthur Orenstein: I dunno.
David Finley: uh?
Arthur Orenstein: I think uh w About
David Finley: Wha
Arthur Orenstein: twenty minutes ago?
David Finley: Yeah. Well
Arthur Orenstein: Losing time losing
David Finley: then we
Arthur Orenstein: time.
David Finley: have still the time, so But we do have to come to a decision,
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah right.
David Finley: right
Arthur Orenstein: So
David Finley: later on. So
Joshua Coleman: Mm. Well I thought um everybody on the website uh would see the same thing, but
Arthur Orenstein: I don't think
Joshua Coleman: obviously
Arthur Orenstein: so.
Joshua Coleman: that's not the case.
Michael Nagase: Yeah, uh there are different uh We have all have different home pages,
David Finley: Oh yeah?
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: with different links. Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah right.
David Finley: Uh?
Joshua Coleman: For instance you couldn't see this.
David Finley: Okay, yeah well.
Joshua Coleman: Um Yeah. Well I'm Mike, User Interface
David Finley: Mm-hmm.
Joshua Coleman: Designer. The the method? Well I used my own experience with remotes, took a good l look uh at the remotes on the corporate website, which are these two.
David Finley: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: Um
Arthur Orenstein: These are already in use?
Joshua Coleman: Yes, these are from from another uh manufacturer.
Arthur Orenstein: Alright,
Joshua Coleman: Um
Arthur Orenstein: okay.
Joshua Coleman: This one is engineering-centred, so this one has the most functions and um things. This one is user-centred.
David Finley: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: Mm-hmm.
Joshua Coleman: Um
Arthur Orenstein: Well
David Finley: I like user-centred.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, Arthur Orenstein too.
Joshua Coleman: I like user-centr centred
David Finley: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: uh uh also the best.
David Finley: We also do that.
Joshua Coleman: Um Well, I thought uh that we uh reduce the the option to control the D_V_D_ also, and teletext and that kind of stuff.
Arthur Orenstein: Mm.
Joshua Coleman: Uh so I thought we we we would use more or need more buttons than this one.
Arthur Orenstein: But we have to reject
Joshua Coleman: But
Arthur Orenstein: that, because
Joshua Coleman: Yes.
Arthur Orenstein: of the requirements?
David Finley: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: Th that's why this mm is not relevant any more I
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
Joshua Coleman: feel. Um I think this is about the maximum number of buttons uh we'll need.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, right.
Joshua Coleman: I um I kinda like the shape. I think this is what we talked about. But
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: You can't really see uh the differ from different sides. But I think
Joshua Coleman: No
Michael Nagase: uh
Joshua Coleman: I've Well I showed it somewhere. Um
Michael Nagase: Uh you can draw it if you Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: Oh yeah. I think we should go further with the idea of a removable front. So
David Finley: Mm-hmm.
Joshua Coleman: we can can uh yeah customise the
David Finley: Well absolutely, but i th they all have to have something about um the recognition from our company. So
Joshua Coleman: Mm?
David Finley: we cannot just uh
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: make someone
Joshua Coleman: It's a front.
David Finley: w
Joshua Coleman: It's not the the whole remote that changes, of
David Finley: No
Joshua Coleman: course.
David Finley: but
Arthur Orenstein: But
Joshua Coleman: You
David Finley: that's
Arthur Orenstein: it
Joshua Coleman: can
David Finley: th the side they look uh look at is the front. So if y if you make a a front with just a a tiger on it, then uh
Joshua Coleman: Mm.
David Finley: our recognition is totally gone.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, that's right.
Joshua Coleman: Or you can you can can put the same symbol on on every
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
Joshua Coleman: remote. So
Arthur Orenstein: that's
Joshua Coleman: l
Arthur Orenstein: a must.
Joshua Coleman: like
Arthur Orenstein: We
David Finley: Yeah,
Arthur Orenstein: must
Joshua Coleman: Ericsson
Arthur Orenstein: have
Michael Nagase: We
Arthur Orenstein: that.
Michael Nagase: can
David Finley: we
Michael Nagase: put
David Finley: must.
Joshua Coleman: does
Michael Nagase: it on the on the back side.
David Finley: Yeah
Joshua Coleman: every uh
David Finley: well and and
Joshua Coleman: S something like this.
David Finley: Yes.
Joshua Coleman: It's recognisable.
David Finley: 'Kay.
Arthur Orenstein: We can
Joshua Coleman: Um
Arthur Orenstein: make a symbol of the company right here. And if you
Joshua Coleman: Yeah?
Arthur Orenstein: put a front on it, there's a hole on the front. So
Michael Nagase: Yeah,
Arthur Orenstein: the symbol's
Michael Nagase: so that
Arthur Orenstein: always
Joshua Coleman: Yeah
Michael Nagase: you
David Finley: Yeah
Joshua Coleman: yeah.
Michael Nagase: don't
David Finley: yeah
Joshua Coleman: Something
Michael Nagase: replace
David Finley: yeah.
Joshua Coleman: like that,
Michael Nagase: the symbol,
Joshua Coleman: in the
Michael Nagase: yeah.
David Finley: Or
Arthur Orenstein: on
David Finley: the
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: th the the lowest part of the remote isn't changed
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
David Finley: by the front.
Arthur Orenstein: yeah.
Michael Nagase: Mm-hmm.
Arthur Orenstein: But
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: let's
David Finley: Those
Arthur Orenstein: not
David Finley: kind
Arthur Orenstein: focus
David Finley: of things.
Arthur Orenstein: on the
David Finley: Yes.
Arthur Orenstein: front.
David Finley: Okay.
Joshua Coleman: Um Well so uh uh like I said I thought we'd we'd use more function. If we we had to include more functions. But we don't. So um
David Finley: Mm-hmm.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
Joshua Coleman: I think this is about the maximum number of buttons we need. Maybe some less. Like eject we don't need, and some other buttons we don't need. I think
Michael Nagase: Mike,
Joshua Coleman: uh
Michael Nagase: uh can you put uh that picture from Arthur Orenstein on the in the Word documents file?
Joshua Coleman: Yeah,
Michael Nagase: In Map?
Joshua Coleman: I will. I think uh for the remote um uh less is more. The less buttons the better the design. Um
David Finley: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
Joshua Coleman: We
Arthur Orenstein: I
Joshua Coleman: should
Arthur Orenstein: agree.
Joshua Coleman: go with that concept I think. I know.
David Finley: Alright.
Arthur Orenstein: I've I've got another point.
David Finley: Yeah?
Arthur Orenstein: Um there are two target audi audiences, and we've uh chose for the younger one. Um,
Joshua Coleman: Mm.
Arthur Orenstein: research has shown that um it's a high interested uh in features. They are high high interested in feature. But they are more critical. Fo Yeah, critical.
Michael Nagase: The
Arthur Orenstein: So
Michael Nagase: younger uh
Arthur Orenstein: The younger audience.
Michael Nagase: Mm-hmm.
Arthur Orenstein: So we must um must design uh a control that really speaks to the people.
David Finley: Well what if we um I at I at home have a remote that has um the most familiar uh buttons on the top,
Arthur Orenstein: Mm-hmm.
David Finley: and the bottom side of the front has a little clip, a f a little uh You can click away and then you have f much more functions that most people don't use but s some do do.
Michael Nagase: Mm-hmm. I think uh the most functions uh underneath that uh
Arthur Orenstein: Clip aren't
Michael Nagase: uh
Arthur Orenstein: used much.
Michael Nagase: No um
David Finley: Well but
Michael Nagase: mm
David Finley: because
Michael Nagase: usually
David Finley: you say they their features are important, they want
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah right.
David Finley: m um
Michael Nagase: But
David Finley: a lot, but not
Joshua Coleman: Yeah, but what kind of features?
Michael Nagase: Yeah
Joshua Coleman: Like
Michael Nagase: I think
Joshua Coleman: L_C_D_ screens
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah
Joshua Coleman: and
Michael Nagase: m
Arthur Orenstein: but
Michael Nagase: most
Joshua Coleman: voice recognition.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: But I've
Michael Nagase: Most
Arthur Orenstein: Here, look
Michael Nagase: uh
Arthur Orenstein: at these numbers. The newest features are, like I said, are uh L_C_D_ and uh speech uh control. Our audience, these people, are very like these uh features.
David Finley: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: Mm-hmm.
Arthur Orenstein: You see? So
Michael Nagase: Uh.
Arthur Orenstein: we must build in something, or they will to uh go to the concurrent.
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: The
Michael Nagase: Our
David Finley: Competitors.
Michael Nagase: competitor.
Arthur Orenstein: concurrent?
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Competitors, right. So, I do think we have to uh have some features.
David Finley: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Even though they
David Finley: Well
Arthur Orenstein: cost a little more.
David Finley: maybe w we could uh s On um some uh calculators you have lo those little little
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
David Finley: L_C_D_
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
David Finley: th that you can click on or something, or that you can click uh out uh of the remote. And if if that's gives you a little bit of sta status
Arthur Orenstein: Like
David Finley: information.
Arthur Orenstein: a ticker-tape.
David Finley: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Which programme you are l watching or something.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah, that's nice.
David Finley: Those kind of things, uh because you also have those uh those program recognition for your V_ V_C_R_s. And uh
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, right.
David Finley: well
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
David Finley: if y
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah right.
David Finley: if your remote picks that up also, you they can display which programme you're currently watching.
Michael Nagase: Yeah. So it it just signals the the different uh sig uh the different symbols on the screen
David Finley: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: you have, uh because if you change to s channel two you have two on the screen and two on your on your um
David Finley: For example.
Michael Nagase: on your L_C_D_ screen.
David Finley: It it could be such a little uh th that you can click in and out and you and you have it.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah, we should keep that simple too.
Michael Nagase: But should
Joshua Coleman: It
David Finley: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: it uh really be
Joshua Coleman: will
Michael Nagase: uh clickable, uh
Arthur Orenstein: No not
David Finley: Well
Arthur Orenstein: clickable.
David Finley: maybe.
Joshua Coleman: No, it
Arthur Orenstein: Nah,
Michael Nagase: or
Joshua Coleman: should
Arthur Orenstein: no
Joshua Coleman: be
Arthur Orenstein: no no.
Joshua Coleman: uh integrated. I
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
Michael Nagase: or just
Arthur Orenstein: just
Joshua Coleman: think
Michael Nagase: integrate
Arthur Orenstein: at
Michael Nagase: inside to
Arthur Orenstein: at
Michael Nagase: try to
Arthur Orenstein: the
Michael Nagase: make
Arthur Orenstein: top.
Michael Nagase: it d more trendy.
Arthur Orenstein: So when you s you sit like this you can can watch. I think
David Finley: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: it
Joshua Coleman: Yeah,
Arthur Orenstein: should be
Joshua Coleman: something
Arthur Orenstein: at the top.
Joshua Coleman: like on
David Finley: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: um some radios in car. You Where it's, yeah, walking
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah right.
Joshua Coleman: to
Arthur Orenstein: It's
David Finley: R_D_S_s
Arthur Orenstein: a
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: or
Arthur Orenstein: ticker-tape
David Finley: something.
Arthur Orenstein: idea.
Michael Nagase: But that's of course uh a bit more uh expensive than uh the basic uh calculator design, with the scrolling text and that kind of thing.
Joshua Coleman: Wa
Arthur Orenstein: Well it's just
David Finley: Well
Arthur Orenstein: one
David Finley: I
Arthur Orenstein: script.
David Finley: think it's you got
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: It just means it's a script that's uh keeps it uh rolling, and it's not uh That's five minutes off uh implementing
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
David Finley: time
Arthur Orenstein: five
David Finley: I think
Arthur Orenstein: minutes
David Finley: uh
Arthur Orenstein: of ja ja for programming.
David Finley: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: So I don't think that's the issue.
David Finley: No.
Michael Nagase: Alright.
Arthur Orenstein: Alright, we go with the L_C_D_ screen?
David Finley: Uh well I think so, yes.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah
Arthur Orenstein: 'Kay.
David Finley: Um
Joshua Coleman: well we we we still need to know how much that will cost.
Arthur Orenstein: Right, I don't know if I can
David Finley: We're
Arthur Orenstein: find
David Finley: g
Arthur Orenstein: that,
David Finley: No but
Arthur Orenstein: but
David Finley: we're we'll
Joshua Coleman: Or
David Finley: have
Joshua Coleman: maybe
David Finley: to look into
Joshua Coleman: you will
David Finley: that.
Joshua Coleman: get that information uh
Arthur Orenstein: Next
David Finley: Um
Arthur Orenstein: time. Yeah right.
David Finley: we can use
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: this board again, I think. Uh we can put some um decisions about um the controls we want, th the issue. Where is my presentation? Uh
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, I understand what you're saying.
David Finley: Uh
Arthur Orenstein: We should have a general idea of how it's gonna look.
David Finley: Well I mean we're all here now, I think. These I've already given you. So we have to decide on the different remote control functions.
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
David Finley: So we want to have a small L_C_D_ screen
Arthur Orenstein: At the top.
David Finley: that's special.
Michael Nagase: Shouldn't we start with the most important
Joshua Coleman: At
Michael Nagase: parts?
Joshua Coleman: the top
David Finley: Yes.
Michael Nagase: The L_C_D_
Joshua Coleman: or
Michael Nagase: screen
Joshua Coleman: at the bottom?
Michael Nagase: alright
Arthur Orenstein: I think
Michael Nagase: but
Arthur Orenstein: the top
Michael Nagase: we should
Arthur Orenstein: is more
Michael Nagase: start
Arthur Orenstein: uh
Michael Nagase: with the power button? Uh
David Finley: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: When
Joshua Coleman: Yeah
Arthur Orenstein: you s
Joshua Coleman: but
Arthur Orenstein: How do you zap? You just sit in your chair?
Michael Nagase: Huh?
Arthur Orenstein: With
Joshua Coleman: Yeah
Arthur Orenstein: the
Joshua Coleman: but
Arthur Orenstein: remote?
Joshua Coleman: with with the L_C_D_ screen on the top it
David Finley: That
Joshua Coleman: gets
David Finley: thing is
Joshua Coleman: a bit
David Finley: terrible.
Joshua Coleman: unnatural. 'Cause most remotes have some space left at the bottom.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah but that's where your hand ball might be.
David Finley: Uh
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
Joshua Coleman: Yeah,
Arthur Orenstein: I dunno.
Joshua Coleman: no Mm.
Michael Nagase: And then uh
Arthur Orenstein: We'll draw two, and then we'll see uh
Michael Nagase: Maybe we should uh centralise the discussion here. I dunno what uh you were
Arthur Orenstein: No
Michael Nagase: talking about but
Arthur Orenstein: Um he
Michael Nagase: we
Arthur Orenstein: thinks
Michael Nagase: are busy with something.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, right. He thinks it's better to put the L_C_D_ at the bottom, and I think it's better at the top.
Michael Nagase: Uh-huh. Why
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: do you think it's better at the bottom?
Joshua Coleman: Uh well because most uh remotes have um some space left at the bottom, and that way you can keep the shape recognisable for
Arthur Orenstein: But
Joshua Coleman: everybody.
Arthur Orenstein: your
Michael Nagase: But you
Joshua Coleman: I
Michael Nagase: just
Joshua Coleman: c
Michael Nagase: can put uh the the the the the whole interface a bit down, so that there's
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: Well
Michael Nagase: room
Arthur Orenstein: The
Joshua Coleman: I d
Michael Nagase: for
Joshua Coleman: I think
Michael Nagase: the for
Joshua Coleman: that's
Arthur Orenstein: the
Michael Nagase: the interface.
Arthur Orenstein: ticker
Joshua Coleman: that's
Arthur Orenstein: The L_C_D_
Joshua Coleman: ugly
Arthur Orenstein: is
Joshua Coleman: but
Arthur Orenstein: like like small. It's it's wide. It's
Michael Nagase: Uh-huh.
Arthur Orenstein: not not high. But
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: And and
David Finley: I th
Michael Nagase: we
David Finley: I
Michael Nagase: can
Joshua Coleman: I
David Finley: think
Joshua Coleman: th
David Finley: Mike Mike has a point, because
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: um
Joshua Coleman: Power
David Finley: when when
Joshua Coleman: button
David Finley: uh when I
Joshua Coleman: always
David Finley: use a remote
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: I l I hate the buttons but buttons at the at the
Michael Nagase: Bottom.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: bottom. So and and
Joshua Coleman: Yeah,
David Finley: I
Joshua Coleman: y
David Finley: I like
Joshua Coleman: you
David Finley: to
Joshua Coleman: gotta
David Finley: use the
Joshua Coleman: zap
David Finley: ones
Joshua Coleman: like this or you want
David Finley: on the
Joshua Coleman: to
David Finley: top. So
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah
David Finley: when
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: right.
David Finley: I
Arthur Orenstein: But
David Finley: u when I have to have an L_C_D_
Michael Nagase: Well
David Finley: s scr
Arthur Orenstein: We're making
David Finley: window
Michael Nagase: that's
Arthur Orenstein: a remote
Michael Nagase: a
Arthur Orenstein: with
Michael Nagase: bit exaggerated. Well, I agree with you.
Arthur Orenstein: with a few functions you know.
Michael Nagase: It's
Arthur Orenstein: We
Michael Nagase: it's also more recognisable. It looks more like a calculator to people, if you have the l the the
David Finley: Yes but we we we
Michael Nagase: the
David Finley: we
Michael Nagase: thing
David Finley: don't
Michael Nagase: on top.
David Finley: want that.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah you don't want
David Finley: We don't
Joshua Coleman: You want
David Finley: want
Joshua Coleman: uh
David Finley: them to look
Joshua Coleman: Yeah
David Finley: like a calculator.
Joshua Coleman: it
David Finley: We
Joshua Coleman: it
David Finley: want to
Joshua Coleman: it
David Finley: look
Joshua Coleman: must
David Finley: it
Joshua Coleman: be a remote.
David Finley: like our original
Michael Nagase: Yeah
David Finley: but
Michael Nagase: w
David Finley: familiar
Michael Nagase: well, but uh you
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: don't have to throw uh um important aspe
Arthur Orenstein: High-tech.
Michael Nagase: important aspect like familiarity
David Finley: Yea
Michael Nagase: uh completely away, uh because
David Finley: Maybe
Michael Nagase: I think
David Finley: a
Michael Nagase: it's
David Finley: bic
Michael Nagase: uh
David Finley: uh better uh white uh We White?
Michael Nagase: I think
Arthur Orenstein: Width.
Michael Nagase: it's still important to
David Finley: Width.
Michael Nagase: have it at the top,
David Finley: Uh
Michael Nagase: because it's
David Finley: format
Michael Nagase: uh
David Finley: yeah format? Line width? Width?
Arthur Orenstein: Th
Michael Nagase: it's more familiar
Arthur Orenstein: that's not
Michael Nagase: that
Arthur Orenstein: a problem.
Michael Nagase: way.
David Finley: Yeah?
Arthur Orenstein: When I draw here it Oh. Huh?
David Finley: It's a bit off.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, it's off.
David Finley: Well.
Michael Nagase: A little a little bit.
Arthur Orenstein: It it needs to be calibrated
David Finley: Well
Arthur Orenstein: again.
David Finley: uh let's
Arthur Orenstein: Well
David Finley: uh talk about that later uh
Michael Nagase: Maybe you should another pen. Maybe that's uh better.
Arthur Orenstein: Where?
Michael Nagase: You e you only have
David Finley: It's
Michael Nagase: one pen
David Finley: special
Michael Nagase: for that
David Finley: pen.
Michael Nagase: screen. Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Alright, we have to make a decision now, because
David Finley: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: we don't have much time.
David Finley: No.
Arthur Orenstein: Um I think we have uh a few functions, and we can put uh the L_C_D_ above it, and still have lots of room at the bottom,
Michael Nagase: Yeah. I
Arthur Orenstein: where you can put
Michael Nagase: I
Arthur Orenstein: your
Michael Nagase: agree.
Arthur Orenstein: hand.
David Finley: I think it should be at the button, bottom.
Michael Nagase: Well
Joshua Coleman: At the bottom?
Michael Nagase: I'm
David Finley: Bottom.
Michael Nagase: the I I'm the designer,
David Finley: The L_C_D_.
Michael Nagase: so um
Joshua Coleman: In a
Arthur Orenstein: At
Joshua Coleman: few
Arthur Orenstein: the
Joshua Coleman: minutes
Arthur Orenstein: bot
Joshua Coleman: Oh yeah, oh
David Finley: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: yeah, I totally
Arthur Orenstein: So
Joshua Coleman: agree. Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: We are two uh V_S_ two.
David Finley: Well but uh what what if we we
Joshua Coleman: He's
David Finley: first
Joshua Coleman: the boss.
David Finley: decide the different functions,
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
David Finley: and then
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
David Finley: look at the
Arthur Orenstein: Great.
David Finley: design.
Michael Nagase: Uh we uh
David Finley: Because
Michael Nagase: we
David Finley: we
Michael Nagase: were
David Finley: have to
Michael Nagase: busy
David Finley: decide
Michael Nagase: with that.
David Finley: this.
Michael Nagase: Uh yeah we should uh summon the
David Finley: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: the different uh aspects of the thing. So, we have the power button.
Arthur Orenstein: And moreover I think that you two should be uh come to consensus about the L_C_D_
David Finley: Yes.
Arthur Orenstein: s. It's uh your it's your job.
Michael Nagase: Yeah of course. Uh it's uh.
Joshua Coleman: No
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: it's
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: W
Joshua Coleman: our
David Finley: we have
Joshua Coleman: job.
Michael Nagase: wh
David Finley: a power button. Guys?
Michael Nagase: While you have to agree, I
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
Michael Nagase: can say
Arthur Orenstein: right.
Michael Nagase: it's like this and
David Finley: Guys?
Arthur Orenstein: Alright,
Michael Nagase: you must agree.
Arthur Orenstein: let's
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: keep
David Finley: We
Arthur Orenstein: it
David Finley: have
Arthur Orenstein: central.
David Finley: a power button, setting buttons, L_C_D_ window,
Joshua Coleman: The ten
David Finley: the number
Joshua Coleman: numbers?
David Finley: buttons
Joshua Coleman: Yeah?
Michael Nagase: Channel, yeah.
David Finley: Uh
Joshua Coleman: Volume?
Michael Nagase: Volume control.
David Finley: Yes.
Michael Nagase: Um
Arthur Orenstein: Mm.
David Finley: Uh
Michael Nagase: Well let's look at your uh design.
David Finley: the mute
Michael Nagase: Uh
David Finley: button. I h love that one.
Michael Nagase: Uh-huh.
Joshua Coleman: I think we we should use something like this um to um The the channel up and channel down button?
David Finley: Yes.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah, in circle, you know?
David Finley: Yeah. Yeah yeah yeah. Well
Joshua Coleman: And
David Finley: that's
Joshua Coleman: and
David Finley: that's
Joshua Coleman: a
David Finley: also
Joshua Coleman: volume
David Finley: design.
Joshua Coleman: control also
David Finley: Yes.
Joshua Coleman: in it.
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
David Finley: Um
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: But
David Finley: h
Michael Nagase: th
David Finley: ho
Michael Nagase: th on this remote th these controls are for something else, a D_V_D_
David Finley: Yes.
Michael Nagase: player or
David Finley: Yes.
Michael Nagase: something.
Joshua Coleman: Yes,
David Finley: They
Michael Nagase: So
David Finley: are
Joshua Coleman: as
David Finley: for some
Joshua Coleman: I
David Finley: uh
Joshua Coleman: already
David Finley: video
Joshua Coleman: said,
David Finley: uh
Joshua Coleman: we could drop some of these buttons.
Arthur Orenstein: You should put that uh power button, channel and volume should have the most uh importance.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah. I think these should be in one big circle in the middle.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, but what he said about R_S_I_ was t kinda true. When when you uh put them all in the same place, the most used buttons, you're doing the same thing all the time, and that's just what R_S_I_'s all about. So it might be smarter to put them a little more
David Finley: Apart.
Arthur Orenstein: away from each other.
David Finley: So people have to move their hand. And they get less uh complaints of R_S_I_.
Michael Nagase: Yeah, it's it's also not good to completely stay in one position constantly with one hand. Y
David Finley: That's what I always do, because
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
David Finley: all my i important buttons
Michael Nagase: It's
David Finley: are the
Michael Nagase: good
David Finley: same
Michael Nagase: to move
David Finley: place.
Michael Nagase: uh from time to time. Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah
Arthur Orenstein: Um
Joshua Coleman: but
David Finley: Yes?
Joshua Coleman: people don't like it when their buttons are all over the place. They
Michael Nagase: No
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: but
David Finley: not
Joshua Coleman: they need
Michael Nagase: now
Joshua Coleman: to
Michael Nagase: y
Joshua Coleman: be centred.
Michael Nagase: W would we have to choose a
Arthur Orenstein: Frequency
Michael Nagase: way
Arthur Orenstein: of
Michael Nagase: in middle?
Arthur Orenstein: uh button use.
David Finley: Yes.
Arthur Orenstein: Um channels are uh most uh is most used within the hour.
David Finley: Uh-huh.
Joshua Coleman: Volume
Arthur Orenstein: You
Joshua Coleman: hardly.
Arthur Orenstein: can see. So the the channel uh channel buttons should
Michael Nagase: Mm-hmm.
Arthur Orenstein: be far far apart, I think, up and down.
Joshua Coleman: No I don't think.
Michael Nagase: Oh.
David Finley: Up
Michael Nagase: Far
David Finley: and
Michael Nagase: apart?
David Finley: down far apart from each other?
Arthur Orenstein: You thinking uh about
Joshua Coleman: Yeah but
Arthur Orenstein: R_S_I_?
Joshua Coleman: Yeah
David Finley: Well
Joshua Coleman: but
Arthur Orenstein: Y
David Finley: not
Arthur Orenstein: look
David Finley: too
Arthur Orenstein: at
David Finley: much.
Arthur Orenstein: uh look
Joshua Coleman: No.
Arthur Orenstein: at the frequency. Nei not too much, but
Joshua Coleman: The other the other two uh frustrations are far more important. So
Michael Nagase: I think you can have the two buttons of up and down close together, but you don't have uh have to have volume control
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: and
David Finley: for example
Michael Nagase: and
David Finley: the power
Michael Nagase: zapping button
David Finley: button,
Michael Nagase: close together.
David Finley: you can
Joshua Coleman: Well they are used four times
David Finley: If someone
Joshua Coleman: an hour,
David Finley: is
Joshua Coleman: so
David Finley: constantly z zapping, it's not going to miss, that it that the power button is not right beside it. Because I
Arthur Orenstein: Nei
David Finley: have
Arthur Orenstein: nei nei
David Finley: someone
Arthur Orenstein: n I I
David Finley: But
Arthur Orenstein: totally
David Finley: the buttons
Arthur Orenstein: agree.
David Finley: is way. So
Arthur Orenstein: But
David Finley: that one
Arthur Orenstein: just
David Finley: can be put away.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah. Right. Yeah. I
David Finley: The power
Arthur Orenstein: agree.
David Finley: button can uh be uh uh
Joshua Coleman: Power bu button should be left at the top.
David Finley: Yes.
Arthur Orenstein: And should and should be red.
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
David Finley: Oh man, five minutes. Yeah, well
Arthur Orenstein: Right,
David Finley: five minutes left.
Arthur Orenstein: just make some decisions.
David Finley: Yep.
Arthur Orenstein: The most important things we have to uh
David Finley: Um how are we going to do it
Michael Nagase: C c
David Finley: with
Michael Nagase: can you
David Finley: those
Michael Nagase: make you
David Finley: numbers?
Michael Nagase: make We can use uh the drawing board now, I think. Uh it it doesn't work well but But it it
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: would be
David Finley: I have
Michael Nagase: pretty
David Finley: it here.
Michael Nagase: pretty uh nice if we could just draw a simple
Arthur Orenstein: I do
Michael Nagase: thing.
David Finley: Yeah
Arthur Orenstein: think you
David Finley: well
Arthur Orenstein: have
David Finley: that's
Arthur Orenstein: to
David Finley: going
Arthur Orenstein: keep
David Finley: to take
Arthur Orenstein: you
David Finley: too
Arthur Orenstein: have
David Finley: too
Arthur Orenstein: to
David Finley: much
Arthur Orenstein: keep
David Finley: time.
Arthur Orenstein: it central now. Just
Joshua Coleman: Mm.
David Finley: Yes.
Arthur Orenstein: uh
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: you decide that, you decide that,
Michael Nagase: Mm.
Arthur Orenstein: and
David Finley: Yes.
Michael Nagase: Alright.
Arthur Orenstein: ready.
David Finley: Well the L_C_D_. Um you are Industrial, you are User Interface. So I think it's going to go to Mike.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
David Finley: But you will have to make consensus with. Well
Joshua Coleman: Well consensus,
David Finley: Well
Joshua Coleman: um
David Finley: it's a bit
Arthur Orenstein: Nei.
David Finley: hard,
Joshua Coleman: We we
David Finley: because
Joshua Coleman: can
David Finley: we
Arthur Orenstein: We're
Joshua Coleman: put
David Finley: are going
Joshua Coleman: it in
David Finley: to
Joshua Coleman: the
David Finley: be
Joshua Coleman: middle,
Arthur Orenstein: No
David Finley: uh individually.
Joshua Coleman: so
David Finley: That's a bit
Arthur Orenstein: We're
David Finley: uh
Arthur Orenstein: deciding now,
David Finley: Yes.
Arthur Orenstein: so Top or bottom?
Michael Nagase: Well uh yeah I I still think it's it's quite important though to uh
David Finley: Yes it
Michael Nagase: to
David Finley: is.
Michael Nagase: have it at the top, so Yeah. You say familiarity isn't important but
David Finley: Well what if we're going to now decide about the functions, and the design comes into the next round?
Arthur Orenstein: Okay.
David Finley: Plus the d th
Michael Nagase: Yeah
David Finley: the design
Michael Nagase: d
David Finley: round is still to come huh?
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: right. Okay.
Joshua Coleman: Alright.
David Finley: Alright these functions.
Michael Nagase: As we we we
David Finley: The number
Michael Nagase: we agreed,
David Finley: f
Michael Nagase: we do
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: have a L_C_D_.
David Finley: yes,
Michael Nagase: So
David Finley: that's alright.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
Michael Nagase: that's
Arthur Orenstein: okay.
David Finley: W the number function.
Michael Nagase: that's enough. Yeah.
David Finley: Are we going to uh do it like uh on Mike's screen with uh one button that says I'm going to do a t two number digital?
Joshua Coleman: No.
David Finley: How do you want it to do then?
Michael Nagase: There's
Joshua Coleman: Well
Michael Nagase: one two
Joshua Coleman: just
Michael Nagase: three four five
Joshua Coleman: when
Michael Nagase: six
Joshua Coleman: you
David Finley: It
Michael Nagase: six
David Finley: it has
Joshua Coleman: push
Michael Nagase: seven
David Finley: to
Joshua Coleman: a
Michael Nagase: eight
David Finley: r
Michael Nagase: nine
David Finley: recognise
Joshua Coleman: one one
Michael Nagase: zero.
Joshua Coleman: and
David Finley: one as there could still come more.
Joshua Coleman: No, if you
Michael Nagase: Oh,
Joshua Coleman: On
Michael Nagase: like that.
Joshua Coleman: most
Michael Nagase: Um
Joshua Coleman: T_V_s if you uh press two numbers shortly after each other,
David Finley: Yes.
Michael Nagase: They'd recognise
Joshua Coleman: d it Yeah.
Michael Nagase: it. Th
David Finley: Alright
Michael Nagase: that's
David Finley: so
Michael Nagase: the
David Finley: no
Michael Nagase: most
David Finley: button for
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: that.
Michael Nagase: That that's
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: very easy.
Arthur Orenstein: No.
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
David Finley: Okay uh anyone any uh oth other functionalities of our uh remote?
Michael Nagase: I think these are the the most important
Arthur Orenstein: Do
Michael Nagase: functions.
Arthur Orenstein: you still have the pictures over there?
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: So
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, that's about it. You do need the uh multi Or did uh No, like this one. You do need them?
David Finley: No, we'd
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah,
David Finley: uh just said we
Arthur Orenstein: I
David Finley: didn't
Arthur Orenstein: know.
David Finley: uh
Arthur Orenstein: But are we Alright, alright
David Finley: Well
Arthur Orenstein: uh
David Finley: uh
Arthur Orenstein: Now okay.
David Finley: Um well because we can't integrate it with any other uh remotes, all those buttons on those pictures are uh irrelevant.
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
David Finley: So just for a television is that all we need?
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, it's most useable this way.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: basic function.
David Finley: Teletext is gone. So all those buttons that ar are to do with teletext Oh screen placing. We'll have uh those uh buttons about uh And uh the two important ones we're l f forgetting. Uh there's um screen. You can make it wider and
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah.
David Finley: less wide. And the button that you can go to A_V_ for your video.
Arthur Orenstein: Right. I do
Michael Nagase: Oh yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: think we have to put that underneath a clip.
David Finley: Those two? But it's just two,
Michael Nagase: Uh
David Finley: and we make
Michael Nagase: just
David Finley: a clip?
Michael Nagase: two just two under uh under
David Finley: Th that's
Michael Nagase: uh
David Finley: a
Joshua Coleman: We
David Finley: bit
Joshua Coleman: we
David Finley: uh
Joshua Coleman: can make
David Finley: waste.
Joshua Coleman: make uh a little row of like four buttons down here.
David Finley: Yes.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah. Okay, right.
Michael Nagase: I
David Finley: Or
Michael Nagase: I think
David Finley: at
Michael Nagase: uh
David Finley: the top. Your L_C_D_ screen is
Joshua Coleman: Or
David Finley: going
Joshua Coleman: at
David Finley: to go.
Michael Nagase: But you you can
Joshua Coleman: Yeah
Michael Nagase: put
Joshua Coleman: alright
Michael Nagase: uh
Joshua Coleman: then.
Michael Nagase: two or three buttons under uh another section. Uh that's that's too complicated.
David Finley: Yes.
Michael Nagase: You can just put it somewhere They
David Finley: Yeah
Michael Nagase: they aren't used much, not as much as those other, so you
Joshua Coleman: Oh,
Michael Nagase: can
Joshua Coleman: they
Michael Nagase: put
Joshua Coleman: can
Michael Nagase: it somewhere
Joshua Coleman: be small or round
Michael Nagase: Yeah s
Joshua Coleman: like
Michael Nagase: bit
Joshua Coleman: buttons.
Michael Nagase: smaller and s Well uh and and I think more at the bottom. Yeah. Yeah or at the top, yeah. What do you think uh those those buttons? Above
David Finley: Well I
Michael Nagase: or
David Finley: think they
Michael Nagase: down?
David Finley: should in an in an isolated part of the remote.
Michael Nagase: And w where? Well we design it later. We have it, and we design
David Finley: Yes?
Michael Nagase: later where everything
David Finley: Yes.
Michael Nagase: goes. Yeah.
David Finley: Yes. Well any other uh
Arthur Orenstein: Well if you you
Joshua Coleman: Why go
Arthur Orenstein: take
Joshua Coleman: to
Arthur Orenstein: those
Joshua Coleman: video?
Arthur Orenstein: th If you
David Finley: Go to video, that's always on your remote control.
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, but
David Finley: To
Arthur Orenstein: you can z
David Finley: A_V_
Arthur Orenstein: you
David Finley: uh
Arthur Orenstein: can
David Finley: to
Arthur Orenstein: zap
David Finley: A_V_
Arthur Orenstein: t
Michael Nagase: The
Arthur Orenstein: you
Michael Nagase: the video
Arthur Orenstein: can
David Finley: A_V_
Michael Nagase: channel
Arthur Orenstein: you
Michael Nagase: uh?
Arthur Orenstein: can zap
David Finley: A_V_.
Arthur Orenstein: to the video channel
Joshua Coleman: That's
Arthur Orenstein: from
Joshua Coleman: just
Arthur Orenstein: zero
Joshua Coleman: zero.
Arthur Orenstein: to uh
Joshua Coleman: Yeah.
David Finley: Well
Michael Nagase: No no
David Finley: l
Michael Nagase: not
David Finley: n no
Michael Nagase: always.
David Finley: not at not at
Michael Nagase: Ze
David Finley: my remote.
Michael Nagase: yeah zero is a different channel than uh
David Finley: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: the
Joshua Coleman: Yeah,
Michael Nagase: the
Joshua Coleman: but
Michael Nagase: video
Joshua Coleman: you can
Michael Nagase: channel.
Joshua Coleman: can zap
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, but
Joshua Coleman: down
Arthur Orenstein: when you zap down zero
David Finley: Yes.
Arthur Orenstein: you get to A_V_.
Joshua Coleman: Yes, I
David Finley: I
Joshua Coleman: think
David Finley: don't.
Joshua Coleman: th
David Finley: I go to ninety-nine.
Joshua Coleman: No,
Arthur Orenstein: Ah uh
Joshua Coleman: then
Arthur Orenstein: well
Joshua Coleman: you press ninety
Arthur Orenstein: whatever,
Joshua Coleman: nine. I think go to video is an
David Finley: Th
Joshua Coleman: irrelevant
David Finley: that's the button
Joshua Coleman: button,
David Finley: uh
Joshua Coleman: but
David Finley: No.
Michael Nagase: But it's easy to go If you are at uh at channel uh fifty five and you want to uh go immediately to the video channel, you do you have to push a to
David Finley: No
Michael Nagase: to get
David Finley: you can
Michael Nagase: below
David Finley: ch push
Michael Nagase: zero.
David Finley: zero.
Michael Nagase: It's more
David Finley: Yeah.
Michael Nagase: easy to get to uh
David Finley: Yeah, I I
Michael Nagase: where the
David Finley: think
Michael Nagase: specific uh
David Finley: that
Michael Nagase: video
David Finley: one
Michael Nagase: channel
David Finley: button
Michael Nagase: button.
David Finley: is uh I use it uh
Arthur Orenstein: Yeah, but if we're choosing to uh incorporate these buttons, you have to have uh channel setting, if you wa if you have a new T_V_. You have
David Finley: Yeah?
Arthur Orenstein: to set the channels. Right all th these uh different buttons you
David Finley: These
Arthur Orenstein: have
David Finley: buttons,
Arthur Orenstein: to
David Finley: I don't have buttons for channel setting uh especially on my remote.
Arthur Orenstein: Ah,
Michael Nagase: Yeah well
Arthur Orenstein: I do.
Michael Nagase: uh
David Finley: It's
Michael Nagase: d
David Finley: it's
Joshua Coleman: Yeah well
Michael Nagase: different
David Finley: incorporated
Michael Nagase: screen settings
David Finley: with
Joshua Coleman: y you must
David Finley: p
Joshua Coleman: have.
Michael Nagase: a
David Finley: m
Michael Nagase: Yeah, sk
David Finley: plus and down, uh
Michael Nagase: Yeah y
David Finley: those
Michael Nagase: you you you
Joshua Coleman: Yeah you yeah
Michael Nagase: you
Joshua Coleman: you have
Michael Nagase: have
Joshua Coleman: one
Michael Nagase: screen width.
Joshua Coleman: one button from s set frequency o or something, and then with plus and min minus you can uh adjust
Arthur Orenstein: Right.
Joshua Coleman: the uh
Arthur Orenstein: That's the only one we put uh in there.
David Finley: So we still have one uh four?
Arthur Orenstein: For a screen uh fu uh
David Finley: Ch
Arthur Orenstein: channel setting.
David Finley: ch
Michael Nagase: Yeah to uh oh yeah of course to configure
Arthur Orenstein: Programme,
Michael Nagase: the
Arthur Orenstein: right.
Michael Nagase: programme
David Finley: Okay.
Michael Nagase: the
David Finley: Oh the Okay button?
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
Arthur Orenstein: Uh
David Finley: Oh you always have in the centre an Okay button,
Michael Nagase: Yeah.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah, alright.
David Finley: for your menu. Menu button.
Michael Nagase: You should Yeah. I think that's important. Uh
David Finley: Channel, setting, menu. We
Michael Nagase: And and the settings
David Finley: have
Michael Nagase: to change the brightness
David Finley: to go.
Michael Nagase: the settings to change the brightness and the contrast.
David Finley: Okay.
Michael Nagase: Channel, yeah.
David Finley: So um
Michael Nagase: Chief?
David Finley: Save.
Michael Nagase: Chief?
David Finley: Yes see.
Michael Nagase: Th the menu menu button is also important. Then
David Finley: Yes
Michael Nagase: you can
David Finley: I have
Michael Nagase: uh
David Finley: put it in.
Michael Nagase: Where? I don't see it.
David Finley: Here.
Michael Nagase: Oh Menu, alright.
Joshua Coleman: I think things like uh contrast and brightness should be um
Michael Nagase: In the menu.
Joshua Coleman: in the menu,
Michael Nagase: And
Joshua Coleman: yeah.
Michael Nagase: you can uh then adjust it with the zapping buttons or something.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah, the
Michael Nagase: Because uh
David Finley: Alright.
Michael Nagase: the zapping buttons aren't
Joshua Coleman: Or
Michael Nagase: used
Joshua Coleman: the volume
Michael Nagase: then if you
Joshua Coleman: or
Michael Nagase: are in
Joshua Coleman: something
Michael Nagase: the menu.
Joshua Coleman: like
David Finley: Guys?
Joshua Coleman: that.
Michael Nagase: Yeah. Or
David Finley: We're
Michael Nagase: the
David Finley: going
Michael Nagase: volume,
David Finley: to
Michael Nagase: yeah.
David Finley: uh go to our uh rooms, and uh we'll
Joshua Coleman: Your pen.
David Finley: have to decide s
Arthur Orenstein: Ah.
David Finley: things on our own I think.
Arthur Orenstein: Great.
David Finley: So
Michael Nagase: Yes chief.
Arthur Orenstein: Alright.
Joshua Coleman: I thought
David Finley: Well
Joshua Coleman: we'd
David Finley: see
Joshua Coleman: uh
David Finley: you
Joshua Coleman: lunch
Michael Nagase: Yeah
David Finley: uh
Michael Nagase: this
David Finley: W w
Michael Nagase: is
Joshua Coleman: uh
David Finley: we
Joshua Coleman: right
David Finley: have lunchtime,
Joshua Coleman: now,
Michael Nagase: this
Joshua Coleman: or
Michael Nagase: is your
Joshua Coleman: not?
Michael Nagase: thing.
David Finley: by the way, now
Arthur Orenstein: Ah.
Joshua Coleman: Yeah,
David Finley: uh so
Arthur Orenstein: Okay.
Joshua Coleman: lunch
David Finley: uh
Joshua Coleman: break.
Michael Nagase: I am hungry.
David Finley: Lunch.
Arthur Orenstein: Get into my belly.
David Finley: Ah. We didn't exactly do everything
Michael Nagase: See you later mate.
David Finley: but So | There are some new requirements for the project: the device will have to be for TV only, they should ignore the teletext function, as it is dated, and, also, the remote should be recognisable as a Real Reaction product. The target group will be people below 30. It transpires that customers are willing to pay more for fancier looking remotes, especially if they include LCD screens and speech recognition. Functions like zapping are very prevalent, as well as complaints about remotes being difficult to learn and easy to lose. The function of the remote is relatively simple: by pressing a button a current is passed to the chip, and defines what signal is to be sent to the receiver (the TV) via infrared. The team agreed to follow a user-centred approach and simplify the design by somehow minimising the number of buttons. They plan to include an LCD screen to display relevant information. Other functions are served by push buttons: OK, menu, screen sizing, AV, settings buttons, mute, digits 1-9, power, volume control, channel up/down with the last three types being prominent on the device. The exact design and placement of the components will be decided in the next meeting. | 1 | amisum | train |
Daniel Williamson: Uh fourth meeting.
Leo Parker: We have to do what?
Daniel Williamson: Some extra deciding.
Winfred Griffith: W what? Alri
Leo Parker: Oh.
Winfred Griffith: alright.
Daniel Williamson: Well
Winfred Griffith: We'll see.
Daniel Williamson: I'll show you the notes again. Very interesting. Well you'll you two will uh present us your prototype.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Then um I guess that's your bit?
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: I I didn't s see anything about it, so I already uh thought you uh you were to do that. So the you're uh. I'll show you how we're going to do with financing this
Leo Parker: Mm.
Daniel Williamson: uh design.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah, that's important too. Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: And then we'll
Leo Parker: Bit late.
Daniel Williamson: evaluate, after after we have redesigned it. Because uh well we'll see about the costs. Um we'll uh evaluate our p our uh production and then uh we can close.
Winfred Griffith: Alright.
Daniel Williamson: Well the finance uh we'll do later, so um firstly uh I'll show you the notes. I don't think it's very interesting.
Leo Parker: I think it is.
Daniel Williamson: Oh nei. Uh no. Alright. This is copy paste. So
Winfred Griffith: From Gary Patton of course, yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Of course. You had
Winfred Griffith: Well
Daniel Williamson: some
Winfred Griffith: from us
Daniel Williamson: very
Winfred Griffith: all, yeah,
Daniel Williamson: strange
Winfred Griffith: from
Daniel Williamson: layout.
Winfred Griffith: all of us. Yeah. It's a nice chorus, yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Well um We ge we went through the agenda, and well we had some uh some presentations from you three. And uh I summarised what you said to us. So uh I don't think it's very interesting and go through it again.
Winfred Griffith: Repeat it yeah.
Daniel Williamson: So uh
Winfred Griffith: Alright.
Daniel Williamson: This is what we decided. It's also copy paste from what we made together. So
Gary Patton: Okay.
Daniel Williamson: we still know that. And then uh we can we can uh use the time better. Well uh next you two will uh present uh the pot prototype for us.
Winfred Griffith: Alright, we both uh will?
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: Or one of us will?
Leo Parker: Alright.
Winfred Griffith: Uh
Leo Parker: No you go and I'll uh
Winfred Griffith: Alright. If I
Leo Parker: supplement
Winfred Griffith: make mistakes
Leo Parker: you.
Winfred Griffith: uh you'll uh
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Correct.
Winfred Griffith: Right. Uh well this is our design. Uh it's pretty uh much uh like uh Mike draw uh drew uh the in the during the last meeting. With uh the different uh perspectives of it. Uh we'll begin uh with the front. We have of course uh the the round shape uh the round uh basic shape. Um with uh the upper part being the front. Th So there's this part um which is made of hard plastic, the front. And uh we're we're using different colours. Of course for the launch we use the basic ugly colours, and
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: later we'll put out uh more interesting covers with different patterns
Daniel Williamson: Mm-hmm.
Winfred Griffith: and pictures and everything. But basically, different colours, bright colours not black, too dark. Fancy colours. Um then we have uh the lower part of the of the device. Uh which is of course um part of the back actually, because it's also titanium. You can see it also on the on the on the side view, that only this part is the front, and the rest of it, the under uh the under side uh of it, yeah, the back side and the lower part of the front is of course titanium made of titanium, and has the titanium colour of course, the look. Um
Daniel Williamson: Mm.
Winfred Griffith: then we have uh on back on the front uh the logo in the upper corner, uh which is uh made uh which is also part of the back, part of the titanium uh
Leo Parker: Yeah, it's a double R_,
Winfred Griffith: titanium
Leo Parker: but
Winfred Griffith: part. Yeah?
Leo Parker: It's a double R_.
Winfred Griffith: It's a double R_. Yeah the
Leo Parker: But
Winfred Griffith: logo Uh uh
Leo Parker: it's
Daniel Williamson: Yeah,
Leo Parker: very difficult
Daniel Williamson: alright.
Winfred Griffith: it's
Leo Parker: to to
Winfred Griffith: difficult
Leo Parker: draw
Winfred Griffith: to draw
Leo Parker: that in
Winfred Griffith: so small, but
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: it's our double R_ uh
Daniel Williamson: Okay.
Winfred Griffith: logo is in there.
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: Um so that's the logo in the upper lef uh right corner. Then we have the buttons. Uh it's difficult to draw again the little oval or round I think oval will be better for
Leo Parker: Oval
Winfred Griffith: the
Leo Parker: yeah.
Winfred Griffith: for the d for the different
Daniel Williamson: Alright.
Winfred Griffith: uh channel buttons. So uh oval, n those are here. And then we have the m The m
Leo Parker: Channel up and volume?
Winfred Griffith: Yeah the the con the the the, yeah, the t volume and the channel controls uh in the middle here. Um um with kind of arrow shapes, which makes it also a bit more exciting than basic round or um uh uh square buttons. And also here are the two uh buttons we agreed on. We have the Okay button. Oh nei we uh the Okay button's here in the middle
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: of
Daniel Williamson: Mm-hmm.
Winfred Griffith: the of the operators, of the channel and uh volume um changers. And then we've here the Menu button and the
Daniel Williamson: Alright.
Leo Parker: Menu for
Winfred Griffith: And
Leo Parker: the
Winfred Griffith: the video
Leo Parker: L_C_D_
Winfred Griffith: button.
Leo Parker: screen.
Winfred Griffith: The
Gary Patton: Mm right.
Daniel Williamson: So
Winfred Griffith: Yeah. And of course this low part, this is the L_C_D_ screen.
Daniel Williamson: 'Kay.
Winfred Griffith: Uh this is what we made of it. You can make uh suggestions uh
Daniel Williamson: Well
Winfred Griffith: if you want.
Leo Parker: Well, at
Daniel Williamson: if
Leo Parker: the back
Daniel Williamson: I look at it, the side the side view
Winfred Griffith: Maybe we maybe we should finish first uh our
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: talk and then you can add
Daniel Williamson: Oh
Winfred Griffith: suggestions.
Daniel Williamson: yeah alright.
Winfred Griffith: Maybe I I don't want to
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: I don't want to suppress you but n I'll uh finish this uh quick. Um okay I've had everything I guess on
Leo Parker: No
Winfred Griffith: the
Leo Parker: the
Winfred Griffith: front?
Leo Parker: back. the
Winfred Griffith: Yeah
Leo Parker: logo
Winfred Griffith: the back. Yeah.
Leo Parker: and our uh l uh
Winfred Griffith: We thought about Yeah, uh the back is of course totally titanium. And we thought about the logo big in the middle.
Daniel Williamson: Mm-hmm.
Winfred Griffith: Just so again the double R_. We have
Gary Patton: Mm-hmm.
Winfred Griffith: then the logo on front and on the back. Maybe that's
Daniel Williamson: Okay.
Winfred Griffith: too much but
Leo Parker: No
Winfred Griffith: you
Leo Parker: I don't
Winfred Griffith: have to
Leo Parker: think
Winfred Griffith: say uh say that if you think that way. And
Leo Parker: And the
Winfred Griffith: the company slogan, we thought in a kind of arc
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: shape
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: uh above the logo. That's basically what we were thinking about, and
Daniel Williamson: Okay.
Leo Parker: And about
Daniel Williamson: W
Leo Parker: the side view um This the front won't be as thick, but
Daniel Williamson: Well I
Leo Parker: again
Daniel Williamson: see, but
Leo Parker: th the the drawing technique makes it very difficult to
Winfred Griffith: Oh and uh
Leo Parker: to
Winfred Griffith: before
Leo Parker: really
Winfred Griffith: I forget.
Leo Parker: uh
Daniel Williamson: Well.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah the the voice,
Daniel Williamson: Yeah
Winfred Griffith: of course,
Daniel Williamson: I see
Winfred Griffith: the voice
Daniel Williamson: it.
Winfred Griffith: recorder is uh at the bottom.
Daniel Williamson: Yes.
Winfred Griffith: And you can record it uh using, yeah, the the
Daniel Williamson: When I
Winfred Griffith: the
Daniel Williamson: look
Winfred Griffith: back
Daniel Williamson: at
Winfred Griffith: of
Leo Parker: Well,
Winfred Griffith: the
Daniel Williamson: uh
Leo Parker: it
Winfred Griffith: f
Leo Parker: won't
Daniel Williamson: when
Leo Parker: be visible.
Daniel Williamson: I look at
Winfred Griffith: w
Daniel Williamson: this
Winfred Griffith: device.
Daniel Williamson: side view,
Leo Parker: Mm?
Daniel Williamson: I think w when I have that in my hand, it's terrible. If
Winfred Griffith: Why?
Daniel Williamson: if you look if if this this is thick, and this is thin, th th then
Winfred Griffith: Well
Daniel Williamson: it that
Winfred Griffith: it fits
Daniel Williamson: it lies over your hands.
Winfred Griffith: uh it
Daniel Williamson: But
Winfred Griffith: it it it fits the hand, mean
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: uh the the
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Daniel Williamson: Well
Winfred Griffith: the
Gary Patton: I
Winfred Griffith: the
Gary Patton: agree.
Daniel Williamson: what what what I what I agree is that when uh when um you have such of uh an arc in the middle, so that the the a the ends and the fronts is a bit thicker, so
Leo Parker: If
Daniel Williamson: th then
Leo Parker: y
Daniel Williamson: it falls over your hands.
Leo Parker: If you handle a remote, you you usually don't have your hand straight
Winfred Griffith: In
Leo Parker: like
Winfred Griffith: the middle
Leo Parker: this. You
Winfred Griffith: in the
Leo Parker: you have it a bit
Gary Patton: It depends
Leo Parker: uh
Gary Patton: on the size.
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Gary Patton: If it's kinda small, this is is great. But if it's it's larger, then you want to grab it.
Daniel Williamson: And how
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: large is it?
Gary Patton: Yeah, that's the question.
Winfred Griffith: That's the question. Uh well Yeah. H What do you suggest I mean we do? This
Daniel Williamson: Well
Winfred Griffith: was
Daniel Williamson: uh
Winfred Griffith: Mike's prototype, and y you seemed to agreed on it. But now
Daniel Williamson: Well
Winfred Griffith: you
Daniel Williamson: the
Winfred Griffith: have
Daniel Williamson: sides
Winfred Griffith: a totally
Daniel Williamson: I
Winfred Griffith: different.
Daniel Williamson: haven't seen yet, uh?
Leo Parker: Well,
Winfred Griffith: The size? Yeah
Leo Parker: they
Winfred Griffith: well
Leo Parker: lay there
Winfred Griffith: the size
Daniel Williamson: They the
Leo Parker: all
Winfred Griffith: doesn't
Daniel Williamson: the
Leo Parker: the time.
Daniel Williamson: the
Winfred Griffith: really
Daniel Williamson: the
Winfred Griffith: matter
Daniel Williamson: the side
Winfred Griffith: w I mean
Daniel Williamson: view,
Winfred Griffith: Side? Uh
Daniel Williamson: we
Winfred Griffith: oh
Daniel Williamson: didn't
Winfred Griffith: the side?
Daniel Williamson: uh
Winfred Griffith: W we we he drew the s the
Leo Parker: Yeah
Winfred Griffith: side,
Leo Parker: yeah.
Winfred Griffith: but you d you weren't paying attention as usual. Well any case, we'll discuss it now. Uh I think uh this is a pretty good uh good idea.
Gary Patton: Yeah, I agree with the L_C_D_ screen. You have it in your palm like this, and you can watch uh watch the screen. And if you have it li in the middle,
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Gary Patton: your hand might be over it.
Winfred Griffith: But you you hold it like this.
Leo Parker: Yeah you
Winfred Griffith: You're not holding it like this
Leo Parker: you don't
Winfred Griffith: or something.
Leo Parker: you don't grab it, you you
Winfred Griffith: You, yeah, y How do you call it? Yeah. Well y y y you don't have it like this. You
Daniel Williamson: No
Winfred Griffith: have
Daniel Williamson: no
Winfred Griffith: it
Daniel Williamson: no.
Winfred Griffith: more like this. using buttons this way, or
Gary Patton: Like
Winfred Griffith: if you're
Gary Patton: you're
Winfred Griffith: right-handed,
Gary Patton: holding your telephone.
Winfred Griffith: this
Daniel Williamson: Yep.
Winfred Griffith: way.
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: So you Yeah.
Gary Patton: Because
Winfred Griffith: So
Gary Patton: if you have a screen on it, you wanna look at your screen.
Leo Parker: Hmm.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah
Leo Parker: That
Winfred Griffith: well
Leo Parker: way, it it falls into your hand. I think.
Daniel Williamson: Okay.
Gary Patton: Yeah, I
Winfred Griffith: And
Gary Patton: agree
Winfred Griffith: maybe
Gary Patton: on
Winfred Griffith: you
Gary Patton: this.
Winfred Griffith: can you can grab it a bit higher, so Well
Gary Patton: No, I don't think so. That's not uh
Leo Parker: No but but
Winfred Griffith: Well
Gary Patton: the
Winfred Griffith: the
Gary Patton: point
Winfred Griffith: the Well that's a reason to to to put the L_C_D_ screen uh of course on the upper side, but
Leo Parker: Well f for as far as I can see, three of us agree and
Daniel Williamson: Yeah
Leo Parker: only
Daniel Williamson: well
Leo Parker: Nils
Daniel Williamson: uh I think uh if you t if you three uh agree then then that's it.
Leo Parker: But you're Daniel Williamson, you can make the hard decisions.
Daniel Williamson: Yes. So
Winfred Griffith: If
Daniel Williamson: uh
Winfred Griffith: necessary.
Daniel Williamson: I c
Winfred Griffith: But
Daniel Williamson: I c
Winfred Griffith: uh
Daniel Williamson: Well,
Winfred Griffith: are d
Daniel Williamson: we'll
Winfred Griffith: Can you
Daniel Williamson: we
Winfred Griffith: live
Daniel Williamson: we'll
Winfred Griffith: with
Daniel Williamson: do
Winfred Griffith: it?
Daniel Williamson: it
Winfred Griffith: Uh
Daniel Williamson: like this.
Leo Parker: Yeah?
Daniel Williamson: Alright,
Winfred Griffith: Y
Daniel Williamson: if you think that that's the
Winfred Griffith: Yeah,
Daniel Williamson: way
Winfred Griffith: y y
Daniel Williamson: it
Winfred Griffith: y
Daniel Williamson: should
Winfred Griffith: y you said it was totally uh unusable.
Daniel Williamson: No
Winfred Griffith: But do you
Daniel Williamson: No, when I I my personal taste is that I want it to fall over my hands with a thick But
Winfred Griffith: But d you don't think this
Daniel Williamson: In
Winfred Griffith: is
Daniel Williamson: the market
Winfred Griffith: completely unusable
Daniel Williamson: uh
Winfred Griffith: I guess. I think.
Daniel Williamson: No not totally.
Winfred Griffith: Not totally, well
Daniel Williamson: For Gary Patton, I I wouldn't buy it. Let's
Winfred Griffith: Yeah
Daniel Williamson: say it
Winfred Griffith: but
Daniel Williamson: like
Winfred Griffith: of course
Daniel Williamson: that.
Winfred Griffith: y you are also human. We have to
Daniel Williamson: No
Winfred Griffith: take uh every everyone into
Gary Patton: And you might
Winfred Griffith: account.
Gary Patton: be
Winfred Griffith: So
Gary Patton: uh You might be target customer.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah. Well
Daniel Williamson: Yes
Winfred Griffith: uh who who
Leo Parker: Mm.
Daniel Williamson: but
Winfred Griffith: else thinks like you? We don't know. Maybe
Daniel Williamson: Yeah, we
Winfred Griffith: a
Daniel Williamson: don't
Winfred Griffith: thousand
Daniel Williamson: know, but
Winfred Griffith: people,
Daniel Williamson: that's
Winfred Griffith: or
Daniel Williamson: uh
Winfred Griffith: a million people.
Daniel Williamson: that's that's that's more market research. So let it be like this at uh
Winfred Griffith: Let
Daniel Williamson: at this
Winfred Griffith: it
Daniel Williamson: moment.
Winfred Griffith: be. Alright.
Daniel Williamson: Okay?
Winfred Griffith: So that's that. Uh any other suggestions?
Daniel Williamson: No, I think it's great.
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Leo Parker: But what about the redesigning?
Daniel Williamson: Comes to that later.
Leo Parker: Okay.
Daniel Williamson: Um you. Uh c You can uh Walter.
Winfred Griffith: You're very personal
Daniel Williamson: You can do the
Winfred Griffith: again.
Daniel Williamson: evaluation uh criteria on this?
Gary Patton: Alright. Great.
Daniel Williamson: That's more useful than just speaking.
Gary Patton: Well, this is just a short intro. I'm
Daniel Williamson: Yes.
Gary Patton: going to do uh the ev evaluation. That's gonna be done at the end of seven point skill criteria. So I made a I made a few questions on the hand of uh uh the impor most important requirements and
Daniel Williamson: Mm-hmm.
Gary Patton: trends. And we have to look if our uh if our device uh is working correctly. Well, I put some questions in a Word file. See if I can find them. Uh uh uh uh mm.
Daniel Williamson: 'Kay.
Gary Patton: Well
Leo Parker: Hmm.
Gary Patton: I uh think you have all seen uh this kind of evaluation, so uh I don't have to explain it. Uh the first question is, uh is the device good-looking? Because normal p uh most people thought that um earlier devices were ugly ugly. Seventy five percent of them. So what do we think?
Winfred Griffith: Well d we designed it, so of course we are very
Leo Parker: Mm.
Daniel Williamson: Yeah,
Gary Patton: Yeah
Daniel Williamson: we're we're not quite uh objective about
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Gary Patton: No,
Daniel Williamson: this.
Leo Parker: Well
Gary Patton: I know, but
Leo Parker: we designed it to be good-looking.
Gary Patton: I have to uh evaluate it. So I have to take this questionnaire.
Winfred Griffith: So and
Daniel Williamson: To
Winfred Griffith: we
Daniel Williamson: the customers?
Winfred Griffith: ha we have answer now?
Daniel Williamson: To
Gary Patton: Yeah
Daniel Williamson: potential
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: customers who have to take this
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Daniel Williamson: questionnaire?
Gary Patton: but I can't
Daniel Williamson: Nei.
Gary Patton: can
Daniel Williamson: Oh no.
Gary Patton: s
Leo Parker: Hmm.
Daniel Williamson: I know, I know, I know. But um Well we can go, uh because of the time, uh pretty quick through this. Uh do we find it good-looking? Well we think so.
Winfred Griffith: I
Daniel Williamson: Uh
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Winfred Griffith: Yeah, I
Leo Parker: We
Winfred Griffith: think
Leo Parker: designed
Gary Patton: but
Winfred Griffith: it
Leo Parker: it
Gary Patton: uh,
Leo Parker: to
Gary Patton: you
Leo Parker: be
Gary Patton: know
Leo Parker: good-looking,
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Leo Parker: so
Gary Patton: We dis we di we designed it to be perfect. So But we have to be critic critical about it. And I have to uh take all these points and get a average at the end. So we we
Daniel Williamson: Well,
Gary Patton: know where we stand.
Daniel Williamson: one.
Gary Patton: 'Cause th there are some things we might have uh bi might have forgotten.
Daniel Williamson: Well so it's point four.
Gary Patton: Right, so
Daniel Williamson: Easy
Winfred Griffith: Well
Daniel Williamson: to find
Winfred Griffith: l well
Daniel Williamson: t
Winfred Griffith: let's start with the beginning, just one
Gary Patton: Right.
Winfred Griffith: by one.
Gary Patton: Uh is it good-looking?
Winfred Griffith: Well, I guess uh I think uh
Daniel Williamson: Two.
Winfred Griffith: it's uh it's it's um pointed towards the youth of course, uh if you look at the design and and the colours and everything. That was our target audience of course. But it's also not completely um uh u unacceptable for older people I guess. Uh it's it's not f a device
Gary Patton: The titanium
Winfred Griffith: that
Gary Patton: might be uh f
Winfred Griffith: Yeah,
Gary Patton: for
Winfred Griffith: that's
Gary Patton: older people.
Winfred Griffith: that's uh for older people, it's it's more that classical
Gary Patton: It you put
Winfred Griffith: look.
Gary Patton: uh
Winfred Griffith: So
Gary Patton: put a black front on it or something.
Leo Parker: Hmm.
Winfred Griffith: Uh no. I think Yeah they like black of course, but I think they'll uh they they think uh the the titanium look of it is also Uh I think it's also good for them, so I think we both uh have uh consider considered uh the youth and also a bit older people. So I
Gary Patton: Right.
Winfred Griffith: think it's very good-looking and not only for youth uh young people.
Leo Parker: I think we shouldn't discuss any points points that long, because
Gary Patton: Right.
Leo Parker: I don't know
Daniel Williamson: No.
Leo Parker: how how many points there
Daniel Williamson: I
Leo Parker: are
Daniel Williamson: totally
Leo Parker: but
Winfred Griffith: Yeah,
Leo Parker: uh
Daniel Williamson: agree.
Winfred Griffith: the fourteen
Daniel Williamson: We
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Gary Patton: Right,
Winfred Griffith: yeah.
Gary Patton: a number
Daniel Williamson: we have
Gary Patton: please.
Daniel Williamson: to get get on,
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: go
Winfred Griffith: Is
Daniel Williamson: through
Winfred Griffith: it
Daniel Williamson: this.
Winfred Griffith: easy to t change channels? Yeah well I think so.
Gary Patton: So the last one is seven. Easy
Leo Parker: Um,
Gary Patton: to change channels?
Daniel Williamson: No,
Leo Parker: no
Daniel Williamson: not
Leo Parker: it's
Daniel Williamson: false.
Leo Parker: uh
Daniel Williamson: It's one.
Gary Patton: Oh, sorry. Yeah, right.
Daniel Williamson: Well uh two?
Gary Patton: Change channels?
Daniel Williamson: Y Well we have to go through it.
Winfred Griffith: I think it's uh as easy as uh can be made. Uh
Gary Patton: Right.
Winfred Griffith: So I Yeah. You How can you make it any easier?
Gary Patton: The power, channel and volume
Leo Parker: With
Gary Patton: buttons
Leo Parker: two
Gary Patton: are easy
Leo Parker: huge
Gary Patton: accessible?
Leo Parker: buttons.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah,
Daniel Williamson: Yep.
Winfred Griffith: huge is a Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Two.
Gary Patton: Two? Alright. The uh device is easy to find if you lose it?
Daniel Williamson: Well, no.
Winfred Griffith: D
Daniel Williamson: We didn't
Winfred Griffith: we
Daniel Williamson: implement
Winfred Griffith: d we don't
Daniel Williamson: anything about that.
Winfred Griffith: we don't have
Leo Parker: Well
Winfred Griffith: uh
Leo Parker: it's
Winfred Griffith: that
Leo Parker: easier
Winfred Griffith: s
Leo Parker: to find than a a normal black one or something, because of the colour. But
Daniel Williamson: Well six
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: then.
Gary Patton: Six? Right.
Winfred Griffith: Well we don't have the device that beeps uh when you lost
Daniel Williamson: Are
Winfred Griffith: it
Daniel Williamson: the
Winfred Griffith: or so,
Daniel Williamson: functions
Winfred Griffith: but um um
Daniel Williamson: easy to learn? Well w I we do want we have a l f
Leo Parker: We have so few
Daniel Williamson: f
Leo Parker: functions,
Daniel Williamson: less
Leo Parker: so
Daniel Williamson: of
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: an
Gary Patton: Yeah, I agree.
Daniel Williamson: And the device R_S_I_ sensitive?
Leo Parker: Well, I should I
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Leo Parker: think two, because the voice recorder
Daniel Williamson: Ah.
Leo Parker: is n not
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Leo Parker: self learning.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah. Yeah.
Gary Patton: Alright.
Winfred Griffith: Mm?
Gary Patton: Two?
Daniel Williamson: Yeah, but just do some We
Gary Patton: Yeah
Daniel Williamson: we
Winfred Griffith: Are we take
Daniel Williamson: I th
Winfred Griffith: too much
Daniel Williamson: I th
Winfred Griffith: time?
Daniel Williamson: I think this is too time consuming. Uh not
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Daniel Williamson: not towards
Gary Patton: I agree.
Daniel Williamson: you,
Gary Patton: No.
Daniel Williamson: but towards this all. Th
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: this is
Gary Patton: Right,
Daniel Williamson: We you have
Gary Patton: R_
Daniel Williamson: to
Gary Patton: R_S_I_
Daniel Williamson: put
Gary Patton: sensitive?
Daniel Williamson: it to the customers.
Gary Patton: R_S_I_ sensitive?
Daniel Williamson: Uh well well a bit, so four.
Gary Patton: Four. Um
Daniel Williamson: Yes.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah, very much. One.
Daniel Williamson: One. And features included also one. And One.
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Uh those uh nine uh is the fancy-looking. Uh we still think so.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Device fancy
Winfred Griffith: And I
Daniel Williamson: feeling.
Winfred Griffith: think fancy-feeling
Daniel Williamson: Yeah,
Winfred Griffith: too, because of the
Daniel Williamson: cool
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: titanium
Daniel Williamson: man.
Winfred Griffith: back. Yeah.
Gary Patton: Right.
Daniel Williamson: Are there enough technology? Yeah
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: well also we have two.
Gary Patton: Yeah, that's great.
Leo Parker: The
Daniel Williamson: to use? Yes we have not many buttons.
Winfred Griffith: So well maybe two
Gary Patton: Well,
Winfred Griffith: because
Leo Parker: Two
Daniel Williamson: Two,
Winfred Griffith: of the voice
Gary Patton: with
Daniel Williamson: three.
Winfred Griffith: recorder.
Leo Parker: two.
Gary Patton: the uh Three.
Leo Parker: T
Daniel Williamson: Are
Winfred Griffith: F
Daniel Williamson: the trends about fruit and vegetables implemented? Well in our covers,
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: in our fronts. So
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: yes, one.
Winfred Griffith: One or two.
Daniel Williamson: Is
Leo Parker: One
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: the material
Leo Parker: or two, another
Gary Patton: Nah
Daniel Williamson: attractive?
Leo Parker: two.
Gary Patton: f four I think.
Winfred Griffith: Four?
Gary Patton: If you look at this
Winfred Griffith: Well, it doesn't really resemble any fruit, uh that's true.
Gary Patton: No.
Winfred Griffith: But but we have the the the the the
Daniel Williamson: Oh okay.
Winfred Griffith: sparkly fruity
Leo Parker: Well
Winfred Griffith: colours
Leo Parker: three.
Winfred Griffith: of course.
Gary Patton: Three,
Daniel Williamson: Okay.
Gary Patton: alright.
Winfred Griffith: And you can also have front with uh with
Gary Patton: Yeah, that's true.
Daniel Williamson: Is
Winfred Griffith: fruit
Daniel Williamson: the material
Gary Patton: But
Winfred Griffith: on
Leo Parker: Mm.
Daniel Williamson: attractive? Well
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: the titanium
Winfred Griffith: it.
Daniel Williamson: is strong, and uh the rest f uh the buttons feel soft. So I would say at least two.
Gary Patton: Right.
Daniel Williamson: Okay. Well Yeah.
Leo Parker: This is the last meeting?
Daniel Williamson: Yes, but we
Gary Patton: The
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Gary Patton: average
Daniel Williamson: we have to design
Gary Patton: will uh
Daniel Williamson: much
Gary Patton: come later.
Daniel Williamson: more, because there was some irritating account manager coming to Gary Patton.
Winfred Griffith: I
Daniel Williamson: Um
Winfred Griffith: knew things uh were going uh
Daniel Williamson: Oh.
Winfred Griffith: too smoothly. There had
Daniel Williamson: Uh
Winfred Griffith: to be some kind of trouble
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: along
Daniel Williamson: Yes.
Winfred Griffith: the way.
Daniel Williamson: Well, look at the costs at this point.
Winfred Griffith: My god.
Daniel Williamson: I had to fit it in.
Gary Patton: It has to go to twelve, right?
Daniel Williamson: I twelve and a half.
Gary Patton: Twelve and a half.
Daniel Williamson: So Well what costs a lot? The sample spea costs four.
Winfred Griffith: The what? The
Daniel Williamson: The sample speaker,
Gary Patton: Out.
Daniel Williamson: the s sensor.
Gary Patton: That's easy. Kick it out.
Daniel Williamson: Kick it out.
Leo Parker: The what?
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: We have to go to twelve and a
Gary Patton: The
Daniel Williamson: half.
Gary Patton: speaker.
Daniel Williamson: The speaker costs
Leo Parker: Oh.
Daniel Williamson: far, by far the most.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah w
Gary Patton: That's some wrong
Winfred Griffith: tha that's
Gary Patton: info,
Winfred Griffith: uh
Gary Patton: man.
Winfred Griffith: that's a bit an optional
Daniel Williamson: It
Winfred Griffith: option.
Daniel Williamson: it isn't worth it.
Winfred Griffith: No.
Gary Patton: No.
Winfred Griffith: No, d
Daniel Williamson: We
Winfred Griffith: th
Daniel Williamson: could make
Winfred Griffith: No.
Daniel Williamson: two
Gary Patton: It's
Daniel Williamson: different
Gary Patton: uh
Daniel Williamson: versions, one with and one without. But for
Gary Patton: It's
Daniel Williamson: this
Gary Patton: just extra. Kick it out.
Daniel Williamson: So, zero.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Then we go to fourteen point six.
Gary Patton: What more?
Daniel Williamson: Well the titanium I don't want to lose actually.
Winfred Griffith: No.
Gary Patton: Batteries are uh
Daniel Williamson: L_C_
Gary Patton: quite
Daniel Williamson: three? Yeah hand dynamo? Y t come on,
Leo Parker: Um
Gary Patton: Uh no,
Daniel Williamson: w
Gary Patton: no
Daniel Williamson: a remote
Gary Patton: no
Daniel Williamson: control
Winfred Griffith: N
Gary Patton: no.
Daniel Williamson: has a battery.
Winfred Griffith: Uh well we have a bit of a problem I think. Because
Leo Parker: Well well
Winfred Griffith: uh
Leo Parker: why why why should we use a advanced chip?
Daniel Williamson: Well be for the
Winfred Griffith: the
Daniel Williamson: L_C_D_
Winfred Griffith: L_C_D_
Daniel Williamson: uh you
Winfred Griffith: screen.
Daniel Williamson: had said.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Leo Parker: Yeah?
Gary Patton: Hmm.
Leo Parker: Can't we do that with a regular chip?
Winfred Griffith: No.
Leo Parker: Why not?
Winfred Griffith: Because uh that uh y
Daniel Williamson: Well
Winfred Griffith: because
Daniel Williamson: what what's the difference between
Winfred Griffith: my information
Daniel Williamson: simple
Winfred Griffith: says
Daniel Williamson: and regular?
Winfred Griffith: it. Huh?
Daniel Williamson: What's the difference between a simple
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: and
Leo Parker: Regular
Daniel Williamson: a regular chip?
Leo Parker: is normal.
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: And simple?
Winfred Griffith: Uh
Leo Parker: Simple.
Winfred Griffith: well
Daniel Williamson: Nothing.
Winfred Griffith: yeah I I read something about it, but
Leo Parker: Elementary.
Daniel Williamson: Well?
Winfred Griffith: Yeah, I
Daniel Williamson: Your part.
Winfred Griffith: I read something about it, but it wasn't very clear. I d I didn't in include it in my report.
Daniel Williamson: What happens if we do
Winfred Griffith: Single Well you have to use a chip. So Well you have
Daniel Williamson: How
Winfred Griffith: to
Daniel Williamson: much
Winfred Griffith: use
Daniel Williamson: do we
Winfred Griffith: the
Daniel Williamson: win?
Winfred Griffith: advanced
Leo Parker: We we
Winfred Griffith: chip,
Leo Parker: we
Daniel Williamson: One.
Winfred Griffith: if you have
Leo Parker: Why?
Winfred Griffith: the L_C_D_ screen.
Leo Parker: We have very little options furthermore, for the
Winfred Griffith: But
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: if you have a regular chip, you can't have the L_C_D_ screen.
Leo Parker: Uh well we have to put
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Leo Parker: that in.
Gary Patton: we need to have the the L_C_D_
Winfred Griffith: That that's
Gary Patton: screen.
Winfred Griffith: a fact.
Daniel Williamson: Well,
Winfred Griffith: Uh
Daniel Williamson: we could say, well this special colour, that
Gary Patton: No
Daniel Williamson: isn't that that isn't there, because the the fronts they will buy it. The special colour.
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Winfred Griffith: Yeah, but it's
Gary Patton: but
Winfred Griffith: only
Leo Parker: Nah.
Winfred Griffith: one half.
Gary Patton: No,
Winfred Griffith: Uh
Gary Patton: that's
Winfred Griffith: it d
Gary Patton: n
Winfred Griffith: it doesn't
Gary Patton: It's not relevant.
Daniel Williamson: Yeah,
Leo Parker: Yeah, you must change
Daniel Williamson: then
Leo Parker: the
Daniel Williamson: you
Leo Parker: chip
Daniel Williamson: s then
Leo Parker: uh
Daniel Williamson: you only
Leo Parker: back.
Daniel Williamson: have one half left.
Leo Parker: You
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Leo Parker: must change the chip back, Nils.
Daniel Williamson: Uh yeah.
Winfred Griffith: But we d Then we have to lose the L_C_D_ screen.
Gary Patton: No, Then the whole concept is uh
Winfred Griffith: Yeah, I know but that's what my information says. I di I didn't uh
Leo Parker: Hmm.
Winfred Griffith: put
Gary Patton: You
Winfred Griffith: uh the advanced chip
Leo Parker: No
Winfred Griffith: in there for fun.
Gary Patton: You
Leo Parker: we
Gary Patton: can make
Leo Parker: oh
Gary Patton: you
Winfred Griffith: You
Gary Patton: can
Winfred Griffith: have
Gary Patton: make
Winfred Griffith: to use
Gary Patton: it cheaper.
Winfred Griffith: it.
Gary Patton: But if you don't sell
Leo Parker: You
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Leo Parker: you we have an advanced chip-on-print, and we have an L_C_ display. I think that's
Daniel Williamson: Yeah?
Leo Parker: a bit double. Y
Daniel Williamson: No,
Leo Parker: we don't need both.
Daniel Williamson: the advanced chip is needed to
Winfred Griffith: For
Daniel Williamson: have
Winfred Griffith: the L_C_D_
Daniel Williamson: an L_C_D_
Winfred Griffith: screen.
Daniel Williamson: display.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah. Yeah.
Leo Parker: Says.
Daniel Williamson: Says, his Uh that was in the second meeting, I think.
Winfred Griffith: Well uh and what do they mean with curves uh again? Because we you
Daniel Williamson: Well
Winfred Griffith: have
Daniel Williamson: I
Winfred Griffith: uncurved
Daniel Williamson: I did single curve to Well you said s double
Leo Parker: I?
Daniel Williamson: curved, uh he,
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: because uh I thought it's a b a bit cheaper already. We can
Gary Patton: No
Daniel Williamson: also
Winfred Griffith: Well
Daniel Williamson: make it flat.
Gary Patton: no
Winfred Griffith: But
Gary Patton: no
Winfred Griffith: what
Gary Patton: no.
Winfred Griffith: what
Daniel Williamson: But
Winfred Griffith: did what do n Sorry, but What do they mean with the curves? Is th
Daniel Williamson: Curved? Yes,
Winfred Griffith: Is this
Daniel Williamson: that's
Winfred Griffith: a
Daniel Williamson: curved.
Winfred Griffith: curve? One curve? Yeah, this
Daniel Williamson: Yes.
Winfred Griffith: is actually two curves, yeah. It's
Daniel Williamson: No,
Winfred Griffith: how
Daniel Williamson: it's
Winfred Griffith: you
Daniel Williamson: one
Winfred Griffith: It's
Daniel Williamson: curve.
Winfred Griffith: how you look at
Leo Parker: One
Winfred Griffith: it.
Leo Parker: curve.
Daniel Williamson: One curve, simple.
Winfred Griffith: Well then we have a huge problem I think. W t we can never get uh below the
Daniel Williamson: We
Winfred Griffith: twelve
Daniel Williamson: have a big
Winfred Griffith: and a
Daniel Williamson: financial
Winfred Griffith: half.
Daniel Williamson: problem.
Leo Parker: Well we make it more expensive to buy.
Daniel Williamson: Well, then we have two dollars less profit. Come on, if we if we if we make this fifty million, they won't hesitate to uh congratulate us, so uh
Gary Patton: If if you make people brand-aware, they are willing to pay more. But
Winfred Griffith: But uh I
Gary Patton: Because we we use a brand at the front and uh I dun at the back. If you have uh lots of uh marketing people might buy.
Leo Parker: Yeah or we could
Gary Patton: If you if
Leo Parker: replace
Gary Patton: you make it cool
Leo Parker: it
Gary Patton: to have
Daniel Williamson: By the way, we also have this one.
Gary Patton: Oh, that's just great.
Daniel Williamson: Oh, costs nothing.
Gary Patton: Oh,
Daniel Williamson: That's nice.
Gary Patton: alright.
Daniel Williamson: Plastic
Winfred Griffith: Hey but uh
Daniel Williamson: is
Winfred Griffith: I think you'll agree that uh that we that now we have this uh screen, it's it's very uh not practical to ha to consider this after we have designed the entire thing.
Daniel Williamson: Yes, but I just got it.
Winfred Griffith: Well
Leo Parker: Why
Winfred Griffith: that's pretty
Leo Parker: why
Winfred Griffith: uh
Leo Parker: don't we
Winfred Griffith: l
Leo Parker: replace
Gary Patton: That is
Leo Parker: the titanium
Gary Patton: pretty stupid.
Winfred Griffith: N
Leo Parker: with
Winfred Griffith: not
Leo Parker: uh
Winfred Griffith: very practical.
Leo Parker: plastic
Winfred Griffith: Well
Leo Parker: coloured titanium, uh
Daniel Williamson: Who?
Leo Parker: titanium-coloured plastic?
Daniel Williamson: You want to dump the titanium?
Leo Parker: Yeah well if we uh we we have to get cheaper.
Daniel Williamson: And make all plastic, then we ha then we're there.
Winfred Griffith: But I'm n I don't agree.
Leo Parker: But
Winfred Griffith: I think
Leo Parker: then we we've got to uh
Daniel Williamson: Th then
Leo Parker: run
Daniel Williamson: you
Leo Parker: through
Daniel Williamson: have
Leo Parker: the
Daniel Williamson: a
Leo Parker: eval
Daniel Williamson: ugly,
Leo Parker: evaluation
Daniel Williamson: stupid,
Leo Parker: process again.
Daniel Williamson: l ugly looking, dumb remote
Leo Parker: Ah no
Daniel Williamson: that
Leo Parker: no.
Daniel Williamson: that no-one would buy.
Leo Parker: It's not ugly looking. The looks remain the same.
Daniel Williamson: No, I don't think so.
Gary Patton: Y
Leo Parker: Well, I
Winfred Griffith: I
Leo Parker: do
Winfred Griffith: think
Leo Parker: think so.
Winfred Griffith: the titanium just uh provided the the tough look and
Daniel Williamson: Yes.
Winfred Griffith: the and the
Daniel Williamson: And the feel,
Leo Parker: feel.
Daniel Williamson: and th that it is strong, and
Winfred Griffith: And also the the older people will like it because of that. And
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Winfred Griffith: because i
Gary Patton: I
Winfred Griffith: Alright
Gary Patton: agree.
Winfred Griffith: it's not our target audience, but it's it's useful
Daniel Williamson: We still
Winfred Griffith: if it's uh
Daniel Williamson: we had to focus
Winfred Griffith: important for old
Daniel Williamson: to
Winfred Griffith: people.
Daniel Williamson: get more people
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: from the younger group, but not lose the one
Winfred Griffith: I think the titanium is very important.
Leo Parker: Yeah alright but then we we
Winfred Griffith: Yeah
Leo Parker: won't
Winfred Griffith: we have a
Leo Parker: get
Winfred Griffith: problem,
Leo Parker: there.
Winfred Griffith: yeah. W But you can better, yeah, dump the L_C_D_ screen
Leo Parker: We
Winfred Griffith: then.
Leo Parker: can dump the special colour. We l we use plastic. And plastic is already in colour I think.
Gary Patton: I don't think you should dump the L_C_D_ screen.
Winfred Griffith: Well what else? W I
Leo Parker: No,
Winfred Griffith: mean
Leo Parker: nothing.
Winfred Griffith: uh
Gary Patton: Or you shou
Leo Parker: Amen.
Gary Patton: It's Or change the titanium or dump the L_C_D_ screen. But I think you could better change
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Gary Patton: uh titanium to hard a hard kind of plastic looking like titanium
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Gary Patton: than lose the L_C_D_ screen. Because you have lots of functions in it too.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah,
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: well yeah. Alright.
Daniel Williamson: Why can't
Winfred Griffith: I
Daniel Williamson: I
Winfred Griffith: agree
Leo Parker: But
Winfred Griffith: with that. So we u we use uh Unfortunately. Um.
Daniel Williamson: I'll put in the report
Winfred Griffith: Titanium-coloured
Daniel Williamson: we that we think that fourteen
Winfred Griffith: plastic.
Daniel Williamson: point one is the l m lowest price you can make a remote for that's trendy d these
Gary Patton: Yeah, I
Daniel Williamson: days.
Gary Patton: agree.
Winfred Griffith: So titanium-coloured plastic for the back.
Daniel Williamson: I I'll talk to the managers.
Leo Parker: No no no no. W Titanium stays there.
Daniel Williamson: Titanium, I thi I think this this is this is e really good re
Winfred Griffith: Yeah
Gary Patton: Osl
Winfred Griffith: this is
Daniel Williamson: remote.
Winfred Griffith: good, but it it's not
Daniel Williamson: But
Winfred Griffith: good enough. So we have to use the ditch the titanium, I'm afraid.
Daniel Williamson: Ah those
Leo Parker: Well
Daniel Williamson: those account managers, what do th d what do they know? Come on.
Winfred Griffith: What
Daniel Williamson: Riot.
Winfred Griffith: do we Well what do we know? All we want is a is a fancy design but we don't really
Daniel Williamson: Yes,
Winfred Griffith: consider the costs.
Daniel Williamson: yes.
Winfred Griffith: So
Leo Parker: No because we did not know anything about
Gary Patton: If
Leo Parker: it.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah
Gary Patton: you
Daniel Williamson: One
Gary Patton: don't
Winfred Griffith: al
Daniel Williamson: and
Gary Patton: have
Winfred Griffith: alright,
Daniel Williamson: a
Gary Patton: the
Daniel Williamson: half
Gary Patton: money,
Daniel Williamson: Euros.
Winfred Griffith: yeah.
Gary Patton: you can't
Winfred Griffith: But
Gary Patton: make it.
Daniel Williamson: Hmm?
Winfred Griffith: we
Gary Patton: So
Winfred Griffith: have
Gary Patton: s
Winfred Griffith: to deal with it now. So
Gary Patton: If you don't have the money, you can't make it. So this is too expensive.
Daniel Williamson: So?
Winfred Griffith: So
Gary Patton: So we have to make it cheaper.
Winfred Griffith: Titanium gone and add plastic.
Gary Patton: Right.
Leo Parker: Yeah, but then we've got money left.
Winfred Griffith: And on plastic times two and then we uh are there?
Daniel Williamson: Well, no it's just uh all plastic.
Winfred Griffith: No
Daniel Williamson: Well alright.
Winfred Griffith: No
Daniel Williamson: Huh.
Winfred Griffith: yeah well Oh six. A lot of plastic,
Gary Patton: It's
Winfred Griffith: yeah.
Gary Patton: just free, man.
Daniel Williamson: Four. So
Winfred Griffith: No two for the to make it clear.
Daniel Williamson: But then we can add the special colour?
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: As we have money over uh left.
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: And we still
Leo Parker: W
Daniel Williamson: have money left. What do we want, guys?
Winfred Griffith: I want gold plating. No no
Gary Patton: Yeah right.
Winfred Griffith: um
Gary Patton: I want chrome.
Leo Parker: Well I think uh the case is double curved then.
Daniel Williamson: Yes.
Leo Parker: Because
Winfred Griffith: We have
Leo Parker: you y have that
Winfred Griffith: we
Leo Parker: curve
Winfred Griffith: have to
Leo Parker: and
Winfred Griffith: uh
Leo Parker: you have
Winfred Griffith: fill
Daniel Williamson: Y Oh
Leo Parker: that
Daniel Williamson: no.
Leo Parker: curve.
Winfred Griffith: W
Leo Parker: Yeah
Winfred Griffith: we ha
Gary Patton: Well,
Leo Parker: well
Gary Patton: th that
Leo Parker: uh
Gary Patton: that
Daniel Williamson: Alright.
Gary Patton: is the problem.
Winfred Griffith: No no no, but th that's
Daniel Williamson: Safe.
Winfred Griffith: not f um
Leo Parker: Well y we have curves
Winfred Griffith: Well
Leo Parker: in all
Winfred Griffith: you
Leo Parker: directions.
Winfred Griffith: can you can double curve, if you don't have titanium. And that we dropped, so it
Daniel Williamson: So
Winfred Griffith: it can be done.
Daniel Williamson: alright.
Winfred Griffith: But it's pretty funny. We we do want to reach twelve point five. But it
Daniel Williamson: Finance?
Leo Parker: I mean,
Winfred Griffith: isn't bad to to to stay
Leo Parker: this
Winfred Griffith: at eleven.
Leo Parker: this ain't titanium, but it looks like it.
Winfred Griffith: We
Daniel Williamson: Well,
Winfred Griffith: get more salary,
Daniel Williamson: guys?
Winfred Griffith: if we make
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: if cheaper
Daniel Williamson: Guys?
Winfred Griffith: than twelve uh
Daniel Williamson: We
Winfred Griffith: twelve
Daniel Williamson: have
Winfred Griffith: and
Daniel Williamson: to
Winfred Griffith: a
Gary Patton: Shoot.
Winfred Griffith: half.
Daniel Williamson: dump our titanium, and we'll hate the managers for that, but now we're going to
Winfred Griffith: Objection.
Daniel Williamson: evaluate our project, of uh project,
Leo Parker: Pro project.
Daniel Williamson: project. Well, satisfaction on for example, are we satisfactory about our creativity?
Winfred Griffith: Well I can't get no satisfaction, but uh I think it's uh Well in in if we consider the costs then this is the best, yeah.
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: I think it's terrible
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: that we got uh those costs at the last moment.
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Gary Patton: Yeah, Gary Patton too.
Daniel Williamson: That's really bad.
Winfred Griffith: Its it's
Daniel Williamson: But
Winfred Griffith: uh ridiculous actually,
Leo Parker: And
Daniel Williamson: that
Leo Parker: uh
Winfred Griffith: but
Daniel Williamson: that
Leo Parker: unrealistic.
Daniel Williamson: that's that, yeah that's a reason, but also for our creativity. We had um nice design, and then you get the cost, and you had to dump all your creativity.
Leo Parker: Well
Gary Patton: Right.
Leo Parker: we we we used our creativity, but we just had to adapt it to the costs.
Winfred Griffith: Which isn't very practical, but
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Leo Parker: Nei.
Winfred Griffith: that's the way.
Leo Parker: Uh no.
Daniel Williamson: Well,
Winfred Griffith: Uh-huh.
Daniel Williamson: alright. Uh leadership next.
Leo Parker: Terrible.
Daniel Williamson: Uh teamwork?
Gary Patton: Leadership.
Leo Parker: Leadership?
Gary Patton: Well
Leo Parker: Well
Gary Patton: it's It was very democratic.
Daniel Williamson: Uh yeah
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: well I think
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: so also. I al I I've uh filled that in in a the questionnaires uh each time, so
Gary Patton: Yeah yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Well the managers were terrible. So, with their all their useless requirements. But o alright,
Winfred Griffith: Well
Daniel Williamson: the teamwork?
Winfred Griffith: uh they they didn't think of the requirements. It's the requirements of the user, uh I guess.
Daniel Williamson: No they said, oh we won't d uh we won't uh use
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: teletext, uh we won't use the D_V_D_.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah but they base that on on the user specifications.
Daniel Williamson: Alright, teamwork?
Gary Patton: Well
Daniel Williamson: Well great I think.
Leo Parker: Right
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Leo Parker: yeah.
Gary Patton: think so too.
Daniel Williamson: Uh well what do you, what did you think about the SMARTboard?
Winfred Griffith: It was a complete disaster. No
Gary Patton: Yeah, I
Winfred Griffith: Uh
Daniel Williamson: Well
Gary Patton: don't
Winfred Griffith: it it it
Gary Patton: like
Leo Parker: No,
Winfred Griffith: uh
Gary Patton: it.
Leo Parker: that's
Winfred Griffith: it is
Leo Parker: a SMARTboard,
Winfred Griffith: uh
Gary Patton: Yeah?
Leo Parker: and that's a digital pen.
Daniel Williamson: It's
Leo Parker: Or
Daniel Williamson: also
Leo Parker: not?
Daniel Williamson: a It's both
Winfred Griffith: No
Daniel Williamson: the
Winfred Griffith: it's
Daniel Williamson: SMARTboards.
Winfred Griffith: other way around. That's the SMARTboard. That's
Daniel Williamson: I liked
Winfred Griffith: the digital
Daniel Williamson: this
Winfred Griffith: panel.
Daniel Williamson: SMARTboard,
Gary Patton: This
Daniel Williamson: but I hated
Gary Patton: this
Daniel Williamson: that one.
Gary Patton: this isn't a SMARTboard,
Daniel Williamson: Well it's
Gary Patton: right?
Daniel Williamson: both a SMARTboard.
Winfred Griffith: That's that's the smart
Gary Patton: Yeah right. B but you This is
Leo Parker: Oh
Gary Patton: just
Leo Parker: they're both
Gary Patton: a large
Leo Parker: SMARTboards.
Gary Patton: t large television.
Daniel Williamson: No.
Gary Patton: You u you use the
Winfred Griffith: A televi
Daniel Williamson: It's both
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: a SMARTboard, but this one is used for a desktop, and that one is used to to
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Daniel Williamson: draw.
Gary Patton: but you ca This is just a beamer function. And here, on this one, you can uh draw the pictures and things
Daniel Williamson: Well,
Gary Patton: like that.
Daniel Williamson: wi w which
Gary Patton: But
Daniel Williamson: one did you like?
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Gary Patton: That one.
Winfred Griffith: Left or right?
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: That one.
Gary Patton: That one isn't accurate. It just
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Gary Patton: doesn't work. You can
Leo Parker: But I I think this is meant by the digital pen.
Daniel Williamson: Yes. Th that is so.
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Winfred Griffith: Well
Gary Patton: but
Winfred Griffith: I didn't
Gary Patton: I
Winfred Griffith: use
Gary Patton: think
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: We're now
Gary Patton: there's
Winfred Griffith: uh
Daniel Williamson: talking
Gary Patton: a big
Daniel Williamson: about
Gary Patton: distinction
Daniel Williamson: the SMARTboards.
Gary Patton: between the these th I don't need a SMARTboard.
Winfred Griffith: Nei It
Leo Parker: Well
Winfred Griffith: it's much m
Leo Parker: we we used that one,
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Leo Parker: and
Gary Patton: but
Leo Parker: we needed
Gary Patton: give
Leo Parker: it. I
Gary Patton: Gary Patton
Leo Parker: think.
Gary Patton: a beamer. That's uh that's much
Leo Parker: Yeah
Gary Patton: uh
Leo Parker: alright,
Gary Patton: much
Leo Parker: but
Gary Patton: cheaper.
Daniel Williamson: Or install a laptop to a beamer, or have this one standing here in an I I like it.
Gary Patton: Right.
Leo Parker: Yeah I like
Daniel Williamson: Okay,
Leo Parker: that
Daniel Williamson: alright.
Leo Parker: one, but that one is terrible.
Winfred Griffith: But uh you can uh I I sent it about three times now. Uh a green uh board with uh chalk is much
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: more useful than that
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: thing.
Daniel Williamson: Yeah, it is.
Winfred Griffith: The simple uh
Daniel Williamson: So
Winfred Griffith: sch
Gary Patton: I agree.
Winfred Griffith: school board.
Daniel Williamson: And uh the digi the digital pen? Did uh did you like that one?
Gary Patton: No.
Winfred Griffith: I I didn't use it. I wrote things down but I didn't
Daniel Williamson: I used
Winfred Griffith: import
Daniel Williamson: it
Winfred Griffith: it
Daniel Williamson: uh
Winfred Griffith: into my
Daniel Williamson: just
Winfred Griffith: laptop.
Daniel Williamson: to check it out, but uh
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: You you
Winfred Griffith: That's
Daniel Williamson: can't
Winfred Griffith: the
Daniel Williamson: send that to anyone,
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: because you
Gary Patton: It
Daniel Williamson: you've
Gary Patton: isn't
Daniel Williamson: scrabbled
Gary Patton: practical.
Daniel Williamson: something on a page for yourself,
Gary Patton: Right.
Daniel Williamson: and then you're going to send it, yeah. Well, no.
Winfred Griffith: W But also y you write things down. And i you can also bring your your
Gary Patton: Your
Winfred Griffith: your
Gary Patton: notepad.
Winfred Griffith: note block. So
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: what's the what's
Daniel Williamson: It's,
Winfred Griffith: the
Daniel Williamson: no,
Winfred Griffith: th
Daniel Williamson: it
Winfred Griffith: what's
Daniel Williamson: it's useless.
Winfred Griffith: the point of importing it
Leo Parker: Well
Winfred Griffith: into
Leo Parker: I I drew this. Mm. And I made a mistake. But it it would have been uh useful, if
Daniel Williamson: Yes.
Leo Parker: I I could show this on the screen.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah alright.
Daniel Williamson: For
Winfred Griffith: For
Daniel Williamson: drawings,
Winfred Griffith: drawings, but
Daniel Williamson: yes.
Leo Parker: Yeah
Winfred Griffith: not
Leo Parker: for drawings.
Winfred Griffith: for personal notes. I think that's not very
Leo Parker: N notes mm.
Winfred Griffith: Uh I mean you can bring your paperwork along and p Well of course
Daniel Williamson: But
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Winfred Griffith: if
Gary Patton: it
Winfred Griffith: you
Gary Patton: might
Winfred Griffith: have
Gary Patton: be
Winfred Griffith: a lot
Gary Patton: useful
Winfred Griffith: of paper
Gary Patton: for drawings.
Winfred Griffith: If
Gary Patton: I
Winfred Griffith: you've
Gary Patton: I agree
Leo Parker: Mm.
Gary Patton: on that.
Winfred Griffith: If
Daniel Williamson: But
Winfred Griffith: you've
Daniel Williamson: for notes, it i you you have to put that in a strict Uh you have to put a name, standard date, and all those things. And notes uh for a meeting are very strict. So if you uh were to write them down for yourself, and then put that in your computer, you still have to type it over to Word.
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Daniel Williamson: So it
Gary Patton: right.
Daniel Williamson: doesn't d doesn't have any
Gary Patton: That Stefan
Winfred Griffith: Yeah
Gary Patton: use.
Winfred Griffith: I understand. But I think uh d this option is only useful if you've got a lot of paperwork. You can't It's not very uh ni
Gary Patton: No,
Winfred Griffith: Yeah
Gary Patton: I
Winfred Griffith: well
Gary Patton: don't think so.
Winfred Griffith: a lot of documents
Gary Patton: It's
Winfred Griffith: are Yeah.
Gary Patton: it's only useful if you have to
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Gary Patton: draw something.
Leo Parker: it's really useful, I think.
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Yep. Alright.
Winfred Griffith: Mu
Daniel Williamson: Um
Winfred Griffith: Yeah right.
Daniel Williamson: etcetera? Well uh the laptops?
Gary Patton: Yeah, great.
Daniel Williamson: Of course
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: great.
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Leo Parker: Hmm.
Winfred Griffith: Can we keep them?
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: Uh.
Daniel Williamson: You can. B by my
Gary Patton: Wireless uh wireless
Leo Parker: Thanks Project
Gary Patton: things.
Leo Parker: Manager.
Daniel Williamson: Yeah. Other uh things we used here? I hated the cameras, I hated the microphones.
Gary Patton: Well
Daniel Williamson: But
Gary Patton: these
Daniel Williamson: No
Gary Patton: chairs,
Winfred Griffith: Well
Gary Patton: man.
Winfred Griffith: did you really uh
Gary Patton: Really great.
Winfred Griffith: Did you really take uh take those in account? I
Daniel Williamson: No.
Winfred Griffith: half of time I didn't
Daniel Williamson: No.
Winfred Griffith: notice they were there.
Daniel Williamson: I
Winfred Griffith: So
Daniel Williamson: haven't looked w one time directly at the camera. I don't care about it.
Leo Parker: Well
Winfred Griffith: But
Leo Parker: I
Winfred Griffith: we
Leo Parker: did.
Winfred Griffith: shouldn't talk about that. Because this
Daniel Williamson: Well
Winfred Griffith: is
Daniel Williamson: w
Winfred Griffith: a
Daniel Williamson: why
Winfred Griffith: realistic
Daniel Williamson: not?
Winfred Griffith: environment.
Daniel Williamson: Uh etcetera We
Winfred Griffith: Right.
Daniel Williamson: N new
Winfred Griffith: Okay.
Daniel Williamson: ideas found? What kind of ideas for n a future schedule What? For future um
Leo Parker: Well
Daniel Williamson: meetings you have
Leo Parker: I missed
Daniel Williamson: got?
Leo Parker: uh the option to uh
Gary Patton: Communicate
Leo Parker: to email,
Gary Patton: in between.
Leo Parker: yeah. Email
Gary Patton: Yeah, right.
Daniel Williamson: Chatting
Leo Parker: or chat
Winfred Griffith: But
Daniel Williamson: and
Winfred Griffith: yeah.
Leo Parker: or
Daniel Williamson: emailing.
Leo Parker: something.
Winfred Griffith: W
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: well th that's just the the environment they set us up f with. So
Leo Parker: Yeah alright, but that's one n new idea.
Gary Patton: Yeah, I agree.
Daniel Williamson: Well, new ideas found by this. Not. Nothing.
Gary Patton: Well,
Daniel Williamson: We
Gary Patton: more
Daniel Williamson: don't
Gary Patton: more
Daniel Williamson: want this.
Gary Patton: information in the beginning.
Daniel Williamson: We hate this.
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Gary Patton: That's
Daniel Williamson: Digital pen is useless.
Leo Parker: No
Daniel Williamson: So
Leo Parker: it isn't.
Daniel Williamson: Yeah,
Winfred Griffith: Well,
Daniel Williamson: for drawings.
Winfred Griffith: for drawing for drawings.
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Leo Parker: So it isn't useless.
Daniel Williamson: But uh two t But uh th then you have to have a lot of drawings, because
Winfred Griffith: Well
Daniel Williamson: if I had a company and I'm going to uh buy those expensive huge expensive uh things, I and I have to w pay those uh papers uh that are expensive, I'm not going to uh
Gary Patton: For
Winfred Griffith: No
Gary Patton: people who uh sketch th the whole day, I can
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Gary Patton: imagine that it's useful.
Daniel Williamson: Well th
Winfred Griffith: But it's
Daniel Williamson: then
Winfred Griffith: still
Daniel Williamson: still
Winfred Griffith: an expensive
Daniel Williamson: they they they
Winfred Griffith: uh expensive
Daniel Williamson: should have a a nice graphics programme on the laptop. Because this is huge
Gary Patton: Well
Daniel Williamson: uh
Leo Parker: Well
Daniel Williamson: this
Leo Parker: you
Daniel Williamson: v
Leo Parker: you
Daniel Williamson: very
Leo Parker: can't you
Daniel Williamson: very
Leo Parker: can't
Daniel Williamson: uh
Leo Parker: draw
Daniel Williamson: expensive
Leo Parker: on a laptop
Daniel Williamson: paper.
Leo Parker: like you like you paint of or draw with your hand.
Gary Patton: Yeah, I agree.
Leo Parker: With
Winfred Griffith: But
Leo Parker: the mouse
Winfred Griffith: if w
Leo Parker: it is
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Leo Parker: No.
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: Well and
Gary Patton: Mouse
Winfred Griffith: if
Gary Patton: is ju just isn't working if you're sketching.
Leo Parker: Uh indeed.
Winfred Griffith: And but what if uh maybe this this board uh SMARTboard is malfunctioning or someone. But suppose it was working correctly, what uh would it be useful then, if it wasn't off all the time?
Daniel Williamson: Well no. I
Winfred Griffith: A
Daniel Williamson: hated to draw like that. You you can't
Winfred Griffith: Really?
Daniel Williamson: draw anything uh neat.
Gary Patton: Yeah, but he's saying if it is correct, and you can draw very,
Winfred Griffith: Anything you want. Any b b
Gary Patton: yeah,
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: I
Gary Patton: very
Winfred Griffith: L li
Daniel Williamson: if
Gary Patton: precise
Daniel Williamson: it
Winfred Griffith: li
Daniel Williamson: if it would be perfect following.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Well
Winfred Griffith: Well
Daniel Williamson: th
Winfred Griffith: it
Daniel Williamson: th
Winfred Griffith: isn't, but
Daniel Williamson: then
Winfred Griffith: maybe
Daniel Williamson: still
Gary Patton: Yeah,
Winfred Griffith: that thing
Gary Patton: mu
Daniel Williamson: it's
Winfred Griffith: is uh is
Daniel Williamson: it's it's very expensive uh towards a a just a green
Winfred Griffith: Yeah,
Daniel Williamson: uh
Winfred Griffith: board,
Leo Parker: Yeah,
Winfred Griffith: a school
Leo Parker: but
Winfred Griffith: board,
Leo Parker: but
Winfred Griffith: yeah.
Leo Parker: then you can
Daniel Williamson: school board.
Leo Parker: uh save it in instantly, and
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Leo Parker: and and
Daniel Williamson: Yep.
Winfred Griffith: I it
Leo Parker: re-use
Gary Patton: It
Winfred Griffith: has
Gary Patton: saves
Winfred Griffith: It
Leo Parker: it,
Gary Patton: time.
Winfred Griffith: is
Leo Parker: and
Winfred Griffith: useful.
Leo Parker: uh
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Yeah yeah.
Winfred Griffith: This uh if it works correct, maybe this thing this thing is just malfunctioning. So uh if we get in uh if we get another one and you make sure it does work,
Daniel Williamson: Yep.
Winfred Griffith: I think then it's pretty useful.
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: Because uh yeah you can draw t things quickly and uh clearly for anyone uh in the discussion room. And then you can save it immediately.
Daniel Williamson: Well, they are now.
Leo Parker: Hmm.
Gary Patton: Celebration.
Daniel Williamson: It is. So,
Winfred Griffith: Did you type
Daniel Williamson: congratulations
Winfred Griffith: that?
Leo Parker: Hmm.
Daniel Williamson: crew.
Leo Parker: Celebration.
Daniel Williamson: Se
Gary Patton: Well
Leo Parker: Yeah, we can go to the bar and uh with our
Daniel Williamson: Finally my beer.
Leo Parker: newly earned money.
Daniel Williamson: Well, that's it I think.
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Um I don't know how long we still have. I dunno how long uh we had for this last meeting. But uh
Winfred Griffith: Maybe till four o'clock or something? Well dunno. Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: Well yeah, it is a bit uh Well we still have to make the end report and uh all those things. I have to do that.
Gary Patton: Yeah. You better
Daniel Williamson: I
Gary Patton: get started.
Daniel Williamson: Di did you um save
Leo Parker: Oh.
Daniel Williamson: this one in the folder?
Leo Parker: No.
Daniel Williamson: Can you
Leo Parker: No
Daniel Williamson: do that?
Leo Parker: no no no.
Winfred Griffith: No we must save this thing, yeah. In the shared map map.
Leo Parker: But Nils you've got some work left.
Daniel Williamson: I don't know what you have
Winfred Griffith: Map,
Daniel Williamson: to do.
Winfred Griffith: is it a good word? The
Gary Patton: Huh.
Winfred Griffith: folder, yeah.
Leo Parker: I have to go to a
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Leo Parker: physiotherapy.
Daniel Williamson: Oh it worked. Two
Leo Parker: Wow.
Daniel Williamson: times quick.
Gary Patton: Oh, alright.
Daniel Williamson: Cool.
Winfred Griffith: So it is useful,
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: yeah.
Leo Parker: It
Gary Patton: Oh
Leo Parker: is
Winfred Griffith: No
Leo Parker: handy.
Gary Patton: great,
Winfred Griffith: but uh
Gary Patton: man. I'm gonna
Daniel Williamson: This
Gary Patton: buy
Daniel Williamson: is nice.
Gary Patton: one buy
Winfred Griffith: Radical.
Gary Patton: one for my bedroom.
Daniel Williamson: Uh
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: D design.
Winfred Griffith: Do you believe it yourself?
Daniel Williamson: S Oh. He saved them all ten. Well alright. Um
Leo Parker: Well they they wanted everything we produced, so
Winfred Griffith: They
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: also want to see my cat and his rabbit, and uh
Daniel Williamson: Well
Leo Parker: My big bird.
Winfred Griffith: Your big beautiful bird.
Daniel Williamson: Where is this?
Winfred Griffith: Maybe the pen is just uh uh broken and the board isn't. Of or the other way around uh
Gary Patton: Maybe you are broken.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah I think so too.
Gary Patton: You
Leo Parker: I think
Gary Patton: know.
Leo Parker: you have we have to make clear to her that we are ready.
Gary Patton: I think she's listening.
Daniel Williamson: I also think so. She
Winfred Griffith: Who
Daniel Williamson: already
Winfred Griffith: is
Daniel Williamson: knows.
Winfred Griffith: she you're talking about? Oh
Daniel Williamson: She?
Winfred Griffith: you mean our uh
Daniel Williamson: Big brother.
Winfred Griffith: coach, our f personal coach.
Daniel Williamson: Our manager.
Winfred Griffith: Is she also our accountant? Is she responsible for
Daniel Williamson: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: sending that information so late?
Daniel Williamson: I don't think so.
Winfred Griffith: Oh.
Leo Parker: Close
Winfred Griffith: Because
Leo Parker: your laptop.
Winfred Griffith: then we have to confront her with our
Leo Parker: So she can see we're ready.
Gary Patton: I feel watched.
Daniel Williamson: Alright.
Leo Parker: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: We put the fashion in
Leo Parker: Let's
Daniel Williamson: electronics,
Leo Parker: take this remote into
Daniel Williamson: but
Leo Parker: uh
Daniel Williamson: we couldn't
Leo Parker: production.
Daniel Williamson: because of the costs. That that's
Winfred Griffith: Yeah. That
Daniel Williamson: the
Winfred Griffith: that's
Daniel Williamson: title
Winfred Griffith: our new
Daniel Williamson: of
Winfred Griffith: slogan.
Daniel Williamson: our uh
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Daniel Williamson: end document.
Winfred Griffith: Yeah, I
Daniel Williamson: We
Winfred Griffith: like
Daniel Williamson: couldn't
Winfred Griffith: that.
Daniel Williamson: put the fashion into the electronics.
Winfred Griffith: Blame our accountants.
Gary Patton: Do that.
Daniel Williamson: Yeah, that's a nice title.
Gary Patton: Yeah.
Winfred Griffith: But we couldn't, yeah.
Gary Patton: Very catching.
Daniel Williamson: Oh.
Winfred Griffith: Well I th
Gary Patton: I'm
Winfred Griffith: Yeah.
Gary Patton: sure management would like that.
Daniel Williamson: Well
Leo Parker: She's on the move.
Daniel Williamson: I'm going to resign after this project anyway, so
Gary Patton: Oh, that's just great. | Winfred Griffith and Leo Parker presented the drawing of a prototype. It is rounded, with the front made of hard plastic in different colours. The back, as well as the lower part of the front are made of titanium. The back has the logo and slogan of the company engraved in its middle. The buttons include oval digit buttons, arrow-shaped channel and volume controls in the middle; below those, is the menu (for the LCD) and the video button. The LCD can be found at the lower section of the device. After the presentation, the product was evaluated. This was done on a scale of 1(excellent)-7(very bad) on fancifulness, ease of use, finding the device when it is lost, hi-tech features, incorporation of fashion trends, and ergonomic design. Because it was over budget, titanium was replaced by plastic and the speech recognition was discarded. They thought it would have been more sensible to have the component costs before the prototype design. Finally, the team evaluated the project process in terms of creativity (generally satisfied), leadership (the process was democratic, not happy with management), teamwork (happy with it), and means (SMARTboard was 'a disaster' and the digital pens only good for drawings). | 1 | amisum | train |
Jonathan Lo: So welcome. The first kick-off meeting. What we do? First the opening, then the rest. What are we going to do. We m have to make a new remote control. It has to be original, trendy and user-friendly. So we will get back th on that. First we have to make a functional design. After that we have to make a conceptual design, and then after that a detailed design. So we'll discuss that later. First we have a look at. to we have to make a small painting. What have do we have to do. First you can save the documents. We have to do that every time we make something. You can print it. No. And we have to use the pen and the eraser. So Now. We all have to use this one. You have to make your own favourite animal. So I'll make an example.
Blair Campbell: Yep.
Jonathan Lo: First don't touch that things. You can use the pen. And then you can make um something.
Clarence Salzmann: Nice.
Jonathan Lo: Um you can change some things. Um format, line, and change it. And you can change the colour.
Clarence Salzmann: elephant.
Jonathan Lo: So that's it. So
Jonathan Lo: So and after it you have to save it.
Blair Campbell: Okay.
Jonathan Lo: Now we can make a new one. You have to paint now.
Blair Campbell: Oh.
Jonathan Lo: So you're next.
Clarence Salzmann: 'Kay.
Blair Campbell: Well we will try. Where it going?
Quentin Knoke: Hmm. That's uh strange.
Jonathan Lo: What is going on?
Clarence Salzmann: pop-ups.
Jonathan Lo: What are
Blair Campbell: Hmm.
Jonathan Lo: you What?
Clarence Salzmann: What is this, Pictionary.
Blair Campbell: Uh
Jonathan Lo: Um
Clarence Salzmann: Uh
Jonathan Lo: Is
Clarence Salzmann: a
Jonathan Lo: a It
Clarence Salzmann: bird.
Jonathan Lo: is a It is a
Clarence Salzmann: Bird.
Jonathan Lo: A duck.
Blair Campbell: Mm. So Now save?
Clarence Salzmann: Yeah.
Jonathan Lo: Yes. Hmm.
Blair Campbell: Now uh blank?
Jonathan Lo: Blank, yes.
Quentin Knoke: Yeah.
Blair Campbell: Yeah.
Jonathan Lo: Okay next one.
Quentin Knoke: Okay. Let's try
Clarence Salzmann: Whoo.
Quentin Knoke: this. Uh
Blair Campbell: Yeah, yeah.
Quentin Knoke: Um. Mm-hmm. Mm.
Clarence Salzmann: Oh not. Oh.
Jonathan Lo: Oh.
Clarence Salzmann: Okay. Okay. Yeah. No problem. Shit happens.
Blair Campbell: I'm not getting anything uh on my screen now. Okay.
Clarence Salzmann: A parrot.
Blair Campbell: Wow.
Clarence Salzmann: Ish.
Blair Campbell: Oh.
Clarence Salzmann: He did it before.
Quentin Knoke: Uh
Quentin Knoke: No, no. Yeah. Okay.
Blair Campbell: Nice.
Clarence Salzmann: Oh.
Jonathan Lo: Very good.
Quentin Knoke: Uh blank.
Clarence Salzmann: Thank you.
Jonathan Lo: Okay. Very good. So um you can always go back. So That's it. So that was two. Now next. The budget. The b Uh we will sell the t at twenty five Euros. And we have only twenty of twelve and a half Euro to make it. So now we have to think about what we will make. First I wanna hear from you. Uh what are your experiences with remote controls. So
Clarence Salzmann: Uh I will start.
Jonathan Lo: F
Clarence Salzmann: Uh
Jonathan Lo: first.
Clarence Salzmann: Big one, they are uh not easy to use. when I dropped it, uh it broke. So that won't be uh our goal, I think.
Quentin Knoke: No.
Clarence Salzmann: And uh g big buttons, m uh that's easier to use than uh I think. Not all the small buttons, you
Jonathan Lo: Is
Clarence Salzmann: don't
Jonathan Lo: this
Clarence Salzmann: know
Jonathan Lo: positive or negative, that uh big buttons?
Clarence Salzmann: Big buttons, positive.
Jonathan Lo: Positive.
Clarence Salzmann: All all small buttons like when you have uh like a hundred buttons on your remote control, you won't know what they're working for.
Jonathan Lo: Okay. What are your experiences?
Quentin Knoke: Uh well I think the the the goal of a remote control is that it's it it has an influence on the T_V_ set. And that
Jonathan Lo: Mm.
Quentin Knoke: it controls the channels and the the volume. And uh I I I think it's positive if corner of the of the remote. So that you know it s it still has batteries on it in it. And that if you push the button the LED uh gives a light, and uh and you see that it's working. And uh yeah. Uh
Jonathan Lo: So
Quentin Knoke: Yeah,
Jonathan Lo: and
Quentin Knoke: but
Jonathan Lo: do they always have that?
Quentin Knoke: No no no. But I my my experience is that it it it's convenient
Jonathan Lo: It's
Quentin Knoke: to have
Jonathan Lo: easy
Quentin Knoke: that.
Jonathan Lo: to you.
Quentin Knoke: Yeah.
Jonathan Lo: Okay.
Quentin Knoke: Yeah.
Jonathan Lo: 'Kay.
Blair Campbell: Uh at home we have a T_V_, a video uh recorder, a D_V_D_ player, and a satellite receiver. have uh four distinctive remote controls
Clarence Salzmann: Thank
Blair Campbell: for that.
Clarence Salzmann: you.
Blair Campbell: That's not really ea easy.
Clarence Salzmann: Help also.
Blair Campbell: So it would be nice if we have one for all.
Clarence Salzmann: Thank you.
Blair Campbell: And we also had a remote control for our radio set. But um i it it had a lot of buttons on it, and you didn't know which one was what. And it was uh uh v not easy to use. So we n barely used it.
Jonathan Lo: Okay so they have too much. So
Quentin Knoke: Hmm.
Jonathan Lo: next. For our own remote control we have to think how do we make it. So what ideas do you have for it, for the new remote control? What what does it have to have?
Clarence Salzmann: The weight. Not not too heavy.
Jonathan Lo: Not too heavy.
Clarence Salzmann: Not
Jonathan Lo: Yes.
Clarence Salzmann: much buttons.
Jonathan Lo: Yeah.
Clarence Salzmann: Bust-free. That when you drop it, it won't break. Like uh some kind of rubber on it. Or hard uh hard plastic. Uh buttons not too small.
Clarence Salzmann: Uh something like when you uh lose your uh remote control, sometimes it happen.
Jonathan Lo: Yes.
Clarence Salzmann: Uh it between the couch and you can't find it. When you push a but a button on the T_V_, then you hear some uh some sort of bleep.
Jonathan Lo: Like
Clarence Salzmann: And
Jonathan Lo: a
Clarence Salzmann: then
Jonathan Lo: phone.
Clarence Salzmann: you uh, hey there there's remote control.
Blair Campbell: Yeah.
Jonathan Lo: Okay.
Quentin Knoke: Yeah.
Jonathan Lo: So,
Clarence Salzmann: Next.
Jonathan Lo: that's.
Quentin Knoke: Yeah well that's that are good ideas. Uh Yeah well the LED on the corner, that that indicates that it's working. If you push a button. Um Yeah. And looking on the budget, not too expensive uh material. So probably plastic or something. Uh
Jonathan Lo: Okay.
Blair Campbell: Yeah I think it uh from a marketing point of view, it also has to look nice. Or you won't sell it.
Jonathan Lo: Yes.
Blair Campbell: And um yeah uh on our website we can see what products we already have. And it should work with as many uh as possible of them.
Jonathan Lo: Okay. This is It has to be compatible with other things.
Blair Campbell: Yes.
Jonathan Lo: Okay.
Clarence Salzmann: I have one more idea. Just popped up.
Jonathan Lo: Yes?
Clarence Salzmann: Uh it it won't take a lot of batteries. So you don't won't have to change the batteries uh once a week or uh once every two weeks.
Jonathan Lo: No battery use. So more ideas?
Quentin Knoke: Mm no.
Jonathan Lo: No okay. It's only the first ideas. So uh what are we going to do now is Next meeting is in half an h hour. Uh Okay. Next meeting, half an hour. Um, what you have to do. Well look on your. And Next instructions you'll get in your email. So This is the first meeting. See you later in half an hour.
Quentin Knoke: Yes.
Clarence Salzmann: Okay.
Blair Campbell: Okay.
Clarence Salzmann: Thank you. | For the first meeting, the task of designing a remote control was briefly introduced along with the plan for the subsequent meetings. The group then drew animals to practise using the drawing platform. They discussed their likes and dislikes regarding current remote controls, including ease of use, multiple systems and power indicators. They then offered suggestions as to what they would like from their remote. They would like the remote to be durable, for it to include a device to help find it when lost and not use too many batteries. | 1 | amisum | train |
William Pina: Okay. So welcome back. What do we have to? So first. I want to say I'm the secretary, so I make the minutes. You find them in your in the map in the From the group. There's the minutes from the first meeting. You'll find the next minutes also there. Then I wanna hear from you, what you've done. And after that I have some new product requirements. So And after that we have make decisions, what we do. And then we're ready. We have forty minutes for this meeting. After that we'll have lunch. So first I wanna ask Michael Johnson to tell what he did.
Michael Johnson: That's my task.
William Pina: So
Michael Johnson: Okay. Uh I've Where have I put it? My Documents or not?
Michael Johnson: Hmm. I've save it on my computer, my presentation.
William Pina: Yeah on your computer, or the
Michael Johnson: But where?
William Pina: What's the name?
Michael Johnson: Uh uh uh
William Pina: What's the name of it?
Michael Johnson: It was about the working of the remote control.
William Pina: It's the technical function or the functional requirements.
Michael Johnson: Nope. Not a of Wait. The working design. But I've
William Pina: Working
Michael Johnson: saved
William Pina: design.
Michael Johnson: it. But now I don't know where it is.
Michael Johnson: Hmm.
William Pina: Working design. What is this? Product documents.
Michael Johnson: Yeah. And I import this until
William Pina: On the desktop. Up. up.
Michael Johnson: One
William Pina: Up.
Michael Johnson: more.
William Pina: Up. Up. Yes. My Documents. Nope.
Michael Johnson: What the fuck
William Pina: Gone.
Michael Johnson: is this?
William Pina: Well you Um Nah. Nah, nah, nah. PowerPoint. Working design.
Michael Johnson: Yeah that's the empty one.
William Pina: And
Michael Johnson: I had one.
William Pina: Presentation of
Michael Johnson: Uh-huh.
William Pina: working design.
Michael Johnson: Open it. Okay here it is.
William Pina: Save as. Uh
Timothy Parsons: Desktop.
William Pina: it's Project.
Michael Johnson: Project.
Timothy Parsons: Yeah.
William Pina: Save.
Michael Johnson: Okay.
Timothy Parsons: Okay
William Pina: Very good.
Timothy Parsons: Well.
Michael Johnson: A little later but here it is.
William Pina: Okay. So
Michael Johnson: So okay. It's a little difficult what I'm gonna tell you. It's about the working of the remote control. I just had an half an hour j to study it and I don't
Timothy Parsons: Make
Michael Johnson: get
Timothy Parsons: it.
Michael Johnson: it.
William Pina: Now have ten minutes to tell it.
Michael Johnson: Ten minutes to tell it. Okay. I think it will be a few minutes and
William Pina: Okay.
Michael Johnson: First uh I will tell you something about the findings, what I discovered about the remote control. The working bout it uh of it. Uh then I'll have uh some kind of map, and it's the top of the remote control. With a little bit of science, uh you I will show that uh in in a few minutes. And then uh what I'll think about it. First, the findings. The remote control is a very difficult uh thing to uh to explain to just all of you wh who haven't seen a remote control uh inside. Uh there's a lot of uh plastic on it, um because its uh not so expensive. And there are uh a lot of uh wires, uh which um connect the components in it, the battery, and there are um switches and things like that. There's a lot of small uh electronics. So it won't be um uh too expensive to build it. Only twelve Euro fifty I think uh we will make it. Now And here I have the top of the remote control. Uh here's some kind of chip. Uh on top of this, there are uh the numbers. Uh you have all on your remote control. And uh the teletext uh button. And uh here's the battery. And when you push the button, it will uh will be sent to the chip. And the chip will um send it to all kind of sub-components. That's what I said, it's very difficult. And after that it will be sent to the infrared. And that will send it to your television. That's a short h uh how it works. Uh I think I can uh make it uh difficult, but we all we all don't get it. My preferences? It's uh it won't be uh We shouldn't make it too big. Uh also for the cost, uh we should only put one battery on it. A long-lasting battery. Uh also for the cost, uh use only plastic. Not other materials. Also because of the cost, uh not too much buttons on it. We can also make uh a button uh with a menu uh button. And then um that that you will see it on the T_V_. And on the T_V_ you can uh switch into the menu. That's I
James Kendall: Mm-hmm.
Michael Johnson: think it's easier. And the bleep signal, y uh you told us. Uh but we can also use it uh a bleep like something, when the battery's empty, then there is a bleep. Then you'll have to change it in a in a week or something. And also the bleep, when what I told you about uh when you lost it, and you push a button, and then you hear bleep bleep, and we will find it. This is uh
William Pina: Oh oh.
Michael Johnson: just uh Yeah.
William Pina: Two questions.
Michael Johnson: Yeah.
William Pina: The battery. You say one battery is cheaper. Why?
Michael Johnson: If we w if we use only just one uh small pen-light, then it will be cheaper than when we use
William Pina: Yeah but
Michael Johnson: two.
William Pina: when you use two, you can use it two times longer.
Michael Johnson: Yeah but then we'll have to make the um remote control uh long lasting.
William Pina: Okay
Michael Johnson: Just
William Pina: so it's the size of the remote control.
Michael Johnson: Yeah.
William Pina: Okay and the buttons. When you use it on the television, you've you need the television, wh which can use it.
Michael Johnson: Yeah. But
William Pina: S
Michael Johnson: uh I think this our remote control is for the televisions we uh we sell in our company?
William Pina: Okay.
Michael Johnson: Or is it also for other company uh for other televisions?
William Pina: I think we have to use it also on other televisions though.
Michael Johnson: Then this is an option.
William Pina: So
Michael Johnson: Maybe just a menu button to use it on our televisions. And then we make it easier uh for our televisions. And on the other tele televisions, you can also use it, but then
William Pina: Yeah but
Michael Johnson: we
William Pina: I
Michael Johnson: won't
William Pina: don't
Michael Johnson: use
William Pina: I think
Michael Johnson: the
William Pina: it They are two different things though. We have to choose one. It has to work on o uh all televisions.
James Kendall: Mm.
Michael Johnson: Yeah? Okay. Then I think uh the menu button uh will only work on the newer televisions. And we will uh look forward and don't make a
Timothy Parsons: Hmm.
Michael Johnson: remote control which for the older televisions.
William Pina: Okay.
Michael Johnson: And I just uh have one more idea. Uh maybe it's one of your tasks. But Uh, to have a trendy remote control, we can also um make something like the Nokia um mobile phones. To change covers. So if you have uh a trendy half with all red, uh yellow and something. And then you can put a
Timothy Parsons: Hmm.
Michael Johnson: red cover on it. And also different things.
William Pina: Yeah. Good idea.
Timothy Parsons: Will
Michael Johnson: Yes.
Timothy Parsons: this will this add to the cost?
Michael Johnson: Uh then it won't be uh will have just one cover on the uh original one. then you can buy the covers.
Timothy Parsons: Yes but you have to m uh be able to change it. D does it make it more difficult to design?
Michael Johnson: I think it will be a little more difficult, but not
William Pina: Mm-hmm.
Michael Johnson: too much.
Timothy Parsons: Not much. 'Kay.
Michael Johnson: Just like with the Nokia uh mobile phones.
William Pina: Yeah but there are much
Michael Johnson: Just one.
William Pina: more Nokia telephones than um these ones.
Michael Johnson: Yeah but then we'll have to to just um put five covers on it, and see if it works. If it won't works then we'll get something else. Then we uh won't g uh go further with it.
William Pina: Yeah but are their profits bigger than their cost?
Michael Johnson: Uh a p a a cover made in uh in China, it it won't be I guess so expensive I think.
William Pina: Yeah but there are also design cost. I don't think When you have a remote control, do you change the cover?
Michael Johnson: Maybe.
William Pina: Would you change
Michael Johnson: I
William Pina: the
Michael Johnson: wi
William Pina: cover?
Michael Johnson: I won't. But maybe
William Pina: No.
Michael Johnson: I think trendy people or like children where you can paint on it, and uh the the children
William Pina: N
Michael Johnson: think,
William Pina: yeah
Michael Johnson: oh
William Pina: but
Michael Johnson: this is my remote control, uh I made a picture on it.
William Pina: I think that
Michael Johnson: Uh
William Pina: too less people would change it for good profit.
Michael Johnson: Yeah.
William Pina: So
Michael Johnson: Okay. And the other people?
Timothy Parsons: Um
Michael Johnson: What do you think about it?
James Kendall: Yeah a. But If if it Yeah, I don't I'm not sure if it will make profit enough
Michael Johnson: Okay.
James Kendall: to uh But it's uh yeah it's uh original idea.
William Pina: Yes it is but I don't think we have to do it.
James Kendall: No.
Michael Johnson: Okay.
Timothy Parsons: Mm.
Michael Johnson: You're William Pina.
William Pina: Okay.
Michael Johnson: Yes. That's it.
William Pina: That's clear. Okay thank you. So now James Kendall.
James Kendall: Oh. That's Timothy Parsons. Uh Come on. Ah.
Timothy Parsons: Yeah.
James Kendall: Yes well uh uh I shall give a short talk about the the technical function design. some influence on the T_V_ set. Uh both audio and vide video uh in a cordless way. No cords attached. And uh well, it all by pushing a button on the remote. That was from my own experience and uh and uh the previous meeting. Uh I find some uh some interesting quotes on the web. Uh well the same idea here. Uh message to the television. And uh and and and well basic uh operations like on and off, and uh switching channels, and uh and maybe uh teletext or something like that. Uh well these are two uh remotes, and that's our uh our dilemma I think. Uh We just heard from Michael Johnson how uh difficult it is. But uh shall we make a basic remote control, uh just uh swapping channels and volume and uh power button and well nothing much more. Or uh uh more functions on the remote. Uh maybe more devices you can influence. Uh a radio or a v a video recorder, uh V_C_R_. Yeah well that's our dilemma. Um any ideas about that? Basic or multifunctional?
William Pina: We'll got back on that later.
James Kendall: Okay yeah. Yeah well
Timothy Parsons: Yes.
James Kendall: the that was just on my mind. So uh I didn't know what uh what way we would go. Mm yeah well that was my uh functional uh talk.
Michael Johnson: 'Kay.
William Pina: 'Kay, thank you. Then it's your turn, Timothy Parsons.
Timothy Parsons: Okay. Uh um m
Timothy Parsons: Yeah. Um yeah okay. This bit too far. So So I'm uh gonna have a presentation about um, about um yeah what people think. Uh we did a usability lab-test with a hundred persons. And we looked at uh several um things. Uh among them design, uh d d how d did they like the use of it, uh what frustrations they had while using remote controls. Uh well what what will be our market. And uh we asked them if we had some new featu features. If um that would be a good idea or not. Well our findings. Uh our users, they disliked the look and feel of current remote controls. Um uh they especially found found them very ugly. And um th they also found them hard to to learn how to use it. Uh well they also zap a lot. So uh zapping uh should be very easy. And uh fifty percent of the users only use ten percent of the buttons. So a lot of unused buttons. There is more findings. Uh on the buttons. Which uh buttons find users uh very important and which which not? And how much would they use them? Well uh the most used button is the channel selection. And uh we asked them how uh relevant they think uh the buttons are. The power, volume and channel selections are very relevant. Uh teletext is uh less relevant but also important. Uh not important they found the audio, uh that's not the volume but uh specific the the pitch, or the left or right. Uh the screen and the brightness. And uh channel settings. Uh th and they also are not used very often. Then we have a few um graphs about the market. Uh here we can see what the market share is of uh several groups. Um as you can see, most users are uh between thirty six and forty five. Um the the the younger group between sixteen and twenty five is not very big. And to come back on the the swapping uh things, uh I don't think uh, I I think the younger will be most interest in it. But uh they are not a very big group. Um in the we asked them, uh how would you like a s a new feature. If you have an L_C_D_ on the remote control, what would you think of it. Now you can clearly see young users say. I will that would very nice. And older user think uh they will be scared of change I think. And they won't like it. And another thing, how would you like to have a speech recognition on it. Well here we see the same. Young users uh think that's an interesting idea. And old users not. Uh well we uh found out that there are two several markets at which we can aim. Uh the first are the younger, the age between sixteen and forty five. Uh they are highly interested in the features, as you can see uh here. And um they are more critical on their money spending. Uh the second group is the older group. Aged between forty six and sixty five. They are less interested in uh new features. But uh they spend their money more easily. Now if we look back at this graph, we can see that among the first group is about um sixty percent. And the second group about forty percent. So the the first group is bigger. Well then I come to my uh personal preferences. Uh yeah the first question is uh also we have to ask is at the which market do we aim at. Uh of course n uh saying we aim at the young group doesn't say that old people won't buy it. But less of them will buy it. Um well I uh Okay. What I thought, um even young people say it's hard to use, remote control. So if you make a remote control that is uh very easy to use, that's especially aimed at this group, even uh the young group will also be more interested. And um we can make special features. But uh I think it looks nice in the first time. But when use it, uh I don't know what's uh good thing of speech recognition.
James Kendall: Mm-hmm.
Timothy Parsons: Um well th uh that's my second point. Uh less important functions should be discarded from the remote control. It's about discussion we had earlier. Um You can find most functions on a T_V_ set. So uh you don't have to have a lot of audio options, or screen options to change the brightness. And such things. Um well the design is very important.
Timothy Parsons: looking uh remote control if there will be one. But they found most remote controls very ugly. So the design of our remote control is very important. And uh yeah it should be very zap friendly, as most users use it for that. That were my findings.
William Pina: Okay
Michael Johnson: Yeah.
William Pina: thank
Michael Johnson: I have
William Pina: you.
Michael Johnson: uh one question. If
William Pina: Yes.
Michael Johnson: we aim for the younger people, um and there will be uh a lot of features like L_C_D_ or the the the speech uh f recognising, uh the cost will be a lot of h uh a lot higher.
Timothy Parsons: Yes.
James Kendall: Mm-hmm.
Michael Johnson: Uh I think we don't have that in our budget.
James Kendall: No.
Michael Johnson: Do you think?
Timothy Parsons: No.
James Kendall: And I don't
Michael Johnson: Like
James Kendall: uh I don't think twenty five Euros for a remote is really cheap or something.
Michael Johnson: No. No.
James Kendall: So it's Yeah, it's hard to uh get the younger
Michael Johnson: Uh-huh.
James Kendall: group.
William Pina: I think uh the L_C_D_ is cheaper than speech recognition. So
James Kendall: Mm-hmm.
William Pina: I think that can be an d good option. L_C_D_.
James Kendall: Just the L_C_D_?
William Pina: Yes. Only
James Kendall: Mm-hmm.
William Pina: the L_C_D_. So But we'll come back on that.
Timothy Parsons: Okay.
William Pina: Now Oh, go on. What d d d um Um Uh we go back on the decisions later. Now we have a few new product requirements. First, teletext. We have internet now so we don't need the teletext anymore. So not necessary. Next. Only for the television. So we don't look at the other things like the radio or something. Only the television. We look at the age group of forty plus. Uh no, younger than forty. Is a g big group, and like you showed, n not very much people buy our stuff. Fourth point. Our corporate colour and slogan must be used. Very important for the design. So you can see it on our site. Next. Um no.
William Pina: We have to make our decisions, what we want to do. So like you said, we need the. Maybe it's good to put it in a document. Now we have to decide what controls do we need. So maybe you can tell us.
Timothy Parsons: Yeah maybe we can first have a discussion uh on the the product requirements you just uh said.
William Pina: Sorry?
Timothy Parsons: The the requirements you just said,
William Pina: Yes.
Timothy Parsons: maybe we should first have a discussion about that.
William Pina: Yes, it's
Timothy Parsons: I uh
William Pina: okay.
Timothy Parsons: personally think uh teletext is a good option. Uh not everyone um who is looking T_V_ can go to internet when they want to see the latest news.
William Pina: Yeah but we don't use it. It's a new requirement. So, it's not my requirement.
Michael Johnson: 'Kay, we'll just have to do that.
William Pina: We have to do this.
Michael Johnson: Okay.
Timothy Parsons: Okay.
Michael Johnson: No discussion
Timothy Parsons: Okay sorry.
Michael Johnson: about it.
Timothy Parsons: Then uh
William Pina: No.
Michael Johnson: Okay. Unfortunately.
William Pina: So what controls do we need? Who first?
James Kendall: Well a power button?
William Pina: Okay. Uh power.
James Kendall: Uh the well um I think separate channels. So
William Pina: Uh mm channel.
James Kendall: But then both the the separate channels. So so uh
William Pina: Channel
James Kendall: zero to nine or something.
William Pina: Zero to nine.
James Kendall: Uh volume.
William Pina: Volume. Maybe it's easy to pick. What was w your one? Techno
Timothy Parsons: Mine? It's the functional requirements.
William Pina: Okay.
William Pina: We had w uh no no no no. Where was that example of the
James Kendall: Oh mine.
William Pina: Johan. That was the the the the the
James Kendall: Technical.
William Pina: technical Hallo. Okay. What do we need? On-off. Zero to nine.
Michael Johnson: To change to the next channel, just one button. To move up, move down.
William Pina: Yeah that's the
Timothy Parsons: D
William Pina: channel.
Timothy Parsons: Yeah. Do we make a menu?
William Pina: Menu? Uh yes the n newer televisions ha do have menus. Uh
Timothy Parsons: Uh
William Pina: M Menu. I think um the only one or two numbers.
James Kendall: Mm yes.
William Pina: And Hello? That's ch
Timothy Parsons: I think it will be um q quite easy to use, to have uh uh four arrows. Up-down for channel selection, and
William Pina: Yes.
Timothy Parsons: left-right uh for volume. And uh a menu uh button. And if you press the menu button you get into the menu, and you can use the same buttons. But the then to scroll through the menu and to change the options.
William Pina: On the L_C_D_ screen, you mean?
Timothy Parsons: Uh well yeah that depends on if you have uh the menu on the T_V_. Or you get the menu on the L_C_D_ screen on the remote control.
William Pina: Think it's better to have it on the remote control, 'cause it it has to work on all televisions. So
Timothy Parsons: Yes.
Michael Johnson: But
William Pina: we
Michael Johnson: then
William Pina: need
Michael Johnson: we come to the costs.
William Pina: N Yes. But if we have this
Timothy Parsons: 'Kay. But well if you aim at the younger market, um a as they as uh s uh as we seen in the usability uh lab, uh they will buy a nice looking um remote control. And also to find the easy to use uh part very important. So if we have a L_C_D_ sh uh screen, and uh not too many buttons, I think that will incre uh uh even when it's a bit more cost, it will still sell.
William Pina: So now we don't have a lot of buttons. Is this enough?
James Kendall: Mute.
William Pina: Maybe in the menu?
James Kendall: Um
Timothy Parsons: Mm.
James Kendall: Yeah but then it's always uh more than one uh
William Pina: Mute.
James Kendall: thing to do.
William Pina: Mm-hmm.
Timothy Parsons: Yeah.
William Pina: Okay. Maybe more? No. Well. Then that's all. This will be the buttons. And I think that's enough for the next phase. So we can go on to
Michael Johnson: But now we have only the buttons. And
William Pina: Yes.
Michael Johnson: uh we don't yet have to decide what the remote control would look like? Or
William Pina: No that's for the next phase.
Michael Johnson: Okay.
William Pina: Um Phase two is the conceptual design. So
Michael Johnson: Okay.
William Pina: then we'll have the concepts.
Michael Johnson: Okay.
William Pina: That's for the So uh next point. Now we have lunch-break. After that we have t thirty minutes for work. And you can find the minutes in the Project Documents folder inclusive the uh buttons. No. Your individual action, you can find them in the email. So now it's time for lunch.
Michael Johnson: Okay.
Timothy Parsons: Okay. Good idea.
William Pina: Thanks for coming. | William Pina opened the meeting by explaining how to locate his minutes from the previous meeting. Michael Johnson briefly explained the internal workings of the remote, and mentioned his preferences for power source and case material. He also suggested mobile phone-like changeable covers, and the group discussed the profit in this. James Kendall very briefly mentioned some features a remote should have and suggested it should be multifunctional. Timothy Parsons present the findings of the usability study. The group then discussed their target group ,and what features they might include to attract them. The manager introduced new requirements to the project, insisting they were to be followed. The group then discussed what buttons they might need, which included menu, numbers, channel and volume changing arrows and mute. | 1 | amisum | train |
Michael Hunter: Okay. Well, let's start. What are doing? Oops.
Richard Leslie: Hmm.
Nathan Lindsey: Ah, pinball.
Michael Hunter: Okay. Okay. Not doing.
Ashley Depedro: Mm.
Michael Hunter: Uh
Ashley Depedro: Ah.
Richard Leslie: Oh.
Ashley Depedro: Hey. Ah. Now I have my screen back too.
Michael Hunter: Very good. Okay.
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: we have presentations. So first, it's your turn.
Richard Leslie: Mine. Oh
Michael Hunter: Yeah.
Richard Leslie: great
Nathan Lindsey: Huh.
Michael Hunter: Isn't it amazing.
Ashley Depedro: Yeah. Very interesting.
Richard Leslie: Uh
Michael Hunter: Industrial Designer. Interface concept.
Richard Leslie: Yes, well uh let's uh talk about the interface uh concept. Uh, first I'll uh I'll uh discuss the buttons we just chose, uh show you some samples, uh uh discuss some colours and design maybe, already. And uh my personal preferences. Well we chose the power button to switch the television on and off. The bu uh the mute button to switch the volume on and o on and off. and uh off uh uh zero to nine, and the uh button to choose uh higher channels than nine. Uh the volume and channel quadrants, uh left and right, up and down arrows, to uh do the volume and channel. And the menu menu button to man manipulate the L_C_D_ uh display. Um, I found some uh interesting uh uh samples. Examples. Um, well uh what's pretty standard is uh that it's that they're all pretty uh uh high uh
Ashley Depedro: Large.
Richard Leslie: Yeah.
Ashley Depedro: A
Richard Leslie: Yeah.
Ashley Depedro: lot
Richard Leslie: Large
Ashley Depedro: a lot of buttons
Richard Leslie: and and and
Ashley Depedro: buttons.
Richard Leslie: pretty thin and uh and long. Um, power buttons are mostly at the top uh left or right. Um, well we see the the the same uh arrows. Like there. And uh Yeah, well arrow b buttons can be blue. And what's interesting is the the the icons on the buttons. Some buttons have icons like the play and stop, but we don't use that. But uh, these we we have to choose the right icons, or or letters. Uh this is the V_ for volume, but they're both uh a V_. So it's it's not really very uh clear what's the function of that.
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Richard Leslie: Um Yeah. So, that's
Michael Hunter: Can you go back one page? For the uh menu, what do we use for that?
Richard Leslie: Uh,
Michael Hunter: We don't
Richard Leslie: well
Michael Hunter: have buttons for the menu. Or we may use channel of volume and
Richard Leslie: Yeah. I thought that was our uh idea.
Michael Hunter: Okay.
Richard Leslie: So,
Michael Hunter: But
Richard Leslie: uh
Michael Hunter: uh
Richard Leslie: how
Michael Hunter: You have to put it on the
Richard Leslie: Like this.
Michael Hunter: Yeah.
Richard Leslie: Or or this. And that the menu button is okay.
Michael Hunter: Yeah but, has to be clear that you can use the arrows.
Richard Leslie: Yeah, okay.
Ashley Depedro: Yes.
Richard Leslie: Uh, so the The icons on the arrows, as well, you
Michael Hunter: Mm-hmm.
Richard Leslie: mean.
Michael Hunter: Yes. The second one.
Richard Leslie: Yeah. Uh, well that's something to uh think about.
Michael Hunter: Okay.
Nathan Lindsey: Uh, maybe I'll have something in my uh presentation. And
Richard Leslie: Okay.
Nathan Lindsey: you
Ashley Depedro: Okay.
Nathan Lindsey: will see it.
Richard Leslie: Um, well I don't I don't know if we have to discuss this already, or in the next uh meeting. But uh, as we have to uh to to design the the case and the whole uh remote control in our uh our our corporate uh company uh uh colours and the logo, I would uh recommend a yellow case. Uh, round edges. The logo at the bottom. And uh, well maybe each each uh set of buttons uh has uh has his own colour. So, it's good. Uh, recognisable. K so, I think.
Michael Hunter: Not too much colours.
Richard Leslie: Uh, no. Not too much. But uh
Michael Hunter: No, it's not flower power.
Richard Leslie: No, no, no. But this has to be has to be trendy and uh
Michael Hunter: S okay.
Richard Leslie: and Uh, yeah so good uh good icons on the buttons, and uh and big buttons is my uh personal uh opinion.
Michael Hunter: Okay.
Richard Leslie: That was that.
Michael Hunter: Thank you. So, you're next.
Nathan Lindsey: I'm next, okay.
Nathan Lindsey: Yes. No. Here we go. Uh, at
Ashley Depedro: Okay.
Nathan Lindsey: first we will uh I will f
Ashley Depedro: Mm-hmm.
Nathan Lindsey: uh say something about what younger people want, our uh group w uh w uh we want to uh sell our remote controls to. And I'll discuss what my opinion is about the costs, about uh what battery is in it, what kind of buttons also. First uh, the younger people, they want like soft mat uh materials and primary colours. Like, totally yellow, totally red. Uh, so it's visible. Uh, the shapes are curved and round, like uh you also said. Maybe it's nice to uh get a remote control not like all the other ones, straight and uh flat and long. But to give him the shape of your hand, so you it's easier to use or something like that. But that's just an idea. And then, I'll have to discuss about the costs uh of all the things for the remote control. The battery, there are few options. Uh, I think the best option is to use uh the basic battery. So, everybody can buy it uh at the at the supermarket. Or use uh a k uh kinetic battery like uh within a watch. When you uh shake it a few times, it it's loaded. Uh, the the form of the remote control, I think it's also nice have it curved. And maybe like it's hand-shaped. Uh, so uh you take it here in your hand and here are the buttons. Uh material, you use plastic. Hard plastic uh because uh it won't have to burst uh like in the in one time. And also rubber because the younger people like that, what we see in the research. Uh the push-buttons. We have one new thing uh discovered. It's a scroll push uh thing like a mouse. Maybe it's uh easy to use uh for the channels. When you want to go m move up, you just scroll up and click on the button, if you wanna see the next, uh if you wanna see that channel. And also for the mouse, uh for the volume, it's also uh easy to use. Just scroll a bit up, scroll a bit down. And that's also easy just w when you have a thing like this, and you get it here. You can do it with your thumb. And with your
Ashley Depedro: Hmm.
Nathan Lindsey: l left hand you can uh push the buttons uh if you push uh channel one, you can see channel one. The electrics um with a scroll push uh button, we must use regular uh chips. There are also uh simple chips. They are uh cheaper. Um, but then we have just a basic uh uh remote control, and I think there are a lot of those uh things, and people won't buy it any more. They have seen enough of it. And you have also advanced um chips. But that's with the L_C_D_ uh screen. And the costs will increase a lot more. And I think our budget is too low to use and an L_C_D_, and the chip who is more expensive. And maybe it's also then uh thoughtful if we u uh use uh as um different kind of uh shapes for the for remote control, that we then use the primary colours. Like, you get a yellow uh remote control, red one, blue one, et cetera. You have any more questions about this? I think the main
Ashley Depedro: Yep.
Nathan Lindsey: thing is we look at the costs.
Michael Hunter: Hmm.
Nathan Lindsey: And not too basic, not a
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: basic remote control, who
Ashley Depedro: But,
Nathan Lindsey: everybody
Ashley Depedro: thi
Nathan Lindsey: already
Ashley Depedro: i uh
Nathan Lindsey: has.
Ashley Depedro: This is with an L_C_D_? No,
Nathan Lindsey: Not
Ashley Depedro: not.
Nathan Lindsey: with an L_C_D_.
Michael Hunter: No, isn't.
Nathan Lindsey: No.
Michael Hunter: But the L_C_D_ is easy when you use the scroll uh buttons. Then you can scroll, you see what number,
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: and then you push.
Nathan Lindsey: But then, what I say, the costs will uh get a lot higher.
Michael Hunter: But then it's not easy to use scroll uh wheel.
Nathan Lindsey: Th then
Michael Hunter: If
Nathan Lindsey: you'll
Michael Hunter: you
Nathan Lindsey: see
Michael Hunter: don't
Nathan Lindsey: it on the television.
Michael Hunter: Hmm, yes. But then. Yeah, then you go one down one up. When
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah
Michael Hunter: you scroll.
Nathan Lindsey: but l when you see a menu uh on the television, it's like you see uh one to twenty, you go uh uh s scroll
Michael Hunter: Yeah but
Nathan Lindsey: up,
Michael Hunter: like
Nathan Lindsey: and
Michael Hunter: we said
Nathan Lindsey: push
Michael Hunter: before,
Nathan Lindsey: number tw
Michael Hunter: it
Nathan Lindsey: twenty.
Michael Hunter: has to be used on every television. So you may not be uh No. The television must do that.
Nathan Lindsey: Mm-hmm.
Michael Hunter: So
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah, I think the younger people will have newer televisions, which can provide our uh
Michael Hunter: Yeah
Nathan Lindsey: remote
Michael Hunter: but
Nathan Lindsey: control.
Michael Hunter: young people have to have all their uh room. And mostly they are smaller.
Nathan Lindsey: Yes.
Michael Hunter: So
Nathan Lindsey: But that won't be a problem. I think.
Michael Hunter: Most the times that are not advanced televisions.
Nathan Lindsey: No, but then we'll get to the regular uh remote controls. And I think, what I said, everybody has them uh has them already. And they go to a uh supermarket and buy them uh for two Euros. Uh, and ge and get the most cheapest uh thing. And I think we must look further to uh to devel d develop something news.
Michael Hunter: Okay.
Ashley Depedro: Uh, can you give an indication in b uh in the cost difference between uh the chip with L_C_D_ or without?
Nathan Lindsey: I got it on my screen and it was uh higher. But I don't know uh how much higher.
Ashley Depedro: 'Cause it I think
Michael Hunter: That's
Ashley Depedro: if
Michael Hunter: important.
Ashley Depedro: we have an L_C_D_, it will also sell a lot better.
Nathan Lindsey: That's true.
Ashley Depedro: And that might uh bring back the costs uh
Nathan Lindsey: But then we'll I think we must discuss who uh what will be better. If we have a better shape of the um remote control, or better options on it. With a scroll menu, a w scroll thing, and a L_C_D_. And then a flat um remote control. remote control, with scroll, without L_C_D_.
Michael Hunter: Yeah. Maybe you can look how how much it is
Nathan Lindsey: I can
Michael Hunter: for
Nathan Lindsey: uh
Michael Hunter: the
Nathan Lindsey: look on my
Michael Hunter: L_C_D_. It's
Nathan Lindsey: uh
Michael Hunter: very important.
Nathan Lindsey: Uh Note that the push-button requires a simple chip chip. A scroll wheel requires minimally a regular chip, which is a higher price range. The display requires a advanced chip, which is which in turn is more expensive than the regular chip.
Michael Hunter: Yeah, more expensive. But how much?
Nathan Lindsey: Doesn't say.
Michael Hunter: Oh.
Ashley Depedro: Huh.
Richard Leslie: Hmm.
Michael Hunter: Okay.
Nathan Lindsey: That's from my manufacturing division.
Michael Hunter: Okay.
Ashley Depedro: 'Kay.
Michael Hunter: Well, thank
Ashley Depedro: My
Michael Hunter: you.
Ashley Depedro: turn?
Nathan Lindsey: Yes?
Michael Hunter: Next.
Ashley Depedro: Mm. So So Yeah. So, my uh presentation is about trend-watching. Uh, I did some trend-watching. It's very important to uh keep up with latest trends. 'Cause if you don't, you won't sell. So, well how we did do that? Uh, well we made an investigation of the market, by Trendwatchers. They uh watch in uh cities like uh Paris and Milan. Of course, well known for their uh trend uh trends. And well, uh what did you find? Uh, we have two groups, young and trendy, and the old and rich. Well th and the young and trendy, they uh they starting to like uh fruit and vegetables uh as a theme for n uh clothes, shoes, and also uh products. And um, material? That should feel have uh a spongy feeling. And to get a feeling for what it is, uh here is an image of it. Then the old and rich. They like uh dark colours, and simple, recognisable shapes. And um, they also like uh familiar material, uh especially wood. Now, another picture. To get a feeling for this. Well, uh then already come to my personal preferences. We uh aim at the younger market. So, we should also be uh look at their uh trends. However, with trends it's always if there's it's now. It it it might last one year, and next year it be uh can be totally different. And I think we want to sell our product for longer than one year. So, we m must not just only look at what the trend is now, as it might be totally different next year. So, that's uh one thing to keep in mind.
Nathan Lindsey: Changing covers.
Ashley Depedro: Yeah. Any questions?
Nathan Lindsey: Nope.
Richard Leslie: No.
Michael Hunter: No. It's clear. So now, it's uh Ah, let's see.
Michael Hunter: Now, w we have to decide
Michael Hunter: Well, we have to decide on the concept. So, we have to look at 'S next. Components and user interface concept. So Now, we have to make some concept. Maybe one of you can paint it on the board. First, uh user interface.
Nathan Lindsey: Uh, uh-uh. How w how we how we make it? Uh
Michael Hunter: Yes, a concept on uh
Nathan Lindsey: Shouldn't
Michael Hunter: Just
Nathan Lindsey: we first
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: discuss about like what w
Michael Hunter: Yeah, but
Nathan Lindsey: we
Michael Hunter: maybe
Nathan Lindsey: all
Michael Hunter: we can paint it. Uh, what do we want?
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah, but if I paint with
Michael Hunter: I'll paint. Okay. Well
Ashley Depedro: Mm.
Michael Hunter: Something like this? Or
Richard Leslie: Mm,
Michael Hunter: Shapes
Richard Leslie: yes.
Michael Hunter: or What do we need?
Ashley Depedro: Can make
Richard Leslie: What?
Ashley Depedro: several uh concepts.
Michael Hunter: Yes, okay.
Ashley Depedro: We have this, and we had the idea of an um a more uh uh uh like sh in the shape of your hand.
Michael Hunter: Okay.
Nathan Lindsey: More like something
Ashley Depedro: Yeah I I I uh yes.
Nathan Lindsey: M like Yeah I can't dr I can't draw it. Uh
Michael Hunter: And you have to.
Nathan Lindsey: I have to.
Michael Hunter: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: I'm not a designer. It's more three D_. Like, um when you have a part here. This is the remote control. And then you have something like th this under it. So, it's easier
Richard Leslie: Mm.
Nathan Lindsey: to get it like this.
Richard Leslie: Yeah.
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: It's like a gun.
Ashley Depedro: A
Michael Hunter: So, it has to be
Ashley Depedro: g
Michael Hunter: soft?
Ashley Depedro: Mm.
Nathan Lindsey: And it has to be soft, yeah.
Michael Hunter: Okay.
Nathan Lindsey: So, you can
Michael Hunter: And uh,
Nathan Lindsey: squeeze
Michael Hunter: the
Nathan Lindsey: in
Michael Hunter: buttons?
Nathan Lindsey: it and Sorry?
Michael Hunter: Buttons.
Nathan Lindsey: Buttons on top of it. And here. The scrolling. You can do it with your thumb.
Richard Leslie: But but i that's the only scroll uh button on it then?
Nathan Lindsey: But
Michael Hunter: No,
Nathan Lindsey: now
Michael Hunter: it
Nathan Lindsey: we
Michael Hunter: won't.
Nathan Lindsey: use one scroll button and the other one is here. One till uh uh zero till nine.
Michael Hunter: But,
Richard Leslie: Yeah, okay. But
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: well
Nathan Lindsey: And
Richard Leslie: but
Michael Hunter: there
Nathan Lindsey: the
Michael Hunter: one
Nathan Lindsey: b
Richard Leslie: how
Michael Hunter: for the sound and one for the channels.
Richard Leslie: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah?
Richard Leslie: How
Nathan Lindsey: Or two buttons.
Richard Leslie: Okay.
Ashley Depedro: And
Michael Hunter: Uh,
Ashley Depedro: i if
Michael Hunter: two
Ashley Depedro: we go
Michael Hunter: scroll
Ashley Depedro: to uh
Michael Hunter: uh
Nathan Lindsey: If
Michael Hunter: wheels.
Nathan Lindsey: uh 'Kay c If we do If we use one, then we'll have just a switch on it, and you'll just switch it, and now it's
Richard Leslie: Mm.
Nathan Lindsey: the sound to switch
Michael Hunter: That's th
Nathan Lindsey: back
Michael Hunter: that's more difficult.
Ashley Depedro: But if we have
Michael Hunter: It's
Ashley Depedro: uh
Michael Hunter: better
Ashley Depedro: a Ashley Depedro
Michael Hunter: in
Ashley Depedro: Yeah. If we have a menu, uh how do we uh choose other options?
Nathan Lindsey: with the menu uh button. And then you also can scroll uh scroll in it. Just not like all
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: the other ones, with uh this thing, and uh here an arrow, here an arrow, here an arrow, here an arrow. Because uh, from h hundred uh remote controls, ninety nine have it.
Michael Hunter: But
Richard Leslie: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: if we don't have a L_C_D_ we don't have a menu.
Nathan Lindsey: Uh,
Ashley Depedro: Uh-uh.
Nathan Lindsey: then we have it on the T_V_, the menu.
Michael Hunter: Yeah, but again maybe th How do we know the T_V_ can handle it? You don't know. So,
Nathan Lindsey: I
Michael Hunter: there's
Nathan Lindsey: don't
Michael Hunter: no
Nathan Lindsey: know.
Michael Hunter: menu.
Nathan Lindsey: It's like some sort of uh teletext option, but we don't have teletext.
Michael Hunter: No. So you can't use it.
Nathan Lindsey: And if we put an L_C_D_ thing on it, then the costs will uh be much higher.
Michael Hunter: Okay, we make two concepts. One with L_C_D_. One without L_C_D_.
Nathan Lindsey: 'Kay. But you all like this kind of thing. Uh
Michael Hunter: Good concept. But
Nathan Lindsey: With the scroll button.
Michael Hunter: That's one.
Nathan Lindsey: And and this one
Ashley Depedro: Uh-uh.
Nathan Lindsey: has to be soft. And this has to be harder, because when it falls, it mu mu must not burst. Or some kind of rubber around it.
Richard Leslie: Mm-hmm.
Michael Hunter: It's one. Two. Number two.
Richard Leslie: And you can and you can uh make the the power button as a trigger. Like
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah.
Richard Leslie: uh
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah. Ah that's nice. Here. Trigger.
Michael Hunter: No.
Richard Leslie: Just
Michael Hunter: But
Richard Leslie: to
Michael Hunter: when you handle it,
Richard Leslie: uh
Michael Hunter: you put it on and off. It's not good to use.
Richard Leslie: Oh, like
Michael Hunter: Yeah, but
Richard Leslie: a
Michael Hunter: I'll zap. Fuck. Out.
Richard Leslie: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: No, it's not good.
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: Now, second concept. One with L_C_D_, one without L_C_D_. Then uh Paint it.
Nathan Lindsey: Paint it? With the scroll thing on,
Michael Hunter: One
Nathan Lindsey: like this?
Michael Hunter: with two scroll buttons and one with without. Yeah. Uh, one
Nathan Lindsey: So?
Michael Hunter: with a with a menu, and one without a menu. And the one with with a menu has an L_C_D_.
Nathan Lindsey: Draw it.
Michael Hunter: Unbelievable. Do I have to do everything. Blank. You have
Michael Hunter: Not so difficult.
Richard Leslie: But
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Richard Leslie: if you put push the the menu button
Michael Hunter: Uh, that's the menu.
Richard Leslie: Yeah, wh
Michael Hunter: There
Richard Leslie: what
Michael Hunter: for the L_C_D_ screen.
Richard Leslie: Yes, but you don't know which of the scroll buttons you have to choose.
Michael Hunter: You have to For the menu.
Richard Leslie: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: Mm-hmm. One that way. And one that way. So Then it depends on the cost. S On and off.
Nathan Lindsey: But is it easy to use? When you have it on your left side, and
Michael Hunter: When it's not too big. Just like a a phone.
Richard Leslie: Mm-hmm.
Ashley Depedro: M uh yeah, maybe it's better if the uh scroll-wheels are um
Nathan Lindsey: Separate, more separate,
Ashley Depedro: more separate,
Nathan Lindsey: h yeah.
Ashley Depedro: yeah.
Michael Hunter: Yes,
Ashley Depedro: Like, you have
Michael Hunter: okay.
Ashley Depedro: the menu button in between uh
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah. On the left a scroll button, and on the right a scroll button.
Nathan Lindsey: But would it be easy to use then? If it's like you have a big uh
Michael Hunter: Very good. Is it better? When you uh the menu, you have to go there there there there.
Nathan Lindsey: I also think
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: this concept is not what the young people were looking for. They were like round curves, uh different uh
Michael Hunter: Yeah, okay. That's that's the outside.
Nathan Lindsey: Okay, okay,
Michael Hunter: But now
Nathan Lindsey: okay.
Michael Hunter: the First the buttons.
Nathan Lindsey: Mm-hmm.
Ashley Depedro: Think we have we have now two buttons missing. The uh um The mute button.
Michael Hunter: Sorry?
Ashley Depedro: We have two buttons missing. The mute button. And um, the to to uh have to uh numbers
Michael Hunter: Mute. And the other. Yeah.
Ashley Depedro: Okay.
Michael Hunter: Not so difficult.
Ashley Depedro: But, uh
Nathan Lindsey: Personally, I think two scroll buttons uh aren't easy to handle.
Michael Hunter: But how do you wanna solve it?
Nathan Lindsey: With the switch button.
Michael Hunter: Yeah but on the menu that's not uh easy. Then
Nathan Lindsey: No
Michael Hunter: you
Nathan Lindsey: like
Michael Hunter: go down,
Nathan Lindsey: uh
Michael Hunter: you switch, you go into the right, you switch, you go down.
Nathan Lindsey: Oh, you mean like that.
Michael Hunter: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: Uh, then you can also have like uh th um
Michael Hunter: A joystick.
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah, and joystick, I think.
Michael Hunter: Yeah. But is it uh Does that break, a joystick? Or a small one just like in a laptop.
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah like in a laptop, s uh s some sort of thing. A little bit bigger, with
Michael Hunter: Mean, it's
Nathan Lindsey: easier
Michael Hunter: better.
Nathan Lindsey: thi
Michael Hunter: But how expensive it is?
Nathan Lindsey: I don't know.
Michael Hunter: Oh. Why do I pay you for? Um, well um Better ideas.
Ashley Depedro: Okay.
Nathan Lindsey: Or no scroll uh things. Just a shape. And No, no.
Michael Hunter: For the
Nathan Lindsey: It won't
Michael Hunter: young
Nathan Lindsey: work.
Michael Hunter: peoples I think scroll
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: button's good.
Nathan Lindsey: Uh-huh.
Michael Hunter: So Think we have to keep them.
Nathan Lindsey: Or a remote control more like joystick.
Michael Hunter: Yeah, but is it A small one.
Nathan Lindsey: A small one like this, like a Nintendo uh k
Michael Hunter: No just like in a
Nathan Lindsey: Playstation thing.
Michael Hunter: a laptop. Small, round. Then it's not so big.
Nathan Lindsey: No, no, no. I mean the the shape of the
Michael Hunter: Oh the
Nathan Lindsey: remote
Michael Hunter: sh
Nathan Lindsey: control. Just
Michael Hunter: Yeah,
Nathan Lindsey: like a
Michael Hunter: but
Nathan Lindsey: Playstation
Michael Hunter: then
Nathan Lindsey: thing.
Michael Hunter: you can to use t with one hand.
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: So Maybe, if it's possible, it's not too expensive, I think a joystick is better. A small one. So, please look at it.
Nathan Lindsey: No, that's okay, I got
Ashley Depedro: And on the L_C_D_, how much it costs? Uh, it costs extra?
Nathan Lindsey: Uh they're not uh in details. It's more expensive or
Michael Hunter: Yeah
Nathan Lindsey: less
Michael Hunter: we
Nathan Lindsey: expensive,
Michael Hunter: I think
Nathan Lindsey: huh?
Michael Hunter: you get it. So, after this meeting you have half an hour to uh fix it.
Nathan Lindsey: Then I have to come with it.
Michael Hunter: Yes.
Nathan Lindsey: I got my personal costs. I I don't I don't know the costs.
Michael Hunter: Your problem. Not mine.
Nathan Lindsey: Then I'll uh make something up.
Michael Hunter: Okay. So, do we have other concepts? Then for the components, we use a normal battery.
Richard Leslie: Mm,
Michael Hunter: Then it's
Richard Leslie: yeah.
Michael Hunter: Ch cheapest
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah, or
Michael Hunter: way,
Nathan Lindsey: the
Michael Hunter: I think.
Nathan Lindsey: or the kinetic uh with normal
Michael Hunter: No,
Nathan Lindsey: battery.
Michael Hunter: no kinetic.
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah, I think it's
Michael Hunter: Kinetic
Nathan Lindsey: uh, yeah,
Michael Hunter: is uh ch makes it more expensive.
Nathan Lindsey: more expensive. Yeah.
Michael Hunter: So
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: we use a normal battery.
Richard Leslie: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: Okay.
Ashley Depedro: Yes.
Michael Hunter: Chip. Depends on the L_C_D_.
Nathan Lindsey: Depends on the scroll.
Michael Hunter: Scroll.
Nathan Lindsey: If we use a scroll, then we have the uh regular chip. If we don't use a scroll, then we can use the simple chip. And
Michael Hunter: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: that's
Michael Hunter: And uh, we If you use the L_C_D_, we have to
Nathan Lindsey: Uh the most expensive.
Michael Hunter: Yes,
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: okay. So, depends on the L_C_D_
Nathan Lindsey: If we
Michael Hunter: and the scroll.
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: Okay.
Nathan Lindsey: If we No okay scroll-wheel. So, I have this. So, it will be uh the advanced chip, or the uh regu uh or the regular chip.
Michael Hunter: Okay. So, uh the shapes of the design depends on the L_C_D_ and But, it has to be small. I think.
Nathan Lindsey: Or shall we just put it on the pistol thing? And then just put also on L_C_D_ on it?
Michael Hunter: If you have pistol, it L_C_D_'s not easy. Y y
Nathan Lindsey: Just use your thumb.
Michael Hunter: Yeah but If you use a phone.
Nathan Lindsey: If you Yeah. I use my thumb.
Michael Hunter: k Yeah, but but then you have it. Like, th if you have pistol, you have it so.
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: And the screen is Well,
Nathan Lindsey: If
Michael Hunter: then
Nathan Lindsey: you have
Michael Hunter: you
Nathan Lindsey: a joystick
Michael Hunter: have
Nathan Lindsey: on
Michael Hunter: to keep it this way to look at the screen.
Nathan Lindsey: No, if you have like uh an uh uh a ni a uh Playstation uh game controller.
Michael Hunter: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: And you move up, f forward, down, left. Then you have uh just, yeah, a little bit curved. It's not just uh
Michael Hunter: No.
Nathan Lindsey: straight.
Michael Hunter: No, no.
Nathan Lindsey: That's how we use it.
Ashley Depedro: Uh
Nathan Lindsey: That's why they make joysticks like that, I think.
Michael Hunter: Yeah, but then
Ashley Depedro: Uh,
Michael Hunter: you look
Ashley Depedro: yeah, but
Michael Hunter: forward. And then you can
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: y
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah?
Michael Hunter: N well,
Ashley Depedro: If you
Michael Hunter: if you have to look at it.
Nathan Lindsey: 'Kay. Here's our designer.
Ashley Depedro: If we have uh then something standing here, with the L_C_D_.
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah.
Michael Hunter: Then it goes like this.
Nathan Lindsey: Yeah, why not.
Michael Hunter: If th n well
Nathan Lindsey: It's for the younger people.
Michael Hunter: Yes, of course.
Nathan Lindsey: It's something new.
Richard Leslie: It's
Michael Hunter: That's
Richard Leslie: uh
Michael Hunter: good good. But the um, it may not break.
Nathan Lindsey: Now we put uh rubber around it.
Michael Hunter: Okay. If that's possible.
Ashley Depedro: Um,
Nathan Lindsey: Hard
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: plastic, uh the shape, and around it hard uh around it rubber. And the uh the hand shape is also rubber.
Michael Hunter: Okay.
Richard Leslie: Or you
Ashley Depedro: I
Richard Leslie: can
Ashley Depedro: can't
Richard Leslie: uh
Ashley Depedro: see the.
Richard Leslie: turn it inside.
Ashley Depedro: But, uh the
Richard Leslie: But
Ashley Depedro: easy
Richard Leslie: that's
Ashley Depedro: of uh, th the ease of use wasn't uh the most important uh aspect of it.
Nathan Lindsey: Huh.
Richard Leslie: No, that's true.
Ashley Depedro: Uh, for us it's about to sell it. Uh
Michael Hunter: Yeah of
Nathan Lindsey: This
Michael Hunter: course.
Nathan Lindsey: is something new.
Michael Hunter: Okay. Then this is the design. And the buttons are on the next page. So, depends on the cost. So,
Nathan Lindsey: Costs are okay.
Michael Hunter: um we have one minute.
Ashley Depedro: One.
Michael Hunter: I think.
Ashley Depedro: No.
Michael Hunter: No.
Ashley Depedro: You have more.
Michael Hunter: More. Seven.
Ashley Depedro: You have still ten.
Michael Hunter: Next meeting. Thirty minutes. So hurry up.
Nathan Lindsey: Oh, that's us together.
Michael Hunter: You two stay here. Paint it.
Richard Leslie: Okay.
Michael Hunter: Now you have to. So I think it's clear. Check your mail. So
Ashley Depedro: Yeah.
Nathan Lindsey: Yes.
Michael Hunter: It has to be ready in the next meeting. So
Ashley Depedro: What?
Richard Leslie: Cookie.
Ashley Depedro: Okay.
Michael Hunter: Next meeting is called the detailed design. So Everyth everything has to be ready.
Ashley Depedro: Okay.
Michael Hunter: Thanks for your attention.
Nathan Lindsey: 'Kay.
Ashley Depedro: See you at the next meeting.
Nathan Lindsey: Bye bye. | Nathan Lindsey gave a presentation on the interface concept, discussing which buttons will be needed and then looking at some examples of existing remote controls. He suggested using a yellow case with rounded edges and the logo at the bottom, and large, clearly marked buttons. The interface expert informed the group that young people like curved shapes, soft materials and primary colours, and suggested making a hand-shaped remote in plastic and rubber. He talked about the possibility of using a scroll button, and the different chips which could be used. The group discussed using an LCD screen, but did not have enough information about costs to make a decision. Ashley Depedro talked about new trends, including the trends for spongy materials and fruit and vegetable themed products. The group had a discussion and decided to create two designs, one with an LCD screen and one without, and the interface designer drew them on the board. They put off making a final decision about using an LCD screen, scroll buttons and a menu button until they could find out about costs. | 1 | amisum | train |
Brian Landres: Good
Joseph Couper: G
Brian Landres: morning, Flores.
Joseph Couper: good morning.
Brian Landres: Marketing Expert.
Joseph Couper: Oh yeah.
Brian Landres: Right.
Joseph Couper: Are you ready? You should put the laptop uh right into the square.
Brian Landres: For the cameras
Joseph Couper: For i for the cameras, yes.
Brian Landres: Alright.
Joseph Couper: Good morning, Sebastian.
Floyd Pope: Good morning, Mister P_M_. How are you today?
Joseph Couper: I'm fine.
Floyd Pope: How was your business trip to Boston?
Joseph Couper: Um well, actually I didn't go,
Brian Landres: Geez.
Joseph Couper: didn't feel like it. So Do you want to open it as read-only. Um I guess I should close it here.
Brian Landres: You have the same message of uh Windows cannot um sen oh stand-by. Close the the
Dane Caverly: Okay.
Brian Landres: window.
Joseph Couper: Okay, the waiting
Brian Landres: So
Joseph Couper: is for our Marketing Expert,
Brian Landres: That's
Joseph Couper: Ruud.
Brian Landres: right. Ruud.
Joseph Couper: Um project kick-off.
Floyd Pope: Is there a schedule for this meeting?
Joseph Couper: Yes, there is actually. Um I will li list the agenda for today. For this meeting. Good morning, Ruud.
Dane Caverly: Good morning.
Joseph Couper: Uh it's important um
Floyd Pope: I shall close the door.
Joseph Couper: yeah, great. It's important that the laptops are um exactly on the square, um for the cameras. Okay.
Joseph Couper: Okay. Um we're here to develop uh a new product. Um I'm sure you've had a mail from our account manager
Brian Landres: Mm-hmm.
Joseph Couper: about it. Um and um this is the first meeting to to generate some uh uh some ideas about it. Um you are here in a specific role. Uh Ruud is here as Dane Caverly, Roo is here as Brian Landres and Sebastian is here uh in the role of Industrial Designer. Is that correct?
Floyd Pope: That's correct.
Brian Landres: Mm-hmm.
Joseph Couper: Okay. Um we're going to do um uh uh a little tool training uh for the tools we are going to use uh during uh the meetings we are going to have here. Um then I will tell you a little bit about my idea of the project plan, uh and we will have a discussion. Uh this meeting should take no more than twenty five minutes, so
Brian Landres: Alright.
Joseph Couper: we
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Joseph Couper: should keep that in mind.
Floyd Pope: Um is there any room for a little presentation? Uh maybe during the discussion uh
Joseph Couper: There is?
Floyd Pope: section?
Joseph Couper: Yeah, there is.
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Joseph Couper: No problem. Um okay, this new product we are are g are going to develop, um it's a remote control, a television remote control. Um and first of all it should be original, it should be trendy and user-friendly. Those are kind of easy um uh uh goals, um and I'm sure we can find more goals for the for the product we are going to develop. Um we will discuss uh later on more ideas about uh how the remote should look and how it sh it should function and
Brian Landres: Okay.
Joseph Couper: all those kind of things. The market, we should have a look at the market. Um we are going to use a a pred a project method uh during uh this development, um which consists of three different design stages. Uh the functional design, the conceptual design and the detailed design, um all of these stages um um mean that we do some individual work, prepare, and then uh meet to discuss our uh uh the the
Brian Landres: Progressions.
Joseph Couper: the progressions, yes. Um the first stage, the functional design um we are going to search for the user requirements, and we will um make a specific uh specification of that. Um the second is the technical functional design, um what effect should the remote have? Well in this case control t the the television
Brian Landres: It's for the
Joseph Couper: I
Brian Landres: vision.
Joseph Couper: think.
Brian Landres: Yeah.
Joseph Couper: Um and the last one is the working design. How exactly does it work in the technical sense. Um the other design stages, uh we will discuss that later. So we'll kop it keep it with the functional design. Okay, um before we think about remote control we will um work with some of the tools we have uh here. Um as you see now I can give a presentation. Um it's also possible to use this one as well. You can uh uh display pr uh two presentations if you want to. Um to um presentate, to show us uh a file you'll need to uh place it in your project documents folder, which is on your desktop, at least it should be. Um then we have this electronic white-board system. Um yeah, I will show that now. Um you can draw on the board using this pen. There are little um uh
Brian Landres: Sensors.
Joseph Couper: sensors, so do not grab it here, but a lit more a little bit more to the uh to the end. Um well, it it's on the um eraser now, so we click the pen button.
Joseph Couper: Okay, so not too fast writing. Um you can insert a new um slide or or white-board uh uh file um by either using the insert function or by clicking the next button or the blank button. It's quite the same. Um all our um whi um uh SMARTboard um notes should be kept in the same file. So do not m make a new file. Just use this one uh during the day. Um you can use the eraser to make something go away.
Brian Landres: But we all use the same white-board file
Joseph Couper: Yes.
Brian Landres: So we can work together on it while we're or
Joseph Couper: Yeah.
Brian Landres: should we only use it in?
Joseph Couper: Yeah, in the meetings, only in the
Brian Landres: Yeah,
Joseph Couper: meetings.
Brian Landres: okay.
Joseph Couper: It's really like like a regu
Brian Landres: Yeah, alright.
Joseph Couper: regular whiteboard.
Brian Landres: Yep.
Joseph Couper: Um you can choose the format, um sorry. Uh Let Dane Caverly see. Um Well I guess it's maybe because I'm not s uh pen selected. Yep. Current colour, you can choose another colour. And um for example black, and you c I can choose the line width. Um so now I d have a different line width and uh colour. Okay. Quite easy, do have any questions, just c ask Dane Caverly. Um to um oh well, I'm I wrote down the documents uh should be in the project documents folder if you want to uh discuss it with us. Um as a little training um I will ask Ruud first to draw uh uh your own animal on a new slide uh with uh a different colour and a different line width than the one uh now selected.
Dane Caverly: Okay.
Dane Caverly: Um green.
Dane Caverly: An animal. Okay. Um
Dane Caverly: Uh
Brian Landres: It's a bunny.
Dane Caverly: a wee rabbit.
Joseph Couper: A rabbit.
Floyd Pope: Alright.
Joseph Couper: Okay, well great. Um Roo, could you do the same please?
Brian Landres: But of course,
Joseph Couper: But
Brian Landres: Flores.
Joseph Couper: a different animal with a different colour and a different line width.
Brian Landres: Blank.
Joseph Couper: Sebastian is thinking about the animal.
Floyd Pope: I'm just uh guessing what should be my favourite animal.
Joseph Couper: Okay.
Brian Landres: Yeah, I'm think about it too. Format.
Brian Landres: Well, it looked more than a bunny than a cat, but it works, right?
Joseph Couper: It it should be a cat.
Dane Caverly: Yeah.
Joseph Couper: Okay?
Floyd Pope: Well, I'll give it a try.
Floyd Pope: Mm.
Joseph Couper: I'm guessing a horse.
Floyd Pope: Very good.
Brian Landres: With a very small legs.
Floyd Pope: I very good in drawing.
Brian Landres: You should feed that uh that animal.
Floyd Pope: Well, I guess you uh get the idea.
Joseph Couper: Yes, okay.
Floyd Pope: Beautiful.
Joseph Couper: Beautiful. Okay, so um you can use this at any time during the presentation if you want to. Um any questions well, just just let Dane Caverly know. Um okay, back to our project. Um the remote control we are going to develop um will have a selling price of about twenty five Euros. Uh the profit we are looking for for this product is fifty million Euros, which is quite a number. Um we uh we will focus this internationally, so the product will be sold um, if there is market uh interest, uh in in more than one country. And um the production costs should not be more than uh twelve Euro fifty, so we should keep that in mind by uh w w during the development, um because uh, well, those are important numbers. Um then the discussion, maybe the time for Sebastian to show his presentation.
Floyd Pope: Yes, um I have some technical uh issues which I would like to present to you uh before we start the discussion, because uh there might be some uh
Joseph Couper: Limitations.
Floyd Pope: influations influences.
Joseph Couper: Okay.
Brian Landres: Okay.
Floyd Pope: Okay?
Joseph Couper: Okay, great.
Floyd Pope: Okay. Um first about my role, role of Floyd Pope. I would like to think about uh the implementation of uh of things, and the technical possibilities and impossibilities. So if someone of you comes up with uh ideas, uh I'll try to translate them in technical functions, but uh there might be some impossibilities. So that's one. Uh I also will propose some uh um uh some implementations for that, but well, these are quite the same. Sorry about that. Um and I also will remind people of some new technical possibilities which are available and which might be interesting to implement in our product.
Brian Landres: Okay.
Floyd Pope: I have some uh initial ideas about some things um which are maybe nice to take with you in the upcoming uh discussion. One thing about uh interopera operability. Um I think a modern uh remote control should uh control a device diverse subset of equipment. Uh for instance, uh D_V_D_ players, cell phones, video and audio equipment. So one re uh one remote control for all your equipment.
Brian Landres: And for a cell phone?
Floyd Pope: Well, there should be some interoperabi
Brian Landres: Yeah,
Floyd Pope: interoperability
Brian Landres: okay.
Floyd Pope: between them.
Brian Landres: Yeah.
Floyd Pope: I think it could come in handy. We should discuss that. Um and we should think about the way how these things uh should communicate with each other. We're not uh living in the uh nineteen eighties anymore, so infrared is not uh is not really uh hot uh technical stuff anymore. But you should uh think about the things
Brian Landres: But
Floyd Pope: like uh Bluetooth.
Brian Landres: Yeah, but the infrared, it's uh, well, a little bit old-fashioned, if you would
Floyd Pope: Mm-hmm.
Brian Landres: call it like that.
Floyd Pope: But it's
Brian Landres: But
Floyd Pope: cost-effective.
Brian Landres: all the T_V_s are
Floyd Pope: Yes.
Brian Landres: uh equipped with infrared, so
Floyd Pope: Mm-hmm.
Brian Landres: y
Floyd Pope: Well,
Brian Landres: you you can
Floyd Pope: not all, not all. So that's the point.
Brian Landres: Most of them.
Floyd Pope: So
Brian Landres: Or you shou sh use a you should equip infrared and Bluetooth together
Floyd Pope: Maybe,
Brian Landres: in one
Floyd Pope: but
Brian Landres: remote.
Floyd Pope: that's uh something we should discuss
Brian Landres: Yeah.
Floyd Pope: and uh about every everybody should think about it. So that's just my role, I'll just uh give you uh everybody some technical input, and I think now the time is to have a little discussion about what uh the product should be and how it should look,
Joseph Couper: Yeah.
Floyd Pope: but take these things into account when you start the discussion.
Joseph Couper: Okay, so the the main por uh the main points you are uh telling us are focus on the inter uh operability,
Floyd Pope: Yes, so
Joseph Couper: and
Floyd Pope: one thing uh one remote control should uh control one or more uh pieces of equipment,
Joseph Couper: Okay, and
Floyd Pope: and
Joseph Couper: and
Floyd Pope: the
Joseph Couper: uh
Floyd Pope: way of communicating with these equipments.
Joseph Couper: Okay. Okay, good.
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Joseph Couper: Um that was your presentation?
Floyd Pope: That's it.
Joseph Couper: Okay, okay. Um okay. Great. Um I'll go back to my own presentation. Um Mm. Okay. Um I I do think it's time now to to discuss uh mm some things. Um Sebastian told us a few things about the technical implemen uh implications. Um there are other things like um how to make it trendy, which is I think uh um most uh Ru uh Ruud's uh role. Um the way how it should be controlled by the user, which is uh Roo uh r uh during this part.
Brian Landres: Mm-hmm.
Joseph Couper: Um so let's start with you. H how do you think the remote should um function for the user?
Brian Landres: Well, I had a few uh things in mind. Um well, the interoperability, just like uh Sebastian said, um the remote should work on different T_V_s or even different uh um Yeah uh, what is it, devices?
Joseph Couper: Yep.
Brian Landres: Um so i i I think it's a universal remote control for customers to buy just new in uh a store.
Floyd Pope: Yes, I think it should
Brian Landres: It's not
Floyd Pope: be
Brian Landres: for
Floyd Pope: something
Brian Landres: uh
Floyd Pope: like
Brian Landres: for
Floyd Pope: that.
Brian Landres: uh for uh Philips or whatever to buy our remote for their own product, right?
Joseph Couper: Okay, so we're we're going business to consumer, not we're we're it's
Brian Landres: Yeah,
Joseph Couper: not a
Brian Landres: I do I don't know that. It's no I have uh
Floyd Pope: We're
Brian Landres: don't
Floyd Pope: not
Brian Landres: have
Floyd Pope: developing
Brian Landres: the information
Floyd Pope: this
Brian Landres: for
Floyd Pope: product
Brian Landres: it.
Floyd Pope: for a specific vendor, are
Joseph Couper: No.
Floyd Pope: we? No,
Joseph Couper: No.
Floyd Pope: we're
Brian Landres: No,
Floyd Pope: just
Brian Landres: okay.
Floyd Pope: developing this product, and we want to sell it to a very broad uh public, so
Brian Landres: Yeah.
Joseph Couper: Yeah.
Floyd Pope: it should fit to every device.
Joseph Couper: Uh Ruud, y
Dane Caverly: Yeah,
Joseph Couper: do
Dane Caverly: I
Joseph Couper: you
Dane Caverly: think
Joseph Couper: agree?
Dane Caverly: I think they're right, yeah.
Joseph Couper: Okay. Okay.
Brian Landres: Um Well, the techni fu technical function uh what you said is just by pressing the button you should change the state of the T_V_. That's just the basic f technical function.
Joseph Couper: Yeah.
Brian Landres: So that was my really my part for uh this session. Um
Joseph Couper: So is that
Floyd Pope: Yeah.
Joseph Couper: ease of use or uh is that more like um
Brian Landres: Well, that's just the fu the technical function is pure what should the remote control do, wh what is his task uh
Floyd Pope: Mm-hmm.
Brian Landres: as an uh as an uh device. It just should change the T_V_'s
Joseph Couper: Okay.
Brian Landres: state. So that's it. Um but
Floyd Pope: And
Brian Landres: furthermore
Floyd Pope: you you see uh the buttons as a as a means of doing this?
Brian Landres: Yeah.
Floyd Pope: Or are there any o other
Brian Landres: Yeah,
Floyd Pope: controls?
Brian Landres: with buttons.
Floyd Pope: Are there
Brian Landres: Yeah,
Floyd Pope: only
Brian Landres: or
Floyd Pope: any other
Brian Landres: maybe
Floyd Pope: cont
Brian Landres: you want a touch-screen or
Floyd Pope: Well,
Brian Landres: But
Floyd Pope: I I've seen these remote controls with uh this little stick uh which you can move forward,
Brian Landres: Yeah.
Floyd Pope: sidewords.
Joseph Couper: Uh-huh.
Floyd Pope: You know these things. And um it's
Brian Landres: They're
Floyd Pope: very
Brian Landres: very vu
Floyd Pope: easy
Brian Landres: vulnerable.
Floyd Pope: for a user to to switch w yes,
Brian Landres: Yeah.
Floyd Pope: to to switch b uh between uh channels or uh change uh between tracks on a on a C_D_, on on a chapters, you know, on a D_V_D_ player. So maybe that's an idea, I don't know.
Brian Landres: Yeah. And for other user interface I had um, well, it's more industrial thing. Uh point at a T_V_, I think it's it's quite disturbing when you always have to
Floyd Pope: Mm-hmm.
Brian Landres: point directly to the T_V_, so you must point everywhere, so
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Brian Landres: maybe infrared
Joseph Couper: Maybe
Brian Landres: is
Joseph Couper: not even pointed.
Brian Landres: Yeah,
Joseph Couper: Yeah.
Brian Landres: just don't even point it, so in that case infrared should uh maybe uh be restriction to
Floyd Pope: Mm-hmm.
Brian Landres: that.
Joseph Couper: Okay
Floyd Pope: Uh
Joseph Couper: Uh
Floyd Pope: is that uh are there restriction for the range, the operating range too? So when you're not able to point at the device um
Brian Landres: Yeah, if you
Floyd Pope: the
Brian Landres: g
Floyd Pope: range
Brian Landres: if you
Floyd Pope: is
Brian Landres: go to
Floyd Pope: very
Brian Landres: radio
Floyd Pope: limited.
Brian Landres: or or yeah. For T_V_, you're always in in the neighbourhood of a T_V_, so I don't think think the range should
Floyd Pope: Mm-hmm.
Brian Landres: be a problem to
Floyd Pope: Mm-hmm.
Brian Landres: that, but if you want to uh get it working with a radio, and you're in outside your garden with just one uh speaker,
Floyd Pope: Mm-hmm.
Brian Landres: then maybe the range should be uh
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Joseph Couper: Okay,
Brian Landres: But
Joseph Couper: gentlemen, um uh just a reminder, we d we have five minutes left for
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Joseph Couper: this meeting
Brian Landres: Yeah.
Joseph Couper: um
Brian Landres: Two more things.
Joseph Couper: okay.
Brian Landres: Um You should able to feel the buttons without uh it mis um you have to know what you do without looking at the buttons, so it should be as user interface um for feeling should be uh good to understand. You
Joseph Couper: Okay,
Brian Landres: must feel
Joseph Couper: s
Brian Landres: the buttons for
Joseph Couper: yeah.
Brian Landres: volume or whatever, I think.
Joseph Couper: Yeah.
Brian Landres: And of course you don't always know where all buttons are, so it should be visible al um in dark too. So
Joseph Couper: Okay.
Brian Landres: when it's dark Those are two really uh user interface
Joseph Couper: Uh I'll write down glow in the dark.
Brian Landres: Yeah. That's
Joseph Couper: Is tha
Brian Landres: perfect.
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Joseph Couper: Okay. Okay,
Floyd Pope: Do
Joseph Couper: um
Floyd Pope: do you
Joseph Couper: uh I just want to hear uh Ruud's um input for this meeting. Um do you have anything already w um ab idea about how the market uh will respond to the such a product? Or what we should take um in account when developing such a product?
Dane Caverly: Uh I think most most things have already been said, like uh control multiple devices.
Joseph Couper: Mm-hmm.
Dane Caverly: And uh, yeah, infrared might be an issue.
Joseph Couper: Because?
Dane Caverly: Uh well, he said about n abo what he said about pointing.
Joseph Couper: Mm-hmm.
Dane Caverly: But uh lots of devices already use infrared. So implement that.
Joseph Couper: Okay. Okay.
Joseph Couper: Okay, Sebastian, did you have any other
Floyd Pope: Um
Joseph Couper: ideas?
Floyd Pope: well yes, I had, uh about three minutes ago, but I've seem to forget them forgot them. Um oh yes, I remember. Um you said something about visibility in the dark. Um
Brian Landres: Yeah.
Floyd Pope: uh would it be nice for a user to have display on this uh remote control, on which you can see functions? Which makes it easier to operate
Brian Landres: Yeah.
Floyd Pope: it.
Brian Landres: Well, maybe I um but
Floyd Pope: I
Brian Landres: it
Floyd Pope: I don't
Brian Landres: it
Floyd Pope: know.
Brian Landres: can be quite simple, you can just have white buttons
Floyd Pope: Mm-hmm.
Brian Landres: with a black mark
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Brian Landres: on it. The uh the the digits in
Floyd Pope: Mm-hmm.
Brian Landres: black. Uh then it's already visible in dark.
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Brian Landres: So it it don't have to be a lightning or or a fancy well,
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Brian Landres: it can
Joseph Couper: Okay.
Brian Landres: be for
Joseph Couper: Yeah,
Brian Landres: design,
Joseph Couper: yeah,
Brian Landres: of course.
Joseph Couper: okay, because because we wa we want to develop a trendy product.
Floyd Pope: Yes, but
Joseph Couper: So
Floyd Pope: there's a cost limitation too. Well, that's
Joseph Couper: Yeah,
Dane Caverly: Yeah.
Floyd Pope: more
Joseph Couper: twelve Euro fifty,
Floyd Pope: So
Joseph Couper: yeah.
Floyd Pope: that's a big problem, I think. I think the the financial part of this project uh implicates that it's not going to be a high high-end product. The
Joseph Couper: Okay.
Floyd Pope: cost price is very low. Um
Brian Landres: Just remind something. The digits of uh the the painting on the buttons should not fade.
Joseph Couper: Okay,
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Brian Landres: You have a m
Floyd Pope: Very
Joseph Couper: okay.
Brian Landres: uh
Floyd Pope: good point. Yeah.
Brian Landres: Always have s the soft buttons, always uh clear the the the paint on it. The marks.
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Joseph Couper: Okay, um I ha I have one point f um which which comes in mind now. Um uh d I think the device should either be rechargeable very
Floyd Pope: Mm-hmm.
Joseph Couper: easily
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Joseph Couper: um or it should not consume too much um power. Because it's very annoying if you need to change the batteries every s uh uh every other week.
Brian Landres: Yeah.
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Joseph Couper: So um maybe we could um for example uh only
Brian Landres: But um
Joseph Couper: light the buttons that are um
Brian Landres: Necessary,
Joseph Couper: uh applicable at that
Brian Landres: yeah.
Joseph Couper: moment or yeah. I dunno, it's uh that's more Sebastian's
Brian Landres: Yeah.
Joseph Couper: uh um
Floyd Pope: Hmm.
Brian Landres: But then Bluetooth uh might be problem. 'Cause I think Bluetooth uh
Floyd Pope: It's use uh a lot of uh
Brian Landres: Yeah,
Joseph Couper: Well
Floyd Pope: well
Joseph Couper: does
Brian Landres: I know
Joseph Couper: it?
Brian Landres: it from the cell
Joseph Couper: I'm
Brian Landres: phone.
Joseph Couper: not sure.
Floyd Pope: Well,
Joseph Couper: Uh
Floyd Pope: cell phones have uh integrated Bluetooth also and, well, it's it seems to work uh quite okay.
Joseph Couper: Yeah.
Brian Landres: But
Floyd Pope: technically
Brian Landres: you can't
Floyd Pope: it will
Brian Landres: you
Floyd Pope: be
Brian Landres: can't
Floyd Pope: possible.
Brian Landres: use Bluetooth all the time, twenty four hours a day.
Floyd Pope: No,
Joseph Couper: Okay.
Floyd Pope: you cannot.
Brian Landres: Does it
Joseph Couper: Gentlemen,
Brian Landres: It's over?
Joseph Couper: I'm
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Joseph Couper: afraid we do not have any more time. Um
Floyd Pope: Okay.
Joseph Couper: so we will go back to our own uh work. Um next meeting starts in thirty minutes and um, well, you know your o your individual actions or your personal coach will probably email you about th it. Um so this was it.
Brian Landres: Okay.
Joseph Couper: See you in thirty minutes.
Brian Landres: Great. | Joseph Couper opened the meeting and introduced the project, describing what the project would involve, the role of each participant and the agenda for the first meeting. He the demonstrated the equipment the group would be using, and the group practiced using the SMARTboard by drawing their favourite animals. Joseph Couper then went over the project budget. Floyd Pope gave a brief presentation about his role and his initial ideas for the project, suggesting that the remote should be used for multiple devices and that the group should consider using bluetooth rather than infrared. Joseph Couper then asked the others about their initial ideas. Brian Landres agreed that the remote should control multiple devices. They also discussed having glow in the dark buttons, using bluetooth instead of infrared and using a display and/or a joystick instead of conventional buttons. However, they were unsure about what the budget would allow. Joseph Couper suggested that the remote should be rechargeable or not use much power, but this might be difficult if using bluetooth. Joseph Couper closed the meeting. | 1 | amisum | train |
Timothy Rodgers: That's the same as uh on the top of it uh with the the round uh
William Kelly: Like
Timothy Rodgers: button.
William Kelly: this one.
Timothy Rodgers: But uh we don't uh we don't uh we do think it's um well
William Kelly: It's
Timothy Rodgers: what
William Kelly: important.
Timothy Rodgers: if with ease of use, w which prefers the which the the customer of
William Kelly: Uh
Timothy Rodgers: the
William Kelly: I
Timothy Rodgers: user
William Kelly: think
Timothy Rodgers: prefers.
William Kelly: th this is device which which has a learning curve. Um novice users u use this device as uh normal users use uh a c a remote control. And after a while they start to develop uh some skills in the the voice recognition functions, and then they will not use this dial as often. But other
David Wirt: Okay.
William Kelly: users who are new to this device need something like that. They n they need understand what uh channels and uh change the volume, so it's easier for them
David Wirt: Could could I see the scroll bar as as as a sort of shortcut?
William Kelly: Yeah, maybe
David Wirt: A
William Kelly: so.
David Wirt: a and
William Kelly: Yes,
David Wirt: the voice
William Kelly: it's
David Wirt: recognition as well, th maybe you could uh
William Kelly: Well,
David Wirt: could
William Kelly: it's
David Wirt: uh
William Kelly: it's it's another approach, it's more that our um. There are there are many ways of doing uh things uh on such a device.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: It's
David Wirt: Okay.
William Kelly: it's quite easy.
David Wirt: Okay, good. And and the case is is rubber?
William Kelly: Yes, rubber?
David Wirt: And the buttons?
Timothy Rodgers: Plastic
William Kelly: There are
Timothy Rodgers: or rubber.
William Kelly: plastic
Timothy Rodgers: Well,
William Kelly: or rubber.
Timothy Rodgers: yeah.
David Wirt: Okay, and uh the colouring?
William Kelly: Uh yellow with uh
David Wirt: with with grey or black.
William Kelly: grey or black or something like that. Whatever cost uh cost uh the least.
David Wirt: Okay, we'll we'll come to that later. Um okay. Anything else to add or
William Kelly: No. Uh maybe we should uh think about these buttons.
David Wirt: Yeah.
George Cervone: Well, you
William Kelly: But
George Cervone: could use two of them to um channels on the channel button, 'cause
William Kelly: Yes,
George Cervone: you have
William Kelly: but
George Cervone: to
William Kelly: it but these
George Cervone: assign
William Kelly: are tasks
George Cervone: two channel
William Kelly: that are only
George Cervone: new channels.
William Kelly: executed once, I think.
David Wirt: M uh
William Kelly: Or
David Wirt: yeah.
William Kelly: not?
David Wirt: M m but maybe you
George Cervone: You
David Wirt: want a button to uh for example the voice recognition, or
William Kelly: Well
David Wirt: train
William Kelly: okay.
David Wirt: the voice.
William Kelly: Okay, yeah, that's right. Or something
Timothy Rodgers: And
William Kelly: li
Timothy Rodgers: a button
William Kelly: like that.
Timothy Rodgers: for disabling the voice recognition.
David Wirt: Yeah al although by pressing the button for I n don't know two, three seconds, you could also say it you'd disable it
William Kelly: Yes.
David Wirt: with a little beep and
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah.
David Wirt: and but o okay, that that's not really really important.
Timothy Rodgers: That's the basic idea, yeah.
David Wirt: The basic okay.
Timothy Rodgers: Of our prototype.
David Wirt: Okay. Um you thought of some evaluation crit criteria?
George Cervone: Yes.
David Wirt: Okay.
George Cervone: Uh my name is not name but
David Wirt: You are nameless.
George Cervone: Uh well, I used the the uh documents. And these uh were the most important criteria. It should be. yeah,
William Kelly: Is it spongy?
George Cervone: that's uh how the fashion guys uh state it. Fancy look and feel. So
Timothy Rodgers: So just walk through it step by step. mean, is it fancy, everything I believe uh
George Cervone: Uh well
Timothy Rodgers: I
George Cervone: appar
Timothy Rodgers: believe it's fancy.
William Kelly: I believe it's fancy too.
George Cervone: Yeah,
David Wirt: No.
Timothy Rodgers: Oh,
George Cervone: So
Timothy Rodgers: sorry.
William Kelly: Okay.
David Wirt: Okay, so this these are the cr uh the criteria.
George Cervone: Yeah, I think these are the most important
David Wirt: Okay,
George Cervone: criteria.
David Wirt: well
George Cervone: So uh that's about
David Wirt: the
George Cervone: it.
David Wirt: then we'll switch to my presentation. Um
David Wirt: The production costs. The costs are not under Can I
David Wirt: Um this is the
Timothy Rodgers: Twenty two.
David Wirt: Yeah, it's it's
Timothy Rodgers: Yikes.
David Wirt: w way above um uh above the the the twelve Euro fifty. And what makes it very expensive is uh for example the solar cell.
William Kelly: Well it's
David Wirt: So
William Kelly: very expensive.
David Wirt: I guess we should skip that, because it's not that important.
William Kelly: Okay.
Timothy Rodgers: Why does the price and and the s oh, one uh exa
David Wirt: Yeah, the
Timothy Rodgers: yeah.
David Wirt: the price, the the number
Timothy Rodgers: The number
David Wirt: of items
Timothy Rodgers: of uh
David Wirt: and
Timothy Rodgers: yeah.
David Wirt: the the sum.
William Kelly: Okay.
David Wirt: Um well, this is what I would call our luxury model. Um
Timothy Rodgers: And and
David Wirt: if you
Timothy Rodgers: does
David Wirt: would
Timothy Rodgers: it
David Wirt: if you look at the uh w w w what we could do to make it more um to make it just between the twelve Euro fifty, um then I did the following changes. Twelve Euro forty cents I came up with by leaving out the solar cells,
William Kelly: Mm-hmm.
David Wirt: um by not using the voice recognition feature,
William Kelly: Mm-hmm.
David Wirt: because it's uh it's a four Euro uh addition to the price. Um Yeah, I believe Uh, push-button, well It makes it the thirteen yeah. Push-buttons are buttons are are not the most expensive, but do add extra cost.
William Kelly: Hmm.
David Wirt: So um yeah, th this design is not um within our price model.
William Kelly: Okay.
David Wirt: Um
William Kelly: But I'm afraid it's not complete. Because we use spec uh specic uh special materials, the last item. And you have not added one item there.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: So it's c way too expensive.
David Wirt: It's still too expensive, yeah.
Timothy Rodgers: But
David Wirt: Um
Timothy Rodgers: that's that's only for the buttons. So
David Wirt: I I guess
Timothy Rodgers: the button
David Wirt: if we
Timothy Rodgers: we
David Wirt: leave
Timothy Rodgers: can use
David Wirt: the
Timothy Rodgers: plastic.
David Wirt: if we leave this one out, um oh. And uh maybe not
Timothy Rodgers: And
David Wirt: use
Timothy Rodgers: the pla
David Wirt: the
Timothy Rodgers: uh
David Wirt: special form.
Timothy Rodgers: And a plastic b just plastic buttons,
William Kelly: But
Timothy Rodgers: a plas
William Kelly: it
Timothy Rodgers: uh instead of rubber.
David Wirt: It becomes a very dull remote
William Kelly: Yes.
David Wirt: control, I know. But it's the board decision. Um And um yeah.
William Kelly: Well, b basically it when when this is our only option, we should even consider changing the casing, because I think there's very little added value in
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: uh an enhanced case with these dull functions.
David Wirt: Yeah, I
William Kelly: So
David Wirt: know. Maybe we should look at an uh focus on another uh
William Kelly: Type of m maybe
David Wirt: Yeah,
William Kelly: another
David Wirt: m
William Kelly: market
David Wirt: uh maybe
William Kelly: segment.
David Wirt: not not all that fancy, but just way way more easy uh uh
William Kelly: Yeah.
David Wirt: um basic
William Kelly: Yes.
David Wirt: and uh m maximise the profits and um
William Kelly: That's maybe that's better.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: Maybe we could uh we should go for straight and simple,
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: but that's not what uh has been asked.
David Wirt: I know, I know.
William Kelly: So we should kick the board's uh Well
David Wirt: Yeah. Although I think we yeah, but we could still make uh a remote control that ap uh um applies um more to young people uh by giving it another colour already.
William Kelly: Hmm.
David Wirt: Um so it is possible to make uh uh a device that attracts a little bit more to young people.
William Kelly: Yes.
David Wirt: Um but uh I agree it's it's not a fancy high-tech uh device. Definitely not, no. It's not that innovative. Or however you s pronounce that. Um
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah, too bad.
David Wirt: so, okay. Um Oh, this is the wrong one. So uh that means redesign. We do not have the time o uh now to to redesign the product.
Timothy Rodgers: Mm-hmm.
David Wirt: Um but we can evaluate the process and um uh uh the satisfaction on how things went. Um I'm not sure if we need to evaluate uh the device first. I guess
George Cervone: Um well, since we're not gonna manufacture it anyway
David Wirt: Yeah. Yeah, that's true.
William Kelly: Well, maybe it's good to do it anyway, because if we
David Wirt: We
William Kelly: evaluate
David Wirt: l we can learn.
William Kelly: it, we we can also determine if our
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: objectives are good.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: So
David Wirt: I agree. Well
William Kelly: Is it fancy?
David Wirt: I d it
George Cervone: Uh
David Wirt: is it is
George Cervone: Yay. Is it? Is it fancy?
David Wirt: Yeah,
Timothy Rodgers: Um
David Wirt: I think
Timothy Rodgers: the yellow
David Wirt: so.
Timothy Rodgers: rubber,
William Kelly: I think so.
Timothy Rodgers: I think so.
David Wirt: You like the rubber, uh Roo.
Timothy Rodgers: I'm into it.
George Cervone: So uh one?
William Kelly: But
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: it's not that fancy.
David Wirt: No,
William Kelly: I
David Wirt: I'll
William Kelly: mean
David Wirt: I'll I'll give it a two.
William Kelly: I think uh I think it would have been more fancy if we used the titanium housing the casing. It would be
David Wirt: You
William Kelly: even
David Wirt: like
William Kelly: more
David Wirt: tita
William Kelly: oh, you really like titanium. I'm I'm into it.
David Wirt: That's a flavour as well.
William Kelly: It has flavour. Yes, that's right. You should taste it.
David Wirt: Right. Um
George Cervone: Is it uh
David Wirt: Yeah, I know, but but it but that's fancy in the way um I mean fancy has has a lot of
William Kelly: It has to do with fashion, I guess.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: So do
Timothy Rodgers: It's trendy
George Cervone: And
Timothy Rodgers: trendy,
George Cervone: w
Timothy Rodgers: fun
George Cervone: yeah,
Timothy Rodgers: yeah.
George Cervone: w what they want wanted was uh colours and soft materials. So
David Wirt: Yeah.
George Cervone: in that way
David Wirt: It applies. It
George Cervone: It
David Wirt: yeah.
George Cervone: it's fancy.
Timothy Rodgers: Well, just
William Kelly: Okay.
Timothy Rodgers: give it a two.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: Yes. I
Timothy Rodgers: It's
William Kelly: think
Timothy Rodgers: not the
William Kelly: I
Timothy Rodgers: ultimate
William Kelly: th I think
Timothy Rodgers: uh fancy
William Kelly: it would have
Timothy Rodgers: two,
William Kelly: been
Timothy Rodgers: but
William Kelly: I would have think uh it could have been more fancy by using the double-curved case. It would have been even more fancy, but we decided not to, because if we use a double-curved
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah, but that's sti that's
William Kelly: case,
Timothy Rodgers: uh
William Kelly: we could not use solar. So
Timothy Rodgers: Looking at the user uh needs, we only uh don't we don't have the double-curved case. We w we do have uh the rubber, we do have the colours. That's two out of three.
William Kelly: Yes.
Timothy Rodgers: So I believe uh we are close uh to
David Wirt: Yeah,
Timothy Rodgers: two.
David Wirt: I I agree.
William Kelly: Yes, I agree too. It's okay. We did yes, we did good.
George Cervone: Okay, and uh was it innovative?
David Wirt: Well, with the voice recognition feature and uh
Timothy Rodgers: But that's not in it.
George Cervone: Yep.
Timothy Rodgers: Ov or can we
David Wirt: No,
William Kelly: Well,
David Wirt: we
William Kelly: let's
David Wirt: are
William Kelly: let's
David Wirt: evaluating
William Kelly: this
David Wirt: this
William Kelly: product.
David Wirt: this uh design
Timothy Rodgers: Okay.
David Wirt: now.
William Kelly: So
David Wirt: This
William Kelly: I
David Wirt: prototype.
William Kelly: I I think it is. I think it's innovative.
David Wirt: Yeah.
Timothy Rodgers: And the scroll uh wheel. The solar not many remotes have the solar, I think.
William Kelly: No. It could have been a little bit more innovative u by using the kinetic uh energy source,
George Cervone: Yeah,
William Kelly: but
George Cervone: and
William Kelly: it's
George Cervone: uh
William Kelly: it's
David Wirt: That
William Kelly: way
David Wirt: would
William Kelly: too
David Wirt: have been a thrill.
William Kelly: yes, but
George Cervone: So uh also a
William Kelly: I
George Cervone: uh
William Kelly: think
George Cervone: two?
William Kelly: uh
David Wirt: Yep.
William Kelly: it's a two.
George Cervone: Is it easy to use?
David Wirt: I'm
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah.
David Wirt: not sure. I'm not sure.
Timothy Rodgers: Well yeah, the voice recognition of course is hard to learn, I think. Well, hard it's not for the for the e for the elderly.
William Kelly: Well,
Timothy Rodgers: They won't use it.
William Kelly: but there are two parts in this remote control. What you see here is is the basic part. Everybody can use it, so that's easy to use.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: That's for a novice user. When you have a more advanced, elaborate user, well, such a user really would like to explore all these additional functions. So in that in that way it is advanced,
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: and I think it's easy to use for for both uh types of users. So
Timothy Rodgers: I think
William Kelly: uh It's maybe it's not very uh
Timothy Rodgers: I
William Kelly: easy
Timothy Rodgers: think a three.
William Kelly: for
Timothy Rodgers: Wouldn't give it more.
David Wirt: Uh I'm doubting doubting as well. Um
George Cervone: Well the p the most important function is easy to use.
David Wirt: Yeah.
George Cervone: The the zapping, channel switching, volume. But the more advanced functions are probably a bit harder.
David Wirt: Okay. Uh two or three? Three? Wha wh what would be your guess? I mean
William Kelly: Okay.
David Wirt: ease of use um does not only apply to the most basic functions. It's the uh it's it's overall. Is the device easy to use?
William Kelly: Yeah, that's right. You're right in that, but I I guess uh an advanced user will will find the voice recognition function easy to use,
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: because he is already he or she is already an advanced user.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: So After
David Wirt: Um
William Kelly: all, I think personally I would give a two. But
David Wirt: Okay. Uh Roo, a three?
Timothy Rodgers: Yep.
David Wirt: Ruud?
George Cervone: Good question. Uh I'll go uh for the two.
David Wirt: Okay.
William Kelly: So, it's two, two and three. Two threes. So that's
David Wirt: So I could
William Kelly: ten.
David Wirt: make it
Timothy Rodgers: If
David Wirt: e easy?
Timothy Rodgers: you make it a four
William Kelly: So that's
Timothy Rodgers: it will be three
William Kelly: w
Timothy Rodgers: in general.
William Kelly: No, two and a half.
Timothy Rodgers: If he makes it a four.
William Kelly: Six
Timothy Rodgers: Not a three.
William Kelly: and four. Six and four is ten. Divided by four is two and a half. So
Timothy Rodgers: Darn. Nee.
George Cervone: Hmm?
William Kelly: Yes.
David Wirt: Roo.
George Cervone: Huh?
Timothy Rodgers: A seven, a three No.
George Cervone: Yeah.
Timothy Rodgers: A four
George Cervone: I
Timothy Rodgers: and
George Cervone: yeah.
Timothy Rodgers: a three together.
William Kelly: Four?
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah, you
George Cervone: Yeah,
Timothy Rodgers: have a two,
George Cervone: two,
Timothy Rodgers: he
George Cervone: two,
Timothy Rodgers: has
William Kelly: Two?
Timothy Rodgers: a two.
George Cervone: three
Timothy Rodgers: Three? And
David Wirt: No,
Timothy Rodgers: a three?
George Cervone: No.
Timothy Rodgers: Nee. I know.
David Wirt: Okay, but if I would say a three, then it's six, and four is ten.
William Kelly: Divided by four.
David Wirt: Divided by four is two point
Timothy Rodgers: Yes.
David Wirt: five.
Timothy Rodgers: So if you want to have the conclusion as a three three. Then you would make a four. If you fill out a four
William Kelly: That's
David Wirt: But
William Kelly: not
David Wirt: I'm
William Kelly: even
David Wirt: filling in a three. Does it will so it will be a two point five.
William Kelly: But that's not possible to fill in,
David Wirt: Yes,
William Kelly: so
David Wirt: it
William Kelly: we have
David Wirt: is.
William Kelly: to round it.
David Wirt: I have a veto. Exactly. It's not about the content, it's about okay, um
George Cervone: Is
David Wirt: is
George Cervone: it
David Wirt: it
George Cervone: easy
David Wirt: easy
George Cervone: to
David Wirt: to
George Cervone: find?
David Wirt: f Yeah, definitely.
William Kelly: Yes.
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah, we haven't re uh re uh really worked it out, but you
William Kelly: It
Timothy Rodgers: c you
William Kelly: it most
Timothy Rodgers: can
William Kelly: definitely
Timothy Rodgers: you
William Kelly: is
Timothy Rodgers: can
William Kelly: it's
Timothy Rodgers: just
William Kelly: very
Timothy Rodgers: say find
William Kelly: easy.
Timothy Rodgers: and he repeats find.
David Wirt: Yeah, or beeps or yeah.
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah, but
William Kelly: Yes.
Timothy Rodgers: that's the that's the the
William Kelly: Maybe
Timothy Rodgers: basic idea
William Kelly: Uh
Timothy Rodgers: of the the
William Kelly: I
Timothy Rodgers: speaker
William Kelly: I think
Timothy Rodgers: uh
William Kelly: I
David Wirt: I'm
William Kelly: think
David Wirt: here, I'm here.
William Kelly: something like that. Maybe you have to uh programme it once,
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: so to that l respond to uh a certain word or a
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: certain sentence, something
Timothy Rodgers: But even
William Kelly: like
Timothy Rodgers: without
William Kelly: where
Timothy Rodgers: it
William Kelly: are you, and then it will sing I'm here.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: So something like that. So
David Wirt: Well, I
William Kelly: I, th
David Wirt: uh we should not uh stay too long on this subject uh because of the time, but
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah.
David Wirt: I personally give it a one. Um Sebastian?
William Kelly: Yeah, George Cervone too.
Timothy Rodgers: George Cervone too.
George Cervone: Yeah, I agree.
David Wirt: Right, well. The feel of the remote control is spongy. Well, uh it can't be more spongy. So
William Kelly: Well, it can be. There are cases um in which the outside casing is um can be uh how d how do you prono is
Timothy Rodgers: Was
William Kelly: is
Timothy Rodgers: it one of our options?
William Kelly: moldable. No, it's not
George Cervone: No.
William Kelly: one of our option,
George Cervone: Uh
David Wirt: No
George Cervone: this
David Wirt: okay,
William Kelly: but
Timothy Rodgers: So,
David Wirt: but
Timothy Rodgers: in
George Cervone: this
Timothy Rodgers: the
David Wirt: but
William Kelly: when
George Cervone: was
Timothy Rodgers: in
William Kelly: you look
George Cervone: a most
William Kelly: in the market,
George Cervone: spongy option.
William Kelly: when
David Wirt: for the
William Kelly: you
David Wirt: options
William Kelly: look
David Wirt: given, it's the most
William Kelly: Uh
David Wirt: spongy
William Kelly: yes,
David Wirt: one.
William Kelly: but
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah.
William Kelly: that's not that's not uh what they are talking about, I think. Because we compare all these uh characteristics characteristics with uh market uh with
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: with the real market. So
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: there are uh remote controls out there which are a lot more spongy. They're
David Wirt: They're
William Kelly: out
David Wirt: out
William Kelly: there.
Timothy Rodgers: But
David Wirt: there.
Timothy Rodgers: I think in this case in this case we've done the best we could.
William Kelly: Yes,
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: but it's not good enough, so it's a two.
David Wirt: I'll give it a one.
Timothy Rodgers: I wan I'll take one.
William Kelly: You take one? What do you give it?
George Cervone: Well yeah, it depends, 'cause it's the most spongy we could
David Wirt: Yeah, I know, but you have
George Cervone: but
David Wirt: to name a fig uh a
George Cervone: yeah.
David Wirt: number. Because we need to go on in for the time.
George Cervone: Well, if I give it a one
Timothy Rodgers: It will be a
George Cervone: there'll
Timothy Rodgers: one.
George Cervone: be one hell of a calculation. So I'll just give it a two and make this a one point five.
William Kelly: No no no. Uh I'll I'll change it, I'll make it m my my mark will be a four.
David Wirt: You are okay. The remote control offers enough features. Well, Ruud, what what do you think about it?
George Cervone: Well, the basic layout doesn't offem offer much, but the voice recognition could add a lot. So
William Kelly: Basically
George Cervone: Yeah, depends.
William Kelly: it's it's completely programmable.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: You can add very m much functionality by uh using the voice recognition mode.
David Wirt: Yeah, I
William Kelly: So
David Wirt: know.
William Kelly: it's quite advanced.
David Wirt: What what we didn't talk
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah,
David Wirt: about
Timothy Rodgers: but
David Wirt: is
Timothy Rodgers: it
David Wirt: um
Timothy Rodgers: ha
David Wirt: uh
Timothy Rodgers: doesn't has the digits. I believe it's If you uh ask yourself it offers enough features, I don't I don't think it is it has all the features um a normal remote has.
David Wirt: I think it has.
George Cervone: Uh depends on what you
David Wirt: Yeah.
George Cervone: uh implement
David Wirt: Bec
George Cervone: in the speech
David Wirt: because
George Cervone: feat
David Wirt: you can um we didn't talk about it, but you do have uh remote controls that are able to adapt another signal.
William Kelly: Yes.
David Wirt: So, you place a a regular uh remote control in front of the other one, hit the one or the two or the three, whatever, and it r records the uh the um the
William Kelly: Has
David Wirt: the
William Kelly: uh the signals
George Cervone: Signal.
William Kelly: sent
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah.
William Kelly: to
David Wirt: signals.
William Kelly: it.
David Wirt: So you could uh uh uh enter any comment you like, as long it's able to as long as our device is able to reproduce the infrared signal. So I think th this uh this is uh a a remote control with a very high level of features.
William Kelly: Absolutely.
David Wirt: Although there are i a few buttons, but
William Kelly: Yes.
David Wirt: the inside is is quite
William Kelly: But
David Wirt: uh
William Kelly: that that's its
David Wirt: advanced.
William Kelly: power, I guess, because uh a regular programmable uh remote control contains, well, uh really a lot of buttons.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: At at least uh forty buttons.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: So it's it's quite s complicated to get uh to get used to. And this is quite s simple. You can
David Wirt: Yep.
William Kelly: use your voice to to programme it. It's
David Wirt: Yeah. Okay, um let's give it a number. I'll give it uh a one. For for the for this t uh type of market, I think it's a one.
Timothy Rodgers: I'll give a two.
William Kelly: Yeah, I'll give it a one.
George Cervone: Um I think think a one, 'cause v with a voice recognition you could add anything you want, so that's like um
William Kelly: Yes. I I've I think we've uh succe succeed in in developing a product that's actually quite good, but not for this kind of market, and not for this kind of price. So
David Wirt: Yeah. So high quality, low
William Kelly: Hmm.
David Wirt: acceptance. The product is is is uh b high qua uh has a high quality and and is uh advanced.
William Kelly: Yes.
David Wirt: But whether or not our clients are are um willing to pay twenty five Euros
William Kelly: Mm-hmm.
David Wirt: for this kind of device is doub is well, is not sure.
William Kelly: Mm-hmm.
David Wirt: D do you agree?
William Kelly: Yes, I agree.
George Cervone: Maybe
William Kelly: I
George Cervone: even because it doesn't look advanced.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: Yeah, okay.
David Wirt: Maybe
William Kelly: But
David Wirt: we should have a radar uh function.
William Kelly: Yes.
Timothy Rodgers: But we could couldn't uh what what's the selling price? Fifty?
David Wirt: Twenty
Timothy Rodgers: Uh
David Wirt: five Euros.
Timothy Rodgers: twenty five. And costs were twelve fifty.
David Wirt: Yeah.
Timothy Rodgers: But even now, if only our production costs w uh were exceeded the double, Think. Production cost was were t uh was twenty two?
David Wirt: Mm-hmm.
Timothy Rodgers: So uh selling price uh would be uh
William Kelly: M about fifty Euros.
Timothy Rodgers: yeah.
William Kelly: That's quite ex
Timothy Rodgers: That's
William Kelly: well,
Timothy Rodgers: price,
William Kelly: it's
Timothy Rodgers: but
William Kelly: not
Timothy Rodgers: w w
William Kelly: it's not very expensive for a remote control that
Timothy Rodgers: No.
William Kelly: that has this functionality.
Timothy Rodgers: An original remote control of any T_V_ kind, uh a Phillips remote control,
William Kelly: Yes,
Timothy Rodgers: y you
William Kelly: it's
Timothy Rodgers: pay uh
William Kelly: more than fifty Euros. It's quite expensive,
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah, I kn
William Kelly: yes.
Timothy Rodgers: I know uh from a few years ago, it it
David Wirt: Bu
Timothy Rodgers: it
David Wirt: but
Timothy Rodgers: costed hundred
David Wirt: well
Timothy Rodgers: Gilders.
David Wirt: yeah, I know, but you're paying for th for the brand, because there are uh remote controls which control your stereo, television, D_V_D_, C_D_
William Kelly: Yes.
David Wirt: player,
William Kelly: Yes,
David Wirt: for
William Kelly: but you can
David Wirt: under
William Kelly: you
David Wirt: twenty
William Kelly: c
David Wirt: five Euros.
William Kelly: Yes, but you can learn this thing, all these functions. And it's
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: easier to use because those uh remote controls don't offer voice recognition and this one does.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: So I think it's worth its price.
David Wirt: Okay. Um you had an overall rating. Um
George Cervone: Yeah, but uh
David Wirt: That's counting.
George Cervone: with these ratings uh
William Kelly: Well, it's it's about
George Cervone: should be about
William Kelly: one
Timothy Rodgers: Four
William Kelly: point
George Cervone: one point
Timothy Rodgers: six
William Kelly: five.
Timothy Rodgers: seven
George Cervone: s seven,
Timothy Rodgers: eight.
William Kelly: Something like
George Cervone: yeah.
William Kelly: that.
David Wirt: Okay.
Timothy Rodgers: Nine divided by six.
David Wirt: Okay. Um we'll go further on with the the rest of the evaluation.
David Wirt: About the project itself, not about the product. Um What did you think about uh the process, the project process? Ruud?
David Wirt: Try
William Kelly: Well
David Wirt: to translate that.
Timothy Rodgers: Hmm.
David Wirt: Any any other Uh,
William Kelly: Well,
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah,
David Wirt: Roo?
Timothy Rodgers: I think
William Kelly: I think
George Cervone: Ye
Timothy Rodgers: uh
David Wirt: Roo.
Timothy Rodgers: The process was good. But w um we weren't aware of the prices of the costs.
David Wirt: Yeah.
Timothy Rodgers: And and that was the the big deal.
William Kelly: Mm.
Timothy Rodgers: I if we knew that before,
William Kelly: Actually,
Timothy Rodgers: we c we
William Kelly: we had
Timothy Rodgers: could have made the the choice
David Wirt: Better
Timothy Rodgers: between
David Wirt: decision.
William Kelly: Yes.
Timothy Rodgers: what yeah.
William Kelly: We had we had too little information actually.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: So And uh um the the the well, looking at room for creativity, there was w way too the the choice
David Wirt: Less.
William Kelly: of components was way too narrow. So
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: there was not really a process of uh
David Wirt: So we could we we could be we could've been creative. But um
William Kelly: Well
David Wirt: it was tempered by the choice of components and the
William Kelly: Yes.
George Cervone: The prices.
David Wirt: the price.
William Kelly: Well, in the first meeting we we already were very creative. We we
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: thought of possibilities who are not possible uh with the the current uh offer of uh manufacturing components. So
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: We're tempered by that, yes.
David Wirt: Okay, Roo? Any other thoughts on that?
Timothy Rodgers: No, no.
David Wirt: Ruud?
George Cervone: I agree.
David Wirt: You agree, okay. Uh leadership.
Timothy Rodgers: Fantastic.
David Wirt: Okay, Roo's on for his promotion.
William Kelly: Yeah, okay.
David Wirt: Okay.
William Kelly: I think we're a good team.
David Wirt: I think so too, it's it's it's uh of course a laboratory environment. I missed it um to be able to contact you in between
William Kelly: Yes.
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah.
David Wirt: and uh say uh, hey Roo uh. Um
William Kelly: Well, I tried once, but that was not allowed.
David Wirt: Yeah. So um Yeah, but but si uh w w w when taken in account the the situation, uh I think we performed pretty well.
William Kelly: I think so too.
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah.
David Wirt: Yeah. Um the means, the SMARTboard, the digital pen. Did you like
William Kelly: Uh.
David Wirt: 'em?
William Kelly: The digital pen was okay, but SMARTboard was really bad.
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah.
William Kelly: It
David Wirt: Because
William Kelly: it's
David Wirt: of the response or
William Kelly: The response
Timothy Rodgers: Response
William Kelly: is
Timothy Rodgers: and
William Kelly: very slow and the possibilities are very limited. It's not accurate.
David Wirt: Okay.
Timothy Rodgers: Uh it it
David Wirt: Uh
Timothy Rodgers: has yeah. Yeah, it's not accurate. The p the pointing of the pen is not um the place where it it writes its um uh where it uh
George Cervone: Draws.
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah, where it draws. It's uh the drawing on on the b on the board is r right from the pen.
David Wirt: Okay, so it
Timothy Rodgers: So
David Wirt: it
Timothy Rodgers: uh
David Wirt: had to be um
Timothy Rodgers: You to take
David Wirt: better
Timothy Rodgers: in account
David Wirt: aligned,
Timothy Rodgers: that
David Wirt: or
Timothy Rodgers: your
David Wirt: what's
Timothy Rodgers: you
David Wirt: the
Timothy Rodgers: m
David Wirt: word? Uh
Timothy Rodgers: yeah uh
David Wirt: yeah.
William Kelly: Maybe it's it needs to be calibrateds.
Timothy Rodgers: It's too slow
David Wirt: It it was calibrated just before this meeting. Uh
William Kelly: It
David Wirt: the
William Kelly: is?
David Wirt: one before, the third meeting.
William Kelly: Okay.
David Wirt: So uh it's not the calibration, it's the thing itself,
Timothy Rodgers: Hmm.
William Kelly: Okay.
David Wirt: I think. Uh Ruud, w uh did you use the pen a lot? Or
George Cervone: No.
David Wirt: not at all? Not
George Cervone: Not
David Wirt: at all.
George Cervone: really.
David Wirt: Okay. I thought it was quite a handy
William Kelly: I
David Wirt: uh
William Kelly: I think
David Wirt: thing,
William Kelly: so too.
David Wirt: although I would like to see um O_C_R_.
William Kelly: Yes.
Timothy Rodgers: Yep.
William Kelly: Yes.
Timothy Rodgers: If it has O_C_R_, uh I think uh I would use, but uh I I just uh took notes
David Wirt: Yeah.
Timothy Rodgers: for myself and and and that's it. It w it w yeah. It was necessary for George Cervone to uh
David Wirt: To digitise them.
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah, type it.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: Mm-hmm.
Timothy Rodgers: I type faster than I write. So
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: But I think it's a great solution for uh for uh a known problem, uh writing down some notes, some some inf uh information, and then um forgetting your notebook somewhere
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: and losing all that information. Because you have everything in one place and it's quite easy quite easy it's it's possible to make this information digital and share it with others in
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: a quite easy way. I think it's a good product. I only think it's th the the shape of the pen is too big.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: It's not quite uh ergonomic.
Timothy Rodgers: Economic.
William Kelly: Eco ergonomic.
David Wirt: I know. Yeah. Okay. Um What w Uh Ruud, what did you think about the SMARTboards?
George Cervone: Oh, I only use it to draw a rabbit,
David Wirt: Yeah.
George Cervone: so
David Wirt: Okay, you can't really
George Cervone: can't say
David Wirt: decide.
George Cervone: much about it.
David Wirt: No. I missed a feature to easily select uh a slide and uh distribute it to the laptops. I think that would be very easy if you could say okay, I want to use this for my own work or my own presentation further on or
William Kelly: Yes.
George Cervone: No, or the other
Timothy Rodgers: Yeah.
George Cervone: way around.
David Wirt: Or the other way around, that you
William Kelly: Yes,
David Wirt: could
William Kelly: yes.
David Wirt: show but m
William Kelly: That's
Timothy Rodgers: But
William Kelly: quite what
George Cervone: Yeah.
William Kelly: PowerPoint
Timothy Rodgers: y you
William Kelly: does.
Timothy Rodgers: can if
David Wirt: I
Timothy Rodgers: you
David Wirt: know.
Timothy Rodgers: save this image, you can open it in your shared work folder.
David Wirt: I know, but
Timothy Rodgers: So it's almost yeah.
David Wirt: I know, but we couldn't use that feature, so I missed it.
Timothy Rodgers: Yep.
David Wirt: We weren't able to do that. At least the um I wasn't explained how to
Timothy Rodgers: Mm-hmm.
David Wirt: do such
Timothy Rodgers: A
David Wirt: a th
Timothy Rodgers: and the function of of filling an an uh
William Kelly: An object,
Timothy Rodgers: an oval or
William Kelly: yes.
Timothy Rodgers: an an object.
William Kelly: Yes. The drawing
Timothy Rodgers: I
William Kelly: cap
Timothy Rodgers: it's not
William Kelly: capabilities
Timothy Rodgers: possible
William Kelly: are very limited.
Timothy Rodgers: yeah.
David Wirt: Okay.
William Kelly: And and uh w you were when you're using uh Windows, you're used to a certain interface and certain buttons, uh which you can use for drawing.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: And a lot of these buttons don't appear here. So
Timothy Rodgers: Oh
William Kelly: it's
Timothy Rodgers: it looks
David Wirt: Okay,
Timothy Rodgers: like
David Wirt: so
Timothy Rodgers: paint
David Wirt: y it it's
Timothy Rodgers: actually.
David Wirt: not even as advanced as paint.
William Kelly: Not not uh n not way.
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: It's quite uh limited.
David Wirt: Okay. Uh no. Yeah, the project is evaluated. Um but, well, we need to redesign uh
William Kelly: Okay.
David Wirt: the product.
William Kelly: Oh, very good, celebration.
David Wirt: Celebrate.
William Kelly: Pop
Timothy Rodgers: Great.
William Kelly: uh pop up the champagne.
Timothy Rodgers: It
David Wirt: Okay.
Timothy Rodgers: was a privilege working with you.
David Wirt: Um you're dismissed. No, I think we are uh ready.
William Kelly: Okay.
Timothy Rodgers: To private rooms?
William Kelly: I see some action over there.
David Wirt: Private room, Roo. That sounds quite scary.
William Kelly: Okay.
David Wirt: No, let's find uh the way to.
William Kelly: uh we're done, we're finished, I believe. So, are there any more cycles in this process? I think not.
David Wirt: I don't believe so. Well, maybe we'd get an email. Thank you for your
William Kelly: But um how much time did we get for this meeting?
David Wirt: Forty minutes.
William Kelly: And how much time is left?
David Wirt: A minute or or ten maybe. M
William Kelly: Ten minutes.
David Wirt: Yeah, ten or five.
William Kelly: Okay. Okay.
David Wirt: So, we can uh redesign our uh Uh I would like to
William Kelly: Well, I think we we we all know what the redesign should be. A simple, dull, uh one-coloured box.
George Cervone: And no added value.
William Kelly: No, it's
George Cervone: At
William Kelly: it's
George Cervone: all.
William Kelly: just the
George Cervone: So
William Kelly: same product that is already on the market.
David Wirt: Oh.
Timothy Rodgers: But you see the problem, y
David Wirt: Yeah.
Timothy Rodgers: you can't continue your uh your line. Well, it's fluffy alright. Spongy.
William Kelly: What is that?
Timothy Rodgers: A giraffe?
David Wirt: Yeah.
William Kelly: It's a giraffe eating a eating leaves from a tree.
David Wirt: It's blue
George Cervone: In
David Wirt: tongue.
George Cervone: interesting design.
David Wirt: Yeah. This is a new model. But
William Kelly: So you're actually promoting Bluetooth. Or blue tongue.
David Wirt: Blue tongue.
George Cervone: Oh uh it it does uh have a natural uh feeling. So
David Wirt: It's spongy.
George Cervone: Yeah.
David Wirt: That
William Kelly: Blue
David Wirt: is
William Kelly: tongue.
David Wirt: uh it's a new feature next to Bluetooth to um disable all Bluetooth devices.
William Kelly: Okay.
David Wirt: Um
Timothy Rodgers: Right.
William Kelly: Let's wrap it up.
David Wirt: Yeah, we're done here. Gentlemen, thank you for your cooperation.
William Kelly: Thank you Mister manager. Now, let's have uh a bottle of champagne.
Timothy Rodgers: Leave it here.
David Wirt: Yes.
Timothy Rodgers: That's alright. | Timothy Rodgers and William Kelly presented a prototype drawing of the remote control design. It can be used as a normal remote, but the speech recognition also provides a more advanced alternative interface. The speech recognition works as a finding mechanism as well. The rubber case is yellow with grey or black, with buttons either made of plastic or rubber. An extra button could activate/deactivate the voice recognition. The prototype proved extremely over budget. The main contributing factors were the solar cell and speech recognition. One way to compensate for the loss of features, but still attract their target group, would be to add more colour to the design. After the costing, the original prototype was evaluated on a scale of 1(excellent)-7(very bad). The criteria used were fancifulness (2), technological innovation (2), ease of use (2.5), whether it is easy to find (1), sponginess (1.5), number of features (1). Finally, the team evaluated the project process in terms of creativity (choices too narrow), leadership and teamwork (happy with it, but they missed communicating in between meetings), and means (SMARTboard was not satisfactory, but the digital pens were alright, but not too useful). The delay in providing costs of components was criticised. | 1 | amisum | train |
Fred Odom: Okay, good morning. This is our first
Adam Zepeda: Good
Fred Odom: team.
Adam Zepeda: day.
Mark Homer: Morning.
Kevin Kincaid: Morning.
Fred Odom: I'll be your Project Manager for today, for this project. My name is Mark will be giving this presentation for you to kick the project off. That's my uh that's the agenda for today. Well, of course we're new to each other, so I'd like to get acquainted first. So let's do that first, I mean Let's start with you, can you introduce yourself? You're our Marketing Expert.
Mark Homer: Yes. Um my name is Dirk Meinfeld. Um I will be uh Pr Project Mark Homer. And I will see what the user wants and uh what we can do uh with the new produ project product.
Fred Odom: Okay, excellent. And
Adam Zepeda: Nick
Fred Odom: User
Adam Zepeda: Broer,
Fred Odom: Interface
Adam Zepeda: User
Fred Odom: Yeah.
Adam Zepeda: Interface Designer I'm. going to uh look at the technical design from the uh user point of view.
Fred Odom: Excellent. Okay.
Kevin Kincaid: My name is Xavier Juergens, I'm the Designer, and there are three main questions that I have to find an answer to today. First one is uh what happens inside the apparatus, second
Mark Homer: Hmm.
Kevin Kincaid: is what is uh the apparatus made of, and the third is what should it look like.
Fred Odom: What should it look like? Okay.
Mark Homer: Hmm.
Fred Odom: Oh, let's kick it off. Oh, there we go. So, our new project is about we need design a remote control for television set, so, which has to be original, trendy and user-friendly. I took this off our corporate website. It's I think well it sums up what we need to do. We're inspired by latest fashion, not only electronics, but also the latest trends in clothes and interior design. That's why our product will always fit in your home. So apparently we need to um be very at um very open to what's currently hot in the market. So that's what you need
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Fred Odom: to do to bring us the latest info and
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Fred Odom: what people want. So So we put the fashion in electronics. So that's what we need to go for. Anyway, we'll take this project in three steps, three pha uh three phase of design. First step will be the functional design.
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Fred Odom: And that's basically what we're gonna do. Everybody has uh a piece of individual work and a meeting afterwards, so we can share information about So I'm gonna keep this short, since we had a technical problem. So skip through this. Uh. Okay. Every meeting we everybody can present their uh their views and everything, so to help with these, you have we have the SMARTboards here. We can use a regular PowerPoint presentation. I'm supposed to give you an introduction on this doodling board, so it's actually it's very easy. Like it says, very simple, you just take out the pen. Like you see here, I'll just take the take here. That's it, you just put it on the board. You see a pen here. You go here, just like using a pen. You can just draw whatever you want. It's like the eraser, can erase whatever you want. And so it will be easy just to illustrate your views, if you wanna change the format, you just either take out jus just like the pen, and whatever you want, your current colour, your line width, just to make the line bigger. So it should be really easy.
Mark Homer: Okay.
Fred Odom: This is to take the just take a new slide and back again. We're just gonna keep using this board all the time, so I think it will be it's very clear for everyone, I suppose. So I'll take this out. Okay. We'll use that later. Anyway. Yeah, just just just stuff that you wanna share, just put it in the in the project folder, like I put my presentation now. I'll put the the minutes of every meeting, I'll put them there too, so everybody can read up if they have to leave early or whatever. So next, been here. Well, gonna give the electronic white-board uh a shot. So basic idea is we have a blank sheet. Just try whatever you want, and like it says, draw your favourite animal. I think the creative genius should go first.
Adam Zepeda: The creative genius? Thank you very much.
Fred Odom: So, draw us your favourite animal.
Adam Zepeda: Well, I'm more into the technical aspects of drawing, so I'm not really good
Fred Odom: Draw
Adam Zepeda: at
Fred Odom: us
Adam Zepeda: drawing
Fred Odom: a technical
Adam Zepeda: animals,
Fred Odom: animal.
Adam Zepeda: but uh the animal which I Oh.
Fred Odom: Yeah, it's still erasing.
Adam Zepeda: Pen. Uh format. Else my animal will be like king-size. I pretty much like a dolphin, because of its uh its freedom basically. A head. actually worked with this. It's like uh it's a very Uh high-tech. Bit low-responsive though. Prefer pen and paper.
Fred Odom: So that's what we don't want. We want a high-responsive product. So It looks more
Mark Homer: Very
Fred Odom: like nuclear
Mark Homer: nice
Fred Odom: bomb.
Mark Homer: dolphin.
Adam Zepeda: It doesn't look like a nuclear bomb. This thing isn't doing what I'm What I want. So
Fred Odom: Let's go easy on it.
Adam Zepeda: Yeah, well it does look like a nuclear bomb. I'll just finish up real soon, because I'm
Adam Zepeda: So it doesn't really look like a dolphin, but then
Fred Odom: Anyway,
Adam Zepeda: again,
Fred Odom: it should
Adam Zepeda: this
Fred Odom: It
Adam Zepeda: is all new
Fred Odom: It's
Adam Zepeda: for
Fred Odom: supposed
Adam Zepeda: Mark Homer.
Fred Odom: to be a dolphin, you like the freedom that
Kevin Kincaid: Uh-huh.
Fred Odom: it that it represents.
Adam Zepeda: Like the ocean, like swimming. Do that in my spare time, so that's basically an
Fred Odom: What do you like? Okay. Well,
Adam Zepeda: Now we can forget
Fred Odom: our
Adam Zepeda: this
Fred Odom: Marketing
Adam Zepeda: ever
Fred Odom: Expert.
Adam Zepeda: happened.
Fred Odom: Show us an animal.
Mark Homer: Um an animal. I like
Fred Odom: Pick
Mark Homer: the elephant.
Fred Odom: a pick a pick a clean sheet. Oh.
Mark Homer: What?
Fred Odom: Take a clean sheet
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Fred Odom: first.
Mark Homer: Um
Fred Odom: Just press next. That's
Mark Homer: Oh
Fred Odom: it.
Mark Homer: yeah. Oh, a blank. Okay next, Free, I like the elephant. It's big, it's strong, so uh uh Oh, it's a little bit
Adam Zepeda: It's not
Mark Homer: You
Adam Zepeda: really
Mark Homer: have to
Adam Zepeda: that
Mark Homer: hold
Adam Zepeda: responsive,
Mark Homer: it, right?
Adam Zepeda: no.
Kevin Kincaid: Mm.
Mark Homer: Hmm. It's a beautiful animal.
Mark Homer: Oh, you have to p press it pretty hard. With a smile on it, it's very important.
Fred Odom: It's a cute elephant.
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Mark Homer: And uh not to forget its tail. Oh.
Fred Odom: It's a nice beard.
Mark Homer: Yeah, it's okay.
Adam Zepeda: And you
Mark Homer: Yes.
Adam Zepeda: was making comments on my dolphin.
Mark Homer: I will beat the dolphin. No.
Fred Odom: Okay, so it's just a bee.
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Fred Odom: So I suggest you make us the elephant in the market. The big and strong player in the market.
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Fred Odom: This would be good.
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Fred Odom: Okay, excellent. On to the next one.
Kevin Kincaid: Okay.
Mark Homer: Uh yeah.
Kevin Kincaid: Okay, you should press
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Kevin Kincaid: next.
Fred Odom: Press next. Yeah, it's up there.
Kevin Kincaid: Okay.
Fred Odom: That's it.
Kevin Kincaid: Okay, well the animal I'd like to draw is a tiger.
Adam Zepeda: You picked a hard one, didn't you?
Mark Homer: Experience with the tiger. What? They are
Kevin Kincaid: They are really bad, my drawing
Mark Homer: Okay
Kevin Kincaid: skills.
Mark Homer: uh-huh.
Fred Odom: Sure looks smooth.
Mark Homer: Oh.
Kevin Kincaid: I'm not sure how the legs should go, but
Kevin Kincaid: Uh these are stripes.
Adam Zepeda: Got it.
Kevin Kincaid: I've picked this animal because it's very fast. It is uh it knows exactly what it wants. Uh it hardly ever wastes any resources.
Fred Odom: What does it want?
Kevin Kincaid: Uh well, basically uh it hunts for prey, but it does it always in a very well-thought way. Uh it knows exactly what it wants. It never kills an animal uh just for the killing, so it's very efficient. And it tries to do everything as fast as possible.
Fred Odom: Okay.
Kevin Kincaid: And it always goes for uh security, in seeking uh uh
Mark Homer: Mm.
Kevin Kincaid: a hide spot and uh and doing everything, security, speed and efficiency is important. And I think uh those
Fred Odom: I agree.
Kevin Kincaid: things we can use.
Mark Homer: Okay.
Fred Odom: Yay, I'm supposed to draw the animal next. I introduce to the world the amazing
Fred Odom: ant.
Mark Homer: Uh hard worker.
Fred Odom: Great team-workers.
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Kevin Kincaid: Yeah.
Fred Odom: Do everything to Uh really small, but together they're really strong. So I'm
Mark Homer: Yeah, yeah.
Kevin Kincaid: Oh.
Fred Odom: gonna give it a smiley face. Not sure where the p. Just put 'em here. Whatever. Think it need shoes. So
Fred Odom: That's the coolest ant ever.
Adam Zepeda: You've done this before, haven't you?
Fred Odom: I love to draw ants. It's my hobby. Anyway Nah. Just I think it's very representative what we drew, I guess. Like you take
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Fred Odom: just take your freedom and use a a trendy interface that you design for us. Just Yeah. You're supposed to make i make it different from uh from what other people have, and just make it a little distinct. Anyway. another beep to stop the meeting. See. Warning. Finish meeting now. Uh put this down. Examples. Well I guess we have a little little time extra, but Just a little quick discussion to to open open our work. So what do you guys think about The first idea is just very short. I'll start with you. What are y What are your first ideas for the new product?
Adam Zepeda: Well, I basically
Fred Odom: What
Adam Zepeda: had a question. Do uh Are we going to introduce a multi remote control? Is it just the T_V_ or do we want to
Mark Homer: Uh
Fred Odom: The project
Adam Zepeda: in
Fred Odom: I got was just for a T_V_ remote control.
Adam Zepeda: Just for T_V_
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Adam Zepeda: remote
Fred Odom: Yeah,
Adam Zepeda: control.
Fred Odom: I guess so.
Adam Zepeda: Okay. Well, I was
Mark Homer: But
Adam Zepeda: thinking about design remote control, with our uh motto and all. Uh thing to keep in mind is that we need to stick to what people are familiar with.
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Adam Zepeda: No rational changes or whatever, 'cause
Fred Odom: Okay,
Adam Zepeda: it
Fred Odom: so very
Adam Zepeda: revolutionary
Fred Odom: intuitive design,
Adam Zepeda: changes,
Fred Odom: I guess.
Adam Zepeda: yes. Uh we might have to consider other design aspects of our product. So that was something I wanted to add, and perhaps some usability aspect. T_V_ is becoming central in most homes. Do we want people who are disabled in any way to uh, yeah,
Fred Odom: Yeah,
Adam Zepeda: to be able
Fred Odom: we
Adam Zepeda: to
Fred Odom: want
Adam Zepeda: use it as well?
Fred Odom: I suppose we want almost everyone to be using it. So I think I mean, really disabled people, yeah, might be a problem, but I think it's a little take it into consideration. Um yeah. I think we really need to cut the meeting short. You have
Kevin Kincaid: Hmm.
Fred Odom: anything you
Mark Homer: Uh.
Fred Odom: wanna share quickly?
Kevin Kincaid: Only one thing uh that has to be added according to Mark Homer is uh the the material it is made of, it should be something light. That's
Adam Zepeda: Yeah.
Kevin Kincaid: it speaks for itself, but
Fred Odom: It
Kevin Kincaid: some
Fred Odom: should be
Kevin Kincaid: uh
Fred Odom: light, okay.
Kevin Kincaid: Yeah.
Mark Homer: Yeah.
Fred Odom: Um, let's see, where did I Let's skip that. Oh, this is it. Sorry, I skipped
Mark Homer: Selling
Fred Odom: this sheet.
Mark Homer: price.
Fred Odom: What do we This Quick What we're going to Selling price, twenty five Euros. That's for you. The production price, twelve and a
Kevin Kincaid: Okay.
Fred Odom: half Euros, approximately. Just go go for that. We'll
Kevin Kincaid: Okay.
Fred Odom: reach the uh reach that profit.
Adam Zepeda: Okay, well that's not that much
Mark Homer: international.
Adam Zepeda: to work with.
Fred Odom: No, it's not much to work on. I'm sorry, I skipped it. Anyways, that's Yeah, this is it. Do you have anything you you came up with yet? About uh marketing transfer, whatever?
Mark Homer: Um about what? Marketing?
Fred Odom: Marketing I'm not sure what you what you came up with yet. You have anything to share? Or else we'll cut the meeting just cut the
Mark Homer: Um
Fred Odom: meeting short since we're supposed
Mark Homer: no,
Fred Odom: to stop.
Mark Homer: not really yet, but
Fred Odom: Okay.
Mark Homer: I've some ideas and I will uh
Fred Odom: Anyways,
Mark Homer: say
Fred Odom: the
Mark Homer: it
Fred Odom: the
Mark Homer: uh
Fred Odom: personal coach will give you the your p your personal assignments and everything. So we'll just meet back in here thirty minutes.
Kevin Kincaid: Okay.
Mark Homer: Okay.
Fred Odom: I'm sure we have that.
Kevin Kincaid: Good luck everyone.
Fred Odom: Yeah, thanks for attending.
Adam Zepeda: Mm, good luck.
Fred Odom: I'll see you back here in thirty minutes.
Mark Homer: Okay.
Mark Homer: Yes. | The goal of the project is to design an original, trendy and user-friendly remote control for TV. The team comprises Fred Odom, Mark Homer, who is looking at user needs, Adam Zepeda, looking at usability, and Kevin Kincaid, working on the engineering and materials. The project will be completed with three further meetings: the following meeting concerns the functional design. Fred Odom gave a quick overview of the equipment available. The remote needs to be produced for 12.50 euros in order to be sold for double that amount. The whole team tried out the SMARTboard, by drawing their favourite animals. Afterwards, they discussed briefly their first ideas, including the use of light materials and usability concerns. | 1 | amisum | train |
Thomas Magruder: Did you manage?
Wayne Dingus: Yeah, sh not quite.
Thomas Magruder: Okay.
Wayne Dingus: You will uh
Thomas Magruder: Ah. Hello.
Andy Clark: Hello. So, are you d what were j you guys discussing?
Thomas Magruder: No, just uh ask if if he
Wayne Dingus: Woah.
Thomas Magruder: could manage.
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: Okay. Did you find anything new?
Wayne Dingus: Mm uh nothing special. Uh
Andy Clark: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Magruder: I have a lot
Wayne Dingus: Yeah,
Thomas Magruder: of
Wayne Dingus: the
Thomas Magruder: new information.
Wayne Dingus: for uh
Andy Clark: Great,
Wayne Dingus: the trendy
Andy Clark: great.
Wayne Dingus: uh stuff. A little
Andy Clark: Come
Wayne Dingus: bit.
Andy Clark: on.
Wayne Dingus: I uh now will show it.
Thomas Magruder: Hey, everything alright.
Ronald Parker: Well, I had
Thomas Magruder: Did you
Ronald Parker: just
Thomas Magruder: manage?
Ronald Parker: a little bit of time so
Thomas Magruder: Okay.
Wayne Dingus: Okay.
Ronald Parker: I hope it's something
Andy Clark: What's uh here.
Ronald Parker: uh we can work with. But
Wayne Dingus: Yeah, I had the same. It just uh
Thomas Magruder: Do you have a lot of
Wayne Dingus: shuts
Thomas Magruder: new information?
Wayne Dingus: itself down and
Ronald Parker: Hmm?
Thomas Magruder: Do you have a lot of new information?
Ronald Parker: Well, I heard that there was a new uh component speech recognition component,
Wayne Dingus: Oh.
Ronald Parker: which was
Thomas Magruder: That's true.
Andy Clark: And there
Ronald Parker: pretty
Andy Clark: we are.
Ronald Parker: much up to standard, so
Thomas Magruder: Huh.
Ronald Parker: we might use that I put that in my drawing, but again I didn't not have that much time. So
Thomas Magruder: Alright. I have a lot
Andy Clark: What
Thomas Magruder: of
Andy Clark: the
Thomas Magruder: new
Andy Clark: f oh, yeah
Thomas Magruder: information. I have
Andy Clark: uh.
Thomas Magruder: a complete list of
Andy Clark: It doesn't
Thomas Magruder: uh
Andy Clark: do what I want
Thomas Magruder: everything that
Andy Clark: it
Thomas Magruder: we can use, all the components that all av available.
Ronald Parker: Okay, that's just super. Let Wayne Dingus just
Thomas Magruder: I still don't have any finance information, but at least we have a lot more to go on now
Ronald Parker: uh
Andy Clark: Okay fine, that's too bad.
Ronald Parker: You need to
Andy Clark: Yeah, I have
Ronald Parker: start
Andy Clark: to start
Ronald Parker: it up first?
Andy Clark: our
Ronald Parker: Okay
Andy Clark: 'Kay. Okay, go again. Well second phase, conceptual design. It's fine, everybody knows what we're talking about So.
Wayne Dingus: Yep.
Andy Clark: take you past the minutes of last meeting again. Again you get your three presentate to see what you came up with. So too bad we don't have any finance information apparently. So that's too bad. So then we'll just have to d uh have to go on, you know, the information that we have to make the make final decisions on uh on a conceptual design. So Here we go. Anyway, last w last w what discussed last time, you all remember that, that we have to keep the electronics size in mind. Same goes for you. We have to have an easy design with big buttons which are durable and there are people actually spen willing to spend money to do to get more features and uh among those features L_C_D_ screen and voice recognition are very popular. So we have to make a move on that area, I guess. S especially s when when the new uh component is applicable in our uh product, we'll be fine. Anyways, well teletext wasn't important and that's what I took. And the consumer, yeah, we aim for young consumers, so that's fine. And well actually we yeah, we did need some more data on finances, but w yeah we still don't have that apparently.
Wayne Dingus: Mm uh-huh.
Andy Clark: That's too bad. Yeah, we need to im de we are going to implement the beep and the flash thing to recover your remote. So one of these interchangeable covers apparently which will make it a more fashionable product. So anyway. Guess we'll have to do this after the after the you give your presentations. So I'll just close this one now, and let's uh let's see,
Ronald Parker: Okay,
Wayne Dingus: I
Ronald Parker: what
Wayne Dingus: bet
Ronald Parker: t
Andy Clark: We have a lot to tell. You had a lot to go on. So uh how
Thomas Magruder: Yep,
Andy Clark: about
Thomas Magruder: that's
Andy Clark: you
Thomas Magruder: right.
Andy Clark: go first.
Ronald Parker: Okay, yeah.
Wayne Dingus: Oh okay.
Thomas Magruder: Let's see where my presentation is. Okay, um this I mentioned before. Every feature for our remote control needs to have their own operating electronic devices. We need to take care of that. Then warning, uh there has to be a chip in our remote control. And the chip requirements uh needed for a normal button uh is just a simple chip, uh scroll-wheel, and L_C_D_ is an advanced. Of course this is more expensive than this. So we have to decide on that in a minute.
Andy Clark: Okay.
Thomas Magruder: The available uh components for energy are, we have a basic battery, a hand an uh dynamo, like in uh old torches. We have a kin uh kinetic provision, then you have to shake the remote control to get the energy. And we have solar cells. I suggest that we uh decide on that one uh immediately. Then I have all lists. So My personal
Wayne Dingus: Um
Thomas Magruder: uh fav favourite is the kinetic provision because uh
Andy Clark: Does it provide
Thomas Magruder: I ha
Andy Clark: enough energy?
Thomas Magruder: I think so, yes.
Andy Clark: Also if if we were choose the the L_C_D_ option,
Thomas Magruder: Yes.
Andy Clark: would it give enough energy Okay,
Thomas Magruder: Yes.
Andy Clark: that's the
Thomas Magruder: Because
Andy Clark: just assume
Thomas Magruder: I had
Andy Clark: it
Thomas Magruder: the
Andy Clark: takes.
Thomas Magruder: information uh you take uh the remote control, you pick it up at least two times a day. So then it's already shaken and gives
Andy Clark: Well,
Thomas Magruder: energy.
Andy Clark: I'm not sure if it's
Ronald Parker: Is
Andy Clark: shaken
Ronald Parker: that enough?
Andy Clark: enough, because
Ronald Parker: Because I don't really see people
Thomas Magruder: Or
Ronald Parker: shaking their remote
Andy Clark: No,
Ronald Parker: control
Andy Clark: I don't
Ronald Parker: before
Andy Clark: think so,
Ronald Parker: using
Andy Clark: because
Ronald Parker: it.
Andy Clark: uh watches can go on kinetic
Thomas Magruder: Think
Andy Clark: energy because they move all the time. But I'm sure t I mean remotes lie
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: still I think like
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: ninety nine percent of the time. So I don't think that's a really good the other alternative were solar cells. I don't think that's applicable
Thomas Magruder: Other
Andy Clark: because
Thomas Magruder: options are solar
Ronald Parker: No.
Thomas Magruder: cells, hand dynamo and basic battery.
Andy Clark: I thin
Ronald Parker: And
Andy Clark: why
Ronald Parker: what
Andy Clark: why
Ronald Parker: does
Andy Clark: shouldn't
Ronald Parker: the
Andy Clark: we
Ronald Parker: hand
Andy Clark: take a basic
Ronald Parker: dynamo
Andy Clark: battery?
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: oh,
Wayne Dingus: A
Ronald Parker: sorry.
Wayne Dingus: rechargeable maybe.
Thomas Magruder: Only basic battery? Okay,
Andy Clark: Why
Thomas Magruder: but
Andy Clark: not?
Thomas Magruder: I think
Wayne Dingus: Re
Andy Clark: I mean
Thomas Magruder: this
Andy Clark: everybody
Thomas Magruder: is
Wayne Dingus: rechargeable
Thomas Magruder: not a r.
Andy Clark: everybody
Wayne Dingus: basi
Andy Clark: knows how to use that. It's it's common. So and it's available
Thomas Magruder: Yeah.
Andy Clark: everywhere. So why sh
Thomas Magruder: Yeah,
Andy Clark: mm
Thomas Magruder: but
Andy Clark: I
Thomas Magruder: I think
Andy Clark: think
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Thomas Magruder: this rules
Andy Clark: better.
Thomas Magruder: out our unit our rechargeable unit. This is really a
Andy Clark: Yeah,
Thomas Magruder: really
Andy Clark: but
Thomas Magruder: basic
Andy Clark: it's
Thomas Magruder: battery, a normal battery.
Andy Clark: Yeah, uh
Ronald Parker: Oh.
Andy Clark: it wasn't it wasn't in the options,
Thomas Magruder: Huh?
Andy Clark: a rechargeable m module actually.
Thomas Magruder: Okay, that's uh. Okay?
Andy Clark: Okay yeah,
Wayne Dingus: Yep.
Andy Clark: b you c of course you
Wayne Dingus: Basic.
Andy Clark: could place re re-chargeable batteries. But that's up to the consumer himself. So
Thomas Magruder: Okay, but then we don't offer a re-chargement function. That's what it says.
Andy Clark: Well, mm it's not in the list. So we cannot choose from it. So
Thomas Magruder: Exactly.
Andy Clark: Okay,
Thomas Magruder: Alright.
Andy Clark: will just
Thomas Magruder: Right.
Andy Clark: take regular batteries.
Thomas Magruder: Yep.
Wayne Dingus: Okay.
Thomas Magruder: Next one is curving. Uh we can make a model that has one curve, two or three. And uh
Ronald Parker: Curves being?
Thomas Magruder: uh th uh the shape. Of course uh the more
Wayne Dingus: Okay.
Ronald Parker: Of
Thomas Magruder: curves
Ronald Parker: the
Thomas Magruder: the more expensive.
Ronald Parker: remote control
Thomas Magruder: Exactly.
Wayne Dingus: But
Ronald Parker: itself,
Thomas Magruder: Yes.
Ronald Parker: okay.
Wayne Dingus: But It
Ronald Parker: I
Wayne Dingus: dep
Ronald Parker: was thinking along the line of one curve. I'll show that in my design.
Wayne Dingus: But
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: Okay, we'll get back
Ronald Parker: So
Andy Clark: on that
Ronald Parker: we'll
Andy Clark: later.
Ronald Parker: get
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: back to that.
Andy Clark: Just
Thomas Magruder: Hmm. I think one
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Thomas Magruder: curve is uh
Andy Clark: But
Thomas Magruder: fine.
Andy Clark: what were the implications
Wayne Dingus: Depends
Andy Clark: if you if
Wayne Dingus: on the
Andy Clark: put
Wayne Dingus: user.
Andy Clark: more curves it it's gets more expensive.
Thomas Magruder: More expensive.
Andy Clark: Okay,
Thomas Magruder: More difficult
Andy Clark: so I
Thomas Magruder: to
Andy Clark: think
Thomas Magruder: make.
Andy Clark: with with the extras that we had there it's two curves I suppose.
Thomas Magruder: Exactly.
Andy Clark: Okay.
Thomas Magruder: And I believe even that the r the number of options we have on putting things in it uh goes down
Andy Clark: Also decreases,
Thomas Magruder: with
Andy Clark: okay.
Thomas Magruder: exactly. Material. I have to offer a plastic, rubber, wood or titanium. Uh if we choose plastic, we cannot choose solar cells for energy. If
Andy Clark: Okay.
Thomas Magruder: we choose titanium, uh we cannot use more than one curve. But we don't
Andy Clark: More
Thomas Magruder: have that
Andy Clark: than
Thomas Magruder: so
Andy Clark: one
Thomas Magruder: fast.
Andy Clark: curve, uh yeah
Ronald Parker: Okay,
Andy Clark: okay.
Ronald Parker: I t
Andy Clark: We'll just go
Ronald Parker: I'd
Andy Clark: uh
Ronald Parker: go for plastic because
Andy Clark: 'Cause
Ronald Parker: I
Andy Clark: it
Ronald Parker: have
Andy Clark: yeah,
Ronald Parker: a
Andy Clark: I'm
Ronald Parker: couple
Andy Clark: not sure.
Ronald Parker: of curves in my
Thomas Magruder: Mm.
Ronald Parker: design.
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Thomas Magruder: Mm.
Ronald Parker: Well, g let's
Andy Clark: We'll discuss
Ronald Parker: just
Andy Clark: that
Ronald Parker: get
Andy Clark: later.
Ronald Parker: back
Andy Clark: Okay,
Ronald Parker: to
Andy Clark: we have
Ronald Parker: that.
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: so I think
Thomas Magruder: Okay.
Andy Clark: we can rule out um I'm not sure we can rule anything out. We'll do that
Thomas Magruder: No.
Andy Clark: when y when you get your design.
Thomas Magruder: But I think wood is not an option either.
Ronald Parker: No, wood's
Andy Clark: No, wood
Ronald Parker: not
Andy Clark: i wood's
Ronald Parker: an
Andy Clark: not
Ronald Parker: option.
Andy Clark: an option.
Ronald Parker: No.
Andy Clark: Well
Thomas Magruder: Okay.
Andy Clark: it it's stylish, but we can yeah,
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: but you can
Wayne Dingus: No.
Andy Clark: change your covers anyway.
Thomas Magruder: Okay. My personal thought was uh rubber because I had an email, I believe it was from you,
Andy Clark: Yeah, is
Thomas Magruder: uh
Andy Clark: it
Thomas Magruder: f
Andy Clark: keep in
Thomas Magruder: against
Andy Clark: mind that
Thomas Magruder: falling.
Andy Clark: it it's it's uh it fal uh remote controls fall a lot on the ground. So you don't want it to break. So either have rubber edges
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: or a rubber remote control is
Thomas Magruder: Okay.
Andy Clark: very durable. But
Ronald Parker: Yeah,
Thomas Magruder: Uh
Andy Clark: Continue.
Ronald Parker: but it doesn't
Wayne Dingus: No.
Ronald Parker: have to be unbreakable, because we
Andy Clark: Don't have to be un-breakable,
Ronald Parker: do need
Andy Clark: it's
Ronald Parker: to keep
Andy Clark: p it's
Ronald Parker: selling
Andy Clark: a
Ronald Parker: these thing
Andy Clark: it's not supposed to
Thomas Magruder: Mm.
Andy Clark: ju yeah, break after one use.
Ronald Parker: Okay,
Thomas Magruder: Yeah.
Andy Clark: I mean
Ronald Parker: well
Andy Clark: it
Ronald Parker: that
Andy Clark: they they
Ronald Parker: that's
Andy Clark: fall a lot.
Ronald Parker: definitely
Andy Clark: So
Ronald Parker: true.
Thomas Magruder: Mm. I think we have to decide on this anyway. Uh because if we make removeable covers, it has to be one of those mat materials. We have no more than this. So
Ronald Parker: Because it well, ru will rubber actually protect the remote control itself? Because
Andy Clark: Well,
Ronald Parker: it
Andy Clark: you have for if you if for example if you take hard plastic. If it falls it might crack. And rubber uh kind of
Ronald Parker: Yeah, but
Andy Clark: softens
Ronald Parker: then you buy
Andy Clark: the fall.
Ronald Parker: a new cover. But
Andy Clark: I'm
Ronald Parker: rubber
Andy Clark: not sure if it's the it's the entire cover you change. Uh, it's
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm.
Wayne Dingus: Are
Andy Clark: could
Wayne Dingus: are
Andy Clark: be.
Wayne Dingus: we focussi focussing
Andy Clark: You know
Wayne Dingus: on on the
Andy Clark: what, th we're focusing very much on the covers now.
Wayne Dingus: But
Andy Clark: we're going for the basic design. If we wanna expand our options, f be fashionable, then we can get changeable covers. But I think the basic
Wayne Dingus: But
Andy Clark: thing
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm.
Andy Clark: let's just rule out wood for now and
Thomas Magruder: Okay.
Andy Clark: continue.
Wayne Dingus: Not that but are we focussing on the uh younger people or the elder people?
Andy Clark: We're definitely focussing on the younger
Wayne Dingus: Younger,
Andy Clark: people, 'cause
Wayne Dingus: okay.
Andy Clark: that was
Wayne Dingus: Yeah,
Andy Clark: our
Wayne Dingus: that's okay.
Andy Clark: main goal.
Wayne Dingus: Nah, that's
Thomas Magruder: Alright. Then I proceed, but I need to know after this meeting. So
Andy Clark: Okay okay,
Ronald Parker: Okay.
Andy Clark: we will.
Thomas Magruder: Interface, uh I have four things to offer, pu uh normal push-buttons of course. Um uh we have a lot of expertise on that one. We have a large history, our company, on
Andy Clark: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Magruder: push-buttons. Scroll-wheels, uh those can be pushed as well, although that is more expensive. Um liquid crystal colour display and um What is this? Okay, and if we use rubber, I already mentioned that, we can only use rubber buttons. So rubber can only match with rubber.
Andy Clark: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Magruder: Which one of those are we gonna use? Push-buttons, that's b uh I think
Andy Clark: Evident.
Thomas Magruder: basic.
Andy Clark: Yeah, o of course we're gonna use. But I didn't
Ronald Parker: Yeah,
Thomas Magruder: Huh.
Ronald Parker: of
Andy Clark: I didn't
Ronald Parker: cour
Wayne Dingus: But
Andy Clark: go on the thought of a scroll-wheel actually. I'm still deciding
Thomas Magruder: No.
Andy Clark: on what what what could you use it for. Maybe
Thomas Magruder: I
Andy Clark: for
Thomas Magruder: think
Andy Clark: volume
Thomas Magruder: the channels.
Andy Clark: control. Channel, I think that would be annoying
Thomas Magruder: Oh.
Andy Clark: because it might accidentally scroll onto another channel.
Thomas Magruder: Yeah.
Andy Clark: I think a push-button for channel would be better. I mean it for volume control it's
Thomas Magruder: Huh?
Andy Clark: it's a smoother
Thomas Magruder: Huh.
Andy Clark: motion, you can just increase or decrease. But
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Ronald Parker: Yeah,
Andy Clark: not
Ronald Parker: but
Andy Clark: sure.
Ronald Parker: there
Andy Clark: For
Ronald Parker: is
Andy Clark: channels
Ronald Parker: a
Thomas Magruder: But
Ronald Parker: is
Andy Clark: will
Ronald Parker: it
Andy Clark: be good.
Ronald Parker: really necessary 'cause a normal
Andy Clark: I don't think so. I haven't I haven't
Ronald Parker: push-button
Andy Clark: taken it
Ronald Parker: can
Andy Clark: into
Ronald Parker: do
Andy Clark: consideration.
Ronald Parker: that
Thomas Magruder: Huh?
Ronald Parker: job.
Thomas Magruder: Oh.
Wayne Dingus: But
Thomas Magruder: Ah
Wayne Dingus: th
Thomas Magruder: so but
Wayne Dingus: the
Andy Clark: I
Thomas Magruder: it
Andy Clark: don't
Thomas Magruder: looks
Wayne Dingus: younger
Andy Clark: think
Thomas Magruder: cool.
Andy Clark: we really
Wayne Dingus: people
Andy Clark: need one.
Thomas Magruder: Mm
Wayne Dingus: my
Thomas Magruder: no.
Wayne Dingus: investigation turns out that the younger people want a little bit uh material
Thomas Magruder: Oh.
Wayne Dingus: that that
Thomas Magruder: Ah.
Wayne Dingus: is uh
Thomas Magruder: flashy
Wayne Dingus: spongy
Thomas Magruder: and yeah.
Wayne Dingus: and uh
Thomas Magruder: I think
Wayne Dingus: So
Thomas Magruder: would be cool, scroll-wheel. It's not that much uh if we take
Wayne Dingus: A
Thomas Magruder: a normal
Wayne Dingus: sc
Thomas Magruder: scroll-wheel without the pushing, then it's not expensive. We can do that.
Andy Clark: But why
Ronald Parker: Yeah,
Andy Clark: do
Ronald Parker: but
Thomas Magruder: Think.
Andy Clark: we need
Ronald Parker: why
Andy Clark: it?
Ronald Parker: would we use it?
Thomas Magruder: Ah we don't need it,
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Thomas Magruder: but it's uh it's
Andy Clark: If we don't
Thomas Magruder: design
Andy Clark: need it, why
Thomas Magruder: a design
Andy Clark: put it in your
Thomas Magruder: thing.
Andy Clark: why
Wayne Dingus: Yeah,
Andy Clark: put it
Wayne Dingus: you
Andy Clark: in your
Wayne Dingus: get
Andy Clark: in your if it's if it's not something people are looking for or is useful.
Wayne Dingus: No.
Thomas Magruder: I think they are looking for that. Of course we
Andy Clark: Are
Thomas Magruder: have
Andy Clark: they?
Thomas Magruder: uh a young target group. So they might find that
Wayne Dingus: Scroll-wheel?
Andy Clark: Yeah, but
Thomas Magruder: attractive
Andy Clark: if it's
Wayne Dingus: Uh
Thomas Magruder: in
Andy Clark: if
Wayne Dingus: I don't
Thomas Magruder: a remote
Andy Clark: it's
Wayne Dingus: know.
Andy Clark: not
Thomas Magruder: con
Andy Clark: useful, I don't think it I don't think it gives an extra
Wayne Dingus: Yeah,
Andy Clark: function
Wayne Dingus: that's it.
Andy Clark: to the remote. Anyway
Thomas Magruder: Okay. So push-buttons we will use. Uh L_C_D_ screen?
Ronald Parker: Perhaps. I
Thomas Magruder: Is that
Ronald Parker: have
Andy Clark: What
Thomas Magruder: s
Andy Clark: you
Ronald Parker: t
Andy Clark: what
Ronald Parker: I have
Andy Clark: what'd you
Ronald Parker: two
Andy Clark: get on
Ronald Parker: different
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: the L_C_D_ screen? Is it expensive? Does it
Thomas Magruder: chip in it. And that is more
Andy Clark: And
Thomas Magruder: expensive.
Andy Clark: how much more expensive is that?
Thomas Magruder: I
Andy Clark: Or
Thomas Magruder: have no idea. I have no absolute numbers.
Andy Clark: No
Ronald Parker: Okay.
Thomas Magruder: I
Andy Clark: absolute
Thomas Magruder: only have
Andy Clark: numbers, but it's just more expensive and takes more room I suppose in your in your
Thomas Magruder: Yeah, but
Andy Clark: design.
Thomas Magruder: I don't think room is really an issue.
Andy Clark: Don't think it's an issue, okay. Oh let's go for let's say because it is uh very hot in n our target group I think, we should take it take it t to consideration to build an L_C_D_ screen in it.
Ronald Parker: I have two designs, one including uh
Wayne Dingus: For the
Ronald Parker: an
Wayne Dingus: future.
Ronald Parker: L_C_D_ screen,
Andy Clark: Okay.
Ronald Parker: wh which is basically
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: the deluxe edition. And then I also have a standard edition, which wi we can also choose
Andy Clark: Which basically
Ronald Parker: to
Andy Clark: has
Ronald Parker: develop
Andy Clark: the same functionality,
Ronald Parker: too.
Andy Clark: but
Wayne Dingus: Yep
Andy Clark: lacks the L_C_D_ screen.
Ronald Parker: Exactly.
Andy Clark: Okay.
Ronald Parker: But
Andy Clark: We'll
Ronald Parker: we'll
Andy Clark: pick a we'll pick from uh we'll just combine everything later.
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm. Okay. Electronics, uh the first one is the chip. Uh that's no longer an option, it has to be an advanced one now. 'Cause we have the L_C_D_
Ronald Parker: Yep.
Thomas Magruder: screen. Then we have an infrared sender, I think that's basic, we cannot do
Ronald Parker: Basically,
Thomas Magruder: without.
Wayne Dingus: Yep.
Ronald Parker: it
Thomas Magruder: Otherwise it's not s a remote
Andy Clark: Mm-hmm.
Thomas Magruder: control. And we have the sample sensor and speaker, the voice recognition thing. Are we gonna do that or not?
Andy Clark: Once
Ronald Parker: Oh,
Andy Clark: again I was
Ronald Parker: I
Andy Clark: would
Ronald Parker: got
Andy Clark: ask you if it's expensive, but apparently you don't have any data.
Thomas Magruder: I
Andy Clark: So
Thomas Magruder: only have uh uh relative
Andy Clark: Well what d what
Thomas Magruder: information.
Andy Clark: was exact what you got on the on the
Ronald Parker: I
Andy Clark: new
Ronald Parker: got
Andy Clark: component?
Ronald Parker: an email that it's relatively small.
Andy Clark: That's small. So we can implement it.
Ronald Parker: Yes, let
Andy Clark: So
Ronald Parker: Wayne Dingus just
Andy Clark: why why if it's small and we can imp why shouldn't we?
Ronald Parker: Get back.
Thomas Magruder: Oh how did
Andy Clark: And
Thomas Magruder: you
Andy Clark: there's um
Thomas Magruder: That
Andy Clark: get
Thomas Magruder: goes also
Andy Clark: your mar
Thomas Magruder: for the scroll-wheel,
Andy Clark: marketing
Thomas Magruder: by
Andy Clark: report?
Thomas Magruder: the way.
Andy Clark: What was uh the last number of how many people were interested in voice recognition?
Wayne Dingus: Um uh
Andy Clark: Although it's hard for different countries of course.
Wayne Dingus: The most of them um
Andy Clark: But you have to programme it yourself, I suppose, with your own voice.
Wayne Dingus: Um uh more than uh sixty percent.
Andy Clark: More than sixty percent of the people would like
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: voice recognition.
Wayne Dingus: Mean of uh seventy percent I think.
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Wayne Dingus: Uh I'm I have to look it up.
Andy Clark: If it's small, if it's fits,
Thomas Magruder: Yeah.
Andy Clark: if if people like it, why not?
Thomas Magruder: Hmm. But don't
Andy Clark: So
Thomas Magruder: we have any w uh information about scroll-wheel? Scroll-wheel. If people
Wayne Dingus: No.
Thomas Magruder: would like that.
Wayne Dingus: No,
Thomas Magruder: That's strange, because that's the same
Wayne Dingus: only
Thomas Magruder: story. It's it's not necessary
Wayne Dingus: Ah. I don't
Thomas Magruder: like
Wayne Dingus: know.
Thomas Magruder: an L_C_D_, but it's just it adds something to the
Andy Clark: Yeah, but we got some data
Thomas Magruder: design.
Andy Clark: on people that actually are int are interested in that, and I
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: don't think a scroll-wheel offers new functionality,
Wayne Dingus: On the most
Andy Clark: whereas
Wayne Dingus: spee
Thomas Magruder: No.
Andy Clark: speech recognition and L_C_D_ screen
Wayne Dingus: But
Andy Clark: do offer new functionality in
Thomas Magruder: Oh
Andy Clark: your
Thomas Magruder: that's
Andy Clark: product.
Thomas Magruder: r But I think uh we now already have to uh implement uh an advanced chip.
Andy Clark: Uh I think
Thomas Magruder: So
Andy Clark: so, because
Thomas Magruder: it's
Andy Clark: if
Thomas Magruder: m
Andy Clark: I
Wayne Dingus: Yeah,
Andy Clark: think we're
Wayne Dingus: for
Andy Clark: specially
Wayne Dingus: the future.
Andy Clark: w if you're going maybe uh if you have the two editions you wanna wanna give out, probably you have one with uh with speech recognition and
Ronald Parker: Well, they b they basically can have speech recognition. I mainly focused
Andy Clark: Um
Ronald Parker: on the L_C_D_ uh aspect.
Andy Clark: Yeah, hold on a minute. Were were you we're finished? Or
Thomas Magruder: No, but that's that's okay.
Andy Clark: Oh. Because if there's something that
Ronald Parker: 'Cause you wanted to see them,
Thomas Magruder: There
Andy Clark: 'Cause
Ronald Parker: right?
Thomas Magruder: is
Andy Clark: have
Thomas Magruder: still
Andy Clark: did
Thomas Magruder: time.
Andy Clark: you have all the materials? Or everything
Thomas Magruder: Yes,
Andy Clark: that you
Thomas Magruder: this
Andy Clark: desc
Thomas Magruder: was uh the last M_S_. I have
Andy Clark: Okay,
Thomas Magruder: a clear
Andy Clark: so
Thomas Magruder: picture.
Andy Clark: uh just just go for design for now. Just m have a seat for a second. Uh We'll combine everything
Ronald Parker: So this
Andy Clark: after
Ronald Parker: is basically
Andy Clark: this.
Ronald Parker: the deluxe edition.
Andy Clark: Why is
Ronald Parker: I
Andy Clark: it
Ronald Parker: j
Andy Clark: s why is it squared?
Ronald Parker: Why is it square?
Andy Clark: Why did you pick square? Or
Ronald Parker: It
Andy Clark: uh not
Ronald Parker: 'cause it's
Andy Clark: square,
Ronald Parker: designy.
Andy Clark: but why is it yeah, sharp
Ronald Parker: It's basically
Andy Clark: corners.
Ronald Parker: it has some futuristic Potentially,
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: yeah. I don't really know. But I just
Wayne Dingus: People
Ronald Parker: thought that
Andy Clark: Looks
Ronald Parker: uh
Andy Clark: like
Ronald Parker: in
Andy Clark: a Star Trek
Ronald Parker: normal
Andy Clark: phaser.
Ronald Parker: remote controls you have like smooth curves and this and that, and this is something new, this is something different, something fresh.
Andy Clark: It's true.
Ronald Parker: And basically what you
Wayne Dingus: Ri
Ronald Parker: can see here is that it has a little, yeah, let's say gap which you can put
Andy Clark: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: your finger
Andy Clark: Or
Ronald Parker: in.
Andy Clark: Okay, so just yeah,
Wayne Dingus: So
Andy Clark: you
Wayne Dingus: only
Andy Clark: can rest
Wayne Dingus: r
Ronald Parker: So
Andy Clark: it on
Wayne Dingus: right-handed.
Ronald Parker: you
Andy Clark: your
Ronald Parker: can
Andy Clark: finger.
Ronald Parker: you can
Andy Clark: Okay.
Ronald Parker: hold it really comfortable, that's
Andy Clark: Mm-hmm.
Wayne Dingus: But
Ronald Parker: basically
Wayne Dingus: it
Ronald Parker: the
Wayne Dingus: but
Ronald Parker: idea.
Wayne Dingus: it's only right-handed then. Not
Ronald Parker: Or
Andy Clark: No,
Wayne Dingus: for
Ronald Parker: left
Wayne Dingus: the left.
Ronald Parker: hand.
Andy Clark: it
Wayne Dingus: Or
Andy Clark: just
Ronald Parker: I doesn't
Andy Clark: uh it's
Ronald Parker: really matter.
Andy Clark: a curve inside a thing.
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: So
Ronald Parker: As you can
Wayne Dingus: Where?
Ronald Parker: see, this is the
Wayne Dingus: Wher
Andy Clark: It's on the back.
Ronald Parker: remote control
Wayne Dingus: Oh in the back, okay.
Ronald Parker: Uh you can't really see
Wayne Dingus: Oh
Ronald Parker: it
Wayne Dingus: yeah
Ronald Parker: that
Wayne Dingus: yeah.
Ronald Parker: well, but this is the L_C_D_ screen.
Wayne Dingus: Okay.
Ronald Parker: So just imagine it goes that way.
Andy Clark: Yeah,
Wayne Dingus: Oh
Andy Clark: I think it's
Wayne Dingus: yeah
Andy Clark: okay.
Ronald Parker: Then
Wayne Dingus: yeah.
Ronald Parker: you can
Wayne Dingus: Okay.
Ronald Parker: see you can hold
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: it
Wayne Dingus: Yeah yeah.
Ronald Parker: in your left or in your right hand. And
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: I also made
Wayne Dingus: I
Ronald Parker: a
Wayne Dingus: thought it
Ronald Parker: quick image, 'cause I did not have that much time, of the standard edition which has basically the keys are pretty much the same.
Andy Clark: Keys are probably the n the number keys, I suppose.
Ronald Parker: Yeah. I had to do this really fast. So excuse Wayne Dingus for the uh inconvenience
Andy Clark: Okay.
Ronald Parker: here, but as you can see, the keys moved.
Andy Clark: Well, you can work on the actual concept or actual
Ronald Parker: Yeah.
Andy Clark: design later with him.
Ronald Parker: So these
Andy Clark: But
Ronald Parker: are basically the two types we have. So if we were to select the L_C_D_ screen, the transmitter here, you can see the light i
Andy Clark: Well, I think what you have to keep in mind is that um you're moving the the the number keys from the top. Uh in the the simple design you have them at a top, and the uh complex design you have them at the bottom. So it would that would give us a totally different design. So which actually making a whole different product instead of two different models. I think it would be very expensive to produce two whole different products.
Ronald Parker: Well we can
Andy Clark: So
Ronald Parker: shift that. But normally, as you can see there, we put the uh number buttons right on top. Whereas because we had the L_C_D_ screen here, we had to move them downward, so
Andy Clark: Yeah, uh
Ronald Parker: what
Andy Clark: or
Ronald Parker: you could say
Andy Clark: for
Ronald Parker: is
Andy Clark: example,
Ronald Parker: that
Andy Clark: why did you pick the mm the numbers uh all the way below, and the and the channels and volume
Ronald Parker: Because
Andy Clark: control
Wayne Dingus: Well
Ronald Parker: these are basically
Wayne Dingus: it it's
Ronald Parker: the functions
Wayne Dingus: yeah.
Ronald Parker: you use the most. So if you hold it in your hand like this, you put your finger in the gap, this is the m most easy part.
Andy Clark: Okay.
Ronald Parker: Bit.
Thomas Magruder: Hmm,
Ronald Parker: For zapping,
Andy Clark: That's
Thomas Magruder: I agree.
Andy Clark: fine.
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: cau
Andy Clark: That's
Ronald Parker: because
Andy Clark: fine.
Ronald Parker: people are zapping
Andy Clark: Just as long
Ronald Parker: most
Andy Clark: as you
Ronald Parker: of the time.
Andy Clark: tak took it into consideration what people would prefer. Uh, okay if
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: you all agree, I'm fine with it. But
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: Okay. So that's pretty much ha which I had in mind. As you can see here, this can be spaced for extra keys, which is the design
Andy Clark: Okay.
Ronald Parker: thingys.
Wayne Dingus: No it maybe it's better to look uh what the people want.
Andy Clark: Yeah,
Wayne Dingus: So I
Andy Clark: I
Wayne Dingus: can
Andy Clark: think
Wayne Dingus: uh
Andy Clark: we'll
Wayne Dingus: show my uh investigation.
Andy Clark: I think we're going towards the deluxe edition anyway, because that seems
Wayne Dingus: Yeah,
Andy Clark: to be
Wayne Dingus: maybe
Andy Clark: what the
Wayne Dingus: it's
Andy Clark: people
Wayne Dingus: better.
Andy Clark: want. But let's see what's
Ronald Parker: Yeah.
Andy Clark: what they want
Wayne Dingus: Especially
Andy Clark: now.
Wayne Dingus: for young people.
Andy Clark: Mm-hmm.
Wayne Dingus: Um where is that? Where is th
Andy Clark: That's mine.
Wayne Dingus: Oh. Uh
Andy Clark: No, you should send it to the f to the folder first.
Wayne Dingus: Yeah. Mm
Andy Clark: Okay
Wayne Dingus: I forgot
Andy Clark: um,
Wayne Dingus: that.
Andy Clark: let's just assume we go to forty one.
Wayne Dingus: Okay, now it must be there. Yeah, here it is. Oh yeah.
Wayne Dingus: Okay, uh the investigation turns out that the most appear uh people want um um uh look and feel likes is uh uh the s the same as before, but it must be w a little bit fancier than uh the the look of it. Um the second important thing is um the it must be uh technol technological uh innova vative. So that's the L_C_D_ screen is perfect, I think, and not uh
Ronald Parker: Speech recognition.
Wayne Dingus: Yeah, tha that's uh very important. And a third thing is um yeah, it's uh should be easy to use, so not not too much bu buttons and uh channel selection. I think that's uh what you showed is uh perfect. And what the pe young people want is uh in Paris and and in Milan uh it showed out that the fruit and vegetables are uh are trendy.
Andy Clark: Mm-hmm.
Wayne Dingus: Th they you s you see it in the clothes and everything. And um the contrast uh of it, it must uh the the buttons must a little bit spongy material. So uh
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Wayne Dingus: rubber, I think uh th that's
Thomas Magruder: No.
Wayne Dingus: the best.
Andy Clark: Mm-hmm.
Ronald Parker: Then
Thomas Magruder: Yeah,
Ronald Parker: rubber
Thomas Magruder: uh
Ronald Parker: would
Thomas Magruder: I agree.
Ronald Parker: be the best as a material
Wayne Dingus: No.
Ronald Parker: indeed.
Andy Clark: I think so.
Wayne Dingus: So
Ronald Parker: If
Wayne Dingus: we
Ronald Parker: that
Wayne Dingus: are
Ronald Parker: is
Wayne Dingus: uh
Ronald Parker: the uh
Wayne Dingus: we were focussing uh
Thomas Magruder: Okay,
Wayne Dingus: on the
Thomas Magruder: agreement.
Wayne Dingus: younger people.
Andy Clark: Okay.
Wayne Dingus: So the elder, yeah, they wanted a little bit of wood in it and uh that's uh th that's not uh important
Andy Clark: Okay,
Wayne Dingus: now.
Andy Clark: so we're definitely
Ronald Parker: It could
Andy Clark: going
Ronald Parker: be
Andy Clark: for
Ronald Parker: a c
Andy Clark: rubber.
Ronald Parker: it could be a
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: cover. But it's not.
Wayne Dingus: Yeah,
Ronald Parker: Our focus
Andy Clark: Let's just
Ronald Parker: is
Wayne Dingus: but
Andy Clark: go
Ronald Parker: the young audience. So let's
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: stick to that.
Andy Clark: Uh-huh.
Wayne Dingus: 'Cause uh n I I I I thought uh it makes a young uh classic remote with uh
Andy Clark: Nah, I think we're in this case you're losing the the focus on the
Wayne Dingus: Yeah,
Andy Clark: young group, because
Wayne Dingus: that's
Andy Clark: we're
Wayne Dingus: why I I d
Andy Clark: that's what
Wayne Dingus: uh
Andy Clark: we're focussing on. So I think
Wayne Dingus: decided
Andy Clark: the spongy feel gives us rubber.
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm.
Wayne Dingus: With a fruit uh
Andy Clark: Yeah, w th apparently
Wayne Dingus: cover ov or something
Andy Clark: Yeah,
Wayne Dingus: like that. Uh
Andy Clark: apparently yeah, maybe also yeah, I tend to disagree with with uh with a sharp form. I suppose it basi if you're uh saying fruits and vegetables, maybe it's supposed to be a little little
Wayne Dingus: Yeah,
Andy Clark: more round.
Wayne Dingus: in in form of an uh vegetable or an uh fruit,
Andy Clark: Yeah, for exa
Wayne Dingus: maybe.
Andy Clark: maybe like
Ronald Parker: Yeah,
Andy Clark: uh
Ronald Parker: but
Andy Clark: like
Ronald Parker: that's
Andy Clark: a
Ronald Parker: just
Andy Clark: pear
Wayne Dingus: And
Andy Clark: or
Ronald Parker: more
Andy Clark: something.
Ronald Parker: a se a seasonal,
Wayne Dingus: Oh, where is your
Ronald Parker: a trend thing.
Thomas Magruder: That's true.
Andy Clark: That's what
Ronald Parker: The
Andy Clark: we're doing.
Ronald Parker: idea now is is
Wayne Dingus: A
Ronald Parker: is
Wayne Dingus: trendy
Ronald Parker: that you can uh put a cover on it, for example, with fruit, like a shape
Andy Clark: Mm.
Ronald Parker: or whatever.
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: I think shape
Ronald Parker: But
Andy Clark: is
Ronald Parker: not
Andy Clark: is important,
Wayne Dingus: Here he
Ronald Parker: 'cause
Andy Clark: because
Ronald Parker: a
Wayne Dingus: here
Ronald Parker: n next
Wayne Dingus: you can
Andy Clark: they s
Ronald Parker: year
Wayne Dingus: put
Andy Clark: they
Ronald Parker: it
Wayne Dingus: a
Andy Clark: really
Ronald Parker: will it'll
Andy Clark: extend.
Ronald Parker: be something
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Ronald Parker: completely different.
Thomas Magruder: Oh,
Ronald Parker: And
Thomas Magruder: that's
Ronald Parker: then
Thomas Magruder: true.
Ronald Parker: you have your apple-shaped remote control, which is not trendy anymore. So
Andy Clark: Yeah,
Ronald Parker: I think
Andy Clark: but now
Ronald Parker: that's
Andy Clark: you have
Ronald Parker: more
Andy Clark: your
Ronald Parker: something
Andy Clark: your
Ronald Parker: you can
Andy Clark: like
Ronald Parker: focus
Andy Clark: your Star Trek phaser thing shaped control. So I I th
Ronald Parker: Well, you
Andy Clark: the
Ronald Parker: can
Andy Clark: edges
Ronald Parker: s
Wayne Dingus: Uh maybe
Andy Clark: are really
Wayne Dingus: it
Andy Clark: really sharp. I'm
Ronald Parker: What
Andy Clark: uh
Ronald Parker: you
Andy Clark: not
Ronald Parker: can
Andy Clark: su
Ronald Parker: do is smooth the edges indeed. But that will bring extra c expenses.
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm.
Andy Clark: Or maybe just make it make
Wayne Dingus: But
Andy Clark: it up into into a low a smooth curve instead of just less
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: sharp twist
Wayne Dingus: All
Andy Clark: on the outside.
Wayne Dingus: uh veg uh fruit and vegetables are round. So it's
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm.
Wayne Dingus: better
Andy Clark: I think I think there needs to be a little I think it's too too sharp. The edges are too sharp. The
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: bottom is fine of course if it's square. But maybe just th make uh the top a little round it off on the sides. So
Thomas Magruder: But I think,
Andy Clark: I mean
Thomas Magruder: according
Andy Clark: y
Thomas Magruder: to my information, this would be two curves.
Andy Clark: That
Wayne Dingus: Two?
Andy Clark: would
Thomas Magruder: We
Andy Clark: be
Thomas Magruder: have
Andy Clark: two
Thomas Magruder: one
Andy Clark: curves.
Thomas Magruder: left and one right, and that disables what was it again?
Wayne Dingus: But
Thomas Magruder: It's
Wayne Dingus: it
Thomas Magruder: some it's something that we cannot do then.
Andy Clark: One cur you could also make the curve go through of course. But that would make
Ronald Parker: Well
Andy Clark: make the top round.
Thomas Magruder: Okay, that's not a problem.
Ronald Parker: For the
Thomas Magruder: That's
Ronald Parker: gap.
Thomas Magruder: only for the titanium. We don't have.
Wayne Dingus: But it's that that's for
Ronald Parker: And we
Wayne Dingus: the
Ronald Parker: could
Wayne Dingus: comfort.
Ronald Parker: have one here.
Wayne Dingus: It's it's not for the trendy thing of it.
Ronald Parker: No, no no no no. What I'm just 'cause you mentioned that more curves the more expensive, so I'm just
Wayne Dingus: Yeah?
Ronald Parker: taking that
Wayne Dingus: Okay,
Ronald Parker: into account.
Thomas Magruder: Yes.
Wayne Dingus: yeah.
Andy Clark: But let's see, titanium would give us only one
Thomas Magruder: Then
Andy Clark: curve.
Thomas Magruder: w yeah, but we don't
Andy Clark: So but
Thomas Magruder: have
Andy Clark: we're
Thomas Magruder: that.
Andy Clark: not
Thomas Magruder: So
Andy Clark: d we're
Thomas Magruder: we have
Andy Clark: not
Wayne Dingus: So
Andy Clark: using
Wayne Dingus: the
Andy Clark: titanium.
Wayne Dingus: no.
Thomas Magruder: We have
Ronald Parker: Well
Thomas Magruder: no.
Ronald Parker: we picked rubber, right?
Andy Clark: Right, we did. So
Thomas Magruder: But they
Wayne Dingus: We
Thomas Magruder: uh
Ronald Parker: So basically
Wayne Dingus: m
Ronald Parker: what we can do is m
Andy Clark: Just doodle
Ronald Parker: make
Andy Clark: something
Ronald Parker: these
Wayne Dingus: form.
Andy Clark: on the board on
Ronald Parker: edges
Andy Clark: the left.
Ronald Parker: a little bit less sharp. But the problem then is that it will start to resemble m the remote controls as we have them today. We were looking at something fresh, something trendy
Andy Clark: Well actually, we're setting ourselves apart from by technology alone actually. So that let's see what you're doing.
Thomas Magruder: They th these wha are what they call the curves. This side,
Andy Clark: Oh,
Thomas Magruder: this
Andy Clark: okay.
Thomas Magruder: side, this is
Ronald Parker: Okay.
Thomas Magruder: how
Andy Clark: I don't
Thomas Magruder: they count.
Andy Clark: think like that. Not not really the curves on the on the side of the
Thomas Magruder: No
Andy Clark: remote.
Thomas Magruder: no. This is what they uh what they mean.
Ronald Parker: Okay,
Thomas Magruder: Okay, that's not
Ronald Parker: so
Thomas Magruder: really
Ronald Parker: that's basically
Andy Clark: Okay,
Thomas Magruder: a
Andy Clark: now
Thomas Magruder: good.
Ronald Parker: silly.
Andy Clark: I uh of course now I understand why they have more uh like um Why the curves um decrease the the um the size the electronics that can be inside. So Okay. I don't think the outside would be called as a curve really.
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Thomas Magruder: It's like this.
Andy Clark: I think it's for all the basic well, looking from the side anyway. Well, if you see what I have to come up with some designs fast anyway. So
Wayne Dingus: But you can
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Wayne Dingus: make uh if you want to use a fruit in uh in uh
Andy Clark: Okay.
Ronald Parker: But isn't
Wayne Dingus: Uh
Ronald Parker: the f the fruit like a cover thing, because we
Andy Clark: Well, you shouldn't focus on the mostly
Wayne Dingus: Hey,
Andy Clark: on the covers,
Wayne Dingus: you
Andy Clark: because lot of things we came up with, shouldn't be too really too much shouldn't
Wayne Dingus: You
Andy Clark: be
Wayne Dingus: can
Andy Clark: too
Wayne Dingus: make
Andy Clark: focussed
Wayne Dingus: it like
Andy Clark: on the covers because
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Ronald Parker: No,
Andy Clark: it's kind
Wayne Dingus: Like
Ronald Parker: but
Andy Clark: of an
Wayne Dingus: this.
Andy Clark: idea of our own, but we're not sure if
Ronald Parker: But
Andy Clark: we can
Ronald Parker: if
Andy Clark: actually
Ronald Parker: we put that
Andy Clark: make
Ronald Parker: directly
Andy Clark: that.
Ronald Parker: into the design, we limit ourselves extremely. Because it that's just for one
Andy Clark: That's
Ronald Parker: seasonal
Andy Clark: the one
Wayne Dingus: Well
Andy Clark: thing I'm also
Ronald Parker: trend.
Andy Clark: afraid of with this one because it
Wayne Dingus: Oh.
Andy Clark: the edges are really um they might
Wayne Dingus: As
Andy Clark: stick
Wayne Dingus: a
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Wayne Dingus: example.
Andy Clark: out on the on the side
Wayne Dingus: But
Andy Clark: for example. If you have
Wayne Dingus: I
Andy Clark: a
Wayne Dingus: d
Andy Clark: basic design, a little m a little smaller on the on the s on the edges, you could put more covers on it, y one one with square or um sharp corners
Ronald Parker: Okay,
Andy Clark: if you want to.
Ronald Parker: so that's
Andy Clark: So
Ronald Parker: well, that's
Andy Clark: M
Ronald Parker: probabl,
Andy Clark: just round it off a little, I guess, because
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: so we have more options
Ronald Parker: you'd just
Andy Clark: I suppose.
Ronald Parker: like it to go a little bit more like this.
Andy Clark: I think so because it looks leaner and
Ronald Parker: Okay.
Andy Clark: we should just go with that. Anyway,
Wayne Dingus: Hmm.
Andy Clark: you have all the time in the world to make to make the final design in a minute with him. So So we decided on what what did you guys wanna know again because this is um anyway, I'll fire up my thing. So so
Ronald Parker: Did
Andy Clark: we come
Ronald Parker: you
Andy Clark: to a decision.
Ronald Parker: present e everything you wanted to?
Thomas Magruder: Yep.
Ronald Parker: Okay.
Thomas Magruder: So I can uh qui
Andy Clark: Uh
Thomas Magruder: oh. I can quickly
Andy Clark: what
Thomas Magruder: make a conclusion
Andy Clark: the
Thomas Magruder: of what we have decided so far.
Ronald Parker: Uh we still need to decide on a couple of things you
Andy Clark: Ah.
Ronald Parker: you needed to know.
Andy Clark: Yeah. Okay, anyway. Uh energy, we choose regular regular batteries.
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: The chip is advanced because we have the advanced features. The case, it will be the material will be rubber, suppose. Wouldn't the b the design we talked about. Uh user interface, type. Well I think we took all the components separately what we want. Um let's see um supplements. I'm not sure what they mean by that. Anyway, um apparently you guys, you should work together on the final design, both on internal and external design. So Yeah, you should you should probably find out how the product will fall into the market, how uh
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: what's gonna happen with the final design as we have it now. So
Wayne Dingus: Yeah
Andy Clark: Yeah, of course you've got your specific instruction as usual. So
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: Wanna spend some more um I think we're in a pretty much in agreement actually, which
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: is good. So
Ronald Parker: Are we all in agreement about the, well, the primary structure of the of my design?
Andy Clark: Lef let's
Ronald Parker: Except for
Andy Clark: see,
Ronald Parker: the
Andy Clark: where
Ronald Parker: edges.
Andy Clark: the pen go? Here.
Ronald Parker: Like the keys there.
Andy Clark: Yeah uh open your thing again. Let's see what if you can come up with anything new. Um I'll just do a next one. So what would give us your ne your design would be the lights would be on top, right? Uh one
Ronald Parker: Yeah.
Andy Clark: on each one on each side.
Ronald Parker: To create a kind of disco effect when you That was basically
Andy Clark: Is
Ronald Parker: what
Andy Clark: it
Ronald Parker: w
Andy Clark: is it the lights for for finding the finding remote or lights that it
Ronald Parker: Light for
Andy Clark: that
Ronald Parker: the finding of the remote. We can also use one light for showing that the signal is being sent. But
Andy Clark: Yeah, I think that should just be a simple LED or something. Like that that's not that important of course. It just like a matter of a a beep if you pre that you just know that that there's context. So I don't think that's super important. But Hmm.
Ronald Parker: So we have the teletext we have here, we have the mute.
Andy Clark: Uh sh
Ronald Parker: L_C_D_ screen. This
Andy Clark: Oh.
Ronald Parker: is the on off button.
Wayne Dingus: And speech w recognition. Are we
Ronald Parker: Speech recognition, I
Wayne Dingus: We
Ronald Parker: where did I imagine. I did that pretty
Wayne Dingus: Little
Ronald Parker: much over
Wayne Dingus: uh
Ronald Parker: here,
Wayne Dingus: voice
Ronald Parker: so that you could
Wayne Dingus: uh
Ronald Parker: use it like this
Wayne Dingus: Record and a uh
Ronald Parker: and
Wayne Dingus: no.
Ronald Parker: speak to it. Then you have the uh extra keys for teletext, mute, two buttons which can be pretty much anything or nothing. We can also just not use them.
Andy Clark: Let's see, I'll just make
Ronald Parker: Main controls and a key-pad.
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: One light here. And just make it red now. But it could be any colour. So
Ronald Parker: Will be fine.
Andy Clark: Okay, whatever. Fine, anyway. What do we have here? M I'll make it um are we gonna use square buttons or round ones actually? Personally I would prefer round ones.
Thomas Magruder: Wayne Dingus too.
Ronald Parker: Yeah, but that
Wayne Dingus: Form
Ronald Parker: would this
Wayne Dingus: of fruit.
Ronald Parker: was just in
Wayne Dingus: It's
Ronald Parker: the design.
Wayne Dingus: better.
Ronald Parker: Because if you
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: Yeah,
Ronald Parker: I had
Andy Clark: for
Ronald Parker: a square design. So I had
Andy Clark: Okay.
Ronald Parker: square buttons. But in that case the round buttons would be
Andy Clark: Okay,
Ronald Parker: more appropriate.
Andy Clark: I assume it for so we take a r take a round power button right here. Whatever. Uh back to black. Uh not too big though. See this would be good. Um let's see. Are these for any extra controls?
Ronald Parker: Yeah. The
Andy Clark: Okay.
Ronald Parker: left one is teletext and the right one is mute. And these two buttons are or not
Andy Clark: Okay.
Ronald Parker: necessary or
Andy Clark: If we go for for round buttons in general, do we want to the menu key in the middle to be round? For example, if you let's see, put it this here. I think we'll go with the triangles that Come on.
Ronald Parker: Yeah, the triangles would be best indeed.
Andy Clark: Triangles are good. Yeah, they're a little too big now. But Anyway, okay. So do you want for example a round button in the middle or square one?
Ronald Parker: I personally think that a round b
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Ronald Parker: button looks bit silly, but
Andy Clark: I'm
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: not sure uh, I just just came up with it. This aligns nicely. So Okay. We'll just take the take the round button, suppose. Uh oh the square button, sorry.
Ronald Parker: Does everybody agree on that?
Wayne Dingus: Yep.
Andy Clark: I suppose
Thomas Magruder: I would prefer
Andy Clark: so.
Thomas Magruder: round. But doesn't
Ronald Parker: You
Thomas Magruder: matter,
Ronald Parker: prefer a round?
Thomas Magruder: doesn't matter.
Ronald Parker: Okay.
Andy Clark: Okay.
Thomas Magruder: That's not a big deal, think.
Andy Clark: So there's our numbers. Think we need an extra button here of course for yeah, like you had for the higher numbers. And you could include a button here for the mute, I suppose. For something else, just to
Ronald Parker: Yeah,
Andy Clark: mirror
Ronald Parker: you can.
Andy Clark: mirror
Ronald Parker: But it
Andy Clark: the effect
Ronald Parker: but it's not
Andy Clark: with this.
Ronald Parker: necessary, becau
Andy Clark: That's not necessary because it you can take this away, but there it looks like there's a hole there, just to mirror the effect. Okay, so we have
Ronald Parker: We could
Andy Clark: a
Ronald Parker: put
Andy Clark: few
Ronald Parker: our logo there.
Andy Clark: Nah, I think it it would be nice to put the logo here, for example, if you have some buttons here. We could put a logo here because it's very
Wayne Dingus: And what
Andy Clark: always
Wayne Dingus: about
Andy Clark: in your field of vision. If you're watching
Wayne Dingus: Oh.
Andy Clark: it, the L_C_D_ screen, blah blah.
Wayne Dingus: What about a button for your uh favourite channel?
Ronald Parker: Oh that
Andy Clark: Well
Ronald Parker: could
Andy Clark: we could
Ronald Parker: be
Andy Clark: we
Ronald Parker: that
Andy Clark: could include
Ronald Parker: b
Andy Clark: either
Wayne Dingus: Uh
Andy Clark: here
Wayne Dingus: yeah. With the extra controls.
Andy Clark: or here,
Wayne Dingus: Uh
Andy Clark: for example. But you think
Ronald Parker: Well
Andy Clark: here
Wayne Dingus: Uh
Ronald Parker: now
Andy Clark: or here?
Wayne Dingus: one
Ronald Parker: it's getting
Wayne Dingus: one set
Ronald Parker: a little bit too crowded up
Andy Clark: I know.
Ronald Parker: there. So
Wayne Dingus: Yeah,
Ronald Parker: Is your
Wayne Dingus: up uh
Ronald Parker: So it can basically be the button down below or one of the four buttons
Andy Clark: No, we could
Ronald Parker: up there.
Andy Clark: put
Ronald Parker: Because
Andy Clark: this one as favourite
Wayne Dingus: One of
Andy Clark: channel
Wayne Dingus: the four.
Andy Clark: for exam
Wayne Dingus: Uh, it's better than, I think.
Andy Clark: What
Ronald Parker: One
Andy Clark: are these
Ronald Parker: of
Andy Clark: for?
Ronald Parker: the four
Andy Clark: Okay.
Ronald Parker: is
Wayne Dingus: It's a favourite
Ronald Parker: better, I
Wayne Dingus: channel.
Ronald Parker: suppose.
Andy Clark: What?
Wayne Dingus: What? Nee, uh one of the four uh
Ronald Parker: Because it's
Wayne Dingus: It's
Ronald Parker: a little
Wayne Dingus: better
Ronald Parker: bit
Wayne Dingus: th
Ronald Parker: confusing to have twelve buttons down there, because you're only accustomed to eleven, I'd say.
Andy Clark: You're accustomed to eleven? My uh okay, have it your way. I mean, think this looks rather
Ronald Parker: Oh, we still need
Andy Clark: like
Ronald Parker: an okay
Andy Clark: like there's something
Ronald Parker: button.
Andy Clark: missing for example. I mean why wouldn't you include a 'cause there is a um a piece of electronics under there anyway. So why not
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: give it a function.
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: Let's say I mean could be anything.
Ronald Parker: Well, you could
Andy Clark: But
Ronald Parker: also
Andy Clark: th
Ronald Parker: shift the two buttons to be nicely aligned.
Andy Clark: No, I don't think because this is a zero. But you want
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: zero to be mis-aligned with the rest. Anyway, so this is the basic design, we wanna have um on and off what are we missing?
Ronald Parker: Oh,
Andy Clark: If
Ronald Parker: we're
Andy Clark: it
Ronald Parker: pretty
Andy Clark: looks
Ronald Parker: much missing
Andy Clark: um
Ronald Parker: an okay button, but we have a button up there
Andy Clark: Okay,
Ronald Parker: which is still
Andy Clark: so
Ronald Parker: free.
Andy Clark: we want the
Ronald Parker: So
Andy Clark: remote to be the s the side view actually, what I'm gonna draw. So Um probably think you want the curve to be here. So have your finger under here like this,
Ronald Parker: Yeah,
Andy Clark: I suppose?
Ronald Parker: pretty much.
Andy Clark: Okay. Just gonna be sh
Wayne Dingus: Hmm.
Andy Clark: Yeah. Want this straight or what? Let's keep it at this. So it would be like this. Do we want something interesting with it or see. Would give us a light here. Maybe it's boring. You want it curved or what? Maybe you want
Ronald Parker: Well, I think
Andy Clark: Should
Ronald Parker: it
Andy Clark: like
Ronald Parker: looks
Andy Clark: this?
Ronald Parker: better curved. But that's probably uh
Andy Clark: Will give us
Wayne Dingus: Mm.
Andy Clark: design
Thomas Magruder: Huh.
Andy Clark: problem because we have
Thomas Magruder: It can be
Wayne Dingus: Why?
Thomas Magruder: curved.
Ronald Parker: It can be curved, because
Thomas Magruder: Yes.
Ronald Parker: that yeah, it's a little bit more
Andy Clark: It can be
Ronald Parker: trendy
Andy Clark: curved.
Ronald Parker: to
Andy Clark: Okay?
Ronald Parker: be curved.
Andy Clark: I think so. That's why I asked you. Okay. So
Thomas Magruder: I would curve the whole actually.
Ronald Parker: Hmm?
Thomas Magruder: I would curve the whole. Like um like it hangs over your hand a little bit.
Andy Clark: Oh crap.
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Thomas Magruder: Then it will bounce and you don't drop it so easily.
Andy Clark: Yeah. Oh. Anyway, so you want to a little more like this?
Thomas Magruder: Yeah, something like that,
Wayne Dingus: Uh-huh.
Thomas Magruder: yes.
Andy Clark: And just s s
Thomas Magruder: Yes, exactly.
Andy Clark: Stop the curve here or continue it
Thomas Magruder: I think continue like that.
Wayne Dingus: Yep.
Thomas Magruder: Then there's also
Andy Clark: So we
Thomas Magruder: enough
Andy Clark: have our L_C_D_
Thomas Magruder: room for the
Andy Clark: screen.
Thomas Magruder: electronics.
Andy Clark: Let's see.
Ronald Parker: But
Andy Clark: In
Ronald Parker: it pretty much looks like a banana already.
Thomas Magruder: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: Uh
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Thomas Magruder: Let's make
Wayne Dingus: Perfect.
Thomas Magruder: it yellow
Andy Clark: Bana
Thomas Magruder: then.
Andy Clark: it's
Thomas Magruder: Uh
Andy Clark: banana vision.
Ronald Parker: It's fruit.
Wayne Dingus: Yeah,
Ronald Parker: Yeah.
Wayne Dingus: it's perfect.
Andy Clark: So you have your L_C_D_ screen right here, suppose. Um that would make We use the colours now. But Um
Thomas Magruder: Maybe once we can make a special edition in according with Chiquita. Have ourselves sponsored.
Andy Clark: You got sponsor, now you get a free one with every pack of Chiquita.
Thomas Magruder: Uh but it's a good trade-off for them if they can have their logo on it.
Andy Clark: So it would give the buttons
Ronald Parker: Or
Andy Clark: here.
Ronald Parker: they can design their own cover.
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm. They might
Ronald Parker: We
Thomas Magruder: wanna
Ronald Parker: could
Andy Clark: I
Thomas Magruder: be
Ronald Parker: set
Thomas Magruder: the
Andy Clark: suppose
Thomas Magruder: first
Ronald Parker: up a
Thomas Magruder: ones
Andy Clark: I suppose
Thomas Magruder: to
Ronald Parker: a
Thomas Magruder: uh
Ronald Parker: marketing
Andy Clark: we can
Ronald Parker: uh
Andy Clark: put
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: um
Ronald Parker: agreement.
Andy Clark: let's see. Um
Thomas Magruder: Oh, perhaps they can use it. Or give a special edition uh
Andy Clark: Uh I suppose
Thomas Magruder: with with
Andy Clark: we can put the batteries in here because it has the most space, for example.
Ronald Parker: Won't that be a problem with the L_C_D_ screen?
Andy Clark: I don't think so because it's the biggest part of the
Thomas Magruder: Mm.
Andy Clark: uh of the uh
Ronald Parker: Yeah, but the L_C_D_ screen probably needs quite
Andy Clark: Let's
Ronald Parker: the chip.
Thomas Magruder: I think this is possible.
Andy Clark: I think it's possible.
Ronald Parker: Okay.
Andy Clark: I think it's the best place yeah, you could also
Thomas Magruder: Huh.
Andy Clark: put 'em here. But
Thomas Magruder: It doesn't matter. You can actually uh place a chip for the L_C_D_ screen and at the bottom, and and wire it. Doesn't
Andy Clark: Okay,
Thomas Magruder: matter.
Ronald Parker: Okay, that's not a
Wayne Dingus: Okay.
Ronald Parker: problem.
Andy Clark: so
Ronald Parker: Okay.
Andy Clark: we put the batteries here. That's fine. Yep. Blah.
Ronald Parker: I think we get the idea.
Andy Clark: Um, any other com what what are we missing here? Something a speech recognition. Um where do we want the microphone, for example, to be? On the side
Wayne Dingus: Top?
Andy Clark: or on the or,
Ronald Parker: Oh,
Andy Clark: for
Wayne Dingus: W
Andy Clark: example, on top?
Wayne Dingus: On
Ronald Parker: basically
Wayne Dingus: there.
Andy Clark: Like here.
Ronald Parker: the idea that I had
Thomas Magruder: I think
Ronald Parker: was it
Thomas Magruder: on
Ronald Parker: to
Thomas Magruder: top.
Ronald Parker: be pretty
Andy Clark: To be
Ronald Parker: much in combination with the transmitter. 'Cause you can talk to it like this.
Andy Clark: Okay, I w thought
Wayne Dingus: No.
Andy Clark: maybe it's either be here or because it's mi it might interfere with the transmitter, I'm not sure. But 'Cause transmitter would be
Ronald Parker: Well,
Andy Clark: here.
Ronald Parker: the email said it was a quite a small component. So I don't
Andy Clark: Why uh
Ronald Parker: see
Andy Clark: once again,
Ronald Parker: that.
Andy Clark: like you said, the component can be somewhere at the bottom while we wire the microphone up there. Anyway. Um yeah, it could be either be here or make a double microphone.
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm.
Andy Clark: I wouldn't mind.
Thomas Magruder: It is, I believe, also able to talk.
Andy Clark: It's able to talk to you.
Ronald Parker: It's
Thomas Magruder: I have a
Ronald Parker: a
Thomas Magruder: sample uh sample sensor and the speaker sensor.
Andy Clark: A speaker sensor.
Thomas Magruder: Uh the speaker sensor we already have, but s I don't know what they exactly mean by a sample sensor. Could it talk back? Like uh g uh give confirmation or something. I think it can. I think if you have a a speech
Ronald Parker: Well,
Thomas Magruder: recognition
Ronald Parker: the
Thomas Magruder: component, then
Andy Clark: I
Thomas Magruder: a
Andy Clark: think
Thomas Magruder: s
Andy Clark: so, it
Thomas Magruder: speaking
Andy Clark: I think it could.
Thomas Magruder: component is not that hard to to put in either.
Andy Clark: Yeah.
Wayne Dingus: Mm-hmm.
Andy Clark: I mean it could be a all this stuff could be integrated into the L_C_D_ screen, which
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: you could navigate with this, I suppose. Navigate
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: through everything.
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: If
Ronald Parker: Yeah,
Andy Clark: you have
Ronald Parker: but do
Andy Clark: I
Ronald Parker: you
Andy Clark: think
Thomas Magruder: But
Andy Clark: you sh I
Ronald Parker: actually
Andy Clark: think the
Ronald Parker: need
Andy Clark: advanced
Ronald Parker: the remote
Andy Clark: options
Ronald Parker: talking
Andy Clark: should be
Ronald Parker: back?
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm.
Andy Clark: I think it sh
Thomas Magruder: Yeah.
Andy Clark: the advanced option could also be integrated in the L_C_D_ screen, of course, because you don't have to have a button for everything. You can just navigate
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: through th m your menu that you have here for advanced
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: options with this. Think that would be fine.
Thomas Magruder: Mm.
Andy Clark: So that's w m would be making use of the L_C_D_ screen.
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: Mm.
Thomas Magruder: We already have a sound component, by the way, for the beep. So
Andy Clark: Beep.
Thomas Magruder: beep.
Ronald Parker: Beep.
Wayne Dingus: Beep.
Andy Clark: Um, so the flashing of the beep, we have well anything. We could Yeah, but you could put a speaker or something on on
Ronald Parker: At
Andy Clark: the side
Ronald Parker: the back, yeah.
Andy Clark: for example.
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Ronald Parker: Like that. Or at the side.
Andy Clark: For
Ronald Parker: Which is.
Andy Clark: how do you draw that again? Uh whatever, looks stupid.
Ronald Parker: So what's basically edi the editi idea, sorry, now?
Andy Clark: I
Ronald Parker: We
Andy Clark: think
Ronald Parker: need
Andy Clark: this
Ronald Parker: to stay
Andy Clark: is
Ronald Parker: here
Andy Clark: pretty
Ronald Parker: and work out that.
Thomas Magruder: I'm not sure.
Wayne Dingus: Oh.
Thomas Magruder: I
Andy Clark: I
Thomas Magruder: should be
Andy Clark: think
Thomas Magruder: getting
Andy Clark: you have to stay
Thomas Magruder: new information,
Andy Clark: here
Thomas Magruder: I
Andy Clark: because
Thomas Magruder: guess.
Andy Clark: we are supposed to five minutes to finish the meeting. Oh, like my the info that I got was that you're uh we're gonna work on our own because you're gonna do the market market
Wayne Dingus: Yep.
Andy Clark: uh analysing I'm supposed to do the little work on the year-end report. So the project report.
Wayne Dingus: Okay.
Andy Clark: Hmm. Okay, I
Ronald Parker: Well,
Andy Clark: think we're
Ronald Parker: I suppose we'll
Andy Clark: everybody satisfied with the with the current design we have?
Thomas Magruder: Yes.
Andy Clark: So we're s
Wayne Dingus: Ah, that's fine.
Andy Clark: supposed to be rubber.
Ronald Parker: Pretty much.
Andy Clark: I think well, I think the
Wayne Dingus: Round.
Andy Clark: the remote control is gonna be black because we we forgot to
Wayne Dingus: Wh
Andy Clark: talk about I
Wayne Dingus: Why?
Andy Clark: mean the the company colours are important apparently. So we have
Thomas Magruder: But
Andy Clark: the
Thomas Magruder: we
Andy Clark: logo
Thomas Magruder: have
Andy Clark: up there.
Thomas Magruder: any
Andy Clark: So
Thomas Magruder: company
Andy Clark: are we gonna
Thomas Magruder: logo.
Andy Clark: base
Thomas Magruder: We have
Andy Clark: colour is black?
Thomas Magruder: yes, but and yellow.
Andy Clark: And yeah, of course we could use yellow buttons or yellow navigation or whatever.
Thomas Magruder: I would change. I would take a yellow
Andy Clark: Yellow
Thomas Magruder: remote
Andy Clark: but
Thomas Magruder: control.
Andy Clark: yellow control. It's
Thomas Magruder: To have it flashy, to have it it's for young people.
Ronald Parker: Yeah, but when
Andy Clark: Okay.
Ronald Parker: you use covers,
Thomas Magruder: Need do be different.
Ronald Parker: it
Wayne Dingus: It's the colour of
Ronald Parker: basically
Andy Clark: Well,
Wayne Dingus: a
Andy Clark: don't don't stick
Ronald Parker: easier
Andy Clark: yourself on the
Ronald Parker: to
Andy Clark: covers
Ronald Parker: have a
Andy Clark: right
Ronald Parker: n
Andy Clark: now.
Ronald Parker: have a neutral colour on the base.
Andy Clark: But don't stick yourself on the cover because
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Ronald Parker: No, we're designing the remote control now, but taking
Thomas Magruder: But we need to
Ronald Parker: that
Thomas Magruder: be different.
Ronald Parker: into consideration, it's better
Andy Clark: Nah.
Ronald Parker: to have a neutral base colour than to have a flashy
Andy Clark: Yeah, but the info. I think
Wayne Dingus: But,
Andy Clark: we should
Wayne Dingus: the
Andy Clark: go
Wayne Dingus: you
Andy Clark: with uh with the company colour because what specific
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm.
Andy Clark: info that I got from the project board. So I
Wayne Dingus: The young
Andy Clark: think
Wayne Dingus: people
Andy Clark: we should go
Wayne Dingus: want
Andy Clark: with that.
Wayne Dingus: uh a trendy uh
Andy Clark: They want
Wayne Dingus: remote
Andy Clark: something
Wayne Dingus: control.
Andy Clark: trendy.
Wayne Dingus: So
Thomas Magruder: Huh. It's
Wayne Dingus: colourful
Thomas Magruder: either
Wayne Dingus: uh is
Thomas Magruder: black cover with yellow buttons or vice versa. And I would say take a yellow cover and black buttons.
Ronald Parker: It is more trendy. That's
Andy Clark: I
Thomas Magruder: To
Andy Clark: think
Thomas Magruder: be
Ronald Parker: definitely
Andy Clark: we
Thomas Magruder: different.
Andy Clark: should th
Ronald Parker: true.
Andy Clark: then
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: take it take yellow. Take what you c yellow remote control. So let's see if if we can do the LED onto it.
Wayne Dingus: You have the basic colours, blue,
Andy Clark: Uh
Wayne Dingus: green,
Andy Clark: oh.
Wayne Dingus: red.
Thomas Magruder: Yeah, we have so many colours already. So
Andy Clark: You know what?
Wayne Dingus: Oh, it's
Andy Clark: I'm
Wayne Dingus: okay.
Andy Clark: not gonna do this.
Thomas Magruder: Oh no, that
Andy Clark: That's up
Thomas Magruder: I
Andy Clark: to
Thomas Magruder: think
Andy Clark: you guys.
Thomas Magruder: it's good thing to be different than
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Andy Clark: You doodle
Wayne Dingus: Colourful,
Andy Clark: a doodle
Wayne Dingus: you
Andy Clark: us a nice
Wayne Dingus: you
Thomas Magruder: Well
Andy Clark: nice design for for the next
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm.
Andy Clark: meeting, we'll be done. I think
Wayne Dingus: Yep.
Andy Clark: we're all happy now.
Thomas Magruder: I still
Andy Clark: Yeah.
Thomas Magruder: don't have
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Thomas Magruder: my scroll-wheel though.
Andy Clark: Stupid
Thomas Magruder: Uh
Ronald Parker: Oh,
Thomas Magruder: that's
Andy Clark: scroll-wheel.
Ronald Parker: where would you
Wayne Dingus: Yeah.
Ronald Parker: like to put it?
Thomas Magruder: Nah, that's true.
Andy Clark: 'Kay I'm not sure uh I really, I'm no I have no clue what we could use the scroll-wheel for.
Ronald Parker: Uh you could use it for
Thomas Magruder: No,
Ronald Parker: the channels
Thomas Magruder: forget it.
Ronald Parker: and
Wayne Dingus: Oh yeah.
Ronald Parker: for the volume. But
Thomas Magruder: No
Ronald Parker: it's
Thomas Magruder: look,
Wayne Dingus: You
Thomas Magruder: it
Ronald Parker: has
Wayne Dingus: can
Ronald Parker: no
Andy Clark: It takes space, a
Ronald Parker: real
Andy Clark: lot of space.
Ronald Parker: added value.
Thomas Magruder: No,
Andy Clark: And
Thomas Magruder: that's
Andy Clark: it
Thomas Magruder: not
Andy Clark: could
Thomas Magruder: my point. It's not because it's functional, but it's just to add to the design, to have it flashy.
Wayne Dingus: Ah
Thomas Magruder: It
Wayne Dingus: may
Thomas Magruder: it
Ronald Parker: Yeah,
Thomas Magruder: has
Ronald Parker: but if
Thomas Magruder: no
Ronald Parker: it
Thomas Magruder: function,
Ronald Parker: has
Thomas Magruder: I
Ronald Parker: no function,
Thomas Magruder: agree.
Andy Clark: I'm not
Thomas Magruder: I
Andy Clark: sure
Thomas Magruder: agree.
Ronald Parker: then
Andy Clark: if it if it has no function, why even put it there?
Thomas Magruder: Oh, so
Andy Clark: And
Thomas Magruder: many things
Wayne Dingus: But
Thomas Magruder: have
Andy Clark: th
Thomas Magruder: no
Andy Clark: that's
Thomas Magruder: function,
Andy Clark: just so
Wayne Dingus: uh
Andy Clark: much
Wayne Dingus: uh
Andy Clark: things
Wayne Dingus: scroll
Thomas Magruder: just
Andy Clark: that
Thomas Magruder: design.
Andy Clark: make
Wayne Dingus: for
Andy Clark: it look flash
Wayne Dingus: a channel s selection or volume
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm. Hmm.
Andy Clark: I think channel selection would be annoying
Wayne Dingus: Ma
Andy Clark: because it just c you could scroll past the channel
Thomas Magruder: Mm-hmm.
Andy Clark: or
Thomas Magruder: Let's vote
Wayne Dingus: Oh
Thomas Magruder: on
Wayne Dingus: okay.
Thomas Magruder: it. Then we
Andy Clark: Hmm.
Thomas Magruder: don't have to talk about it any longer.
Wayne Dingus: Oh okay.
Thomas Magruder: What do you want? In or out?
Ronald Parker: Basically out. I
Thomas Magruder: Okay.
Ronald Parker: don't see the
Thomas Magruder: You are out of course. You
Wayne Dingus: Out.
Thomas Magruder: are okay, clear.
Andy Clark: No r no scroll-wheel. Okay. Um I don't see anything missing really. Yeah, we should
Ronald Parker: Do you
Andy Clark: too
Ronald Parker: have
Andy Clark: bad we
Ronald Parker: all
Andy Clark: don't
Ronald Parker: your
Andy Clark: have the
Ronald Parker: answers?
Andy Clark: finance. We could've
Thomas Magruder: I have all my answers, yes.
Ronald Parker: Okay.
Andy Clark: Yeah, it's I'm not sure if we're if we're gonna get finance anyway because I thought we cou I thought
Wayne Dingus: I
Andy Clark: it was
Wayne Dingus: have
Andy Clark: gonna be
Wayne Dingus: to
Andy Clark: an
Wayne Dingus: call
Andy Clark: issue
Wayne Dingus: this in a form.
Andy Clark: at
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: the first time we started. I thought it was
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: gonna be a cost issue which
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: material we were gonna take
Thomas Magruder: There is I
Andy Clark: relative
Thomas Magruder: have one
Andy Clark: to
Thomas Magruder: question.
Andy Clark: the advanced chips or anything. So you just do whatever
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: you like and
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Andy Clark: uh
Thomas Magruder: I only
Andy Clark: doesn't
Thomas Magruder: have one
Andy Clark: care
Thomas Magruder: question
Andy Clark: what it costs.
Thomas Magruder: with the material, but I don't have information that. We've
Andy Clark: I think
Thomas Magruder: chosen
Andy Clark: we're
Thomas Magruder: rubber.
Andy Clark: rubber is not expensive.
Thomas Magruder: No,
Andy Clark: Definitely.
Thomas Magruder: but can we make yellow rubber? I think so
Andy Clark: You can make
Ronald Parker: Yes,
Andy Clark: rubber in any
Wayne Dingus: Ah.
Ronald Parker: you
Andy Clark: colour.
Ronald Parker: can colour
Andy Clark: In
Thomas Magruder: Okay.
Andy Clark: any
Ronald Parker: rubber,
Andy Clark: colour. So
Ronald Parker: yeah.
Andy Clark: I mean you can't make yellow titanium, but
Wayne Dingus: But
Andy Clark: you
Wayne Dingus: we ha
Andy Clark: can make
Wayne Dingus: w
Thomas Magruder: Mm.
Andy Clark: yellow rubber.
Wayne Dingus: we
Thomas Magruder: Okay.
Wayne Dingus: don't uh use our reco uh we uh removable cover?
Andy Clark: Uh yeah
Wayne Dingus: No,
Andy Clark: we can
Wayne Dingus: huh?
Andy Clark: make uh for example it's just something you can click on it like uh that's but it's not som not apparently that's not something we're working with in the
Wayne Dingus: Maybe
Andy Clark: basic design.
Wayne Dingus: maybe
Andy Clark: So.
Wayne Dingus: later, maybe
Thomas Magruder: Hmm.
Wayne Dingus: we can
Andy Clark: Yeah, it
Wayne Dingus: uh
Andy Clark: could be. It can be done, for e | For the conceptual design, Thomas Magruder suggested to use kinetic dynamo as energy source. The decision veered towards the basic battery option with no recharging station. They also decided to go for a single-curved design. The available materials for the casing are plastic, wood, rubber and titanium. Possible interfaces are push buttons, scroll wheels, and LCDs. The inclusion of advanced features, like LCD screen and speech recognition, can only be speculative, because the team have no pricing information. Ronald Parker presented two provisional designs, standard and luxury. The latter has an LCD screen at the top. They are both rectangular with a curve grooved in where the finger rests. There are two lights to help find the remote, all the standard buttons and speech recognition. Wayne Dingus talked about the public's preference for looks over technological innovation; however, they both seem to be more important than ease of use. The current fashion among younger people favours bright colours and fruit and vegetable themes and spongy materials: pertinent exchangeable fronts can express such trends on the remote. Based on Ronald Parker's drawing, they designed another version shaped slightly like a banana, and discussed the positions of buttons and all other components. | 1 | amisum | train |
John Pauley: Can
Robert Suttee: Uh
John Pauley: I close this?
Robert Suttee: we don't have any changes, do we So?
John Pauley: Oh,
Robert Suttee: no.
John Pauley: okay.
John Pauley: There we go. Okay, here we are again. Detailed design oh, come on. Well Ah s Forgot to insert the minutes, but it's about the same thing we discussed before. Uh Could open that anyway, think.
John Pauley: Other design anyway, we took as we took w we took rubber as as the material last time. We also that you're just busy with it. Took the advanced chip to t implement the advanced features. Well, we discussed the design, no sharp corners, we rounded it off, like you see on the other screen, which is fine. Um we agreed that the colour should be b uh yellow and black. Yellow in the back because it's m trendy, more trendy than black anyway. So then we ca yeah. We agreed that we would implement both the L_C_D_ and speech recognition, but I'll get to that in a moment. 'Cause some changes in the finances have left us implications anyway. So so,
Charles Anderson: Hmm.
John Pauley: like I said, we had no insight in finances, no prices, but we have 'em now, and it's bad. Anyway. We are Oh. Prototype presentation, well first you guys built the prototype. So you could could present that. But um let's see what be handy to do. Nee no, you just go ahead and present the w we'll scrap it later because
Antonio Hopkins: I think it's more or less the as we had.
John Pauley: What?
Robert Suttee: It's basically
Charles Anderson: Hmm?
Robert Suttee: what we agreed upon,
John Pauley: Oh
Robert Suttee: but just
John Pauley: that's
Robert Suttee: a little bit
Antonio Hopkins: No much
Robert Suttee: more specified.
Antonio Hopkins: s
John Pauley: hasn't changed that much, huh?
Antonio Hopkins: No no no, not at
John Pauley: I
Antonio Hopkins: all.
John Pauley: didn't expect anyway. You just coloured it.
Robert Suttee: Uh s Final design.
Robert Suttee: Basically in what we discussed, cover and buttons will be made of rubber, yellow colour, black components, as you can see right over here.
John Pauley: Mm-hmm.
Robert Suttee: We
John Pauley: I like the menu.
Robert Suttee: chose a different type of colour for the menu. A bit darker yellow so that it com really shows in this keypad.
John Pauley: Mm-hmm.
Robert Suttee: If you black, it's really that good a contrast. So
John Pauley: And I suppose the the the yellow is not printed on the on the rubber. It's it's part of the rubber, I suppose.
Robert Suttee: Probab Yeah.
John Pauley: I think that's more
Robert Suttee: That's
John Pauley: I think
Robert Suttee: the be
John Pauley: that's more durable anyway than
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: printed on to
Robert Suttee: And it I guess it's more easier to just paint
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah, of course.
Robert Suttee: it on the rubber than to uh
Charles Anderson: Mm
Antonio Hopkins: That's
Charles Anderson: yeah.
Antonio Hopkins: uh the integration story again.
Charles Anderson: Okay.
Robert Suttee: So we
John Pauley: Oh
Robert Suttee: have
John Pauley: yeah.
Robert Suttee: it's a bit round shaped, that's what we had uh We chose the buttons to be uh teletext, okay button, favourite channel and the mute.
John Pauley: Mm-hmm.
Robert Suttee: So that's basically what we chose there.
John Pauley: Okay.
Robert Suttee: If you have anything to add, please interrupt
Antonio Hopkins: No,
Robert Suttee: Charles Anderson.
Antonio Hopkins: uh this is just a description of what we see there. So
John Pauley: Yeah.
Charles Anderson: Yeah
Robert Suttee: Oh.
Antonio Hopkins: Speaks for itself.
Robert Suttee: That's pretty much it.
John Pauley: Okay. Now it's my time to ruin everything. Well, not ruin everything, but
Robert Suttee: Oh
John Pauley: no,
Robert Suttee: sorry.
John Pauley: nah. Finances, that's what we have here, what you drew. We have battery power, we have advanced chips and the sam the sensor. The sample sensor and uh for speak recognition anyway. So which you see the which is de o one of the most expensive parts. So well, we have sin one curve, a design. Rubber design. And we had a special colour. Suppose yellow is a special colour. So just half a Euro for You have pushbuttons and an L_C_D_ display. You have the total of seventeen Euros in
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: production cost, which is higher than the twelve and a half that we are permitted to use. So,
Charles Anderson: Hmm.
John Pauley: easy. What do we scrap. Well
Antonio Hopkins: I
John Pauley: think
Antonio Hopkins: d
John Pauley: I had the best solution that I came up with is just to s take out the speech recognition.
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah.
Robert Suttee: I'd say that
John Pauley: Because
Robert Suttee: too.
John Pauley: the L_C_D_ has more support on customer
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: side. There are ninety one percent of uh the people, or something like that. But ninety percent who favour an L_C_D_ display, and only sixty percent that favour speech recognition. I think it's
Robert Suttee: Uh we don't
John Pauley: also
Robert Suttee: really
John Pauley: harder
Robert Suttee: have
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: to.
Robert Suttee: a extra function with the speech sample, which you can't do with a normal
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
Robert Suttee: remote control, which people already do. So
John Pauley: So I ju I took that out. So and so it's still stuck with thirteen, so I had to take out the special colour I suppose. And, yeah, I didn't see anything else I could take out. Yeah,
Charles Anderson: Pushbut
John Pauley: I could take out the push-buttons, but we need those.
Antonio Hopkins: Huh.
John Pauley: So,
Charles Anderson: Special colour,
John Pauley: generally
Charles Anderson: yeah.
John Pauley: what I came up with, in order to be cou to to have production cost of twelve and a half Euros, spe scrap speech recognition and the separate covers can account for the if people want it, we'll just then we'll do it in black. We'll just deliver it in black, have the it has all the function that it's supposed to have, and if you want it if you want the custom design, then you can buy the separate covers. You
Robert Suttee: Well,
John Pauley: make it
Robert Suttee: I'd
John Pauley: d orange
Robert Suttee: I tend
John Pauley: or whatever
Robert Suttee: to
John Pauley: you want.
Robert Suttee: disagree with you on that, because the trend issue was a big issue when
John Pauley: It
Robert Suttee: we
John Pauley: was
Robert Suttee: started
John Pauley: a big
Robert Suttee: designing
John Pauley: issue, but
Robert Suttee: this. So can't we just
John Pauley: I'll
Robert Suttee: basically
John Pauley: just go back. Uh let's
Robert Suttee: extend
John Pauley: just let's
Robert Suttee: it
John Pauley: see
Robert Suttee: to
John Pauley: what
Robert Suttee: thirteen?
John Pauley: okay, let's just see what we no, we we have to be
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
John Pauley: under
Charles Anderson: it
John Pauley: twelve and a half. It
Charles Anderson: The
John Pauley: it's
Charles Anderson: p
John Pauley: not uh
Antonio Hopkins: Okay,
John Pauley: the project
Antonio Hopkins: but there's
John Pauley: is a
Antonio Hopkins: another
John Pauley: no-go
Charles Anderson: And
Antonio Hopkins: problem.
John Pauley: if
Charles Anderson: the
John Pauley: we
Charles Anderson: p
John Pauley: go over twelve and a half,
Robert Suttee: Okay.
John Pauley: so.
Antonio Hopkins: But there's another
Charles Anderson: What
Antonio Hopkins: problem. we take cover, for instance black, then we need button, 'cause black and black doesn't work obviously.
John Pauley: I think you that's what you were ass assigned to do really, to
Antonio Hopkins: Huh.
John Pauley: to see how b th both those work together.
Antonio Hopkins: Huh. Yeah.
John Pauley: So I think yeah, it's I think it's y one of the it's a good way to um to help people
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: uh to make to keep the product trendy too.
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: Just keep you just make new covers for the for
Antonio Hopkins: Right.
John Pauley: it, like we agreed before.
Antonio Hopkins: I agree.
John Pauley: And everything that's left is is the basic function that uh that we want our product to have. Because the expensive parts are in either the advanced chip. But we need that for the L_C_D_
Robert Suttee: Yeah.
John Pauley: display.
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
Robert Suttee: We do.
John Pauley: Then again, we have the L_C_D_ display, which is also expensive. B yeah, but those go together. And yeah, we could take out the curve.
Antonio Hopkins: Or say let's
Robert Suttee: We
Antonio Hopkins: lose
Robert Suttee: could take
Antonio Hopkins: rubber,
Robert Suttee: out
Antonio Hopkins: take
Robert Suttee: a
Antonio Hopkins: plastic.
Robert Suttee: curve indeed.
John Pauley: Could we could take out the curve. Is that an option?
Antonio Hopkins: Yes.
John Pauley: you?
Antonio Hopkins: Although
Charles Anderson: But uh
Antonio Hopkins: we are
Robert Suttee: I
Antonio Hopkins: demolishing
Robert Suttee: think the colour
Antonio Hopkins: a
Charles Anderson: the
Antonio Hopkins: little
Robert Suttee: is
Antonio Hopkins: bit
Robert Suttee: more
Antonio Hopkins: the style.
Robert Suttee: important than
Antonio Hopkins: But
Robert Suttee: the
Charles Anderson: and
John Pauley: Yeah.
Robert Suttee: really the curve, because if you just end up with an entirely black remote
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: I think
Robert Suttee: control
John Pauley: it's it it
Charles Anderson: The
John Pauley: does
Charles Anderson: people
John Pauley: ruin it, but
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah.
John Pauley: the fact that I t took that decision or t Took this example actually, not really decision, but the example is because we do offer the um the possibility of adding your own custom covers. So you can change any colour you want. So it's just you deliver a basic remote control with a possibility to change you into whatever you want.
Antonio Hopkins: Can we then not also uh change the material? We take plastic for the basic cover
John Pauley: You can take
Antonio Hopkins: and
John Pauley: plastic, but I d it's something that's stuck into my mind is that something that really came forward from the marketing research is that people like the the the the squishy
Charles Anderson: Spongy,
John Pauley: feeling of
Charles Anderson: yeah.
John Pauley: the spongy feeling of the
Antonio Hopkins: We can put
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: and
Antonio Hopkins: those
John Pauley: it really
Antonio Hopkins: to the
John Pauley: makes it
Antonio Hopkins: to the other covers.
John Pauley: also makes it different from the existing remote controls,
Charles Anderson: And
John Pauley: because they're all plastic.
Antonio Hopkins: That's
John Pauley: So
Antonio Hopkins: true.
John Pauley: which in in turn Rubber would increase
Antonio Hopkins: But
John Pauley: durability
Antonio Hopkins: okay.
John Pauley: because it doesn't break.
Antonio Hopkins: But what do you then suggest we'd lose? Because we have to lose two things and I
John Pauley: I
Antonio Hopkins: guess.
John Pauley: al like I said,
Charles Anderson: But
John Pauley: I lost the speech recognition
Antonio Hopkins: Yes.
John Pauley: and I lost the special colour, which would make this
Antonio Hopkins: Okay, and that's enough?
John Pauley: black a black and grey. Yeah, that's that that that's enough,
Robert Suttee: So
John Pauley: because
Robert Suttee: black and grey is okay.
John Pauley: I guess those are the
Charles Anderson: But
John Pauley: basic colours. So
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
Robert Suttee: Which we can
John Pauley: Oh.
Robert Suttee: fabricate, okay.
Charles Anderson: The
John Pauley: I think those
Charles Anderson: people
John Pauley: are basic col
Charles Anderson: want to pay for for it, so
John Pauley: They want
Charles Anderson: why
John Pauley: to
Charles Anderson: why uh do we have to keep us uh uh um
John Pauley: To
Charles Anderson: on
John Pauley: ensure
Charles Anderson: the twelve
John Pauley: the profit.
Charles Anderson: and a half?
John Pauley: That that's th that's the order. We're just uh we're the project team and we got our our orders from the pro from
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: the boss of our company which say we don't
Charles Anderson: But
John Pauley: wanna
Charles Anderson: we
John Pauley: spend
Charles Anderson: can
John Pauley: more
Charles Anderson: take
John Pauley: than
Charles Anderson: a risk.
John Pauley: twelve fifty for this. But that's not for our that's not our decision to take.
Robert Suttee: No, we
John Pauley: We have
Robert Suttee: basically
John Pauley: a budget
Charles Anderson: yeah
John Pauley: of twelve fifty
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: per product.
Robert Suttee: We
John Pauley: So
Robert Suttee: need to stick to that.
John Pauley: Stick that. I don't think it's really bad either. I mean if we we have the the backup of or the backup design thing
Charles Anderson: I hope the people will like it, but
John Pauley: to have I think they would do. Th I think they do like because yo we you we agree upon that the that the the the cover thing was a nice idea, because p you could have all sort of designs while at the same time just manufacturing one product,
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: one basic product which you could turn into any any taste you want. So I think it's the best solution
Antonio Hopkins: Perhaps
John Pauley: to
Antonio Hopkins: we should
John Pauley: make
Antonio Hopkins: make
John Pauley: those
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: cu custom
Antonio Hopkins: m
John Pauley: covers for the design aspect
Antonio Hopkins: Huh.
John Pauley: and keep the functionality between of within the th the boundaries of the your f uh your
Charles Anderson: The first sheet.
John Pauley: budget. So
Antonio Hopkins: Perhaps we should make clear to our customer that we had to do this to stay under the cost. And that's uh they know that this is an option and that we had to drop the option to stay under the cost, that they know that.
John Pauley: Well I don't think Yeah.
Antonio Hopkins: Perhaps they
John Pauley: Is it
Antonio Hopkins: decide
John Pauley: worth
Robert Suttee: But they
John Pauley: is
Antonio Hopkins: tha
Robert Suttee: don't
John Pauley: it is it does it mean anything to the customer? Like, it like,
Antonio Hopkins: Of course.
John Pauley: we don't
Antonio Hopkins: Perhaps
John Pauley: care
Antonio Hopkins: they
John Pauley: we don't
Antonio Hopkins: uh
John Pauley: care that you had to
Antonio Hopkins: no, but perhaps they think uh okay, the cover is such a nice idea, uh let's that that then they uh that allow us to make some more costs. We ca we uh we
John Pauley: True,
Antonio Hopkins: can at least
John Pauley: but
Antonio Hopkins: tell
John Pauley: we did
Antonio Hopkins: them
John Pauley: we
Antonio Hopkins: that
John Pauley: didn't get that. So
Antonio Hopkins: You don't know
John Pauley: I
Antonio Hopkins: that.
John Pauley: think it's it should either be a pack,
Robert Suttee: Well
Antonio Hopkins: Huh.
John Pauley: maybe we sh that should be sold in in the s in stores with with a standard cover or something.
Antonio Hopkins: No, I'm not
John Pauley: But
Antonio Hopkins: uh talking about that cost but the one that g has given us the order to design this. We could at least m uh make it like
John Pauley: They could,
Antonio Hopkins: this,
John Pauley: but
Antonio Hopkins: like
John Pauley: uh
Antonio Hopkins: you said, and then tell them okay, we had to drop this and that, just that you know. It is an still an option, but
John Pauley: It's
Antonio Hopkins: not
John Pauley: an option,
Antonio Hopkins: for this
John Pauley: but
Antonio Hopkins: price.
John Pauley: yeah, it's true. So actually uh it's not that much of an increase, but yeah.
Robert Suttee: And
John Pauley: We
Robert Suttee: if
John Pauley: cannot
Robert Suttee: we
John Pauley: contact them. It's just
Antonio Hopkins: Exactly,
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: the order that
Antonio Hopkins: but
John Pauley: we got. So that's what we gotta go with. So it's either one fi just just to get it f just to get it through final, it's either turned into plastic, drop the squishy feel, make it make it more
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: breakable,
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: um or turn it yellow. So It's uh something we have to decide on.
Antonio Hopkins: I'd say lose the curve
John Pauley: I say
Antonio Hopkins: and
John Pauley: lose
Antonio Hopkins: the colour
John Pauley: the curve.
Antonio Hopkins: and
John Pauley: Oh that's true, we could lose the c yeah, I forgot that, sorry. Uh the curve. So
Robert Suttee: So which curve is that ba that's basically
John Pauley: That's just
Robert Suttee: that
John Pauley: this
Robert Suttee: curve.
John Pauley: one just d this is the banana curve.
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
John Pauley: So
Charles Anderson: that's
Robert Suttee: So
John Pauley: this
Charles Anderson: better.
Robert Suttee: we could
John Pauley: would
Robert Suttee: u
John Pauley: this
Robert Suttee: still
John Pauley: would
Robert Suttee: have
John Pauley: be straight.
Robert Suttee: the comfort.
John Pauley: No, uh no, that would be a curve inside the thing, I guess. No, would ju then it would just be a straight remote. Just like like that.
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: Which would, yeah, turn it into something far more ordinary. we could make
Robert Suttee: I
John Pauley: it yellow then, but
Robert Suttee: second that.
John Pauley: You second that, you second that we lose the curve.
Robert Suttee: No, that it would turn out to be a pretty straight-forward remote control.
John Pauley: Okay,
Robert Suttee: So that's
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: yeah.
Robert Suttee: not really
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: So I think it
Robert Suttee: that
John Pauley: would be a good idea to keep the curve to separate it from the rest of the remote control
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: world, so to speak. So we keep the curve. So
Robert Suttee: I would
John Pauley: the only only solution is either to use the l y lose the yellow or lose the rubber. And I'm in favour of keeping the rubber, because it has more
Antonio Hopkins: Oh.
John Pauley: more advantages
Antonio Hopkins: I agree.
John Pauley: than the colour yellow
Robert Suttee: Yeah.
John Pauley: has.
Robert Suttee: I would
Antonio Hopkins: No.
Robert Suttee: say
Charles Anderson: Yep.
Robert Suttee: I would agree with you on the colour, because that's an extra option, an extra service we can deliver for
John Pauley: Mm-hmm.
Robert Suttee: a little bit of more money. So
John Pauley: Yeah, um I guess
Robert Suttee: we
John Pauley: people
Robert Suttee: can always
John Pauley: are
Robert Suttee: do
John Pauley: willing
Robert Suttee: that.
John Pauley: to pay for that. So I think we can
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: take that
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm?
John Pauley: option and just with uh with the idea in the back of our head that you can customise your remote control. So
Antonio Hopkins: Yes.
John Pauley: I think that would still make it a nice product. Okay, we're final on that. So it's too bad we can't make the whole super thing. But anyways we're here. Um
Robert Suttee: Which
John Pauley: yeah.
Robert Suttee: is basically what we discussed.
John Pauley: This we discussed just now. That's just now just we could just discuss how the project went. I mean, was kind of
Charles Anderson: And I want to
John Pauley: I
Charles Anderson: do
John Pauley: sort
Charles Anderson: that.
John Pauley: of expected that everything would turn out this way, but because you yeah, everything cannot be for free. We didn't I think it was too bad we didn't have the financial info the last time. Because
Robert Suttee: Yes,
John Pauley: that
Antonio Hopkins: Huh.
John Pauley: was I th
Robert Suttee: we
John Pauley: it was
Robert Suttee: could
John Pauley: really
Robert Suttee: have
John Pauley: essential really to ma because we spent uh uh entire stage designing a product of which we had no idea what
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: it would cost. So we just
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: put something I think it's really nor not in stroke with reality actually. So
Antonio Hopkins: Charles Anderson too, I felt a bit blind throughout the project, because
John Pauley: Yeah.
Antonio Hopkins: in the beginning I had no list of
John Pauley: Yeah, I
Antonio Hopkins: available
John Pauley: think
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: would
Antonio Hopkins: materials,
John Pauley: have been.
Antonio Hopkins: and then I d
Charles Anderson: But
John Pauley: Materials
Antonio Hopkins: had not list
John Pauley: would
Antonio Hopkins: of
John Pauley: be
Antonio Hopkins: available
John Pauley: ok
Antonio Hopkins: c finances.
John Pauley: at least
Antonio Hopkins: So
John Pauley: the last meeting I would have expected had to have that. So I suppose
Charles Anderson: Let's um see um
John Pauley: Yeah, let's see if it sells. I mean I suppose this sells,
Charles Anderson: Um
John Pauley: because it's very very extended. But
Robert Suttee: Well I hope it
Charles Anderson: Let's
Robert Suttee: sells.
Charles Anderson: Uh
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: I suppose it sells, because it's good.
Charles Anderson: Oh.
John Pauley: I mean it's got everything for the for the reasonable price, because we didn't
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: know what it's gonna cost anyway.
Charles Anderson: Hmm. Okay, let's eval evaluate uh the product of us, our design. Um I have some uh a method, a requirements and scale of. I uh will pre present uh some statements and we will decided together wha what if it's true or false and
John Pauley: Okay.
Charles Anderson: uh then we see uh if the requirements of the user
John Pauley: Have
Charles Anderson: are
John Pauley: been
Charles Anderson: fulfilled
John Pauley: met,
Charles Anderson: or not.
John Pauley: okay.
Charles Anderson: And I will uh make a new blank sheet.
John Pauley: Yeah.
Charles Anderson: So so the buttons, the look and feel. I thought it was okay, but the advanced uh settings, um screen, audio and channel
Robert Suttee: Which are basically
John Pauley: They're stuck under menu.
Robert Suttee: accessible
Charles Anderson: We are not
Robert Suttee: through the menu
John Pauley: For
Robert Suttee: button.
John Pauley: the menu.
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: I think those are totally met, because
Charles Anderson: Oh
John Pauley: we
Charles Anderson: the menu button
John Pauley: we really
Charles Anderson: is
John Pauley: took
Robert Suttee: Yeah.
Charles Anderson: it.
John Pauley: them for the
Charles Anderson: Hi
John Pauley: they
Charles Anderson: Oh, okay.
John Pauley: have the feel they want, they have the simplicity they want.
Charles Anderson: Then it's all uh
John Pauley: I think it's very uh very well met. Either two
Charles Anderson: S
John Pauley: or
Antonio Hopkins: One.
John Pauley: one
Charles Anderson: it's
John Pauley: maybe.
Charles Anderson: true.
John Pauley: I think we took that everything they wanted into consideration.
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: So it could either be a two or a one.
Charles Anderson: So d Oh wait.
John Pauley: One and a half.
Charles Anderson: Uh pen.
Robert Suttee: Which
Charles Anderson: The
Robert Suttee: is not
Charles Anderson: p
Robert Suttee: an option.
Charles Anderson: Oh yeah, it's red,
John Pauley: Just
Charles Anderson: okay,
John Pauley: create our
Charles Anderson: but
John Pauley: own option.
Charles Anderson: Look and feel is everybo it's true.
John Pauley: Yeah.
Charles Anderson: So Anyone? And the next one uh yeah, when it's
John Pauley: It's
Charles Anderson: lost
John Pauley: perfect.
Charles Anderson: uh you can find
John Pauley: Even
Charles Anderson: it.
John Pauley: for deaf people,
Charles Anderson: It's
John Pauley: yeah.
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: It's I don't think it's perfect, but we did everything possible to to
Robert Suttee: To
John Pauley: get
Robert Suttee: make
John Pauley: it back.
Robert Suttee: it that
John Pauley: Because
Robert Suttee: way,
John Pauley: if
Robert Suttee: yeah.
John Pauley: it's stuck in you couch, you can see the light. Maybe you can hear it. But
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: I mean we tried, so
Charles Anderson: And it's
John Pauley: I think it that's that deserves a one.
Charles Anderson: and it's yeah.
John Pauley: Definitely.
Charles Anderson: To. That's okay then. And the next one. How is that? Uh w we had we don't have an uh
Antonio Hopkins: Manual.
Charles Anderson: manual, yeah. But
Antonio Hopkins: I
Charles Anderson: I think
Antonio Hopkins: think
Charles Anderson: that's
Antonio Hopkins: the
Charles Anderson: a
Antonio Hopkins: L_C_D_ display
Charles Anderson: part of it. But
Antonio Hopkins: could be a little
John Pauley: I'd
Antonio Hopkins: bit more
John Pauley: use an
Antonio Hopkins: difficult
John Pauley: remote control.
Antonio Hopkins: then a normal remote control,
Robert Suttee: Mm yeah.
Antonio Hopkins: but then again, it's for young people. So
Charles Anderson: Yeah, an L_C_D_, it tells a lot about uh
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah, I
Robert Suttee: And
Antonio Hopkins: th
Robert Suttee: it's pretty straight-forward, you have
Antonio Hopkins: Exactly.
John Pauley: It's
Robert Suttee: a
John Pauley: pretty straight-forward,
Robert Suttee: navigation
John Pauley: uh-huh.
Antonio Hopkins: No,
Robert Suttee: no
Antonio Hopkins: that's
Robert Suttee: keys
Antonio Hopkins: true.
Robert Suttee: to navigate through the L_C_D_
Antonio Hopkins: I think it won't
Robert Suttee: menus.
Antonio Hopkins: be
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
Antonio Hopkins: a big problem.
Robert Suttee: So
Charles Anderson: So it's a one or
Robert Suttee: One
Charles Anderson: a
Robert Suttee: I
Charles Anderson: I
Robert Suttee: d no,
Charles Anderson: don't know.
Robert Suttee: actu
John Pauley: I think but we didn't
Charles Anderson: For
John Pauley: even
Charles Anderson: the advanced
John Pauley: there was
Charles Anderson: uh
John Pauley: no
Charles Anderson: settings.
John Pauley: issue on making a manual actually. We didn't
Charles Anderson: No okay,
John Pauley: really
Charles Anderson: that
John Pauley: discuss
Charles Anderson: uh that's
John Pauley: it,
Charles Anderson: true.
John Pauley: but I don't think it takes no, it really does doesn't take time to learn, I think. We took
Robert Suttee: No,
John Pauley: it
Charles Anderson: Oh,
John Pauley: s
Robert Suttee: it
John Pauley: it's
Charles Anderson: so
Robert Suttee: it
John Pauley: so
Charles Anderson: it
Robert Suttee: is
John Pauley: easy, we
Robert Suttee: pretty
John Pauley: have so
Robert Suttee: straight-forward.
John Pauley: little button, everything speaks for itself really. So
Antonio Hopkins: Ah.
John Pauley: I think
Antonio Hopkins: Um
John Pauley: that's yeah, we didn't it's
Charles Anderson: Takes
John Pauley: either
Charles Anderson: no
John Pauley: two
Charles Anderson: ti
John Pauley: or one, I guess. Maybe it's a two, because d uh the L_C_D_ is a little is a little new and
Antonio Hopkins: With
John Pauley: there
Antonio Hopkins: the
John Pauley: is
Antonio Hopkins: more
John Pauley: there are some
Antonio Hopkins: important
John Pauley: option
Antonio Hopkins: functions
John Pauley: hidden under
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
Antonio Hopkins: on.
John Pauley: the menu button. So I might
Robert Suttee: Yeah.
John Pauley: make this a two instead of a one, I
Robert Suttee: Yeah.
John Pauley: guess.
Charles Anderson: And the L_C_D_, you have to see it.
John Pauley: So just make that a two.
Charles Anderson: Um mm Oh, it's a little bit learning. Okay. Uh yeah it's uh a little bit same. But
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
Charles Anderson: it tells you
John Pauley: You
Charles Anderson: or
John Pauley: can use the
Charles Anderson: not?
John Pauley: L_C_D_ in a good way. I think so. I think it's perfect, the w where it is, what it can do, if it useful. I think
Charles Anderson: But wha
John Pauley: so.
Charles Anderson: w
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
Charles Anderson: oh, yeah. What are we uh displaying on the L_C_D_ screen? Just uh only the channels and or
Antonio Hopkins: the menus uh
Charles Anderson: What
Antonio Hopkins: Things
Charles Anderson: uh?
Antonio Hopkins: like brightness and uh those kind of things we've put in the menu, because we have no buttons for
Robert Suttee: Well,
Antonio Hopkins: those.
Robert Suttee: basically the menu options indeed. But
Charles Anderson: Oh, in the L_C_D_
John Pauley: No, y
Charles Anderson: screen.
John Pauley: I mean
Antonio Hopkins: Yes.
John Pauley: in the L_C_D_ screen, the small screen. What
Charles Anderson: And
John Pauley: does it
Charles Anderson: for
John Pauley: display?
Charles Anderson: a channel selection, uh or
John Pauley: Well I
Charles Anderson: that's
John Pauley: thought it was
Charles Anderson: not
John Pauley: I thought it was I thought that people wanted previews on their I'm
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
John Pauley: not sure
Charles Anderson: I
John Pauley: if
Charles Anderson: thought
John Pauley: that even possible,
Charles Anderson: I thought
John Pauley: but
Charles Anderson: too but yeah.
John Pauley: 'cause it's this requires a quite quite a bit of band-width. I don't think it's possible really. But the
Charles Anderson: But
John Pauley: they didn't really define in what should be used for.
Charles Anderson: Maybe
Robert Suttee: No.
Charles Anderson: a T_V_ guide or something
John Pauley: But I think in
Charles Anderson: in
John Pauley: for
Charles Anderson: your
John Pauley: example
Charles Anderson: L_C_D_
John Pauley: like
Antonio Hopkins: Mm.
Charles Anderson: uh
John Pauley: T_V_ guides, I think that's
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: that th that you can transmit through it and everything. Just for extra information on your programmes.
Charles Anderson: Yeah, it must be clear
John Pauley: But
Charles Anderson: then
John Pauley: also
Charles Anderson: what
John Pauley: things like
Charles Anderson: what
John Pauley: like
Charles Anderson: what for
John Pauley: like
Charles Anderson: we
John Pauley: menus
Charles Anderson: use it.
John Pauley: or p how about preferences of your uh with configuring your remote control for
Robert Suttee: Yeah.
John Pauley: favourite your favourite channel for example,
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: how do you configure that. So that could be done by L_C_D_ display. I think it's good. No, maybe it's not a one because it's we're not using it perfectly. We didn't give it I don't thing over-discussing. Now we gave it enough thought though.
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: I think we d should just lower this. Maybe maybe it's a three though. We could've used it more effectively probably.
Charles Anderson: Yeah, indeed. So everybody's agree with an uh three on it, it's
Antonio Hopkins: Yes.
Robert Suttee: Yeah.
John Pauley: Yeah, we
Robert Suttee: Two
John Pauley: are using
Robert Suttee: or
Charles Anderson: W
John Pauley: it, but
Robert Suttee: three.
John Pauley: it's not
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
Robert Suttee: So
John Pauley: it's not poorly used, but it's not efficiently used, I think. We could have ev even lost the selection button and uh done everything via L_C_D_ selection.
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: It's now it's just extra to illustrate im
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
John Pauley: uh
Charles Anderson: I
John Pauley: extra features, but okay.
Charles Anderson: A three.
Antonio Hopkins: Nah, it's not really only an extra.
Robert Suttee: You
Charles Anderson: Ah,
Antonio Hopkins: No
Robert Suttee: can
Antonio Hopkins: menus.
Charles Anderson: nothing,
Antonio Hopkins: Think about
Charles Anderson: that's
Robert Suttee: seven.
Charles Anderson: A seven. Uh that's uh
John Pauley: Can you talk
Robert Suttee: Or
John Pauley: to
Robert Suttee: we
John Pauley: remote
Robert Suttee: could
John Pauley: control?
Robert Suttee: say
John Pauley: Well,
Robert Suttee: it
John Pauley: it can't talk anymore.
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: So we scrap that.
Robert Suttee: Or we could say neutral, we
John Pauley: Oh yeah
Robert Suttee: 'cause we scratched the
John Pauley: Just
Robert Suttee: C
John Pauley: to be a prick, but of course you can talk
Charles Anderson: Yeah
John Pauley: to your remote control, it doesn't do
Charles Anderson: yeah
John Pauley: anything. But
Charles Anderson: yeah
John Pauley: you
Charles Anderson: yeah.
John Pauley: c you can talk to
Charles Anderson: Not
John Pauley: it.
Charles Anderson: with the speech recognition. Uh yeah, all the trends and no colours uh anymore. So
John Pauley: Well, we did take everything into consideration of course. Uh the
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
John Pauley: shape i shape
Charles Anderson: uh
John Pauley: is i
Charles Anderson: um
John Pauley: I think
Charles Anderson: only
John Pauley: we
Charles Anderson: in the
John Pauley: yeah,
Charles Anderson: curves.
John Pauley: I think that's okay.
Charles Anderson: But the colours, we don't have special
Robert Suttee: No,
Charles Anderson: colours
Robert Suttee: we
Charles Anderson: on
Robert Suttee: don't
Charles Anderson: it.
Robert Suttee: have the colour.
John Pauley: Yeah,
Robert Suttee: So
John Pauley: special
Robert Suttee: I
John Pauley: co but we took into consideration the fact that it's customisable
Charles Anderson: Yeah, but
John Pauley: to the
Charles Anderson: we
John Pauley: fashi
Robert Suttee: Yes, but
Charles Anderson: yeah,
Robert Suttee: the
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
Charles Anderson: we don't have
Robert Suttee: end
Charles Anderson: it,
Robert Suttee: product
Charles Anderson: so d
Robert Suttee: So
John Pauley: We don't have it we
Charles Anderson: In
John Pauley: do have
Charles Anderson: the end
John Pauley: it,
Charles Anderson: product.
John Pauley: it's
Antonio Hopkins: But
John Pauley: just sold as a package. It does it's not
Antonio Hopkins: M
John Pauley: part of the basic product.
Antonio Hopkins: Changing covers is also trend that
John Pauley: It
Antonio Hopkins: we followed.
John Pauley: that that's what I call trendy. I mean the shape is trendy. The the sh the the functions are trendy. It's just the colours that are not supporting the basic model.
Charles Anderson: Now
John Pauley: Because you ha it's just not affordable
Charles Anderson: But it's
Robert Suttee: Maybe
Charles Anderson: not a
Robert Suttee: we
John Pauley: at
Charles Anderson: one.
Robert Suttee: should
John Pauley: the moment.
Robert Suttee: go with a two then, because it's not perfect,
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
Robert Suttee: because we can't do it initially, but
Charles Anderson: Oh.
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
John Pauley: It's possible,
Robert Suttee: we
John Pauley: but you have to pay extra for the for the possibility of having it in a f a different colour.
Charles Anderson: Oh well Oops.
Charles Anderson: Oh it's a two, right?
Robert Suttee: Yeah.
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
Charles Anderson: On the last one. Uh that n that's
Robert Suttee: Overall
John Pauley: Overall
Charles Anderson: all.
John Pauley: score.
Robert Suttee: score.
Charles Anderson: Overall. It's um
John Pauley: One two
Charles Anderson: ten,
John Pauley: three. sixteen.
Charles Anderson: sixteen three uh
John Pauley: Two two point
Charles Anderson: two
John Pauley: some
Charles Anderson: two
John Pauley: two
Charles Anderson: point
John Pauley: point something.
Charles Anderson: seven
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
Charles Anderson: or something like that. I don't know why.
Robert Suttee: Ten, sixteen, divided by
Antonio Hopkins: Six.
Charles Anderson: Six.
Robert Suttee: Is two two third.
John Pauley: Two and two thirds.
Charles Anderson: Um So we can say it's it's the product is it's okay.
John Pauley: It's okay,
Charles Anderson: Y
John Pauley: but
Charles Anderson: not
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
John Pauley: that's yo m mostly
Robert Suttee: There's
John Pauley: it's it's influenced by the fact that we didn't have enough resources to implement speech recognition.
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
John Pauley: 'Cause yeah, that gives you a seven, which ruins your your average.
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: Without that it would be like under it wouldn't yeah, it would be under two. So I think we have
Charles Anderson: Woah.
John Pauley: even with this it's reasonable.
Robert Suttee: Yeah, if we make it into a four, as in neutral, because we didn't implement it, so we can't say that we
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
Robert Suttee: that it's really not well implemented. We come out on a average of two one eighth.
John Pauley: Well I think it's two is okay.
Robert Suttee: So which is pretty w
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
Robert Suttee: good.
John Pauley: Yeah, two is
Robert Suttee: It's
John Pauley: pretty
Robert Suttee: at
John Pauley: good.
Robert Suttee: least on the positive side. So
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm,
John Pauley: Definitely.
Robert Suttee: We
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
Antonio Hopkins: of
Robert Suttee: could
Antonio Hopkins: course.
Robert Suttee: definitely have done better if we've had more resources, but
John Pauley: Yeah, I think it's
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
John Pauley: probably
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: I I do admit that we d did miss a little or didn't sp didn't talk talk enough about the possibility of the L_C_D_ display. We could
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: have used it more efficiently, we just didn't think of it that
Robert Suttee: Yeah.
John Pauley: way.
Charles Anderson: Yeah, with.
Robert Suttee: True.
John Pauley: So like I said, changing
Charles Anderson: The scale.
John Pauley: channels, everything hidden in your L_C_D_ display, so you just need the navigation buttons to do everything.
Antonio Hopkins: But I think for this price, this is it's really a reasonable product.
John Pauley: I
Antonio Hopkins: It's
John Pauley: think
Antonio Hopkins: a good
John Pauley: we
Antonio Hopkins: product.
John Pauley: div I think we did very well, uh ev even
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: if you look at this score, we did quite well.
Charles Anderson: With
Antonio Hopkins: Oh.
Charles Anderson: an L_C_D_ screen.
John Pauley: It just looking for improvements what what
Antonio Hopkins: Oh.
John Pauley: you could have improved.
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah.
John Pauley: So.
Antonio Hopkins: But if pep people really want speech recognition, then they must be prepared to pu to pay more, because it's
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
Antonio Hopkins: cannot
John Pauley: They sh
Antonio Hopkins: be
Charles Anderson: you
Antonio Hopkins: done
Charles Anderson: can
Antonio Hopkins: for
Charles Anderson: make
John Pauley: they should
Antonio Hopkins: this.
Charles Anderson: 'em another
John Pauley: get kids,
Charles Anderson: one.
John Pauley: and just stick 'em in T_V_ and say change
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm
John Pauley: the channel.
Antonio Hopkins: yeah. Ah but for this price uh you cannot ask that.
John Pauley: I don' think
Antonio Hopkins: You
John Pauley: so.
Antonio Hopkins: cannot
John Pauley: Uh
Antonio Hopkins: th
John Pauley: it's just
Antonio Hopkins: think
John Pauley: not
Antonio Hopkins: of
John Pauley: it
Antonio Hopkins: that
John Pauley: it's not affordable.
Antonio Hopkins: No,
John Pauley: Or your
Antonio Hopkins: it's
John Pauley: sh
Antonio Hopkins: not.
John Pauley: you should lose the L_C_D_ screen probably, but I think
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
John Pauley: that's I think the L_C_D_ screen is more worth than speech
Antonio Hopkins: Oh
John Pauley: recognition.
Antonio Hopkins: It's also more attractive.
John Pauley: Definitely. Okay, that was that.
Charles Anderson: Yeah. Yeah.
John Pauley: So that's the final
Robert Suttee: So
John Pauley: product
Robert Suttee: did you
John Pauley: without the speakers, I guess. Let's see, what was left in the the Another one.
John Pauley: Hmm. Yeah, we evaluate the product. General project, what's i in For example, I thou I thought we were pretty creative in what we created. We took the whole new approach of making exchangeable cover for example, which I thought was pretty creative, because it was never never ever listed somewhere.
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
Charles Anderson: Favourite channel.
John Pauley: Well Anyways. Yeah, leadership is up to you. I mean perhaps I screwed up because I d put a put a speech recognition into it. But that's not for
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
John Pauley: Charles Anderson to decide.
Charles Anderson: I know.
John Pauley: I think
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: we did pretty well as team-work though. Because, yeah
Antonio Hopkins: Yes.
John Pauley: was very hard to work with one another if you cannot
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: communicate in the meantime, because
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: when
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
John Pauley: I got
Charles Anderson: you're
John Pauley: the when
Charles Anderson: working
John Pauley: I got the
Charles Anderson: separate.
John Pauley: input for the financial results,
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah.
John Pauley: initially of course I wanted to contact you. Say, look,
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: this is
Antonio Hopkins: Huh.
John Pauley: you're doing the wrong thing, you're s you're wasting your time now, because we're implementing
Robert Suttee: Yeah.
John Pauley: stuff that
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
John Pauley: we cannot
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
Charles Anderson: yeah
John Pauley: afford.
Charles Anderson: yeah.
John Pauley: So
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: it would be better if y if there was more communication between
Charles Anderson: Yeah yeah
John Pauley: uh
Charles Anderson: yeah. Direct
Robert Suttee: And we
John Pauley: because
Robert Suttee: could
John Pauley: that's
Robert Suttee: share
Charles Anderson: uh communication
John Pauley: that's
Robert Suttee: information
John Pauley: what would w you what
Charles Anderson: with
Robert Suttee: which
John Pauley: you would
Robert Suttee: we
John Pauley: normally
Robert Suttee: received.
John Pauley: do,
Charles Anderson: yeah.
John Pauley: either call or email someone. So
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: that was too bad con was impossible here anyways.
Antonio Hopkins: That's the same thing that I had in the beginning. Everybody was using materials that s I didn't have. So
John Pauley: It didn't
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: have or didn't knew what they costs
Antonio Hopkins: Oh.
John Pauley: or whatever. There was just
Robert Suttee: Yeah.
John Pauley: too little information about what things actually cost and
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: if you could use them. So that was a little unclear I suppose. I think a SMARTboard SMARTboard is pretty cool. I think uh s especially for design issues,
Charles Anderson: My handwriting
John Pauley: it's very
Charles Anderson: is
John Pauley: easy
Charles Anderson: little
John Pauley: just
Charles Anderson: bit
John Pauley: to
Charles Anderson: yeah.
John Pauley: give your give your thoughts a little
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: it's easier to share them.
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
Robert Suttee: Although for actual design I'd say
John Pauley: It's
Robert Suttee: the
John Pauley: a little
Robert Suttee: response
John Pauley: less
Robert Suttee: time
John Pauley: it the
Robert Suttee: should
John Pauley: response time
Robert Suttee: be
John Pauley: is
Robert Suttee: a
John Pauley: le
Robert Suttee: little bit
John Pauley: it's
Robert Suttee: higher,
John Pauley: very bad.
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
Robert Suttee: because
John Pauley: It's good to visualise everything, but I think the response time should could be a lot better.
Robert Suttee: The digital
Charles Anderson: But
Robert Suttee: pen
Charles Anderson: th
Robert Suttee: was
Charles Anderson: that's
Robert Suttee: definitely better to draw my
John Pauley: Definitely.
Robert Suttee: ideas
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
Robert Suttee: and to
John Pauley: Yeah,
Charles Anderson: Yeah, okay.
Robert Suttee: further
John Pauley: it's
Robert Suttee: elaborate
John Pauley: true.
Robert Suttee: on that. So
Antonio Hopkins: But there's uh also one problem with this I noticed. Uh you have to finish a page before
John Pauley: No, you don't
Antonio Hopkins: going
John Pauley: have
Antonio Hopkins: to a
John Pauley: to.
Antonio Hopkins: n
Charles Anderson: No.
John Pauley: No, you don't. I jin
Charles Anderson: You
Antonio Hopkins: Oh.
John Pauley: I
Charles Anderson: can
John Pauley: didn't check the finish button. I just you just ditch
Charles Anderson: Done
John Pauley: it and
Charles Anderson: and
John Pauley: you
Charles Anderson: then
John Pauley: can
Charles Anderson: it's
John Pauley: copy
Charles Anderson: okay.
John Pauley: it or whatever.
Antonio Hopkins: Okay, I saw that uh
John Pauley: Uh only if you uh check the notes or press done. Then it um then you can then it exports to Word
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: automatically. But it's not necessary to check either one of those two. You
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah,
John Pauley: can
Antonio Hopkins: but
John Pauley: just
Antonio Hopkins: I made
John Pauley: preview
Charles Anderson: Oh,
John Pauley: your p you
Charles Anderson: okay.
John Pauley: can just preview your page in the in the programme.
Antonio Hopkins: Okay,
Charles Anderson: Okay,
Antonio Hopkins: but I made three pages
Charles Anderson: yeah.
Antonio Hopkins: and they were not finished. And when the third one was finished, I wanted to download it and then it was not possible anymore, because you have to close all the pinnits uh the pages before going further.
John Pauley: Okay, before starting
Charles Anderson: Okay.
John Pauley: a ne a new page. Okay,
Antonio Hopkins: Exactly.
John Pauley: that could
Antonio Hopkins: So
John Pauley: be
Antonio Hopkins: we cannot
John Pauley: b.
Antonio Hopkins: work on more
Charles Anderson: Oh.
Antonio Hopkins: than one page at same time. That's not possible.
Charles Anderson: Hmm.
Antonio Hopkins: You
John Pauley: Okay.
Antonio Hopkins: have to finish
Robert Suttee: Oh can
Antonio Hopkins: it completely,
Robert Suttee: you?
Antonio Hopkins: then
Robert Suttee: Okay.
Antonio Hopkins: download it, it's then start a new one.
John Pauley: Yeah, okay.
Antonio Hopkins: That's not very uh handy, but
John Pauley: That's
Antonio Hopkins: if you know that, then
John Pauley: Yeah,
Antonio Hopkins: it's not a
John Pauley: it's
Antonio Hopkins: problem.
John Pauley: understandable, okay. Any new ideas? Yeah, more communication between between uh that's the thing I noticed, that communication is very um
Charles Anderson: Important
John Pauley: very
Charles Anderson: to mm
John Pauley: important, because if you get new information, it's essential f for the other team-mates to know that as soon as possible, because you would avoid making doing extra work, because you were doing extra work now uh m working on the on the speech recognition,
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: you have limitation both on the technical on the d on the design side. So I think that could have been better. But that's I think it's more of a a setting here that you cannot communicate
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: than uh than somewhere else. So
Robert Suttee: Yeah, well it could also possibly be well, is it a more real-time information base, so we can all see
John Pauley: Yeah, I think so. And l less
Robert Suttee: which
John Pauley: p
Robert Suttee: information
John Pauley: less spam
Robert Suttee: is available
John Pauley: probably. I'm
Robert Suttee: to
John Pauley: not
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
Robert Suttee: one
John Pauley: sure
Robert Suttee: another.
John Pauley: i I'm not sure you got spammed as well, but I get spammed like every t every two minutes there
Antonio Hopkins: Ah.
John Pauley: was a there
Antonio Hopkins: Well
John Pauley: was another email about master classes or something. So
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: which were totally useless actually. I thought I should probably look into them, but they were all useless. So I just
Robert Suttee: Well, I personally
Charles Anderson: Mm
Robert Suttee: did not have that, but
John Pauley: Oh okay.
Robert Suttee: That's probably your l description. But I also didn't not really. But still, you had that as well.
Antonio Hopkins: Huh.
Robert Suttee: Is that we finished up the design and then we checked the website, and
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah.
Robert Suttee: then there
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
Robert Suttee: was
Charles Anderson: after
Robert Suttee: just extra information.
Charles Anderson: After five minutes, uh
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah,
Robert Suttee: There was a little delay in the
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
Robert Suttee: bit
John Pauley: I didn't have
Robert Suttee: of a
John Pauley: any
Robert Suttee: c
John Pauley: uh more information, it's just
Robert Suttee: crucial
John Pauley: always
Robert Suttee: delay.
John Pauley: the same here.
Antonio Hopkins: Mm.
John Pauley: So that's that's kind of a
Charles Anderson: Email uh
John Pauley: It would change, but not for Charles Anderson. So I'd I had no extra information to go
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: on that one than what you give Charles Anderson
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: actually. I couldn't do any research myself or
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: I see, that's yeah, w I could have done a little extra work probably, then
Charles Anderson: it's
John Pauley: But I was busy enough anyway. So
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: Any new ideas found? Or is that a 'cause
Antonio Hopkins: No.
John Pauley: uh yeah, it's well, probably
Robert Suttee: How much
John Pauley: is.
Robert Suttee: time do we have for this anyway?
John Pauley: I have no clue. That's like oh,but it Should i if the project is evaluated and it was it was in b within budget, we should celebrate. So
Antonio Hopkins: Okay, bring out the beer.
Robert Suttee: Yeah. Champagne.
John Pauley: Uh okay,
Charles Anderson: I want one
John Pauley: think that's
Charles Anderson: for
John Pauley: about
Charles Anderson: my own.
John Pauley: it. Uh I'm not sure what we should still do though uh t let's see what all your tasks were finished, right?
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: What you ha
Antonio Hopkins: I have
John Pauley: from
Antonio Hopkins: no
John Pauley: your
Antonio Hopkins: more email.
John Pauley: assistant. So
Antonio Hopkins: My
John Pauley: let's
Antonio Hopkins: coach is uh being very silent now.
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
John Pauley: Okay,
Charles Anderson: my
John Pauley: I
Charles Anderson: personal
John Pauley: should
Charles Anderson: coach
John Pauley: I think
Charles Anderson: i
John Pauley: I sh I still have the the total report to finish up. I think we took very little time now, because Yeah, we're in agreement, everything the design is okay. The one thing we missed though, we don't
Charles Anderson: What
John Pauley: have a product name. How about you
Antonio Hopkins: we
Robert Suttee: Product
John Pauley: cook a how
Antonio Hopkins: haven't
Robert Suttee: name.
Antonio Hopkins: think
John Pauley: about
Antonio Hopkins: above
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
John Pauley: you
Antonio Hopkins: about
John Pauley: cook
Antonio Hopkins: that.
John Pauley: up a product
Charles Anderson: name.
John Pauley: name?
Antonio Hopkins: Huh. It's better than thi I think than a serial number. Sony uh T_R_ something uh
Charles Anderson: Or
Antonio Hopkins: f
John Pauley: Just
Charles Anderson: fruit
Antonio Hopkins: means nothing
Charles Anderson: name.
Antonio Hopkins: to Charles Anderson.
John Pauley: oh, think of a catchy name.
Antonio Hopkins: Uh
John Pauley: I'll be working on this until the beep until it beeps. So
Antonio Hopkins: Like fruit names.
Charles Anderson: Fruit name or something like that. The
John Pauley: What?
Charles Anderson: banana
John Pauley: Fruit?
Charles Anderson: remote or something.
John Pauley: You don't want
Charles Anderson: I
John Pauley: it to
Charles Anderson: don't
John Pauley: resemble
Charles Anderson: know.
John Pauley: a banana.
Charles Anderson: Yeah, it's the form
Robert Suttee: The
Charles Anderson: of
John Pauley: It's
Robert Suttee: bana
Charles Anderson: it.
John Pauley: not yellow anyway.
Robert Suttee: 'cause it's not yellow
Charles Anderson: Yeah
Robert Suttee: anymore.
John Pauley: It's not
Charles Anderson: oh,
John Pauley: yellow anymore.
Charles Anderson: yeah.
John Pauley: It is curved, but
Charles Anderson: Uh yeah.
Robert Suttee: Well,
Charles Anderson: Uh
Robert Suttee: uh I was going for the R_C_ deluxe, but it's not really a catchy name or anything, it's more
John Pauley: No, it's
Antonio Hopkins: Uh
John Pauley: Hmm.
Antonio Hopkins: at least it's not something with numbers. Numbers are so meaningless to the
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
Antonio Hopkins: people. I mean.
Robert Suttee: Something
Charles Anderson: That's true.
Robert Suttee: with our company name, can we do anything with that?
Charles Anderson: Reaction,
Robert Suttee: Maybe there's something
Charles Anderson: Real
Robert Suttee: on
Charles Anderson: Reaction.
Robert Suttee: the website which will help us out.
Antonio Hopkins: Real Reaction.
Robert Suttee: The reaction
John Pauley: Real Reaction
Robert Suttee: deluxe.
John Pauley: future R_C_. Step into the future of of remote controlling your T_V_.
Robert Suttee: Is that a name or a c
John Pauley: No
Robert Suttee: campaign?
John Pauley: that's a that's a catchy slogan.
Robert Suttee: Yeah. Or
John Pauley: Control
Robert Suttee: the
John Pauley: your remote control.
Robert Suttee: The real reactor.
Antonio Hopkins: Real react.
John Pauley: I go for future R_C_ probably. Something like It's
Antonio Hopkins: The
John Pauley: short
Antonio Hopkins: Real Reactor,
John Pauley: f
Antonio Hopkins: I don't find that uh that bad at all.
John Pauley: Real reactor?
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah. Because
John Pauley: Uh
Antonio Hopkins: our
John Pauley: that
Antonio Hopkins: name
John Pauley: that's
Antonio Hopkins: is Real Reaction.
Robert Suttee: a an option.
John Pauley: That makes Charles Anderson think of different products than a remote control really. I'm not sure. Real reaction in a real
Charles Anderson: Zapping. The
Robert Suttee: So that's one option.
John Pauley: Real reactor.
John Pauley: Didn't notice.
Antonio Hopkins: I'm looking for things in the name.
John Pauley: Mm.
Antonio Hopkins: So that the first three letters are s
Robert Suttee: Should I
Antonio Hopkins: the
Robert Suttee: write
Antonio Hopkins: same.
Robert Suttee: the banana
Antonio Hopkins: R_E_A_
Robert Suttee: down
Antonio Hopkins: R_E_A_.
Robert Suttee: or
Charles Anderson: Yeah, sure.
John Pauley: I take f yeah,
Robert Suttee: Sure?
John Pauley: take a banana.
Charles Anderson: The banana.
John Pauley: Hmm.
Charles Anderson: Remote. Banana recei
Antonio Hopkins: The triple
Charles Anderson: R_C_.
Antonio Hopkins: R_. Real Reaction remotes
Charles Anderson: Remote.
Antonio Hopkins: control.
Robert Suttee: Well I
Antonio Hopkins: Triple R_.
Charles Anderson: R_ three C_.
Robert Suttee: Uh do you mean it like
Charles Anderson: R_ three C_.
Antonio Hopkins: yeah.
Robert Suttee: You mean it like this?
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah, that.
Charles Anderson: Real Reaction Remote Control. R_ three C_. Oh yeah.
John Pauley: No, not like that. It should be it should be longer, because it's not a product name that you f
Antonio Hopkins: I
John Pauley: print
Antonio Hopkins: think
John Pauley: on a box.
Antonio Hopkins: triple R_. Doesn't
John Pauley: Just
Antonio Hopkins: sound?
John Pauley: write out triple,
Charles Anderson: Yeah, triple
John Pauley: like a word
Charles Anderson: R_.
John Pauley: triple R_C_, triple
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah.
John Pauley: stripe Oh. Triple
Charles Anderson: Triple
Antonio Hopkins: Ah.
John Pauley: dash
Charles Anderson: R_C_.
John Pauley: R_ dash s s C_.
Charles Anderson: The triple R_C_, yeah.
John Pauley: Yeah.
Charles Anderson: R_ s R_ three C_.
John Pauley: R_ dash C_.
Robert Suttee: Dash
Antonio Hopkins: I
Robert Suttee: C_?
Antonio Hopkins: think I like it
John Pauley: Dash.
Antonio Hopkins: like this more.
John Pauley: Triple R_ or triple R_C_?
Robert Suttee: Like a
Charles Anderson: Triple
Robert Suttee: C_ right
Charles Anderson: R_ dash.
Robert Suttee: now or a dash in a C_?
John Pauley: How about do both? Sure if it looks stupid. Uh I think that the the R_C_ together takes away the the the image of it's a triple
Antonio Hopkins: Hmm.
John Pauley: Uh the first the
Antonio Hopkins: Mm.
John Pauley: first one looks like it's a triple
Charles Anderson: That
John Pauley: remote control, but it's only a single remote control. And it's especially on the triple R_ that's important.
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
Antonio Hopkins: I
John Pauley: The Real
Antonio Hopkins: would
John Pauley: Reaction
Charles Anderson: this
John Pauley: Remote.
Antonio Hopkins: huh.
Charles Anderson: yeah.
Antonio Hopkins: I would lose the C_ and just name it triple
Robert Suttee: Is it triple
Antonio Hopkins: R_.
Robert Suttee: R_C_s? No.
Antonio Hopkins: It sounds like uh thinking about two
Charles Anderson: Triple
Antonio Hopkins: different
Charles Anderson: remote.
Antonio Hopkins: things and combining it. I would just say triple R_s triple R_
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: Yeah,
Robert Suttee: Well,
John Pauley: triple
Robert Suttee: that's another
John Pauley: R_
Robert Suttee: option.
John Pauley: yeah, you can
Antonio Hopkins: That's also short,
Charles Anderson: It's okay.
Antonio Hopkins: catchy.
Robert Suttee: Okay,
John Pauley: Yeah, triple
Robert Suttee: so which
John Pauley: R_.
Robert Suttee: ones are we going to scratch definitely?
Charles Anderson: The banana.
Antonio Hopkins: Banana.
John Pauley: Banana
Charles Anderson: Banana.
John Pauley: remote.
Robert Suttee: I say this one as well.
Charles Anderson: Yeah, the deluxe.
John Pauley: I think we're all in agreement about the triple R_. I think
Antonio Hopkins: Yes.
Charles Anderson: The
John Pauley: triple R_
Charles Anderson: r
Robert Suttee: Triple
John Pauley: is cool.
Robert Suttee: R_?
Charles Anderson: triple R_.
Robert Suttee: Triple
John Pauley: And it
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
John Pauley: looks
Robert Suttee: R_
John Pauley: cool
Robert Suttee: it is.
John Pauley: when you print it in font, looks pretty cool.
Antonio Hopkins: did you do now?
John Pauley: Just like this just and you just print triple R_,
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah.
John Pauley: it looks doesn't look bad, it's short, it's okay.
Antonio Hopkins: Yeah.
John Pauley: So have to write my report now, I guess. Um Um Yeah, so we have everything. We have the product, we have the costs,
Antonio Hopkins: Yep.
John Pauley: we have
Charles Anderson: It can't
John Pauley: the
Charles Anderson: work.
John Pauley: possibility
Charles Anderson: That will not
John Pauley: of everything. Okay. I think it's adjourned. Retire to my lair and finish the report. That was a short meeting.
Antonio Hopkins: Mm-hmm.
John Pauley: But efficient though.
Antonio Hopkins: The boss is always the last one to go home. So
John Pauley: Probably. See. Okay,
Charles Anderson: Okay.
John Pauley: goodbye.
Antonio Hopkins: See you in a minute.
Charles Anderson: Damn. I will write that one in a Word uh document.
Antonio Hopkins: Okay.
John Pauley: Could you guys draw Charles Anderson a picture of the final design to put on the cover of the
Robert Suttee: Yeah,
John Pauley: report?
Robert Suttee: sure.
Antonio Hopkins: Can't we take this one?
Charles Anderson: Oh sh
Antonio Hopkins: Otherwise we have to
Charles Anderson: Um
Antonio Hopkins: do it all over again.
Robert Suttee: I don't really know whether we can save it as a picture or no.
Antonio Hopkins: Is it okay if I try? Is that okay with
Robert Suttee: Sure.
Charles Anderson: Yeah,
Antonio Hopkins: you?
Charles Anderson: okay, I will ask you when uh
Antonio Hopkins: I'll put it
Charles Anderson: I
Antonio Hopkins: back
Charles Anderson: need
Antonio Hopkins: in
Charles Anderson: the
Antonio Hopkins: a minute.
Charles Anderson: information. So it's oh.
Antonio Hopkins: Okay, it has been saving something, but
Charles Anderson: Uh
Antonio Hopkins: where to I don't know.
Charles Anderson: Oh. Merge.
Antonio Hopkins: Oh, can I say exp yes, I can.
Charles Anderson: Sucks.
Antonio Hopkins: Export as J_ PEG.
Antonio Hopkins: Okay, can I not put this wherever I wants. My document is the wrong one, huh.
Charles Anderson: Yeah, but
Antonio Hopkins: I cannot.
Robert Suttee: Network
Charles Anderson: I don't know.
Robert Suttee: places.
Charles Anderson: Smart no. Ma it's maybe it's not on the network of uh the rest.
Antonio Hopkins: I don't think so.
Charles Anderson: That one is.
Antonio Hopkins: Document and settings.
Robert Suttee: I wouldn't pick that one, no.
Antonio Hopkins: That's a pity. That means that we have to gonna draw it again. Are you gonna do that?
Robert Suttee: Sure.
Antonio Hopkins: Okay.
Robert Suttee: Oh.
Antonio Hopkins: That Yes. Okay. Okay. Okay. Yes, that's correct.
Charles Anderson: Yeah. Okay.
Antonio Hopkins: Okay. No. Oh, it's export.
Charles Anderson: Oh yeah,
Antonio Hopkins: Okay.
Charles Anderson: Can I see scores? Uh,
Antonio Hopkins: Oh, of course. Sorry.
Charles Anderson: one one, two threes, two Okay, then we'll overall, two points. Yes.
Robert Suttee: I see you later.
Charles Anderson: Yeah.
Charles Anderson: Mm. | Robert Suttee and Antonio Hopkins presented a prototype drawing of the remote control design. The rubber case is yellow with black buttons and dark yellow for the menus. There are buttons for teletext, favourite channel, mute and OK. It incorporates both LCD screen and speech recognition. The prototype proved over budget (17 euros). The main contributing factors were the LCD and speech recognition. The latter was taken out, along with the special colour. Everyone agreed that the financial information should not have been given to them at the last moment. After the costing, the original prototype was evaluated on a scale of 1(excellent)-7(very bad). The criteria used were look and feel (1), whether it is easy to find (1), whether it is easy to learn (2), use of LCD (3), speech recognition (7), trendiness (2). Finally, the team evaluated the project process in terms of creativity (satisfactory), leadership and teamwork (happy with it, but they missed communicating in between meetings), and means (SMARTboard could be improved in terms of response time, the digital pens could not be used on more than one page at the same time). Finally, the decided to call their design Triple-R. | 1 | amisum | train |
Virginia Roth: Is that alright now? Okay. Sorry? Okay, everybody all set to start the meeting? Okay, we've got half an hour for this one
Pamela Whatley: Could you plug
Virginia Roth: um
Pamela Whatley: Pamela Whatley in?
Virginia Roth: to uh discuss the um functional design.
Pamela Whatley: Okay. Thanks.
Virginia Roth: All ready to go? Okay.
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: Um so hopefully you've all been working away, and I've put the minutes of the last meeting in the project folder. Um so I guess just to to recap on uh what we did last time. Um kind of uh got to each other a little bit and uh got familiar with all the equipment and started to discuss um a bit about the project, you know, cost-wise how much how much money we had to s
Virginia Roth: Um just want to tell you that you have three new requirements, um which is the The first one is that um uh the company's decided that teletext is outdated uh because of how popular the internet is. Nobody uses teletext very much anymore,
Pamela Whatley: 'Kay.
Virginia Roth: so we don't really need to consider that in the functionality of the of the remote control. Um they've also suggested that we um we only use the remote control to control the television, not the V_C_R_, D_V_D_ or anything else. I think the worry is that if the project becomes too complex then it'll affect um how long it takes us to get it into into production, the time to market.
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: So um, we're just gonna keep it simple and it'll just control the T_V_. And the other thing was that the company want the corporate colour and slogan to be implemented in the new design. Um I'm not entirely sure what the corporate colour is. It might be yellow, because there seems to be a lot of yellow everywhere.
Pamela Whatley: And the slogan, like the actual written slogan, or just to embody the idea of the slogan?
Virginia Roth: Well that's the thing, I'm I'm not sure um uh th because on the the company website, uh what does it say
Pamela Whatley: 'Bout
Virginia Roth: Uh something
Pamela Whatley: putting the fashion in electronics.
Virginia Roth: Yeah,
Theresa Perla: Mm yeah.
Virginia Roth: I mean do they Is that something they want actually written on it, 'cause it's quite long. Um or yeah, just the idea, but I'm not sure. So that's something we can discuss as well. So those are the three things, just not to worry about teletext, uh only control the T_V_, and um and uh incorporate the uh colour and slogan of the company. Um so is everybody okay with any of that, or do you want Pamela Whatley to recap at all?
Theresa Perla: Nope, we're all set.
Virginia Roth: Right um, time for presentations then. Who would like to go first?
Kristen Richey: I'll go first.
Pamela Whatley: Sure.
Virginia Roth: Okay, cool.
Kristen Richey: Alright um, I st steal this from the back of your laptop?
Virginia Roth: Oh
Kristen Richey: Uh
Virginia Roth: yeah, of course, yeah. G go on ahead.
Kristen Richey: so this is the technical functions design. Um Right to do the um the design I have I've had a look online, I've had a look at the homepage, which has given us um some insp inspiration from previous products.
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Kristen Richey: Um I've had a look at the previous products to see what they offer about the design at the end of the meeting. Um unfortunately we're not allowed to talk outside the meeting room, so
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Kristen Richey: Um, having a look at the existing products, I found out that um it tends to come in sort of two extremes, there's either um a very complicated one that's got lots of buttons, lots of colours, very confusing, you don't know what you're doing. Um in that case the the labelling tends to be very bad. Um there's an example I'll show you at the end, um sh show you now. Uh
Virginia Roth: Alright.
Kristen Richey: here um the button there and there. This one's prog. Sorry. That one's perg and that one's prog, and it doesn't really tell you what it does.
Kristen Richey: Um, not sure if you had a a look at the other um control in that example. Um it's a very simple one. It's got only the basic functions mm but um it's the same size as the the
Virginia Roth: Oop.
Kristen Richey: hard to use one. Uh it looked a bit clunky. They're very big and not very much use for buttons. Um, and it's just very hard to access the advanced functions. There's there's nothing for instance for a slow motion button. Um, my own preferences, I prefer the the clunky one. Um it's very easy to use. Um but unfortunately it does lack the advanced functions which I I quite like having on the controls. Um so I believe the the advanced functions should maybe be hidden in a drawer, or something like tha from the bottom of it. So, now I'd like to ask for your preferences. Um not sure of how long we've got, uh
Virginia Roth: Um. Well we can chat away for uh for five minutes or so I think at
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: at most. Just a couple of minutes anyway.
Pamela Whatley: M yeah, like a lot of a lot of what I've um read and prepared for this meeting fits in really closely with what with what Craig's just gone over. So in part I could I could give you some of my personal preferences but I could also th add some to this which is just about sort of um sort of market research.
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Pamela Whatley: But anyway, um
Virginia Roth: Shall we sh well
Pamela Whatley: we might
Virginia Roth: we'll
Pamela Whatley: come
Virginia Roth: stick
Pamela Whatley: to that later.
Theresa Perla: Which
Virginia Roth: to kind
Theresa Perla: which
Virginia Roth: of
Theresa Perla: is
Virginia Roth: your
Theresa Perla: the clunky
Virginia Roth: area
Theresa Perla: one,
Virginia Roth: for now.
Theresa Perla: the one on left
Kristen Richey: Um,
Theresa Perla: or
Kristen Richey: the
Theresa Perla: on
Kristen Richey: clunky
Theresa Perla: the
Kristen Richey: one
Theresa Perla: right?..
Kristen Richey: is the one on the right.
Theresa Perla: Okay.
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Pamela Whatley: Um clunky in what sense, like um h heavier? Larger?
Kristen Richey: Um I think it's supposed to be the same size, but um it's got much fewer buttons. It's, you know,
Pamela Whatley: I see, so
Kristen Richey: it's
Pamela Whatley: it's more
Kristen Richey: very
Pamela Whatley: just
Kristen Richey: spread out
Virginia Roth: Looks
Kristen Richey: and
Pamela Whatley: basic.
Virginia Roth: kind
Kristen Richey: kind
Virginia Roth: of
Kristen Richey: of
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Pamela Whatley: Right, okay.
Kristen Richey: you know, I get the idea it'd be sort of about this size.
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Kristen Richey: got very few buttons on
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Kristen Richey: it and
Pamela Whatley: Sure.
Virginia Roth: Well I think it's a valid point. I mean like the one on the left looks quite um quite complicated, and that P_R_T_ p P_R_O_T_ thing is incredibly confusing. Um so I see I see why yo you know you might prefer the simpler design, but yeah you don't want to lose out on, you know, what it does,
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: so maybe you know you know you get a lot of remote controls where you kind of flip the thing open, I think that's a
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: good idea. I
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: think it's a good idea.
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Kristen Richey: Um, do we have any functions that um we'd want on it? I mean so far I've got um on and off,
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Kristen Richey: um switch the channel up and down, and put the volume up and down.
Virginia Roth: Uh-huh.
Kristen Richey: Um they're just the the very basics you could use for a T_V_.
Virginia Roth: Uh-huh, and then actual numbers for channels as well, yeah.
Kristen Richey: Okay. Um, you say that's a h a required one or a requested one?
Pamela Whatley: Which
Kristen Richey: Would you
Pamela Whatley: was that?
Kristen Richey: like um the channels like the the numbers
Pamela Whatley: Up
Kristen Richey: on
Pamela Whatley: the numbers,
Kristen Richey: thing,
Pamela Whatley: or the up down?
Virginia Roth: God,
Kristen Richey: um
Virginia Roth: I wou I would say that's required, I mean there's no way anybody's gonna buy a remote control these days when if you can't actually individually
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: select channels, I mean would anybody disagree
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: with that? Um, what else, uh So don't need to worry about teletext, don't need to worry about V_C_R_, uh any kind of
Pamela Whatley: We
Virginia Roth: like
Pamela Whatley: don't?
Virginia Roth: display
Pamela Whatley: No?
Virginia Roth: controls at all do you think we need to worry about, you know like
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: brightness and contrast?
Pamela Whatley: Well I think I think es essentially what we're doing right now is we're categorising. We're saying well we want this to be a product that offers all the
Virginia Roth: Mm.
Pamela Whatley: sort of more tricky features but we want them to be in another area? Is that right? Is that what we're
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Kristen Richey: Um,
Pamela Whatley: we're doing? We're kind
Kristen Richey: yeah.
Pamela Whatley: of like sorting them an Or
Kristen Richey: Um
Pamela Whatley: are we actually eliminating things we just don't want the product to have?
Virginia Roth: I think are you are you maybe kind of thinking what we absolutely have to have and what would
Kristen Richey: Uh,
Virginia Roth: be nice?
Kristen Richey: to start with um sort of a bit both, um we need to find out exactly what we have to have
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Kristen Richey: um and after that we can add things if they're possible.
Virginia Roth: Okay, right. Well, do you wanna maybe just, at this point decide on what we absolutely must have as
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: a p as a function of this.
Pamela Whatley: Yep.
Virginia Roth: Um, so so far, just to recap you've got
Kristen Richey: There's um
Virginia Roth: volume
Kristen Richey: on and off,
Virginia Roth: and channel
Kristen Richey: um
Virginia Roth: control and
Kristen Richey: volume and channel, and skip to certain channels with the numbers.
Virginia Roth: Right okay. Um
Pamela Whatley: Well, one one way I would look at this um would be that we a approach the different controls in terms of um like control types, so that for the user it's very clear what they want to do where they
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm
Pamela Whatley: go.
Virginia Roth: yeah.
Pamela Whatley: Uh and also think maybe a little bit about sorta w w what would just wanna be acc easily accessible. For example
Virginia Roth: Oka
Pamela Whatley: if we had audio controls, those could be something people set up very rarely. Maybe they're un they're they're they're in a little area
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Pamela Whatley: but covered up um, things like channel and volume um are used all the time, so we just have them right out on top, um very just very sort of self-explanatory. Um so maybe we need to think about having three or more groupings of controls, you know like one which are just the the habitual ones that should be right within your natural grip. And others that are uh also available and then others that are concealed. Something
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: like that.
Virginia Roth: Uh well, just to to wrap up quickly on this this little section Have I just lost Oh no. Um, uh do you think maybe that's the only kind of uh essential requirements, and then maybe just things that would be nice if it could do would be things like audio set up and display set up and things like that, maybe like a mute button, that sort of thing.
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: Any of you anything to add to that at all?
Theresa Perla: No.
Virginia Roth: No.
Theresa Perla: I'll add it later, I guess the
Virginia Roth: Okay,
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: presentation.
Virginia Roth: right.
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: Um okay, if we can move on to next presentation then please.
Pamela Whatley: Sure.
Virginia Roth: Um
Kristen Richey: Do
Virginia Roth: Do
Kristen Richey: you
Virginia Roth: you wanna
Kristen Richey: want to
Pamela Whatley: Can
Kristen Richey: switch places?
Pamela Whatley: this can this pl reach? Can this plug
Theresa Perla: No.
Pamela Whatley: come across?
Virginia Roth: Probably
Theresa Perla: No.
Virginia Roth: not, actually.
Pamela Whatley: No. So why don't I just pick up and move
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Pamela Whatley: then. Here, I'll just Why don't I just
Pamela Whatley: Mm
Kristen Richey: Just just switch them.
Pamela Whatley: er, can you go up behind Pamela Whatley? Kinda This is so This
Virginia Roth: bit complicated. It'd
Pamela Whatley: I'm all in
Virginia Roth: be
Pamela Whatley: a
Virginia Roth: nice
Pamela Whatley: knot
Virginia Roth: if everything
Pamela Whatley: now.
Virginia Roth: was wireless, wouldn't it?
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: Right.
Pamela Whatley: Um. So I can I can say already, I dunno whether this is for good or for bad but there'll be a lot of kind of uh redundancy in the in the the issues and the the uh
Virginia Roth: Oh, like
Pamela Whatley: the things.
Virginia Roth: overlap between
Pamela Whatley: Yeah,
Virginia Roth: what you said?
Pamela Whatley: yeah. Which
Virginia Roth: that
Pamela Whatley: is ma not
Virginia Roth: that'll happen.
Pamela Whatley: necessarily a bad thing, but may what I've already started doing is cr I created a slide in in my presentation here so um so that we kind of think well what's the cumulative effect of what we've taken from your ideas and and mine, because certainly I I have a hard time separating separating things completely. Obviously
Virginia Roth: Mm hard to know what
Pamela Whatley: obviously
Virginia Roth: where your
Pamela Whatley: what
Virginia Roth: role
Pamela Whatley: you've just
Virginia Roth: ends,
Pamela Whatley: told
Virginia Roth: yeah.
Pamela Whatley: Pamela Whatley what you've just told Pamela Whatley impacts a lot on what um like market research mm that that I've been So
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: how do I how do I get
Theresa Perla: Um
Pamela Whatley: this
Theresa Perla: function
Pamela Whatley: up?
Theresa Perla: F_ eight.
Virginia Roth: Uh pr yeah, press
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: function and F_ eight, yeah.
Pamela Whatley: Okay. Alright. So F_ eight?
Theresa Perla: Function, the blue button. Next to the control on the left.
Pamela Whatley: Oh, and F_
Theresa Perla: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: Mm.
Pamela Whatley: eight.
Theresa Perla: You
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Theresa Perla: have to push it together.
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: Yep.
Pamela Whatley: Okay, I think that that's doing it now.
Theresa Perla: Nope. Try that again.
Pamela Whatley: Uh, again?
Kristen Richey: Think maybe the
Theresa Perla: Wait.
Kristen Richey: the wire in the back might be loose.
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: Yeah, you wanna
Pamela Whatley: Um,
Virginia Roth: Oh oh here
Theresa Perla: Yep,
Virginia Roth: we
Pamela Whatley: okay
Theresa Perla: there
Virginia Roth: go.
Theresa Perla: we
Pamela Whatley: great.
Theresa Perla: go.
Virginia Roth: There you go.
Pamela Whatley: Okay. Just um Before I bring this up what I'll just say is um what I've what I've done is tried to collect some information so that I can then relay this to to you guys so that it's now becomes a collective thing. And then kind of lead us in the direction of deciding, 'kay what what are our options, what should we decide and do you know what I mean, so.
Theresa Perla: Increase
Virginia Roth: Um
Theresa Perla: that 'cause see the
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: That's much better.
Virginia Roth: Right. Can you um
Theresa Perla: There
Virginia Roth: Right,
Theresa Perla: you go.
Virginia Roth: okay.
Pamela Whatley: Okay. Alright. That would be Okay. So um does that make sense? So what I basically got is I just looked into some information and sort of th tried to think about how how we could review it and how we could and what kind of decisions we could take away from it and then maybe by the end of just looking at some of these things we can think about what are our priorities. 'Cause certainly there's lots of different information to go through. So um I'm thinking here about uh primarily about customer needs, that we start with the customer, and w you know, what they want and what are issues with with um existing products. Uh to think about trends and also about try and connect that as you see with the company vision which is about fashion in electronics. Um and then, as I say uh w we'd like to prioritise our design features from this and um
Theresa Perla: Bouncing on top.
Pamela Whatley: Dunno. Okay.
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Pamela Whatley: Um. found here, um a lot of this is new to Pamela Whatley, so we'll just read through together. Um, users dislike the look and feel of current remote controls. So they find them ugly. Most people find them ugly. Um the vast majority would spend more money for it to look fancy as well, we'll see later, the vast majority would spend more money for um slightly more intuitive control, such as
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Pamela Whatley: voice recognition. Okay I'm gonna we'll look at that in a second. Um most people use only a f a very slim portion of all the controls. So I guess what we're looking at here is people want this h technology, they tend to use the most simple controls and overall they find remote controls to be something they don't doesn't really appeal to them.
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Pamela Whatley: So I think what we're doing is we're trying to take like if for Pamela Whatley this is sorta like three different different um inspirations, you know, one is that we want uh something that's high-tech but we want it to seem easy. And in spite of the primitive side of it and the very high-tech side, we want it to just be an appealing piece of equipment in people's hands. Um, frustrations. They get lost a lot, s as it came up in our last meeting. Um, takes time to learn how to use them. This is uh why I mention when Craig was uh showing us some ideas that we actually try and group controls, so d it doesn't just look like a big panel, kinda like when you you look at, you know, a new computer keyboard, or something that is quite explanatory. If you want audio, if you want visual, then you have those. Um and I will admit I don't know what R_S_I_ stands for.
Virginia Roth: Repetitive strain injury.
Theresa Perla: Is installing a new remote control something that people
Pamela Whatley: Uh, no, that did not come up at all. Um so here here is another um sort of a a review here of the main things. I also found that most people would uh adults at least would pay more for voice recognition. Now apparently we do have access to all the tech cutting edge technology in remote control. So I dunno if that's possible we might consider getting into it. Um. And and again here as we sort of move m sort of thin start thinking about how we wanna sell and market this, I think a recurring theme here is the company wants it to be wants us to make something that's fashionable and sleek
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Pamela Whatley: and trendy. Um people uh additionally aren't aren't liking the appearance of their products, so we wanna think about as we take all the sort of the techie features how we can um put that into a unit which is which people like. You know,
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: they like the aesthetics and the ergonomics.
Virginia Roth: So want something that looks good and is easy to use,
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: big priorities.
Pamela Whatley: Yeah,
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: so you know just c looking at what what Craig um Craig's i uh ideas are s sorta tell Pamela Whatley that maybe what we wanna do is try and um separate the different things that we wanna include in this. So if we do say well we want there to be all the technology will we try and make that almost be like optional technology. You know, it's like like I find a lot of T_V_s these days, something really like about 'em is if you wanna just turn 'em on and off you can, but they have little panels where you click
Virginia Roth: Mm.
Pamela Whatley: and there's just like tons of features
Virginia Roth: So
Pamela Whatley: you
Virginia Roth: it
Pamela Whatley: go
Virginia Roth: you
Pamela Whatley: through.
Virginia Roth: wanna group all the different kind of
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: types of functions together, you know. That's I think
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: it's a good idea.
Pamela Whatley: That's s that's sort of the um But I I'm my hope here is that I'm putting out this information so that we can then say okay, well how do we collectively move
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Pamela Whatley: on with it. Um
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: I I haven't brought out one specific marketing idea, although my sense is that what we should try and think about is what are the current trends in materials and shapes and styles,
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Pamela Whatley: and then use that. But not let that confine us technologically.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: So
Virginia Roth: Right.
Pamela Whatley: Alright? Any um comments on all of that?
Virginia Roth: Well, um
Pamela Whatley: That's
Virginia Roth: one
Pamela Whatley: uh
Virginia Roth: of the things that we have to decide on by the end of the meeting is who we're gonna be um who's our our target audience, our target market.
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: Um, so if we want something that that looks good and is easy to use, but has y is fairly powerful product, whatever, who do we really want to aim that at?
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: I mean
Pamela Whatley: Where's the money, maybe.
Virginia Roth: Yeah, who wou who would have the money to spend.
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: Well i if
Pamela Whatley: And who watches
Virginia Roth: if like
Pamela Whatley: T_V_.
Virginia Roth: twenty five Euro is our is our selling price
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: then you can imagine, well I don't I'm not really sure how much that will
Pamela Whatley: Mm.
Virginia Roth: retail at. But you want it's somebody who's not gonna just use the remote that comes with their telly, I suppose,
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: they're gonna actually go out and buy one.
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: So, who do you think we're aiming this at?
Theresa Perla: Um, I think it'll be the mid range to the high end market, in terms of people. 'Cause twenty five Euros for a remote, how much is that lo locally in pounds?
Virginia Roth: It's about sixteen, seventeen pounds, I think.
Theresa Perla: Is that too is that a lot of money to buy an extra remote or a replacement
Virginia Roth: Yeah,
Theresa Perla: remote?
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: okay.
Theresa Perla: Right. Um so maybe not the high end range, but maybe middle, middle up-ish.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: Kind of. You know how much? I dunno I guess you pay,
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: what, ten ten quid for a remote? Like a simple replacement,
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: right. I mean if you lost your remote and the first thing
Virginia Roth: Yeah,
Theresa Perla: you just wanna go
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: out and get,
Virginia Roth: yeah.
Pamela Whatley: This
Theresa Perla: would you
Pamela Whatley: this
Theresa Perla: how much
Pamela Whatley: kinda
Theresa Perla: would you
Pamela Whatley: touches
Theresa Perla: pay?
Pamela Whatley: on your comments there, David. These are the age groups which we
Theresa Perla: Yeah.
Pamela Whatley: have information on and these are this is a table of h what people would pay more for a certain feature. Just
Virginia Roth: Okay
Pamela Whatley: gives us a rough idea of where the w the will to spend money on T_V_ equipment is.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: Mostly focused around the twenty five age group.
Virginia Roth: Yeah, so do you think we're we're aiming at a fairly young market then?
Theresa Perla: Yep.
Pamela Whatley: Sort of young professional, kind
Virginia Roth: Yeah,
Pamela Whatley: of. Mm-hmm
Virginia Roth: okay.
Kristen Richey: Um
Virginia Roth: Um do you think then uh voice recognition is something we should really seriously consider? What what do you think, Craig?
Kristen Richey: Well, did you not say it was the the adults that were going for the the voice recognition? Sort of the
Pamela Whatley: Uh,
Kristen Richey: the older
Pamela Whatley: yeah,
Kristen Richey: group.
Pamela Whatley: it's the Yep.
Kristen Richey: Uh
Pamela Whatley: It
Kristen Richey: f
Pamela Whatley: does it does fit with the market that we're sort of identifying,
Virginia Roth: N yeah.
Pamela Whatley: in terms of
Virginia Roth: I think we are gonna have to narrow it down, to say let's target these
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: people and give them what they want and
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: 'cause you know,
Pamela Whatley: Sure.
Virginia Roth: there needs to be some kind of
Pamela Whatley: Sure.
Virginia Roth: selling point to
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: it. So um anybody anything there to add Just kind of young professionals, uh th like if we are going to include speech recognition, it's kind of between fifteen and thirty five seems to be like a really high response to that.
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: So we could say
Theresa Perla: I
Virginia Roth: that
Theresa Perla: I
Virginia Roth: was
Theresa Perla: think
Virginia Roth: our target.
Theresa Perla: twenty five to thirty five is is is fair to add that in as
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: a group
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: as well because
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: that's more than half your group of people who are willing to at least try
Pamela Whatley: Yeah,
Theresa Perla: and use your technology.
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Pamela Whatley: yeah.
Virginia Roth: Okay, so fifteen to thirty five, look fairly young.
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: You know, they have bit of expendable income to spend on this sort of thing.
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: I think perhaps that age group is significant as well because those are people who use the computer,
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: who are familiar with their with computers in in their everyday work.
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: I think people who are maybe about
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: I wouldn't say thirty five, but people who are about
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: forty-ish and above now
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: would
Pamela Whatley: But
Theresa Perla: not
Pamela Whatley: yeah.
Theresa Perla: be so dependent and reliant on a computer
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: or
Pamela Whatley: Yeah,
Theresa Perla: a mobile
Pamela Whatley: sure.
Theresa Perla: phone or something like that.
Virginia Roth: So
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: So these are people who are gadgety, right? People
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: who are u growing up used to, you know in schools and in universities, when you go on to their working lives,
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: people who would
Virginia Roth: So
Theresa Perla: you
Virginia Roth: they'll
Theresa Perla: know regular
Virginia Roth: not sh not shy
Theresa Perla: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: away from something
Theresa Perla: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: quite high-tech.
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: That that's
Theresa Perla: Mm.
Virginia Roth: that's a good point. Um okay, so um so shall we make the decision uh to include speech recognition
Pamela Whatley: If we can.
Virginia Roth: if we can.
Theresa Perla: I I think
Kristen Richey: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: one thing we should try not to avoid is not to say we have to use speech recognition right now,
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: because
Virginia Roth: Why is that?
Theresa Perla: um, based on what you've go y everybody's saying, right, you want something simple. You want basic stuff and you want something that's easy to use. Speech recognition might not be the simplest thing
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Theresa Perla: for somebody
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: to use.
Pamela Whatley: Could it be an on off thing?
Theresa Perla: Um,
Pamela Whatley: Like if you want it
Virginia Roth: Where you can
Theresa Perla: but
Virginia Roth: activate
Theresa Perla: what
Pamela Whatley: on
Theresa Perla: I'm saying
Virginia Roth: it and
Theresa Perla: is
Virginia Roth: deactivate
Theresa Perla: that we're
Virginia Roth: it?
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: we're trying to lock ourselves into a s particular kind of technology,
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: rather than focusing on on exactly what are the features that we're
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: gonna say,
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: and then, you know,
Pamela Whatley: Sure.
Theresa Perla: say speech recognition is good for this, speech recognition is not good for this.
Pamela Whatley: Sure.
Theresa Perla: So
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: maybe we should I suggest
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: that we think about speech recognition,
Pamela Whatley: Sure.
Theresa Perla: anyway it's a it's something that can be used to fulfil a function, but
Virginia Roth: Uh-huh.
Theresa Perla: at end of the day we don't look at the technology, but
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: we look at the function first.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: Sure. Yep.
Virginia Roth: Uh okay, well do you wanna um give us your presentation
Theresa Perla: Okay, sure.
Virginia Roth: and then then we can I
Pamela Whatley: Yep.
Virginia Roth: don't know um might have been a good idea to all deliver our presentations and then discuss,
Pamela Whatley: Yeah,
Virginia Roth: but
Pamela Whatley: it's
Virginia Roth: this is
Pamela Whatley: good
Virginia Roth: this
Pamela Whatley: well
Virginia Roth: is
Pamela Whatley: it's
Virginia Roth: how we're
Pamela Whatley: good to get ideas out while
Virginia Roth: Yeah,
Pamela Whatley: they're fresh in mind.
Virginia Roth: exactly, yeah.
Pamela Whatley: Um
Virginia Roth: Oh it's something that's just occurred to Pamela Whatley as well is if we make it um speech reco if we incorporate speech recognition, that's appealing to people um maybe with
Pamela Whatley: Not
Virginia Roth: a physical disability as well.
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: Um.
Pamela Whatley: And not losing. And also it helps in terms of people not losing this, you know they
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Pamela Whatley: they're saying oh it's I lose it in the couch.
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Pamela Whatley: like we're kind of what we're b sort of getting in into here is mating different uh design features
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Pamela Whatley: together that they
Kristen Richey: I reckon one problem with speech recognition is um I've actually seen one of them used and uh the technology that was in that one wasn't particularly amazing, so you end up yelling at the control for hours.
Virginia Roth: Really?
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Kristen Richey: Channel up.
Pamela Whatley: Oh really, you've seen one before.
Virginia Roth: Do you think maybe we need like
Kristen Richey: Um
Virginia Roth: further advances in that kind of area until it's worthwhile incorporating
Kristen Richey: I think it'd
Virginia Roth: it
Kristen Richey: probably
Virginia Roth: though?
Kristen Richey: quite expensive
Theresa Perla: Sorry, do
Kristen Richey: to
Theresa Perla: you mind passing
Virginia Roth: Mm.
Kristen Richey: put in.
Theresa Perla: Pamela Whatley my
Virginia Roth: Course
Theresa Perla: notepad.
Virginia Roth: not.
Theresa Perla: Thanks. Cool,
Virginia Roth: There you go.
Theresa Perla: um. Okay. Um.
Virginia Roth: Right.
Theresa Perla: Well this is just the working design
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: um. Well this is just what how I would go about it. Um I guess I try to define like what we're doing now, try to define what we're trying to get done. Um
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Theresa Perla: I think in a practical way, we kind of know what it is. We've used it, we're familiar with it, but we're we can't n we haven't narrowed down um exactly what the things we're trying to fulfil, like Besides the basics, I think back in the back of our minds we know what the basics are. Has to change channels, has to change volume, but in like specifics, right, which one of the basics are you trying to target.
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: Um are there certain parts of the basics that are more important or less important than the basics? Um and I just the idea is just to get everybody to um I usually have a have have a design that's there as a basic, so, you know, things that to start everything going. But I guess everybody does have some idea, so I don't think um there's a need for that. Um okay this finding things is a little bit confusing, so I'll go into the diagram first. It just explains how the process goes through,
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: from a from the basic technology point of view, the basic steps that you need um in the diagram and in this slide probably works better. Um okay, you need some power source. 'Kay, a battery or something,
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: to keep it going. Um and that power source is important because it ties you down to um how long the device will last.
Virginia Roth: Uh-huh.
Theresa Perla: Um it ties you down perhaps a bit later on in terms of the technologies um how far you can transmit the signal or the complexity of the functions
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: that you want. Like for example, voice recognition, right. might be constrained because that you might need to power a microphone, you might need to power other things, so that's one perhaps constraint there. Um Th Okay, the basic thing is there's a user interface where people punch a button or talk into it or smile to it or blink their eyes, whatever.
Virginia Roth: Hmm.
Theresa Perla: You know, and that um picks up an input from a user, um uh a logic a series of logic has to decide what the user is telling the device, and the device has to r you know, based on you push button A_, so I will do something with button A_. So maybe button
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: A_ is the power button,
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: okay. Um and then it needs to be able to send the signal out to the device itself which is the receiver here. Um and I think that's about it in terms of my design um. It's fairly general, um and I guess the purpose of this is also not to restrict you
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: in in the way you're thinking, like um voice recognition, right, um, if it's something which is important then we just add more power rather than having a thing that we don't have enough power. So it's not
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: really a constraint in that sense,
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: but I mean these are functionally, you know, the base,
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: what
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Theresa Perla: the technology has to do.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: Um so I guess the rest of it I think we should maybe you you wanna go back to what the functions are? I think that's
Pamela Whatley: 'Kay.
Virginia Roth: Uh.
Theresa Perla: more relevant to a discussion?
Virginia Roth: Well, do
Pamela Whatley: Sure.
Virginia Roth: you wan do you wanna finish up
Pamela Whatley: Sure.
Virginia Roth: your your whole presentation
Theresa Perla: Yeah, w I'm done.
Virginia Roth: then? Are you are you all done?
Theresa Perla: More or less. Yeah. Ps Oh, it's just putting the rest of it into words, but it's essentially
Pamela Whatley: Yep.
Theresa Perla: the same thing.
Virginia Roth: Mm.
Theresa Perla: Um you have a transmitter, an input
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: device, logic chip, you know, stuff
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Theresa Perla: like that. Um
Virginia Roth: Right.
Pamela Whatley: And like on the means
Theresa Perla: I guess this would
Pamela Whatley: b
Theresa Perla: be
Pamela Whatley: Since we're on the topic of the technology,
Theresa Perla: Yep.
Pamela Whatley: uh are there any like what are our options? Alright, what's what i in Is this the only way that we go about it, or are there
Theresa Perla: Um,
Pamela Whatley: other
Theresa Perla: these these
Pamela Whatley: thin
Theresa Perla: aren't technology options in that sense.
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Theresa Perla: This is just um
Pamela Whatley: The basic
Theresa Perla: a
Pamela Whatley: principle
Theresa Perla: basic
Pamela Whatley: of
Theresa Perla: principles
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: and
Pamela Whatley: 'Kay.
Theresa Perla: basic components that are needed.
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: For example, if you needed um if you needed to add uh a voice recognition, right, then your user interface would be split, broken down into more components,
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: right, which you have a microphone,
Virginia Roth: Oh.
Theresa Perla: the V_R_
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Theresa Perla: and stuff like that.
Virginia Roth: So this just show how
Theresa Perla: Uh
Virginia Roth: we're kind of modularising the whole
Theresa Perla: Yep.
Virginia Roth: thing. Okay.
Theresa Perla: Yep. So each component represents one function,
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: but I think the basic functions are the logic, the transmitter, um and the receiver,
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: okay, and the power are things that you won't have to care about.
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: Um and those are things that based on what your user interface requires then
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: we'll add more functionality to it.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: Um there might be one other consideration which would be that the the transmission between the remote control and the T_V_ for example.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: Okay,
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Theresa Perla: um are we gonna restrict ourselves to using the traditional technologies of infra-red
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: thing? Because that's something you need to actually be physically be pointing to.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Theresa Perla: Right.
Virginia Roth: Well well a worry that was was expressed in the new requirements was that if we made this too complex it would e it would effect um how long how long it took us to get this to market, so I th suspect it might be a good idea just to restrict our kind of our creative influence on this on the user interface and not worry so much about uh how we transmit it
Theresa Perla: Yep.
Virginia Roth: um because I mean it it's tried and tested intra-red, so
Theresa Perla: There might
Virginia Roth: we
Theresa Perla: be
Virginia Roth: could
Theresa Perla: one
Virginia Roth: stay with tha
Theresa Perla: other problem with the transmission, um in particular right now, since we're talking about voice recognition. Um if somebody's gonna h talk to the device, you ideally
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm
Theresa Perla: want them to hold it to them.
Virginia Roth: Oh,
Theresa Perla: I it
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Virginia Roth: yeah.
Theresa Perla: you may not require that, but
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Theresa Perla: you know, um it's it's it's something very natural, I guess,
Virginia Roth: Yeah,
Theresa Perla: you know, to
Virginia Roth: mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: hold it, to signal to the user, and push a button maybe to start s talking
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: about it. Then you need to send the signal out, so
Virginia Roth: Mm.
Theresa Perla: because if you're using infra-red, the line of sight
Virginia Roth: Mm.
Theresa Perla: um say the T_V_'s at that chair, and I'm standing in front of here and the transmitter is here,
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: it blocks it.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: So in that sense, there's not really a restriction but it's something which
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Theresa Perla: you may have to think about later on in the process.
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Theresa Perla: Not so much
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: further
Pamela Whatley: And
Theresa Perla: down.
Pamela Whatley: um just a clarification before we finish this. Uh does c is our controller is it have the option of being um on a standard uh frequency as all of the other equipment, so that the one controller can control
Theresa Perla: There's there's not much specific
Pamela Whatley: several pieces of
Theresa Perla: specific
Pamela Whatley: equipment?
Theresa Perla: information,
Virginia Roth: W
Theresa Perla: but I think that um one indication of infra-red mean that you're just targeting traditional devices.
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Theresa Perla: Because
Virginia Roth: W
Theresa Perla: infra-red is something which everybody has.
Virginia Roth: Well well we've um In the new requirement spec they said just to focus
Pamela Whatley: Just
Virginia Roth: on
Pamela Whatley: to
Virginia Roth: the T_V_,
Pamela Whatley: T_V_, okay.
Virginia Roth: so that's what we should do for now I think.
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: Something I was wondering about was the power. Um, is it worth considering like having like a charging unit as opposed to just regular batteries? I mean is that something we really want to go into, do you think, or should we
Theresa Perla: There's
Virginia Roth: just consider
Theresa Perla: a there's
Virginia Roth: running
Theresa Perla: Okay,
Virginia Roth: on
Theresa Perla: from
Virginia Roth: regular
Theresa Perla: from
Virginia Roth: batteries?
Theresa Perla: a from a component point of view there's added complexity,
Virginia Roth: Uh-huh.
Theresa Perla: and you add cost to it,
Virginia Roth: Uh-huh.
Theresa Perla: um and then there's probably the fact that you need another physical component. You need a docking cradle, for
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: example,
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: for you to
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: put it in to charge.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: Or you need to get the user to plug it in. Um
Virginia Roth: Okay, so
Theresa Perla: and most users are very f use already used to the idea of buying batteries and putting it into
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: the controller. But unless the controller's gonna consume a lot of batteries, like he's gonna run through like
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: twenty batteries a month, then I don't think rechargeable is something we should you know, we
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: Okay,
Theresa Perla: really
Virginia Roth: so
Theresa Perla: need
Virginia Roth: just
Theresa Perla: to
Virginia Roth: stick to to regular
Theresa Perla: care about. Um.
Virginia Roth: Okay. Um, right. So basically the um I'm just gonna just recap uh what I said at the start, was that um the the whole point of this meeting was to f absolutely finalise who we're gonna aim this at, and
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: what exactly the product's gonna do.
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: So um just to recap on Are we all happy about the idea of um aiming the product at um the fifteen to thirty five bracket?
Pamela Whatley: Yeah,
Virginia Roth: Um
Pamela Whatley: that's
Virginia Roth: and
Pamela Whatley: good.
Virginia Roth: also the funct the the actual functions of what it's gonna do. Do you wanna recap on that, Craig?
Kristen Richey: Um. I think we just say that it was gonna be the the most basic stuff possible. Um on off, up and down channels, up and down volume and uh skip to a channel.
Virginia Roth: Okay,
Kristen Richey: Ta.
Pamela Whatley: And
Virginia Roth: right.
Pamela Whatley: is it going to include any of the uh the more advanced features, or are we gonna eliminate those?
Kristen Richey: Um I think we include mute, but apart from that um I think we just we'll go for the simpleness.
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: Okay,
Pamela Whatley: R
Theresa Perla: I
Pamela Whatley: is
Theresa Perla: think
Pamela Whatley: it is it is it s is it not an option still that we include some things just as a sort of under like sort of under a door
Virginia Roth: Yeah,
Kristen Richey: Yeah.
Virginia Roth: it's
Pamela Whatley: or
Virginia Roth: as
Pamela Whatley: some
Virginia Roth: optional functions.
Pamela Whatley: 'Cause what what I'm I'd be a bit worried about is if someone was h had previously developed habits of expecting to control surround sound or this and that with their controller and then and then they, you know, w they get ours and w it's doesn't have that. I dunno
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: if that'd be a problem.
Theresa Perla: Another thing that you were saying about categorising the controls?
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: Um maybe I could suggest we we break them down into three simple categories.
Pamela Whatley: Yeah. Okay.
Theresa Perla: One would be audio controls,
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: one would be video controls,
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Theresa Perla: and the other one would be a device. Um this may not map very well to advanced functionality especially, but I think that um from a manufacturer's point of view,
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: from a person designing the device, but I think from a point of view of a person using the device, you know a T_V_ is something they see and something they hear,
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: um it's something they do other things to like turn it on and turn it off.
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: I mean like
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Theresa Perla: so what we could have is like three buckets, right, where we could throw things into, like if we want this feature, let's throw it into there,
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: and then from there decide whether it's basic, or it's non-basic.
Pamela Whatley: 'Kay, okay.
Theresa Perla: I mean
Pamela Whatley: Like
Theresa Perla: it
Pamela Whatley: that.
Theresa Perla: might help with the visualisation.
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Theresa Perla: And it would actually help with the component build
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: as well.
Virginia Roth: Okay,
Pamela Whatley: Mm okay, great.
Virginia Roth: right. Um, okay well I gotta kind of got five minutes to wrap up now. Um next thing we're doing is having lunch. Whoohoo. Um and then we're gonna have thirty minutes of working on the next stage. Um so I'll be putting the minutes of this uh this meeting into the project documents folder.
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: Um so uh I guess just to just to confirm that we know what we're doing in the next well
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: in the thirty minutes after lunch anyway, um for uh our Industrial Designer, you're gonna be thinking about the components concept. Um User Interface Designer gonna be thinking about our user interface, and marketing you're gonna be thinking about trend watching. Um and you'll all get specific instructions as well. So um I dunno, just just to to ask now if you've got anything else you've thought about while we've been talking. Um, do you wanna start with David. Anything else to say at all?
Theresa Perla: Mm no, not
Virginia Roth: No,
Theresa Perla: really.
Virginia Roth: okay.
Pamela Whatley: Um
Virginia Roth: Andrew?
Pamela Whatley: yeah, just I just wanted to ask then before we wrap up, shall we agree for sake of um sort of clarity and when we when we r resume that we'll u use this idea David's proposed, where we think of these three sort of buckets and
Virginia Roth: Yeah,
Pamela Whatley: anything
Virginia Roth: yeah I think
Pamela Whatley: anything
Virginia Roth: that's definitely
Pamela Whatley: we discuss
Virginia Roth: a good
Pamela Whatley: about
Virginia Roth: idea.
Pamela Whatley: them is sort of, okay, we're talking about this.
Virginia Roth: Uh-huh.
Pamela Whatley: Shall we
Theresa Perla: Mm.
Pamela Whatley: do that, then?
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Pamela Whatley: Okay, great.
Kristen Richey: Um just about the three buckets, um what would go in the the device functions one?
Theresa Perla: Um things like on off. Because they don't have anything to do with what you see.
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: I Pamela Whatley mean in terms of picture and the entertainment value, you know, um
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: so um
Pamela Whatley: And
Kristen Richey: Um
Pamela Whatley: and channel.
Theresa Perla: And channel.
Pamela Whatley: Right.
Theresa Perla: Because the on off also goes, you know, like on off like power, not on off sound. Not
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: on off video. Although you don't turn off the video on your T_V_, but um you
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: might wanna you know turn off the sound, say you wanna pick up the phone, there's a mute button, right, so
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: you you have you have a choice of putting it on to um others or a device. Device is basically anything which we can't categorise, right.
Virginia Roth: Okay,
Theresa Perla: We
Virginia Roth: so
Theresa Perla: put it
Virginia Roth: you're
Theresa Perla: out.
Virginia Roth: gonna have um audio which is gonna be like you know your bass settings and
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: actual volume
Theresa Perla: Yeah, anything to do with
Virginia Roth: hi
Theresa Perla: what you hear, right.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: You you put that into audio.
Virginia Roth: Okay,
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: And
Virginia Roth: and then
Theresa Perla: then
Virginia Roth: visual
Theresa Perla: video is anything that you can see.
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: Okay,
Theresa Perla: Um.
Virginia Roth: so brightness, contrast,
Theresa Perla: Yep.
Virginia Roth: things like that,
Pamela Whatley: Colour, yeah.
Virginia Roth: and then just actual device things,
Theresa Perla: Yep.
Virginia Roth: like
Pamela Whatley: Sure.
Virginia Roth: what channel you're watching,
Pamela Whatley: Sure.
Virginia Roth: turning on an off,
Theresa Perla: Yep.
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: stuff like that. Okay,
Pamela Whatley: And
Virginia Roth: um
Pamela Whatley: then k I suppose quite likely what would happen is in the d device category there might be some which are just like the habitual standard and then others which are maybe a bit more
Theresa Perla: Like
Virginia Roth: Mm-hmm.
Theresa Perla: random which we
Pamela Whatley: Yeah.
Theresa Perla: have no other place to put,
Virginia Roth: Yeah.
Pamela Whatley: Sure,
Theresa Perla: but we
Pamela Whatley: okay.
Theresa Perla: need it somewhere there.
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Theresa Perla: Um even even if it doesn't map very clearly what happens is that people at least have some in their mind. It's easy to use, I think that's one thing that um and I guess from the component point of
Virginia Roth: Okay.
Theresa Perla: view it's easy to build as well 'cause things are like fixed.
Pamela Whatley: Okay.
Virginia Roth: Okay. Um so yeah, I guess just things to think about are you know like the fact it's gotta look good, because of who we're we're, you know, targeting this at. Um something maybe kind of quirky in design maybe.
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: Make it kind of ergonomic kind of to
Pamela Whatley: Mm-hmm.
Virginia Roth: hold, you know, things like that. Um, so I guess I guess that's it.
Pamela Whatley: Great.
Virginia Roth: That's the meeting over. Whoohoo.
Pamela Whatley: Then we get to go find out what was picked up for lunch for us. | Virginia Roth briefed the team on some new requirements to consider when designing the remote. Kristen Richey presented two existing products and discussed what was wrong with each product. The team discussed how to create a remote which did not include the problems present in the existing products presented by the interface specialist. Pamela Whatley presented consumer preferences and requirements and the team discussed who their target demographic should be and whether to include speech recognition in their product. Theresa Perla discussed the interior workings of a remote and the team discussed various options for components and energy sources. The team then discussed features to include in the remote and what they could do to figure out how to categorize them. | 2 | amisum | train |
Eileen Bullard: 'S to do now is
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: to decide how to fulfil what your stuff is, so
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: in that sense
Susy Froedge: Yeah,
Eileen Bullard: so
Susy Froedge: sure.
Eileen Bullard: it does kind of
Maria Smith: Okay,
Eileen Bullard: make
Susy Froedge: It
Eileen Bullard: sense,
Maria Smith: well
Susy Froedge: kinda
Eileen Bullard: yeah.
Susy Froedge: does make, doesn't it, because when we get into the end of meeting we're kind of talking about action and design as opposed
Eileen Bullard: Yep.
Susy Froedge: to background.
Maria Smith: Okay.
Susy Froedge: Everything I have is kinda background.
Maria Smith: Okay we to go?
Eileen Bullard: Yep.
Maria Smith: Well how um on the in this meeting then if we um I'll just just recap on the minutes from the last meeting. And we uh decided on
Eileen Bullard: Yep.
Maria Smith: decided on our our target group being fifteen to thirty five,
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Maria Smith: and we decided that it was gonna be non-rechargeable battery-powered, that we're gonna group our audio-visual and other functions into into those categories, um. And I told you guys about the three requirements about ignoring, except the T_V_, and trying to incorporate the corporate colour slogan. Um so that was the last meeting. Is there
Eileen Bullard: Mm-hmm.
Maria Smith: anything have I forgotten anything?
Eileen Bullard: No.
Susy Froedge: Uh
Maria Smith: Is that
Susy Froedge: that
Maria Smith: everything?
Susy Froedge: sounds.
Maria Smith: Okay. Um so if we have the three presentations, and then if you have anything to kind of that you know you're gonna want to discuss, maybe just make a note of it, and we'll have all the discussion at the end. That might
Susy Froedge: Sure.
Maria Smith: be a better idea this time. And so
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: if we start off uh with Andrew and then Craig and then David, if that's
Susy Froedge: Sure.
Maria Smith: alright. Um
Eileen Bullard: Yep.
Maria Smith: and then after that we'll have to make some decisions about stuff,
Susy Froedge: Yeah,
Maria Smith: right.
Susy Froedge: cool.
Maria Smith: So if
Susy Froedge: Why don't
Maria Smith: you wanna
Susy Froedge: I get that?
Maria Smith: take this.
Susy Froedge: Hmm.
Maria Smith: Screwed in quite tightly. Uh what did uh how did we leave it with speech recognition now? We did we say we were gonna try maybe incorporate it but we hadn't made a definite
Eileen Bullard: Mm-hmm.
Maria Smith: decision on that? Right. Oh I should also point out that um the you know the kind of final objective of this meeting is to reach a decision on the concepts of the product.
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: So um that's kind of the end result hopefully.
Susy Froedge: Okay. Um alright so c is it function F_ eight?
Maria Smith: Uh-huh. Hopefully
Susy Froedge: Hmm.
Maria Smith: appear in a wee second.
Susy Froedge: Come on. I think it's working.
Maria Smith: Up there we go.
Susy Froedge: great let Susy Froedge just start this. Okay great. So um uh s move on. Uh-huh oh where'd it all go? It's not good.
Maria Smith: Oh no.
Susy Froedge: Okay lemme just see where I can find it.
Susy Froedge: This looks more like it. I think I just opened up the template. Sorry
Maria Smith: Oh
Susy Froedge: about that.
Maria Smith: right.
Susy Froedge: Okay alright so let's have a look here. Okay so
Maria Smith: Here
Susy Froedge: this
Maria Smith: we go.
Susy Froedge: was the method that um I've taken. Uh basically what I wanna do here, before we get into it uh too far, is I want to show you all the background information I have that I think we need to acknowledge if we want this to be successful.
Maria Smith: Okay.
Susy Froedge: And uh and then sorta g go through some of the way that I've dealt with that information, and then sort of bring us all together into it to see sorta see how this fits in with the overall vision. Um so I've tried to take a whole lot of market research and summarise it for us, and then ide identify uh trends that are are sort of in sync and are important to our our uh p project plan that we have so far, and then uh initiate a kind of discussion on design options so that it sorta helps us to to narrow in on on aspects that will inform other uh other elements of the of the project. Does that make sense,
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Susy Froedge: tha
Eileen Bullard: Yep.
Susy Froedge: that sort of strategy? I thought that that will impact on the rest of what we do, so that's why I suggested
Maria Smith: Aye a
Susy Froedge: we
Maria Smith: fair
Susy Froedge: get
Maria Smith: point
Susy Froedge: in this.
Maria Smith: definitely.
Susy Froedge: Okay so out of um different uh figures and ratings ob uh of people in general, um consumers in general, the number one thing that was found was that uh the br t television remote control, a fancy look and feel, okay, and not, it specified, not a functional look or or feel,
Maria Smith: Okay.
Susy Froedge: uh b f f fancy. Um however, this is where we kinda have to be very, I think, creative about it. Number two was that it be innovative. Okay so that tells Susy Froedge that we have to find a way to be innovative without a adding just unnecessary um sort of functional bits to it. Uh and third priority uh for ease of use, so again that kind of gives us a general picture of how it has to be, um quite user friendly while still having technology. So it I'll just say right away as a bit of a foreshadowing into how we proceed with this in terms of m marketing, is that I think um what we should think about is how the um about how the innovation uh contributes to the look and feel, and not so much to the functionality of it. For example
Maria Smith: Aye right.
Susy Froedge: like when you pick it up and push it like it all lights up or something, you know what I mean, like, or it's got something else to it
Maria Smith: Uh-huh.
Susy Froedge: that just seems innovative because obviously the thing that the message here is ease of use. So how do you make innovation make something more more easy to use? Well that's I guess where we're gonna go with this.
Maria Smith: Okay.
Susy Froedge: Okay then there's the other aspect of the back the the market um research I have here is on fashion style, okay, which as we've agreed is a priority. Uh top European fashion trend um that I read about says there's this emerging theme of fruit and vegetables, okay, especially in clothes and furniture. And when I first saw that I thought hmm, well do we want to actually try and think about this trend and how we add something to it, or we get right into it, or we completely steer away from it, do you know what I
Maria Smith: Okay
Susy Froedge: mean?
Maria Smith: okay.
Susy Froedge: So my my feeling is that we w do want to observe this trend, but we want to think also about the fact that it sort of has to fit in with something which is not specifically electronics. Um 'cause I think what we're in what we're in is partly sort of home decor, partly something like a computer, um so I think we might wanna be careful about how you know how quickly we create like a remote control in the shape of an apple or something, I think that would be pushing it. And then in terms of m material trends are for things to be soft and spongy and sort of, you might say ergonomic or or friendly to handle, which is which also in indicated that last year this was this was not the case. So um probably a lot of the competition on the market will be still in last year's mode, so if we try and really capitalise on that, I think that'll be in our favour. Um So these this is the summary of everything. market of who we're selling to. Uh innovative design technology's also a must in that it's seen it'd be seen to be uh cutting edge, uh but ease of use t has to be insured throughout. That was like the number three thing. And then at the end there are vibrant natural colours um that's the way I interpreted it anyway, softness in materials, shape, and function, and so I've written at written at the bottom to give us sort of a context of discussion, Mac iPods,
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Susy Froedge: something which is, I'd have to say very high-tech, ten gigabytes, whatever, but when you hold it in your hand there's like no buttons. You know
Maria Smith: Mm
Susy Froedge: what a Mac
Maria Smith: that's
Susy Froedge: iPod
Maria Smith: true,
Susy Froedge: is?
Maria Smith: yeah.
Susy Froedge: I'm thinking however Mac iPod is sort of last year's because it's very hard and sort of glassy and glossy, so I'm thinking if we imagine that we're taking some of the features of a Mac iPod and we're then making it s more of like a more of like a comfortable type of or more of like a maybe more vibrant to friendly thing to have. Um and then so this is w with all that information what I'm what I'm suggesting in this slide here is that we we take these ideas, and as we get into more the more um techni like sort of production side of things, that we think about shape, materials, and themes or series that go throughout. Sort of like a I dunno like um we think of some kind of a thin theme that unifies it all, that we agree on, uh sorta like a marketing identity. Um Does that make sense? Yeah. So so like I threw out a few ideas there just to kinda get us thinking along those lines like lemon, lime, I dunno, green colours, pe whatever, it's just an idea, 'cause I'm thinking that some of these ideas will seem quite coherent if we use them in terms of their what people associate this them with in terms of texture, shape, colours, things like that.
Maria Smith: Mm 'kay. Great.
Susy Froedge: Like um the ones the ones which I'm most fond of in terms of giving like a theme to it would be like um like lemon or something like that, you know something which is, like you see a lot in in other areas. Like I see lots of websites and things that seem to associate with like lemon and lime and
Maria Smith: Okay.
Susy Froedge: So anyway it's just just an idea.
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Susy Froedge: I'm thinking maybe we could incorporate some of these features into a fairly um into something which is which seems to have something to it which is almost gimmicky because like um like something to do with like lighting within it. Like you know just within
Maria Smith: Ah.
Susy Froedge: the simple sense, when you pick up a phone and touch a button it uh lights up, q usually the buttons light up. How can we build on that? Maybe like it could light up in different colours or something or or people could buy the buy the control and then it comes with different like covers or something so.
Maria Smith: Okay.
Susy Froedge: Anyway those are that's all I have, but
Maria Smith: That's
Susy Froedge: uh
Maria Smith: great.
Susy Froedge: hopefully we can we can revisit those ideas
Maria Smith: Uh-huh.
Susy Froedge: when we get into
Maria Smith: Okay great. Um thank you for that. Uh
Susy Froedge: Yep.
Maria Smith: Craig do you wanna uh plug yours in then?
Patricia Smith: Is it working?
Maria Smith: Mm. Not quite.
Susy Froedge: Did you press F_ eight?
Eileen Bullard: It's probably not sending. Yeah.
Maria Smith: Oh something coming
Eileen Bullard: Yep,
Maria Smith: now,
Eileen Bullard: there
Maria Smith: yeah.
Eileen Bullard: it is.
Maria Smith: There we go.
Patricia Smith: And so think of this concept. Um to research it I've um had a look on the the homepage again. It's provided Susy Froedge with more examples of um previously existing c remote controls. Um there's a wee bit of discussion about the other existing ones there, um so I've taken the um suggestions from them and tried to incorporate them into this um So then this we're looking for um suggestions on size th um size of control and the buttons, um the shape of the control, whereabout the buttons should be located on the control.
Maria Smith: Mm.
Patricia Smith: Um what I found from the research is that most the current controls are just basically big bricks with loads of buttons all over them. Um they're not very attractive to look at, and they're not very comfortable to hold, they're I just hold 'em like big bricks, and they're very easily lost. Um they tend to be very dark colours, so if there are shadowy places down the side of couches you can't really see them.
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Patricia Smith: Um the the controls themselves tend to use a very inconsistent colour scheme. Um for instance, the stand-by button isn't always red, uh it really should be. It's uh something the user then uh identify with. This is a red switch off, that's how it should be. Um I'm not sure if there's any other examples of that, but something to look out for. Um there's a problem that I've I've got couple of preferences for the the end control um I get 'em with the the red colour button for stand-by and s the other examples of that um The buttons should be large. They shouldn't be tiny little things like you get on some mobile phones. They should be easy to press, very comfortable. Um one of the examples given on the homepage was um there's an up and down volume button but both of them have a V_ on them,
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Patricia Smith: so the up volume button looks like it should be a down volume button, that's kinda confusing. Um should avoid s things like that. Um if the the corporate colour scheme allows it we should have a very bright colour so that it can be easily identified anywhere.
Maria Smith: Okay.
Patricia Smith: Um obviously trying trying to avoid being tacky there, but it could um tie-in very easily with your
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Patricia Smith: your lime
Susy Froedge: Okay,
Patricia Smith: and lemon idea.
Susy Froedge: do we have a corporate colour scheme? I didn't
Maria Smith: I
Susy Froedge: know.
Maria Smith: think it's yellow because like the website is yellow and
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: there's a band at the bottom is yellow, so
Eileen Bullard: And the Play-Doh
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: 's yellow.
Maria Smith: yellow, lemon,
Patricia Smith: Fantastic.
Maria Smith: you know definitely food for thought there,
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: but keep going and we'll discuss it
Patricia Smith: Um
Maria Smith: after.
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Patricia Smith: any extra features we add beyond the basic ones should be m hidden, they shouldn't be on the um shouldn't be visible without something be opened or
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Patricia Smith: some sort of special extra effort. Um if we did decide to go for voice activation there sh should always be a button as alternative, possibly hidden in the the opened up section um making that something is wrong with it or with somebody's voice, maybe they got a cold or Um we should definitely avoid the big square block look. That's just wrong.
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Maria Smith: Mm 'kay.
Patricia Smith: And um we got an email uh from I think it's the the research department, and they've said th the voice control um can now talk back if you ask it a question.
Maria Smith: Mm.
Patricia Smith: So it sh it could be good to have them um confirm any action you take
Maria Smith: Aye
Patricia Smith: and
Maria Smith: that's a good idea,
Patricia Smith: possibility.
Maria Smith: yeah.
Patricia Smith: Right and these are problems I've had with it. Um I don't know where the slogan should go, or really what the slogan is. I think it's um, fashion into electronics.
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Patricia Smith: And we don't know how flexible the colour scheme is. I mean you say you wanted the the corporate colours, but they don't say you know if we can use
Susy Froedge: Mm.
Patricia Smith: any other colours at all or
Susy Froedge: Mm.
Maria Smith: Okay.
Patricia Smith: That's
Eileen Bullard: Cool.
Patricia Smith: it.
Maria Smith: Okay.
Susy Froedge: Great. Lots of good information there.
Maria Smith: Yeah that
Eileen Bullard: Mm-hmm.
Maria Smith: that was very good, and
Eileen Bullard: Mm
Maria Smith: uh
Eileen Bullard: 'kay
Maria Smith: now with
Eileen Bullard: um.
Maria Smith: David.
Patricia Smith: I think I'm cool.
Susy Froedge: It's a shame the cable wasn't just in the middle
Maria Smith: I know
Susy Froedge: of the table,
Maria Smith: it'd be handy,
Susy Froedge: huh?
Maria Smith: wouldn't it.
Susy Froedge: Just um
Eileen Bullard: Oops.
Maria Smith: Do y do you wanna sit in the the line of sight of this
Eileen Bullard: Yeah
Maria Smith: um
Eileen Bullard: okay. Let Susy Froedge just get this
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: going first. Ah there it is.
Susy Froedge: It takes a second, doesn't it?
Eileen Bullard: 'Kay, that should it. Okay um I guess the same thing again, I started with something very basic. So just so you guys have some idea of what's involved in my process,
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: um and then you can just work through it and we 'll either modify it or start from scratch um depending on what your needs are. Um the components are exactly the same.
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: Um I think, like what you guys said, um the most input that's needed is basically in the user interface. The rest of the components um they do have an impact in terms of cost and complexity. Um like you said time to market was a problem, um and how many components are physically in there in cost. And the power is basically a factor of that. Um and the lower components, the power, the logic, the transmitter, and the infrared, um they affect you in terms of the size of your device, um and that would have some inte impact on how y I think more how you hold rather than um the actual use using the the remote control because um like we've said we've defined, like we only want the basic things that to be visible, and the rest of them we try to hide.
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: So um you know it's just a matter of working out space. So I guess three things, um cost, um complexity, and the size. These are the three things that um will have an impact on you. So just go through it in the components. Um these are the options that are available to you, um I'm not very sure about the voice thing 'cause I got another email and it was in fact quite sketchy on what n the voice options are.
Patricia Smith: Right.
Eileen Bullard: Um it said it could talk to you, but it never said anything about being able to listen. I it said something about a sensor but never clarified that.
Susy Froedge: Mm.
Maria Smith: Hmm.
Eileen Bullard: So maybe if you well I could see the other email that they sent you, um 'cause they got back to Susy Froedge with like different requirements, or different offerings of what components availa Okay so
Patricia Smith: Right.
Eileen Bullard: your basic components are buttons,
Maria Smith: Mm.
Eileen Bullard: okay and you have a wheel available, like a mouse scroll wheel,
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: okay there's an L_C_D_ display, um I think these are quite standard things.
Susy Froedge: They're standard, aren't they?
Eileen Bullard: No um they're well in the sense that these are all the options available for you. I'll explain to you the complexity and the cost thing again a bit
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: later. Okay um then there's um how the case actually looks. It can actually be flat or it can be curved, um and then the different types of materials that you can use, um I don't think you can use them in a combination,
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: um but um I could check back for you, but I don't think you can actually use them in a combination.
Maria Smith: We you couldn't have like plastic and rubber?
Eileen Bullard: Um I think plastic and rubber would be fine, but plastic, rubber, and wood, I wasn't I'm not very sure about the titanium.
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: They had some restrictions
Susy Froedge: Hmm.
Eileen Bullard: on using the rubber and the titanium.
Maria Smith: Mm
Eileen Bullard: Um
Maria Smith: 'kay.
Eileen Bullard: the rubber was a restriction on the kind of power source you could use, but the titanium had a different kind of things on the shape of the
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: thing, so I think that there is some restriction on um I think you could probably group plastic and rubber together,
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: wood and titanium, but you know it might be easier from a cost perspective and a
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: complexity just to use one.
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: You know as opposed to two.
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: Um and the other components are logic chips, um again I'll I'll go back to the component chips. The com how complex or how easy the logic is, it depends on how many functions you have on the on the unit um and that impacts cost. Um
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: I don't think the logic chip has a issue about size 'cause they
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: should be about the same size. Power consumption should be about the same. Um
Susy Froedge: Hmm.
Eileen Bullard: I think the main impact is complexity, um and the other thing is um the power options. Um the first one is a standard battery. Okay the second one I think is more of a gimmick then actually a useable thing, it's a wind-up
Maria Smith: I'll clear
Eileen Bullard: you know,
Maria Smith: one of these
Eileen Bullard: a
Maria Smith: things
Eileen Bullard: crank.
Maria Smith: for you. Just
Susy Froedge: Hmm.
Maria Smith: by moving
Eileen Bullard: Yeah
Maria Smith: it yeah.
Eileen Bullard: but that that might be something I think that's more of a look and feel decision because I don't think you can have one power source if you're using the alternative power sources. I think whatever it is you still need a battery 'cause
Maria Smith: Mm.
Eileen Bullard: I don't think anybody wants to keep doing one thing.
Susy Froedge: No.
Eileen Bullard: Okay the other ones
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: are a solar powered cell, which may not be a great idea in Europe or any country that has seasons 'cause half the year you'd be dead. a battery
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: and something else.
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: Um and the kinetic one I guess for Susy Froedge is the most interesting one because it's movement and people like to fiddle with their
Maria Smith: Mm.
Eileen Bullard: and it's a nice sales gimmick I think. From a marketing
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: gimmick it it's a technology thing, it's a shake it it doesn't work, shake it, knock it or something. You know
Maria Smith: W
Susy Froedge: Hmm.
Maria Smith: yeah.
Eileen Bullard: you know you
Maria Smith: Uh
Eileen Bullard: have you had
Maria Smith: yeah
Eileen Bullard: those
Maria Smith: yeah,
Eileen Bullard: balls,
Maria Smith: I see.
Eileen Bullard: you know those
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: stress balls where you bounce the ball and it and it lights up and it goes, you know that might be a gimmick combined with rubber.
Susy Froedge: Hmm.
Eileen Bullard: You know just to
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: if you get frustrated wi remote control you can throw it, kind of you know just uh
Susy Froedge: Hmm.
Maria Smith: I know what you mean yeah.
Eileen Bullard: you know um so. Um okay my from my role, I don't think that personal preferences but role preferences, I think um something comfortable to hold,
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: um small and slim I guess that's more in the sense of small and slim in terms of comfortable not so small you can't, you know like a phone
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: or something, too small phone. Um and the other thing is from a production point of view um the less components we use and the simpler the components means you reduce your cost and you increase your profit.
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: Um and also the time to market and the complexity of developing
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm
Eileen Bullard: designing
Susy Froedge: mm-hmm
Eileen Bullard: and debugging
Susy Froedge: mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: it um so.
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: Um okay let Susy Froedge just go back and talk about some of the restrictions. Um The user interface restrictions basically means that if you use more complicated features, like the buttons are standard okay, the L_C_D_ panel and the scroll wheel you need more complicated logic.
Maria Smith: Mm.
Eileen Bullard: Um the case okay with a rubber case you can't have the solar panels. Okay with the titanium case, let Susy Froedge just check that um, titanium case can't be curved, it has to be square.
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: Okay um there's no restriction on the plastic,
Susy Froedge: It can't
Eileen Bullard: and
Susy Froedge: be curved.
Eileen Bullard: it can't be curved
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: on the wood. So that's again, I don't think you can use them in a combination,
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: um especially the titanium I I suspect they're
Maria Smith: Right.
Eileen Bullard: very fixed to a particular need. So um mixing them may not be a good idea
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: um yep.
Maria Smith: Right
Eileen Bullard: That's
Susy Froedge: Uh
Eileen Bullard: it.
Susy Froedge: question
Maria Smith: can
Susy Froedge: on
Maria Smith: I
Susy Froedge: can I ask a question?
Maria Smith: Yeah well yeah it's just I'm quite keen to get the discussion going with the time we've left so
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: but yeah you c ask
Susy Froedge: Can
Maria Smith: away.
Susy Froedge: we uh power a light in this? Can we get a strong enough battery to power a light?
Eileen Bullard: Um I think we could because the L_C_D_ panel requires power, and the L_C_D_ is a form of a light
Maria Smith: Mm.
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: so that
Susy Froedge: So maybe one of the things we can just try and include is a really good battery.
Maria Smith: Why what kind of light do you want are you thinking
Susy Froedge: Well
Maria Smith: of?
Susy Froedge: I mean I'm thinking it might be That for uh this to be a high-tech thing it's
Maria Smith: Uh-huh.
Susy Froedge: gonna have to have something high-tech about it
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Susy Froedge: and that's gonna take battery power, and to make that to make that a realistic goal I think one of the issues that will come up later is,
Eileen Bullard: Are
Susy Froedge: can
Eileen Bullard: you
Susy Froedge: the
Eileen Bullard: thinking
Susy Froedge: battery power
Eileen Bullard: are you
Susy Froedge: it?
Eileen Bullard: thinking of of a light in the sense of um a light light, or a light in the sense of
Susy Froedge: Illuminate
Eileen Bullard: it glows
Susy Froedge: the buttons.
Eileen Bullard: kind of
Susy Froedge: Yeah
Eileen Bullard: you
Susy Froedge: it
Eileen Bullard: know
Susy Froedge: glows.
Eileen Bullard: Frankenstein, it's alive.
Susy Froedge: Well m I'm thinking along the lines of you're you're in the dark watching a D_V_D_
Eileen Bullard: Okay.
Susy Froedge: and you um you find the thing in the dark and you go like this, and that's what everybody does. Oh where's the volume button in the dark,
Maria Smith: Yeah yeah yeah.
Eileen Bullard: Okay.
Susy Froedge: and uh y you just touch it, or you just pick it up, and it lights up or something.
Maria Smith: Like a phone
Eileen Bullard: Okay.
Susy Froedge: Like
Maria Smith: yeah,
Susy Froedge: a phone,
Maria Smith: like
Susy Froedge: yeah
Maria Smith: the backlight
Susy Froedge: yeah.
Maria Smith: in a phone. Okay cool.
Susy Froedge: Whereas with phones, people charge them once a week.
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Susy Froedge: We're gonna need to put in a really good battery so people don't have to charge their r remote control every few days.
Eileen Bullard: Um that's why I think the option of the the kinetic thing which basically means as long as you shake it like a watch, like an automatic
Susy Froedge: But are people gonna
Eileen Bullard: watch
Maria Smith: Mm.
Susy Froedge: wanna shake their movie controller?
Eileen Bullard: um it's probably sensitive enough when you fiddle it.
Susy Froedge: Right.
Eileen Bullard: So
Susy Froedge: Sure.
Maria Smith: Mm.
Eileen Bullard: you could trigger that to a light, like I said the bouncing ball thing, or you
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: could trigger that to use that to power
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: the light as opposed to
Susy Froedge: Right.
Eileen Bullard: so when they pick it up, right, and then
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: that that sorta triggers
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: the
Maria Smith: Right
Eileen Bullard: glowingness.
Maria Smith: okay
Susy Froedge: Okay,
Maria Smith: um
Susy Froedge: great.
Maria Smith: well let's just go right back to the marketing ideas for a start, and just giving an Eileen Bullard idea on the time, we've got about fifteen minutes to play with at most.
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: So um yeah so just t to bear in mind that the ultimate goal of this meeting is to reach an decision on the the the concepts of the product. So
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: back to your idea about um incorporating the idea of like fruit and veg, and
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: the corporate colour, and things like that.
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: Um I mean what does everybody think about Does anybody have any ideas of about how we can fit all that in together? I mean that's kind of the user interface type of thing, what are your thoughts on that?
Patricia Smith: Um I think we could go for like um maybe not a p a fruit shape but a very sort of curvy type shape. Um you could have the same sort of texture and colour as a fruit.
Maria Smith: So maybe do y are we thinking something that like s could sit in your hand comfortably, or do you th you'd hold onto comfortably or
Patricia Smith: Um probably something that s sits in your hand comfortably, sort of
Maria Smith: So
Patricia Smith: feels
Maria Smith: something
Patricia Smith: right in
Maria Smith: quite
Patricia Smith: your hand.
Maria Smith: curvy? Okay um right okay. Colour-wise I mean you made a re uh was it you or uh I can't remember who made the point about how if you've a nice bright colour you'll not lose it, was that Whose
Eileen Bullard: I think
Susy Froedge: What's
Eileen Bullard: he
Susy Froedge: that?
Eileen Bullard: made that.
Maria Smith: about how if you have a bright colour you'll not lose it so much.
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: Um and when the corporate colour is yellow, I mean maybe we could think about about the colour of the whole product being
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: yellow I don't know. Um And then obviously the uh the materials when it
Susy Froedge: Well
Maria Smith: That's all.
Susy Froedge: I mean I'm thinking that what we need to do is have something that kind of unifies a lot of the different concepts, and
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Susy Froedge: if we think that what we are w our number one marketing motive is um the look and feel.
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Susy Froedge: So for the look and feel to seem coherent and not just sorta bits and bits and pieces of of concept and technology or or whatever or fashion, then we should have it kind of come back to one thing that we kind of all sorta can visualize. Um maybe what we could do is t th think about a concept which touches b back to the on the um the colour, you said
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Susy Froedge: company colour yellow. I mean if we think of something, like I was saying also lime
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Susy Froedge: and lemon you know, what can we come up with something where we we try and associate it with with like the series. We just come up with something like that we kind of use it as a theme to inspire the
Maria Smith: Okay.
Susy Froedge: shapes and things.
Maria Smith: Right.
Eileen Bullard: Is there a particular shape that you're interested in? Like does marketing have any research on does it need to be long? Does it need with
Maria Smith: Oh
Eileen Bullard: a square
Maria Smith: you know like
Eileen Bullard: thing
Maria Smith: in circular
Eileen Bullard: wha
Maria Smith: in shape or
Eileen Bullard: Yeah 'cause that will n help narrow down the choice of
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: Choice of material
Eileen Bullard: Like fruit.
Maria Smith: yeah. 'Cause
Eileen Bullard: I'm
Patricia Smith: See
Eileen Bullard: thinking
Maria Smith: I I
Patricia Smith: I'm
Eileen Bullard: fruits
Maria Smith: I
Eileen Bullard: in
Maria Smith: was
Eileen Bullard: my head,
Maria Smith: kinda
Eileen Bullard: but that's
Maria Smith: thinking
Eileen Bullard: tacky.
Maria Smith: about as well you know how you get these shock resistant mobile phones, and they're plastic but then also have like rubber on the outside, and it kinda feels it feels kind of warmer to the touch. It feels
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: a bit more comfortable, and maybe we could incorporate plastic and rubber into it. And then then we could have curved shapes, 'cause wood or titanium, yeah, it's gonna have to be boxy and rectangular and I think we might be moving away from that you know so um Well I'm do we really want it in like the shape of a lemon or
Susy Froedge: No no no
Maria Smith: no I don't think we do either.
Susy Froedge: not at all. It's more more just that we we think about like what it is we're trying to achieve, so and then we have one one sorta theme that we stick with. Do you
Maria Smith: Okay
Susy Froedge: know what I mean?
Maria Smith: right well um so thoughts about the actual shape of the thing.
Patricia Smith: I'd quite like a sort of uh snowman type shape.
Maria Smith: A snowman shape?
Patricia Smith: Um so a p sort of larger bit sits in your hand,
Maria Smith: Uh-huh.
Patricia Smith: and then you got maybe another bubble at the top for just any other function you need.
Maria Smith: That's quite
Susy Froedge: Right,
Maria Smith: a distinctive shape, that
Susy Froedge: sure.
Maria Smith: would be good wouldn't it.
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: Yeah so yeah should we go with that?
Susy Froedge: Um can we yeah like to and wha like do you have a
Maria Smith: Do you wanna draw
Susy Froedge: Can you
Maria Smith: it on
Susy Froedge: like
Maria Smith: the board?
Susy Froedge: yeah just t we can visualize it.
Patricia Smith: Um something like that um you got two groups there um maybe it could fold up and you get a third group inside
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: Ooh
Patricia Smith: or
Maria Smith: that'd be good.
Patricia Smith: uh you have volume controls about there.
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Susy Froedge: Yep.
Maria Smith: So call it the snowman-shape trademark. Yeah that's cool. Um and I mean colour-wise what does everybody think? I think it is quite important to get yellow in there somewhere. I mean do you want the whole thing yellow, maybe like yellow and white do you want
Susy Froedge: Mm.
Maria Smith: something
Patricia Smith: So I reckon it'd look quite nice if we just had um this here, had a sorta background yellow,
Maria Smith: Uh-huh.
Patricia Smith: and then have sort of a nice bold colour for the buttons.
Maria Smith: Okay cool. Um and also I mean how are we going to incorporate the slogan in? The fact that it talks to you, I mean it might be quite cool if when you first start using it it says, what is it, putting fashion into electronics or something, I dunno. Or when you like or if you turn it off or something if
Patricia Smith: I think
Maria Smith: it
Patricia Smith: that
Maria Smith: can
Patricia Smith: might
Maria Smith: speak
Patricia Smith: scare Susy Froedge.
Maria Smith: if it could actually say the slogan it might be a bit more powerful than just having it written on it somewhere. I d I d any thoughts on that at all?
Patricia Smith: I think that'd probably scare Susy Froedge. You turn it on your control possessed s.
Maria Smith: I know. Um unless an a I mean if you also would that work if we wanted to incorporate um an L_C_D_ display, where would we put that? Would we put that on the inside or
Patricia Smith: Um
Eileen Bullard: Do we need an L_C_D_ display? What what's the functionality
Maria Smith: It's
Eileen Bullard: of
Maria Smith: bound
Eileen Bullard: that?
Maria Smith: to increase the cost of it a lot, I
Eileen Bullard: Yeah but the
Maria Smith: would've
Eileen Bullard: question
Maria Smith: thought.
Eileen Bullard: is what
Susy Froedge: What would
Eileen Bullard: are
Susy Froedge: it
Eileen Bullard: we
Susy Froedge: achieve?
Eileen Bullard: using it what would we what would we achieve from it? Putting
Susy Froedge: Well
Eileen Bullard: in lights is cheap but putting in an L_C_D_ panel
Susy Froedge: L_C_
Eileen Bullard: just
Susy Froedge: well
Eileen Bullard: to make it glow is
Susy Froedge: I'd
Eileen Bullard: a bit
Susy Froedge: when
Eileen Bullard: of
Susy Froedge: you used
Eileen Bullard: a
Susy Froedge: to mention the L_C_D_ I'd think I wonder what that would be about. And the th the thing I could see it helping with would be if it was somehow connected with um listings. So as
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Susy Froedge: you scroll through, 'cause we said we might have a jog dial, so
Eileen Bullard: Mm-hmm.
Susy Froedge: as you scroll through your stations you can y it actually tells you what it is.
Eileen Bullard: I think that will be a problem because we don't have an input device to get the listings into
Susy Froedge: Right,
Eileen Bullard: it,
Susy Froedge: okay.
Eileen Bullard: so
Maria Smith: Mm
Eileen Bullard: um
Maria Smith: oh
Eileen Bullard: it's
Maria Smith: yeah
Eileen Bullard: a bit
Maria Smith: that's
Eileen Bullard: nuts
Maria Smith: true.
Eileen Bullard: to get the
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: Monday Tuesday
Maria Smith: So
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: Wednesday
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Maria Smith: so
Eileen Bullard: you
Maria Smith: no
Eileen Bullard: know.
Maria Smith: need for an L_C_D_ display?
Eileen Bullard: Um I I'm not saying there's no need for an L_C_D_ display, but um
Maria Smith: I think that would
Eileen Bullard: it's
Maria Smith: make it very
Eileen Bullard: what's
Maria Smith: complex.
Eileen Bullard: what what would it tell the user, 'cause the L_C_D_ tends to be an output as
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: uh as opposed to an input so
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: um does the remote control need to talk back to the
Susy Froedge: Mm
Eileen Bullard: user?
Susy Froedge: not real
Eileen Bullard: We have the option of the speaker as well the sa the same thing goes for the speaker, is there a need for the remote control to
Maria Smith: I
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Maria Smith: don't know if there is
Eileen Bullard: to
Maria Smith: really,
Eileen Bullard: talk back?
Patricia Smith: Nah.
Maria Smith: no um
Eileen Bullard: Um
Maria Smith: I would say no need for a talk-back. Uh does anybody disagree with that?
Susy Froedge: No.
Eileen Bullard: You could
Maria Smith: No?
Eileen Bullard: put a game on it.
Maria Smith: Easy.
Eileen Bullard: When the T_V_ dies you can play with the remote control.
Susy Froedge: Mm
Maria Smith: Okay
Susy Froedge: mm.
Maria Smith: um right so you're gonna have the three different sets of of functionalities, um I mean do you wanna group them into s head of the snowman, body of the snowman, inside of the snowman, is that what you're thinking?
Patricia Smith: Um well I think the advanced ones the the ones you don't usually use could be hid inside.
Maria Smith: Okay.
Patricia Smith: B um I think the we had were fairly basic ones, they'd have to go on the the front somewhere.
Maria Smith: Okay right um what else do you need to talk about?
Susy Froedge: Well i
Eileen Bullard: Where
Susy Froedge: I was
Eileen Bullard: would
Susy Froedge: just
Eileen Bullard: you physically position the buttons? Um I think that that has some impact on
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: on on many things.
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Patricia Smith: Um
Eileen Bullard: Um maybe you wanna draw onto the
Maria Smith: So I'm just gonna um pop this in here 'cause I have a slide about decision making
Eileen Bullard: Yep.
Maria Smith: which I'd forgotten about.
Maria Smith: Oh sh God we've got five minutes um okay uh back we go. Um energy what do you think that's suggesting we're how we're powering the thing? I really like the idea of this kinetic thing where you'd have the back-up of the battery,
Susy Froedge: Yeah,
Maria Smith: but have
Susy Froedge: sure.
Maria Smith: have kinetic power,
Susy Froedge: Um
Maria Smith: I mean what does
Susy Froedge: I've
Maria Smith: anybody
Susy Froedge: had
Maria Smith: think
Susy Froedge: kinetic
Maria Smith: about that?
Susy Froedge: things before, and the the the one issue we need to keep in mind with them is that you're committing the user to moving it, and
Eileen Bullard: No, like I said we
Susy Froedge: watches
Eileen Bullard: have a h
Susy Froedge: yeah
Eileen Bullard: hybrid kind of thing,
Susy Froedge: Sure,
Eileen Bullard: so it's not gonna
Susy Froedge: okay,
Eileen Bullard: charge the battery,
Susy Froedge: right, okay.
Eileen Bullard: it's just
Maria Smith: Okay.
Susy Froedge: Support for it. I mean
Eileen Bullard: Yeah.
Susy Froedge: just it's just worth pointing out because like I've I've known I've known people to have kinetic watches that they wear all the time,
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Susy Froedge: and it's just like magic because it's always powered and there's no battery. I've also known people to have things like like a jewellery watch they wear from time to time, and they eventually just say it's just too much of a nuisance because
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Susy Froedge: I don't wear
Eileen Bullard: Yep.
Susy Froedge: it all the time. Like remote control is similar, you're away on vacation, I dunno whatever, you something,
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Susy Froedge: and it just starts to get worn down. So
Maria Smith: Well
Susy Froedge: we should
Maria Smith: I suppose that if
Susy Froedge: think
Maria Smith: you're
Susy Froedge: about
Maria Smith: if you're away and you're not using it, then you're not using any power either. So you'd have the battery as the kind of to keep it ticking over
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: idea I'm really sorry we're gonna have to wrap up quite quickly, we don't have as much time as I thought.
Susy Froedge: Yep.
Maria Smith: Um so I think that's what energy is referring to here. Chip on print, is that that's an industrial design thing, is it David?
Eileen Bullard: Yes yes.
Maria Smith: Okay um as for the case, kind of discussed that
Susy Froedge: And this size here, I'd suggest this be small,
Maria Smith: Yeah I
Susy Froedge: like
Maria Smith: know we're gonna
Susy Froedge: quite
Maria Smith: have like
Susy Froedge: small.
Maria Smith: rubber buttons that feel kind of
Patricia Smith: Yeah
Maria Smith: Okay.
Patricia Smith: I think so yeah.
Susy Froedge: Um just a a lot of the um I mean one of the things running through my mind right now, I realise we're being efficient to wrap up the meeting
Maria Smith: Mm-hmm.
Susy Froedge: and have lots of decisions made, um but we are leaning quite a bit to the side of being low-tech, rubber buttons plastic frame, it's almost like we're reproducing the same old remote control
Maria Smith: Mm 'kay.
Susy Froedge: that's out there. Should we think about how we are actually getting this high-tech user friendly uh um theme like what is it that we're u we're using to to achieve those goals? Like
Maria Smith: Could have things like backlighting the buttons and
Susy Froedge: Okay
Maria Smith: stuff like
Susy Froedge: so
Maria Smith: that.
Susy Froedge: so backlighting,
Eileen Bullard: Or even
Susy Froedge: that
Eileen Bullard: a
Susy Froedge: would
Eileen Bullard: clear
Susy Froedge: be good.
Eileen Bullard: case. Um
Susy Froedge: Yeah clear, that'd be
Eileen Bullard: you
Maria Smith: Aye
Eileen Bullard: know a
Maria Smith: that
Eileen Bullard: a
Maria Smith: would be
Eileen Bullard: glowing
Maria Smith: a
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: good idea.
Eileen Bullard: a a glowing yellow type case where the yellow is showable, but in the dark it sort of, it's alive.
Susy Froedge: Yeah sure.
Eileen Bullard: Um in
Maria Smith: S
Eileen Bullard: in a
Maria Smith: so
Eileen Bullard: slight
Maria Smith: like
Eileen Bullard: subtle
Susy Froedge: Yeah that'd
Eileen Bullard: way.
Susy Froedge: be really
Maria Smith: cur
Susy Froedge: good.
Maria Smith: slightly transparent
Eileen Bullard: Yeah
Maria Smith: case, so
Eileen Bullard: yeah.
Maria Smith: it's yellow,
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: like tinted yellow, but
Eileen Bullard: Yeah.
Maria Smith: you can maybe see through it. Is that what
Eileen Bullard: Or
Maria Smith: you mean?
Eileen Bullard: or there might be a light running through it like a mouse.
Susy Froedge: Sure.
Eileen Bullard: You know you have cordless mice and they don't eat that much power
Susy Froedge: Yeah,
Eileen Bullard: right. So the power the
Susy Froedge: yeah.
Eileen Bullard: battery in that sense, maybe
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: you have one or two stratig strategically placed lights
Susy Froedge: Sure.
Eileen Bullard: that sort of
Susy Froedge: Yeah they they emanate a light through it.
Eileen Bullard: Yeah
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: but because the case is transparent
Maria Smith: Lights.
Eileen Bullard: so it
Susy Froedge: 'Kay.
Eileen Bullard: gives it a little bit of a glow,
Susy Froedge: Yeah, mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: doesn't
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: make it freaky.
Susy Froedge: Um and then the other thing that we we're s we've committed ourselves to achieving is simplicity, and so I'm thinking maybe should we try and think about having something like um some kind of an innovative concept about how the um the volume and the channels are controlled, 'cause that's the main thing people will f wanna
Maria Smith: Mm.
Susy Froedge: do. Could we use like a jog dial, like a nice just sort of round, somewhere on it where you just
Eileen Bullard: The question
Susy Froedge: roll
Eileen Bullard: is
Susy Froedge: it?
Eileen Bullard: when you're rolling
Susy Froedge: Or
Eileen Bullard: it, how do you wanna roll it? Do you want 'em to roll it like that? Do you want 'em to roll it like that? 'Cause in a mouse your hand's in a position
Patricia Smith: Mm.
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: to roll it, whereas the other thing about having it jog dial this way, it tends to get moved accidentally.
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Maria Smith: Yeah
Susy Froedge: Well
Maria Smith: if
Susy Froedge: why
Maria Smith: you
Susy Froedge: don't we
Maria Smith: are
Susy Froedge: do
Maria Smith: holding
Susy Froedge: it like
Maria Smith: it
Susy Froedge: a
Maria Smith: in your
Susy Froedge: mouse
Maria Smith: hand
Susy Froedge: then?
Maria Smith: you could you could do that, couldn't you? If you're holding it in your hand
Eileen Bullard: That's
Maria Smith: you could
Eileen Bullard: a very unnatural motion
Maria Smith: Do you think?
Eileen Bullard: to yeah.
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: Can you imagine you have to scroll a lot. Um it might work for volume,
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: and maybe some of the brightness controls and stuff like that,
Maria Smith: Mm.
Eileen Bullard: but not for channels right. If you have a Telewest box you've got like, you
Susy Froedge: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Bullard: don't have to buy all the channels, you've about fifty channels, can you imagine
Maria Smith: Yeah
Eileen Bullard: trying
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: to.
Maria Smith: okay okay
Susy Froedge: Yeah,
Eileen Bullard: Um
Susy Froedge: sure.
Maria Smith: um
Eileen Bullard: and I don't think having that you know too quick too
Susy Froedge: Mm.
Eileen Bullard: slow kin
Patricia Smith: Well,
Eileen Bullard: it's confusing
Patricia Smith: but
Eileen Bullard: to the
Patricia Smith: then
Eileen Bullard: I dunno.
Patricia Smith: for um for skipping a large amount of channels you do have to uh to skip the channel button, the
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: But
Patricia Smith: number
Eileen Bullard: users
Patricia Smith: part.
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: tend to tend to want to use that and once they lose out on the user experience they're like
Maria Smith: Okay.
Patricia Smith: Uh but
Eileen Bullard: Because that's becomes the most accessible
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: thing
Susy Froedge: But that's
Eileen Bullard: in front
Susy Froedge: not a bad
Eileen Bullard: of
Susy Froedge: thing is it?
Maria Smith: Just
Susy Froedge: Because when you think about it, the alternative is to go push
Patricia Smith: Yeah.
Susy Froedge: the button.
Eileen Bullard: Yeah.
Susy Froedge: Jog dials are much easier than that.
Maria Smith: Okay
Susy Froedge: You
Maria Smith: um
Susy Froedge: just roll.
Maria Smith: right well wouldn't it we do need to make a decision on whether we want to incorporate a jog dial in nice and quickly. Um I'm all for them actually, I think they're quite you
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: know th very quick to m to use.
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: So does anybody oppose the idea of of incorporating one into the design at all? No. And the other thing was um can we think of any way of getting the slogan into this thing?
Susy Froedge: Yeah like I mean if we if if we keep coming back to this board here,
Maria Smith: Uh-huh.
Susy Froedge: I wouldn't be surprised if we could take this idea, imagine that, I dunno, that it's within the shape of the hand, it's quite small
Maria Smith: Uh-huh ooh okay,
Susy Froedge: I dunno.
Maria Smith: we really gotta wrap up so
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: yeah.
Susy Froedge: It's small, and that we've got like the the l slogan somewhere like on the casing
Maria Smith: Okay
Susy Froedge: at the side,
Maria Smith: well if we can do
Susy Froedge: and that
Maria Smith: that, great.
Susy Froedge: yeah
Maria Smith: Yeah okay.
Susy Froedge: well I mean isn't that what we just h said said we s just have to decide now?
Maria Smith: Yeah let's let's try and get the slogan on there
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: um, and
Susy Froedge: And then
Eileen Bullard: So
Susy Froedge: like
Eileen Bullard: you
Susy Froedge: a
Eileen Bullard: wanna
Susy Froedge: jo
Eileen Bullard: expand the shape of the
Susy Froedge: And then like a jog dial somewhere that fits in with the shape of it like I dunno like here, in with
Eileen Bullard: That
Susy Froedge: the
Eileen Bullard: that might have one problem in terms of um
Susy Froedge: It would get bumped, it's doesn't
Eileen Bullard: in terms
Susy Froedge: really fit
Eileen Bullard: of
Susy Froedge: with your
Eileen Bullard: whether
Susy Froedge: hand.
Eileen Bullard: you're left handed or you're right handed
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: you
Maria Smith: Mm.
Eileen Bullard: might be locking yourself in.
Susy Froedge: Or maybe
Patricia Smith: Mm.
Susy Froedge: just fit
Eileen Bullard: Could
Susy Froedge: it
Eileen Bullard: I just
Susy Froedge: in like down the middle
Maria Smith: Okay.
Susy Froedge: here.
Eileen Bullard: could I just jump in and suggest something
Maria Smith: Right
Susy Froedge: A
Eileen Bullard: quickly?
Maria Smith: I'm
Susy Froedge: jog
Maria Smith: gonna have
Susy Froedge: di
Maria Smith: to I'm really gonna have to hurry you on here 'cause we're we're
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: actually over time.
Susy Froedge: It's kind
Maria Smith: Um
Susy Froedge: of
Maria Smith: is there anything
Susy Froedge: yeah
Maria Smith: anybody's unsure about? Just for in closing just the next meeting's gonna be in thirty minutes, and so you can see in the screen here what each of you are gonna hopefully be doing,
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Maria Smith: uh I know that the designers are gonna be working with Play-doh on that. So um that'll
Susy Froedge: Huh.
Maria Smith: be that'll be good. Um and I'll get the the minutes up as soon as possible. Anything at all you think we haven't discussed that we need to? Is everybody
Susy Froedge: Um
Maria Smith: kind of happy about
Eileen Bullard: Um
Maria Smith: what they're gonna be doing?
Eileen Bullard: I think one thing would be the jog dial 'cause that's gonna have quite a big impact on
Susy Froedge: Yeah I think
Eileen Bullard: the thing
Susy Froedge: the jog
Eileen Bullard: um
Susy Froedge: dial, you know it just after you drew that, what if it was flat and you just
Eileen Bullard: Yeah
Susy Froedge: spun
Eileen Bullard: that's what
Susy Froedge: it,
Eileen Bullard: I was thinking
Susy Froedge: that'd be great.
Eileen Bullard: the a slide, because
Susy Froedge: Yeah.
Eileen Bullard: then you you don't have to put the hand.
Susy Froedge: Yep.
Eileen Bullard: I think incorporating a logo is quite straight forward. There's
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: lots of space for it um
Maria Smith: That's kind of a design thing that you guys can
Eileen Bullard: Yeah
Maria Smith: can discuss,
Eileen Bullard: but it's
Maria Smith: yeah.
Susy Froedge: Sure,
Eileen Bullard: also a a marketing
Susy Froedge: yeah,
Eileen Bullard: and a function
Susy Froedge: yeah
Maria Smith: Okay.
Susy Froedge: and materials we sorta said we'd do plastic and rubber, didn't
Eileen Bullard: Yeah.
Susy Froedge: we,
Maria Smith: Yeah.
Susy Froedge: and I think maybe we should try and stay away from just the big protruding rubber buttons, 'cause that'd just be so standard.
Maria Smith: To make something flush with the case?
Susy Froedge: Something a bit more flush, yeah,
Maria Smith: Okay right.
Susy Froedge: or maybe have rubber incorporated into the case as well, so
Maria Smith: Okay.
Susy Froedge: that it has and also t plastic
Maria Smith: Sp kinda
Susy Froedge: I've
Maria Smith: grippy?
Susy Froedge: seen can get really textured, so you can get plastics that actually feel soft in your hand.
Eileen Bullard: Feel like fruit.
Maria Smith: Okay.
Eileen Bullard: Fruits kids.
Susy Froedge: They feel kind of like um, you get pens
Eileen Bullard: No like
Susy Froedge: now and then that you'd think that
Eileen Bullard: Yeah
Susy Froedge: they were
Eileen Bullard: yeah.
Susy Froedge: rubber but they're not, they're actually just plastic that's textured, kind
Eileen Bullard: Yeah
Susy Froedge: of a
Eileen Bullard: yeah
Susy Froedge: little
Eileen Bullard: kinda
Susy Froedge: bit
Maria Smith: Okay
Susy Froedge: like
Eileen Bullard: like that yeah.
Maria Smith: I'm gonna have to I'm gonna have to call this to a close 'cause we're way over time. So um that's really good, like we've s had much to talk about that um pretty much run
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: out of time to do so. So off
Susy Froedge: Okay.
Maria Smith: you go and design stuff wooh.
Eileen Bullard: Play-doh time.
Maria Smith: Yeah quite jealous actually.
Eileen Bullard: You got to choose first. No, we're kidding. Okay, can I just swipe your power cable, I don't think it matters. Okay lemme okay, I'm gonna pull everybody out first and then put in whoever needs to be left. It's you.
Eileen Bullard: Argh. This is a real hassle and a oops. I'm gonna take the microphones, 'cause it's too lazy t take them off again. Cool. | Maria Smith recapped the decisions made in the previous meeting. Susy Froedge discussed his findings from trend watching reports, stressing the need for a product that has a fancy look and feel, is technologically innovative, is easy to use, and incorporates some aspect of fruit and vegetables in its design. The interface specialist presented research on the appearance of current remotes, concluding that current remotes are generally unappealing in terms of look and usability. The interface specialist presented ideas on how to remedy the unappealing aspects of current remotes in the team's design and also how to incorporate the corporate color scheme into the design. Eileen Bullard presented options for materials, components, and batteries and discussed the restrictions involved in using certain materials. The team then discussed options for the shape and color scheme of the remote, as well as what components, batteries, and materials to use. | 2 | amisum | train |
Crystal Cheeks: Just put it on the deskt desktop.
Michelle Berger: No on the desktop you'll find you should that there's a project documents link. A well actually just there.
Crystal Cheeks: Project documents, yeah.
Michelle Berger: Yeah. That's it. If you dump it in there.
Crystal Cheeks: What's your username?
Michelle Berger: Your username.
Crystal Cheeks: What's your username and password? Mm-hmm. Sorry. Okay.
Michelle Berger: Okay.
Crystal Cheeks: There we go.
Michelle Berger: Excellent. Right. Hopefully that's us ready to uh to go. So. Functional design meeting. We'll have to flesh out some of the uh stuff. Um we'll start with the minutes of the last meeting. Not a lot thankfully to say. We introduced ourselves, the of a macro facility, interacting the T_V_ a bit more, um mentioning of bar-code, joystick for user manipulation, um and ergonomics of the remote control as well. Um it's come to my attention the following. Teletext has become outdated due to the populat popularity of the internet. Remote control should only be used for the T_V_. Um due for uh time to market and possibly also cost issues. Um also key is the corporate image should stay recognisable, um f uh your colour and slogan of course is down at the bottom there. Um. Now. Just to say quickly uh I would have thought that only being used for a television the macro facility may now not be required.
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: Um or at l its functionality would have been of limited use. So to the point in my opinion anyway that it might not be worth pursuing. Um if anybody disagrees we can uh definitely say so. Um and hopefully we'll just crack on and we'll get everything going. Um I'd like to if possible hear from our Marketing Expert first,
Crystal Cheeks: 'Kay.
Michelle Berger: to help us gain an idea of where we're going to go. So um I'll just load up your presentation from here if you want.
Crystal Cheeks: Sure. Um, sh would you like to I'll just do it from here.
Michelle Berger: Yep. Sorry. Uh. Is yours the
Crystal Cheeks: Um, try second one maybe. Try it, yeah maybe.
Michelle Berger: Oh sorry.
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah. Okay.
Michelle Berger: Okay, right.
Crystal Cheeks: Oh, I thought I put in my last name, I guess not, but.
Michelle Berger: Uh if you that's all right.
Crystal Cheeks: Okay.
Michelle Berger: If you do you want Crystal Cheeks to just cycle through it for you or?
Crystal Cheeks: Oh yeah, that'd be, that'd
Michelle Berger: Yeah?
Crystal Cheeks: great. Okay. Functional requirement by Crystal Cheeks Ebenezer.
Michelle Berger: Okay.
Crystal Cheeks: Okay, so um we did some research, we asked one hundred people their opinions on remote controls. We asked some uh open ended questions, just, what are your opinions on the remote control, got a lot of re responses, and we asked some very specific questions, and we got a lot of good feedback. Please bear in mind this is only a hundred people, so even when the groups are divided into fifteen to twenty five, twenty five to thirty five, there's only maybe ten people fifteen people in each group. Okay.
Michelle Berger: Okay.
Crystal Cheeks: So we got some the bad stuff we got, remotes are often lost. I often lose my remote control, the back of the couch, some place, and even if it's not lost permanently, it takes Crystal Cheeks a few minutes to find it. Most buttons are not used any more, like you said, teletext is outdated now. I remember trying to load a D_V_D_ player recently, and there were so many buttons, it took Crystal Cheeks I don't know maybe ten minutes to to go through each button, 'cause you have to press the shift button to access the yellow buttons, you know there's just a lot of stuff that no one really uses. And if they do, not very often. Takes too long to master the remote control. I've seen some remote controls that are big, they have a lot of buttons, you have to hold down more than one key at one time to do something, they're just not great to use. We just got a lot of bad complaints about remote controls, people do not like remote controls. Some of the good stuff we got. Between the age of uh fifteen and twenty five, most people would be willing to pay extra for voice recognition software. Now don't get excited yet, I've got more to say on that. Most people'd be willing to pay for that um most people want remote controls to be pretty, they want it to be fancy, th they they want it to be different, everybody has a white remote control with black buttons, and a red button and a green button, not everybody wants that. Finally, my opinion.
Michelle Berger: Yep.
Crystal Cheeks: The voice recognition thing is cool. And uh voice recognition, the software, open source software exist already. It's a bit sketchy at some times, uh, you're not gonna get good always accurate results, but for a very fixed number of words, you know you have, how many different words can you have for a remote control, up, down, left, right, channel five, channel seven, you know, how many, you can't have that many words. For a fixed vocabulary it works quite well. I'm pretty sure people would buy it. But after a while people may wanna return it, because if you have to to say som I mean most people use a remote control for switching to channels, and they say they do that about ninety eight percent of the time. Using the remote control, ninety eight percent of the time for changing channels, and that's for flickering through channels. So if you have to say up, up, up, up, if you have to do that all the time, then people might get a bit fed up with that and they may return it. However, oh, because the voice recognition software exists already, there's no need to spend money on research and development, but this does mean the need for microphones in the in the remote control, which is an unusual feature in my opinion. But if we do have the voice recognition thing, there's a lot of stuff that you can uh get rid of. See, you could there're two options. Either you have voice recognition by itself, which I think is a bit impractical for like night time if you wanna be watching television and you wanna be quiet, or I don't know you have a visitor coming round and the remote's only trained for you, it's a bit impractical to have just voice recognition by itself. So you can have voice recognition and a regular remote. But imagine you got rid of the regular remote part, then you can design the remote to look any way you want it to look, because there are no restrictions on physical size, or shape, it it could be as fancy as you want it to be, you know, it could be like a lollipop or something like that, something weird like that. As long as the voice recognition stuff works, that's that's fine.
Michelle Berger: Okay, yep.
Crystal Cheeks: So we have the three birds, that we have the the fancy bit, right, the voice recognition's fancy, it's cool, it's different, it's radical, so, and then we have an extra bit I don't remember so I'm pretty sure people will buy the remote, but is it practical to have a voice recognition system in a remote control, I think is a big question. Um, will people will people be willing to wait for the the period that it'll take to train the remote, 'cause I think it will the remote will uh get better over time with the same user user, but for the first week or for the first two weeks are you willing to wait, are you willing to have a bad remote control. And uh what if you have visitors come round, they stay the night, they wanna use the T_V_, they can't use the remote because they speak differently to you. Um, how do you account for regional accents and stuff like that. Uh, will people return the remote control, I think a lot of young people will buy the remote control, if they have the money, you know, so,
Michelle Berger: Mm-hmm.
Crystal Cheeks: do our audience have the money, but would they return it after a while because it's not as fast as pressing a button, it's not a practical. So.
Michelle Berger: If
Crystal Cheeks: These
Michelle Berger: you could
Crystal Cheeks: are things
Michelle Berger: uh
Crystal Cheeks: I think we should consider. I
Michelle Berger: sor
Crystal Cheeks: think it's cool,
Michelle Berger: if you could speed it up a bit, yeah.
Crystal Cheeks: I'm sorry?
Michelle Berger: If you could uh speed it up a bit please,
Crystal Cheeks: Sure.
Michelle Berger: yeah.
Crystal Cheeks: I'm about
Michelle Berger: Sorry.
Crystal Cheeks: to end, yeah.
Michelle Berger: Cool.
Crystal Cheeks: I think it's cool but there are definitely some considerations.
Michelle Berger: Okay.
Crystal Cheeks: So, yeah.
Michelle Berger: Excellent. Right. Um. Hear from Susan Price now I think might be an idea.
Susan Price: Okay.
Michelle Berger: Um,
Tanya Heuser: How did where
Michelle Berger: you've
Tanya Heuser: did
Michelle Berger: got your presentation now,
Susan Price: Yeah,
Michelle Berger: is it
Susan Price: it's
Michelle Berger: on
Susan Price: in
Michelle Berger: the
Susan Price: the it's the folder
Tanya Heuser: did you
Susan Price: yeah.
Tanya Heuser: get
Michelle Berger: is
Tanya Heuser: all your
Michelle Berger: it?
Tanya Heuser: in
Michelle Berger: Okay.
Tanya Heuser: information?
Crystal Cheeks: There was uh a website,
Tanya Heuser: Oh.
Crystal Cheeks: uh, right here.
Tanya Heuser: Ah, okay.
Michelle Berger: Technical functions?
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: No. Yeah.
Crystal Cheeks: G I started making stuff up, then I got an email saying
Michelle Berger: Okay.
Susan Price: Okay, this is a brief run through of the um of the technical functions of the remote. As um is uh the the the presentation is uh already slightly obsolete because I had in mind something that would uh be i be aimed at controlling multiple devices but uh there's still stuff of relevance, so
Michelle Berger: Okay.
Susan Price: press on. I've looked at looked at a num uh couple other uh remote control models just an basic design principles. Um and wasn't really satisfied by what I saw I have to say so this is more sort of springboard for uh how these could be improved on. Um um basically the job of the device is to send commands to an appliance, in this case the television set. Um to save you getting off your backside. Um and there's two main trends in th in the sort of design practice. On the one hand and this uh this particularly relates to its sort of earliest models where with you know i so so many buttons on it so about the size of the television set. Um giving you every possible function that the that the device has, the remote control controls. And most of these functions are not going to be used, it creates a rather user unfriendly interface. And on the other hand there's a user focused approach that pares things down to just what what is most likely to get used. Um With uh a and a and of course there is a certain amount of sort of loss of function here obviously, but mostly that's relatively peripheral functions. And so you go for something that's fairly intuitive to use, and um well f the for the most part for T_V_ remote it's uh tha that would be channel control and volume. Um and if you if you if you are wanting to incorporate uh control of a D_V_ D_V_D_ or uh V_C_R_ presumably into that then there's a play, pause, stop, rewind, fast-forward, record, so forth. Um. My own view is that we should definitely be going for a user focused design. Um but uh the pro I think the problem with a lot of the sort of user focused designs that are about is that they sort of make assumptions in advance about what uh what a given user's going to uh want mo want to do from want it to do most. So, something that's uh something that is more programmable, that uh perh perhaps has the full range of functions available to it but you can then specify yourself what you're most likely to want. Um so that those are then immediately accessible through fairly minimal number of controls, um I liked Ebenezer's idea of including a joystick in that and uh possibly a sort of fairly minimal number of sort of function buttons, and have a disp you then have some sort of basic display on it so that if you're um sort of cha changing from different modes for the device it'll tell you just exactly what uh you know each direction of the uh of the um joystick's going to do or wha or what each function button's going to do. Um, this is actually a again slightly taking inspiration off of uh games controllers,
Crystal Cheeks: Mm.
Susan Price: you know the Playstation control where you have four basic function buttons that are just marked with um distinctive uh geometrical shapes but the and then dependent on what you're doing with it what game and so on um those uh those functions are then sort of further specified. And so it's taking taking the lead from that. Um.
Michelle Berger: Okay. Yeah. Right.
Susan Price: That's it.
Michelle Berger: Um, if we could hear from our Industrial engineer, or
Tanya Heuser: Yeah.
Michelle Berger: Designer.
Tanya Heuser: Uh, I was still working on stuff, I hadn't got it finished. Um, alright. Click to save in where do I have to save it?
Michelle Berger: If you look on the desktop you'll find that there's a link to the project folder, or project documents. If you save it in there we can open it up from here.
Tanya Heuser: Um, what I've done with it, I'm sorry.
Tanya Heuser: Shit. Um
Michelle Berger: Are you finding it okay or?
Tanya Heuser: I'm just closing it now. where I've saved it.
Crystal Cheeks: Well like if you go to one, uh whichever one you were
Tanya Heuser: that's
Crystal Cheeks: working
Tanya Heuser: it there, yeah.
Crystal Cheeks: yeah, and you just click file save as.
Tanya Heuser: Oh right.
Michelle Berger: Okay.
Tanya Heuser: right I'm responsible for working design, uh, this is basically the inside going on of the the uh remote control. So we have the energy source, we have the user interface, this this is what I've seen. Uh the sender will push the button, the chip will respond, uh and then the dig digital signal is sent to the T_V_. So uh uh, if you go to next slide, you'll see you'll see uh what do we need on the user interface. Do we need uh many buttons, or do we need l many light bulbs that could be easier to uh to realise which appliances are on or not. Um, or would that take too much power, would we need more um components in there to supply the power? Um, the joystick is another thing, if we were gonna add that, um, there'd be more components to deal with that.
Michelle Berger: Mm-hmm.
Tanya Heuser: Um, so uh we need to I dunno exactly what That's the design of the the the layout of the uh electronic design, but um obviously there'll be more details once we've decided what we're putting on the user interface.
Michelle Berger: Okay.
Tanya Heuser: So, that'll be decided, I guess. Uh, and the next slide. Oh, yeah Um, if you go to the next slide then.
Michelle Berger: Oh. Yeah.
Tanya Heuser: I just used the it was a mess, uh I was just putting adding it together at the end there.
Michelle Berger: Ah, don't
Tanya Heuser: Uh
Michelle Berger: worry about it at all mate.
Tanya Heuser: Uh so you have the energy source obviously connected to the chip, and the user interface obviously contains everything. You have the switch turn it on, infrared bulb, uh will contact the T_V_ and will have whatever device or D_V_D_ player, the bulb will turn on to say it's on. Uh, so do we need on the control uh different buttons to decide, or different light bulbs, would it be easier? Um, I dunno what we should decide on that.
Michelle Berger: Okay. Well. Oh sorry, I'm I'm interrupting you. Are
Tanya Heuser: No,
Michelle Berger: you
Tanya Heuser: it's finished,
Michelle Berger: is it
Tanya Heuser: yeah.
Michelle Berger: yeah? Okay. Right. Um, right we can probably skip that for now. So, we've had some stuff put forward, um along with the new user requirements, um we've had a lot of kind of input I'd say so far. Um I hear what Crystal Cheeks's saying about um voice activated control. However I've got a couple of worries about that. The power required, um and the ability
Tanya Heuser: Cost.
Michelle Berger: to
Tanya Heuser: Mm.
Michelle Berger: the cost, it seems like for uh an embedded system, this could cause us issues. Um for example you see that there's fairly robust services on uh computers via uh via voice, I_B_M_ do um drag and dictate,
Crystal Cheeks: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: but these require a lot of memory and usually um state quite advanced processor requirements. Um voice activation could be an interesting idea but I think that our Ind Industrial Designer would probably upon some research say that it's maybe not feasible.
Crystal Cheeks: 'Kay.
Michelle Berger: Um that's just my view
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: right now, however the idea of a joystick and then maybe an L_C_D_ which has been kind of put forward so far, it's almost like having a small T_ not T_V_ to say, but if you can control almost all of the functionality from the display, I don't know how much power an L_C_D_ would take,
Crystal Cheeks: Mm.
Michelle Berger: but it might be quite low?
Tanya Heuser: L_C_D_
Crystal Cheeks: I uh
Tanya Heuser: on the remote just telling you what's on, or uh,
Michelle Berger: Well literally
Tanya Heuser: interactive
Michelle Berger: um
Tanya Heuser: L_C_D_ or
Michelle Berger: if you can imagine the display maybe slightly larger than um those on a a mobile phone, something
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: where you can read an an um fair amount of information, traverse maybe quite a few menus, if we maybe used mobile phones as a good example, they usually incorporate they have the keypad, and then evr all the other functionality is usually associated inside by traversing around.
Crystal Cheeks: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: That could be one possibility. Um and then we could have like say the common buttons as you say,
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: volume control, changing channels
Susan Price: I I was thinking that the remote the um sort of default functions for the joystick would be up and down for uh volume, left and right for channels.
Michelle Berger: We
Tanya Heuser: Do you think that people will get mixed up, like, they'll be looking at this screen and that screen and then, you know, trying to get everything working, would it be a bit confusing?
Susan Price: Um I think probably for the first couple of hours of using it
Tanya Heuser: Yeah.
Susan Price: um but you know muscle memory's a wonderful thing, um.
Crystal Cheeks: Mm.
Susan Price: And I think and I think that size of uh display was about what I had in mind. Um though I mean I w I would say that uh we could probably probably be required to um mo most of the mobile phone displays you see these days are colour but we should probably try to stick to black and white.
Michelle Berger: I
Susan Price: Si
Michelle Berger: would agree with
Susan Price: si
Michelle Berger: you.
Susan Price: simply to keep m keep the unit cost down. Um I mean colour could be a sort of subsequent development but uh you know cost a bit of extra money f w w w w w once everyone's got the first, you know, oh colour's out, we'll have to replace
Michelle Berger: Mm-hmm.
Susan Price: it won't we. It does nothing extra.
Michelle Berger: That would be my feeling as well, I think we could possibly create quite a useful user interface. Um
Crystal Cheeks: Sure
Michelle Berger: now I mean
Crystal Cheeks: but
Michelle Berger: I don't sorry, go for it.
Crystal Cheeks: the idea of a remote with a menu or and a joystick I think like I h if I was in the habit of buying remote controls then I would want one, but I think we don't have a specific audience, you know, like what is our target audience, what niche are niche are we trying to market and corner. You know, you know what I'm saying, like, for whom is this intended? Everybody?
Michelle Berger: I think it could probably be aimed at most people who've used a mobile. And that might be just another way of saying try to target most people.
Crystal Cheeks: Most people, yeah.
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: might be s you know um we're kind of almost relying on their experience with a mobile phone I suppose.
Crystal Cheeks: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: But that does cover a very large section of the people out there.
Crystal Cheeks: Sure. I think that's fair
Michelle Berger: Um,
Susan Price: Mm.
Crystal Cheeks: yeah.
Michelle Berger: I mean I imagine as well that the actual L_C_D_ and maybe to a certain extent the joystick as well would be for the additional functionality. Which maybe doesn't get used as often, maybe it makes it easy for them to figure out how to um change the channels as in the frequencies and such for reprogramming it.
Crystal Cheeks: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: Um and you can still have the main buttons that allow the people to turn the machine on and off, d up and down, it depends, I mean maybe we have the fol um the joystick as a separate one for the other functions then, that there's just a a small number of as you were saying uh buttons that have already been defined.
Crystal Cheeks: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: So like we go for the nice standard um up and down for and volume control. So that literally anybody can come along, pick up the remote and still know what do do. And
Crystal Cheeks: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: they can completely ignore most of the functionality which would be for say the o actual owner of the the T_V_ and who would normally use the unit.
Crystal Cheeks: Mm-hmm.
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: I dunno.
Susan Price: I th the thing I like about the uh the uh joystick is that uh you you you then basically you can then basically put it I mean for for T_ T_ for T_V_ remote alone, you could put um I mean there are like I say the the the main things people do with a T_V_ remote control is the volume and the channel. You can pack all that onto was onto a single control.
Michelle Berger: Mm-hmm.
Susan Price: Um. But uh but the but then o uh obviously if uh you know I mean with things like ch with things like tuning and channels um you know adjusting brightn uh brightness and fiddly things that no one really bothers with, most T_V_s these days actually have menus anyway so
Michelle Berger: Mm-hmm.
Susan Price: this would be a fairly rational way of integra integrating the uh the remote with the device it's controlling. Um concern about our market. Um, if we are I mean most of the uh of the replacement remote market is sort of remote control rationalisation. Um, you've got twenty different devices
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah.
Susan Price: in your living room,
Crystal Cheeks: Mm-hmm.
Susan Price: you want one wo y you want one that'll do the job of all of them.
Michelle Berger: Mm-hmm.
Susan Price: Um, if all you're replacing is one of the you know however many remotes you have in your living room, um you know you still need separate remotes for everything else. I just think that uh
Michelle Berger: Well this
Susan Price: possibly
Michelle Berger: is a requirement that we have
Susan Price: mm.
Michelle Berger: to stick to I'm afraid, this isn't one that I've just arbitrarily decided on.
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: So um this is this is one of the solid ones that has to be obeyed, for now.
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: So I can understand your point, and I would agree with you, but this is our design spec for now. 'Fraid to say. Um
Susan Price: Does that um would that include um access to say interactive functions on digital or cable?
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah.
Michelle Berger: I would say so, yes, because then we have to be able to control the remote boxes, and that is a separate unit. Um I think that it I would say that the design spec we've been with is for the television only for now.
Susan Price: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: And until we
Crystal Cheeks: Hmm.
Michelle Berger: hear otherwise we should go with just that.
Crystal Cheeks: Okay, specifically
Susan Price: Okay.
Crystal Cheeks: television.
Michelle Berger: Okay. Maybe we'll hear differently, but
Crystal Cheeks: So
Michelle Berger: for
Crystal Cheeks: the
Michelle Berger: now
Crystal Cheeks: joystick is just for differentness.
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: It would be ease of manipulation of certain functions,
Crystal Cheeks: Okay.
Michelle Berger: yes.
Susan Price: Just
Michelle Berger: Um
Susan Price: a thought. Um maybe then our market should be T_V_ manufacturers, rather than the public. Try and sell it t sell it to them to supply with um
Michelle Berger: There is that possibility, yes. B However I don't know exactly where we'll be going with that, but
Crystal Cheeks: Mm.
Michelle Berger: it might not even be the avenue of Crystal Cheeks, that might be sales,
Crystal Cheeks: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: who are not in this meeting.
Crystal Cheeks: It's just, the way I figure it, twelve point five Euros per unit,
Michelle Berger: Mm-hmm.
Crystal Cheeks: we have to sell at least like three million or something like that, not to account for all the the money we waste on remotes that no one buys, you know, like if we made a perf if we made a ks
Michelle Berger: Mm-hmm.
Crystal Cheeks: for every remote we made someone bought it, then we have to sell a lot of remote controls. We just Is this gonna be enough to to sell?
Michelle Berger: Well, something else that you brought up was uh the ability to lose a remote, which as you said you've done, in fact we've probably all done.
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah.
Michelle Berger: Um, I don't know if it's a gimmick or not, but have any of you ever seen those odd little key rings where if you whistle, it will beep and you tell you where it is.
Crystal Cheeks: I had
Susan Price: Mm,
Crystal Cheeks: one of those,
Susan Price: yeah,
Crystal Cheeks: and my
Susan Price: I've
Crystal Cheeks: brother,
Susan Price: seen them.
Crystal Cheeks: and my
Michelle Berger: Um.
Crystal Cheeks: dad, could have beat Crystal Cheeks up because it it went off all the time accidentally.
Michelle Berger: Well the other option of course is that um
Crystal Cheeks: The clapping one.
Michelle Berger: the well I was going to say clapping, um Um digital telephones, uh for example, one unit has of course you have to have that base unit, somewhere where there's a button, but maybe it's a button that you attach to the T_V_.
Crystal Cheeks: To a television.
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: Something which you when you press that, it would beep to give its location away, on the remote unit.
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah.
Michelle Berger: And
Susan Price: Yeah, I think that's
Michelle Berger: that
Susan Price: a good
Michelle Berger: could
Susan Price: idea.
Michelle Berger: be something could um
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah,
Michelle Berger: separate
Crystal Cheeks: that's a good idea.
Michelle Berger: us a bit. And that way, because we're attaching what would be a small button to the T_V_, again say what, it would be a small transmitter, um watch battery type scenario I would say, or something that if it was problems enough you could actually even just um I don't power that might be something that we could look into.
Tanya Heuser: Yeah
Michelle Berger: Yep. Yeah, it's uh putting a lot on your shoulders there, so I mean that could be something that separates us a bit from the market
Crystal Cheeks: I
Michelle Berger: as
Crystal Cheeks: think
Michelle Berger: well.
Crystal Cheeks: so, yeah.
Michelle Berger: So. To go on from here. Um we have to decide exactly what we're going to do with the remote. Before we leave this meeting, it would be best to say this is what we're going this is the design we're gonna try and get, this is how we're gonna make ourselves look unique. Do we go for
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: maybe a remote contro uh sorry, we're gonna go for a remote control obviously, do we go for a small joystick that would operate say changing channels, up and down, and then, what, another button that would say that it's now being used to manoeuvre round the L_C_D_.
Susan Price: Mm yeah.
Tanya Heuser: We're
Susan Price: Yeah,
Tanya Heuser: just saying volume.
Susan Price: I think that's
Tanya Heuser: Should volume be important in the joystick, do you think?
Michelle Berger: We could use
Susan Price: Yeah.
Michelle Berger: say the left and right for changing channels and the up and down
Susan Price: For
Michelle Berger: for
Susan Price: volume.
Michelle Berger: volume,
Tanya Heuser: Yep.
Crystal Cheeks: But
Michelle Berger: and
Crystal Cheeks: we have a frequency of how what people use a remote control for most.
Michelle Berger: Okay.
Crystal Cheeks: Um, power
Tanya Heuser: I
Crystal Cheeks: is used like once per hour, channel selection is used a hundred and sixty eight
Michelle Berger: Mm-hmm.
Crystal Cheeks: per hour, that's by far the biggest one, and then teletext, is still here, that's like fourteen,
Michelle Berger: Vol
Crystal Cheeks: and volume selection.
Michelle Berger: Volume selection okay, yep, the teletext we're gambling with, and we're gonna say
Crystal Cheeks: No,
Michelle Berger: it's
Crystal Cheeks: yeah,
Michelle Berger: dead,
Crystal Cheeks: okay okay.
Michelle Berger: the way of the dodo
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah, um
Michelle Berger: So we well, sorry, we could maybe even go as far as saying power button, small joystick, L_C_D_, and then what maybe is it one more button to say that you're using the menu system, and with the possibility of pushing down on the joystick to say okay? So we're having very very few buttons involved,
Susan Price: Actually
Michelle Berger: but
Susan Price: how
Michelle Berger: navigation around a menu for most things.
Susan Price: Actually I would say maybe two two function buttons, the y we're now using the menus button and um and an og and an okay button. I
Michelle Berger: Okay.
Susan Price: mean certainly something I've found with the joystick on mo the joysticks on mobile phones is that a lot of the time th the device mistakes you trying to move it in one direction or the other for pushing down for okay.
Michelle Berger: Okay.
Susan Price: Or vice versa. And that's really irritating.
Crystal Cheeks: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: Um
Susan Price: The o the o the other dis design constraint I think we should bear in mind is that people are you know very much used to using a remote control one handedly, um, so we need to make sure that e even with the joystick, you know something that can just sit comfortably in the palm of the hand and have the joystick just controlled by the thumb.
Michelle Berger: Okay. So um we're actually that sounds like a rough idea. Do we incorporate the idea of trying to f locate the remote control again via a beeping noise?
Tanya Heuser: Yeah, think so.
Michelle Berger: Do
Crystal Cheeks: Um, I think
Michelle Berger: you
Crystal Cheeks: because
Michelle Berger: mind looking?
Crystal Cheeks: it's so small it might be an uh I mean if we only have like two three buttons it might be essential to have to have
Michelle Berger: The ability
Crystal Cheeks: that
Michelle Berger: to locate it again.
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah.
Michelle Berger: So that would require a um transmitter maybe attached to the T_V_, just so that it says find Crystal Cheeks, and what, a basically a small microphone um on the actual unit, can maybe hide it in
Tanya Heuser: Light
Michelle Berger: the base.
Tanya Heuser: bulb as
Susan Price: Oh.
Tanya Heuser: well, no?
Michelle Berger: Sorry?
Susan Price: So so a small speaker you mean.
Crystal Cheeks: Speaker
Michelle Berger: Some speaker, sorry, yeah.
Crystal Cheeks: yeah.
Tanya Heuser: And a light bulb? No. To flash. No.
Michelle Berger: Um
Tanya Heuser: Nah, you'd see it anyway, if you hear
Michelle Berger: E
Tanya Heuser: it.
Michelle Berger: us we might be better with the sound possibly
Crystal Cheeks: W
Tanya Heuser: Yeah.
Michelle Berger: we could maybe
Crystal Cheeks: those
Michelle Berger: incorporate
Crystal Cheeks: little key-rings have both, so
Michelle Berger: th e the true fact, considering the cost of an L_E_D_,
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah.
Michelle Berger: we could just incorporate it anyway.
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah.
Michelle Berger: The L_E_D_s can be surprisingly bright now.
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah.
Tanya Heuser: Mm-hmm.
Susan Price: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: Um.
Susan Price: Blue ones particularly. Plus that's a nice wee design touch.
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah.
Michelle Berger: So by the sounds of it, with what we're suggesting so far, your design um the user interface is still quite open, you could go for quite an interesting design. Because
Susan Price: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: we're only going to have a very few key and you've got you know a small L_C_D_, joystick, e I think it leaves you open to a a potential wide range of shapes, something that can make it stand out slightly.
Susan Price: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: Um if you could look into what we've suggested so far, the feasibility of um small transmitter, um and such, maybe if an L_C_D_ screen requires too much power, or such. Ebenezer, um, Marketing Expert
Crystal Cheeks: Well I can give you the frequency, what people what options people use most often, I guess that's gonna be important in the ts defining the the software side of the interface, right. You
Michelle Berger: If,
Crystal Cheeks: want the stuff.
Michelle Berger: yeah if you could maybe as well see what people think about the idea of this minimalist approach that we've taken, where of a joystick to control the very basic functions,
Crystal Cheeks: Okay.
Michelle Berger: and then the idea of manipulating it like you would a mobile.
Crystal Cheeks: Okay.
Michelle Berger: I don't know how easy that will be within the time frame, but could
Crystal Cheeks: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: be something we could maybe look into.
Crystal Cheeks: Sure. Sure.
Michelle Berger: Okay. Um any last comments that anybody would like to put forward? Anything that they think has been missed out. Bit of a wide open question there of course.
Crystal Cheeks: Mm.
Michelle Berger: Feel free to email Crystal Cheeks if you think that uh we've screwed something up and wanna get it rectified as soon as possible.
Crystal Cheeks: Sure. 'Kay.
Michelle Berger: Right.
Crystal Cheeks: Yeah.
Tanya Heuser: So I should just look at um the speaker, the speaker and an L_E_D_. And
Michelle Berger: Speaker and L_E_D_ for locating, um,
Tanya Heuser: Yeah,
Crystal Cheeks: Transmitter.
Tanya Heuser: and a transmitter.
Michelle Berger: transmitter
Susan Price: Actually one one wee thought about that. Um, if we do end up trying to market this to television manufacturers then the um then the transmitter could actually be built into the television.
Michelle Berger: getting the external power source, yep, that's quite true. Um, and something that we can can easily be adopted at the last minute as well I'd say.
Susan Price: Yeah.
Michelle Berger: The electronics could be s either placed externally or internally, makes no difference
Susan Price: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: to the final product of the actual remote control, so that's good. Uses maybe gives us a new potential market.
Susan Price: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: 'Kay.
Susan Price: You know
Tanya Heuser: P
Susan Price: I think I mean if it w if we get a major television manufacturer to say y oh yeah we'll have that, save us the bother, then that's you know vast amounts of sales. Quite quickly.
Michelle Berger: Oh, one thing that we've almost not talked about at all, my apologies for that, um, user interface, we also need to maybe get the slogan in here, um it's,
Tanya Heuser: Fashion.
Michelle Berger: I'm pointing at my laptop, what in God Real reaction, and such. So um
Tanya Heuser: The slogan is yeah,
Michelle Berger: Oh, sorry.
Tanya Heuser: the slogan's we put the fashion in electronics, isn't it?
Michelle Berger: My apologies. No it could well be, I've probably missed that. Um,
Tanya Heuser: 'S also
Michelle Berger: I
Tanya Heuser: look
Michelle Berger: think
Tanya Heuser: cool.
Michelle Berger: that's l almost the last minute thing we can just incorporate into the actual plastic on top. So
Susan Price: Mm.
Michelle Berger: I'm not too concerned a that we haven't gone into depth about that. But it might be something you could consider when you're thinking about shapes? In fact we might
Susan Price: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: like to put a slogan on, and um
Susan Price: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Berger: possibly the two R_s to signify the company. Rather than real reaction.
Susan Price: Mm. Yeah. I thought the uh the d the double arc could perhaps uh be the uh the enter button.
Michelle Berger: Sounds good. And I'd say that that's us for now. Okay. | Michelle Berger recapped the events of the previous meeting and briefed the team on some new requirements the team must follow when designing the remote. Crystal Cheeks presented research on consumer preferences and user requirements for remotes. Crystal Cheeks also presented information regarding voice recognition and what demographic finds the feature appealing. Susan Price described the technical functions of a remote and stressed the need for a user focused design. Tanya Heuser discussed the interior workings of a remote. The team then discussed the option to include voice recognition, LCD, and a feature to locate a misplaced remote. The team briefly discussed who they were aiming their product to along with the idea of marketing their product to television manufacturers. The team also decided on some features to include in their product. | 2 | amisum | train |
Madonna Lindsey: Hmm hmm hmm.
Brandi Hayes: Are we we're not allowed to dim the lights so people can see that a bit better?
Madonna Lindsey: Yeah.
Brandi Hayes: Okay, that's fine. Am I supposed to be standing up there?
Carol Kornfeld: So
Brandi Hayes: Okay.
Carol Kornfeld: we've got both of these clipped on? She gonna answer Carol Kornfeld
Brandi Hayes: Yeah,
Carol Kornfeld: or not?
Brandi Hayes: I've got
Carol Kornfeld: Right, both of them, okay.
Brandi Hayes: Yes.
Carol Kornfeld: God. Jesus, it's gonna fall off.
Madonna Lindsey: Okay Yep yep, Okay.
Brandi Hayes: Okay.
Madonna Lindsey: Tu tu tu tu
Brandi Hayes: Hello everybody.
Madonna Lindsey: Hi, good morning.
Brandi Hayes: Um I'm Sarah, Brandi Hayes and this is our first meeting, surprisingly enough. Okay, this is our agenda, um we will do some stuff, get to know each other a bit better to feel more comfortable with each other. Um then we'll go do tool training, talk about the project plan, discuss our own ideas and everything um and we've got twenty five minutes to do that, as far as I can understand. Now, we're developing a remote control which you probably already know. Um, we want it to be original, something that's uh people haven't thought of, that's not out in the shops, um, trendy, appealing to a wide market, but you know, not a hunk of metal, and user-friendly, grannies to kids, maybe even pooches should be able to use it. Okay, um, first is the functional design, um this is where we all go off and do our individual work, um what needs need to be fulfilled by the product, um what effects the product has to have and how it's actually going to do that. Um, conceptual design, what we're thinking, how it's gonna go and then the detailed design, how we're actually gonna put it into practice and make it work.
Madonna Lindsey: 'Kay.
Brandi Hayes: Okay, right. We're gonna practice with the pens and draw our favourite animal on the white board, I'll go first, and um sum up the characteristics of that animal. So
Madonna Lindsey: Oops.
Brandi Hayes: Okay, I'll leave space for everyone else. Um
Brandi Hayes: What's missing?
Brandi Hayes: We're running out of blue. Okay. I'm not gonna ask you to guess, I'm going to tell you that's supposed to be a tiger.
Madonna Lindsey: Mm.
Brandi Hayes: And I see them
Madonna Lindsey: Oh
Brandi Hayes: as
Madonna Lindsey: sorry.
Brandi Hayes: majestic,
Madonna Lindsey: Mm-hmm.
Brandi Hayes: and independent, and proud. Now, who would like to go next?
Madonna Lindsey: Yeah, Carol Kornfeld.
Brandi Hayes: 'Kay.
Madonna Lindsey: Cat. Where did this come from?
Brandi Hayes: Is that your lapel then?
Madonna Lindsey: Uh,
Brandi Hayes: There you go.
Madonna Lindsey: yep. Thank you. Uh, maybe you can guess what I'm trying to make?
Carol Kornfeld: A kind of dog?
Madonna Lindsey: Yep. It's actually sitting, so
Carol Kornfeld: Sorry?
Natalie Parker: It's sitting
Madonna Lindsey: it's sitting,
Natalie Parker: down.
Madonna Lindsey: it's not standing.
Carol Kornfeld: Uh.
Madonna Lindsey: Okay, I see it as one thing it's very supportive. It's your best friend your you can talk to a dog, it can be your best friend, it doesn't discriminate between you, based on what you are. Second it's loyal and third thing it's got intuition. dogs can som sometimes can make out between a thief and a
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Madonna Lindsey: person so basically these are the three unique features I think belong to a dog.
Brandi Hayes: Okay, thank you.
Madonna Lindsey: Thank you.
Natalie Parker: Yeah I'll
Madonna Lindsey: Okay.
Natalie Parker: have a go.
Madonna Lindsey: Sorry.
Carol Kornfeld: Please, please
Natalie Parker: Thanks.
Carol Kornfeld: leave Carol Kornfeld a space at the bottom, I'm little,
Natalie Parker: Alright,
Carol Kornfeld: you can get to
Natalie Parker: okay.
Carol Kornfeld: the top, with standing on a chair.
Natalie Parker: Well since you guys have chosen the ones I wanted to do, I'll have
Brandi Hayes: Okay.
Natalie Parker: to have to
Madonna Lindsey: Does
Natalie Parker: go
Madonna Lindsey: it
Natalie Parker: for
Madonna Lindsey: look
Natalie Parker: something
Madonna Lindsey: like a dog
Natalie Parker: a bit
Madonna Lindsey: actually?
Natalie Parker: random. And also, my drawing skill isn't that great
Brandi Hayes: Well,
Natalie Parker: so,
Brandi Hayes: as you can see, the quality
Natalie Parker: yeah.
Madonna Lindsey: Mm.
Brandi Hayes: of the work today is um
Carol Kornfeld: I think it's outstandingly good.
Natalie Parker: Okay, now I'm gonna have to change what is was originally gonna be because that looks like a beak now, so.
Carol Kornfeld: Crocodile?
Brandi Hayes: Gonna be
Natalie Parker: Yeah,
Brandi Hayes: a
Natalie Parker: it
Brandi Hayes: bird.
Natalie Parker: can be a crocodile, it can be
Brandi Hayes: Is
Natalie Parker: a
Brandi Hayes: it
Natalie Parker: crocodile.
Brandi Hayes: gonna be it's
Natalie Parker: an
Brandi Hayes: gonna
Natalie Parker: at
Brandi Hayes: be
Natalie Parker: first
Brandi Hayes: a bird.
Natalie Parker: firstly it was an attempt at a T_ Rex and then it sort
Carol Kornfeld: O
Natalie Parker: of changed into a pelican but it can be a crocodile now actually.
Brandi Hayes: That's lovely.
Natalie Parker: Yeah
Carol Kornfeld: Beauti
Natalie Parker: and
Carol Kornfeld: that's
Natalie Parker: uh I'll have to think on the spot of uh things that it is. Um uh scary, uh strong, yeah that's about it I think.
Brandi Hayes: Okay it's fine.
Carol Kornfeld: Okay. Um, I'm very impressed your artistic skills,
Natalie Parker: Uh
Carol Kornfeld: mine's are dreadful.
Natalie Parker: uh
Carol Kornfeld: Oops this is now coming apart, let Carol Kornfeld just put the top in.
Natalie Parker: Wo
Carol Kornfeld: I hope that clicks in, I'll just I'll hold it on, okay. Oops, oh dear, what happened there?
Brandi Hayes: Technical help.
Carol Kornfeld: Hopefully
Natalie Parker: Hmm.
Carol Kornfeld: that'll stay on, two-handed version.
Natalie Parker: Okay.
Carol Kornfeld: Okay, uh Again this is off the top of my head, I was gonna do a big
Natalie Parker: Uh
Carol Kornfeld: cat too, um. Oh
Brandi Hayes: Hmm.
Carol Kornfeld: dear, it doesn't look what like what I want it to be.
Natalie Parker: S
Carol Kornfeld: Uh.
Natalie Parker: Uh
Carol Kornfeld: It's not a vampire bat honestly.
Brandi Hayes: Okay, yeah.
Carol Kornfeld: Uh and somewhere there's a body behind.
Natalie Parker: Okay,
Carol Kornfeld: That's
Natalie Parker: some
Carol Kornfeld: my dreadful
Natalie Parker: sort of
Carol Kornfeld: that's the worst yet,
Natalie Parker: bird.
Carol Kornfeld: that's it's meant to be an eagle
Brandi Hayes: A seagu
Natalie Parker: Ah
Madonna Lindsey: Eagle,
Brandi Hayes: right,
Natalie Parker: eagle,
Madonna Lindsey: okay.
Natalie Parker: right
Brandi Hayes: not
Carol Kornfeld: you
Natalie Parker: okay.
Carol Kornfeld: can
Brandi Hayes: a seagull.
Carol Kornfeld: tell it's a flying animal could have been a seagull, I never thought of a seagull. An eagle, um again I'm thinking on my feet goodness. I suppose they're all so independent, I'd put that one down again. Da dum um.
Natalie Parker: They're good at golf.
Carol Kornfeld: Indepen independent, right, did you say they're good at golf?
Natalie Parker: Yeah,
Carol Kornfeld: Are they?
Natalie Parker: no yeah,
Brandi Hayes: Eagle.
Carol Kornfeld: Oh.
Natalie Parker: an eagle.
Carol Kornfeld: Oh right, okay, I'm not good at golf. I'd say they're quite free-spirited, flying around everywhere, doing their own thing. And uh, birds of prey aren't they, oh dear,
Brandi Hayes: Mm-hmm.
Carol Kornfeld: intrepid. I'll put that, intrepid. There we go,
Brandi Hayes: That's
Carol Kornfeld: hope
Brandi Hayes: lovely.
Carol Kornfeld: that pen's gonna be okay. Whoops.
Brandi Hayes: Okay. That was fun, right. Um finance-wise, we've got a selling price at twenty five Euros, which I don't actually know what that is in Pounds, at all. Any ideas?
Natalie Parker: It's about
Carol Kornfeld: Seventeen.
Natalie Parker: mm,
Madonna Lindsey: One point four
Natalie Parker: mm yeah.
Madonna Lindsey: or something like that. One point four Euro would make a Pound or something
Natalie Parker: Yeah,
Madonna Lindsey: like that.
Natalie Parker: yeah, something like that, so
Madonna Lindsey: Yeah.
Natalie Parker: that
Brandi Hayes: D
Natalie Parker: yeah about seventeen,
Brandi Hayes: fifteen?
Carol Kornfeld: Seventeen
Brandi Hayes: Seventeen.
Natalie Parker: seventeen
Carol Kornfeld: Pounds.
Natalie Parker: Pounds,
Brandi Hayes: Okay,
Natalie Parker: something like that.
Brandi Hayes: that's expensive.
Carol Kornfeld: Should we be making notes of this? We can just refer to this later can't
Natalie Parker: But
Brandi Hayes: I
Carol Kornfeld: we?
Brandi Hayes: think so,
Carol Kornfeld: Yeah,
Brandi Hayes: I think
Carol Kornfeld: okay.
Brandi Hayes: so, I'll be able to um pull it up, or
Carol Kornfeld: Okay.
Brandi Hayes: I could put it
Natalie Parker: Havi
Brandi Hayes: in the shared folder or
Natalie Parker: having
Brandi Hayes: something.
Natalie Parker: said that though, if you wanna get one of those the the ones on the market at the moment they're s they're about twenty pounds anyway. So,
Carol Kornfeld: Right.
Brandi Hayes: Really?
Natalie Parker: it'd still be yeah, we had to
Carol Kornfeld: So
Natalie Parker: buy one.
Brandi Hayes: Mm.
Carol Kornfeld: so
Brandi Hayes: I
Carol Kornfeld: I suppose
Brandi Hayes: think
Carol Kornfeld: later it depends if we want to undercut the price, we d or or is it going to make our product look a cheapie-cheapie option?
Brandi Hayes: Yeah,
Natalie Parker: Hmm.
Brandi Hayes: um production cost's at twelve fifty, so
Madonna Lindsey: Okay, pretty huge margin.
Brandi Hayes: half of the selling price is
Natalie Parker: Yeah.
Brandi Hayes: taken
Carol Kornfeld: Mm.
Brandi Hayes: up by building it.
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Brandi Hayes: Um, and profit aim is fifty million Euros, which is uh
Carol Kornfeld: In our first year?
Brandi Hayes: Yi yes, um yeah, I presume so.
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Madonna Lindsey: So
Brandi Hayes: Um
Madonna Lindsey: then
Carol Kornfeld: You've got market range international and you did say earlier it's got to be a um accessible and usable by sort of all age groups
Brandi Hayes: Mm-hmm.
Carol Kornfeld: just t we're not focusing on business market, any particular thing, it's
Brandi Hayes: No,
Carol Kornfeld: everyone user-friendly
Brandi Hayes: yeah.
Carol Kornfeld: to everyone. Okay. Big
Brandi Hayes: So
Carol Kornfeld: target group.
Brandi Hayes: yes, yes, I don't think we have to I don't think it's a case of worrying about different languages and things like that,
Carol Kornfeld: No.
Brandi Hayes: um making that a key point, just that it's going to be in the international market like
Carol Kornfeld: Mm.
Brandi Hayes: Australia, America, things like that. Okay. What are your experiences with remote controls? I mean I've got we got um we had three videos, a T_V_ and a sort of amp thing all
Madonna Lindsey: Mm-hmm.
Brandi Hayes: set up
Natalie Parker: Yeah.
Brandi Hayes: so we got one of the universal remote controls,
Carol Kornfeld: Alright.
Natalie Parker: Yeah.
Madonna Lindsey: Yeah,
Brandi Hayes: um
Madonna Lindsey: that c
Brandi Hayes: that you programme each of your things into, but that kept losing the signals so we'd have to re-programme it every now and again. I think it was quite a cheapie as well,
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Natalie Parker: Yeah
Brandi Hayes: so
Natalie Parker: uh.
Brandi Hayes: that might have had something to do with it, but that was quite good, the fact that you could
Natalie Parker: Use all the ones
Brandi Hayes: You didn't
Natalie Parker: at the same
Brandi Hayes: have
Natalie Parker: time.
Brandi Hayes: six remote controls sitting
Carol Kornfeld: Right.
Brandi Hayes: in front of
Madonna Lindsey: Okay,
Brandi Hayes: you.
Madonna Lindsey: you wanna integrate everything into one like
Natalie Parker: Yeah,
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Madonna Lindsey: Okay.
Natalie Parker: 'cause
Carol Kornfeld: My
Natalie Parker: you
Carol Kornfeld: experience has only been being given the remote control with the object I buy, not doing any tampering with it and programming, using it to programme T_V_ and uh uh videos and things. But basically on, off, volume up and down, channel one, two, th that basic functions,
Brandi Hayes: Mm.
Carol Kornfeld: I don't think I could go any further with it than that, so, I suppose it's got to be something usable by someone like Carol Kornfeld as well.
Brandi Hayes: Yeah, the main that's the main stuff anyway,
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Brandi Hayes: I mean and you don't want to I hate I hate looking at a control and seeing a million tiny little buttons with tiny little words
Carol Kornfeld: Mm.
Brandi Hayes: saying what they all do and just
Natalie Parker: Yeah.
Brandi Hayes: sitting there searching for the teletext
Carol Kornfeld: Mm.
Brandi Hayes: button or
Carol Kornfeld: And
Brandi Hayes: something
Carol Kornfeld: symbols
Brandi Hayes: like that.
Carol Kornfeld: that you don't necessarily
Brandi Hayes: Yeah.
Carol Kornfeld: understand, symbols you're meant to understand that you don't.
Madonna Lindsey: So simplification
Brandi Hayes: Um.
Madonna Lindsey: of symbols you could think
Brandi Hayes: When
Madonna Lindsey: of.
Brandi Hayes: they're when you've got the main things on the front of it and a section opens up or something to the other functions where you can do sound or options
Carol Kornfeld: Oh yeah.
Brandi Hayes: kind of recording, things like that inside it.
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Brandi Hayes: 'Cause it doesn't make when you pick it up it doesn't make it really complicated to
Carol Kornfeld: Mm.
Brandi Hayes: look at, it's obvious
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Brandi Hayes: what
Natalie Parker: Mm.
Brandi Hayes: you're doing, um.
Carol Kornfeld: Actually that just raises a point, I wonder what our design people think, but you know on a mobile phone,
Madonna Lindsey: Mm-hmm.
Carol Kornfeld: you can press a key and it gives you a menu, it's
Madonna Lindsey: Menu,
Carol Kornfeld: got a menu
Madonna Lindsey: alright.
Carol Kornfeld: display, I wonder if incorporating that into the design of a remote control might be useful,
Natalie Parker: Yeah.
Carol Kornfeld: so you've got a little
Madonna Lindsey: Uh
Carol Kornfeld: L_C_D_
Madonna Lindsey: uh
Carol Kornfeld: display.
Madonna Lindsey: Right, I was thinking on the same lines you, instead of having too many b buttons and make it complicated for the user, may h maybe have an L_C_D_ di display or something like that, like a mobile,
Carol Kornfeld: With menus,
Madonna Lindsey: yeah and with
Carol Kornfeld: yeah,
Madonna Lindsey: menus.
Carol Kornfeld: yeah.
Madonna Lindsey: And if it's s somewhat similar to what you have on mobile phone, people might find it easier to browse and navigate also
Carol Kornfeld: Yeah.
Madonna Lindsey: maybe.
Brandi Hayes: What about the older generation? What about granny and grandads? Um,
Madonna Lindsey: You mean to save it lesser
Brandi Hayes: my grandad
Madonna Lindsey: number.
Brandi Hayes: can answer his mobile phone, but
Natalie Parker: Yeah.
Brandi Hayes: he couldn't even dream
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Brandi Hayes: of texting or something
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Brandi Hayes: like that.
Carol Kornfeld: Can he programme his remote control or is it basic
Madonna Lindsey: Right.
Carol Kornfeld: with that too?
Brandi Hayes: I don't think they tape things,
Natalie Parker: Yeah,
Brandi Hayes: I
Carol Kornfeld: Right.
Brandi Hayes: don't think
Natalie Parker: my
Brandi Hayes: they
Natalie Parker: grandad's
Brandi Hayes: use
Natalie Parker: actually better than Carol Kornfeld at using teletext, so.
Carol Kornfeld: Right. So that's a problem regardless of of any design modifications you you come up with,
Natalie Parker: Yeah.
Carol Kornfeld: that's gonna be a problem anyway with the older generation
Brandi Hayes: Mm, yeah,
Carol Kornfeld: perhaps,
Brandi Hayes: the
Carol Kornfeld: and
Brandi Hayes: age
Carol Kornfeld: that's another
Brandi Hayes: gap.
Carol Kornfeld: issue
Natalie Parker: Yeah,
Carol Kornfeld: how we tackle that.
Natalie Parker: what it just needs to be as long as it's sort of self-intuitive and you can can work out what everything's doing, 'cause I mean, menus on sort of new phones now they've sort of got all these pictures and stuff which makes it fairly obvious what you're trying to do.
Brandi Hayes: Mm.
Madonna Lindsey: Mm-hmm.
Natalie Parker: But
Brandi Hayes: I
Natalie Parker: I
Brandi Hayes: d
Natalie Parker: don't know how
Brandi Hayes: I don't like the, you know the new phones that have kind of got a Windows-based
Natalie Parker: Oh yeah.
Brandi Hayes: running system.
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Brandi Hayes: I find it really confusing, I kept getting lost in the phone, I di I've not got a new one but uh my
Carol Kornfeld: Right.
Brandi Hayes: friend got a new one and I was trying to do things with it and I just kept getting lost, but that's just Carol Kornfeld.
Natalie Parker: Yeah, I don't I don't know how for twenty fi, or twelve Euros fifty how much of a excellent screen you could get,
Brandi Hayes: Yeah.
Natalie Parker: you'd you'd have to sort of keep
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Natalie Parker: it down to a black and white L_C_D_ thing anyway,
Carol Kornfeld: Is
Natalie Parker: I'd
Carol Kornfeld: it possible
Natalie Parker: assume.
Carol Kornfeld: that that for the older generation you could have like an extra button that you press for large print like you do in large print books?
Madonna Lindsey: Okay.
Carol Kornfeld: Obviously
Brandi Hayes: Teletext
Carol Kornfeld: it displays
Brandi Hayes: has got that
Carol Kornfeld: less
Brandi Hayes: option
Carol Kornfeld: on
Brandi Hayes: as
Carol Kornfeld: the
Brandi Hayes: well.
Carol Kornfeld: screen, it displays less on the screen but as long as they can read it that's the main thing.
Brandi Hayes: Yeah. Or what about kind of a dual function? In that you've got the basic buttons just for your play, volume, programme things
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Brandi Hayes: and also and then a menu to go into with obvious pictures, obvious symbols and
Carol Kornfeld: Yeah.
Brandi Hayes: that's where you control
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Brandi Hayes: recording and things like that.
Carol Kornfeld: Mm. The other thing is, just ch chucking into mobile phone f design features again, it could have a flip top remote control so that when you flip over the top, your screen is you can have a bigger screen in
Brandi Hayes: Mm-hmm.
Carol Kornfeld: the
Madonna Lindsey: Mm, okay.
Carol Kornfeld: the flip over.
Brandi Hayes: I think
Madonna Lindsey: S
Brandi Hayes: that's a cost thing,
Natalie Parker: Y
Brandi Hayes: I don't
Madonna Lindsey: It
Brandi Hayes: I
Carol Kornfeld: Yeah?
Madonna Lindsey: might
Brandi Hayes: don't know how much we're gonna know about
Madonna Lindsey: it might save a b bit of space, it's i instead
Carol Kornfeld: Mm-hmm.
Madonna Lindsey: of looking bulky, it might look
Brandi Hayes: Yes,
Madonna Lindsey: small.
Brandi Hayes: no
Carol Kornfeld: Yeah,
Brandi Hayes: that's important.
Natalie Parker: Yeah.
Madonna Lindsey: But it might have
Carol Kornfeld: like
Madonna Lindsey: its
Carol Kornfeld: smaller.
Madonna Lindsey: cost implications.
Brandi Hayes: Okay.
Carol Kornfeld: And there's no reason we need to make it look as fashionable and stylish as a mobile phone, it can still be lightweight plastic,
Brandi Hayes: Mm.
Carol Kornfeld: you know?
Madonna Lindsey: Right.
Carol Kornfeld: Something that's easily moulded and produced.
Brandi Hayes: Yeah.
Carol Kornfeld: Sorry I'm treading on your territory guys.
Natalie Parker: No uh uh
Brandi Hayes: Um, right, okay we've got half an hour before the next meeting, so we're all gonna go off and do our individual things. Um I think that's probably about it and then we'll come back and liaise again
Natalie Parker: Yeah.
Brandi Hayes: and I get to do another fantastic PowerPoint presentation.
Natalie Parker: Just just a quick thing about
Brandi Hayes: Sure.
Natalie Parker: the um about what you're saying about the uh does does it need to be fashionable? The sort of I I had a quick look at the company website and it's like the the uh we put the fashion into electronics,
Carol Kornfeld: Ah
Natalie Parker: so
Carol Kornfeld: right.
Natalie Parker: I think
Madonna Lindsey: Okay.
Brandi Hayes: Okay.
Natalie Parker: think the
Carol Kornfeld: Okay.
Natalie Parker: whole design thing might be qui
Carol Kornfeld: Sure
Natalie Parker: I mean
Carol Kornfeld: b
Natalie Parker: you don't you
Carol Kornfeld: y yeah.
Natalie Parker: you can still have plastic and it'd look quite
Carol Kornfeld: But
Natalie Parker: good but
Carol Kornfeld: yeah, I mean it doesn't have to be that, you know th that was my main point,
Natalie Parker: Yeah.
Carol Kornfeld: we don't have to use metal, I don't know if using
Brandi Hayes: Mm.
Carol Kornfeld: plastic does make it cheaper, I presume it would.
Natalie Parker: Yeah.
Carol Kornfeld: Yeah,
Brandi Hayes: I would
Natalie Parker: Yeah.
Brandi Hayes: it
Carol Kornfeld: yeah,
Brandi Hayes: would probably.
Carol Kornfeld: yeah.
Brandi Hayes: I mean there's Sky remote controls and everything. They're kind of moulded and look a bit different, and the Telewest remote controls are silver plastic, which
Carol Kornfeld: Right.
Brandi Hayes: looks a bit smarter, so yeah I guess that's stuff we can think
Carol Kornfeld: Okay.
Brandi Hayes: about. Okay, so let's break it up there.
Carol Kornfeld: 'Kay.
Brandi Hayes: Okay?
Natalie Parker: Okay.
Brandi Hayes: So, see you in half an hour.
Carol Kornfeld: back to our room?
Brandi Hayes: I think
Madonna Lindsey: Mm,
Brandi Hayes: so,
Madonna Lindsey: yeah.
Carol Kornfeld: Yep?
Brandi Hayes: yeah. | Brandi Hayes gave an introduction to the goal of the project, to create a trendy yet user-friendly remote. She presented a long-range agenda for the whole project. The group introduced themselves to each other and practiced with the meeting room tools by drawing on the board. Brandi Hayes presented the project budget, the projected price point, and the projected profit aim for the project. Then the group began a discussion about their own experiences with remote controls to generate initial design ideas for making the product user-friendly. They discussed grouping features into a menu and adding an LCD display. They also discussed the look of various materials that may be used in the design, in keeping with the company's goal to create fashionable electronics. | 2 | amisum | train |
Betty Sulla: Help. It's up there? That screen's black.
Betty Sulla: Alright, okay. Okay, that's fine.
Doreen Pray: Oh God.
Betty Sulla: Are we done?
Betty Sulla: Right, okay um, this is our second meeting and I might be a bit all over the place. Um, right our agenda for today, do you want us to give you a second?
Doreen Pray: Uh, no that's okay, sorry.
Betty Sulla: Okay, um I'll go over what we decided last meeting,
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: um, we decided upon a universal control, one handset for all, T_V_, video equipment.
Sara Brasil: Sorry.
Betty Sulla: Um that important that the product was accessible to a wide range of consumers, wide age range, not limiting anyone. We decided it was important to reflect the company's image in our product, we put fashion in electronics, you know that kind of s thing. Um, our budget would have to affect um try not to reflect our budget, um that we might have a bit of oh oh you can see it, okay. Um dissonance between what our budget was and what we want it to look like. Um want it to look uncluttered, undaunting to the customer. We discussed a flip-open design, um reducing the size of the control and an electronic panel um for further features like programming, things like that. Okay. Um, three presentations, I've got written here so shall we hear from Marketing first?
Doreen Pray: Um is it okay if I postpone that til later, I just want to get access to a little bit more information,
Betty Sulla: No
Doreen Pray: is that
Betty Sulla: that's
Doreen Pray: okay?
Betty Sulla: fine, that's fine.
Markita Smith: Okay, yeah I'll go first Can. I grab the
Betty Sulla: Unplug Doreen Pray.
Markita Smith: Thanks.
Markita Smith: What do I have to press? Oh, F_ eight?
Betty Sulla: Um, F_N_ function F_
Markita Smith: Oh
Betty Sulla: eight.
Markita Smith: right, yeah. Okay. Maybe
Sara Brasil: Yep.
Markita Smith: Yep there we go. Okay this is uh the working design, presented by Doreen Pray, the uh Industrial Designer extraordinaire. 'Kay, this is where I went a bit mad with PowerPoint so. What the first thing question I asked was what are we trying to design? Well, a device which basically sends the signal to the T_V_ to change its state, whether that be the power, or the channel um or the volume, everything is just um some sort of signal to change the state of the T_V_ or other appliance that it's sending the signal to. Um, so I decided I'd have a look at what th other people have designed and try and take some inspiration from that. But uh although we will want to be taking ideas from other people, we wanna make sure that our design stands out and I thought that was something that well it wasn't really my area because I'm dealing with the inside really. So um, yeah I ran out of time so I couldn't do this one as fun as the last one. Um and uh I found out that most uh controls use some form of infrared to send signals to the T_V_ presumably because of the cost issue of uh something like uh the same thing that computers use, wireless and, you don't need to send very much information. Um, most of them are powered by some form of battery. Now our one, I'm I'm not sure whether we want to look at the size issue because most of them are powered by triple A_ batteries but those can be quite bulky so I d I didn't know if you wanted to look at something else um so we could shrink down the size
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm. Could
Markita Smith: of the
Doreen Pray: I
Markita Smith: control.
Doreen Pray: can I interject to ask a question
Betty Sulla: Mm-hmm.
Markita Smith: Yeah
Doreen Pray: there, is
Markita Smith: sure.
Doreen Pray: that appropriate? You're saying the triple A_ batteries are small or
Markita Smith: Um
Doreen Pray: the
Markita Smith: no no,
Doreen Pray: surrounding
Markita Smith: if you
Doreen Pray: it?
Markita Smith: if you look at if you look at most remote controls they're quite they're quite chunky and
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Markita Smith: that's because of the size of the batteries, they have to be obviously this certain size to fit those
Doreen Pray: Right,
Markita Smith: batteries
Doreen Pray: the triple
Markita Smith: in.
Doreen Pray: A_s are the smallest you can
Markita Smith: Yeah
Doreen Pray: get
Markita Smith: the
Doreen Pray: are they not,
Markita Smith: the
Betty Sulla: They
Markita Smith: well
Doreen Pray: right?
Betty Sulla: are.
Sara Brasil: Okay.
Markita Smith: you can you can get the sort of circular round ones
Doreen Pray: Oh
Markita Smith: but I'm just
Doreen Pray: I see.
Markita Smith: wondering about power consumption and how much you need to send
Doreen Pray: Okay.
Markita Smith: the data across. Um, and d which leads sort of onto the next point about 'em being small and easy to carry round. Um, now the ones at the moment are small but I was just wondering if we could look at something a bit smaller. Now the main components I came up with um were obviously the power source for the batteries 'cause otherwise it's not gonna work, uh as I said about the w which batteries we were gonna choose, we can uh discuss that later and then you obviously need something to decode the information that you're putting in from from the controller and to turn it into an i uh infrared signal which we're going to use to send the information. Now these have a wireless range of up to about five metres which is sort of suitable for anyone who's watching the T_V_ unless they're in a cinema, which not most people do so as we're applying to the most audience that should be fine. And then I was uh just had a quick look at the external design but I d I left that mostly to the uh interface designer. And so this is what I had as the basic idea of what we wanna do. It's not a proper circuit, I'm not sure if it'd work or not, I'm not even confident that those are the real um the real way you'd wire it up but anyway, we've just got the the power going to the infrared bulb with the chip and the uh U_I_ interface um which would basically, when you when you pressed anything it would the chip would convert it into some form of I_R_ data which could be decoded by the T_V_ receiver, which obviously means that we're gonna have to conform to whatever um whatever form of communication that the T_V_s are already using and since that that's another use and reason to use that infrared because that's what all T_V_s use at the moment. And then finally, um we want uh the it to be available to a wide audience at a low cost so all the components that I've put forward are uh low in cost so that that should be good. Um it should should be different enough um from the alternative products to get a good consumer base, we were talking about it before and also just something that I was thinking about, uh because they're small
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Markita Smith: they're also easy to lose so if we could look into some way of d dunno some anti-going down the side of the sofa
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Markita Smith: thing that you could have, I th that was just sort of a general point there.
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Markita Smith: And
Doreen Pray: That's
Markita Smith: that's
Doreen Pray: a very important
Markita Smith: uh
Doreen Pray: part, it came up
Markita Smith: yeah.
Doreen Pray: in our market research findings too so I can refer to that,
Markita Smith: Alright okay,
Doreen Pray: whenever you like Doreen Pray to present.
Markita Smith: and yeah, that's that's what I came up with there, so
Betty Sulla: Okay,
Markita Smith: if
Betty Sulla: thank
Markita Smith: you wanna
Betty Sulla: you very much. Um, would you like to continue
Sara Brasil: Yep
Betty Sulla: on from that?
Markita Smith: Ooh.
Sara Brasil: 'Kay.
Betty Sulla: Or,
Sara Brasil: It can be
Betty Sulla: maybe move the laptop
Sara Brasil: okay, that's
Betty Sulla: over.
Sara Brasil: okay with Doreen Pray. further.
Sara Brasil: Oops.
Sara Brasil: Why's it not working? F_ eight, right?
Betty Sulla: F_ function.
Markita Smith: Function F_ eight yeah.
Sara Brasil: Okay. Mm
Doreen Pray: No.
Sara Brasil: why's it in the right?
Doreen Pray: The plug hasn't come out at the
Sara Brasil: Yeah,
Doreen Pray: bottom,
Sara Brasil: it's
Doreen Pray: has
Sara Brasil: connecting.
Doreen Pray: it? No.
Markita Smith: No, no yeah it's just.
Doreen Pray: Meter adjusting.
Betty Sulla: Oh, there.
Sara Brasil: okay. Yeah. Actually mm some of my points might overlap with what William's
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: just mention, but basically my method was like uh whatever brainstorming we did in the last meeting just a couple valuable points and started developing on and there might be some missing loops in this thing which I think we'll uh take a feedback from the marketing because um, I haven't had some marketing data and basically every product is marketable. So purpose, as William already said, I would put it to simplify the interaction with T_V_ to make make it as simple as possible. And to summarise I I would say it's it should be user-friendly by being easy to use, rather than having a lot of complex button because you can have an engineering maybe having hundred buttons and maybe having uh a remote control which has the main features like volume control or channel ch changing the channel or whatever. But we are to to make it unique so that people want to buy it, will this two features together. So what the concept is to have a flip-top model. The main functions such as which are like often used will be on the top and the complex functions which say you you can say like the y young generation or trendy generation want to pr say programme their favourite channels or whatever, can be put in the middle part of the f flip-top. So it's like it could be accessed by a wide ra range of uh audience and we can punch in new f features such as uh added features such as shock proof body and maybe a design to appeal to a lot of people. Findings most people prefer us user-friendly rather than complex remote controls because there are times like uh people have used a remote control for say a year or something and they they are not used maybe thirty to forty percent of the buttons so it's not of no use of punching in the uh trying to put in those things in on the top of the remote control and try to confuse the user. As we saw we we have to make a profit also so we we can maybe go for an economies of a higher production mm by fifty million we said?
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: Yeah, with that I think we'll be able to achieve economies of scale also, so we can give in add in more features and make it less costly. Um, that's so this is if you ask Doreen Pray personally, I would make uh flip-top with a trendy uh uh design and s maybe we we should look at also like the buttons whe whether they are like soft or little hard because they are
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: times when the buttons tend to be a bit hard after uh continuous use usage and all that. So in overall a simple and uh user-friendly design.
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Sara Brasil: Uh any
Betty Sulla: 'Kay.
Sara Brasil: comments like, if you want?
Betty Sulla: Um, I think we'll chat about it at the end,
Sara Brasil: Okay.
Betty Sulla: okay so if anyone wants to write something down that they want to bring up at the end,
Doreen Pray: 'Kay.
Markita Smith: Yeah sure.
Betty Sulla: um Ooh, it's vibrating, that's strange. Oh, God.
Betty Sulla: Right, okay.
Doreen Pray: Have I got
Sara Brasil: I
Doreen Pray: to keep
Sara Brasil: think
Doreen Pray: this
Sara Brasil: you'll
Doreen Pray: here?
Sara Brasil: have to You can't
Doreen Pray: Does it matter?
Sara Brasil: It'll have to this can't
Doreen Pray: I'll
Sara Brasil: be
Doreen Pray: have
Sara Brasil: pulled.
Doreen Pray: t I'll have to move
Betty Sulla: We just
Doreen Pray: it
Betty Sulla: do
Doreen Pray: won't
Betty Sulla: the best we
Doreen Pray: I?
Betty Sulla: can.
Doreen Pray: Uh, whoops.
Sara Brasil: You'll have to push it a bit more.
Doreen Pray: Will it manage? Bit more, oh
Sara Brasil: Yep.
Doreen Pray: dear.
Sara Brasil: Yeah this is more than enough.
Markita Smith: There we go,
Sara Brasil: Okay.
Markita Smith: I've got a bit more of the
Doreen Pray: Oh.
Markita Smith: cable. we go.
Doreen Pray: Is that okay?
Sara Brasil: Yeah I think you can pull it out now.
Doreen Pray: Thank you, just pull it closer a little bit.
Markita Smith: Uh you should be able to
Betty Sulla: Yeah,
Markita Smith: and
Betty Sulla: you
Doreen Pray: Get
Betty Sulla: might.
Doreen Pray: it right
Markita Smith: yeah,
Doreen Pray: over,
Markita Smith: there
Doreen Pray: okay,
Markita Smith: you
Doreen Pray: thank you.
Betty Sulla: Ah.
Markita Smith: go.
Betty Sulla: Look at that.
Doreen Pray: Okay, um, I'm going to look at the functional requirements from the marketing point of view and uh obviously our starting point with marketing is always market research. Um, so that's where we started, we used our our usability lab, the company's usability lab, we did our usual selection methods to get a cross-section of the general public, male and female, all age groups from fifteen upwards and um we observed them in the lab, just their general use of the remote control, you can see we had a hundred subjects there. Our findings, lots of findings, I've just summarised some of them here. The overall thing which I've I've got at the top there in italics is that users dislike the look and feel of current remote controls, so it has obvious design implications there. Um, we found that seventy five percent of users find most remote controls ugly. Eighty percent would spend more money when a remote control would look fancy, we were quite surprised by that finding, but um that's quite a high proportion of our our, you know, international target group are prepared to spend more money for something that's a bit nicer looking. Um, current remote controls do not match well with the operating behaviour of the user overall. For example, you can see below there, seventy five percent of users zap a lot, so you've got your
Sara Brasil: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: person sunk back in the sofa channel-hopping. So again there's power implications there. Um, fifty percent of users only use ten percent of the buttons, so again a big design issue there. Um and possibly we can also cut back on cost if we don't have so many functions actually on the remote control. Um the biggest frustrations that people found with regard to personal preferences were um something that you you mentioned earlier, uh remote controls are often lost in the room, it's a slipping down the back of the sofa type of thing, uh fifty percent were were particularly frustrated by that. Uh thirty four percent of people take said they take too much time to learn to use and I think that ties in with the um the previous finding of people only using ten percent of the buttons, they just can't be bothered to learn about the other functions. Um, um slightly more than a quarter of people said it was bad for uh repetitive strain injury. You know those small movements of the remote control can lead to kind of shoulder and elbow problems. Um the vast majority of the thirty five and under age group would like um a liquid crystal display and speech recognition, again that was to aid I think in uh when they've lost the actual remote control, some kind of speech recognition. Something we didn't put to them, but which I'm thinking of now is um even if perhaps the lost control can give off a bleep every now and again til you find it or a flashing light, possibly. Um, that trend reverses in the older age groups. So thirty fives and unders who would like those two features, that kind of evens out thirty five to forty five and in the older age group it kind of reverses, they're not so bothered with this. I
Sara Brasil: 'Kay.
Doreen Pray: had marvellous tables and things that I could show you, but I think I'll just keep it simple, if there's any more information I can email you extra details,
Betty Sulla: Okay.
Doreen Pray: is that
Markita Smith: Okay.
Doreen Pray: okay?
Betty Sulla: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: That's fine.
Betty Sulla: Right,
Markita Smith: Huh.
Betty Sulla: um we have new project requirements, um we're not going to be using teletext,
Sara Brasil: Okay.
Betty Sulla: um apparently the consumers consider it outdated with the internet now. Um our control is only going to be for T_V_, it's not going to be a combined control, which limits you know all of the different things that it limits the cost for us, but it
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: also makes it easier to understand
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm,
Betty Sulla: for
Doreen Pray: so
Betty Sulla: the
Doreen Pray: can we not
Betty Sulla: consumer.
Doreen Pray: programme a video with this remote control?
Betty Sulla: It says for T_V_ only, so looks like it's
Doreen Pray: Just
Betty Sulla: just
Doreen Pray: channel-hopping.
Betty Sulla: yeah, I think maybe Sky things like that might be incorporated into it, but I don't know, what do you think? It just said, for T_V_ only.
Doreen Pray: Would
Betty Sulla: But
Doreen Pray: that
Betty Sulla: I mean,
Doreen Pray: imply
Betty Sulla: general
Doreen Pray: video
Betty Sulla: T_V_
Doreen Pray: use?
Betty Sulla: controls
Markita Smith: T yeah yeah.
Betty Sulla: do do video as well.
Markita Smith: I d well I dunno
Betty Sulla: I mean you
Markita Smith: 'cause
Betty Sulla: bu
Markita Smith: uh
Betty Sulla: well
Markita Smith: the
Betty Sulla: som
Markita Smith: w if
Betty Sulla: you
Markita Smith: you've
Betty Sulla: get
Markita Smith: g
Betty Sulla: com you get combined T_V_ and videos don't
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: you?
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm,
Markita Smith: If yeah and if
Doreen Pray: yes.
Markita Smith: you got if you got a Sky box, they have one of those plus boxes, you can record straight off the T_V_ anyway
Betty Sulla: Mm.
Markita Smith: so on to on to like the T_V_ hard drive or so.
Betty Sulla: I think we assume that it's still got play and stop functions and
Doreen Pray: Yes.
Betty Sulla: programming.
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: Anything about that on the market research or something like regarding whether people want a combined something like that?
Doreen Pray: Um we didn't really look into that but remember we found that finding that most people only use about uh
Betty Sulla: Mm.
Sara Brasil: Ten
Doreen Pray: ten
Sara Brasil: perc
Doreen Pray: percent of the buttons,
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Doreen Pray: I think th th those do tend to be the basic channel-hopping things and
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: on and off for the video, fast-forwarding, so on and I think it's sort of general knowledge that people do find programming their videos a nightmare.
Sara Brasil: Okay.
Betty Sulla: Hmm.
Doreen Pray: So I.
Markita Smith: Ju um just as an idea on the uh speech recognition thing
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Markita Smith: that pr it'd probably be quite expensive
Sara Brasil: Pens
Markita Smith: to incorporate an entire speech recognition thing and they're not that great
Doreen Pray: In fact
Markita Smith: anyway.
Doreen Pray: I've just called up that table there,
Markita Smith: Alright, okay.
Doreen Pray: we asked those two questions, table relates to both questions, so we didn't differentiate. Would you prefer an L_C_D_ screen, that's multi-function remote and would you pay
Markita Smith: Alright,
Doreen Pray: more for
Markita Smith: okay.
Doreen Pray: speech recognition in a remote control? So you can see how the the yes no sort
Betty Sulla: Mm-hmm.
Doreen Pray: of varies
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: across the age group there, and a substantial number of don't knows in the older age group, I think that's just general fear of new technology.
Betty Sulla: Yeah,
Markita Smith: Yeah
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Markita Smith: but um
Betty Sulla: bu
Markita Smith: on on that again I just thought 'cause you can get those key chains now and you whistle and then it'll
Doreen Pray: Oh
Markita Smith: let
Doreen Pray: yeah.
Markita Smith: off a loud noise to let you know where it is
Doreen Pray: Right.
Markita Smith: so I thought that could be quite a
Betty Sulla: We do have a budget limitation that we can't control ourselves, so I think when we can take a cheaper option which still does the
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Betty Sulla: same kinda thing um because it is something I it needs to be the thing that you use to find it needs to be something that you don't lose, you were
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: saying whistling,
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: maybe on the T_V_ you could put like a pack on the T_V_ or something so you can't see the remote, you go and press the button on top of the T_V_ and it beeps and
Doreen Pray: Yes.
Betty Sulla: you're
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: like oh
Sara Brasil: Okay.
Betty Sulla: okay it's over there,
Doreen Pray: That's
Betty Sulla: something
Doreen Pray: a super idea.
Betty Sulla: like that, but
Markita Smith: Hmm.
Betty Sulla: that's that sounds a lot cheaper to Doreen Pray.
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: Um the third thing was that we have to make sure the corporate image is very much incorporated into the handset. Um so we want logo, we want um fashionable, trendy, I mean what you were talking about with the marketing. Um, people paying more for it to look good. Um, we need to focus on that as well.
Doreen Pray: Yes, further market research will be needed to kind of focus on what that is, it's gonna be different for a fifteen year old th for somebody who's sixty
Betty Sulla: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: and also across the world if we're aiming at the international market. What is um attractive to a trendy New Yorker and what is attractive to a retired South African,
Betty Sulla: Mm.
Doreen Pray: I dunno, you get the idea. It's it's gonna vary around the world. At the end of the day, th the engineering design is one thing, it's the user interface design that may and th the sort of
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: you know fashionable aspect of it we might have to change for different markets round the world.
Betty Sulla: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: So are we talking of a single model or maybe five, six designs? Sure.
Markita Smith: Well y yeah you could you could have a number of different designs
Sara Brasil: Alright.
Markita Smith: I mean inside they'd be essentially exactly the same.
Sara Brasil: Right.
Betty Sulla: Mm-hmm.
Markita Smith: Just
Sara Brasil: The features
Doreen Pray: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: could be same and the body could look
Markita Smith: yeah,
Sara Brasil: slightly different.
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Markita Smith: yeah.
Sara Brasil: So
Betty Sulla: What about you were talking about the buttons,
Sara Brasil: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: um the controls that are coming out now have kind of big, rubber buttons, not tiny little one, big, rubber buttons, but what about, I mean, 'cause we got to make it original,
Markita Smith: 'Kay.
Betty Sulla: what about um you know with the touch screen
Markita Smith: Yeah,
Betty Sulla: computers
Markita Smith: yeah that's what I was just
Betty Sulla: yeah?
Markita Smith: yeah.
Betty Sulla: Um so you it's like a little panel that you touch rather than a button which shouldn't wear out as much either, not
Markita Smith: No,
Betty Sulla: sure about
Markita Smith: well no
Betty Sulla: the
Markita Smith: 'cause you wouldn't have to you don't actually
Betty Sulla: You
Markita Smith: have
Betty Sulla: don't
Markita Smith: to press
Betty Sulla: have to press
Markita Smith: them you
Betty Sulla: it,
Markita Smith: just
Betty Sulla: you just have to put your thumb onto it.
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: Um, think that might appeal I'm thinking kind of Japan, I'm thinking uh young, um
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Betty Sulla: office people,
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: trendy
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: kind
Doreen Pray: Yes
Betty Sulla: of a thing.
Doreen Pray: it will appeal to sections of the market
Betty Sulla: Um,
Doreen Pray: def
Betty Sulla: but quite, um, easily labelled so that anyone can oh yeah that's obvious what that's for
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: and it's not daunting to maybe the older
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm,
Betty Sulla: generations,
Markita Smith: Mm.
Doreen Pray: mm.
Markita Smith: But
Betty Sulla: um
Markita Smith: also er ergonomics as we're saying with the different designs, ergonomics uh there's sort of physically different things 'cause um if you've ever seen the X_ Box they had to make two different sized controllers because people in Japan wouldn't buy it because the controller
Betty Sulla: Were too
Markita Smith: was
Betty Sulla: big.
Markita Smith: physically to big because um they're c uh just generally Japanese people have smaller hands
Betty Sulla: Mm.
Markita Smith: so they couldn't get round the controller which is uh so if you I don't know what 'cause you obviously you can have bigger buttons for some countries or something and smaller ones for others.
Sara Brasil: Yeah, uh maybe to as uh it it was indicated that uh uh risk uh of uh repeated use, the injuries, maybe a touch screen could be a better option for that.
Markita Smith: Yeah. Yeah.
Sara Brasil: So, a bigger b okay so y you're dividing designs based on not only segment age groups, you're desi uh dividing it according to the countries also, the market.
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Sara Brasil: Maybe for U_S_ and all you can have a slightly bigger remote
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: control and maybe in Japan and all you need to have a small,
Markita Smith: Hmm.
Sara Brasil: yeah.
Betty Sulla: I think we have to design
Markita Smith: Huh.
Betty Sulla: one product
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: and then the company can take it wherever they want to uh
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: the features slightly,
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: um.
Doreen Pray: Th the internal d engineering design has got to remain the same,
Betty Sulla: It's
Doreen Pray: yes,
Betty Sulla: gonna be the same,
Doreen Pray: absolutely.
Betty Sulla: so we need to focus on just one thing,
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: not get bogged down in lots of different um possibilities,
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: um.
Doreen Pray: I'm concerned, when you read the the R_S_I_ issue again, repetitive strain injury, I don't think just moving your finger around on a small screen is going to deal with that enough, I think that is still a kind of a question mark issue how we deal with that. Um,
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: R_S_I_ tends to be caused by repetitive small movements. I'm j I really can't get my head round this one, this may
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: have to be postponed to a future meeting but it's something we should think about.
Markita Smith: I yeah I was just thinking about how you could combat that 'cause
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Markita Smith: without without doing something where you have to move your arm
Doreen Pray: I
Markita Smith: around
Doreen Pray: know, and it
Markita Smith: to
Doreen Pray: becomes
Markita Smith: change the
Doreen Pray: ridiculous,
Markita Smith: channel and it
Doreen Pray: yes
Markita Smith: becomes yeah.
Betty Sulla: Or
Doreen Pray: I know.
Betty Sulla: a speech recognition,
Markita Smith: Yeah,
Doreen Pray: Yeah.
Markita Smith: speech recognition,
Betty Sulla: which
Markita Smith: but
Betty Sulla: is extremely expensive,
Markita Smith: yeah.
Betty Sulla: I
Doreen Pray: Yes.
Betty Sulla: think that's the only way that you kind of avoid
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: that kind of issue.
Doreen Pray: Do we have to initially um, you know looking at the findings here, focus on a younger age group initially and then broaden out the market later. Do we really have to go for everyone right away?
Markita Smith: Mm.
Sara Brasil: We
Doreen Pray: Um.
Sara Brasil: could focus on the biggest market.
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Markita Smith: Ge
Sara Brasil: If say
Markita Smith: uh
Sara Brasil: people between age group of twenty to thirty five are
Doreen Pray: And when
Sara Brasil: the biggest
Doreen Pray: we've been throwing
Sara Brasil: market?
Doreen Pray: up our ideas we're automatically talking about business people, young people, trendy people.
Betty Sulla: We are we're talking about um the type of company that we're working for as well. That they want um it to be fashionable, they want it to be trendy and you wouldn't automatically assume associate that with the older generations.
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Betty Sulla: Now with the baby boomers, the older generations are actually larger, they have a greater population
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: than us young
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: people,
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: but I don't think we're focusing on that, I think we are focusing on a sort of mid-range
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Betty Sulla: um, business kind of class type
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Betty Sulla: people.
Doreen Pray: I'm just thinking of budgetary issues too, for when it does get to the sort of broad scale marketing stage, we want to, you know, not waste money, not be profligate
Betty Sulla: Mm-hmm.
Doreen Pray: and uh you know focus on where the idea will be taken up, first it's most likely to be taken up first of all where the main purchasing power is coming from for a product like this.
Betty Sulla: Okay, so the remote control functions. Um we've got the T_V_,
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: we've got the video, now there's um I can't remember what it's called, the little code at the end of programme details,
Markita Smith: Video plus.
Betty Sulla: yes. We could use that as an alternative to programming in times, things like that,
Markita Smith: Yeah
Betty Sulla: is
Markita Smith: yeah.
Betty Sulla: that I always found that really easy when I discovered
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Betty Sulla: it,
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: um because you've got your general record anyway so if you there's a programme on you want to put record on, that's fine, but if you do want to tape something
Markita Smith: Just
Betty Sulla: in
Markita Smith: whack
Betty Sulla: two days
Markita Smith: in the
Betty Sulla: time
Markita Smith: number.
Betty Sulla: and you're not sure if you're going to, you put the number in and it's just a number, it's not a date, it's not a time, it's not a channel, it's not when it finishes, it's not
Markita Smith: And
Betty Sulla: anything
Markita Smith: you w
Betty Sulla: like that,
Markita Smith: yeah.
Betty Sulla: it's just a number.
Markita Smith: And you wouldn't you wouldn't need uh a whole host of extra buttons for that, you
Betty Sulla: No.
Markita Smith: just need one 'cause you've already got all the numbers
Betty Sulla: You've already
Markita Smith: there
Betty Sulla: got
Markita Smith: anyway,
Betty Sulla: the numbers
Markita Smith: yeah.
Betty Sulla: for typing
Doreen Pray: Right,
Betty Sulla: in anyway.
Doreen Pray: I've not come across that function but it sounds wonderful.
Betty Sulla: It is after um if you look in the newspaper,
Markita Smith: It's not
Betty Sulla: T_V_ guide or any T_V_ guide there's a five, six
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: digit number afterwards and that's the number you put in
Doreen Pray: Ah,
Betty Sulla: and it's
Doreen Pray: hmm.
Betty Sulla: recorded that it's going to be on on Tuesdays at ten o'clock on the seventeenth so you don't have to worry about dates and you don't have to worry about times,
Doreen Pray: Right.
Betty Sulla: um and it has been around for quite
Markita Smith: It's
Betty Sulla: a
Markita Smith: been
Betty Sulla: long time.
Markita Smith: been around for a long time it's just it's not very well advertised
Betty Sulla: No
Markita Smith: as
Betty Sulla: it's not
Markita Smith: to how
Doreen Pray: Superb.
Betty Sulla: um
Markita Smith: to use it and
Betty Sulla: but
Markita Smith: things.
Betty Sulla: I think if awareness was kind of
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Betty Sulla: brought to the forefront about that
Markita Smith: Mm.
Doreen Pray: Yes.
Markita Smith: Though if y if you've got something like Sky anyway you can just click on it you can just press the button on the programme once and it'll record that programme
Betty Sulla: Mm.
Doreen Pray: Right.
Markita Smith: when it's on and you press it on it twice and it'll record the whole series.
Doreen Pray: Excellent, mm-hmm.
Markita Smith: So that yeah.
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Markita Smith: But just to have that function would
Doreen Pray: Right.
Markita Smith: be would be really good.
Betty Sulla: Okay so
Doreen Pray: Can I just run this past you while it occurs to Doreen Pray, I don't mean to quickly jump from one subject to another, but just discussing the different age groups and targeting the different age groups it occurs to Doreen Pray, to produce our own mobile phones, that that's kind of what led us on to comparing T_V_ remote controls with with their design features, um, chain companies like Carphone Warehouse, you can pop in anytime with a phone that you bought for them w if you've got any problems with it and they'll fix it, they'll
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: phone the company, you can use
Betty Sulla: Mm-hmm.
Doreen Pray: their telephones. Is it worthwhile with with our retail outlets having a a similar um kind of service so that if older users were deterred from buying this, if they know they can just pop into one of our high street outlets, th you know, which button is it I press for this? Th as free as a free aspect of our service, would that not make it more attractive to them?
Markita Smith: Mm. But the only problem is that with a mobile phone you signed for a contract so they um the companies who uh who you deal with have actually they've they've got an obligation to
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Markita Smith: to help you out and
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Markita Smith: also I mean it's it's fair enough to have some sort of help service but I I'm not sure how much the cost would be of
Doreen Pray: Right.
Markita Smith: having
Betty Sulla: The functionality of it in the sense that you're sitting there, you're pressing this button and your T_V_'s not doing it.
Doreen Pray: Alright.
Betty Sulla: Taking your T_V_ and your
Doreen Pray: Yes
Betty Sulla: control and saying look this is what I'm doing, it's not working, what should I do?
Doreen Pray: If it was something as simple as you couldn't change the channel, but I mean for if there were any more or are we absolutely definite it's only gonna be for T_V_ and video, we're
Markita Smith: Yeah,
Doreen Pray: not
Betty Sulla: I
Markita Smith: I
Doreen Pray: gonna
Betty Sulla: think
Markita Smith: mean
Doreen Pray: put any
Betty Sulla: so.
Doreen Pray: okay,
Betty Sulla: Um
Doreen Pray: just a thought.
Markita Smith: I mean instru instruction books I
Betty Sulla: Instruction
Markita Smith: feel c I
Betty Sulla: manuals.
Markita Smith: reckon
Doreen Pray: Okay.
Markita Smith: can
Betty Sulla: But
Markita Smith: cover
Betty Sulla: I mean
Markita Smith: that.
Betty Sulla: they're there's customer service, there
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: will be a customer service number
Markita Smith: Department,
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Markita Smith: yeah.
Betty Sulla: thing that you can phone up and speak to
Doreen Pray: Sure.
Betty Sulla: and that way there's no call out charge, there's no extra, t the person
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Betty Sulla: has to walk to a shop
Sara Brasil: Right.
Betty Sulla: on the high street,
Doreen Pray: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: I think
Betty Sulla: um.
Sara Brasil: it will be too much of an effort for a person to for a phone maybe he might walk down the street,
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: but for a remote he will just refer
Doreen Pray: Not
Sara Brasil: to the
Doreen Pray: for
Sara Brasil: manual
Doreen Pray: such
Markita Smith: And they're
Doreen Pray: simple
Sara Brasil: and all that.
Doreen Pray: functions
Markita Smith: yeah,
Doreen Pray: because
Markita Smith: they
Doreen Pray: we're
Markita Smith: should
Doreen Pray: focusing
Markita Smith: be
Betty Sulla: Mm.
Markita Smith: f
Doreen Pray: on that, yes
Betty Sulla: But
Markita Smith: yeah.
Betty Sulla: we
Doreen Pray: okay.
Betty Sulla: should focus on making the manual as
Sara Brasil: Simple.
Betty Sulla: user-friendly
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Betty Sulla: as possible
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: because a lot of them are just tiny
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: little writing and lots and lots of pages.
Doreen Pray: Puts people off reading
Markita Smith: It's the
Doreen Pray: them
Betty Sulla: It
Markita Smith: uh
Doreen Pray: so
Markita Smith: yeah.
Betty Sulla: does,
Doreen Pray: they just do the
Betty Sulla: you just
Doreen Pray: obvious,
Betty Sulla: put it in the
Doreen Pray: yes.
Betty Sulla: drawer until something goes wrong and then you try and search through it, so
Doreen Pray: Sure,
Betty Sulla: that should be something we think
Doreen Pray: okay.
Betty Sulla: about.
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: Um, what other functions? We need I'm not sure if we need a design um decision now, but we should think about c 'cause you've got the dilemma between oh batteries, that's what I was thinking about. Mobile phone batteries, what kinda battery is that?
Markita Smith: Um they're they're specially made for the for the mobile phones, but they come with a charger, I mean you could you could bundle a charger
Betty Sulla: Well they la
Markita Smith: in with it
Betty Sulla: they
Markita Smith: but
Betty Sulla: they last quite a long time,
Markita Smith: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: and if you had uh when you th the thing that you get with mobile house phones,
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: you sit it in its charger when you're not using it or
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: t at
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: night or something, but it doesn't really matter 'cause it never really runs out 'cause it lasts a long time once
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: it is charged. Um, something like that should reduce
Markita Smith: Yeah
Betty Sulla: the
Markita Smith: and
Betty Sulla: size
Markita Smith: if
Betty Sulla: of it.
Markita Smith: yeah if you if you had if you had one of those uh just coming back to your other point about pressing the button and setting off the bleeper in the room that could uh
Betty Sulla: Yeah it could be on that
Markita Smith: Yeah on
Betty Sulla: yeah,
Markita Smith: that as well so.
Betty Sulla: okay. S
Sara Brasil: So are we talking of a concept of a rechargeable something
Markita Smith: Yeah
Sara Brasil: on
Markita Smith: some
Sara Brasil: the remote?
Markita Smith: sort
Betty Sulla: Yes.
Markita Smith: of docking station or
Betty Sulla: Rechargeable
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: with a docking station.
Markita Smith: yeah.
Betty Sulla: So the rechargeable which would be your
Markita Smith: Yeah yeah
Betty Sulla: field.
Markita Smith: th yeah that that'd be fine,
Betty Sulla: Okay.
Markita Smith: and also that would mean they wouldn't have to go out buying batteries all the time.
Betty Sulla: Yes,
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Sara Brasil: Right.
Betty Sulla: which it is cheaper in the long
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: run as well. Um, th the shape you got trendy. I don't wanna big box with lots of things, you don't want a tiny sort of
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: little thing either,
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: because then you have got the repetitive strain injury no matter how many
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Betty Sulla: how much you try and make it simple, um
Doreen Pray: And we don't w I mean so many remote controls look absolutely identical, these
Betty Sulla: They
Doreen Pray: long,
Betty Sulla: do.
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: brown things with the same coloured buttons all crammed in on the s the surface. We definitely an ob an obvious thing, a very simple thing is to get away from these brown rectangles, we don't want that.
Betty Sulla: Okay so we've got
Sara Brasil: Okay.
Betty Sulla: a flip-screen. Um
Sara Brasil: What I was thinking of a design which Nokia h uh came up with almost six or seven years back. Basically we have a flat one it it looks like a box,
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: like a chocolate. That's very strenuous because your thumb is slightly up,
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Sara Brasil: so they came up with something like this, curled up, so here, so it's like uh you can say a
Doreen Pray: Slightly
Sara Brasil: banana
Doreen Pray: curved,
Sara Brasil: shape kind of thing, curled
Doreen Pray: curved.
Sara Brasil: up
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: like a boat.
Betty Sulla: Okay.
Sara Brasil: G uh so what happens is you don't have to press your thumb too down like. So it's already
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Sara Brasil: curled up so
Betty Sulla: 'Cause it's
Sara Brasil: your
Betty Sulla: kind
Sara Brasil: thumb
Betty Sulla: of moulded
Sara Brasil: doesn't y
Betty Sulla: to your hand
Sara Brasil: yeah
Betty Sulla: anyway.
Doreen Pray: Mm.
Sara Brasil: so we can have a s like you know moulded according to your
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: the way you h hold of it's kind of semi-circular in the bottom, something like that.
Betty Sulla: Okay.
Sara Brasil: I wouldn't say exactly semi-circular but
Betty Sulla: Can
Sara Brasil: yeah smooth.
Betty Sulla: you look into the company logo? Um, things that are associated with the company in view to trying to incorporate that into the design of the product.
Sara Brasil: Current.
Betty Sulla: I mean for example, if it was a C_ or something like that, you could have it in a vague C_ shape that opens up kind
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: of like a shell,
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: or something, um something along those lines to be able to incorporate it quite um obviously into the design, while also making it quite different from anything else that's there.
Sara Brasil: We could look in at
Doreen Pray: I mean
Sara Brasil: that
Doreen Pray: look
Sara Brasil: but
Doreen Pray: at the mobile.
Markita Smith: Mm.
Sara Brasil: Mm. What we were talking is to make it more rather than like sea-shells, logo could become as you could put a logo in the corner of uh the model, rather than you know, trying to make it like a sea shell or whatever you were ta telling like.
Betty Sulla: Well we need to think about how it's gonna look different.
Doreen Pray: I think that's that sounds a really attractive idea, I've
Sara Brasil: A
Doreen Pray: not
Sara Brasil: sea
Doreen Pray: come
Sara Brasil: shell?
Doreen Pray: across anything like that before, if it kind of yeah and that opens out into your flip-top.
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: Then it's nice t to h you can make it lightweight plastic, nice to hold in the palm of the hand and just because you're having to actually insert in between the two covers, that's gonna take care of some of the repetitive strain injury trying p prevent a lot of that I would think. I think it's a really nice idea
Sara Brasil: Yeah
Doreen Pray: and
Sara Brasil: we could look in at
Doreen Pray: plus
Sara Brasil: that.
Doreen Pray: you can get you know even though we're using plastic, you can still I mean think of the designs you can get in plastic, we can do a nice conch shell or scallop shell exterior.
Betty Sulla: Or you could do um different, like you get with mobile phones, different fascias.
Markita Smith: Mm.
Betty Sulla: You
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: could have different kind of casings.
Doreen Pray: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: So you could have like psychedelic ones
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: for younger people and sleek ones and
Doreen Pray: Less chance of it being lost too, it's not like a chocolate brown lozenge that's gonna go down the sofa
Betty Sulla: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: and people might want to put it on their mantelpiece or whatever as a ki if it looks attractive enough as a kind of ornament they don't not gonna lose it so much either. It's easier to bit nice to handle.
Betty Sulla: Mm.
Sara Brasil: Yeah maybe we could come at some say five, six des designs and then choose which are whichever
Betty Sulla: Okay.
Sara Brasil: appeals the
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Sara Brasil: most like, that
Betty Sulla: Okay.
Sara Brasil: could be the most common design.
Doreen Pray: Okay.
Betty Sulla: Okay.
Sara Brasil: But we can like think of five, six designs.
Betty Sulla: Right, I think we have to round it up, um
Doreen Pray: Can I just quickly
Betty Sulla: Sure.
Doreen Pray: um go over the new project requirements so that I haven't missed anything. So it's no teletext, it's only for T_V_ and by implication video,
Sara Brasil: Mm-hmm.
Doreen Pray: our corporate image should be incorporated in the remote control, um something about Videoplus.
Betty Sulla: That was um in cutting down the number that was kinda separate that was cutting down the number
Doreen Pray: Right.
Betty Sulla: of functions,
Doreen Pray: Right.
Betty Sulla: making it simpler so instead of having lots of
Doreen Pray: Right,
Betty Sulla: things
Doreen Pray: so
Betty Sulla: you
Doreen Pray: when
Betty Sulla: put
Doreen Pray: they
Betty Sulla: in
Doreen Pray: press
Betty Sulla: for date
Doreen Pray: for programming you it comes up on the L_C_D_, a reminder about using Videoplus? So that they have a look at the guide and Or was is this nothing to do with the project requirements, is this just that was an add-on feature?
Betty Sulla: It's kinda takes the place of
Doreen Pray: Uh-huh.
Betty Sulla: having a button to press for the date and having the
Doreen Pray: Right.
Betty Sulla: button to press for the channel, things like
Doreen Pray: Right,
Betty Sulla: that.
Doreen Pray: so it's
Betty Sulla: Um
Doreen Pray: kind of doing away
Betty Sulla: it could
Doreen Pray: with
Betty Sulla: be
Doreen Pray: the programming
Betty Sulla: it c
Doreen Pray: feature?
Betty Sulla: It
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: yes,
Doreen Pray: Right.
Betty Sulla: it could be uh adv advertisement feature, um rather than design feature, you know, drawing attention to that. And it also paid um lip service in the instruction manual, 'cause it's very simple so putting it down in words should be helpful.
Doreen Pray: Mm, and the rechargeable batteries.
Betty Sulla: Yeah.
Doreen Pray: Was there anything else there that we in the new
Betty Sulla: Um
Doreen Pray: new project requirements?
Sara Brasil: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: We've got the buttons but I think we'll
Sara Brasil: Yeah.
Betty Sulla: work through that with the design of it,
Doreen Pray: Mm-hmm.
Betty Sulla: um.
Doreen Pray: That's not at the moment a requirement, it's something we're looking at,
Betty Sulla: Yes.
Doreen Pray: what preference
Betty Sulla: Yes.
Doreen Pray: so it may come round to market research at some point
Betty Sulla: And
Doreen Pray: to see
Betty Sulla: we've
Doreen Pray: what
Betty Sulla: talked
Doreen Pray: people
Betty Sulla: about
Doreen Pray: would like.
Betty Sulla: um there being an alarm or something, a beeping
Sara Brasil: For
Markita Smith: Yeah.
Sara Brasil: detection,
Betty Sulla: for being lost,
Sara Brasil: right.
Betty Sulla: um. Learning how to use it should be as simple as possible. But there aren't gonna be that func that many functions incorporated into it so it should be fine and the I the instruction manual, I don't know if we deal with that, um. I think Yep,
Sara Brasil: Yep,
Betty Sulla: and different
Sara Brasil: I think
Betty Sulla: from what's out there.
Doreen Pray: Okay.
Betty Sulla: Yep, I think that's us.
Doreen Pray: What would you
Sara Brasil: True.
Doreen Pray: specifically
Markita Smith: Okay.
Doreen Pray: like marketing to look at before the next meeting? Or shall I just sort of generally look at all the issues involved?
Betty Sulla: I think you might get guidance, but um I th Instruction manuals, 'cause
Doreen Pray: Okay.
Betty Sulla: there tends to be a demonised thing, u um, they're everyone's got like a big pile of them, but no one really uses them.
Doreen Pray: Okay.
Betty Sulla: Um.
Doreen Pray: Whoops,
Sara Brasil: Oops.
Doreen Pray: questionnaire
Sara Brasil: We should f
Doreen Pray: four.
Betty Sulla: Yes, right.
Doreen Pray: 'Cause we're
Betty Sulla: Okay.
Doreen Pray: at
Sara Brasil: I
Doreen Pray: lunchtime
Sara Brasil: think it's time
Doreen Pray: now
Sara Brasil: for
Doreen Pray: I think.
Sara Brasil: us to get back to
Betty Sulla: Right, okay. I think you can email Doreen Pray, if there's any more questions. Um and I'll be able to not answer them. | Markita Smith gave his presentation on the basic functions of the remote. He presented the basic components that remotes share and suggested that smaller batteries be considered in the product design. Sara Brasil presented his ideas for making the remote easy-to-use; he discussed using a simple design and hiding complicated features from the main interface. Doreen Pray presented the findings from a lab study on user requirements for a remote control device, and discussed users' demand for a simple interface and advanced technology. Betty Sulla presented the new requirements that the remote not include a teletext function, that it be used only to control television, and that it include the company image in its design. The group narrowed down their target marketing group to the youth market. They discussed the functions the remote will have, including Video Plus capability and rechargeable batteries. A customer service plan was suggested to make the remote seem more user-friendly, but it was decided that helpful manuals were more within the budget. The group then discussed the shell-like shape of the remote and including several different casing options to buyers. | 2 | amisum | train |
Luz Washington: I'll wait until you're all um hooked up.
Lorraine Ramos: Oh good grief. 'Kay.
Luz Washington: Okay.
Lorraine Ramos: Oh.
Luz Washington: Put it on in that
Joyce Bludworth: Oops.
Luz Washington: way. Thanks.
Luz Washington: Okay.
Joyce Bludworth: Mm.
Luz Washington: Welcome back everybody,
Joyce Bludworth: After lunch.
Luz Washington: hope you've had fun.
Joyce Bludworth: Yeah.
Luz Washington: Right um this is our conceptual design meeting,
Joyce Bludworth: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: um I think we're slightly ahead of ourselves from the last meeting,
Kristine Cork: Yeah,
Joyce Bludworth: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: I
Kristine Cork: yeah
Luz Washington: th
Kristine Cork: I was getting that
Luz Washington: I
Kristine Cork: impression as
Luz Washington: I
Kristine Cork: well.
Luz Washington: think
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Luz Washington: yeah um. This is where we talk about um properties, materials, user-interface and
Kristine Cork: Etcetera.
Luz Washington: trend-watching.
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: So I think we've touched on a few things to do with that already, but we'll just go. Um the minutes from the last time. Um we had a couple of um changes in our plans in that we couldn't use teletext, it wasn't gonna be a control for everything um and that we had to incorporate the image of the company into it somehow. Um we have decided on a leaving out the voice recognition, we've decided on there being a flip design and um a different shape from what's normal. We were thinking a shell, but something along those lines, just a different shape from what's normal, um. You were going to look into the rechargeable batteries
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: and we were gonna think about the port and an alarm for getting it lost,
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: things like that, um and our market was going to be young, business, kind of range.
Joyce Bludworth: 'Kay.
Luz Washington: Okay, so shall we start with the first presentation?
Lorraine Ramos: Shall I?
Joyce Bludworth: Yep.
Luz Washington: Yes
Lorraine Ramos: Okay.
Luz Washington: if you feel
Lorraine Ramos: We just connect up. Thank you.
Lorraine Ramos: There we go. Okay um so we decided on our market and so this feedback from the marketing department is really about trend watching. Um the methods we used to decide on uh current trends and so on, market trends, were that we did our traditional uh our usual market research study uh with a hundred subjects and the the general feedback from them is that the most im uh w I'm sorry I'm slightly tongue-tied after lunch, sorry
Luz Washington: It's
Lorraine Ramos: Project
Luz Washington: okay.
Lorraine Ramos: Manager. Um we decided on the most important aspect i uh required in a remote control device and we'll come to that later. So that was one of the first things we did. Also with our company um being forerunners in uh putting fashion into technology, we also looked at a fashion update um using our consultants on fashion and design in Paris and Milan. Uh so the general findings from that was uh in the market trends the most important aspect for remote controls were people want a fancy look and feel, rather than the the current functional look and feel of remote controls. They also also want a remote control to be technologically innovative, and of course, as we predicted, that it should be easy to use. Now I should point out that the first of those findings, fancy look and feel, is the most important, is twice as important as the second, technologically innovative, which is in turn twice as important as being easy to use. So possibly that the feature that we put first is actually third is still important, but it's third in order of preference for the the subject group we looked at.
Luz Washington: Yeah.
Lorraine Ramos: Okay, um, now the fashion update which relates to very personal preferences among our subject group, um we found from our um consultants in Paris and Milan who des attended all the design and fashion fairs there, that fruit and vegetables are going to be the theme for clothes, shoes and furniture. So should we be thinking of using something like that in our remote control design too? There also seems to be um a trend towards a spongy feel to materials, uh again in contrast to last year. So a lot of interesting feedback there, both from our market research departments and from our people in Paris and Milan. Be interesting to see what our design people make of that.
Joyce Bludworth: 'Kay.
Luz Washington: Okay thank you very much. Um
Joyce Bludworth: Yep.
Luz Washington: let's start from the inside and work our way out.
Joyce Bludworth: Fine.
Kristine Cork: Yeah,
Joyce Bludworth: It's okay
Kristine Cork: okay.
Joyce Bludworth: with Lorraine Ramos.
Lorraine Ramos: Unless anyone has any questions about that? Not
Luz Washington: I
Lorraine Ramos: yet?
Luz Washington: don't think so, not
Lorraine Ramos: 'Kay.
Luz Washington: yet. Um, yes, thank you.
Kristine Cork: That screwed
Lorraine Ramos: Okay.
Kristine Cork: in?
Luz Washington: I hate those little things
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: especially if you do them on too tight and you can't get the leverage on them to undo
Lorraine Ramos: I know.
Luz Washington: them.
Kristine Cork: 'Kay,
Luz Washington: Okay.
Kristine Cork: Okay. Um this is uh all about the design of the actual components and the availability of the components we have in stock at the moment. Okay, first uh the Into the method. The the main idea of the whole thing is just so you sh you just press buttons and it should activate things on the T_V_ and we discussed last meeting that it should be easy to find. Um also in this study I've looked into the availability of some of the materials, 'cause some of the things that we looked at last time aren't un unfortunately aren't available.
Luz Washington: 'Kay.
Kristine Cork: Um, findings, I've got my nice little picture there. This is uh the chip called the T_A_ double one eight three five which is what's used in pretty much every remote control 'cause it sends out standard signals, based on your input and um it's pretty much used for all all T_V_
Luz Washington: 'Kay.
Kristine Cork: remotes at the moment. Um and then we we're loo looking into battery options. There's um actually no rechargeable option available, so we I saw the um the standard double A_ and triple A_ which we thought were a bit bit too bulky at the moment, dynamo charging, I thought that that might be a bit silly to be
Luz Washington: Wa
Kristine Cork: to be honest,
Luz Washington: can you explain
Kristine Cork: people won't
Luz Washington: that?
Kristine Cork: it's it's basically
Luz Washington: Like a
Kristine Cork: like wind-up radio.
Luz Washington: right, okay.
Kristine Cork: So you wind up your remote control before you use it.
Luz Washington: How what
Kristine Cork: It
Luz Washington: kind
Kristine Cork: might
Luz Washington: of how l long can you get out of that, I mean can you
Kristine Cork: You
Luz Washington: pick it up and then wind it for two minutes and then that's it for the night?
Kristine Cork: Yeah,
Luz Washington: Or
Kristine Cork: yeah, oh yeah I presu you wouldn't have to wind it for very long, but I don't I don't think it's really sort of necessary when you th you think of the next two options, like the the solar charging, 'cause most people have the light on in the room anyway so they could get
Luz Washington: That
Kristine Cork: when
Luz Washington: doesn't count though
Kristine Cork: when
Lorraine Ramos: Does
Luz Washington: does
Kristine Cork: you
Lorraine Ramos: does
Kristine Cork: got
Luz Washington: it?
Lorraine Ramos: light
Kristine Cork: T_V_.
Lorraine Ramos: charge as as sunlight
Luz Washington: I thought
Lorraine Ramos: does?
Luz Washington: it was
Lorraine Ramos: Artificial
Luz Washington: U_V_
Kristine Cork: No.
Lorraine Ramos: light?
Kristine Cork: Is
Luz Washington: like
Kristine Cork: it? Alright i
Lorraine Ramos: Has to be solar.
Luz Washington: Any, any
Joyce Bludworth: Yep. Regarding those sizes, which one you think will be light because we we have to take into consideration size also, so maybe a standard triple A_ might take lesser space or and dynamo might take more
Kristine Cork: Yeah
Joyce Bludworth: space.
Kristine Cork: it would the d yeah the dynamo would take more space 'cause you actually need a physical sort of handle to wind up.
Luz Washington: I'm pretty sure that solar is from the sun.
Kristine Cork: Yeah,
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Kristine Cork: okay.
Luz Washington: Uh, I don't think it counts
Lorraine Ramos: Artificial
Luz Washington: electric
Lorraine Ramos: light,
Luz Washington: lights
Lorraine Ramos: no.
Luz Washington: no, but I mean
Lorraine Ramos: That's
Luz Washington: not
Lorraine Ramos: going to
Luz Washington: many you don't want to limit your market. I mean people who live in basement flats there's not that many people,
Lorraine Ramos: I know, different
Luz Washington: but
Joyce Bludworth: Uh
Luz Washington: there
Kristine Cork: But
Lorraine Ramos: parts
Luz Washington: are
Lorraine Ramos: of the world
Luz Washington: people.
Lorraine Ramos: too, if we're if we're marketing internationally.
Kristine Cork: Yeah and most
Joyce Bludworth: Right.
Kristine Cork: people most people also watch T_V_ in the in the
Joyce Bludworth: Night.
Kristine Cork: night anyway.
Luz Washington: Mm, but then it would be charging through the day, I think the point is that it charges through the day and then you've got it charged
Kristine Cork: But
Luz Washington: for
Kristine Cork: I
Luz Washington: the
Kristine Cork: I think
Luz Washington: evening.
Kristine Cork: I think the the next one's the best
Luz Washington: Okay.
Kristine Cork: anyway. The the kinetic charging which is like you get it in r you get it in wrist watches
Luz Washington: Yeah I've
Kristine Cork: and
Luz Washington: seen
Kristine Cork: you d you don't even notice it. I mean the amount the amount of probably moving around you'd be doing all the time would would charge it up, I don't think you'd ever need to actually physically start shaking it up to make it work.
Joyce Bludworth: And are these like uh what are the life of the kinetic battery, it like it runs for long time?
Kristine Cork: Um yeah it's it charges into um some form of it's a smaller cell
Joyce Bludworth: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: which it charges into and uh the si the size sort of a watch a watch battery, 'cause they use them quite frequently
Joyce Bludworth: Okay.
Kristine Cork: in watches. And that'll that would l would last for um well I do I d I'm not entirely sure how long it would last but I've never seen one run out.
Luz Washington: But then
Joyce Bludworth: We c
Luz Washington: if you think about a watch, it's on your wrist so it's on your whole bod it's on your body the whole time
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: so you're walking around, you're doing things, it is moving a lot of the time.
Kristine Cork: Yeah
Luz Washington: If
Kristine Cork: and
Luz Washington: you'd I mean you switch the T_V_ on, then you put it on the side, then
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: you pick it up to change it and then you put it on the side.
Kristine Cork: Yeah but then
Luz Washington: Is
Kristine Cork: again
Luz Washington: it really gonna be enough?
Kristine Cork: I I think it is because if you think about it, the watch, although it's only a tiny amount it's it's um it's always moving for the whole day and they don't run out over night when you leave them on the side.
Luz Washington: Okay.
Kristine Cork: And th for the same the same reason, you're only using it for a v incredibly short amount of time just to send the signal and then you're finished with it
Lorraine Ramos: Hmm.
Luz Washington: So it's
Kristine Cork: and
Luz Washington: not
Kristine Cork: you
Luz Washington: the
Kristine Cork: put
Luz Washington: draw
Kristine Cork: it
Luz Washington: on it isn't
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: no no I do I don't
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Kristine Cork: think the
Luz Washington: Okay.
Lorraine Ramos: Could
Kristine Cork: the
Lorraine Ramos: I
Kristine Cork: draw
Lorraine Ramos: just
Kristine Cork: on it
Lorraine Ramos: ask
Kristine Cork: would be
Lorraine Ramos: referring back to solar charging, is that
Kristine Cork: Mm.
Lorraine Ramos: compatible with um standard batteries? I mean, could people put standard batteries in but with a s you know they could leave it in the sunlight for solar charging
Kristine Cork: Ye
Lorraine Ramos: or the two things not compatible?
Kristine Cork: yeah I think
Luz Washington: Like a
Kristine Cork: I
Luz Washington: dual
Kristine Cork: th uh g y
Luz Washington: kind
Kristine Cork: you
Luz Washington: of.
Kristine Cork: could have a dual um power thing but the the thing with the solar cells is you would need to put them on the case and they because, if you lie on a calculator they
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Kristine Cork: they're qui they're quite big and they all they all look i identical.
Lorraine Ramos: So that affects
Joyce Bludworth: Solar
Lorraine Ramos: the exterior
Joyce Bludworth: would be
Lorraine Ramos: design.
Luz Washington: Expensive
Joyce Bludworth: slightly
Luz Washington: as
Joyce Bludworth: expensives.
Luz Washington: well.
Kristine Cork: They're they're
Luz Washington: What
Kristine Cork: expensive,
Luz Washington: kind of price
Kristine Cork: they don't
Luz Washington: are we looking at for I presume
Joyce Bludworth: It's
Luz Washington: the
Joyce Bludworth: twelve
Luz Washington: normal
Joyce Bludworth: point f
Luz Washington: batteries are the cheapest?
Kristine Cork: Yeah the normal batteries would be the cheapest I'd presume then it would actually be the the solar charging ones, um but the It's i I think they're not very resistant to dropping, 'cause if you
Luz Washington: Solar.
Kristine Cork: drop stuff yeah if you if you have
Luz Washington: Well they're
Kristine Cork: y
Luz Washington: not designed
Kristine Cork: the size you'd need to charge a remote wouldn't be that big but I mean if remotes always get thrown around and stuff, so. Y
Luz Washington: Practical-wise
Kristine Cork: I think yeah,
Luz Washington: okay.
Kristine Cork: practically. I mean calculators you don't really throw around a lot whereas remotes you do, they
Luz Washington: You
Kristine Cork: can
Luz Washington: do get
Kristine Cork: t
Luz Washington: a bit of wear but don't calculators have a battery in them
Kristine Cork: Yeah
Luz Washington: as
Kristine Cork: they
Luz Washington: well?
Kristine Cork: do, they yeah they've got dual things,
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Kristine Cork: but they're
Luz Washington: Mm.
Kristine Cork: the batteries are smaller I think.
Joyce Bludworth: Another
Lorraine Ramos: Again
Joyce Bludworth: question
Lorraine Ramos: it de
Joyce Bludworth: is like sorry. W w which one would last the longest, because we don't want customers to be like you know charging like a mobile phone every day.
Kristine Cork: Mm.
Joyce Bludworth: A remote
Kristine Cork: W
Joyce Bludworth: control, like, so
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Kristine Cork: m yeah so
Joyce Bludworth: we
Kristine Cork: the
Joyce Bludworth: have to s look at the life also.
Kristine Cork: Yeah the the s if you if you had something du uh using the standard batteries and the solar charging, um, I don't think you'd I think the it would d well you know how long the standard double A_s would last in or
Lorraine Ramos: It would
Kristine Cork: triple
Lorraine Ramos: just detract
Kristine Cork: A_s would last.
Lorraine Ramos: from the attractiveness of the of the whole feature,
Kristine Cork: Yeah
Lorraine Ramos: i it's
Kristine Cork: I think
Lorraine Ramos: not gonna
Kristine Cork: i I
Lorraine Ramos: add
Kristine Cork: think
Lorraine Ramos: anything,
Kristine Cork: it would,
Lorraine Ramos: okay.
Kristine Cork: yeah.
Luz Washington: Okay, can we add in uh an attachment to closing feature?
Joyce Bludworth: Okay.
Luz Washington: Can we think about that? 'Cause if we're doing the kinetic thing
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: and
Lorraine Ramos: Shouldn't we do some
Luz Washington: it's
Lorraine Ramos: market research on that first before we add it in because I I personally
Luz Washington: Well add it in to think about
Lorraine Ramos: right, okay.
Luz Washington: um because, where am I? If it is the kinetic thing and it is small and it is portable and it is a different shape
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: and the kinetic is something people don't do kind of we're doing something original and different um but if you wore it if it's something you could just clip on your pocket then you would have that less, you you wouldn't lose it
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: so much. But then maybe
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: that's looking at someone who's just sitting on their own rather than the eternal battle for control of the controls.
Lorraine Ramos: It's not something that's come up in any of our uh focus groups and market research,
Luz Washington: No.
Lorraine Ramos: it's not a thing that people are looking for
Luz Washington: Okay.
Lorraine Ramos: when we threw it open
Joyce Bludworth: So
Lorraine Ramos: to the field yeah.
Kristine Cork: Okay.
Lorraine Ramos: But it's something to put on the side to think about maybe.
Luz Washington: Okay, right.
Kristine Cork: Okay, well I'll move on.
Luz Washington: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: Um, my second part of my findings uh the mo most current remotes use this silicone uh P_C_B_ board which pr printed circuit board, has these contacts that are really close together and then when you press down on the rubber button, it'll connect the circuit and each each switch is connected to two uh different legs on the chip and so sends a different message and that then uh gets translated by the chip into a code and then it's fired out of this L_E_D_ in the sequence of l on and off bursts.
Luz Washington: What kind of things do we have to consider there? Can we what kind of size, does it come in varying sizes or is it just one size
Kristine Cork: Well
Luz Washington: and we would have to fit the
Kristine Cork: well
Luz Washington: design
Kristine Cork: this
Luz Washington: of
Kristine Cork: the thi the thing about is um they they can be as big or as small as you want them to be because you can you can print circuit board like that that it's it's simply spaced like that so you can have fit the n the size of the nine buttons in. If you if you see how thin the tracks are,
Luz Washington: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: you could you could s you could put them virtually right next to each other and have a much smaller switch on each one, if
Luz Washington: Okay.
Kristine Cork: you if you wanted to but um the there is an option to do to do it like that, or you could have some sort of array of switches which I'll speak about in the next bit
Luz Washington: Okay.
Kristine Cork: so that And then to uh yeah, so to conserve battery life the remote should be in a standby mode no while not being used. Now what I was thinking about that was 'cause sometimes when y when you have these things, they've got little lights on behind the buttons, so you can see what all the buttons are, like on a mobile phone, they
Luz Washington: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: do it more
Joyce Bludworth: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: often than on a than on a T_V_ remote, but you could you could have lights behind the buttons and um after like five or ten seconds of not being used I'd have that turned off, if we decided to go for buttons that could light up.
Joyce Bludworth: Okay.
Kristine Cork: Um, the case material, I've a been sent what the factory can actually give us, the there's the plastic which I think we were gonna go for anyway as the main case
Luz Washington: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: case housing and the the main problems with the well you could go for wood but I think it would be a bit impractical. Titanium um very expensive just to process, which
Luz Washington: Mm.
Kristine Cork: to make it is expensive, and rubber, well you're saying that people like this uh spongy feel this
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Kristine Cork: year, so perhaps uh some something made of rubber, but I was thinking more of the buttons, because the buttons which they've they've said that they've they've put across are what is used in some stress ball manufacture
Lorraine Ramos: Okay.
Kristine Cork: and it's meant to be anti R_S_I_.
Luz Washington: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: I'm no I'm not sure how that would work because surely your fingers would still be moving over the short distances but that's what they said. Um the problem with the casing is that uh there's quite um there's quite a few design restrictions that they've got on the shape of the case. If you go for titanium they can only do a standard box shape, whereas if you come to plastic they can they can be a little more they can they can do sort of curved shapes. But whether whether or not because we'd have it in two separate units
Joyce Bludworth: Second
Kristine Cork: for
Luz Washington: Hinged,
Joyce Bludworth: thing
Kristine Cork: the flip
Joyce Bludworth: is
Kristine Cork: phone.
Luz Washington: yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: yeah and second question is like, a mobile you can change the cover,
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: you call it a skin or whatever. So in this case if you're looking at like a customer can change the colour like from green, parrot
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Joyce Bludworth: green to chilli red or something like that.
Kristine Cork: Yeah I th
Joyce Bludworth: So is that feature available in like uh titanium, or it's
Kristine Cork: Uh.
Joyce Bludworth: like only specific to plastic
Kristine Cork: Yeah
Joyce Bludworth: or
Kristine Cork: in in titanium I don't I don't think it would be available at all really,
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: the ju just it w well you could make it available in the titanium, it was just it would be so expensive to buy a new case for it,
Joyce Bludworth: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: because of the expense of how much titanium is is it's light and strong but I think it should be left for aircraft design rather than for
Lorraine Ramos: It does
Kristine Cork: for
Lorraine Ramos: mark
Kristine Cork: a remote.
Lorraine Ramos: quite easily too if you let it fall. I've got a mobile phone myself which is titanium and it does
Kristine Cork: Yeah,
Lorraine Ramos: mark very easily
Kristine Cork: yeah.
Lorraine Ramos: if you drop it. I was just wondering if we make the basic mould out of plastic but have like a rubber cover that goes
Kristine Cork: Rubber,
Lorraine Ramos: over,
Kristine Cork: yeah.
Lorraine Ramos: that would give the spongy feel, that also allows us to kind of have different fasciae
Kristine Cork: And you can
Lorraine Ramos: for
Kristine Cork: peel
Lorraine Ramos: the phone.
Kristine Cork: them off yeah.
Luz Washington: So
Joyce Bludworth: Yeah.
Luz Washington: instead of the fascia that comes off being plastic, the fascia that comes
Lorraine Ramos: Like
Luz Washington: off
Lorraine Ramos: a rubber
Luz Washington: would
Lorraine Ramos: sleeve
Luz Washington: be the rubber,
Lorraine Ramos: almost, yeah.
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: Something
Luz Washington: like those
Joyce Bludworth: like
Luz Washington: pens that you get with the grip,
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Joyce Bludworth: Alright.
Luz Washington: that you can
Joyce Bludworth: That
Luz Washington: you can
Joyce Bludworth: could
Luz Washington: pull
Joyce Bludworth: be a good
Luz Washington: that
Joyce Bludworth: idea.
Luz Washington: off.
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Kristine Cork: Hmm.
Joyce Bludworth: It
Luz Washington: Okay.
Joyce Bludworth: could it would be comfortable to hold on also.
Luz Washington: Mm.
Lorraine Ramos: Very
Kristine Cork: T
Lorraine Ramos: cheap way of changing the look of it and people can just buy a new one
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Lorraine Ramos: if they want to.
Luz Washington: Well that's been really popular with mobile phones so I don't
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Luz Washington: see why not.
Lorraine Ramos: Yeah.
Kristine Cork: Also the
Luz Washington: 'Kay.
Kristine Cork: just just going back to the interface designs with the buttons, the I kno we were planning to do some sort of touch
Luz Washington: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: screen. Now what I was saying before about instead of having you could have just a bare P_C_B_ circuit board and I'm sure you could probably get it in different colours and so just by touching it with your finger it'd make the connection over if you had them close enough, that would be one option. Um the second option th they offer rubber buttons, but I thought that an L_C_D_ type of screen 'cause one they're incredibly thin um and don't take up much space, two they you can have them in a sort of array and you can arrange the buttons on the screen in a sort of set thing and you could have them like a touch
Joyce Bludworth: Sorry I didn't
Kristine Cork: display.
Joyce Bludworth: get the last part, you're talking of
Kristine Cork: Uh what what
Joyce Bludworth: Just what you said I I didn't get the uh meaning of it completely, you're saying
Kristine Cork: Oh
Joyce Bludworth: like
Kristine Cork: on the on the L_C_D_ screen
Joyce Bludworth: Uh-huh.
Kristine Cork: you could becau you could fit it the problem with it basically is that it's flat and so you can't do lots of curve
Joyce Bludworth: Okay.
Luz Washington: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: curved things with it, but um you can you wouldn't have with the L_C_D_ you'd have the wires coming off, you wouldn't have that with the with the L_C_D_, you'd only have that with the printed
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Kristine Cork: circuit board. With W
Lorraine Ramos: I
Kristine Cork: also
Lorraine Ramos: don't s
Kristine Cork: with
Lorraine Ramos: sorry
Kristine Cork: the
Lorraine Ramos: to interrupt, I don't see why the curved thing is a problem, if we for example had a shell,
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: Oh
Lorraine Ramos: once
Luz Washington: it would be
Lorraine Ramos: we
Luz Washington: flat
Lorraine Ramos: open that
Luz Washington: inside.
Lorraine Ramos: yeah, so
Kristine Cork: You
Lorraine Ramos: it'd
Kristine Cork: could
Lorraine Ramos: be
Kristine Cork: have
Lorraine Ramos: f
Kristine Cork: a
Lorraine Ramos: yeah,
Kristine Cork: flat screen inside,
Lorraine Ramos: yeah.
Luz Washington: Mm.
Kristine Cork: yeah,
Lorraine Ramos: Have
Kristine Cork: but I'm
Lorraine Ramos: I
Kristine Cork: just
Lorraine Ramos: misunderstood
Kristine Cork: wondering whether
Lorraine Ramos: you?
Kristine Cork: we want an L_C_D_ screen inside. It wouldn't be like full colour, it would just be black and white,
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: but there'd be touch touch buttons, so you
Joyce Bludworth: 'Kay.
Kristine Cork: wouldn't be pressing down on 'em, w or we could have rubber buttons which are made of this material which is anti-R_S_I_.
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: I think it would be good to have a contrast between, if the whole thing is gonna
Kristine Cork: Is
Luz Washington: be
Kristine Cork: rubber.
Luz Washington: this rubber thing it would be good to open it up and see something quite fancy looking
Lorraine Ramos: Yeah.
Luz Washington: inside.
Kristine Cork: Mm.
Luz Washington: I mean
Kristine Cork: Yeah I hadn't I
Luz Washington: Uh
Kristine Cork: hadn't really thought of
Lorraine Ramos: I just
Kristine Cork: that
Lorraine Ramos: had another idea,
Kristine Cork: to be
Lorraine Ramos: I don't
Kristine Cork: honest.
Lorraine Ramos: know if it helps with that, but just to do with the R_S_I_. Is it possible, just as an option, when we open it up, people can use their fingers to press the button, or we have inside like a small pointer thing
Kristine Cork: Yeah
Lorraine Ramos: when
Kristine Cork: you
Lorraine Ramos: people
Kristine Cork: could,
Lorraine Ramos: want
Kristine Cork: you
Lorraine Ramos: to.
Kristine Cork: could have some sort of stylus
Luz Washington: Like one
Kristine Cork: that you
Luz Washington: of
Kristine Cork: could
Luz Washington: the palm
Kristine Cork: pull
Luz Washington: pop
Kristine Cork: out
Luz Washington: thing.
Kristine Cork: but
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Kristine Cork: I I think they could get a bit easily lost,
Lorraine Ramos: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: Absolutely,
Kristine Cork: 'cause I had
Joyce Bludworth: f
Lorraine Ramos: They're
Luz Washington: It
Lorraine Ramos: easy
Luz Washington: would have
Lorraine Ramos: to
Luz Washington: to
Lorraine Ramos: replace
Luz Washington: be attached.
Lorraine Ramos: as
Joyce Bludworth: for
Lorraine Ramos: well,
Joyce Bludworth: somebody who
Lorraine Ramos: cheap.
Joyce Bludworth: very often,
Kristine Cork: Hmm.
Joyce Bludworth: if he would a person who switches channels very often or does use a particular function very often
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: will find it very irritating to use a
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Joyce Bludworth: and he might spoil the touch-pad very fast compared to a button like,
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: if
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Joyce Bludworth: you keep punching with an pointer or whatever.
Kristine Cork: Yeah
Lorraine Ramos: Yeah
Kristine Cork: okay.
Lorraine Ramos: just a thought they wouldn't actually need one and they could use anything they've got, couldn't they? A pencil or a pen, so they wouldn't really need a
Luz Washington: Okay, we'll talk about that so if you finish your and
Kristine Cork: Yeah
Luz Washington: we'll come
Kristine Cork: that's
Luz Washington: back to that.
Kristine Cork: yeah that
Luz Washington: That's
Kristine Cork: that's
Luz Washington: you,
Kristine Cork: the end of m my
Joyce Bludworth: And
Luz Washington: right
Joyce Bludworth: just one
Luz Washington: okay.
Joyce Bludworth: small question before like you are, regarding the circuit, since we are hav having a flip-top, we
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: can customise the two circuits for different type of buttons like we are keeping the standard buttons on the top and
Kristine Cork: Uh
Joyce Bludworth: the more
Kristine Cork: yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: complex buttons under this thing, so we can divide the circuit like you know.
Kristine Cork: Yeah yeah that that would be fairly simple, I mean you'd
Joyce Bludworth: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: you'd actually have two separate you'd
Joyce Bludworth: Okay.
Kristine Cork: have two separate circuit boards but they'd be joined by wires or
Joyce Bludworth: Okay.
Kristine Cork: like some cabling between them,
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: 'cause in the in the actual flip bit you'd have some linking.
Lorraine Ramos: another point while it occurs to Lorraine Ramos, it kind of applies to both our designers here, so I'm not sure how it
Kristine Cork: Mm.
Lorraine Ramos: would fit in. If we flip open, now you know how you've got some mirrors in nightclubs that are mirrors when you turn to them and you turn away and it gives like an advertising display, you seen those?
Luz Washington: No.
Lorraine Ramos: And they kind of respond to the turn of your body. Is it possible that when we open our flip-top shell it's a little compact mirror and when you press a button it then goes onto the phone display th uh the remote control display thing.
Luz Washington: We're
Kristine Cork: Um.
Luz Washington: marketing to guys as much as we are to women.
Lorraine Ramos: They don't look at themselves? Just a thought.
Luz Washington: Well it's a remote control, you were sitting watching T_V_
Lorraine Ramos: Yeah.
Luz Washington: are you gonna want to sort of open it and say
Lorraine Ramos: I
Luz Washington: oh
Lorraine Ramos: know what
Luz Washington: shit
Lorraine Ramos: you mean,
Luz Washington: I should
Lorraine Ramos: it's
Luz Washington: go
Lorraine Ramos: with
Luz Washington: and
Lorraine Ramos: us
Luz Washington: have
Lorraine Ramos: using
Luz Washington: a
Lorraine Ramos: the ideas
Luz Washington: shower
Lorraine Ramos: for a mobile
Luz Washington: and
Lorraine Ramos: ph
Luz Washington: do my hair before I put the T_
Lorraine Ramos: it's with us using the ideas for mobile phones I kinda got
Luz Washington: Yeah,
Lorraine Ramos: sidetracked
Luz Washington: no,
Lorraine Ramos: onto that I think, okay.
Luz Washington: no.
Lorraine Ramos: trying to think of other features we can build in that wouldn't cost too much
Luz Washington: Mm.
Lorraine Ramos: but maybe we'll leave that one on the side.
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Lorraine Ramos: 'Kay.
Luz Washington: Okay.
Kristine Cork: I mean you can you could do it, you could have a 'cause if you if you just put the full charge through an L_C_D_ display it'll completely blank it out,
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Kristine Cork: but I don't know if you could get any mirror effect on it,
Lorraine Ramos: Oh I think
Kristine Cork: I'm not sure
Lorraine Ramos: forget
Kristine Cork: about
Lorraine Ramos: about the mirror that was just a very quick passing thought yeah.
Luz Washington: Okay, okay.
Joyce Bludworth: Okay, uh would like to share something which I did here. First thing is uh basically on design we just took the input from the previous meeting, especially from the marketing and industrial design, to check on the customer needs and feasibility. Second is we checked into competitors, the picture here shows one of the standard models offered by competitors here. So y you generally see there's not much of variety
Luz Washington: Mm.
Joyce Bludworth: and like marketing team said uh, people need trendy, they are bored of black and white. So
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: you generally see rectangular shape, very monotonous kind of designs here. And uh second thing is there's too much of confusion here.
Luz Washington: Mm.
Joyce Bludworth: No particular remote is standard. Like, some some people have a Here you see this? This is on a I I I found th that uh only common feature is the ch uh channel control and uh volume control, rest other buttons, they are in a very disorganized and they are not consistent th with other models and all.
Luz Washington: Okay.
Joyce Bludworth: Okay, and second as already discussed with William, we are going to have m maybe a G_ G_U_I_ interface in the
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: f in the middle of the flip-top
Lorraine Ramos: Sorry what
Joyce Bludworth: and
Lorraine Ramos: does that
Luz Washington: Which
Lorraine Ramos: stand
Luz Washington: means
Joyce Bludworth: g
Lorraine Ramos: for?
Joyce Bludworth: graphic user interface basically
Lorraine Ramos: Okay.
Joyce Bludworth: which is what we d do in computer, have
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: icons or touch pad or whatever, which
Kristine Cork: If
Joyce Bludworth: is
Kristine Cork: you if yeah if you have like buttons that appear on the screen in this L_C_D_ screen.
Joyce Bludworth: Like you have on a l uh icons or something y you have is a good example of G_U_I_ graphic user interface.
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: Okay.
Joyce Bludworth: So basically not point or click Press any particular device, he just has to click on that particular icon
Luz Washington: Okay.
Joyce Bludworth: to simplify. And on the top m repetitive buttons which are like volume or channel changing and all could be on the pointing device, that means the use of button. So he need not use a pointer to keep changing the channel if a person is frequent surfer.
Luz Washington: Mm-hmm.
Joyce Bludworth: So we are having a combination of boards, so f on the s simpler board, on the top we have this button, rubber buttons, to keep frequently changing the channels.
Luz Washington: Can we swap that round so th that the ones that we use all the time are on the bottom part? 'Cause if you're thinking about holding it you would be using your thumbs to press, just like a mobile phone.
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Lorraine Ramos: No you'd hold it you don't if you flip it open then you'd be Wouldn't you? Isn't that the idea? You us if we just use the shell as an example
Luz Washington: Yeah.
Lorraine Ramos: again, you open that, you've got your L_C_D_ display there and you've got the buttons there so you're holding
Kristine Cork: Yeah,
Lorraine Ramos: it in
Luz Washington: That's
Lorraine Ramos: the palm
Luz Washington: what
Lorraine Ramos: of your
Luz Washington: I was
Lorraine Ramos: hand,
Kristine Cork: yeah
Luz Washington: just saying,
Lorraine Ramos: yeah.
Kristine Cork: but you
Luz Washington: and
Joyce Bludworth: But
Kristine Cork: can
Luz Washington: then
Kristine Cork: do
Luz Washington: have
Kristine Cork: it with your
Luz Washington: the
Kristine Cork: thumb li
Luz Washington: and then have the L_C_D_ at the top
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Joyce Bludworth: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: and then be able to touch that for the
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: other
Joyce Bludworth: Okay
Luz Washington: controls,
Joyce Bludworth: and you mean to
Luz Washington: so
Joyce Bludworth: the
Luz Washington: have the um the volume and the programme, things like that,
Joyce Bludworth: And the lower distance.
Luz Washington: on the lower
Joyce Bludworth: Oh f
Luz Washington: side.
Joyce Bludworth: perfect.
Lorraine Ramos: Hmm.
Luz Washington: Okay.
Joyce Bludworth: So the findings are too many cluttered buttons. Repetition of certain but buttons which I already explained, example the volume and channel control buttons. All are confusing and in inconsistent. Okay we had a latest finding of voice recognition, there was a mail which mentions that our division has developed a new speech recognition s feature. We have to check into the for financial f feasibility whether we can incorporate it this at a low cost, but for like we had g um s response from the customers that they would like to have the feature of finding
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: it. So it could be like, where is the remote, and the remote answers I am here.
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: Some kind of thing or it gives a b bleep sound or some kind of sound
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Joyce Bludworth: this can be incorporated this would be more uh you can say trendy also? And technologically innovative also.
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: So we we can check into the financial feasibility of incorporating this. My personal preferences would be like, as already uh marketing department, they want something to do with fruit so I wouldn't say the design should be like a fruit, but yeah we can take inspiration from fruit colours, like the vibrant colours,
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Joyce Bludworth: uh red chilli
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: uh tomato red or whatever and second thing is cer certain standard buttons we should have, like for example, i if you see the previous slide uh
Kristine Cork: Well, yeah we
Joyce Bludworth: I think most of the users would now be well acquainted with this cer central pattern, here,
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: so we we we would not change h that particular pattern because i this is the most consistent thing in all remote controls.
Luz Washington: I can't see that, is that play and stop and things?
Joyce Bludworth: This is central one, the one you
Luz Washington: Or is that volume and
Joyce Bludworth: yeah volume and
Luz Washington: channel?
Joyce Bludworth: channel. So keep that m that standardised because that's the most common feature across all models, if you look at all the models, it's here. This and voice recognition.
Luz Washington: Okay. Right. Okay. Um I'm not sure how long we've got left, but we need to make a decision about um the things we've discussed. So, we agree on Do we agree on the battery?
Lorraine Ramos: Kinetic?
Joyce Bludworth: The kinetic.
Luz Washington: Yeah.
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: Um, that means that there's no function for li the port, you know that it sits in, then pressing
Kristine Cork: Mm.
Luz Washington: the button then having so we could incorporate voice recognition
Kristine Cork: Yeah
Luz Washington: for the
Kristine Cork: I
Luz Washington: finding
Kristine Cork: think
Luz Washington: it.
Kristine Cork: I mean
Luz Washington: It's
Kristine Cork: if
Luz Washington: a bi i it's like a g it's a gadget, it's a
Kristine Cork: Yeah it is it is
Luz Washington: selling
Kristine Cork: qui
Luz Washington: point.
Kristine Cork: it's quite a cool feature to have and also if they've got it if they've got these parts already in stock,
Joyce Bludworth: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: then it won't be cheap to re-manufacture them, uh or it will be cheap sorry to re-manufacture them. So do you reckon that's a good idea that, where's the remote, I'm here thing? I think that would be quite
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Kristine Cork: fun.
Luz Washington: I think the only I think the only pitfall that we would have would be how much it's going to cost
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: if that means we have to cut down somewhere else, but I think pretty much we've used cheap
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: relatively cheap and
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Luz Washington: simple things.
Kristine Cork: Yeah
Luz Washington: The
Kristine Cork: to
Luz Washington: L_C_D_'s
Kristine Cork: s
Luz Washington: not cheap.
Kristine Cork: th well
Lorraine Ramos: Hmm.
Kristine Cork: it's it's not as expensive as it would be if it was full colour 'cause if we've just got a black and white one, I mean they use them in calculators so.
Luz Washington: Yeah, okay.
Joyce Bludworth: Maybe we could start with the black and white.
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: That
Luz Washington: And you
Joyce Bludworth: that
Luz Washington: could
Joyce Bludworth: way we could
Luz Washington: yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: upgrade later.
Lorraine Ramos: Yeah,
Luz Washington: Okay.
Lorraine Ramos: we talked about
Joyce Bludworth: Mm.
Lorraine Ramos: kinetic charging, we've deci seem to have decided on that, did we decide on double A_ or triple A_ batteries?
Joyce Bludworth: Mm.
Kristine Cork: Well you cou um.
Luz Washington: Do you want like a back-up?
Lorraine Ramos: No, one of the decisions we had to make was whether we had double A_ or triple A_ batteries 'cause they've still got to be charged this way haven't
Kristine Cork: K no the
Lorraine Ramos: they?
Kristine Cork: kinetic
Lorraine Ramos: I
Kristine Cork: ones
Lorraine Ramos: oh I
Kristine Cork: come
Lorraine Ramos: see.
Kristine Cork: come with um a sort of w watch a battery that goes in a watch.
Lorraine Ramos: Right, okay, got you.
Kristine Cork: So it's a lot smaller, so it would
Lorraine Ramos: Got you on that okay, didn't realise.
Luz Washington: Um, okay so we've got battery. The inside components is pretty standardised across the board isn't it?
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: Yeah.
Luz Washington: So there's not a really a decision to be made there, um. The buttons what did you give us as our The bare-board L_C_D_
Kristine Cork: Yeah
Luz Washington: or
Kristine Cork: the well I think were we're going for the L_C_D_ on that one, on the buttons, on the on the on on the top one
Luz Washington: On
Kristine Cork: we're
Luz Washington: the top
Kristine Cork: gonna
Luz Washington: one okay you've got the touch
Kristine Cork: yeah.
Luz Washington: okay and then
Kristine Cork: On the bottom we were gonna have the rubber, the rubber ones, the anti-R_S_I_ ones.
Luz Washington: Okay, okay.
Lorraine Ramos: Sorry could you repeat that last part?
Kristine Cork: Um, okay on
Lorraine Ramos: L_C_D_
Kristine Cork: we've got the flip
Lorraine Ramos: screen.
Kristine Cork: the flip-screen,
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Kristine Cork: the top one is gonna be the L_C_D_ and the bottom one is gonna be the rubberised buttons.
Lorraine Ramos: Okay.
Joyce Bludworth: And for the sorry.
Luz Washington: No, it's fine.
Joyce Bludworth: For the body design I think plastic,
Kristine Cork: Plastic,
Joyce Bludworth: uh w yeah
Kristine Cork: okay.
Joyce Bludworth: we could
Luz Washington: For
Joyce Bludworth: use
Luz Washington: the
Joyce Bludworth: the
Luz Washington: inside.
Joyce Bludworth: body, for the inside and
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: uh rubber as a padding or for the grip, something like to add to the design.
Luz Washington: Mm-hmm.
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm, so we decided on a rubber casing for the plastic shell,
Joyce Bludworth: Plast right.
Lorraine Ramos: a variety
Luz Washington: Oh I think
Lorraine Ramos: of designs,
Luz Washington: so, I
Lorraine Ramos: okay.
Luz Washington: think so.
Lorraine Ramos: and it is just uh although it's rubberised and spongy, apart from that we're just going to go for sort of vegetable and fruit colours, we're not gonna try and make it actually a vegetable or fruit design or anything else,
Kristine Cork: Mm
Lorraine Ramos: like
Kristine Cork: no.
Lorraine Ramos: a shell that we discussed,
Luz Washington: No
Lorraine Ramos: just
Luz Washington: I think
Lorraine Ramos: go for the colours.
Luz Washington: I
Joyce Bludworth: It's
Luz Washington: we don't wanna be tacky if we've got
Lorraine Ramos: Okay.
Luz Washington: a kind of different shape anyway um the fact the m the material that we would be using would be cheap, so we could make it red, we could make it um psychedelic, you know, we could make
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: it black and white zebra stripes, but that's not really what we're focusing on, what we're focusing on is the m you know
Lorraine Ramos: The feel.
Luz Washington: yes. So we could
Lorraine Ramos: 'Kay.
Luz Washington: just pick anything.
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm. Is that going to be this image I've got in my head of something kind of shaped like that, maybe about that size, made of plastic, fits into the palm of the hand, rubberised cover that's spongy. Is that really going to fit fancy look and feel which was the major thing that people wanted, market research, is that
Luz Washington: It's
Lorraine Ramos: fancy?
Joyce Bludworth: Uh
Luz Washington: just
Joyce Bludworth: I
Luz Washington: different
Joyce Bludworth: it's different.
Luz Washington: it's just different from everything else and I mean, I'm trying to imagine um clean looking
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Luz Washington: houses, sort of beige and black
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: um so you either want something that goes with that, which is what's
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: on the market anyway,
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: or you want something that contrasts as
Kristine Cork: Mm.
Luz Washington: you know like you get clocks now that
Lorraine Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: are more of a talking point than an actual clock
Lorraine Ramos: Yeah.
Luz Washington: because they're so interesting
Lorraine Ramos: I'm just kind of pushing
Luz Washington: and
Lorraine Ramos: at that to see if you came out with anything else, but I mean I totally agree. We looked at those remotes, I mean they are kind of anonymous, very similar looking things.
Luz Washington: Mm.
Lorraine Ramos: This would definitely be different enough, I just wondered if anybody could come up with something even more
Luz Washington: And you would just have an across the b you would have so many different options that you could do, you could have um a plain black one, you could have sparkly pink glittery
Lorraine Ramos: Well the thing
Luz Washington: ones
Lorraine Ramos: is the rubberised
Luz Washington: for your little
Lorraine Ramos: covers are going to be s relatively cheap to produce, that if in a year's time we we get feedback from the design fairs that show something else is coming I mean it's so easy for us
Luz Washington: Mm.
Lorraine Ramos: to just produce that and it can be slipped on,
Luz Washington: And
Joyce Bludworth: Right.
Luz Washington: ones
Lorraine Ramos: which is another
Luz Washington: tha
Lorraine Ramos: beauty of it.
Luz Washington: ones that have rubbery spikes y you know,
Kristine Cork: You
Luz Washington: you
Kristine Cork: can
Luz Washington: could just
Kristine Cork: you can
Luz Washington: go
Kristine Cork: just
Luz Washington: so
Joyce Bludworth: Acupressure,
Luz Washington: far
Joyce Bludworth: you
Luz Washington: with
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: could
Luz Washington: it,
Joyce Bludworth: talk of acupressures.
Luz Washington: like a puffer fish, you could just, you could take it wherever, so I think that's quite a
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: flexible
Joyce Bludworth: And finally
Luz Washington: thing.
Joyce Bludworth: the body should be retouchable, may maybe ch you can change the body or the case casing the case outside,
Luz Washington: Yes.
Joyce Bludworth: it should be moulded it with the design in such a way you can change it every time.
Kristine Cork: Yeah, yeah j with these rubber these rubberised ca not
Luz Washington: Mm.
Kristine Cork: the actual uh plastic outside
Joyce Bludworth: Okay.
Kristine Cork: case, just the rubber
Joyce Bludworth: The rubber.
Luz Washington: Yeah.
Kristine Cork: thing that goes round the outside.
Luz Washington: Okay we've got five minutes, um, or that might've been up
Lorraine Ramos: Mm,
Luz Washington: for
Joyce Bludworth: Fine.
Luz Washington: a while.
Lorraine Ramos: so can I just recap uh Sarah,
Joyce Bludworth: Yeah.
Lorraine Ramos: for the decisions that we've made, kinetic charging, the watch-type batteries, um L_C_D_ display on th the top side of the flip top, rubberised buttons on the bottom side, we're gonna use fruit and vegetable colours for the rubber cover, the case itself is plastic. That's how far we've got, what else do we have to add to our decisions here?
Joyce Bludworth: Fine, uh we were talking of voice recognition also
Lorraine Ramos: Mm.
Luz Washington: Mm-hmm.
Joyce Bludworth: because that we are not for how to look it uh remote control if it's lost. So,
Lorraine Ramos: Yes,
Joyce Bludworth: are
Lorraine Ramos: it was
Joyce Bludworth: we
Lorraine Ramos: just,
Joyce Bludworth: looking
Lorraine Ramos: there was
Joyce Bludworth: at
Lorraine Ramos: just
Joyce Bludworth: voice?
Lorraine Ramos: a cost issue with that, but it's a good idea we just need to check on the cost,
Joyce Bludworth: Or
Lorraine Ramos: is
Joyce Bludworth: maybe
Lorraine Ramos: that right?
Joyce Bludworth: like uh William was suggesting in the last thing some devices you put on key chains. For
Kristine Cork: Oh
Joyce Bludworth: l
Kristine Cork: yeah, yeah
Joyce Bludworth: yeah,
Kristine Cork: the whistle ones, yeah.
Joyce Bludworth: the whistle. So we can if financially voice recognition is not feasible we could go for a whistle.
Lorraine Ramos: And incorporating the company logo?
Joyce Bludworth: Yep.
Luz Washington: Have you
Joyce Bludworth: Uh sorry I didn't mention this, but we'll be incorporating in the design.
Lorraine Ramos: Mm. 'Cause
Luz Washington: Okay.
Lorraine Ramos: I took it from the feedback you gave in the last meeting from y from y your report, it's not just a case of having a little R_R_ hidden somewhere, they do want it to be obvious that it's our product don't
Luz Washington: Well they
Lorraine Ramos: they?
Luz Washington: do, but I think we can
Lorraine Ramos: Since it's
Luz Washington: you
Lorraine Ramos: the only
Luz Washington: could
Lorraine Ramos: one of its kind on the market
Luz Washington: well
Lorraine Ramos: it's obviously
Luz Washington: it is,
Lorraine Ramos: gonna
Luz Washington: it
Lorraine Ramos: be ours.
Luz Washington: is, I think you just address that with um advertising.
Lorraine Ramos: Yeah.
Luz Washington: Um, you associate the name with the individual product
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: that it is
Lorraine Ramos: Okay.
Luz Washington: and that does the work for you. Obviously it'll have a logo on it just like everything, but everything else has a logo on it. The point is that it's got to stand out somehow differently
Lorraine Ramos: Okay.
Luz Washington: but I think it does, without that so I'm not worried about that.
Lorraine Ramos: Okay. Did we I know at the last meeting we spoke about a beeper, I think that was you talked about a beeper for a location, have we just rejected that in favour of voice recognition then?
Luz Washington: Depending on how i
Kristine Cork: Yeah, depending on the expense of it.
Luz Washington: I mean we've got this memo saying that it's something that the company's looking into, so
Kristine Cork: And they've got in stock, so yeah.
Luz Washington: um that seems to make sense, but if it turns out that it's hugely expensive we'd have to cut down somewhere else, then it's worth thinking about. But I think we'll find out more about cost
Kristine Cork: Yeah.
Luz Washington: afterwards. Right
Kristine Cork: Okay.
Luz Washington: I'm going to wrap it up there.
Joyce Bludworth: Fine.
Luz Washington: I got a end meeting now message on my
Joyce Bludworth: Mm-hmm.
Luz Washington: mo
Kristine Cork: Did it?
Luz Washington: yeah
Joyce Bludworth: Yeah.
Luz Washington: so.
Joyce Bludworth: Again
Luz Washington: Um
Joyce Bludworth: a questionnaire huh?
Luz Washington: so I think we've probably got it
Lorraine Ramos: You
Luz Washington: says,
Lorraine Ramos: got to go through.
Luz Washington: closing we have forty minutes so I um think we've probably got about that time before we come back. It's either that or we only had forty minutes to discuss what we just discussed and don't know how long that took.
Joyce Bludworth: I think we are pretty going in a clear direction now.
Luz Washington: Is everyone happy? Okay. | Luz Washington reviewed the decisions from the previous meeting. Lorraine Ramos made a presentation on trend watching, including trends in user requirements and trends in fashion. Kristine Cork presented all the components of the device and announced that several of the features already discussed would not be available. He suggested substituting a kinetic battery for the rechargeable batteries and using a combination of rubber and plastic for the materials. Joyce Bludworth presented his main interface design, which included buttons for the most frequently used features and a graphic user interface on the LCD screen for other functions, to keep frequently used features easy to use. He announced that speech recognition was still an option to consider, depending on price. Luz Washington then began a discussion to decide what was going into the final design. It was decided that a kinetic battery would be used in place of a rechargeable battery, that the remote will feature an LCD screen and rubber casing and rubber buttons, and that interchangeable rubber covers in fruit colors will be available. Speech recognition may be included if it is not too costly. | 2 | amisum | train |
Margarita Arndt: If you leave them on the whole time you get to look like a noodle the whole time.
Gail Osborne: Hmm.
Christy Lloyd: Is that someone's?
Margarita Arndt: Is that.
Gail Osborne: Thank you.
Margarita Arndt: three, apparently.
Gail Osborne: Hmm. Hmm.
Margarita Arndt: Okay, you all
Christy Lloyd: Okay.
Margarita Arndt: switched on.
Gail Osborne: Yep Christy Lloyd too.
Margarita Arndt: I presume we're good to go. Okay, um minutes um we decided to use a kinetic charger,
Gail Osborne: Mm-hmm.
Margarita Arndt: standard chip, um 'cause it can come in various different sizes, it wasn't uh uh gonna be a problem factor. We wanted a stand-by function. The case material is gonna be soft, rubbery, changeable. Um buttons with a combination of L_C_D_ and rubber according to the design. Um bright funky designs inspired by fruit, keeping with the hip kind of feel. Um and to try and incorporate voice recognition software into our design until we can find out more about the cost of things like that. Um and the rubber buttons that we'll use will be anti-R_S_I_. Okay? Prototype presentation.
Jean Dye: Is that for us?
Margarita Arndt: I think
Gail Osborne: Yep.
Margarita Arndt: that would be you.
Jean Dye: Okay.
Gail Osborne: Christy Lloyd and William worked on a prototype, and I think William is going to make a p presentation on that.
Jean Dye: Yeah shall, I show?
Gail Osborne: Yeah.
Jean Dye: I'll show. Though do you do you wanna
Margarita Arndt: Make
Jean Dye: do you
Margarita Arndt: sure
Jean Dye: wanna
Margarita Arndt: the
Gail Osborne: I
Jean Dye: sh
Margarita Arndt: camera's
Gail Osborne: can hold it like
Jean Dye: do you wanna hold it and I'll
Gail Osborne: Yeah,
Jean Dye: I'll
Gail Osborne: so
Jean Dye: show you the presentation. Can I just nick
Margarita Arndt: Yes,
Jean Dye: your
Margarita Arndt: yes you can. Wait a second, I'll get it out.
Jean Dye: Whoa.
Gail Osborne: It
Margarita Arndt: Um
Gail Osborne: looks
Jean Dye: Going a bit crazy over here.
Gail Osborne: crazy.
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Jean Dye: Thank you.
Margarita Arndt: You
Gail Osborne: Um not now.
Margarita Arndt: should have one of
Gail Osborne: Oh.
Margarita Arndt: those things and you can just take it off.
Gail Osborne: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: Ta-da.
Gail Osborne: Oh, where are the hinges?
Jean Dye: Okay, so this is
Margarita Arndt: Right.
Jean Dye: our look and feel presentation,
Margarita Arndt: Mm
Jean Dye: the
Margarita Arndt: 'kay.
Jean Dye: final our final presentation. And we'll first look at the exterior of what we've uh come up with over there. Um
Gail Osborne: 'Kay.
Jean Dye: It's
Gail Osborne: You able
Jean Dye: have
Gail Osborne: to look?
Jean Dye: a a plastic body
Gail Osborne: Yep.
Jean Dye: um with a sort of standard colour, either we're thinking some something fairly neutral like a a white or a light blue or something. This is underneath the rubberised
Margarita Arndt: Mm-hmm.
Jean Dye: the rubberised uh outer casing um which there'd be sort of a wide choice they would be attached, but we can we can come up with that.
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Jean Dye: Um the um wide choice of colours and sort of patterns, so you've got you've got a lot of customisation with it. Um it's obviously an a sort of clam-shell design and uh the um the top L_C_D_ screen that you can see that would b would be sort of um how do you say,
Gail Osborne: The
Jean Dye: it's
Gail Osborne: black and white touch screen
Jean Dye: yeah
Gail Osborne: wherein
Jean Dye: yeah, it would
Gail Osborne: people
Jean Dye: be sort
Gail Osborne: can
Jean Dye: of inset into the into
Margarita Arndt: Mm.
Jean Dye: the top
Margarita Arndt: So
Jean Dye: and
Margarita Arndt: it's
Jean Dye: the
Margarita Arndt: flush.
Jean Dye: buttons at the bottom
Gail Osborne: Right.
Jean Dye: would d so so it'll fully close flat.
Margarita Arndt: Oh right, okay,
Jean Dye: Yeah,
Margarita Arndt: yeah.
Jean Dye: yeah. And working on the inside we've um already said d decided on the kinetic batteries, which actually, thinking about it now, could y could also probably attach to the flipping open and shut as well, so that you could probably get
Margarita Arndt: So
Jean Dye: a
Margarita Arndt: put
Jean Dye: bit
Margarita Arndt: it
Jean Dye: of
Margarita Arndt: in the top section rather than the bottom sections,
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: 'cause
Gail Osborne: Mm-hmm.
Margarita Arndt: it's the top
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: part that's okay.
Jean Dye: Um we decided that um the voice recognition system, it did actually say on the email that they were sort of coming in and they were fairly easy to get a-hold of, so we presumed that they'd also be quite cheap. So you'd have something like where you'd shout out, where where is the remote and it'll shout back, I'm here, or something. And
Christy Lloyd: Or something.
Jean Dye: then yeah. It wo it won't shout out I'm here or something. It'll just shout out I'm here,
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Gail Osborne: 'Kay.
Jean Dye: or something
Margarita Arndt: I'm under
Jean Dye: to
Margarita Arndt: the sofa.
Jean Dye: similar effect.
Gail Osborne: Ah
Margarita Arndt: Or, that would be too complicated.
Gail Osborne: oka
Jean Dye: Uh yeah, if it was going like I d well tha that could be something for next time, maybe. You can have a remote that tells you exactly where it is. Um the standard, there's be a standard transmission with the T_V_ using using all the standard chips that we've talked about.
Margarita Arndt: Infrared.
Jean Dye: Um it would it would have obviously 'cause it's split over two two different layers, it would need two separate P_C_B_s, so it would be joined at the hinge through some sort of cabling. And uh because, obviously, all T_V_s use this, the same infrared medium, we'd just be using using the same thing to transmit the data. And the infrared um sender would be on the on one of the bot the bottom layer, just at the front of the we haven't I don't think we actually
Margarita Arndt: Like
Jean Dye: put it on.
Margarita Arndt: here.
Jean Dye: Yeah, yeah, something like that.
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Gail Osborne: Infrared could be
Margarita Arndt: Actually,
Gail Osborne: here
Margarita Arndt: no,
Gail Osborne: also.
Margarita Arndt: it would be it would have to
Jean Dye: Yeah,
Margarita Arndt: be on
Jean Dye: on
Margarita Arndt: the
Gail Osborne: Yeah,
Jean Dye: the front
Gail Osborne: here.
Jean Dye: on the
Margarita Arndt: on
Jean Dye: front
Margarita Arndt: the front.
Jean Dye: side of that, yeah.
Margarita Arndt: Oh right, yeah, okay,
Gail Osborne: So when
Margarita Arndt: yeah,
Gail Osborne: it's
Margarita Arndt: I've got
Gail Osborne: even
Margarita Arndt: you.
Gail Osborne: if it's open here, the
Margarita Arndt: It's
Gail Osborne: signals
Jean Dye: So
Margarita Arndt: still
Jean Dye: when
Gail Osborne: would
Margarita Arndt: pointing,
Gail Osborne: go.
Jean Dye: you've actually got
Margarita Arndt: yes.
Jean Dye: it open, it would be
Gail Osborne: Yeah.
Jean Dye: facing the T_V_.
Margarita Arndt: Yeah, that would make sense.
Jean Dye: And then finally um on to the interface. The top screen, as we said, is would be an inset um black and white L_C_D_ s touch screen which
Gail Osborne: This one right here.
Jean Dye: yeah would uh have all of all of the the available functions for for the remote on it, uh whereas the bot the bottom screen would just contain the standard buttons, like the vo volume up and down, channel up and down, power on and off,
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Jean Dye: and uh things to that effect. And now we've we also decided on the inside, we could possibly either have um some some kind of sort of bezzled uh logo on it, or something inset, or maybe an engraving of the logo on the top.
Gail Osborne: Which
Margarita Arndt: But
Gail Osborne: is
Margarita Arndt: not interfering with
Jean Dye: No
Margarita Arndt: the
Jean Dye: d
Margarita Arndt: outside
Jean Dye: not
Margarita Arndt: kind
Gail Osborne: No.
Jean Dye: not
Margarita Arndt: of
Jean Dye: actually.
Margarita Arndt: look of the product
Jean Dye: No,
Margarita Arndt: once
Jean Dye: not
Margarita Arndt: it's
Jean Dye: uh interfering with l the whole look of
Gail Osborne: Look up
Jean Dye: the
Gail Osborne: to it.
Jean Dye: the
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Jean Dye: product when it's uh on the thing. And finally that's how we put the fashion back into electronics, as
Margarita Arndt: Thank
Jean Dye: that
Margarita Arndt: you
Jean Dye: is
Margarita Arndt: very much.
Jean Dye: that's
Gail Osborne: Yay.
Jean Dye: the company logo.
Margarita Arndt: Wrapping it all up,
Christy Lloyd: Well done.
Margarita Arndt: okay. Um I've now got evaluation criteria.
Christy Lloyd: Certainly.
Gail Osborne: So this is the one. Sorry.
Margarita Arndt: It's to be presented.
Jean Dye: There
Christy Lloyd: Logged in? Thank you.
Jean Dye: you go.
Christy Lloyd: Oops.
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Gail Osborne: Evaluation.
Gail Osborne: Mm um I I think this is chip.
Margarita Arndt: It's quite similar to what it was before, though.
Christy Lloyd: Okay.
Margarita Arndt: Sorry.
Christy Lloyd: This stage of the evaluation is really for us as a team to evaluate if we have now got a product specification and prototype design that meets the the criteria that we got from our market research. So this is the first stage of the evaluation. Now, the collection of the criteria, as we saw in our meeting, was based on the user requirements and trends found in the marketing reports and marketing strategy of our company. So it's what we've discussed in the last meeting, are we actually meeting those trends and requirements? Now the findings that we came up with, just a recap, are here. The criteria that we want in this remote control are a fancy look and feel, technological innovation, it should be easy to use, it should incorporate current fashion trends, and those the two main ones, they were the spongy texture
Gail Osborne: Mm-hmm.
Christy Lloyd: and the fruit and vegetable strong design colours. The design should minimise R_S_I_ and be easy to locate and we were still um uh slightly ambivalent as to whether to use voice recognition there, though that did seem to be the favoured strategy, but there was also, on the sideline, the though of maybe having a beeper function. Okay, so we can come back to that slide, if you don't have a note of those. I'll just show you how we're going to evaluate our own feedback to this, to what we have so far. We're going to use a seven point scale, where one is true and seven is false. We look at each of those criteria that I've just mentioned, I'll call that slide back up, and I will just
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: do a preliminary rating of all those criteria on the whiteboard here.
Gail Osborne: Mm-hmm.
Christy Lloyd: Does that seem clear? Any questions there?
Gail Osborne: Ah, it's perfect.
Christy Lloyd: So we're going to look at these
Gail Osborne: Is it
Christy Lloyd: crite
Gail Osborne: everybody is going to evaluate, or just the
Christy Lloyd: Yes,
Gail Osborne: Market okay.
Christy Lloyd: we're going to come to w we'll discuss each one
Margarita Arndt: Mm-hmm.
Christy Lloyd: and we'll come to a consensus rating between one and seven.
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Christy Lloyd: Is that okay?
Gail Osborne: 'Kay.
Christy Lloyd: One is true, seven is false. Right. So I won't write all of that out again. It will just be criteria one, two, three, four, five, six, or A_, B_, C_, D_, E_, F_ to confuse it with the number rating. B_, C_, D_, E_, F_. This is where I realise how tiny I actually am.
Margarita Arndt: Just write small.
Christy Lloyd: Criteria and rating. Actually, it might be an idea, if we each did give our own individual rating, and we could take an average at the end. How about that?
Margarita Arndt: Yeah.
Gail Osborne: Yeah,
Jean Dye: Yeah,
Gail Osborne: so
Jean Dye: okay.
Gail Osborne: you
Margarita Arndt: That
Gail Osborne: can
Christy Lloyd: Okay.
Margarita Arndt: works.
Christy Lloyd: So I'll just separate the ratings by obliques, and if we go one, two, three, four, we know who's who.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: Mm-hmm.
Christy Lloyd: Okay. Criteria A_, the fancy look and feel. How do we feel about this prototype model relating to fancy it is a fancy look and feel. One is true, seven is false. My own rating for that would be a two. One is true and seven is false.
Margarita Arndt: I would agree.
Jean Dye: Yeah,
Christy Lloyd: I'll just
Jean Dye: I'd
Christy Lloyd: go
Jean Dye: uh
Christy Lloyd: this way.
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Jean Dye: yeah I'd
Gail Osborne: 'Kay.
Jean Dye: probably put it uh two yeah, two
Christy Lloyd: Two.
Jean Dye: or three. No, three. Three.
Christy Lloyd: Okay.
Margarita Arndt: I would say two.
Christy Lloyd: Two.
Gail Osborne: I would say four.
Christy Lloyd: A four, okay.
Gail Osborne: Mm-hmm.
Christy Lloyd: Adding those up, we've got a six and a five, eleven divided by four is what? Uh two and three quarters,
Jean Dye: Mm
Christy Lloyd: it that
Jean Dye: yeah.
Gail Osborne: Almost
Christy Lloyd: right.
Gail Osborne: three.
Christy Lloyd: Two and three quarters?
Gail Osborne: I think yeah.
Jean Dye: Yeah, yeah.
Christy Lloyd: Okay. Two point seven five, there we go. Okay, criteria B_, criterion B_, technologically innovative. I would give that a three.
Jean Dye: I'd give it a one.
Christy Lloyd: Okay. Not that you're biased
Jean Dye: No, no,
Christy Lloyd: in
Jean Dye: not
Christy Lloyd: that
Jean Dye: at
Christy Lloyd: it
Jean Dye: all.
Christy Lloyd: the designer.
Margarita Arndt: A two.
Gail Osborne: Oh sorry, I I got it wrong. The first one rating, I'm sorry. Can you just make it two?
Christy Lloyd: The average
Gail Osborne: The first.
Christy Lloyd: oh,
Gail Osborne: Yeah,
Christy Lloyd: for you?
Gail Osborne: I I just it
Christy Lloyd: You
Gail Osborne: the
Christy Lloyd: want
Gail Osborne: other
Christy Lloyd: your
Gail Osborne: way.
Christy Lloyd: rating to be a two?
Gail Osborne: Uh in
Christy Lloyd: Is that what you're saying?
Gail Osborne: Yep, I just
Christy Lloyd: Okay.
Gail Osborne: got
Christy Lloyd: So, I'll work out the average for that again at the end. It's a very slightly altered Okay, and we're just
Gail Osborne: two
Christy Lloyd: waiting
Gail Osborne: point f
Christy Lloyd: for your
Margarita Arndt: It's
Christy Lloyd: rating
Margarita Arndt: just two
Christy Lloyd: f
Margarita Arndt: point five for that one.
Christy Lloyd: Two
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: point five, okay. Losing one decimal place,
Gail Osborne: One is
Christy Lloyd: that's
Gail Osborne: a,
Christy Lloyd: okay.
Gail Osborne: seven is false, okay.
Christy Lloyd: So what are you rating for this one, Paw?
Gail Osborne: Two.
Christy Lloyd: Two, okay. So that is eight. That brings it down to two, nice
Jean Dye: Two.
Christy Lloyd: and simple, yeah. Okay, ease of use. Easy to use? Based on what you've said there, I would say a one, true.
Jean Dye: Two.
Christy Lloyd: Two.
Margarita Arndt: I would say a two.
Christy Lloyd: A two, okay.
Margarita Arndt: I would say a two.
Gail Osborne: Two.
Christy Lloyd: Two. I should've said a two to make the arithmetic easy, shouldn't I? We'll just put almost two, because
Margarita Arndt: One
Christy Lloyd: I'm not
Margarita Arndt: point
Christy Lloyd: gonna get
Margarita Arndt: seven
Christy Lloyd: into silly decimal
Margarita Arndt: f five.
Christy Lloyd: places.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: Okay,
Christy Lloyd: Okay.
Margarita Arndt: mm-hmm.
Christy Lloyd: Or we or if we want to really bring it down, we can do later. Um
Jean Dye: D_.
Christy Lloyd: mm now we're looking at it incorporates current fashion trends, now that's particularly
Jean Dye: One.
Christy Lloyd: in relation to our market research findings about the spongy texture to the exterior and the fruit and vegetable design colours.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: Right. So I'm just thinking, before I give it my rating, you were limited in the use of materials for your prototype here.
Jean Dye: Yeah,
Christy Lloyd: Is this
Jean Dye: that's
Christy Lloyd: actually going to be the colours that you
Jean Dye: No,
Christy Lloyd: would use?
Jean Dye: no, the the base colour was um
Gail Osborne: White. With
Jean Dye: white
Gail Osborne: for the plastic?
Jean Dye: or or
Gail Osborne: Uh
Jean Dye: like
Gail Osborne: blue.
Jean Dye: or l sort of a light blue, but
Christy Lloyd: Right.
Jean Dye: the changeable fa faces would uh allow you to get any basically
Gail Osborne: Any
Jean Dye: any one of a number of colours that uh
Christy Lloyd: So
Jean Dye: th it's
Christy Lloyd: we could
Jean Dye: full
Christy Lloyd: use
Jean Dye: sort
Christy Lloyd: any
Jean Dye: of customised.
Christy Lloyd: strong fruit and veg colours and that's what
Gail Osborne: Right.
Christy Lloyd: we're
Jean Dye: Yeah,
Christy Lloyd: intending to do.
Margarita Arndt: Mm-hmm.
Jean Dye: yeah,
Gail Osborne: Mm-hmm.
Jean Dye: yeah
Christy Lloyd: Okay. And the
Jean Dye: and
Christy Lloyd: spongy feel is no problem with that.
Jean Dye: No,
Gail Osborne: Yeah,
Jean Dye: no,
Gail Osborne: because
Jean Dye: 'cause
Gail Osborne: you'll
Jean Dye: th
Gail Osborne: be
Jean Dye: that's
Gail Osborne: having a
Jean Dye: that's the the spongy feel would be
Gail Osborne: Because
Jean Dye: in
Gail Osborne: of the
Jean Dye: the
Gail Osborne: rubber
Jean Dye: rubber
Gail Osborne: case.
Jean Dye: that you put round it, that
Christy Lloyd: Okay.
Jean Dye: otherwise it's just sort of hard plastic.
Christy Lloyd: to be a one for Christy Lloyd.
Jean Dye: Yeah, I'll give it a one as well.
Christy Lloyd: Yep. Everybody?
Margarita Arndt: One.
Christy Lloyd: Okay.
Gail Osborne: One.
Christy Lloyd: That part was nice and easy.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Gail Osborne: Mm.
Christy Lloyd: Okay. Uh moving on to does the design minimise repetitive strain injury. I
Jean Dye: Mm.
Christy Lloyd: don't think we've really touched on that
Jean Dye: No.
Christy Lloyd: a lot. We've we've discussed it, we haven't really come up with anything that we felt could feasibly reduce that. We've talked about pointers, but the very use of a remote control, if you're someone who's zapping, who's sitting
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: like that, and we found so many people did, how do you minimise that on such a small device?
Margarita Arndt: Well the type of button that we're gonna use in the bottom half, the material, minimises
Christy Lloyd: Mm-hmm.
Jean Dye: to be.
Margarita Arndt: R_S_I_ it's meant to.
Christy Lloyd: Mm-hmm.
Margarita Arndt: Um maybe because it's slightl with the size that we've got it's quite small, but with the amount of stuff we're putting on it isn't that much.
Christy Lloyd: Mm.
Margarita Arndt: So maybe because there's more space, it's not kind of moving around trying to
Christy Lloyd: Mm-hmm.
Margarita Arndt: hit accurately the buttons in between.
Christy Lloyd: Right.
Margarita Arndt: It's quite obvious just big buttons.
Christy Lloyd: Right.
Margarita Arndt: Um
Christy Lloyd: I think I'm gonna have to be neutral on that and give it a four.
Jean Dye: Yeah. Yeah, I'd uh I'd f I'd go for a five,
Christy Lloyd: A
Jean Dye: actually,
Christy Lloyd: five, okay.
Jean Dye: 'cause
Margarita Arndt: Four.
Christy Lloyd: Four and
Gail Osborne: Four.
Christy Lloyd: a four okay. Twenty one is that twenty one? So that's four point two five.
Jean Dye: Yep.
Christy Lloyd: And finally, last but not least, easy to locate. Now we talked about voice recognition, we talked about a beeper, have we really have the
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: designers come to any
Jean Dye: Yeah,
Christy Lloyd: dec
Jean Dye: it was
Christy Lloyd: real decision
Jean Dye: it was
Christy Lloyd: on that?
Jean Dye: uh a
Gail Osborne: Voice
Jean Dye: voice
Gail Osborne: r recognition.
Christy Lloyd: It was the
Jean Dye: voice
Christy Lloyd: I'm here
Jean Dye: recognition,
Christy Lloyd: thing, yep.
Jean Dye: yeah.
Christy Lloyd: And are we happy with the costs on that? That is going to
Jean Dye: Yeah,
Christy Lloyd: be feasible,
Jean Dye: yeah, that
Christy Lloyd: cost-wise.
Jean Dye: yeah, that's feasible.
Christy Lloyd: That sounds good then. I'd go for a I ca we can adjust the volume on that, just as we could volume on T_V_.
Jean Dye: Um I think
Christy Lloyd: So if sombody's
Jean Dye: it would
Christy Lloyd: in the
Jean Dye: r
Christy Lloyd: other room or if T_V_s in different rooms, or.
Jean Dye: I think it would probably be a
Margarita Arndt: A standard.
Jean Dye: a stand it would be a stand it would be quite loud.
Margarita Arndt: It would
Christy Lloyd: Right.
Margarita Arndt: be.
Christy Lloyd: Okay.
Jean Dye: So it would be
Christy Lloyd: You
Jean Dye: s
Christy Lloyd: built into
Jean Dye: p
Margarita Arndt: And
Christy Lloyd: the
Margarita Arndt: if
Christy Lloyd: feature.
Margarita Arndt: you didn't
Jean Dye: yeah.
Margarita Arndt: hear it in the room that you were standing in, then you'd realise that it wasn't in that room,
Christy Lloyd: Okay.
Margarita Arndt: you'd go into another
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: room.
Christy Lloyd: Logical. That's a one for Christy Lloyd.
Jean Dye: Yeah, one.
Christy Lloyd: One
Margarita Arndt: One.
Christy Lloyd: and one, good.
Jean Dye: I do realise that we might be being fairly biased, 'cause it is our product, but
Christy Lloyd: So, how do we feel about this? We've got our our we've got the highest rating of meeting the specifications that is definitely true for two of the uh six criteria there. That is for um incorporates current fashion trends and is easy to locate. The lowest rating we've got, which is really n it's not terribly low, i it's close around neutral is for uh the minimisation of repetitive strain injury. Do we feel on the basis of tha of these evaluation findings that we can go ahead and now produce this as a prototype and market it, or do we have to make further modifications?
Margarita Arndt: I don't think so.
Jean Dye: W I thin yeah,
Christy Lloyd: We happy
Jean Dye: I
Christy Lloyd: to
Jean Dye: think
Christy Lloyd: go ahead?
Margarita Arndt: I think we yeah.
Jean Dye: yeah.
Margarita Arndt: I
Christy Lloyd: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: think we're set.
Christy Lloyd: I think for most of those ratings that it's high enough at the upper end of the scale for us to go ahead with that, and I really doubt if on the basis of current technology and our current capabilities, we could actually do much
Margarita Arndt: Do
Christy Lloyd: more
Margarita Arndt: much
Christy Lloyd: to minimise
Margarita Arndt: apart from having
Christy Lloyd: that.
Margarita Arndt: a
Jean Dye: Mm.
Margarita Arndt: huge big
Christy Lloyd: I know. Okay. Well, I hope that's uh clear to the team. Is there anything you would like to to ask Christy Lloyd about the findings before I sum up?
Margarita Arndt: Don't think
Jean Dye: No.
Margarita Arndt: so.
Christy Lloyd: Good. Fine then. I'll just leave it there. Oops.
Margarita Arndt: Okay, thank you.
Gail Osborne: Hmm.
Margarita Arndt: Okay, I've got finance here now. I'm gonna plug this in so you can all see it, if that's okay. Um.
Christy Lloyd: Oh yes.
Gail Osborne: You want Christy Lloyd to b unplug that?
Gail Osborne: That's all. Yes.
Margarita Arndt: Thanks.
Margarita Arndt: Right.
Gail Osborne: Okay.
Margarita Arndt: Now I presume that the screen will go blank, that um Okay. We just type numbers into this and we come out with the final value. So are we still on for kinetic?
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: Yes.
Margarita Arndt: Okay. See, it woulda been handy to have this at the beginning. Um it might have influenced our choice. Right, what's happening with the electronics?
Jean Dye: It was a regular chip
Gail Osborne: Chip
Jean Dye: on
Gail Osborne: on print.
Jean Dye: print and
Margarita Arndt: Double-curved.
Jean Dye: Oh, no, no, no, the um Yeah, it's you you've put in three for the number of kinetic cells, there should just be one. In the top, it's the number of c
Margarita Arndt: Oh,
Jean Dye: yeah.
Margarita Arndt: right, okay. Thanks.
Jean Dye: Yeah, and
Margarita Arndt: So, would there be two?
Jean Dye: yeah, just a no, one reg v uh
Margarita Arndt: One chip.
Jean Dye: Yeah, one of them and one sample sensor and sample speaker.
Gail Osborne: Okay.
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Gail Osborne: Yep.
Jean Dye: And they're double curved. No. Y
Gail Osborne: Single-curved.
Margarita Arndt: One double curve.
Jean Dye: Two, 'cause it's
Gail Osborne: Two
Jean Dye: two.
Gail Osborne: curves, yeah.
Christy Lloyd: But it has a slightly flattened bottom so it can sit. So it
Margarita Arndt: So
Christy Lloyd: can
Margarita Arndt: what's
Christy Lloyd: rest.
Margarita Arndt: a single curve then?
Jean Dye: Yeah, I'd say I'd say
Christy Lloyd: It
Jean Dye: it
Christy Lloyd: would
Jean Dye: was
Christy Lloyd: just
Jean Dye: w
Christy Lloyd: be a flat bottom
Jean Dye: yeah,
Christy Lloyd: with
Jean Dye: I
Christy Lloyd: one
Jean Dye: think
Christy Lloyd: curve. like
Jean Dye: I
Christy Lloyd: a domed
Jean Dye: think
Christy Lloyd: thing.
Jean Dye: it's
Margarita Arndt: So
Gail Osborne: Single-cu.
Margarita Arndt: just one double
Christy Lloyd: Mm.
Jean Dye: One double-curved.
Margarita Arndt: Yeah.
Jean Dye: And
Margarita Arndt: Um
Jean Dye: one no,
Gail Osborne: Plastic
Jean Dye: 'cause one
Gail Osborne: and rubber.
Jean Dye: yeah, one's double-curved, and then
Christy Lloyd: The other
Jean Dye: the
Christy Lloyd: curves
Jean Dye: other one's
Christy Lloyd: at the sides, but it's slightly flattened at the bottom so it doesn't roll over.
Margarita Arndt: Mm.
Christy Lloyd: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: Um
Jean Dye: a plastic.
Margarita Arndt: we've got plastic and rubber, haven't we?
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Gail Osborne: Yeah. Plastic one and
Jean Dye: And
Gail Osborne: maybe
Jean Dye: special
Gail Osborne: rubber point
Jean Dye: colour.
Gail Osborne: five. No I think
Margarita Arndt: Um
Gail Osborne: rubber, since it's being used just as a casing, we can put point five.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: Do you think?
Gail Osborne: Yeah, I think it allows the point five, yeah. We can use that.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Christy Lloyd: What does it mean if you put point five for that?
Gail Osborne: It means we are not using a lot of rubber actually. We're using
Margarita Arndt: It would
Gail Osborne: just
Margarita Arndt: be like saying we're using
Gail Osborne: a very low quantity of rubber compared to plastic.
Margarita Arndt: See, it says case material.
Christy Lloyd: Mm-hmm.
Margarita Arndt: So we're not actually using plastic in the case,
Jean Dye: No,
Margarita Arndt: are we?
Jean Dye: no, that's it's as
Margarita Arndt: It's
Jean Dye: an
Margarita Arndt: including,
Jean Dye: extra.
Margarita Arndt: it's including.
Christy Lloyd: Right, okay.
Jean Dye: So that shouldn't that shouldn't be actually on there, because that's not incorporated in the cost of the remote you get.
Christy Lloyd: But it is gonna be part of the total cost, and there's nowhere else we can we can put that in, is there? There's nowhere else we can code for the the rubber used in the casing. So do we not have to account for it in the cost somewhere there?
Margarita Arndt: Okay, we'll just put it in as we'll put in as half.
Christy Lloyd: Okay.
Margarita Arndt: Or sh we should just put it in as one, because the plastic is zero anyway.
Jean Dye: Yeah,
Christy Lloyd: Mm.
Jean Dye: okay.
Margarita Arndt: No, we don't step on anyone's toes. Okay, special colour, do we need that?
Christy Lloyd: Might do, if we go for some of the more exotic
Margarita Arndt: N yeah,
Christy Lloyd: aubergines
Margarita Arndt: okay.
Christy Lloyd: and such like colours.
Margarita Arndt: Interface.
Gail Osborne: Push-button.
Jean Dye: Yeah, the push-button's
Gail Osborne: One.
Jean Dye: one and L_C_
Gail Osborne: An
Jean Dye: display one.
Gail Osborne: One.
Jean Dye: And buttons
Margarita Arndt: Buttons
Christy Lloyd: S
Gail Osborne: I think we could change the battery also. Instead of going for kinetic how about going for a standard battery.
Christy Lloyd: Has that not made any d if you click off that square now, has that not made any difference?
Jean Dye: Well
Christy Lloyd: Is it
Margarita Arndt: Has
Christy Lloyd: oh,
Jean Dye: yes.
Christy Lloyd: it's
Margarita Arndt: that
Christy Lloyd: brought
Margarita Arndt: not
Christy Lloyd: it
Margarita Arndt: gone
Christy Lloyd: slightly
Margarita Arndt: up? Oh no,
Christy Lloyd: down.
Margarita Arndt: it was seven five it's changed not
Christy Lloyd: So
Margarita Arndt: a
Christy Lloyd: is
Margarita Arndt: lot.
Christy Lloyd: is uncurved completely and just actually making the rubber case the curved thing, is
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: that going to make a difference?
Gail Osborne: Uncurved, flat.
Christy Lloyd: Oh, it's not made any difference, has it?.
Jean Dye: No,
Christy Lloyd: It's
Gail Osborne: No,
Jean Dye: we'll
Christy Lloyd: gone up
Jean Dye: have
Christy Lloyd: again.
Gail Osborne: it just
Margarita Arndt: Oh, it's
Gail Osborne: surprises
Margarita Arndt: not calculated
Gail Osborne: one.
Jean Dye: No, no,
Margarita Arndt: it.
Jean Dye: you've got
Christy Lloyd: Oh.
Jean Dye: to click off to calculate it again.
Margarita Arndt: Okay, there we go.
Christy Lloyd: It's brought it down slightly.
Jean Dye: C
Margarita Arndt: It's
Jean Dye: it
Margarita Arndt: not
Jean Dye: might
Margarita Arndt: a lot though.
Jean Dye: uh you might you might be assuming that that is in Euros. It could be in Dollars. And then it would be fine, because the exchange range would make it about twelve.
Christy Lloyd: Is
Margarita Arndt: We
Christy Lloyd: there
Margarita Arndt: haven't
Christy Lloyd: anything on
Gail Osborne: I
Margarita Arndt: been
Gail Osborne: don't
Christy Lloyd: the menu
Margarita Arndt: dealin
Gail Osborne: think so.
Margarita Arndt: we haven't been dealing with dollars
Christy Lloyd: No.
Margarita Arndt: though, I think
Jean Dye: No.
Gail Osborne: Ri I think it's in Euro.
Margarita Arndt: Okay, so the highest we've got is the electronics here. Um
Christy Lloyd: If we
Margarita Arndt: and
Christy Lloyd: tr
Margarita Arndt: the
Christy Lloyd: um.
Margarita Arndt: interface.
Christy Lloyd: If we moved away from our much loved idea of a kinetic battery and just
Gail Osborne: And
Christy Lloyd: went
Gail Osborne: going
Christy Lloyd: with the
Gail Osborne: to
Christy Lloyd: standard
Gail Osborne: a regular bat
Christy Lloyd: batteries, would that make a huge difference?
Jean Dye: Yeah, the
Gail Osborne: Yeah.
Jean Dye: standard, it um it would make one difference. The biggest one would be taking away if you took away
Gail Osborne: What I feel is, customers never said
Jean Dye: If you
Gail Osborne: anything
Jean Dye: to
Gail Osborne: about the battery. It's internal, nobody looks into the battery.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Gail Osborne: But shape and colours,
Christy Lloyd: And people are
Gail Osborne: that's
Christy Lloyd: used
Gail Osborne: something
Jean Dye: If
Christy Lloyd: to buying
Gail Osborne: we
Jean Dye: if
Gail Osborne: shouldn't
Christy Lloyd: batteries,
Jean Dye: you take
Gail Osborne: comprimi
Christy Lloyd: they're not
Jean Dye: away
Christy Lloyd: gonna
Jean Dye: the
Christy Lloyd: say
Jean Dye: voice,
Christy Lloyd: I'm not getting
Jean Dye: I
Christy Lloyd: this, 'cause
Jean Dye: I
Christy Lloyd: I've got
Jean Dye: do
Christy Lloyd: to
Jean Dye: I
Christy Lloyd: buy
Jean Dye: don't
Christy Lloyd: a
Jean Dye: like
Christy Lloyd: battery
Jean Dye: to say
Christy Lloyd: for a
Jean Dye: it,
Christy Lloyd: remote
Jean Dye: but if you
Christy Lloyd: control.
Jean Dye: take away the voice recognition, then you've got it.
Gail Osborne: Where's that special form? Mm mm
Christy Lloyd: Should
Gail Osborne: mm.
Christy Lloyd: we see what difference it makes?
Margarita Arndt: Where's the
Jean Dye: Yeah i yeah. No
Margarita Arndt: where's
Jean Dye: 'cause
Christy Lloyd: Um
Margarita Arndt: the voice recognition?
Jean Dye: it's samples sens sample speaker.
Margarita Arndt: Right,
Jean Dye: If you
Margarita Arndt: okay.
Jean Dye: took away that, that'll make it twelve point three five.
Margarita Arndt: Well the kinetic is three. If we change it to the battery it's that's
Jean Dye: They
Margarita Arndt: minus three.
Jean Dye: n n yeah, but you p minus three plus two.
Margarita Arndt: Oh, right. I keep seeing zero.
Margarita Arndt: it some other way, we can do it doesn't have to be voice recognition. We could do the voice recognition for, you know, business class or something, you
Christy Lloyd: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: know, like an upgraded version.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: Sure.
Gail Osborne: Mm-hmm.
Margarita Arndt: You could choose to have that
Jean Dye: But they
Margarita Arndt: or not.
Jean Dye: but I mean in I don't see why we have to sell it for twenty five Euros now, because they w they were saying they were quite willing to pay more for better product.
Christy Lloyd: But we're still working to
Margarita Arndt: So
Christy Lloyd: um
Margarita Arndt: should we just change the
Christy Lloyd: head
Margarita Arndt: design
Christy Lloyd: o
Margarita Arndt: specification then?
Christy Lloyd: We can put in our recommendations.
Gail Osborne: Make it
Christy Lloyd: If
Gail Osborne: costly.
Christy Lloyd: we if we're
Margarita Arndt: Yes.
Christy Lloyd: working to head office specifications as this is what this project team's working for, we can
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: put in our recommendations for what we've we've found and what we the consensus that we've come to as a result
Margarita Arndt: Mm-hmm.
Christy Lloyd: of
Jean Dye: We
Christy Lloyd: the meetings.
Jean Dye: c we could
Christy Lloyd: But we
Jean Dye: s
Christy Lloyd: need to work to that specification to start with.
Jean Dye: Yeah,
Margarita Arndt: Mm-hmm.
Christy Lloyd: And
Jean Dye: we
Christy Lloyd: I
Jean Dye: could say
Christy Lloyd: think the voice recognition sounds wonderful, but our object is so distinctive that that in itself is gonna make it easier to locate as a f you know in a first instance. Um as you say, we can offer the voice recognition initially to business class customers and so
Margarita Arndt: Okay, we can
Jean Dye: Yeah, I
Margarita Arndt: make
Jean Dye: s
Margarita Arndt: the price fit, and then say if
Jean Dye: And
Margarita Arndt: we'd
Jean Dye: then say
Margarita Arndt: had
Jean Dye: we
Margarita Arndt: our
Jean Dye: recommend
Margarita Arndt: budget, we
Christy Lloyd: Mm.
Margarita Arndt: would've had this,
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: because it also sets it apart from
Christy Lloyd: 'Cause
Margarita Arndt: the crowd.
Christy Lloyd: we've done all the background work
Margarita Arndt: They like
Christy Lloyd: to go
Margarita Arndt: their
Christy Lloyd: for
Margarita Arndt: gadgets,
Christy Lloyd: that if they want
Margarita Arndt: they like
Christy Lloyd: it.
Margarita Arndt: something that's completely different.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: It's
Christy Lloyd: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: s something completely different associated with your company. Right, okay, so
Christy Lloyd: So if we take voice recognition out
Jean Dye: That'll do it. Twelve point three
Gail Osborne: Yeah
Jean Dye: five.
Gail Osborne: we are close
Christy Lloyd: we are.
Gail Osborne: to the budget.
Jean Dye: Is it twelve point fif
Gail Osborne: Two
Margarita Arndt: It's
Gail Osborne: five.
Jean Dye: was it twelve
Margarita Arndt: two
Jean Dye: point
Margarita Arndt: point
Jean Dye: fifty?
Margarita Arndt: five. No, it's twelve point two five.
Christy Lloyd: Are you sure? Sorry, not meaning to doubt your words
Margarita Arndt: Yeah well two,
Christy Lloyd: there.
Margarita Arndt: twelve point two five times two is
Christy Lloyd: Right.
Margarita Arndt: twenty five,
Christy Lloyd: Are they
Margarita Arndt: isn't
Christy Lloyd: really
Gail Osborne: It's
Margarita Arndt: it?
Christy Lloyd: going
Gail Osborne: twelve
Christy Lloyd: to quibble
Gail Osborne: point five
Christy Lloyd: about
Gail Osborne: maybe,
Christy Lloyd: ten
Gail Osborne: then.
Christy Lloyd: P_? Or point zero one of a Euro? Which is less than ten P_.
Gail Osborne: I don't know what it said fifty percent of the cost. So
Margarita Arndt: I think
Gail Osborne: half of
Margarita Arndt: the agenda
Gail Osborne: the price would
Margarita Arndt: one
Gail Osborne: be
Margarita Arndt: was where the um price was, wasn't it? No.
Gail Osborne: I think it is the first one.
Christy Lloyd: That's today's kick off meeting,
Margarita Arndt: Twelve point five.
Christy Lloyd: Mm.
Jean Dye: Ah.
Gail Osborne: So we
Christy Lloyd: I
Gail Osborne: are under
Christy Lloyd: thought
Gail Osborne: the
Christy Lloyd: that's
Gail Osborne: budget.
Christy Lloyd: what it was.
Margarita Arndt: Well done, people.
Christy Lloyd: So we're okay.
Jean Dye: Okay.
Margarita Arndt: So is that uh got us covered for the electronics then? We don't need
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: something else to take that place?
Jean Dye: No.
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Jean Dye: 'Cause that that was just a bought-on extra, you could just take that out and that would be fine,
Margarita Arndt: Okay.
Jean Dye: yeah.
Gail Osborne: Seems fine.
Jean Dye: Yeah, I think that's brilliant.
Gail Osborne: Except voice recognition, everything is
Margarita Arndt: Right, so we've done that. Okay. Product evaluation. We've done room for creativity, haven't we?
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: Because
Gail Osborne: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: we've got decisions that we would have made that we weren't didn't feel able to make. Um I presume we discussed leadership and teamwork.
Gail Osborne: Mm-hmm.
Jean Dye: Yes.
Gail Osborne: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: um in the sense that um did you feel like a team? Or did you feel like uh
Jean Dye: Yeah, I'd say, as a team.
Christy Lloyd: Although we had our separate
Gail Osborne: I think
Margarita Arndt: autonomy?
Gail Osborne: we
Christy Lloyd: tasks,
Gail Osborne: had a nice time.
Christy Lloyd: there was
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: so much interaction, so much that we needed to um
Jean Dye: Find out
Christy Lloyd: bounce
Jean Dye: from
Christy Lloyd: off
Jean Dye: each other,
Christy Lloyd: each
Jean Dye: yeah.
Christy Lloyd: other. And I've certainly felt heard, listened to in that in relevant areas we've been able to, you know, give and take and adjust our remit
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: Mm-hmm.
Christy Lloyd: where necessary.
Gail Osborne: Yeah, I think there was uh very constructive feedback by everybody. It's not like people trying to cut each other. There is more of uh true cohesive teamwork. We came to a very predic creative design, yeah. Yeah, and uh Yeah, I think. And Sarah, you coordinated the work very well.
Margarita Arndt: Thank you. How did you find it?
Jean Dye: Yeah, no, I thought it it went really well and I yeah, I I feel that everyone was listened to and all the points that were raised seem to have been sorted out, although we didn't quite make the voice recognition in there, but that's that's good.
Margarita Arndt: Yeah.
Jean Dye: I think it would have made it into the final product if it was actually if if if we'd seen the marketing before the initial specification was put out, I think maybe it would've come out a d little different, but
Margarita Arndt: Yeah.
Jean Dye: yeah.
Margarita Arndt: I liked the fact that we could say an idea and it'd be suggested that that wasn't the best idea, but no one felt like shot down,
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Gail Osborne: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: you know, y it didn't matter it saying what you thought, because if it wasn't something that was that relevant, then it didn't matter, 'cause it was just another idea in the field.
Jean Dye: Mm.
Margarita Arndt: I like that.
Christy Lloyd: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: Um teamwork. Well you two created that wonderful specimen of a Play-Doh model.
Jean Dye: Yeah, well.
Gail Osborne: I
Margarita Arndt: Um
Gail Osborne: think that was the best part of the
Margarita Arndt: uh I'm still not caught up. But that's nothing to do with the teamwork at all. Um
Christy Lloyd: Maybe we should think of branching out into children's toys and
Margarita Arndt: Maybe.
Christy Lloyd: fake mobile phones as a side line. And fake
Gail Osborne: 'Kay.
Christy Lloyd: R_C_s.
Margarita Arndt: No, that was quite fun. Um means, whiteboard, digital pens, etcetera, what does that mean? Any
Christy Lloyd: How do
Margarita Arndt: ideas?
Christy Lloyd: we evaluate
Jean Dye: Discuss
Christy Lloyd: the materials
Jean Dye: which ones
Christy Lloyd: we had for communicating
Jean Dye: yeah.
Christy Lloyd: and sharing information?
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: Could it've been better, was it adequate?
Jean Dye: Yeah, I think I think we probably woulda used the outer email system more, had we actually
Margarita Arndt: Had time to kind of
Christy Lloyd: Mm.
Jean Dye: had had more time and if we'd been separated more.
Margarita Arndt: Yeah, 'cause we could just sort of say,
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: sorry what did you say about that or what do you think about that,
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: rather than having to email it, yeah.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: But it was nice having it there. Um like the whole picture of the thing.
Gail Osborne: Yeah, moving around the room.
Christy Lloyd: Yeah.
Gail Osborne: But I think it's good, like uh we spent times individually.
Gail Osborne: I never thought of a remote control with a flip top.
Margarita Arndt: Yeah, I think it's new
Christy Lloyd: It's
Margarita Arndt: ideas
Christy Lloyd: really borrowing
Margarita Arndt: in general,
Christy Lloyd: from
Margarita Arndt: rather
Christy Lloyd: other areas,
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: than
Christy Lloyd: it's, you know, bringing things from other areas in, it so it's I mean nothing is new,
Margarita Arndt: Mm.
Christy Lloyd: but it's applying it to a d in a different area.
Jean Dye: Vegetables.
Gail Osborne: That's mine.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: Yeah, no.
Gail Osborne: Yeah, it's
Margarita Arndt: Well they have to come from somewhere, don't
Christy Lloyd: Absolutely,
Margarita Arndt: they?
Christy Lloyd: yeah.
Gail Osborne: The thing
Margarita Arndt: And
Gail Osborne: is
Margarita Arndt: as sh as w sorry, you
Gail Osborne: Yep, sorry, go on Sarah.
Margarita Arndt: go. Um as was shown by your presentation with all of the other controls, remote controls, no one's thought about it
Jean Dye: No.
Margarita Arndt: particularly.
Christy Lloyd: Mm-hmm.
Margarita Arndt: I mean they're slightly different, so if someone's been shut in the room and said make ours a bit different from everyone else's, 'cause it's
Christy Lloyd: Mm-hmm.
Margarita Arndt: w something we should think about, but obviously no one's put any
Jean Dye: Yeah,
Margarita Arndt: great
Jean Dye: I
Margarita Arndt: deal
Jean Dye: do
Margarita Arndt: of thought into it.
Jean Dye: I don't think the the companies are really concerned. They're just like we've got a D_V_D_ player, does anyone remember the remote control? Can't you get the one that we used for the last one? Yeah,
Christy Lloyd: Yeah.
Jean Dye: just jazz it up a bit.
Margarita Arndt: Mm.
Jean Dye: Uh
Christy Lloyd: Yeah.
Jean Dye: d they don't really think about it, because normally, the remote control isn't the product which they're trying to ship. They're trying to ship
Christy Lloyd: Yeah,
Jean Dye: the D_V_D_
Christy Lloyd: the focus
Jean Dye: player,
Christy Lloyd: isn't on
Jean Dye: the video
Christy Lloyd: to that,
Jean Dye: player,
Christy Lloyd: yeah.
Margarita Arndt: But then when
Jean Dye: the T_V_.
Margarita Arndt: it everything is really smart,
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: and you've just got this big chunk of black
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: thing sitting on your coffee table, it doesn't go, I
Jean Dye: No.
Margarita Arndt: mean if you could have something that's a proper funky
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: thing, a funky item that's individual, individual to you, I mean they could even go into um you go in with an idea and they design it on Photoshop and then they just get it printed on the plastic,
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: you would pray you would pay a lot extra, because it's individually being a plastic was being made for you.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: But people could have anything that they wanted.
Jean Dye: Mm.
Gail Osborne: Surprising
Margarita Arndt: Because of the
Gail Osborne: to
Margarita Arndt: produ
Gail Osborne: Christy Lloyd is like uh people give a lot of attention to modifying mobile phones,
Margarita Arndt: Mm.
Gail Osborne: like a real want to see a new launch or something like that.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Gail Osborne: And new f television products coming up, but nobody giving uh much idea to this.
Christy Lloyd: I think
Gail Osborne: Like Sarah
Christy Lloyd: it's
Gail Osborne: was telling,
Christy Lloyd: really
Gail Osborne: everything's
Christy Lloyd: good that this has been very market research based,
Gail Osborne: Right.
Christy Lloyd: because just going back to mobile phones, I mean this is the first change in remote control devices that I can really, you know, say is is obvious and visible. We see it in mobile phones a lot, and tha that's where we've borrowed a lot of our ide our ideas from. There are innovations in that that people don't really want.
Margarita Arndt: Yes.
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: I see people wanting a model of the phone they were really happy with, and they can't get it anymore
Margarita Arndt: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: and it's innovation for innovation's sake, and I think it's wonderful our company's so R_ and D_ based.
Margarita Arndt: Well, it's
Gail Osborne: Mm-hmm.
Margarita Arndt: innovation for money's sake. The
Christy Lloyd: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: the people have to keep
Christy Lloyd: But
Margarita Arndt: buying.
Christy Lloyd: forcing it onto people,
Margarita Arndt: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: yeah. It's things that, you know, they might want to buy the thing they
Margarita Arndt: And
Christy Lloyd: really
Margarita Arndt: you
Christy Lloyd: want.
Margarita Arndt: can't get you've got your handset that works fine, but you can't get the battery anymore
Christy Lloyd: Mm.
Margarita Arndt: for that type of phone,
Christy Lloyd: Mm.
Margarita Arndt: because the phones have moved on, things like
Christy Lloyd: Or
Margarita Arndt: that.
Christy Lloyd: there isn't a cover to fit it or
Margarita Arndt: Yes.
Christy Lloyd: whatever, yeah.
Margarita Arndt: It's madness. Um
Christy Lloyd: See I think
Margarita Arndt: In closing There we go. Um our costs are below budget with recommendations that they the budget be increased, but I think I don't know, d what do you think? Do you think that's takes into account um overheads like us being well paid kind of a thing? And the heating
Jean Dye: Well.
Margarita Arndt: for the building, do you think our budget includes everything, all the costs that are going out?
Christy Lloyd: I think it was just the produc uh just
Jean Dye: I
Christy Lloyd: the
Jean Dye: think
Christy Lloyd: production
Jean Dye: that was just
Christy Lloyd: cost
Jean Dye: the
Christy Lloyd: of the phone.
Jean Dye: the physical.
Margarita Arndt: So it looks well it looks like it's gonna be fifty percent profit, you've
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: still got
Christy Lloyd: Mm-hmm.
Margarita Arndt: all of the overheads to come out of that. So
Jean Dye: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: maybe increasing it, you would also have to increase the price that it's sold at.
Gail Osborne: Maybe
Jean Dye: Yeah,
Gail Osborne: fifty
Jean Dye: I
Gail Osborne: percent
Margarita Arndt: But
Jean Dye: think
Margarita Arndt: I
Gail Osborne: more.
Margarita Arndt: think but you were saying that that's quite
Jean Dye: yeah
Christy Lloyd: But
Jean Dye: I
Christy Lloyd: I
Jean Dye: don't
Christy Lloyd: think in the remit
Jean Dye: from
Christy Lloyd: that
Jean Dye: the market
Christy Lloyd: we were given,
Jean Dye: research.
Christy Lloyd: it was very specific. I think we've done what we were required to do,
Margarita Arndt: Hmm.
Christy Lloyd: and I think there'll have to be another project team or a new project for us to look at at those kind of things. I don't think that's something we have to look at
Margarita Arndt: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: and
Jean Dye: No.
Christy Lloyd: find a way of raising the cash for.
Jean Dye: Yeah, it
Christy Lloyd: I
Jean Dye: was
Christy Lloyd: think we've done very well to get within budget and
Margarita Arndt: Mm.
Christy Lloyd: it still makes such an innovative item
Margarita Arndt: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: that I think people are really gonna want.
Gail Osborne: Yeah.
Margarita Arndt: It's a shame it won't ever get made.
Christy Lloyd: I know.
Margarita Arndt: Maybe
Christy Lloyd: Maybe
Gail Osborne: Who
Margarita Arndt: it
Christy Lloyd: it
Gail Osborne: knows?
Christy Lloyd: will.
Margarita Arndt: will.
Christy Lloyd: Maybe they are gonna steal
Margarita Arndt: Maybe
Christy Lloyd: our ideas
Margarita Arndt: someone'll
Jean Dye: I
Christy Lloyd: and
Jean Dye: it's
Christy Lloyd: sell
Margarita Arndt: r
Christy Lloyd: it.
Margarita Arndt: run
Jean Dye: top secret.
Margarita Arndt: down and patent it.
Jean Dye: Um it's it is it's a conspiracy going on here.
Margarita Arndt: Um
Jean Dye: That's what it is.
Margarita Arndt: the project has been evaluated well and truly.
Gail Osborne: Yeah.
Christy Lloyd: Mm-hmm.
Margarita Arndt: Um and we've got the meeting survey and questionnaire.
Gail Osborne: There's a final questionnaire.
Margarita Arndt: Oh, so we've got about fifty minutes to catch up with everything that I fell behind with, so I'll be delegating in my um
Jean Dye: In
Margarita Arndt: role
Jean Dye: your
Margarita Arndt: as
Jean Dye: yeah.
Margarita Arndt: Project Supervisor, so good luck.
Gail Osborne: Celebration, you didn't talk about that.
Margarita Arndt: I think the celebration is the twenty five pounds. Either that or we'll be dancing on the desks. Oh.
Christy Lloyd: Questionnaire.
Jean Dye: Okay. Is that it then?
Margarita Arndt: Um yeah, just the last, I think.
Jean Dye: Awesome.
Margarita Arndt: I think I've got minutes for two of the meeting and the last thingy.
Christy Lloyd: Questionnaire done. Oh, I didn't have to rate you on how much you influenced the meeting this time.
Jean Dye: Was that not the questionnaire for the how you felt you'd done in your thing?
Christy Lloyd: Oh, right. But
Jean Dye: I
Christy Lloyd: do we not
Jean Dye: don't
Christy Lloyd: sometimes
Jean Dye: think.
Christy Lloyd: evaluate in these meetings
Jean Dye: Yeah, the
Christy Lloyd: too? Yeah.
Jean Dye: the s yeah. I think yeah, questionnaire seven was the one I did just before the meeting.
Gail Osborne: Yeah.
Jean Dye: Mm.
Margarita Arndt: I just got con | Margarita Arndt went over decisions from the previous meeting. Jean Dye presented the prototype and discussed its look, its internal components, and its interface. Christy Lloyd evaluated the product according to the initial product goals. The group then decided that enough of this criteria had been satisfied for the project to continue. Margarita Arndt presented the final cost of the device which exceeded the initial projected price point. The group decided to remove speech recognition but to propose to the management that it remain in the design. The group then discussed their effectiveness as a team. All members felt that they interacted well and that they felt they could be creative. Christy Lloyd felt that the market-research based approach would help the project's success with consumers. The group did express, however, that the budget was overly constraining. Margarita Arndt instructed the group to fill out a final evaluation questionnaire. | 2 | amisum | train |
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um minutes from the last meeting which were essentially that we uh had decided on roles for each of you, however, um there are some changes that I've got from on high that
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: um are a bit uh well w what I didn't actually realise it was that the uh this is for a specific television.
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: So the all in one idea goes out the window. And
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: they require that the uh actually I'll get to that at the end point number four, um we'll what you've and then we can see what we can adapt from it. So um, presentations, were you anybody got,
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: raring to go?
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Raring to go? Okay. Good stuff. Mm.
Candida Meurer: Um.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Oh
Candida Meurer: So
Melodie Fitzgerald: I need to
Candida Meurer: how
Melodie Fitzgerald: plug you in.
Candida Meurer: S
Meaghan Acosta: Wow.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Just about.
Marie Keegan: It's a inspired design.
Candida Meurer: Sh do you want Candida Meurer to hold it?
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh there we go, just screw 'em on in. Gonna have to swap them round so now,
Candida Meurer: So, after that?
Melodie Fitzgerald: it was function F_ eight.
Candida Meurer: F_ eight.
Melodie Fitzgerald: That's the
Candida Meurer: f
Melodie Fitzgerald: wee blue one.
Candida Meurer: oh sorry F_ eight.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Blue one F_ eight. Should
Candida Meurer: Okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: do it, good one.
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Candida Meurer: Yeah. Uh, Candida Meurer again, Rajan Candida Meurer. Uh, as we have decided in the last meeting that I have to find out, sorry,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Hold on, sorry.
Candida Meurer: yeah sure.
Melodie Fitzgerald: and if you just click that it'll go ahead, one
Candida Meurer: Yeah,
Melodie Fitzgerald: at a time.
Candida Meurer: yeah. Uh actually, sorry I have to see the other, sorry.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Sorry, uh.
Candida Meurer: Yeah, thank you. Uh I have look at the market potential for uh, like consumer likings and everything, what is the potential for this product and are we able to achieve our a net profit or our aims or not? Then
Melodie Fitzgerald: P press F_ five to start it first.
Candida Meurer: Sorry. Okay. Yeah, I can,
Marie Keegan: Hmm.
Candida Meurer: okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Jesus.
Candida Meurer: Uh then uh the methodology I adopted to find out all this was market survey. A a detailed market survey on consumers was done to find out their likings and dislikings, what they prefer what they not prefer, w what problems they do encounter in all this type of things. And what we got was, we found that if you uh, what they th what problems they are having with different uh remote controls available in the market. Seventy five percent of users they do find it that the remote controls available in the market are ugly. They are not so good looking. So, we have to put stress on this, uh we have to take care of this fact also like our design, uh should be appropriate, should be good looking for the consumers. And yes that's wi uh this will definitely, this can definitely put uh uh enhance our sales. Uh and even uh the good thing about this is that eighty percent of users they are willing to pay high uh pay more for this uh good looking remote controls also. So even if the available market goes for the available uh even if the market goes for the available remote control is less even then we can sell it at twenty five Euros, which maybe which may seem quite high but if our looks are are if the re remote control we design have a good better uh better look uh designs, then we can hope that consumers will prefer these g remote controls.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Excellent.
Candida Meurer: Then And the second thing, some some companies they think that they should have more and more functions of the users uh or in their remote controls, but rather than those having more functions in the remote controls we should emphasise what actually consumer want, what they operate, rather than making it too complicated. Because mostly it has been found that fifty percent of the users they use only ten percent of the buttons, so there is no point of having ninety percent buttons making the remote controls too bulky, too complicated too expensive a because I think I believe that technology is useful only if uh the consumers they want to use it. Otherwise there is no point of having all this type of things. So this will not only reduce the cost of our remote controls but it will increase our profit also. So we have to take care of this fact also. Then. Uh it was function I want to go to.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Oh you wanna go back? Just escape.
Candida Meurer: Uh, escape, okay thank you. Then if we look at this slide,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Candida Meurer: uh these are in your shared documents, you can see,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Candida Meurer: like Uh,
Meaghan Acosta: So,
Candida Meurer: sorry.
Meaghan Acosta: sorry I was just gonna say, what was the question for this? Or is are you coming on to that?
Candida Meurer: Ah t look all the market potential, what
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Candida Meurer: uh how we should design consu our remote controls, what they should be there so as to en enhance our profit, enhance
Meaghan Acosta: So these percentages
Candida Meurer: our sales.
Meaghan Acosta: are
Candida Meurer: Yeah,
Meaghan Acosta: are what?
Candida Meurer: these are different age group persons like uh sorry, I can open it in another way.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Candida Meurer: Uh,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Speech recognition.
Candida Meurer: yes. If we look at the costs whether the consumers they are willing to uh pay more for speech recognition in a remote control or not, we can find that they up to a thirty five years age group we have a very good disliking for this uh this uh point, like for speech recognition in a remote control. So we can emphasise on this point also like, because it will definitely enhance our sales in this
Meaghan Acosta: Hmm.
Candida Meurer: ag in this particular age group from uh fifteen to thirty five, and I uh and I think that most of the users of the rem uh T_V_ are belong to this age group.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Hmm.
Candida Meurer: So we
Melodie Fitzgerald: We're als
Candida Meurer: should look
Melodie Fitzgerald: we we're looking at who buys it as well.
Candida Meurer: Yeah. We can look at that that factor also, so yes.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh, which I think the twenty five to thirty five is uh usual, sort of.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm,
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: mm.
Candida Meurer: So, and And then
Melodie Fitzgerald: Fifteen to twe
Candida Meurer: Yes. I think so. Uh if we look at this data how how uh h how what are the problems the consumers are facing with the existing remote controls in the market. They find that thirt uh thirty five percent uh thirty four percent of the consumers they find too difficult to operate a remote control. So it should be in such a way that it should be easy to learn how to operate these remote controls and we should provide pl uh spe uh proper manuals for its use also so as that people consumers could easily learn. They need not to have any, much technical knowledge
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Candida Meurer: to see uh to know how to operate these remote controls.
Candida Meurer: So
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Candida Meurer: um this is all about uh market potential by Candida Meurer.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Candida Meurer: Uh, yes, th
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay, thank you.
Candida Meurer: thank you.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um, follow on with Helen? Yeah
Meaghan Acosta: Yep, sure,
Melodie Fitzgerald: please.
Meaghan Acosta: that's cool, um
Candida Meurer: Yeah we have to
Melodie Fitzgerald: Oh,
Candida Meurer: take
Melodie Fitzgerald: so
Candida Meurer: that
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: we do yeah.
Candida Meurer: out. Sorry.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Fun and games.
Candida Meurer: Sorry.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Don't know if the cable's gonna be long enough.
Candida Meurer: Uh sorry,
Melodie Fitzgerald: I think
Candida Meurer: I
Melodie Fitzgerald: I
Candida Meurer: have.
Melodie Fitzgerald: just kicked over whatever it runs on underneath as well.
Candida Meurer: Brian, this one also I. Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Meaghan Acosta: I
Candida Meurer: Thank
Meaghan Acosta: can
Candida Meurer: you
Meaghan Acosta: turn
Candida Meurer: very much
Meaghan Acosta: my
Candida Meurer: Brian.
Meaghan Acosta: computer quickly if that's okay.
Candida Meurer: If you want Candida Meurer to help,
Meaghan Acosta: Um,
Candida Meurer: yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: yep.
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: Okay, and then what do I press, F_ eight?
Candida Meurer: Uh F_ eight.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Function
Candida Meurer: Function
Melodie Fitzgerald: F_ eight.
Candida Meurer: F_ eight.
Meaghan Acosta: Oh right.
Candida Meurer: Mm s.
Meaghan Acosta: Okay cool.
Candida Meurer: It's not coming.
Meaghan Acosta: Oh.
Candida Meurer: Function F_ eight, okay. Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah. No signal.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Hmm.
Candida Meurer: Computer.
Melodie Fitzgerald: There you go.
Candida Meurer: Computer adjusting,
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Candida Meurer: yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: Cool. Okay
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: and then how do I press the the big one, to get it on
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh
Meaghan Acosta: to the big
Melodie Fitzgerald: F_ five.
Meaghan Acosta: F_ five and I press that again to get it off as well
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um,
Meaghan Acosta: do
Candida Meurer: Escape.
Meaghan Acosta: I?
Melodie Fitzgerald: F_ five and escape'll bring it back and just uh the left button for advancing.
Meaghan Acosta: Okay, so um I'm the interface design designer, User Interface Designer sorry, uh I'm concerned with um w what effect the apparatus should have on the user and um I'm I'm also I want to point out that our motto, put the fashion in electronics, so obviously we as a company we want to make our products trendy and fashionable, it's a big concern of ours. Okay, and how do I press n just the next button?
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh just
Meaghan Acosta: The arrow?
Melodie Fitzgerald: a left uh
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: left
Meaghan Acosta: So
Melodie Fitzgerald: mouse button.
Meaghan Acosta: um I looked at existing designs and also um the information that Raj gave us was very useful about what people like, what people dislike. Um and what people fashionable, because we said people between twenty five and thirty five
Melodie Fitzgerald: Mm-hmm.
Meaghan Acosta: were the main um buyers of of our T_V_ I think.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Meaghan Acosta: So um what they like and what they find fashionable.
Melodie Fitzgerald: 'Kay.
Meaghan Acosta: And ergonomics, we said um, I don't know I haven't actually been able to do any of this myself, but um maybe that comes up, I don't know.
Melodie Fitzgerald: That can come under
Meaghan Acosta: And
Melodie Fitzgerald: Arlo as
Meaghan Acosta: the
Melodie Fitzgerald: well.
Meaghan Acosta: findings, well the basic that was the basic function to send messages to the television set. That's
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh.
Meaghan Acosta: what people want to do. Um, so they need to be included, um, but I've got some pictures here of some leading ones. I don't know how to get to them, do I press
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh
Meaghan Acosta: F_
Melodie Fitzgerald: if
Meaghan Acosta: five
Melodie Fitzgerald: you
Meaghan Acosta: is it?
Melodie Fitzgerald: if you escape
Meaghan Acosta: escape?
Melodie Fitzgerald: then you can see your bar.
Meaghan Acosta: Oh okay, cool. I haven't got my glasses on so I hope it's this one. These
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh
Meaghan Acosta: are two
Melodie Fitzgerald: okay.
Meaghan Acosta: leading um remote controls at the moment. You know
Melodie Fitzgerald: 'Kay.
Meaghan Acosta: they're grey, they've I mean this one's got loads of buttons, it's hard to tell from here what they actually do, and they don't look very exciting at all. Um, personally I prefer this one just because it's looks easier use, it's a bit more sleek with more of this silver stuff,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Mm-hmm.
Meaghan Acosta: um, but there you go, that's what we're up against, and I think we can do much better than that.
Marie Keegan: Of course.
Meaghan Acosta: Um
Melodie Fitzgerald: We hope so.
Meaghan Acosta: hang on. F_ five, okay, sorry. Personal preferences. Um, well I think we need to l I think the ergonomics is quite um important, um
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah, particularly if we've uh there was a bit in Raj's about R_S_I_ and things as well.
Meaghan Acosta: Uh-huh.
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: And um I thought not too edgy and like a box, more kind of hand-held more um not as uh computery and
Melodie Fitzgerald: Organic.
Meaghan Acosta: or organic, yeah, more organic shape I think. Um simple designs, like the last one we just saw, not too many buttons and as Raj pointed out, only ten percent fifty percent of people only use ten percent of the buttons,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Mm-hmm.
Meaghan Acosta: so I think what we can miss out on the buttons we can make up for in
Melodie Fitzgerald: Sales,
Meaghan Acosta: design and and how nice it looks.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Meaghan Acosta: Um, hand-held and portable I think is portamint is important because T_F_T_ have just um released um I think is it a a remote control for presentations or uh and
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah
Meaghan Acosta: a big
Melodie Fitzgerald: it's
Meaghan Acosta: seven
Melodie Fitzgerald: like a,
Meaghan Acosta: inch
Melodie Fitzgerald: yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: big screen, anyway, so um
Melodie Fitzgerald: It's.
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah, no seven inches isn't that big but um anyway um so hand-held and portable and uh m
Melodie Fitzgerald: Right.
Meaghan Acosta: I thought about other functions for T_V_ but as you pointed out people don't actually want that, so
Melodie Fitzgerald: And
Meaghan Acosta: maybe
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: we
Melodie Fitzgerald: also
Meaghan Acosta: forget about that.
Melodie Fitzgerald: the company want to keep it stuck to the T_V_ for uh to keep down the
Meaghan Acosta: It's
Melodie Fitzgerald: production
Meaghan Acosta: for one
Melodie Fitzgerald: time.
Meaghan Acosta: T_V_ oh right okay, sure. And so the last thing I thought w which I quickly mentioned in the other one was maybe a bit of a gimmick to
Melodie Fitzgerald: Mm-hmm.
Meaghan Acosta: set us apart from other people, like glow-in-the-dark
Candida Meurer: Exactly.
Meaghan Acosta: um
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: which does already e exist but it's not very
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: widely used I don't think. Easy finder with the a whistle function
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Meaghan Acosta: or something, or rechargeable station because it's a pain when you run out of batteries.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: And I think that, yep, that's it.
Melodie Fitzgerald: That's cool.
Marie Keegan: So
Meaghan Acosta: Okay?
Marie Keegan: uh, I noticed your talk about speech recognition and whistling,
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Marie Keegan: and uh I was just curious to know, have we done any research into how many people can whistle? Um, or if is that a function we want in the remote?
Meaghan Acosta: Um,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um,
Meaghan Acosta: I haven't
Melodie Fitzgerald: do you have
Meaghan Acosta: been
Melodie Fitzgerald: trouble
Meaghan Acosta: able to
Melodie Fitzgerald: whistling?
Marie Keegan: I don't, but I I know a lot of people do right.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Really? Ooh.
Marie Keegan: Yeah it just I mean it has to be a certain kind of whistle too, right?
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah, I suppose
Meaghan Acosta: yeah
Melodie Fitzgerald: that's true.
Meaghan Acosta: or
Melodie Fitzgerald: Well
Meaghan Acosta: some
Melodie Fitzgerald: I suppo
Meaghan Acosta: sort
Melodie Fitzgerald: uh you could
Meaghan Acosta: of
Melodie Fitzgerald: y you could
Meaghan Acosta: voice
Melodie Fitzgerald: have the you could have the basically um instead of a whistle if it's got the voice recognition you could have it just, you know, where are you?
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah.
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Marie Keegan: That's costly though. Um a much easier thing is just any loud noise like clapping
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Marie Keegan: um,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Hmm.
Marie Keegan: shouting,
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Marie Keegan: you know,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Sounds
Marie Keegan: uh
Melodie Fitzgerald: good.
Marie Keegan: and then, what would the response be? It beeps back at you or something?
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah, something.
Marie Keegan: Okay. Well, uh let Candida Meurer set this up. So I plug it in, press F_ five? Function F_ five?
Melodie Fitzgerald: Function F_ eight for the um
Marie Keegan: Or function F_ eight?
Melodie Fitzgerald: the uh
Marie Keegan: Okay.
Meaghan Acosta: Oh you need to twiddle the thingamibobsy thing.
Marie Keegan: Okay. I think it's uh just to lock it in.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Marie Keegan: It's got it.
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Marie Keegan: Okay. Um. So as Marie Keegan my job is to take an input from you guys,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Alright.
Marie Keegan: um so it's good you went first, and
Melodie Fitzgerald: Let's
Marie Keegan: I jotted
Melodie Fitzgerald: remember
Marie Keegan: down some
Melodie Fitzgerald: that.
Marie Keegan: notes as to what are the b needs and uh what kind of novel features we can add to differentiate our product from the others. Um so Raj told us that uh consumers are willing to spend more for fancy products, and um he also mentioned that uh the current products don't always match users' operating behaviour. Um, a lot of the buttons aren't used, and uh he mentioned that they're not fun to use. And uh a novel feature which uh we just brought up was this this automatic speech recognition feature or noise detection feature for when you lose the remote, there could be a little microphone on it, and any noise over a certain threshold um it'll pick up as a a distress signal um
Melodie Fitzgerald: Mm-hmm.
Marie Keegan: from you and it'll beep back and say you know oh here I am or
Melodie Fitzgerald: But
Marie Keegan: something
Melodie Fitzgerald: sure
Marie Keegan: of this
Melodie Fitzgerald: surely
Marie Keegan: sort.
Melodie Fitzgerald: that would have to be um sort of specific rather than above a threshold 'cause if you had a loud movie on you're likely
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: to get it
Marie Keegan: Oh
Melodie Fitzgerald: beeping
Marie Keegan: yeah,
Melodie Fitzgerald: back at you.
Marie Keegan: yeah,
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Marie Keegan: that's true. Well maybe you could have a um hmm tha that would be a consideration to take into account yes. Um.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Sorry I didn't mean to derail you there.
Marie Keegan: Yeah well tha that's uh for later down the road um, and then as for the user interface it should be trendy, um and not computery, right, so more low tech and not too many buttons.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Marie Keegan: So I took these all into consideration and also I have some limitations from the boss. Right um, and practical limitations which I kinda threw out the window. And so I did a little research and unfortunately all I had to work on was our uh our corporate archives of the great products we've made before, which include, you know, um space craft, coffee makers, and bullet trains
Melodie Fitzgerald: Ah is
Marie Keegan: Or
Melodie Fitzgerald: that what
Marie Keegan: uh
Melodie Fitzgerald: that is?
Marie Keegan: or a high speed train. Right and having personally worked with all these products uh I have a great deal of experience with uh
Melodie Fitzgerald: Well
Marie Keegan: with industrial
Melodie Fitzgerald: that's cool.
Marie Keegan: design of
Melodie Fitzgerald: If
Marie Keegan: these.
Melodie Fitzgerald: you if you can build space craft you'll have no problem with a
Marie Keegan: Right.
Melodie Fitzgerald: remote control,
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah sure.
Melodie Fitzgerald: yeah.
Marie Keegan: So, I figured, just put 'em all together. You got a a caffeine powered space shuttle train transport to your T_V_, and um
Candida Meurer: Hmm.
Marie Keegan: as for the user interface problem, you know, too many buttons. Give it one button and and it's a you know, for the the cowboy in all of us I I'm not quite sure what the the function is there
Melodie Fitzgerald: Right
Meaghan Acosta: Well
Marie Keegan: but
Meaghan Acosta: I like
Melodie Fitzgerald: okay.
Meaghan Acosta: that design.
Marie Keegan: Yeah it's a g I mean you could have a you know a
Melodie Fitzgerald: Is that just switches on the speech recognition and it's entirely speech operated, is it?
Marie Keegan: Right.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Marie Keegan: So I think I I missed the budget thing, it was fifty million Euros?
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Marie Keegan: And we gotta sell twenty five of them?
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah,
Marie Keegan: Right.
Meaghan Acosta: not a problem.
Candida Meurer: Fifty
Marie Keegan: Okay.
Candida Meurer: million
Melodie Fitzgerald: Ah now
Candida Meurer: was
Melodie Fitzgerald: it's fif
Candida Meurer: uh
Melodie Fitzgerald: fifty
Candida Meurer: prof
Melodie Fitzgerald: million Euros we've gotta uh
Candida Meurer: As a profit.
Melodie Fitzgerald: we've
Marie Keegan: Oh okay,
Melodie Fitzgerald: g
Marie Keegan: so I I
Melodie Fitzgerald: gotta
Marie Keegan: mixed
Melodie Fitzgerald: make
Marie Keegan: those
Melodie Fitzgerald: profit,
Marie Keegan: numbers.
Melodie Fitzgerald: so we're making that at twelve and a half
Marie Keegan: Okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Euros a time.
Marie Keegan: Well I guess more realistically then, we need a product that's got some kinda nifty outer casing, cheap plastic uh, you know, um
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Marie Keegan: that should be just like uh a tenth of the price maybe or less. An energy source which'd probably just be uh your regular batteries
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Marie Keegan: um, we don't
Melodie Fitzgerald: Would
Marie Keegan: wanna
Melodie Fitzgerald: it
Marie Keegan: have
Melodie Fitzgerald: be
Marie Keegan: it
Melodie Fitzgerald: possible to have the rechargeable idea? Is that is
Marie Keegan: Uh.
Melodie Fitzgerald: that gonna
Meaghan Acosta: Or
Melodie Fitzgerald: mark
Meaghan Acosta: a little
Melodie Fitzgerald: up
Meaghan Acosta: base
Melodie Fitzgerald: a lot?
Meaghan Acosta: station or
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: something,
Marie Keegan: Yeah, yeah, we could do that too. Um, I hadn't thought of that. Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: That might cost more though, 'cause obviously with batteries we don't need to provide, well we provide the first batteries, but
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah, yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: it's more, it's that's cheaper
Marie Keegan: Right.
Melodie Fitzgerald: I mean
Meaghan Acosta: to
Melodie Fitzgerald: if
Meaghan Acosta: just
Melodie Fitzgerald: you think
Meaghan Acosta: provide
Melodie Fitzgerald: about
Meaghan Acosta: batteries.
Melodie Fitzgerald: these base stations now it's essentially just a a lead with a sort of
Meaghan Acosta: A
Melodie Fitzgerald: self
Meaghan Acosta: battery in it,
Melodie Fitzgerald: connecting
Meaghan Acosta: kinda.
Melodie Fitzgerald: brake in it, so
Marie Keegan: Right,
Melodie Fitzgerald: I don't
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Marie Keegan: so
Melodie Fitzgerald: think it'd up up
Marie Keegan: so the
Melodie Fitzgerald: the price that much.
Marie Keegan: unirs
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Marie Keegan: the user interface uh the canonical user interface for these would be just a bunch of buttons, but since we're a cutting edge company, we uh of course will have alternatives like uh speech recognition, whistling recognition and rocket power
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Marie Keegan: behind our product. Um and lastly the transmission interface is uh, just some engineering thing you don't have to worry about.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Marie Keegan: Um so here's you know, a great schematic that my uh apprentice designer gave Candida Meurer. Um as you can see the the remote control have parts and those parts look like that and um you know it's got a little operating procedure that looks something like that. And I suppose you all know how it works because we've all used it and we wouldn't be in a company designing remote controls if we didn't know what they were so uh personal preferences, I think uh programmable options which um just require a small amount of memory, uh non volatile memory, just um
Meaghan Acosta: Mm.
Marie Keegan: so the user can put in their favourite channels and maybe their preferred volume settings so that when they turn it on it's not blasting.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm that's a good idea actually I like the programmable
Candida Meurer: Yeah,
Meaghan Acosta: options.
Candida Meurer: Candida Meurer too.
Marie Keegan: Oh okay. And the uh, the bells and whistles that we mentioned you know, they take more budgeting, um more technical uh expenditure of effort and it's also much more likely to not work if
Melodie Fitzgerald: Right.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm 'kay.
Marie Keegan: if we add these bells and whistles.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Marie Keegan: That's all I got.
Melodie Fitzgerald: 'Kay, thank you very much, um I'll take that back.
Marie Keegan: Ooh that's tight.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Right, also so um a notice I got not very long before the meeting, so didn't manage to forward it on to you, it is let's see, I'll find it myself, um Ta
Marie Keegan: Okay, I don't think we need to screw it in.
Melodie Fitzgerald: nah.
Marie Keegan: Just push it.
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: We had that um to dis-include teletext um because it's become outdated, and everybody uses the internet anyway.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um, dunno what Oracle would have to say with that but never mind. Um it's only for the television, which I'm presuming means it's for a specific television,
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: and um instead of colours and sorta colour options, they want corporate colour and slogan somehow implemented in the new design.
Meaghan Acosta: Corporate colour.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yellow.
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Marie Keegan: Yellow.
Melodie Fitzgerald: I presume. Um, everything, all their sort of uh you know the uh corporate website and everything's yellow.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: electronics uh I don't know exactly how sort of incorpor I mean, I guess if you're going for a sort of globular shape you could kind of have it working its way round it or
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: something. Uh,
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: where am I? Okay, so, we have to decide on which functions we're going to actually have.
Meaghan Acosta: 'Kay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh, now, we had as listed options we had speech recognition potentially, flat screen interface, L_C_D_ interface um we also want to limit the number of buttons
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: so we'll pretty much take that one as read. We'll
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: use the the basic functions for a television. No teletext. Um okay
Meaghan Acosta: Although
Melodie Fitzgerald: hold
Meaghan Acosta: the
Melodie Fitzgerald: on.
Meaghan Acosta: the danger with that is, it could look a bit cheap.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Not enough buttons you mean?
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah. Well
Melodie Fitzgerald: So sorta strike a balance between a a few and a
Meaghan Acosta: Mm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: or it looks like we're just cutting on the um
Meaghan Acosta: On the number of buttons, kind of
Melodie Fitzgerald: I
Meaghan Acosta: functions
Melodie Fitzgerald: do however
Meaghan Acosta: and stuff.
Melodie Fitzgerald: have this from over my head,
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm, okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: that they don't want teletext on it.
Meaghan Acosta: Okay, cool.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh maybe Raj you could find out what people would think about that, or maybe they'll send
Candida Meurer: About
Melodie Fitzgerald: some information
Candida Meurer: cost.
Melodie Fitzgerald: about that, about um what people, whether people would require um teletext in a remote teletext option in a remote control.
Candida Meurer: Okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay um. So uh I take it your position Arlo is that the bells and whistles we've gotta come up with the a gimmick but not too complicated a gimmick.
Marie Keegan: Yeah yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um so I mean a a the sort of inkling I'm getting from little bits of um web chatter that I'm getting sent is that they're quite interested in a T_F_T_ display, interactive display. However that does sound a bit like the more complicated design that rav uh sorry Raj um said people didn't like.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Although
Meaghan Acosta: mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: I guess if there's a sort of If you think about standard interfaces that people use already, sort of Windows-style
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: drop down menus or whatever, I think maybe that's a
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: bit, going a bit far but you know like in a basic sense that you could have your basic selection of buttons, and if you hit a sort of menu at the top you have um it goes to a different selection of buttons,
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: so it sorta keeps it simple.
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um glow in the dark, is that sort of with a light inside it or is it sort of
Meaghan Acosta: Um
Melodie Fitzgerald: glow in the dark material?
Candida Meurer: Uh.
Meaghan Acosta: Glow in the dark material
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Meaghan Acosta: I was thinking.
Melodie Fitzgerald: So
Meaghan Acosta: Um,
Candida Meurer: I
Meaghan Acosta: so I I guess that would be cheaper than a light
Candida Meurer: Uh may
Meaghan Acosta: I
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: think.
Candida Meurer: I say something about?
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Candida Meurer: Uh actually I think it's really really very important point uh as if we look at the market because people mor fifty percent people they find that the remote controls are often lost somewhere in the remote, in the room. But
Meaghan Acosta: Often lost s was
Melodie Fitzgerald: Lost,
Meaghan Acosta: that,
Candida Meurer: yeah
Meaghan Acosta: yeah.
Candida Meurer: are
Melodie Fitzgerald: yeah.
Candida Meurer: lost and means they forget where they have kept the remote control last time.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Candida Meurer: But if we add speech recognition as well as glow in the dark then both these factors will help their locating the
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Candida Meurer: remote control, like if they come and speak something at the remote control uh replies to something something and it glows in the dark. Both these factors uh both these points will help them to locate the
Melodie Fitzgerald: That's
Candida Meurer: where
Melodie Fitzgerald: cool.
Candida Meurer: they have
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm,
Candida Meurer: kept this remote control,
Meaghan Acosta: mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: That's
Candida Meurer: and
Melodie Fitzgerald: cool.
Candida Meurer: this will definitely enhance our uh market sales, so we should take it into consideration also.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay, cool. Um
Marie Keegan: Well hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: speech recognition I take it
Marie Keegan: Oh
Melodie Fitzgerald: I don't,
Marie Keegan: it's
Melodie Fitzgerald: I've I know of no products um
Marie Keegan: They're act
Melodie Fitzgerald: that
Marie Keegan: there
Melodie Fitzgerald: use
Marie Keegan: there
Melodie Fitzgerald: speech
Marie Keegan: was
Melodie Fitzgerald: recognition
Marie Keegan: a remote control
Melodie Fitzgerald: well.
Marie Keegan: that came out two years ago that had a some basic speech recognition on it. You could programme it with your channels and then you say you know like uh B_B_C_ one and it goes to that channel.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Really?
Marie Keegan: Yeah, it didn't work very well though because of this noise interference problem.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Mm-hmm.
Marie Keegan: They mentioned you know if the television says you are listening to B_B_C_ one.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah, or a yeah an advert an advert for B_B_C_ two on B_B_C_ one'll switch the channel for you kinda thing.
Marie Keegan: Right, right, and so there was a lot of this, you'd be watching the T_V_ and then all of a sudden it'd it'd pick up a noise and turn it off or you know
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Marie Keegan: or
Melodie Fitzgerald: Mm.
Marie Keegan: turn the volume off or something,
Meaghan Acosta: 'Kay.
Marie Keegan: but if you can work around that that noise problem
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh-huh.
Meaghan Acosta: Well what about this might get a bit too expensive actually, but what about um something that's built into the T_V_ um that you can press and it'll send out a little signal you know like the ones that we can't hear or something
Melodie Fitzgerald: Ah, that's a good idea.
Meaghan Acosta: um that that will activate the remote control starts
Marie Keegan: Right.
Meaghan Acosta: to beep.
Melodie Fitzgerald: So like a kind
Meaghan Acosta: If
Melodie Fitzgerald: of
Meaghan Acosta: you find
Melodie Fitzgerald: backwards
Meaghan Acosta: if y
Melodie Fitzgerald: remote from the telly.
Marie Keegan: Right
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah.
Marie Keegan: and then it would do just you know, uh subtractive kind of cancellation of the noise. What you could do then would be you have uh a remote controlled by the T_V_ speaker, or not a remo I'm sorry, a microphone by the T_V_ speaker and a transmitter there that sends back to your remote, 'cause you can't um expect uh the the television manufacturers to
Meaghan Acosta: Mm.
Marie Keegan: to put that feature into their
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah,
Marie Keegan: T_V_s.
Meaghan Acosta: that's the only thing, yeah.
Marie Keegan: But
Melodie Fitzgerald: Right.
Marie Keegan: yeah, then you have like the little se separate module by
Melodie Fitzgerald: That
Marie Keegan: the
Melodie Fitzgerald: we
Marie Keegan: T_V_
Melodie Fitzgerald: should just stick
Marie Keegan: speaker
Melodie Fitzgerald: on, yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: That
Marie Keegan: which
Meaghan Acosta: comes with our remote control.
Marie Keegan: Right,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Marie Keegan: and then
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah.
Marie Keegan: the remote control would know um
Melodie Fitzgerald: And that's
Marie Keegan: what's
Melodie Fitzgerald: a
Marie Keegan: being produced by
Melodie Fitzgerald: sort
Marie Keegan: the television.
Melodie Fitzgerald: of basic R_F_ kind
Marie Keegan: Right,
Melodie Fitzgerald: of
Marie Keegan: right.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: frequency so it'll be cheap.
Marie Keegan: Right, right. Um. Yeah that's certainly possible then an another thing was about this losing the remote and trying to find it again. If you do have this sorta speech interface to it, you don't even need to find it. You just say you know, um whatever you whatever you want the remote for, you know to change the channel or to uh turn the T_V_ on and off, you just shout your command to it and it would do it for you if it's within you know, within hearing range.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh-huh.
Marie Keegan: And uh you know it could be somewhere in the room y that you've no idea where it is and it would still do its job.
Meaghan Acosta: That could also be built into the T_V_ though, which might make our remote control a bit obsolete.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Marie Keegan: Well, hopefully
Melodie Fitzgerald: It might
Marie Keegan: we're
Melodie Fitzgerald: do
Marie Keegan: uh
Melodie Fitzgerald: us out of a job.
Marie Keegan: we're ahead
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah,
Marie Keegan: of the curve.
Meaghan Acosta: okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um Okay. I like the whole sort of remote feedback thing. Um so I think rather than and that also kind of takes out the speech recognition
Meaghan Acosta: Mm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: in terms of the interference of it not working very well and things like that,
Marie Keegan: Hmm.
Meaghan Acosta: And the expense.
Melodie Fitzgerald: so I th yeah and expense
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: and the time. So I think if we're going to go well I mean like the thing about the there's the problem with the T_F_T_ or the L_C_D_ kind of thing is if you're also wanting the the kind of uh organic globby sort of feeling to it then you might have trouble incorporating the screen.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um, but I guess not I thin we'll just we'll just pretend that's not a problem. Um uh and how are you about the glow in the dark material? Is that
Marie Keegan: Um.
Meaghan Acosta: Maybe not even all of it 'cause we said um colours and fashion w were important so maybe um just like a little l line that's kind of around the outside
Marie Keegan: Mm.
Meaghan Acosta: and then you can make the rest a different
Melodie Fitzgerald: Contrast
Meaghan Acosta: colour.
Melodie Fitzgerald: contra
Marie Keegan: Yeah,
Melodie Fitzgerald: well.
Marie Keegan: no th the material's cheap but it's just uh the the glow in the dark material needs some light to charge it you know,
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Marie Keegan: and
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah,
Marie Keegan: then uh
Melodie Fitzgerald: okay.
Marie Keegan: if you're,
Melodie Fitzgerald: So if
Marie Keegan: if
Melodie Fitzgerald: it's
Marie Keegan: you're
Melodie Fitzgerald: dow
Marie Keegan: sitting
Melodie Fitzgerald: it's
Marie Keegan: in the dark
Melodie Fitzgerald: d uh
Marie Keegan: for
Melodie Fitzgerald: yeah.
Marie Keegan: too long it uh it won't glow
Melodie Fitzgerald: Or
Marie Keegan: any
Melodie Fitzgerald: if
Marie Keegan: more.
Melodie Fitzgerald: it's down under the couch cushions
Marie Keegan: Right.
Melodie Fitzgerald: um which is where I usually find mine.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Marie Keegan: Right.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um Okay, well we can use we can still use the glow in the dark as a gimmick essentially,
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah, 'cause
Melodie Fitzgerald: um
Meaghan Acosta: what I thought, main
Melodie Fitzgerald: if we're gonna have to if we're gonna have the logo on as well, bright yellow logo in our our um slogan.
Meaghan Acosta: Slogan, yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh then you know they're gonna be fairly brightly coloured anyway, and
Meaghan Acosta: Right.
Melodie Fitzgerald: we can have sort of a a a trimming as well, of
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: the glow in the dark material, just as gimmickyness.
Meaghan Acosta: 'Cause yeah, that w more than finding it, that was more like you know if you're watching a film in the dark,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Mm-hmm.
Meaghan Acosta: you can um
Marie Keegan: Mm-hmm.
Meaghan Acosta: still see the remote control.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Alright, so n sorta
Meaghan Acosta: That was more
Melodie Fitzgerald: if
Meaghan Acosta: of a
Melodie Fitzgerald: if
Meaghan Acosta: a gimmick.
Melodie Fitzgerald: if we're gon if we're gonna go with the idea of um uh of feedback, sort of remote finder, then that kinda stuffs that one out then. Do you think?
Meaghan Acosta: Mm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh it makes it fairly unnecessary then.
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah, unnecessary.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um, okay so scratch that. Uh so we've got do we want to go with the T_F_T_ idea or the
Marie Keegan: Um
Melodie Fitzgerald: is that
Marie Keegan: yeah we're getting
Melodie Fitzgerald: far
Marie Keegan: a lot
Melodie Fitzgerald: too
Marie Keegan: of features
Melodie Fitzgerald: expensive?
Marie Keegan: now, I I think
Melodie Fitzgerald: Well I mean I think I think the sort of find the finder things I mean it's uh I could probably write the circuit diagram for that myself.
Marie Keegan: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um
Marie Keegan: Well, I think a consideration too is that these uh remotes get abused a lot, you know they get thrown
Meaghan Acosta: Mm.
Marie Keegan: around, there's a good chance the the T_F_T_ screen would break
Melodie Fitzgerald: Mm-hmm.
Marie Keegan: or uh get damaged. They're pretty fragile.
Meaghan Acosta: So is
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Meaghan Acosta: that one of our definite requirements that they wa that it needs a T_F_T_
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um
Meaghan Acosta: screen?
Melodie Fitzgerald: no, I mean that was going on ravs uh Raj's sort of um marketing research I guess. Um Uh So we'll stick with sort of programmability um for the buttons that we do have. Um. So that's sort of included in your sub-module kind of stuff, um
Marie Keegan: Yeah mm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh you were finding out about teletext. If you
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: could find out that uh
Candida Meurer: Totally, it takes cheap speech recognition, she
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um I think
Candida Meurer: they
Melodie Fitzgerald: we're gonna
Candida Meurer: wi
Melodie Fitzgerald: scratch the speech recognition as a bit of a
Marie Keegan: Oh.
Melodie Fitzgerald: um
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah you think so?
Melodie Fitzgerald: expensive, no?
Marie Keegan: Oh no it's it's much cheaper than the T_F_T_, it's just a microphone
Melodie Fitzgerald: Oh right, okay.
Marie Keegan: and some some integrated circuits.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Is it
Marie Keegan: And
Melodie Fitzgerald: not
Marie Keegan: it'd
Melodie Fitzgerald: the circuits
Marie Keegan: it'd be a small
Melodie Fitzgerald: that
Marie Keegan: vocabulary
Melodie Fitzgerald: cost
Marie Keegan: speech recognition system, like a
Melodie Fitzgerald: Oh right, okay. Uh
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: well that kind of takes back the R_F_ the R_F_ remote sort of idea as well. Um. Five minutes. Okay. Decisions. Uh, votes, let's vote. Who wants T_F_T_? No-one does. Excellent, so we'll go with speech recognition, yeah?
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm,
Marie Keegan: Okay.
Meaghan Acosta: that's
Melodie Fitzgerald: Um,
Meaghan Acosta: cool.
Melodie Fitzgerald: speech recognition, limited buttons, organic design.
Meaghan Acosta: Um
Melodie Fitzgerald: And what else was I thinking of that I haven't written down and therefore fallen out my head, programmability.
Candida Meurer: Glow in dark.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh
Meaghan Acosta: if it's not too expensive s I think it's a good
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh
Meaghan Acosta: gimmick.
Melodie Fitzgerald: o
Marie Keegan: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: okay. And also, integrating the, remember to integrate the logo and the s slogan.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay, so. Um can you put all these reports in the project documents folder if they're not already in there as well. So, it just helps Candida Meurer
Marie Keegan: Yeah
Candida Meurer: Here?
Melodie Fitzgerald: summarize
Marie Keegan: yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: them.
Candida Meurer: Sure.
Melodie Fitzgerald: And um I'll put any I'm I'm putting anything I do in there anyway, so uh
Meaghan Acosta: And where is it sorry?
Melodie Fitzgerald: Uh pro uh project documents. On
Marie Keegan: So it should be when you save
Melodie Fitzgerald: A_M_I_ scenario controller.
Marie Keegan: on your desktop, so it goes save as,
Meaghan Acosta: Oh.
Marie Keegan: or
Candida Meurer: Uh it is in shared documents?
Marie Keegan: And then uh hit that little folder up thing
Melodie Fitzgerald: Where
Marie Keegan: again.
Melodie Fitzgerald: am I?
Candida Meurer: Projoct
Melodie Fitzgerald: Project
Candida Meurer: uh projector.
Marie Keegan: Again.
Melodie Fitzgerald: documents, yeah, it's on your desktop
Marie Keegan: All the
Melodie Fitzgerald: as
Marie Keegan: way
Melodie Fitzgerald: well.
Marie Keegan: to the top, yeah that's up to desktop. Right and then project documents.
Meaghan Acosta: Okay, cool.
Candida Meurer: Hmm. It is not giving anything. Shared documents.
Melodie Fitzgerald: And I will tr getting strings of um information, I'll try and forward any specific to anybody in particular, as soon as I get them now, rather than I was about to sort of tell you about the changes before the meeting, and then the meeting turned up, so
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Marie Keegan: Mm. Did you get my email?
Melodie Fitzgerald: I did.
Marie Keegan: Okay. Just making sure.
Meaghan Acosta: Okay.
Melodie Fitzgerald: So
Meaghan Acosta: What I thought as well about the material is um maybe not this kind of material, but maybe more like um this kind of rubbery material, it's a bit more bouncy, like you said they get chucked around a lot. Um, a bit more durable and
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay.
Meaghan Acosta: that can also be ergonomic and it kind of feels a bit different
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: from all the other remote controls. The rubber
Marie Keegan: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: rather than
Melodie Fitzgerald: More sort of um flesh-like than plasticky sort of.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
Marie Keegan: Wow.
Candida Meurer: Um but we have to take care like But we have to take care of our children also if they means if children catch hold of your or if they chew it it shouldn't be too harmful. So, whatever material we use
Melodie Fitzgerald: Oh no, ethics,
Candida Meurer: it should be
Melodie Fitzgerald: that's
Candida Meurer: yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: gonna cost us money.
Candida Meurer: So we have to safety point of view also,
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay,
Candida Meurer: we have to
Melodie Fitzgerald: safety.
Candida Meurer: take care.
Meaghan Acosta: Oh I think wi with the more organic shape of it it won't be as it won't as have many sharp corners as that, so that's something
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: good, um I dunno,
Melodie Fitzgerald: It
Marie Keegan: We
Melodie Fitzgerald: sme
Marie Keegan: could
Meaghan Acosta: I mean
Marie Keegan: go
Melodie Fitzgerald: smells
Marie Keegan: comp
Melodie Fitzgerald: good for children.
Marie Keegan: yeah.
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Marie Keegan: We could go completely out of the box and make the thing a big red ball foam ball. And it's got the thing on the inside. And there's no buttons at all, it's always on, and just yell at it,
Meaghan Acosta: That's
Marie Keegan: and it works.
Meaghan Acosta: a good
Melodie Fitzgerald: That
Meaghan Acosta: idea.
Melodie Fitzgerald: sounds,
Marie Keegan: And then
Melodie Fitzgerald: yeah
Marie Keegan: ch children
Meaghan Acosta: Interesting.
Melodie Fitzgerald: it's gonna
Marie Keegan: will
Melodie Fitzgerald: have
Marie Keegan: love
Melodie Fitzgerald: to be
Marie Keegan: it.
Melodie Fitzgerald: it's gonna be have a big yellow
Marie Keegan: Oh
Melodie Fitzgerald: foam
Marie Keegan: yellow,
Melodie Fitzgerald: ball,
Marie Keegan: yellow
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah,
Melodie Fitzgerald: yeah,
Marie Keegan: ball.
Meaghan Acosta: d
Melodie Fitzgerald: sorry.
Marie Keegan: Right.
Meaghan Acosta: with the colour, um does it have to be all yellow, do you know?
Melodie Fitzgerald: Please God no. Um.
Meaghan Acosta: No.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Well, I wouldn't th I mean, my reaction to an all-yellow remote control wouldn't be anything other than horror, so
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: I think just having it
Candida Meurer: Small
Meaghan Acosta: Having
Melodie Fitzgerald: surrounding
Candida Meurer: logo
Meaghan Acosta: a little bit.
Melodie Fitzgerald: the logo.
Candida Meurer: with
Meaghan Acosta: Okay
Candida Meurer: the
Meaghan Acosta: cool.
Candida Meurer: like a small yellow strip or y yellow with the
Meaghan Acosta: Mm
Candida Meurer: logo
Meaghan Acosta: mm.
Candida Meurer: in it.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: Mm-hmm, okay. Cool.
Melodie Fitzgerald: And I'll see if I can argue with boss about putting the what was it? We put we put fashion into Whoops, it's not working. Can't believe I've forgotten it. We put the fashion in electronics.
Meaghan Acosta: Oh yeah, that's
Melodie Fitzgerald: I
Meaghan Acosta: a good one that. Yeah
Melodie Fitzgerald: bet
Meaghan Acosta: so.
Melodie Fitzgerald: that'll catch on well. Okay, any last
Candida Meurer: Yeah.
Melodie Fitzgerald: worries, queries?
Marie Keegan: Twelve thirty.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay. S
Candida Meurer: Hmm.
Melodie Fitzgerald: s I know what you're thinking. Okay then, lunchtime, yay.
Candida Meurer: That's good.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Okay, that felt a bit more like a something with order and and reason to it than the last one. This is quite fun actually.
Meaghan Acosta: Wow.
Marie Keegan: Mm.
Meaghan Acosta: Has anybo oh.
Melodie Fitzgerald: I really
Meaghan Acosta: Has anybody
Melodie Fitzgerald: don't
Meaghan Acosta: pressed okay, it vibrates. It's
Melodie Fitzgerald: Yeah,
Meaghan Acosta: pretty
Melodie Fitzgerald: yeah.
Meaghan Acosta: cool.
Marie Keegan: Yep.
Candida Meurer: Check here.
Melodie Fitzgerald: Wow you've your first page. I
Meaghan Acosta: Yeah,
Melodie Fitzgerald: was just writing really
Meaghan Acosta: got small
Melodie Fitzgerald: big.
Meaghan Acosta: writing.
Marie Keegan: Yeah I've been using up the pages.
Meaghan Acosta: I don't wanna waste it.
Melodie Fitzgerald: I've finished the meeting now. Oh, everybody
Marie Keegan: Another
Melodie Fitzgerald: needs
Marie Keegan: questionnaire.
Melodie Fitzgerald: k questionnaire. | Candida Meurer presented requirements of users as found in a company market study. The study showed that users want a fancier-looking but uncomplicated remote control, and are interested in speech recognition. He presented the age groups polled and said that the target marketing group should be users aged fifteen to thirty-five. Meaghan Acosta presented several competitors' remotes and discussed the features that would make their own device more user-friendly. Marie Keegan gave a presentation on important internal components that would keep the project within its budget, and discussed possible materials and programmable features. Melodie Fitzgerald gave several new requirements for the project to the group. The group discussed the features they would like to incorporate into the design in light of the new requirements and budget constraints. They decided to keep speech recognition as one of their components, and decided to include some programmable features, limit the number of button functions, and make the remote yellow and glow-in-the-dark, in an organic shape. The Program Manager said that he would ask to what extent the company motto had to be incorporated into the design. | 2 | amisum | train |
Charlotte Nolasco: Um we are So the meeting will have about the same format as the last time. So switching over I've just left uh
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Charlotte Nolasco: my first two screens. Um I have mailed you the minutes of the last meeting uh just to save time.
Latoya Andersen: Okay. Cool.
Charlotte Nolasco: Um and is there any questions you have that arised from last meeting that are particularly bothering you?
Latoya Andersen: Mm um.
Charlotte Nolasco: N
Latoya Andersen: No I don't think so.
Charlotte Nolasco: No? Okay, cool.
Virginia West: No.
Charlotte Nolasco: Then we shall start with a presentation from Raj.
Andrea Blood: Yeah. Hi, Andrea Blood Raj, again Uh. in this meeting I I'm going to discuss about the trend watching, uh how these trends is going to affect our market potential and how important is this. So we have to look on this. First of all methodology. The met methodology to find out the trend was incl uh was done in a way We have done a rec not only a recent remote control market survey, but we also considered the latest fre fashion trends of the market, we think that this is also a factor which will affect our sales and profit. So what are our findings? In our uh in our findings we have seen that when we did our remote control market survey we found that uh people l uh people do have preference for tho fancy mobi uh f remote controls which look and feel very good, rather than having a functional look and feel uh good. So this sh this clearly indicates their preference for the design their outlook of the remote controls. So we should take into uh we should consider this factor as the most important factor, because this factor is twice as important, the second factor which is further ti twice the as important as the sec as uh the third factor. So this factor becomes the most important factor in our surv uh uh in our mark uh means in take in designing our rem uh remote controls.
Latoya Andersen: The last one is the most important one, is
Andrea Blood: No
Latoya Andersen: it?
Andrea Blood: the first
Latoya Andersen: Oh, sorry.
Andrea Blood: one is the uh the outlook of the mobile, the it should have a fancy outlook,
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: the fancy design
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: uh rather than just having a functional look and feel good, it should have a fancy look and foo feel good. The second most important aspect is that remote control should be a technologically uh innovative. We must have some technological advancement in the remote control tha rather than just putting it as it is as the other remo uh remote controls are. So it uh should be technologically innovative like glow-in-the-dark or speech recognition, something like that. So that indicates our technological advancement.
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Andrea Blood: And the third most important aspect in the ta to take into consideration is that it should be easy to use,
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Andrea Blood: like it shouldn't be too much co complicated, there shouldn't be too many buttons on this mobi uh remote control, it shouldn't be too complicated uh like this way. And it should be uh and customers should be provided with manuals that is easy to understand in their local language, something. So that they could know how to use these remote controls. When we did uh f fashions uh, recent fashion uh our recent fashion update shows that
Latoya Andersen: Sorry.
Andrea Blood: Ah yeah?
Latoya Andersen: I was just reading fruit and vegetables. Hard to know how we are going to incorporate that.
Andrea Blood: Y yeah uh yeah, we have to, because uh d you can see how people have related their clothes, shoes, and everything with fruits and vegetables, because the g world is now changing it's trend towards organic,
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: becoming more and
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Andrea Blood: more organic, becoming
Virginia West: We should make a big sponge lemon and
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Virginia West: then it'd be it would be yellow.
Andrea Blood: So
Latoya Andersen: Th
Virginia West: It's Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: that's
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: very good.
Andrea Blood: So something
Latoya Andersen: Glow-in-the-dark.
Andrea Blood: like that we we should do.
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: And people uh the f feel of the material is expected to be spongy rather than just having a plastic look, hard look.
Latoya Andersen: Well, that's
Virginia West: Mm.
Latoya Andersen: good. That's
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: what we kind of
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: predicted
Andrea Blood: So
Latoya Andersen: anyway.
Andrea Blood: so that they could play with it while handi uh while handling it.
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: So that should also be taken
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: into consideration. So
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: these are my views. So
Latoya Andersen: spongy, not real spongy, you can
Andrea Blood: No it
Latoya Andersen: Do
Andrea Blood: ca
Latoya Andersen: you think like rubber would be good or does it
Andrea Blood: y
Latoya Andersen: really want to be
Andrea Blood: a The
Latoya Andersen: like gel kind of
Andrea Blood: rubber
Latoya Andersen: stuff?
Andrea Blood: which is good for health and which is quite disposable
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: that we
Latoya Andersen: Quite
Andrea Blood: can take
Latoya Andersen: disposable.
Andrea Blood: into co Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: 'Cause we It shouldn't be have any harm to the environment also,
Latoya Andersen: Oh
Andrea Blood: because
Latoya Andersen: okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: Alright,
Andrea Blood: our company
Charlotte Nolasco: okay.
Andrea Blood: is very well for taking all these concerns into consideration,
Latoya Andersen: Uh-huh.
Andrea Blood: so we don't want to have any harm to the society,
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: so
Charlotte Nolasco: Fashion.
Latoya Andersen: Cool.
Charlotte Nolasco: Mm
Andrea Blood: So
Charlotte Nolasco: 'kay.
Andrea Blood: that's all.
Charlotte Nolasco: Fruit and veg, well there you go. Just what I think of
Latoya Andersen: Mm.
Charlotte Nolasco: when I think of a
Latoya Andersen: A remote control?
Charlotte Nolasco: remote control.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah. And were there any factors that weren't important in the survey, that they said we don't want?
Andrea Blood: S uh we
Latoya Andersen: Or
Andrea Blood: didn't
Latoya Andersen: was it just
Andrea Blood: find out any such
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: point. Uh
Charlotte Nolasco: Mm-mm-mm-mm.
Andrea Blood: yes, there could be, but we couldn't find out any,
Latoya Andersen: Cool.
Andrea Blood: so
Charlotte Nolasco: Mm-mm-mm-mm-mm.
Latoya Andersen: F_, what is it? Um.
Charlotte Nolasco: Function F_ eight.
Latoya Andersen: yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: Hmm.
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: No signal.
Andrea Blood: Oh no,
Latoya Andersen: Is that?
Virginia West: No,
Andrea Blood: Yeah,
Virginia West: it's got
Andrea Blood: uh yeah,
Virginia West: it's got
Andrea Blood: uh yeah.
Virginia West: it.
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Okay,
Charlotte Nolasco: Excuse
Latoya Andersen: and then
Charlotte Nolasco: Andrea Blood.
Latoya Andersen: F_ five, right?
Charlotte Nolasco: Uh, yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Okay. Um okay, so the interface concept um. Yeah. The interface specification, what people um how they interact with it basically, I think. Um so the method, we looked at existing designs, what are the what's good about them, what's bad about them, um I looked at their flaws, so we're going to look at their flaws, everything. Um and what the survey told us and what we think would be good, so a bit of imagination.
Charlotte Nolasco: Mm 'kay.
Latoya Andersen: Uh the findings, I've got some pictures to show you as well.
Charlotte Nolasco: either.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Andrea Blood: Hmm.
Latoya Andersen: Okay, so most remote controls use graphical interface, where you um have got s buttons and you point it rather than having the output as a a stream of text or something.
Charlotte Nolasco: Uh okay.
Latoya Andersen: Um and we also found that there's inconsistent layout, which makes it confusing. So I think for our remote control There is some inconsistency already in ec existing in between remote controls, but I think standard kind of um shape and uh play and those kind of but buttons like the the top right for on and off or something, I think,
Charlotte Nolasco: Right,
Latoya Andersen: people
Charlotte Nolasco: okay.
Latoya Andersen: find that
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: important,'cause then it's easy to use. And we've got some pictures of some uh new remote controls to show you. Do
Charlotte Nolasco: Excellent.
Latoya Andersen: I press Escape F_ five?
Charlotte Nolasco: Uh
Latoya Andersen: Or
Charlotte Nolasco: no
Latoya Andersen: just
Charlotte Nolasco: just escape
Latoya Andersen: Escape,
Charlotte Nolasco: should
Latoya Andersen: okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: uh
Latoya Andersen: Um, oh I still haven't got my glasses on. Yeah, okay. So these are the some of the pictures of existing ones.
Virginia West: Wow.
Latoya Andersen: I'll just walk you through them. This one is a voice recognition. And
Charlotte Nolasco: 'Kay.
Latoya Andersen: that's the kind
Charlotte Nolasco: Looks
Latoya Andersen: of idea
Charlotte Nolasco: pretty
Latoya Andersen: we're going
Charlotte Nolasco: complicated.
Latoya Andersen: for. There's um an L_C_D_ thing, which we thought could I thought could get a bit confusing and a bit
Charlotte Nolasco: Right,
Latoya Andersen: expensive
Charlotte Nolasco: okay.
Latoya Andersen: as well for us. This one is got a kind of scroll like a mouse,
Charlotte Nolasco: Mm-hmm,
Latoya Andersen: which
Charlotte Nolasco: like the middle button.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay.
Latoya Andersen: Um and But I'm not exactly sure how you'd use that, like
Charlotte Nolasco: Ah it's
Latoya Andersen: would
Charlotte Nolasco: kinda
Latoya Andersen: the
Charlotte Nolasco: like scrolling
Latoya Andersen: computer
Charlotte Nolasco: uh
Latoya Andersen: come
Charlotte Nolasco: right, well, if I s if I'm thinking of the right one, I've got the same thing in front of my monitor, you scroll it and the when you reach the sort of um menu item that you require, you press the
Latoya Andersen: Uh-huh,
Charlotte Nolasco: middle
Latoya Andersen: that's like
Charlotte Nolasco: of the scroll.
Latoya Andersen: the L_C_D_ one, is
Charlotte Nolasco: Right,
Latoya Andersen: it?
Charlotte Nolasco: okay.
Latoya Andersen: But the one below that has got like a little scroll function on the side. But I presume that the functions must come up on the T_V_ screen.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah,
Latoya Andersen: I
Charlotte Nolasco: presumably.
Latoya Andersen: think
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: that's what that is. So these are just a few ideas. Again that's just quite boring shape, grey, looks quite space-agey, but too many buttons, I think
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah,
Latoya Andersen: on
Virginia West: Uh
Latoya Andersen: that
Virginia West: it looks
Charlotte Nolasco: looks
Latoya Andersen: one.
Virginia West: threatening.
Charlotte Nolasco: like uh looks like something out
Latoya Andersen: Yeah,
Charlotte Nolasco: of a jet.
Latoya Andersen: it does look kind of dangerous.
Virginia West: It looks like
Andrea Blood: Hmm.
Latoya Andersen: Um
Virginia West: yeah.
Latoya Andersen: this one I thought was really cool. It's w it's got the programmability function that we talked about. You can put it in there, it's for your kids, and it's quite an organic shape and the little circle around there is pretty cool.
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay.
Latoya Andersen: And that's really easy to use, bright, so I like this one lot for our design. I think something like that would be good.
Virginia West: Wow.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah,
Latoya Andersen: Of course
Charlotte Nolasco: I m
Latoya Andersen: yellow.
Charlotte Nolasco: I mean the one thing I think about about these ones is um these kl uh secured areas um, I've seen a lot of them with the the cover missing.
Latoya Andersen: Right,
Charlotte Nolasco: So
Latoya Andersen: yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: like have it hinge rather than sort
Latoya Andersen: Yeah,
Charlotte Nolasco: of clip on
Latoya Andersen: that's
Charlotte Nolasco: or whatever.
Latoya Andersen: true. Yeah. Um so maybe that could be built into one of the things and it comes up on the T_V_ or something. And this one, the over-sized one, I don't know about you, but I think it's a bit too gimmicky. I don't think
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: that will
Charlotte Nolasco: I mean is
Latoya Andersen: sell
Charlotte Nolasco: that not
Latoya Andersen: very
Charlotte Nolasco: sort
Latoya Andersen: well.
Charlotte Nolasco: of to assist the blind or something, is it?
Latoya Andersen: I guess so. I don't know. I think
Charlotte Nolasco: Strange.
Virginia West: Then
Latoya Andersen: that's a bit
Virginia West: d blind don't watch T_V_.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah
Charlotte Nolasco: No they do,
Latoya Andersen: exactly.
Charlotte Nolasco: they do. They
Virginia West: They
Charlotte Nolasco: listen
Virginia West: do?
Charlotte Nolasco: to it. Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah. And um this one is just pointing out. I like some of these things um the the raised symbols and everything, but pointing out um that this one the volume it is kind of pressing down, but it would actually go up, because
Charlotte Nolasco: Right,
Latoya Andersen: of the
Charlotte Nolasco: okay.
Latoya Andersen: shape. So that could that's a bit confusing. Um but the buttons on this I think are it's just showing you how you can have different different um buttons. They don't have to be all the same. So that's quite cool. Um.
Charlotte Nolasco: 'Kay but people tend to recognise certain shapes to do certain things anyway,
Latoya Andersen: Yeah,
Charlotte Nolasco: don't they?
Latoya Andersen: exactly. Um F_ five. Yes. So there are some of the findings. So we need to combine those ones um
Charlotte Nolasco: Brilliant. That's handy.
Latoya Andersen: Um yeah it is, just in time, very handy. Um so I think maybe incorporating that in our design would be good. It's you
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay.
Latoya Andersen: program it like you say, record, um and then, play, and then, record, play machine, and stuff like that, so that's And it's much Yeah. So that's quite cool. Uh personal preferences just some imagination, the raised symbols I thought were good, the L_C_D_, it does look smart, but I think maybe for our budget, do you think that would be a bit too expensive to have the
Virginia West: The L_C_D_
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: and the other stuff uh, I think.
Latoya Andersen: And the speech recognition, 'cause I think we're definitely going for the speech recognition, are we?
Andrea Blood: But in our market survey we have seen that people are willing to pay more, but
Latoya Andersen: Uh-huh.
Andrea Blood: they want the quality, they want f fancy look, they want some new design, something new.
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay.
Latoya Andersen: Uh-huh.
Andrea Blood: Uh
Latoya Andersen: But our budget,
Charlotte Nolasco: It's still
Andrea Blood: yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: it's still got
Latoya Andersen: we've
Charlotte Nolasco: to get within
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: our twelve fifty,
Andrea Blood: So even
Charlotte Nolasco: you know.
Andrea Blood: if we increase our cost little bit, within uh some limits, and we give something new technological advancement as well as new design with fancy outlook,
Latoya Andersen: Uh-huh.
Andrea Blood: I think we will meet the requirements and we will be able to have a good sales
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: in the market.
Latoya Andersen: I'm not
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay.
Latoya Andersen: sure if
Virginia West: Ben
Latoya Andersen: the if
Virginia West: bana
Latoya Andersen: for twenty five Euros uh per uh twelve Euros fifty m
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: manufacturing cost,
Charlotte Nolasco: I can't see tha Although, th I mean
Latoya Andersen: The
Charlotte Nolasco: to
Latoya Andersen: L_C_D_.
Charlotte Nolasco: be to be sure they have got I mean they are going crazy with the L_C_D_ technology now, so that you've got your L_C_D_ T_V_s and everything so maybe the small
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: But I mean like I I the black and white, I guess, it just doesn't look funky enough.
Latoya Andersen: No.
Charlotte Nolasco: Um but, I mean, like even mobile phones or whatever have now have colour L_C_D_ screens, w
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: I ju
Virginia West: Hmm.
Latoya Andersen: S
Charlotte Nolasco: I mean I wouldn't know about the costs of them.
Latoya Andersen: Uh-huh.
Virginia West: But uh
Charlotte Nolasco: Twelve
Virginia West: price
Andrea Blood: And
Charlotte Nolasco: fifty.
Andrea Blood: the
Virginia West: not withstanding, is it, is be just overload?
Andrea Blood: Uh
Latoya Andersen: Yeah, that's
Andrea Blood: i
Latoya Andersen: the thing, because
Charlotte Nolasco: Possibly.
Andrea Blood: it will be easy because there will be, on L_C_D_ s screen, there will be different frent icons, they can just click
Virginia West: But but
Andrea Blood: ok okay, whatever
Virginia West: the
Andrea Blood: they
Virginia West: thing
Andrea Blood: wa
Virginia West: is when you use a remote control, you never look at it, right?
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Virginia West: You're looking at the
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: T_V_
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Virginia West: and
Latoya Andersen: That's true, yeah.
Virginia West: and it's uh It just seems kind of like a
Latoya Andersen: And one of the
Virginia West: a needless
Latoya Andersen: survey
Virginia West: th
Latoya Andersen: findings was that they want it easy to use, so I
Charlotte Nolasco: Right.
Latoya Andersen: think I'm not sure about the L_C_D_. It's a it's great, it's a good idea, but for our budget and for the thing we're trying to go for eas easy to use, it's not the thing we should go for, I think. Child-friendly, I thought this was good, as you pointed out the um the bit, it often goes missing especially with children, but it's a good shape and the organic is kind of we could make a vegetabley kind of round shape, I think.
Virginia West: So which
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Virginia West: vegetable?
Charlotte Nolasco: Well I mean we
Latoya Andersen: Yeah,
Charlotte Nolasco: could make a
Latoya Andersen: I know, carrot.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah. Well, si
Virginia West: Okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: since we're going for the uh the k the sort of company colours, I think your lemon wasn't that far
Virginia West: The the lemon.
Charlotte Nolasco: s
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: Well what are the options?
Charlotte Nolasco: And if it doesn't work you know,
Latoya Andersen: But
Charlotte Nolasco: we've
Latoya Andersen: we don't
Charlotte Nolasco: just
Latoya Andersen: want
Charlotte Nolasco: made
Latoya Andersen: it to
Charlotte Nolasco: a lemon.
Latoya Andersen: be Yeah. Um the child-friendly, yeah. Easy to use, it seems quite easy to use. I like the d the different shapes of the buttons and
Charlotte Nolasco: Mm-hmm.
Latoya Andersen: stuff. I think
Charlotte Nolasco: I
Latoya Andersen: that's
Charlotte Nolasco: like
Latoya Andersen: a good idea
Charlotte Nolasco: I like
Latoya Andersen: to go
Charlotte Nolasco: the colourful
Latoya Andersen: for.
Charlotte Nolasco: buttons as well.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah. And the mouse one, I thought it was a good idea, because people use mo mice mouses now with the scrolling
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: thing. Um.
Charlotte Nolasco: I mean we are marketing to sort of twenty five to thirty
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: five, so most people will have come in contact with that
Latoya Andersen: S yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: kind of use.
Latoya Andersen: So they'd be able to use that um, as I said I think i I'd presume it would come up on the screen.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Um so there
Charlotte Nolasco: And
Latoya Andersen: you
Charlotte Nolasco: that
Latoya Andersen: go.
Charlotte Nolasco: means tha that means you get to bump that bit to the T_V_ maker, so
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: Oh.
Latoya Andersen: So that's um the user interface
Charlotte Nolasco: 'Kay.
Latoya Andersen: design. So
Virginia West: Okay.
Latoya Andersen: okay, I'll take this out now then.
Virginia West: Um
Latoya Andersen: There you go.
Virginia West: so I guess there are a lot of options that we're gonna have to choose from among,
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah,
Virginia West: and
Charlotte Nolasco: looks
Virginia West: I'll
Charlotte Nolasco: like it.
Virginia West: I'll give you the uh,
Latoya Andersen: Mm.
Virginia West: I guess, technical considerations for those.
Charlotte Nolasco: Uh
Virginia West: And I'm gonna use the whiteboard, just 'cause we haven't used it.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah, I was just thinking the self same
Virginia West: Right.
Charlotte Nolasco: thing.
Virginia West: So, the way I'm gonna do this is uh we're gonna take a look at some old remote controls, see how they work, uh reuse the the vital kind of um essential pieces of it, and then we'll throw in our new innovations um and keep it all within budget. So uh
Charlotte Nolasco: Magic man.
Virginia West: yeah, looking inside a a very simple remote control. Um this is what they sent Andrea Blood. 'Kay. Here's uh the competition, I suppose. Um you open it up, there's a circuit board inside,
Charlotte Nolasco: Mm-hmm.
Virginia West: um and there's a a chip, a processor, the T_A_ one one eight three five, which um receives input from the buttons,
Charlotte Nolasco: So
Virginia West: and
Charlotte Nolasco: this
Virginia West: ch
Charlotte Nolasco: is a standard off the shelf kind of a chip, is it?
Virginia West: Right, it's very they're very cheap remote. This remote costs nothing, you know. Um so that takes a signals from the buttons and translates it into a sequence of pulses that it then sends to the to the amplifier, which is made of some transistors and amplifiers, op-amps, and then that gets sent to the uh to the L_E_D_ light, which I can kinda see is that little red light bulb
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Virginia West: at the end,
Charlotte Nolasco: Right.
Virginia West: and that sends out the infrared uh light signal to the television. Oh here it is. Um so this is kind of the the bear essentials that we need to have in our remote control, because
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay.
Virginia West: it it defines
Charlotte Nolasco: So
Virginia West: the uh
Charlotte Nolasco: can we make them to pretty much any size we like or is there a minimum
Virginia West: R
Charlotte Nolasco: or?
Virginia West: Um no, I mean this is a very old one, so now with the new technology this is a
Charlotte Nolasco: They gotta be
Virginia West: a minimally small and cheap thing
Charlotte Nolasco: Almost
Virginia West: to
Charlotte Nolasco: a
Virginia West: make.
Charlotte Nolasco: key-ring.
Virginia West: Right. So this is what we need to have for certain. Um.
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay.
Virginia West: So you know, as we said, we got the outer casing, which we have to decide, you know, what's it gonna be, um the board we have to use basically uh the same set-up, processor, um we'll probably use the more advanced processor than they had, amplifier and transmitter are all standard. Um so for the casing, uh this an e-mail I got from our manufacturing team uh, you know, we have a bunch of options from wood, titanium, rubber, plastic, whatnot, um latex, double-curved, curved. So
Charlotte Nolasco: 'Kay.
Virginia West: lots of choices, what do we think? Uh or
Charlotte Nolasco: Well.
Virginia West: sponge, I guess, isn't on there, right.
Latoya Andersen: Mm.
Virginia West: Organic
Charlotte Nolasco: Well, I mean like
Virginia West: sponge.
Latoya Andersen: I'm
Charlotte Nolasco: la
Latoya Andersen: not
Charlotte Nolasco: latex
Latoya Andersen: sure about the sponge.
Charlotte Nolasco: has a kinda spongy feeling to it, doesn't it. Um
Virginia West: Uh yeah, it's very elasticy for sure.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: And that would k also give it kinda durability and
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: Um.
Charlotte Nolasco: and ther that's also f sorta relatively cheap to cast.
Virginia West: Yeah so
Charlotte Nolasco: Um so maybe s uh a sort of uh plastic initial plastic with a a latex kinda sheath?
Virginia West: Okay so, here are a a plastic, uh latex
Latoya Andersen: I like the rubber, the stress balls, I think, you know,
Charlotte Nolasco: Oh right,
Latoya Andersen: that
Charlotte Nolasco: okay.
Latoya Andersen: could be a bit of a gimmick like it's
Virginia West: Oh
Charlotte Nolasco: I don't
Virginia West: right.
Charlotte Nolasco: know what that
Latoya Andersen: good
Charlotte Nolasco: stuff
Latoya Andersen: to hold
Charlotte Nolasco: is.
Latoya Andersen: and
Virginia West: So something with give to it.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: Okay.
Latoya Andersen: And
Virginia West: And
Latoya Andersen: that might be quite durable and easy to chuck around.
Virginia West: and the colour is yellow, right?
Latoya Andersen: Yeah,
Charlotte Nolasco: Or at least
Latoya Andersen: y
Charlotte Nolasco: incorporating,
Latoya Andersen: yellow
Charlotte Nolasco: yeah.
Latoya Andersen: incorporated,
Virginia West: Yellow,
Latoya Andersen: yeah.
Virginia West: okay. Um.
Charlotte Nolasco: I mean I forgot i we're sort of uh I don't know what other
Latoya Andersen: I think
Charlotte Nolasco: standard silver kind of
Latoya Andersen: Mm.
Charlotte Nolasco: Other parts or uh
Latoya Andersen: Yeah, the buttons w like, 'cause there's gonna be the the cover the the rubber or the plastic casing and then the buttons in probably
Charlotte Nolasco: Mm-hmm.
Latoya Andersen: two different colours or i if
Virginia West: Mm' kay.
Latoya Andersen: we're having buttons actually,
Virginia West: So
Latoya Andersen: I
Virginia West: yellow
Latoya Andersen: don
Charlotte Nolasco: Um.
Virginia West: for the body, and then what colour for the buttons?
Charlotte Nolasco: Um I quite like the multi-coloured buttons myself.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: So multi-coloured buttons.
Latoya Andersen: You do have ones like um play could be green or on and off is red, and stuff like that, yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah or yeah a limit uh maybe
Latoya Andersen: Makes
Charlotte Nolasco: even
Latoya Andersen: it
Charlotte Nolasco: just
Latoya Andersen: easy
Charlotte Nolasco: a limited
Latoya Andersen: to use.
Charlotte Nolasco: multi-colour so it it doesn't look too childish,
Latoya Andersen: Yeah,
Charlotte Nolasco: perhaps.
Latoya Andersen: that's true, because that blue one did look
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: quite hardish.
Virginia West: Okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: Although I mean this uh uh also comes to shape as well. I mean if we are gonna make it a novel I mean double-curved sounds good to Andrea Blood if
Virginia West: Okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: we're talking
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Charlotte Nolasco: about sorta ergonomic and easy use,
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: a bit comfier, you know.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: Mm 'kay so the shape we wanna go Um how exactly? Maybe double
Latoya Andersen: Like uh an hour glass kind of figure, is that what you're thinking of, or
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah
Latoya Andersen: just
Charlotte Nolasco: it's uh,
Latoya Andersen: like
Charlotte Nolasco: yeah,
Latoya Andersen: a
Charlotte Nolasco: that that'd be that's sort of comfortable to hold, easy to hold so you don't
Latoya Andersen: It's
Charlotte Nolasco: drop
Latoya Andersen: not
Charlotte Nolasco: it.
Virginia West: What about
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: a banana? Yeah?
Latoya Andersen: We could make novelty remote controls.
Virginia West: Okay,
Charlotte Nolasco: Well, yeah, I mean like
Virginia West: like we could have a big banana shaped remote control, 'cause it's yellow fruit,
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah,
Virginia West: right?
Charlotte Nolasco: yeah. Mm
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: and a lemon might be a
Latoya Andersen: But
Charlotte Nolasco: little
Latoya Andersen: then how
Charlotte Nolasco: hard
Latoya Andersen: would
Charlotte Nolasco: to
Latoya Andersen: you point
Charlotte Nolasco: grip.
Latoya Andersen: it?
Andrea Blood: Ah
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Andrea Blood: yeah. Mm-hmm.
Latoya Andersen: How would you point it?
Virginia West: Oh
Latoya Andersen: What
Virginia West: i it doesn't matter which end you point, I guess. We could have a little L_E_D_s on each end.
Charlotte Nolasco: They only cost pennies.
Andrea Blood: Yeah, I appreciate this idea, because then this this will help us in our advertisement also and we can relate with fruits and vegetables, the people's choices. That what our data shows that,
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Andrea Blood: so this w this
Charlotte Nolasco: Huh?
Andrea Blood: w
Latoya Andersen: y I'm I'm not sure about the banana idea.
Virginia West: So a
Charlotte Nolasco: Um.
Virginia West: spongy
Latoya Andersen: Rubber
Virginia West: banana
Latoya Andersen: banana.
Charlotte Nolasco: I mean
Virginia West: re Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: that that th
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: does it does seem a bit uh again childish maybe.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: Okay, okay.
Latoya Andersen: I think maybe just draw on the kind of fruit and vegetable shape. And what else did you say about fashions? What was trendy?
Andrea Blood: Uh the fashion trend shows
Charlotte Nolasco: S
Andrea Blood: that fruits and vegetables,
Virginia West: See
Andrea Blood: like people uh
Charlotte Nolasco: And sponginess.
Andrea Blood: now
Latoya Andersen: And
Virginia West: So
Latoya Andersen: spongy,
Virginia West: maybe an an
Andrea Blood: Spongy.
Latoya Andersen: yeah.
Virginia West: unidentifiable fruit or
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: fiable fruit or vegetable
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: like so it would have a stem perhaps and
Latoya Andersen: Maybe,
Virginia West: a
Latoya Andersen: yeah.
Virginia West: maybe a it'd be s
Charlotte Nolasco: Huh.
Latoya Andersen: Like
Virginia West: axially
Latoya Andersen: what's
Virginia West: symmetric.
Latoya Andersen: what's that, I don't even know the name of it, some kind of, you know where it's like looks like a little snowman kind of thing. I don't know the name of that.
Virginia West: So it'd look like this kinda.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah, that's what I was thinking.
Virginia West: Like a gourd
Charlotte Nolasco: Uh.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah,
Virginia West: almost,
Latoya Andersen: maybe that's what they are.
Virginia West: or a squash of some sort?
Latoya Andersen: 'Cause that you can hold it in like the bottom bit and
Virginia West: Yeah, and it has a a clear top and bottom so
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: y so you could say, you know, it transmits from this end.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah, why the hell not. Let's
Latoya Andersen: I don't know.
Charlotte Nolasco: that'll make us fifty
Latoya Andersen: What do you
Charlotte Nolasco: million
Latoya Andersen: guy
Charlotte Nolasco: Euros.
Latoya Andersen: What do you think?
Charlotte Nolasco: Um. Well, I guess it's kind of dra uh you don't necessarily have to have it sort of clearly identified as a fruit just
Latoya Andersen: No.
Charlotte Nolasco: to have that kind of fruitish shape,
Virginia West: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: yeah?
Andrea Blood: Yeah, then only we can relate it
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah,
Andrea Blood: with
Charlotte Nolasco: we
Andrea Blood: something.
Charlotte Nolasco: can relate it by advertising
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: or
Andrea Blood: Exactly.
Virginia West: Okay, so double-curved, single-curved, what do we feel?
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Andrea Blood: Or the public choose
Latoya Andersen: Uh-huh.
Andrea Blood: what they want.
Charlotte Nolasco: There's
Virginia West: Okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: a good man. There's a good idea.
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Virginia West: Okay um, I guess, since you're the marketing guy.
Andrea Blood: Yeah, sure.
Virginia West: We'll
Andrea Blood: I will
Virginia West: uh
Andrea Blood: be happy to do that.
Virginia West: Okay, we could do that. Um.
Latoya Andersen: Okay. And buttons would, did we say? Uh different shapes of buttons?
Charlotte Nolasco: Um I l I su I mean for the specific functions, you know, up and down, uh
Latoya Andersen: Mm.
Charlotte Nolasco: play, stop.
Virginia West: Okay,
Charlotte Nolasco: They've
Virginia West: so
Charlotte Nolasco: got, I mean, they've got standard sort of intuitive um
Virginia West: so buttons.
Charlotte Nolasco: things that are always used.
Virginia West: Okay, just like that.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: That's cool. I like it.
Virginia West: Okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: Um.
Virginia West: With the scroll-wheel or no?
Latoya Andersen: Yeah, what about the scroll wheel and speech recognition?
Charlotte Nolasco: Uh speech recognition, I think, so we need a microphone presumably.
Virginia West: Okay uh I could put the microphone here.
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Virginia West: Okay there's the microphone.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Virginia West: Where should I put
Charlotte Nolasco: I mean
Virginia West: the
Charlotte Nolasco: ho
Virginia West: microphone?
Charlotte Nolasco: h h wel are we sure that scroll wheel does give ease of use?
Latoya Andersen: Yeah, I'm not sure. Um I mean those ideas I saw were just for inspiration, I think.
Charlotte Nolasco: Glad, we're not doing
Latoya Andersen: Um
Charlotte Nolasco: this for real.
Latoya Andersen: yeah, I can no I'm not sure. I couldn Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Virginia West: Okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: And uh I think if this this new software for the sound recognition is the
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: Okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: microphone
Virginia West: So should the microphone be just anywhere on it or
Charlotte Nolasco: I would put it sort of sub-centrally, so it's Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: 'Kay there's the mic.
Charlotte Nolasco: So it can be sort of
Latoya Andersen: That's
Charlotte Nolasco: held
Latoya Andersen: cool.
Charlotte Nolasco: and w We really need really gonna need to hold it, if it's gonna be voice recognition.
Virginia West: Um n well we can Whoops.
Charlotte Nolasco: Oops.
Virginia West: Um.
Charlotte Nolasco: Um.
Latoya Andersen: So let's not use the whiteboard any more.
Virginia West: Yeah. Um.
Charlotte Nolasco: Upsidaisy.
Virginia West: Oops, sorry. Okay.
Latoya Andersen: And uh so what else was there? Um the What about the glow-in-the-dark thing, the strip around it? Are we just gonna
Charlotte Nolasco: I
Latoya Andersen: leave
Charlotte Nolasco: s
Latoya Andersen: that?
Charlotte Nolasco: I still like it. Um
Latoya Andersen: You still like it.
Charlotte Nolasco: but that's Andrea Blood.
Latoya Andersen: 'Cause we've got the uh technological innovation with the speech
Virginia West: Right.
Latoya Andersen: recognition
Charlotte Nolasco: Yes,
Latoya Andersen: system.
Charlotte Nolasco: or maybe it's just going a bit uh too far. I mean we are pushing it probably with
Latoya Andersen: 'Cause
Charlotte Nolasco: funny
Latoya Andersen: um it
Charlotte Nolasco: fruit
Latoya Andersen: could
Charlotte Nolasco: shapes.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: Um don't wanna sort of overkill.
Latoya Andersen: Especially with yellow. Mm. I dunno.
Virginia West: Hmm.
Charlotte Nolasco: 'Cause I mean like uh if we I mean how good is the speech recognition thing? Do we want to go for buttons at all, do we want to just have a device that maybe sits and pretends it's a fruit?
Latoya Andersen: Then you put it in the fruit bowl?
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah, you know, and then
Virginia West: They
Charlotte Nolasco: you
Virginia West: can
Charlotte Nolasco: just
Virginia West: work
Charlotte Nolasco: tal
Virginia West: from
Charlotte Nolasco: I
Virginia West: a
Charlotte Nolasco: mean
Virginia West: You don't
Charlotte Nolasco: like
Virginia West: have
Charlotte Nolasco: everybody's
Virginia West: to hold it.
Charlotte Nolasco: got fruit bowl in front of the telly.
Virginia West: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Charlotte Nolasco: Um.
Virginia West: I it could even encourage healthier habits for television watchers,
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: you know they have
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Virginia West: uh fruits
Charlotte Nolasco: Make them
Virginia West: all round
Charlotte Nolasco: make
Virginia West: them.
Charlotte Nolasco: them think
Virginia West: Now
Charlotte Nolasco: of fruit, yeah.
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Virginia West: just make sure they don't eat the remote.
Charlotte Nolasco: I mean uh
Latoya Andersen: Yeah, do we
Charlotte Nolasco: some
Latoya Andersen: need buttons?
Charlotte Nolasco: uh I l like think of a fruit that could sit sort of independently on its own like uh, I dunno, an apple.
Latoya Andersen: Mm.
Charlotte Nolasco: Then it's just apple so sort of Uh,
Virginia West: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: yellow apples though Hmm.
Latoya Andersen: I quite like the shape. I quite like the design of that, uh 'cause that could sit on its own and
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: it's quite
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay,
Latoya Andersen: got
Charlotte Nolasco: yeah,
Latoya Andersen: a quite
Charlotte Nolasco: that's
Latoya Andersen: steady
Charlotte Nolasco: good.
Latoya Andersen: base.
Charlotte Nolasco: Groovy.
Virginia West: Okay.
Latoya Andersen: Um
Virginia West: But
Latoya Andersen: and
Virginia West: yeah
Latoya Andersen: as we say we n we don't wanna be too ridiculous with the fruit things
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah,
Latoya Andersen: you know.
Virginia West: But yeah, about the speech thing, it doesn't have to be hand held or close. It can sit at a distance and
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Virginia West: pick
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Virginia West: it up
Charlotte Nolasco: So
Virginia West: still.
Charlotte Nolasco: I mean like you could actually Yeah,
Andrea Blood: Or
Charlotte Nolasco: gives you
Andrea Blood: we
Charlotte Nolasco: the
Andrea Blood: can
Charlotte Nolasco: options.
Andrea Blood: we can do one thing, we can just have a remote control and casings of different different shapes, different fruit shapes
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Andrea Blood: in such a way that a any casing can be could be fit into this mobile general piece.
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Andrea Blood: So whatever people want, like if somebody want it in banana shape, we will put that casing onto that mobile phone,
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Andrea Blood: okay,
Charlotte Nolasco: So a selection
Andrea Blood: it will look
Charlotte Nolasco: of casings.
Andrea Blood: l Uh yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah,
Andrea Blood: In
Charlotte Nolasco: It
Andrea Blood: that
Charlotte Nolasco: kind
Latoya Andersen: 'cause
Charlotte Nolasco: of
Latoya Andersen: you
Charlotte Nolasco: fi
Andrea Blood: w
Latoya Andersen: said
Charlotte Nolasco: it fits
Latoya Andersen: about disposable,
Charlotte Nolasco: with f fits with
Latoya Andersen: didn't
Charlotte Nolasco: marketing
Latoya Andersen: you?
Andrea Blood: S s
Charlotte Nolasco: um
Andrea Blood: sorry?
Latoya Andersen: You said about disposable earli people want disposable things so
Andrea Blood: Uh
Latoya Andersen: we could
Andrea Blood: like
Latoya Andersen: do that,
Andrea Blood: if
Latoya Andersen: like
Andrea Blood: this
Latoya Andersen: have a
Andrea Blood: is
Latoya Andersen: choice.
Andrea Blood: a like if this is a mobile phone uh we will design casing in such a way like half of, we need not to have a full cover,
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Andrea Blood: we will just have a half of cover, okay?
Charlotte Nolasco: Like
Andrea Blood: If somebody
Charlotte Nolasco: like mobiles,
Andrea Blood: wants it
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: yeah.
Andrea Blood: i in banana shape, we will fit banana shape casing onto that, so it will give a banana shape look. If somebody wanted in apple shape we will design that, we will put we will put apple shape casing on that. It will give apple shape look.
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: So in that way you can have any, that means whatever you want,
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: without
Latoya Andersen: We still
Andrea Blood: uh yeah.
Latoya Andersen: need the buttons in the same places
Andrea Blood: Yeah,
Latoya Andersen: thought, don't
Andrea Blood: button will
Latoya Andersen: we?
Andrea Blood: be
Charlotte Nolasco: You
Andrea Blood: on
Charlotte Nolasco: can
Andrea Blood: the upper
Charlotte Nolasco: standardise
Andrea Blood: side,
Charlotte Nolasco: those, I mean.
Andrea Blood: buttons will be the on the upper side.
Latoya Andersen: Oh, that's the
Andrea Blood: Yeah,
Latoya Andersen: other side. Oh,
Andrea Blood: buttons
Latoya Andersen: okay.
Andrea Blood: will be on the upper side, lower side we will just put the casing, so half of that will be look
Latoya Andersen: Oh, half
Andrea Blood: the
Latoya Andersen: a fruit.
Andrea Blood: Yeah,
Latoya Andersen: Oh,
Andrea Blood: not
Latoya Andersen: okay,
Andrea Blood: not the
Latoya Andersen: okay.
Andrea Blood: upper side. So from lower you can, it means while you are holding of from this side you c you can have banana look or apple
Latoya Andersen: Okay,
Andrea Blood: look, whatever.
Latoya Andersen: okay.
Andrea Blood: So in that way we need not to d have different different shape mobiles everything, we will just design casings fruit shape.
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Virginia West: Yeah
Charlotte Nolasco: I think
Andrea Blood: And
Virginia West: yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: tho I think if you're gonna have a facia then you'd want to have it so that it does go over the buttons, 'cause when if you think about it if they're wanting it, 'cause they want to look at it, if they're using it, and what they want to look at is facing away from them.
Latoya Andersen: Mm
Charlotte Nolasco: It doesn't really
Latoya Andersen: mm.
Charlotte Nolasco: You know 'cause that'd be in the palm of their hand and they wouldn't be able to see
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: it, unless you have sort of you got the buttons options on one side, and you get the facia on the other side with a microphone so that you can place it face down. And you've got the facia, and you can just talk at the
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Charlotte Nolasco: Maybe.
Virginia West: Okay, um so
Charlotte Nolasco: So you've narrowed it down to half a dozen options.
Virginia West: Yeah, s I guess we decided on material, right? So that that spongy latex rubber
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: everything feel,
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Virginia West: and the colours we got down,
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: and
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Virginia West: the shape, maybe we'll just make it kinda mix and match type of shape or
Latoya Andersen: Well, um because Well, I I'm not sure if we should go so far in the whole fruit thing, because I think we should maybe just take the inspiration from the fruit and uh
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay,
Latoya Andersen: because
Charlotte Nolasco: so we stick with what we've got there.
Latoya Andersen: what Yeah, w I think wh wha would we're trying to get to twenty five, thirty five year olds who want it quite trendy as well they said. They wanted something that looks fancy and I think maybe fruit could be a bit of a too much of a gimmick, but something ergonomically shaped and organic, like good to hold, based on fruits and natural things like that,
Charlotte Nolasco: Mm 'kay.
Latoya Andersen: because al already we're going a bit gaudy with the yellow, you know.
Charlotte Nolasco: Mm-hmm.
Latoya Andersen: I
Virginia West: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: mean we could make it nice pale yellow.
Charlotte Nolasco: Well, it's kind of gotta be our company's yellow.
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Virginia West: Okay.
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: So again I mean like we could have, uh I mean, we could quite easily have the the main body be a different
Latoya Andersen: Yeah. Maybe we
Charlotte Nolasco: colour,
Latoya Andersen: could have
Charlotte Nolasco: but
Latoya Andersen: that
Charlotte Nolasco: have
Latoya Andersen: pale yellow and then an outside bit bright yellow with, you said, the logan the slogan.
Charlotte Nolasco: kinda going round, yeah.
Virginia West: Mm.
Latoya Andersen: Because
Charlotte Nolasco: Um I mean e even if I mean not necessarily that the um the whole body has to be of the company colour, so
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: you know um blue and yellow tend to go to we well together. So you have the main body blue with the yellow logo and slogan running
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: up one side of it kind
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: of thing.
Latoya Andersen: Uh-huh.
Virginia West: Mm-hmm.
Charlotte Nolasco: W sort of
Virginia West: Great. Um as for the energy source um, you know, almost every remote control uses just batteries, but we don't have to be limited by that. We can use a hand-dynamo. Um I don't
Charlotte Nolasco: Uh
Virginia West: know what that means, we crank
Charlotte Nolasco: It's
Virginia West: it?
Charlotte Nolasco: I think it's basically the more you move i it, it's got a wee thing inside that just kinda
Virginia West: Right, it's
Charlotte Nolasco: powers
Virginia West: like those
Charlotte Nolasco: it.
Virginia West: watches
Charlotte Nolasco: Uh
Virginia West: that you
Charlotte Nolasco: yeah.
Virginia West: c So, this
Latoya Andersen: Oh,
Virginia West: might
Latoya Andersen: a
Virginia West: be
Latoya Andersen: d
Virginia West: an idea for
Latoya Andersen: a
Virginia West: something
Latoya Andersen: dynamo?
Virginia West: that people really wanna grab,
Andrea Blood: Yeah,
Virginia West: you can shake it if it's
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: out of power.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah,
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah, I
Latoya Andersen: like
Charlotte Nolasco: like
Latoya Andersen: with
Charlotte Nolasco: that,
Latoya Andersen: those
Charlotte Nolasco: yeah.
Latoya Andersen: watches that you kind
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: of twist. Yeah
Virginia West: Okay. So
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay.
Andrea Blood: But
Latoya Andersen: that's
Virginia West: if
Latoya Andersen: quite
Virginia West: it if
Latoya Andersen: cool.
Virginia West: it's not working,
Charlotte Nolasco: You shake
Virginia West: I guess people's
Charlotte Nolasco: it and
Virginia West: natural
Charlotte Nolasco: scream at
Virginia West: reaction
Charlotte Nolasco: it.
Virginia West: anyway is to
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Virginia West: just
Andrea Blood: But
Virginia West: shake the thing.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah, it
Andrea Blood: but
Latoya Andersen: is,
Andrea Blood: do
Latoya Andersen: yeah.
Andrea Blood: you think that it will be a good idea to use dynamo, tha these type of cells? Because then people have to, well like if the cell is out
Charlotte Nolasco: It does leave
Andrea Blood: of
Charlotte Nolasco: them with
Andrea Blood: bat
Charlotte Nolasco: an obligation to
Andrea Blood: Yeah, to
Charlotte Nolasco: Especially
Andrea Blood: mo
Charlotte Nolasco: if they want to use it uh uh
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: sp uh specifically as um voice activated.
Andrea Blood: Yeah,
Charlotte Nolasco: Then
Andrea Blood: because
Virginia West: Right.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah,
Andrea Blood: most
Charlotte Nolasco: if it's just
Andrea Blood: of the
Charlotte Nolasco: sitting
Andrea Blood: people
Latoya Andersen: then
Charlotte Nolasco: on the
Latoya Andersen: they have to pick it up and then activate
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: it and then Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay, okay.
Latoya Andersen: That's true.
Virginia West: Okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: Right um what are the other options?
Virginia West: Uh there's solar power.
Andrea Blood: Uh,
Virginia West: Um.
Andrea Blood: solar power will w also not be a good idea, because then they have to keep m their mobiles outside
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Andrea Blood: in
Virginia West: Yeah.
Andrea Blood: solar energy, and the days when there is no sola
Charlotte Nolasco: I'm
Andrea Blood: sunlight
Charlotte Nolasco: I'm with uh Raj
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: on that, I
Virginia West: Okay,
Charlotte Nolasco: think,
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Virginia West: so
Charlotte Nolasco: you
Virginia West: probably
Charlotte Nolasco: know,
Virginia West: just
Charlotte Nolasco: I've got I've
Andrea Blood: What
Charlotte Nolasco: got no
Andrea Blood: we
Charlotte Nolasco: I've got a north facing
Andrea Blood: w
Charlotte Nolasco: house, there's not really
Andrea Blood: yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: ever sun
Latoya Andersen: But
Charlotte Nolasco: coming
Andrea Blood: I
Latoya Andersen: w
Charlotte Nolasco: in
Andrea Blood: think
Charlotte Nolasco: my
Latoya Andersen: like
Charlotte Nolasco: window.
Andrea Blood: we should
Latoya Andersen: just
Andrea Blood: a rechargeable
Latoya Andersen: normal light?
Charlotte Nolasco: Oh
Andrea Blood: battery
Charlotte Nolasco: that's true.
Andrea Blood: will be a good idea. They can
Charlotte Nolasco: I mean
Andrea Blood: they
Charlotte Nolasco: I
Andrea Blood: can
Charlotte Nolasco: w I
Andrea Blood: recharge
Charlotte Nolasco: w uh that
Andrea Blood: it.
Charlotte Nolasco: idea that I thought um just on the basis of like ridding them of batteries and that
Virginia West: Mm.
Charlotte Nolasco: kind of bother
Latoya Andersen: And we're
Charlotte Nolasco: is
Latoya Andersen: a very
Charlotte Nolasco: having
Latoya Andersen: environmentally
Charlotte Nolasco: a,
Latoya Andersen: friendly company,
Charlotte Nolasco: yeah, having
Latoya Andersen: aren't
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: we as
Charlotte Nolasco: a
Latoya Andersen: well?
Charlotte Nolasco: rechargeable stand, so
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: that not only it doubles
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: as a stand, but um for using it as uh recharging it, but also for using it
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: as sound recognition.
Virginia West: 'Kay.
Latoya Andersen: Like like a hand like one of those portable phones
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah
Latoya Andersen: kind
Andrea Blood: Yeah,
Latoya Andersen: of thing.
Charlotte Nolasco: that
Andrea Blood: that's
Charlotte Nolasco: kind of thing.
Virginia West: Okay.
Andrea Blood: Yeah, exactly.
Virginia West: So uh a rechargeable battery.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Virginia West: Okay.
Charlotte Nolasco: Rechargeable.
Virginia West: Um the user interface, the buttons, I guess we talked about this already.
Latoya Andersen: Mm.
Charlotte Nolasco: What's
Virginia West: Um.
Charlotte Nolasco: chip on print? What's
Virginia West: Hmm?
Charlotte Nolasco: Sorry, never mind.
Virginia West: Uh th the uh the electronics um, basically the more features we add um Oops, this one. So the more features we add the fancier chips we need to buy
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Virginia West: and put in, which adds to the cost
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Virginia West: as you can expect. Um. But uh I think we can keep it all under budget. So uh yes, so the speech thing you said our our techno our research and development department came up with some break-through.
Latoya Andersen: Mm-hmm.
Virginia West: So
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah,
Latoya Andersen: Just
Charlotte Nolasco: and if
Latoya Andersen: in time.
Charlotte Nolasco: we if we're
Virginia West: just
Charlotte Nolasco: just
Virginia West: in time.
Charlotte Nolasco: having buttons and the speech then we're getting our cheapest option of chipping.
Virginia West: Right, right.
Charlotte Nolasco: That's good. Uh woah.
Virginia West: Yeah,
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay,
Virginia West: and
Charlotte Nolasco: we're
Virginia West: keeping
Charlotte Nolasco: we're kind
Virginia West: the L_C_D_
Charlotte Nolasco: of uh
Virginia West: screen out.
Charlotte Nolasco: we're kind of um Excuse m I've just deleted that whole thing. Um we're kind of running out of time, so if you could Uh. Was that you? Um
Virginia West: Huh?
Charlotte Nolasco: that was your bit's covered, I just
Virginia West: Oh
Charlotte Nolasco: dele
Virginia West: yeah that
Charlotte Nolasco: I
Virginia West: was that
Charlotte Nolasco: just
Virginia West: was
Charlotte Nolasco: accidentally
Virginia West: it.
Charlotte Nolasco: deleted what I was supposed to say next.
Andrea Blood: Uh excuse Andrea Blood,
Charlotte Nolasco: Um,
Andrea Blood: Bri
Charlotte Nolasco: yeah.
Virginia West: So
Charlotte Nolasco: Oh, yeah.
Virginia West: control F_ eight, right?
Latoya Andersen: Yeah, mine seems to have turned off. I can't
Charlotte Nolasco: And I just
Latoya Andersen: do
Charlotte Nolasco: touch
Latoya Andersen: anything.
Charlotte Nolasco: the pad.
Andrea Blood: You just touch the pad, yeah.
Latoya Andersen: No.
Andrea Blood: No?
Charlotte Nolasco: It's actually shut down.
Latoya Andersen: It's on, but there's nothing
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay,
Latoya Andersen: on the screen.
Charlotte Nolasco: um now
Virginia West: Try uh
Charlotte Nolasco: what
Virginia West: flipping the screen
Charlotte Nolasco: we
Virginia West: down.
Charlotte Nolasco: have uh our next meeting's in half an hour
Virginia West: 'Kay.
Charlotte Nolasco: and what I would like you guys to do is work on giving Andrea Blood a model in clay.
Virginia West: Oh, I get to do it, too.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah.
Latoya Andersen: Cool.
Charlotte Nolasco: It's
Virginia West: Oh
Charlotte Nolasco: you guys.
Virginia West: neat.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah. So um, you know I mean, luckily we chose a nice simple shape.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Virginia West: Yeah,
Latoya Andersen: Mm.
Virginia West: yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: Um and further instructions will be sent by your personal coaches.
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Virginia West: Okay.
Andrea Blood: That's great.
Virginia West: Save everything to the shared documents, is that right?
Charlotte Nolasco: Uh yeah, I hope
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: I can recover this, 'cause I've accidentally deleted it.
Andrea Blood: Mm-hmm.
Charlotte Nolasco: Which doesn't really help Andrea Blood much.
Latoya Andersen: I think, I've saved mine already.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah, can you save that uh send that last one again, please, Raj, as I still
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: can't find it on the
Andrea Blood: Uh it was under a different name. I will show you, in shared documents.
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay.
Andrea Blood: Uh working components. Oh, you didn't get that.
Charlotte Nolasco: No.
Andrea Blood: I will send new.
Charlotte Nolasco: Okay, thank you.
Andrea Blood: Uh I'll put it in shared documents, again.
Charlotte Nolasco: Um yeah, Project, Project Documents.
Andrea Blood: Project documents, sorry, I put it in the shared documents.
Charlotte Nolasco: Uh right, that's
Andrea Blood: Uh yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: that's the that it goes there automatically if you put it in Project Documents. Project Documents is on the um desktop.
Andrea Blood: Right, that's great. But I cou can't open that, because it w asks uh for some username or password.
Virginia West: Oh.
Charlotte Nolasco: Really?
Andrea Blood: I'll show you.
Virginia West: Uh these lapel mics are trouble.
Andrea Blood: Ts
Charlotte Nolasco: Oh right, I think um Hold on.
Andrea Blood: Sorry. Uh.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah, I don't know if y it it just ca it just came up on my um on my agenda. S Um presumably there's clay somewhere. Um. Four.
Andrea Blood: Yeah, that's great.
Charlotte Nolasco: Whoops. Light, light, please. Light. Right, there you go.
Andrea Blood: Yeah, th thank you.
Charlotte Nolasco: Yeah, quite. And we're using this our basic chip set, so it's all
Andrea Blood: Oh sorry.
Charlotte Nolasco: good.
Virginia West: Are we done with our meeting?
Andrea Blood: Uh
Charlotte Nolasco: Um I think
Andrea Blood: excuse
Charlotte Nolasco: we're almost
Andrea Blood: Andrea Blood, Brian.
Charlotte Nolasco: done, yeah.
Andrea Blood: You have
Virginia West: Yeah.
Andrea Blood: to keep your pen separate, because I used your pen.
Charlotte Nolasco: Oh oops. Sorry
Andrea Blood: S
Charlotte Nolasco: man. Uh okay, still didn't manage to get down all the last bits so we had rechargeable and Uh. Apples. Mm-mm-mm-mm-mm. 'Kay, so we came up with that, that's okay. What's supplements? Supplements. Uh uh. See.
Latoya Andersen: Cool. Fun.
Charlotte Nolasco: I shoulda something like that. If I kn see I I knew that. I shoulda sort of engineered it so we k ended up making a diffi difficult shape.
Andrea Blood: Hmm.
Charlotte Nolasco: Just for cruelty.
Latoya Andersen: Yeah.
Andrea Blood: Hmm.
Latoya Andersen: Star fruit.
Charlotte Nolasco: I wonder
Andrea Blood: So
Charlotte Nolasco: if they mean
Andrea Blood: sh
Charlotte Nolasco: like literally make it, sort of buttons
Andrea Blood: should
Charlotte Nolasco: and everything.
Latoya Andersen: No.
Andrea Blood: Should we leave
Latoya Andersen: Oh yeah,
Andrea Blood: now,
Latoya Andersen: we can do buttons.
Andrea Blood: Brian? Or
Charlotte Nolasco: Um.
Andrea Blood: we are going to discuss something?
Charlotte Nolasco: Uh no, I think that's us our discussion over unless anybody's got questions or confusions,
Latoya Andersen: No I'm good.
Charlotte Nolasco: 'cause I'm confused.
Andrea Blood: Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: Huh?
Latoya Andersen: Okay.
Andrea Blood: Excuse Andrea Blood.
Charlotte Nolasco: Um uh we'll probably get questionnaire in a minute, it's a
Latoya Andersen: Mm.
Andrea Blood: Sorry. Thank you. Yeah.
Charlotte Nolasco: There we go. Warning, finish meeting now.
Andrea Blood: So.
Charlotte Nolasco: I rounded it up far too fast. Um. Where are we going? My Documents, that's not what I want. My Project Documents. There we go. | Andrea Blood presented the results of a market survey that indicated users' most important preferences in remote control features. He discussed trends in fashion that should be incorporated into the prototype design. Latoya Andersen compared the designs of several competitors' remotes to decide which features should be used in their own design. She discussed using voice recognition, an LCD screen, and color to make the device easier to use and to improve its look. Virginia West went over all of the internal components and materials that will be incorporated in the design. He gave a layout of the placement of the components in the device. The group decided to use a rubber or latex material to give the device a spongy feel. He discussed the color and shape of the remote with the group and the placement of the components on the device. The group discussed colors and shapes further, and decided that the remote will be yellow, and perhaps having a fruit-inspired shape. The group decided to use a rechargeable battery and recharging stand. Charlotte Nolasco instructed Latoya Andersen and Virginia West to construct the prototype. | 2 | amisum | train |
Joann Tyson: Okay.
Gail Ballard: Okay, almost there.
Sarah Baker: Okay. We'll sta I'll use the PowerPoint I. How was that, was that fun?
Joann Tyson: Mm.
Gail Ballard: Yeah, yeah.
Joann Tyson: Very fun.
Sarah Baker: Okay. Uh oh I've forgotten to mail you the minutes, but I will do.
Gail Ballard: Okay.
Sarah Baker: Upsidaisy.
Lorena Harding: Hmm.
Sarah Baker: Um Um
Lorena Harding: E
Sarah Baker: we
Lorena Harding: excuse Lorena Harding I forgot
Sarah Baker: Yeah.
Lorena Harding: my
Sarah Baker: Alright,
Lorena Harding: copy.
Sarah Baker: okay, yeah. He's gonna get his pen.
Joann Tyson: Oh right.
Sarah Baker: Um Will you guys first with your prototype um before we get to the good news?
Gail Ballard: Yeah, there's good news?
Sarah Baker: Uh
Gail Ballard: Oh.
Joann Tyson: Mm.
Sarah Baker: we have budget problems.
Gail Ballard: Oh. Cutbacks.
Sarah Baker: I'm afraid you're all sacked. Oops. I don't even have on.
Gail Ballard: Hmm.
Sarah Baker: Okay, have you
Gail Ballard: Okay.
Sarah Baker: got a presentation to make?
Lorena Harding: No, not
Sarah Baker: No.
Lorena Harding: mine
Sarah Baker: Okay
Lorena Harding: yet.
Sarah Baker: so it's
Gail Ballard: Oh.
Sarah Baker: just your your show.
Gail Ballard: Um maybe we should bring so that the camera can see. Yeah.
Joann Tyson: Okay. Sure.
Gail Ballard: Okay.
Joann Tyson: We made three
Sarah Baker: Three?
Joann Tyson: for you.
Sarah Baker: Oh.
Joann Tyson: Um one's based on the banana, one's based on the tomato and
Sarah Baker: Tomato?
Joann Tyson: the other one
Sarah Baker: What tomato?
Joann Tyson: is st
Sarah Baker: I don't recall a tomato.
Joann Tyson: Look. Oh yeah, well yeah, we had v some red left over. So.
Sarah Baker: Ah I see, okay.
Joann Tyson: Okay, so this is the um non to non uh no buttons one, or as mm few buttons as possible,
Sarah Baker: Mm-hmm.
Joann Tyson: mainly speak recognition. The yellow there is the um
Sarah Baker: Logo.
Joann Tyson: the slogan, yeah,
Sarah Baker: Okay,
Joann Tyson: incorporate,
Sarah Baker: brilliant.
Joann Tyson: it's very simple. If you do need buttons, you can flip it over, and there's some there,
Sarah Baker: Okay.
Joann Tyson: um but mainly it's speech recognition.
Sarah Baker: Okay, so the buttons would be like, you know individual users, or
Joann Tyson: Yeah.
Sarah Baker: Yeah.
Joann Tyson: Yeah and yeah they might project things onto the screen which you can do on there.
Sarah Baker: Alright, okay.
Joann Tyson: Mm I'm not sure about that. Um and this one is the one w more like the one w that we looked at earlier.
Sarah Baker: Right.
Joann Tyson: Yeah, you guys can
Sarah Baker: That's
Joann Tyson: have
Sarah Baker: groovy.
Joann Tyson: a look at that
Lorena Harding: Yeah.
Joann Tyson: if you want.
Lorena Harding: Uh can
Sarah Baker: Well I like the
Lorena Harding: I
Sarah Baker: feel of it,
Lorena Harding: have
Joann Tyson: Yeah,
Sarah Baker: I like the feel
Joann Tyson: sure.
Sarah Baker: of it.
Joann Tyson: Um that one is
Lorena Harding: Oh sorry
Joann Tyson: Oh
Lorena Harding: s
Sarah Baker: At Oh
Joann Tyson: no, it's delicate.
Sarah Baker: dear.
Joann Tyson: That's that's already got its stand that one. That's it stand.
Sarah Baker: Alright,
Joann Tyson: It does
Sarah Baker: okay.
Joann Tyson: also lie flat, but that's the that yellow stand there represents the the charging stand.
Sarah Baker: Okay,
Joann Tyson: Um
Sarah Baker: brilliant mm.
Joann Tyson: the black on the back is the slogan.
Sarah Baker: Okay, nice and obvious
Joann Tyson: Uh
Sarah Baker: there,
Joann Tyson: yeah, that Well, we
Sarah Baker: if it's
Joann Tyson: did think
Sarah Baker: standing
Joann Tyson: of
Sarah Baker: up,
Joann Tyson: that.
Sarah Baker: I guess, yeah.
Joann Tyson: Yeah, if it's standing up it's it's on there, but also we're gonna have the company name on the front, which is the little black kind of line in
Sarah Baker: Oh
Joann Tyson: the
Sarah Baker: right,
Joann Tyson: middle.
Sarah Baker: okay, brilliant. Like
Joann Tyson: So
Sarah Baker: that
Joann Tyson: um
Sarah Baker: from its centre.
Joann Tyson: and that's the um transmit the L_E_D_ thing. These are the s two scroll ones which we thought could be channel up and down and volume up and down. We n were weren't sure about putting them there, because um i it's it kind of could get bashed.
Sarah Baker: Where you're, yeah, uh were you're holding it kind of
Joann Tyson: Yeah. Well, if you hold it, you can you all can hold it, is it does actually feel quite ergonomic,
Sarah Baker: Mm-hmm.
Joann Tyson: if you've got small hands.
Sarah Baker: Yeah.
Gail Ballard: Mm.
Joann Tyson: Um,
Sarah Baker: Okay.
Joann Tyson: obviously I don't think that's real sized. It would
Sarah Baker: Yeah,
Joann Tyson: have
Sarah Baker: okay.
Joann Tyson: to be a bit
Sarah Baker: Yeah,
Joann Tyson: bigger.
Sarah Baker: scale model, yeah.
Joann Tyson: Okay. Um that's a speaker at the top, so you can speak into it like a little walkie-talkie as well for speak recognition.
Sarah Baker: Mm-hmm.
Joann Tyson: Um and um then the buttons. Yeah kind of self-explanatory, just buttons whenever you need them. Tried to keep it simple. Oh that's the charging base prongs at the bottom. We used those. And um then the
Sarah Baker: Alright, excellent.
Joann Tyson: big red button in the middle is the on and off one. It's
Sarah Baker: Okay.
Joann Tyson: not in the traditional place,
Sarah Baker: No.
Joann Tyson: but um
Sarah Baker: It's out of
Joann Tyson: it's
Sarah Baker: the way
Joann Tyson: quite an
Sarah Baker: as
Joann Tyson: obvious
Sarah Baker: well, I
Joann Tyson: place.
Sarah Baker: suppose, so. Excellent.
Joann Tyson: So there we go and and um we have the banana-based
Gail Ballard: Oh yeah, yeah.
Joann Tyson: one too.
Sarah Baker: Yep.
Gail Ballard: This one is uh, I suppose for the younger audiences.
Sarah Baker: Okay,
Gail Ballard: A a more friendly
Sarah Baker: so
Gail Ballard: type
Sarah Baker: so
Gail Ballard: of
Sarah Baker: Barney the banana.
Gail Ballard: Right, right. It's to uh induce more television watching I suppose
Sarah Baker: Ah
Gail Ballard: or
Sarah Baker: excellent, just what we need.
Joann Tyson: Yeah.
Gail Ballard: Yeah.
Lorena Harding: Mm-hmm.
Sarah Baker: Lo Sort of Loch Ness banana.
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Gail Ballard: Right, right.
Sarah Baker: Cool yeah. Well, nice to have uh options at least.
Joann Tyson: Yeah.
Gail Ballard: Yep.
Sarah Baker: 'Kay
Joann Tyson: So
Sarah Baker: and
Joann Tyson: are there any um improvements or issues
Gail Ballard: It won't
Joann Tyson: or
Gail Ballard: stand.
Sarah Baker: Oh there are issues, oh there are issues.
Gail Ballard: Just let it lie down, it wont stand.
Sarah Baker: Um main problem that we have unfortunately being finance.
Joann Tyson: Oh.
Sarah Baker: Uh, let's just enter in the um evaluation criteria. Um unfortunately the unit we are currently going to produce minus the extra scroll buttons, uh it's gonna cost
Lorena Harding: Mm.
Sarah Baker: us fourteen point six Euros.
Joann Tyson: Oh.
Sarah Baker: So
Gail Ballard: What's
Sarah Baker: we have
Gail Ballard: on the
Sarah Baker: to
Gail Ballard: uh
Sarah Baker: rea
Gail Ballard: on the left?
Sarah Baker: Sorry, I've accidentally highlighted somehow Um. There we go.
Gail Ballard: Okay.
Sarah Baker: Oh god,
Joann Tyson: Ooh.
Sarah Baker: why is it doing that? There we go. So basically, um in order to save our two Euros um I was thinking that we could have essentially the same shape, but just have it flattened.
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm. More like
Sarah Baker: Um.
Joann Tyson: a traditional remote control.
Sarah Baker: Yeah, I mean it's already got a kind of cool shape,
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Sarah Baker: so but it wouldn't have to be curved sort
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Sarah Baker: of in and out. And by doing so Oh no, hold on. Doesn't save us quite as much. I don't know what's going on with this again.
Gail Ballard: W why is the uh double curved two of them?
Sarah Baker: Oh, good point.
Lorena Harding: And
Sarah Baker: Um.
Lorena Harding: double curve on both sides? Curve. Yeah, this
Sarah Baker: That's
Lorena Harding: is double-curve,
Sarah Baker: sort
Lorena Harding: no?
Sarah Baker: of curve
Lorena Harding: This
Gail Ballard: Is
Lorena Harding: is
Gail Ballard: i
Lorena Harding: double-curve.
Sarah Baker: in and
Lorena Harding: It
Sarah Baker: out.
Lorena Harding: This one is single curve.
Gail Ballard: Mm.
Lorena Harding: 'Cause this is single curve, this is curved on both sides. So double-curve.
Sarah Baker: No, I think it means double curved as in um
Joann Tyson: Like an S_ shape.
Sarah Baker: like uh a single curve on that bottom half, and the double curved would be if it was that similar curve
Joann Tyson: Okay.
Sarah Baker: upward. Okay, I might be wrong though.
Lorena Harding: Like this, one curve on this side, one curve on that side.
Sarah Baker: I don't think that counts as a curve, I think
Lorena Harding: Hmm.
Sarah Baker: that's just a shape.
Joann Tyson: Okay.
Sarah Baker: A curvature is like the this
Lorena Harding: Maybe.
Sarah Baker: case.
Joann Tyson: Okay.
Gail Ballard: 'Cause that's the uh the biggest expense there, right.
Sarah Baker: Yeah,
Gail Ballard: got
Sarah Baker: and why
Gail Ballard: two
Sarah Baker: why
Gail Ballard: of them
Sarah Baker: I've got it two, I don't know, I can't seem to select any more however.
Gail Ballard: Okay. Well we can work around that um
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Sarah Baker: Right. No.
Gail Ballard: Cut things out. But you think it should be one.
Sarah Baker: It's meant to be one, yeah, I don't know why I put two in there,
Gail Ballard: Okay.
Sarah Baker: but um Hold on till I find it, I think this shift button might be stuck again. No maybe the shift button's stuck in.
Gail Ballard: Yeah.
Sarah Baker: Um
Lorena Harding: Mm.
Sarah Baker: okay, so
Lorena Harding: Should
Sarah Baker: that would take away three, which would give us Oh that's fine.
Gail Ballard: Yeah, so
Sarah Baker: Eleven
Gail Ballard: we're
Joann Tyson: Cool.
Sarah Baker: uh eleven Euros sixty.
Joann Tyson: Cool.
Sarah Baker: Um
Joann Tyson: So we could even add something.
Sarah Baker: We cou Oh not quite,
Gail Ballard: We should fire
Sarah Baker: have the scroll-wheel,
Gail Ballard: the accountants.
Sarah Baker: unfortunately. What?
Gail Ballard: Fire the accountants. Ah yeah, we could add things. Maybe if you click back in that bottom right cell, where you're starting from,
Sarah Baker: Yeah.
Gail Ballard: and then use the arrow keys. Does that work?
Sarah Baker: Yeah, I know, that
Gail Ballard: No
Sarah Baker: just extends
Gail Ballard: mm.
Sarah Baker: it as well.
Lorena Harding: Uh you
Sarah Baker: I
Lorena Harding: can
Sarah Baker: don't
Lorena Harding: do
Sarah Baker: know.
Lorena Harding: one thing. You just select one box outsi yeah, this box. Then move it with the help of this Okay.
Sarah Baker: It One of the buttons
Lorena Harding: Just
Sarah Baker: is sticking,
Lorena Harding: uh just
Sarah Baker: I don't know.
Lorena Harding: uh Okay, just a minute. Okay. No input, like this. Shift. No
Sarah Baker: No, it's
Lorena Harding: it's
Sarah Baker: 'cause
Lorena Harding: not.
Sarah Baker: the uh the shift button's stuck,
Lorena Harding: Yeah,
Sarah Baker: or something.
Lorena Harding: it's not working.
Gail Ballard: Is
Lorena Harding: Should
Gail Ballard: it the
Lorena Harding: we
Gail Ballard: other
Lorena Harding: ask
Gail Ballard: shift
Lorena Harding: Meli
Gail Ballard: button maybe?
Lorena Harding: Should we ask our technical expert Melissa?
Sarah Baker: No that's fine. Um we've worked out what it would be anyway.
Gail Ballard: Did you try both shift buttons? It could be
Sarah Baker: Yeah.
Gail Ballard: the other side.
Sarah Baker: Cancel. Piss off.
Gail Ballard: That's too bad.
Sarah Baker: Oh well, never mind. Um. Right, so that's finances and I dunno what we what could we reckon we could add? Um
Joann Tyson: Well maybe we could add something, but maybe if What
Sarah Baker: Well I suppose
Joann Tyson: do you
Sarah Baker: that's
Joann Tyson: th
Sarah Baker: our that's
Joann Tyson: We're
Sarah Baker: that's
Joann Tyson: trying
Sarah Baker: our
Joann Tyson: to
Sarah Baker: design
Joann Tyson: save
Sarah Baker: that
Joann Tyson: money,
Sarah Baker: we've got.
Joann Tyson: so. Yeah,
Sarah Baker: So
Joann Tyson: if we're happy with the design there's no point in spending money, if we don't have to.
Sarah Baker: Yeah.
Joann Tyson: But if there is anything you think we've missed out there, then, you know, feel free to add it. Maybe I mean obviously it would be bigger so there might be more space for the the slogan on the front, because it's
Sarah Baker: Yeah
Joann Tyson: not in an
Sarah Baker: yeah.
Joann Tyson: ideal place right now.
Sarah Baker: Well that's that's uh Okay, so project evaluation. We have under twelve Euros fifty. Project process, how do we think that went? Are we happy?
Gail Ballard: Oh.
Joann Tyson: Mm.
Gail Ballard: Yeah I think we have a a winning product.
Sarah Baker: Okay. Evaluation. Oh we've been writing this up for m
Joann Tyson: I think
Sarah Baker: months.
Joann Tyson: it went quite smoothly.
Sarah Baker: Uh room for creativity, were we happy with that?
Joann Tyson: W I think we were very creative.
Sarah Baker: No, I mea I think it means sort of individually.
Joann Tyson: Oh right, okay.
Sarah Baker: Yes, no, maybe?
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Sarah Baker: Okay. Groovy. So uh we're just gonna. Uh yeah, okay. Teamwork? Leadership, sorry.
Gail Ballard: Great
Joann Tyson: Excellent
Gail Ballard: leadership.
Joann Tyson: leadership.
Sarah Baker: Thank you very much. You're all get you're all getting a raise. Uh teamwork. I thought went well.
Gail Ballard: Yeah,
Lorena Harding: Yeah.
Gail Ballard: yeah.
Joann Tyson: Yeah,
Sarah Baker: Yeah.
Joann Tyson: everyone got enough input, I think.
Sarah Baker: Uh and well means, yeah.
Lorena Harding: Yeah,
Sarah Baker: The
Lorena Harding: we
Sarah Baker: technical stuff was brilliant. Let's
Joann Tyson: Yeah.
Sarah Baker: buy more.
Lorena Harding: Yeah.
Gail Ballard: These
Sarah Baker: I don't
Gail Ballard: pens
Sarah Baker: know what, new
Gail Ballard: are
Sarah Baker: ideas
Gail Ballard: are neat
Sarah Baker: found,
Gail Ballard: though.
Sarah Baker: means, to be honest.
Lorena Harding: Yeah, these are new ideas, like glow-in-the-dark or something like that. We discussed all the new ideas, but of course we couldn't reach any proper goals, we couldn't use these, but we h we are using these scroll buttons like this.
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Sarah Baker: Mm-hmm.
Lorena Harding: These are new ideas we And new shapes, everything.
Joann Tyson: Yeah.
Sarah Baker: Mm 'kay.
Lorena Harding: At le
Sarah Baker: Groovy.
Lorena Harding: Yeah.
Sarah Baker: So just general thumbs up for all of us then.
Lorena Harding: Hmm.
Sarah Baker: That kind of unfortunately is too quick.
Joann Tyson: Okay.
Lorena Harding: Hmm.
Gail Ballard: Okay.
Joann Tyson: Well um.
Sarah Baker: Uh. I suppose yeah.
Gail Ballard: Uh
Sarah Baker: Um.
Gail Ballard: so let's talk about our bonuses and the raises we're getting
Sarah Baker: That's
Gail Ballard: for this,
Sarah Baker: it,
Gail Ballard: right.
Sarah Baker: um I think another couple of days holiday pay might be
Joann Tyson: Mm.
Sarah Baker: well in order for all of you.
Gail Ballard: Right, right.
Sarah Baker: Uh Let's see if I can get this bloody thing to work.
Gail Ballard: Uh
Sarah Baker: Whoops.
Gail Ballard: maybe we should start cleaning up the clay.
Joann Tyson: Yeah, maybe.
Lorena Harding: So
Sarah Baker: Does it go back in, does it? Reusable.
Gail Ballard: Something we
Sarah Baker: I
Gail Ballard: should
Sarah Baker: don't know
Gail Ballard: get.
Sarah Baker: what this is
Lorena Harding: So
Sarah Baker: but it's really really annoying.
Lorena Harding: Uh Brian, have
Sarah Baker: Uh-huh.
Lorena Harding: you have you finished?
Sarah Baker: Um
Lorena Harding: Uh
Sarah Baker: I have, yes.
Lorena Harding: mine needs also this.
Sarah Baker: Huh?
Lorena Harding: At last mine is also the presentation.
Sarah Baker: Oh right, okay, you've got more,
Joann Tyson: Oh,
Sarah Baker: okay.
Joann Tyson: you got
Lorena Harding: Yeah,
Joann Tyson: a presentation,
Sarah Baker: Sorry
Joann Tyson: sorry.
Sarah Baker: uh.
Lorena Harding: yeah.
Gail Ballard: Oh ok
Sarah Baker: It didn't bother to tell
Lorena Harding: S
Sarah Baker: Lorena Harding that on this thing. Is it? Okay.
Lorena Harding: Uh
Sarah Baker: Doesn't tell Lorena Harding.
Lorena Harding: is the project evaluated, that is mine.
Sarah Baker: Oh you're doing that.
Lorena Harding: Yeah.
Sarah Baker: We evaluated ourselves, we thought we were great.
Joann Tyson: Yeah.
Gail Ballard: Uh.
Joann Tyson: Mm, love to eat that
Gail Ballard: Anybody
Joann Tyson: now. Kind of a green
Sarah Baker: Mm.
Joann Tyson: banana now.
Gail Ballard: Clay covered banana.
Joann Tyson: It's this as well, sorry, we forgot to mention it'll be made out of kind of a rubbery latex, new material that we've got.
Sarah Baker: O okay,
Joann Tyson: I've got.
Sarah Baker: hold on.
Gail Ballard: blue.
Sarah Baker: I wonder w which cell do I want.
Gail Ballard: It's fun to touch.
Joann Tyson: Yeah.
Lorena Harding: So.
Sarah Baker: Okay,
Lorena Harding: Yeah.
Sarah Baker: I didn't realise you had that bit.
Joann Tyson: Oh could you pass the tomato
Lorena Harding: So.
Joann Tyson: please. Sorry. Thank you.
Lorena Harding: So now is the final evaluation, final evaluation of the uh uh of our product.
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Lorena Harding: How we are going to means uh at what standard what standard whether it meets our standards or not. How mu What rating we will give to these products. So of course this is will be a team work, w we together have to decide wha what rating we will give to this product and everything.
Sarah Baker: Okay.
Lorena Harding: So what methodology I will tell you on what basis we are going to discuss all this. We will give the rating to this product based on the user requirements, whether it meets the user requirements or not, this product. Then trends, whether it is as fashion trends or not? Means because we have already stated that people do prefer fashionable things nowadays.
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Lorena Harding: So this is also an important factor for our evaluation also. Then marketing strategy of the company. As we have already discussed that our company is quite in the market, not only in terms of providing quality products, not only in pro providing latest technologies, but also in terms of providing environmental s
Joann Tyson: Sorry. Sorry, carry on.
Lorena Harding: Yeah. So but also in terms of providing environmental safe products, uh yeah like uh keeping uh keeping in mind all the safety issues. So Now comes the criteria rating with seven point scale.
Sarah Baker: Okay.
Lorena Harding: I'm having this scale this scale,
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Lorena Harding: so we have to do it on a board.
Joann Tyson: Okay.
Sarah Baker: Alright, okay. The board working again, is
Lorena Harding: the
Sarah Baker: it?
Lorena Harding: user requirem I think.
Gail Ballard: Do we have the uh the marker for the board?
Joann Tyson: Um.
Sarah Baker: Uh.
Gail Ballard: There it is.
Lorena Harding: Thank you. So.
Lorena Harding: So these are the three crite criterias for our evaluation of our product.
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Lorena Harding: First of all uh comes user requirement. So we will see whether this product meets all user requirements or not. I I will first I would like to have your views, what do you think whether it meets all user requirements or not?
Joann Tyson: Um I think Yeah, it did. It
Lorena Harding: S
Joann Tyson: had all the basic buttons that they needed as well as the uh new technology that people said they wanted.
Sarah Baker: Yeah.
Joann Tyson: Um
Sarah Baker: When
Joann Tyson: so.
Sarah Baker: the user requirement is essentially just to operate
Joann Tyson: Does it
Sarah Baker: the
Joann Tyson: work?
Sarah Baker: T_V_, so
Joann Tyson: Yeah.
Sarah Baker: yeah, of
Joann Tyson: So.
Sarah Baker: course we haven't
Lorena Harding: So
Sarah Baker: actually got a working
Lorena Harding: what do
Sarah Baker: model
Lorena Harding: you think
Sarah Baker: yet.
Lorena Harding: you will personally give.
Joann Tyson: I would say seven.
Lorena Harding: Seven. Uh.
Joann Tyson: Seven is good, yeah, isn't it? I can't True or false? No sorry tr one
Sarah Baker: One, yeah.
Joann Tyson: is true.
Lorena Harding: Uh one is means highest ranking,
Joann Tyson: Yeah.
Lorena Harding: okay. But I think highest ranking is seven,
Sarah Baker: No
Lorena Harding: or one?
Sarah Baker: it's
Gail Ballard: No
Sarah Baker: it's
Gail Ballard: that's
Sarah Baker: like
Gail Ballard: false.
Sarah Baker: true is one end,
Lorena Harding: Okay,
Sarah Baker: and false
Lorena Harding: right
Sarah Baker: is the oth
Lorena Harding: right.
Joann Tyson: Okay, so
Lorena Harding: So
Joann Tyson: one.
Lorena Harding: it's one for from your point of view.
Joann Tyson: Yep.
Lorena Harding: And what do you say our Industrial
Gail Ballard: Uh.
Lorena Harding: Expert?
Gail Ballard: It's hard to know. I I give it a two.
Lorena Harding: Uh d you can you can tell on on the like I think she has given her views on the basis of design, because she was our i Interface Expert.
Gail Ballard: Okay.
Lorena Harding: But you can give your views based on technology, whether the technology meets the requirements of the customers or not?
Gail Ballard: Um yeah, I think i it might even exceed it um. But I guess there is a kind of a shortage of buttons. Um I'm gonna give it a two.
Lorena Harding: Two.
Gail Ballard: Two.
Lorena Harding: And what about uh you, Brian?
Sarah Baker: Oh, I'll go for a one.
Lorena Harding: You will go for one.
Sarah Baker: Basic requirements
Lorena Harding: Okay.
Sarah Baker: but of the pro of the project.
Lorena Harding: Uh for Lorena Harding personally it is everything fine, it may be having good design, it may be uh meeting all the requirements of the customers like technology-wise, price-wise, but there is one thing which limits the customers, like we are having only two, three designs, like we are having one banana design and the other one is orange,
Joann Tyson: Mm
Lorena Harding: and
Joann Tyson: yellow.
Lorena Harding: Uh yeah, lower
Sarah Baker: Yeah
Lorena Harding: end. And the third
Sarah Baker: th
Lorena Harding: one is what you ge uh that is not a f fruit look.
Joann Tyson: Uh-huh.
Lorena Harding: But if
Sarah Baker: Come
Lorena Harding: a
Sarah Baker: on
Lorena Harding: person
Sarah Baker: that was the tha
Lorena Harding: doesn't like banana, or orange, you are limiting him.
Joann Tyson: Uh-huh.
Lorena Harding: No, don't
Sarah Baker: 'Kay.
Lorena Harding: buy our product, because we are l we like this only.
Joann Tyson: Okay.
Lorena Harding: So we are showing our preference for particular fruits, two or three kinds rather, and
Sarah Baker: Being fruitist.
Lorena Harding: Yeah.
Joann Tyson: Is that
Lorena Harding: So.
Joann Tyson: no is that not trends?
Lorena Harding: Uh no, uh personally as a Marketing Expert I don't believe that, because whatever companies they launch their products in the shape of fruits, they give a range of products, a range of shapes,
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Lorena Harding: Some children like to buy banana shape, some apple shape, some even pineapple shape, some orange shape.
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Lorena Harding: So you can what shape a person will like. So in this case giving only one or two choices we are lim limiting our customers. And by
Joann Tyson: Uh-huh.
Lorena Harding: limiting them, we are limiting our sales, limiting our profit also.
Joann Tyson: But in electronics, I think, it's not q always quite so um you don't always have so many choices as with chocolates.
Joann Tyson: We were coming up with one product.
Lorena Harding: Uh maybe. Okay but
Joann Tyson: No,
Lorena Harding: I
Joann Tyson: I mean
Lorena Harding: will
Joann Tyson: uh obviously
Lorena Harding: I will
Joann Tyson: your
Lorena Harding: personally
Joann Tyson: opinion, I'm just trying to
Lorena Harding: won't give it beyond three.
Joann Tyson: Okay.
Lorena Harding: So we can
Sarah Baker: He's a tough cookie.
Lorena Harding: Yeah, on an average we can think three, four sevenths, maybe. Three or four? Uh, no sorry, it should
Sarah Baker: Six.
Lorena Harding: be
Sarah Baker: Five or six.
Joann Tyson: What are we doing?
Lorena Harding: No
Gail Ballard: What are
Lorena Harding: sorry,
Gail Ballard: we doing?
Lorena Harding: sorry, sorry,
Joann Tyson: Adding
Lorena Harding: sorry,
Joann Tyson: them
Lorena Harding: we
Joann Tyson: up?
Lorena Harding: are doing a very
Gail Ballard: We're gonna
Lorena Harding: wrong
Gail Ballard: average
Lorena Harding: thing.
Gail Ballard: them?
Lorena Harding: Yeah, yeah, we are taking everything,
Gail Ballard: Okay.
Lorena Harding: and that's
Joann Tyson: Oh.
Lorena Harding: I have taken
Gail Ballard: So
Lorena Harding: it very
Gail Ballard: seven
Lorena Harding: wrongly.
Gail Ballard: fourths.
Lorena Harding: Yeah uh
Gail Ballard: About one
Lorena Harding: three
Gail Ballard: point
Lorena Harding: four four
Gail Ballard: f
Lorena Harding: two six
Gail Ballard: one point
Lorena Harding: seven
Gail Ballard: eight.
Lorena Harding: seven sev Yeah one pe exactly. So we can say one or two.
Gail Ballard: Okay.
Joann Tyson: Okay.
Lorena Harding: because it is one point eight
Sarah Baker: Oh I see.
Lorena Harding: uh two, so we will do
Gail Ballard: Yeah
Lorena Harding: two.
Gail Ballard: round it up to two.
Lorena Harding: Yeah.
Joann Tyson: Okay, yeah.
Lorena Harding: So
Gail Ballard: So trends.
Lorena Harding: where were the trends.
Gail Ballard: Can you explain what you want us to write there?
Lorena Harding: Sorry?
Gail Ballard: How it how conforms to the current trends?
Lorena Harding: Yeah, again the the fashion trends, this also like whether it it will be fashionable to have these products in the
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Lorena Harding: uh as a fruit shape or something.
Joann Tyson: Okay.
Lorena Harding: Uh.
Joann Tyson: Well um going on uh the specifications that we had, that fruit and vegetables are quite popular, and that people like something that is good to look at and not many buttons, I would give it um, well, because it's hard to make a fruit good to look at, that that looks cool, you know, so I would actually give it a three. Tha three or four, I'm not sure. Three.
Lorena Harding: Okay.
Joann Tyson: Go
Lorena Harding: Yeah.
Joann Tyson: for three. That's fine.
Lorena Harding: Uh
Gail Ballard: 'Kay. As far as the uh technology it its' got the latest trends in speech technology, but it's missing the screen, as we said, um but it does have the push-buttons, or the scroll-buttons, um but it doesn't have that fancy solar power or the the vibrating energy mechanism. So I give it a a four. I'd give it a kinda middle of the road for
Joann Tyson: Mm.
Gail Ballard: for technology.
Sarah Baker: Yeah, I am sort of pret uh Just the fruit does Lorena Harding in, I mean uh it might it might be trendy to some, but I'm just not swallowing the fruit, so
Joann Tyson: Yeah.
Sarah Baker: um Uh also uh I would have liked to have seen the L_C_D_ screen in it. Um so yeah I'd say about four as well.
Lorena Harding: Okay. Uh personally I wi uh I think that in terms of trends, these products are quite good, like, these products are in fruit shape, because that wha people now our fashion trend shows that people like everything all f everything that is being advertised, like clothes, shoes, and everything is being
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Lorena Harding: advertised in the form of fruits and vegetables, or getting them or showing some association with them. So and in this way our product is good. And the second thing, now people don't want any complicated or bulky products and ours is quite simple and quite handy.
Joann Tyson: Mm-hmm.
Lorena Harding: So that is also ef that also Our product meets the f the fashion uh trends of the market. And yes. It is cus spongy also. So they can play with it, it's quite good. So then I think, maybe I can give it two. So four five ten thirteen thirteen. So we can Is it fine? So what
Gail Ballard: Yeah.
Lorena Harding: about company strategy?
Gail Ballard: Well
Joann Tyson: Um.
Gail Ballard: it was yellow.
Joann Tyson: Yeah, the company strategy, okay. Um there was lot of discussing, that was good. Um I feel I got my say. Um so I'd give the company strategy a two.
Lorena Harding: Okay.
Gail Ballard: Well, I think it's the the remote control conforms to the the company strategy.
Joann Tyson: Okay.
Sarah Baker: Yeah,
Gail Ballard: Is that the question?
Sarah Baker: yeah.
Joann Tyson: Is it? Okay.
Gail Ballard: Um.
Joann Tyson: Okay, so one or two.
Gail Ballard: Yeah.
Joann Tyson: One. Okay, just leave it, it's fine.
Gail Ballard: I'll go with two.
Lorena Harding: So what about you, Brian?
Sarah Baker: Um yeah, a three. Pretty much kept to the company strategy, so I would go for a a one, as we not only kept it, but we were limited by
Joann Tyson: Mm.
Lorena Harding: Yeah, and Lorena Harding also, like, this product Lorena Harding uh Lorena Harding uh Lorena Harding uh this meets all company strategy like our product should be as per customers' requirement, as per latest technology, and it should be environmental safe. So since our product meets all these requirements, so I would also prefer to give it rank one. So four six
Gail Ballard: So one
Lorena Harding: six
Gail Ballard: and a half.
Joann Tyson: Yeah,
Lorena Harding: half.
Joann Tyson: one.
Lorena Harding: So we can say two or one
Gail Ballard: A two.
Lorena Harding: Okay. So th seven seven. Uh overall we are getting two something, but we can round it as two.
Gail Ballard: Yep.
Joann Tyson: Okay.
Sarah Baker: Cool,
Lorena Harding: Yeah.
Sarah Baker: groovy.
Lorena Harding: So I
Gail Ballard: S
Lorena Harding: think overall uh evaluation of our product is quite good.
Sarah Baker: Cool.
Lorena Harding: So we can launch it. Yeah.
Sarah Baker: Brilliant.
Joann Tyson: Woo-hoo.
Sarah Baker: In which case we are done. 'Cause we've evaluated and we are within budget.
Joann Tyson: Cool.
Gail Ballard: Okay.
Lorena Harding: So
Sarah Baker: Champagne lunch
Lorena Harding: yeah.
Joann Tyson: Yeah.
Sarah Baker: anyone?
Gail Ballard: Uh.
Lorena Harding: Great. | Joann Tyson and Gail Ballard presented their prototypes to the group. Two prototypes featured different fruit shapes, with one including speech recognition instead of a large number of buttons. It also featured scroll wheels for channel control. The other prototype was designed like a banana with children users in mind. Sarah Baker announced to the group that with all of their desired features, the project would go over the alotted budget; after a reanalysis of the features of the prototype, the project came in under the budget instead. It was decided that another feature could possibly be added. The group evaluated their effectiveness as a team and felt that all members worked well together and could be creative, and that the project had very good leadership. Lorena Harding led an evaluation of the prototype according to the initial project goals; the evaluation showed that most of the goals had been sufficiently satisfied in order to launch the product. | 2 | amisum | train |
Violeta Evans: ...
Mary Angelovich: Okay. So, this is uh first meeting of design project. Um and I um like to show you the agenda for the meeting, I don't know if it was sent round to all of you.
Violeta Evans: Mm, yeah.
Mary Angelovich: Maybe
Violeta Evans: I
Mary Angelovich: not.
Violeta Evans: receive
Mary Angelovich: Anyway,
Violeta Evans: it.
Mary Angelovich: this is the the plan for today's meeting is um firstly just to introduce the project briefly, um although I'm sure you've actually got some of the information already. Then the main purpose is to so that we get to know each other a little bit more.
Beverly Brunet: Mm-hmm.
Mary Angelovich: Um then we practice using some of the tools that we'll be using during the the course of the design project and the meetings um specifically the whiteboard over there. Um then we need to go through the specifics of our project plan um and discuss come up with some preliminary ideas about it. And then that's it. So we've got twenty five minutes to do that, that's until eleven twenty five. S so any
Beverly Brunet: so sh.
Mary Angelovich: any questions? Is i
Violeta Evans: Not at this point.
Mary Angelovich: not at this point. So this is our project. What we're aiming to do is to create a new remote control for a television. Um we want it to be something original, something trendy and also something user friendly, so it has to be quite intuitive that people are able to use this product.
Mary Angelovich: The method that we're going to use to complete the project, that has three components as such. There's the functional design of the the remote control. We're going the way we'll do that I think is to to work individually initially and then come together for meetings to to work on that. Um similarly with the conceptual design, we'll start off by working individually with our own expertise on our own laptops and then we'll bring what we've done together. Um and then the detailed design will come after that. We'll pull it all together.
Beverly Brunet: I'm a bit confused about uh what's the difference between the functional design and conceptual design? Uh i is it just uh more detail, uh as I understand it?
Mary Angelovich: I think it th w we're talking the the functional design is more your um area of things where you'll be we want to look at what functions we need in the remote control and
Beverly Brunet: Right.
Mary Angelovich: what what specific things it it has to do but the conceptual design is um perhaps bigger than that and includes the
Beverly Brunet: How
Mary Angelovich: how people
Beverly Brunet: how
Mary Angelovich: are going
Beverly Brunet: it
Mary Angelovich: to
Beverly Brunet: will
Mary Angelovich: use
Beverly Brunet: be done.
Mary Angelovich: it and and that kind of thing.
Beverly Brunet: So whe where do we identify the components of our uh product? Uh I think it's it's in the conceptual design phase that we identify the it's in the conceptual design phase that we identify the components of our product?
Mary Angelovich: Um I think we'll we'll start that initially with the functional design
Beverly Brunet: Okay.
Mary Angelovich: already but then yeah. Okay, so that's just a brief overview of the p the the project itself. Um what I'd like us to do now is simultaneously introduce ourselves and start using some of the tools that we're using for for the project, specifically the whiteboard.
Beverly Brunet: Hmm.
Mary Angelovich: So each person in turn, I'd like us to go up to the whiteboard, the pen's just underneath it there and draw your favourite animal and then tell everyone what the f your favourite characteristics of that animal are and while you're doing that tell us your name, what your role is and perhaps how your animal relates to the role that you're taking in this project.
Margaret Shell: Why are you looking at Margaret Shell?
Mary Angelovich: Would you like to go first?
Margaret Shell: Do I have a choice? Okay. Ooh ooh,
Mary Angelovich: Oh,
Margaret Shell: things falling everywhere.
Mary Angelovich: yeah,
Margaret Shell: Right, okay.
Mary Angelovich: p put them in pockets.
Margaret Shell: Cool.
Mary Angelovich: You
Margaret Shell: Okay.
Mary Angelovich: don't have to hurry, we've got plenty of time.
Margaret Shell: So, my name's Cat and I'm really not very good at this whole drawing malarkey so um
Margaret Shell: Okay.
Mary Angelovich: It's got no eyes.
Margaret Shell: Oh, good point. Ah, the eyes always ruin it. Right. Okay, what do it's eyes like?
Margaret Shell: Okay, cool. Um this is a rabbit.
Mary Angelovich: I thought it might be a cat.
Violeta Evans: Yeah well origi uh at first I thought it was going to be cat.
Margaret Shell: Yeah, I don't think it's furry enough,
Violeta Evans: Yeah
Margaret Shell: make
Violeta Evans: now
Margaret Shell: it a
Violeta Evans: I
Margaret Shell: fluffy
Violeta Evans: now
Margaret Shell: rabbit.
Violeta Evans: I understand now, yeah.
Mary Angelovich: Yeah I can see by the ears.
Violeta Evans: Yeah.
Margaret Shell: Okay, right, it's a fluffy rabbit, blue. Rabbits don't come in blue but you know. Um okay and I like it because it's small
Mary Angelovich: Mm.
Margaret Shell: and it's fluffy. And one day you'll be able to getical genetically modify them and they will come in pink.
Violeta Evans: Ah.
Margaret Shell: Okay?
Mary Angelovich: Excellent,
Beverly Brunet: Mm.
Mary Angelovich: and what's your what's your role within the team?
Margaret Shell: I am the um I need my notebook, mm ooh top banana. Thank you. Okay, cool, I am Margaret Shell um so like I'm gonna be doing the apparently according to the little guy in the computer that knows everything the user g requirements specification of the functional design, um
Beverly Brunet: Mm-hmm.
Margaret Shell: trend watching in the conceptual design and product evad-valuation in the detailed design
Mary Angelovich: Mm-hmm.
Beverly Brunet: Okay.
Margaret Shell: um so yeah.
Mary Angelovich: And more
Beverly Brunet: 'Kay.
Mary Angelovich: about yourself, you're from?
Margaret Shell: Um I'm from Leicester,
Mary Angelovich: Mm-hmm.
Margaret Shell: um second year. Um what else do you want to know? I like sports um yeah, aerobics, kickboxing, spinning um and uh
Mary Angelovich: But not with rabbits.
Margaret Shell: not with rabbits, no
Beverly Brunet: Mm.
Margaret Shell: no. And vets, I like vets as well. And yeah um and I like cocktails, especially pink ones. Okay?
Beverly Brunet: Cool.
Mary Angelovich: Excellent,
Margaret Shell: Cool.
Mary Angelovich: to match the rabbit.
Violeta Evans: Okay. Um so my name is Maarika. Where's the pen? Okay.
Mary Angelovich: There's a an if you have not enough room there's an eraser there and you can rub
Violeta Evans: Yeah,
Mary Angelovich: it off.
Violeta Evans: well, or I can make it smaller. Uh so um um I'm the Interface Designer in this project and my favourite animal I, m I mean I'm not so sure because I'm not so so very um familiar with all kinds of animals, but I do like dogs. Oh, sorry, maybe I should have shouldn't have said it beforehand but
Beverly Brunet: Mm.
Violeta Evans: mm hmm. Um well, there are different kinds of dogs, but okay um.
Beverly Brunet: That's not bad at
Mary Angelovich: Ah
Beverly Brunet: all.
Mary Angelovich: it looks like a dog.
Beverly Brunet: Yep.
Violeta Evans: Okay.
Margaret Shell: Is a bit more impressive than my rabbit. I think it needs four legs if it's gonna walk though.
Violeta Evans: Yeah, maybe it has some colourful patches, yeah. Um
Mary Angelovich: the other
Violeta Evans: yeah
Mary Angelovich: legs
Violeta Evans: and
Mary Angelovich: are on the other
Violeta Evans: I
Mary Angelovich: side.
Violeta Evans: do like dogs because they are good friends to people and they are loyal. Mm, well that's compared to some other animals like cats. Um they're really much more fun because they are not so independent. Um yeah maybe maybe the fact that they protect their home as well, yeah. Um what it has to do with with my role in the project is hard to say. Uh I hope to be loyal to the project and not to n not to um let people doing similar projects know the details of our project or something, yeah.
Mary Angelovich: And where where are you from?
Violeta Evans: I'm from Estonia uh,
Mary Angelovich: Estonia.
Violeta Evans: yep. Um so is there anything else you'd like to know? Oh, right, my roles, um so um in the different um stages of the design, so at first I will be responsible for um for yeah, designing the technical functions of the um um of the remote control uh then in the in the conceptual design stage I need to um come up with uh interface concept and then in the last um stage I will be responsible for the int infa for the user interface design. Okay,
Beverly Brunet: Thank you.
Violeta Evans: that's it.
Beverly Brunet: Okay um I'll do some I'll rub the features and let the drawing stay. 'Kay um my name is Gaurav. Um my favourite animal one of my favourite animals is a cow. I've got no idea how to draw a cow.
Mary Angelovich: Good luck.
Beverly Brunet: Uh this is going to be
Margaret Shell: They're not just like a big round body and then some really skinny legs and then just
Beverly Brunet: Yeah,
Margaret Shell: some
Beverly Brunet: that'll
Margaret Shell: horns.
Beverly Brunet: do. Okay, so let let Margaret Shell draw the body first.
Mary Angelovich: Mm.
Beverly Brunet: Big, round body, really skinny legs and they've got a long tail and a long face.
Mary Angelovich: It's eating.
Margaret Shell: It looks like Eeyore.
Beverly Brunet: And there is some grass there.
Mary Angelovich: Yeah.
Beverly Brunet: So this is what I like about cows that
Margaret Shell: Horns,
Beverly Brunet: they just keeps
Margaret Shell: draw some
Beverly Brunet: sitting
Margaret Shell: horns.
Beverly Brunet: there eating grass, they do not disturb anybody um they're kind of Buddhist in a way. So yeah, I like cows. Um my my role in the project is um uh Beverly Brunet, so I'm supposed to design all the details of of the product um ho how it works and whatever it'll mm take during the functional role, what are the various functions that have to be performed by it uh during the um conceptual design, what are the various components of it and um finally, I'm not too sure what was the last part. Um the detailed design, I I guess it will again be the identification of the components and how they integrate with each other. Um I'm from India. Uh I'm doing my P_H_D_ in Psycholinguistics, I sit at the Department of Psychology. Yeah.
Mary Angelovich: Excellent.
Beverly Brunet: Thank you.
Violeta Evans: Thanks.
Mary Angelovich: Right, now now it's my turn obviously.
Mary Angelovich: Okay,
Beverly Brunet: That doesn't
Mary Angelovich: here's
Beverly Brunet: look
Mary Angelovich: a space.
Beverly Brunet: like a cow, does
Violeta Evans: It
Beverly Brunet: it?
Violeta Evans: looks very very cute.
Mary Angelovich: Yeah, I like the cow. I'm
Violeta Evans: Yeah.
Mary Angelovich: Jen.
Violeta Evans: Mm-hmm.
Mary Angelovich: Um I like dogs too, but I can't do that already because I can't draw a dog as well as you can. I like Mm.
Margaret Shell: Is that a lizard?
Beverly Brunet: No way.
Mary Angelovich: Hmm.
Violeta Evans: Wow.
Mary Angelovich: It's a gecko.
Violeta Evans: Ah,
Beverly Brunet: Ah
Violeta Evans: a gecko,
Beverly Brunet: okay.
Violeta Evans: okay.
Mary Angelovich: Yeah.
Margaret Shell: Is there a difference?
Violeta Evans: Is a ar
Mary Angelovich: They're
Violeta Evans: are they also like lizards or are they
Mary Angelovich: Yeah,
Violeta Evans: yeah,
Mary Angelovich: they're l
Violeta Evans: they
Mary Angelovich: it's
Violeta Evans: are
Mary Angelovich: a kind of lizard.
Violeta Evans: mm-hmm.
Mary Angelovich: And I I like geckos because they remind Margaret Shell of warm places
Violeta Evans: Ah.
Mary Angelovich: and,
Beverly Brunet: Uh-huh.
Mary Angelovich: and where I was living in Cambodia they used to live in my house and they were on the ceiling and they would make little gecko noises
Violeta Evans: Mm-hmm.
Mary Angelovich: in
Violeta Evans: I hope
Mary Angelovich: the
Violeta Evans: you
Mary Angelovich: evening.
Violeta Evans: don't like snakes, do you?
Mary Angelovich: I don't like snakes. I come
Violeta Evans: Okay.
Mary Angelovich: from Australia and we have nasty snakes.
Violeta Evans: Mm-hmm.
Mary Angelovich: That's where I'm from, Australia. I'm from Melbourne and I'm your Project Manager for today and
Beverly Brunet: Mm.
Mary Angelovich: my role is basically to keep things going and make sure that you all work together in a productive way, so that by the end of the day we come up with a great product.
Violeta Evans: Wonderful.
Mary Angelovich: Okay.
Beverly Brunet: Thank you.
Mary Angelovich: So, let's see what's next in the PowerPoint presentation. So,
Margaret Shell: If
Mary Angelovich: I've
Margaret Shell: you
Mary Angelovich: just
Margaret Shell: right
Mary Angelovich: thought
Margaret Shell: click
Mary Angelovich: yeah
Margaret Shell: on it
Mary Angelovich: I've
Margaret Shell: you
Mary Angelovich: just
Margaret Shell: can
Mary Angelovich: thought about this that we could even put it much more professionally
Beverly Brunet: Mm-hmm.
Mary Angelovich: as there we go. Okay, so this is the um overall budget for our project. We've got um we're planning to sell these remote controls for that means we've got five minutes. Um we're planning to sell the remote controls for twenty five Euros each. Um and with that we're aiming for a profit of fifty million Euros. And that's selling them on the international market, not just in the U_K_. Um so to do that our finance people estimate that we need production costs of maximum twelve and a half Euro so that we can reach that profit target.
Mary Angelovich: So that's something to keep in mind while you're designing. Okay. Hmm. This is let Margaret Shell just skip ahead to see that's the last thing, okay. We've only got a couple of minutes. Does anyone have any first ideas to bounce around about um what we're thinking of this
Violeta Evans: Yep.
Mary Angelovich: remote control?
Violeta Evans: I'm just wondering whether whether there is like any special feature that we want to have w want this remote control have as opposed to the already existing ones.
Mary Angelovich: Mm-hmm. I think that's probably something that w it's best if we take away with us, but if
Beverly Brunet: Mm-hmm.
Mary Angelovich: we all have a think, when we go away from the meeting, what specific things could be um included in this remote control that that
Beverly Brunet: I think uh
Mary Angelovich: are out
Beverly Brunet: i
Mary Angelovich: of
Beverly Brunet: in
Mary Angelovich: the ordinary.
Beverly Brunet: the beginning uh one thing was that was mentioned was that it should be mm trendy, user friendly and original so um I think your point is relevant as far as the originality is concerned, that we should provide some features that are quite unique
Mary Angelovich: Something
Beverly Brunet: to this.
Mary Angelovich: something new.
Margaret Shell: Yeah, I was looking
Beverly Brunet: Mm.
Margaret Shell: at the website, and the other things that they've made and I like put down some like inspirational words like that I got from looking at the pictures.
Mary Angelovich: Mm-hmm.
Margaret Shell: So the motto is um we put the fashion in electronics and um so it's something that is sleek and stylish but it's still functional,
Mary Angelovich: Mm-hmm.
Margaret Shell: you know? So I'm kind of thinking, you know like those phones that they have, the new generation ones, where they don't actually have any buttons on them and stuff like that.
Mary Angelovich: Uh-huh.
Beverly Brunet: Alright.
Margaret Shell: You know, so something heading towards that, so it's not overly I mean I don't know what h most of the buttons do on my remote controls, so I figure how many do you need, you know?
Mary Angelovich: Mm-hmm.
Beverly Brunet: Mm.
Margaret Shell: Okay.
Mary Angelovich: So perhaps some sort of menu-based thing, or
Margaret Shell: Something that's a little less crowded than this, like
Mary Angelovich: Mm-hmm.
Margaret Shell: I mean you know, theoretically you can do all kinds of things with your T_V_, right?
Mary Angelovich: Yeah.
Margaret Shell: But what do most people do? They turn it on, they watch
Beverly Brunet: Yeah.
Margaret Shell: certain specified channels,
Mary Angelovich: Yeah.
Margaret Shell: you know, and then they turn it off again.
Beverly Brunet: There is a
Margaret Shell: Sometimes
Beverly Brunet: lot of functionality
Margaret Shell: they play a movie.
Beverly Brunet: in there that is not used ninety percent of the time,
Margaret Shell: Yeah,
Mary Angelovich: Yeah.
Beverly Brunet: but
Margaret Shell: so
Beverly Brunet: will be used ten percent of the time,
Margaret Shell: there's no
Mary Angelovich: So,
Beverly Brunet: yeah.
Margaret Shell: need to have buttons on it to
Mary Angelovich: no.
Margaret Shell: do that, maybe to
Beverly Brunet: Yep.
Margaret Shell: do
Mary Angelovich: It could be one button for a menu or something, if
Margaret Shell: Yeah.
Mary Angelovich: you
Violeta Evans: Mm-hmm.
Mary Angelovich: really
Beverly Brunet: And
Mary Angelovich: need
Beverly Brunet: then
Mary Angelovich: to go
Beverly Brunet: use
Mary Angelovich: and do
Margaret Shell: So,
Beverly Brunet: the
Mary Angelovich: that.
Margaret Shell: if you're the kind of sad case that knows how your remote control works, then you know
Beverly Brunet: Mm.
Margaret Shell: that's fine and you can do it on the screen rather than everybody else having to have those buttons, which just confuse them.
Mary Angelovich: Mm-hmm.
Margaret Shell: Hmm.
Mary Angelovich: Excellent.
Margaret Shell: 'Cause like if you look at the train, it's just very like, there's no extra bits on it, the train on the website and I dunno if
Mary Angelovich: Oh I
Margaret Shell: you
Mary Angelovich: haven't
Margaret Shell: can put
Mary Angelovich: had
Margaret Shell: it
Mary Angelovich: a look
Margaret Shell: up on
Mary Angelovich: yet,
Margaret Shell: the thing
Mary Angelovich: yep.
Margaret Shell: um but it is just like a long like thing used for mu moving people, but it looks really pretty too.
Mary Angelovich: Mm-hmm. Great. Any other immediate thoughts
Beverly Brunet: Mm.
Mary Angelovich: before we move along?
Beverly Brunet: Uh we can aim for I mean we can think about all these little things, but we can aim for something wi that gives a high battery life, although
Mary Angelovich: Mm-hmm.
Beverly Brunet: I don't think that um it's a huge problem for remote controls anyway, battery life, uh every now and then you need to replace the batteries.
Mary Angelovich: Yeah.
Beverly Brunet: Um
Violeta Evans: Yeah but
Beverly Brunet: Hmm.
Violeta Evans: uh I mean e even though it has to be re original we shouldn't uh go like too far away from from the usual ones, because otherwise
Beverly Brunet: Yeah.
Violeta Evans: the new users will just have a
Beverly Brunet: A
Violeta Evans: lot
Beverly Brunet: big learning
Violeta Evans: of problems
Beverly Brunet: curve,
Violeta Evans: with l
Beverly Brunet: yeah.
Mary Angelovich: Mm-hmm.
Violeta Evans: learning, yeah, yeah.
Beverly Brunet: Yeah. So, i it should kind of fit in as well, and
Mary Angelovich: It's like
Beverly Brunet: the
Mary Angelovich: those fancy websites
Beverly Brunet: stereotype of a
Violeta Evans: Hm-hmm.
Beverly Brunet: yeah.
Mary Angelovich: that you can't access because you have no idea how to get in, but the designers thought they were great. Okay, so we need to wrap it up now, so that we can go away and get on with some of this. Um we've got another meeting in thirty minutes, so you're you'll be getting specific instructions once you go back to your workspace, but im basically you're looking at the working design,
Beverly Brunet: Alright.
Mary Angelovich: you're looking at the technical functions design, and for you it's the user requirements specification,
Margaret Shell: Mm-hmm.
Mary Angelovich: like you said at the start. Okay?
Violeta Evans: Okay.
Mary Angelovich: Thanks for that.
Violeta Evans: Thank you.
Mary Angelovich: Uh I'll see you in half an hour.
Violeta Evans: See you.
Mary Angelovich: Carry the laptops back again.
Beverly Brunet: Hmm.
Mary Angelovich: Do we need to unplug things? Probably. | Mary Angelovich opens the meeting by going over the agenda. She explains the project, which is to create a new remote control for television that should be original, trendy, and user-friendly. The three components of completing the project will be functional, conceptual, and detailed design. They introduce themselves by going up to the white board and stating their name, role, drawing their favorite animal, and sharing their favorite characteristic about the animal. After they talk about their overall budget, they discuss what special features they want to include in this remote control that existing ones do not have. They discuss making a menu-based remote which would be less crowded with buttons and therefore stylish and sleek but functional. They end the meeting with Mary Angelovich going over the task each member is to complete before the next meeting. | 2 | amisum | train |
Arlene Bustos: Excellent. So um I sent you the agenda it, was on the in the project documents. I don't know if you got a chance to just have a look at it. Anyway, it's the meeting's gonna follow more or less the same structure as last time, so we'll go round each of you in turn and you can give your presentations on what you've been up to. Um and at the end of that we need to discuss what you've come with, so that we can make on the key remote control concepts, so that's we need to know about the components' properties, materials, the user interface and any trends that Glenda Price has been watching.
Marian Miguel: Right.
Arlene Bustos: Okay. Um, do you wanna start again?
Marian Miguel: Okay.
Arlene Bustos: Let Glenda Price we've
Marian Miguel: Right
Arlene Bustos: got forty
Marian Miguel: s
Arlene Bustos: minutes.
Marian Miguel: so I haven't made a PowerPoint
Arlene Bustos: You haven't
Marian Miguel: presentation,
Arlene Bustos: made a PowerPoint, okay.
Marian Miguel: yeah, I I thought I'll use the whiteboard instead.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: Um mm,
Arlene Bustos: Let's hope the pen holds out.
Marian Miguel: okay, so basically I'll start off by uh I thought I'll use the whiteboard because we have so many different options and what we can do is that we can start um uh rubbing off the options that we do not require
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: and putting in the options that uh are m or highlighting or underlining them or something like that. Okay, I'll start again with a brief introduction to connect that anyway
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: brief introduction to the insides of a remote control and uh then we can probably uh discuss the various components. Yeah. Okay, so w what you see here is so this is the outside of the remote, right?
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: If you open it, you have a circuit board here, right, and this is the chip that I was talking about last time. This basically sends information to a tr uh transistor here, which then uh sends the information to an L_E_D_ device here.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: If you flip the printed circuit board, and this is th the most important point here, uh everything else is kind of Okay, so if you flip the circuit board, this is what it looks like. So you see for example a particular button attaches to a particular place on the P_C_B_
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: and uh on pressing this button I a circuit completes, the information goes to the chip, which is somewhere here and the chip that tra then translates the code into an infra infrared radiation, which goes goes out through there. So uh the important point that I read over the website was uh that the configurations of these printed circuit circuit boards uh are quite cheap to make, you can
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: ge get them printed as you want to, so w we can have a configuration um irrespective of the cost, the way we want to have.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: Right? So that's the important point here, so these are the different options that we have. Okay. So the batteries, I'll start with the battery,
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: right? So they can be simple which is like uh the normal batteries in uh our uh the cells, yeah?
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: Uh thes these are the kind different kind of batteries that the company makes, right? So. And dynamos. Um
Glenda Price: Does that mean like a wind-up one?
Marian Miguel: yeah, yeah. So uh
Glenda Price: A wind-up remote.
Marian Miguel: I don't know if even if you want to consider this, but these are the different things that the company makes, so
Arlene Bustos: Okay.
Marian Miguel: th they'll they'll since uh they'll come internally from the company, they'll be eas uh cheaper, uh all these options.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: So the third one is uh the kinetic energy ones.
Glenda Price: You could make the hand dynamo into an exercise bike, and then people could exercise whilst watching T_V_.
Marian Miguel: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: And charging their remote,
Glenda Price: Yeah,
Arlene Bustos: yeah.
Glenda Price: and stop worrying about the whole R_S_I_ from the remote thing, 'cause
Marian Miguel: Yeah,
Glenda Price: that's just
Marian Miguel: it's a good option.
Victoria Torry: So what was what was
Marian Miguel: The
Victoria Torry: this k
Marian Miguel: the kinetic energy one is uh that e uh uh they are usually modern watches,
Victoria Torry: Okay.
Marian Miguel: since our
Arlene Bustos: Uh
Marian Miguel: hand
Arlene Bustos: yeah.
Marian Miguel: keeps moving, it keeps the watch ticking. But
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: I dunno i if it is a good idea for a remote control,
Arlene Bustos: For a remote,
Marian Miguel: because
Arlene Bustos: 'cause you
Marian Miguel: it'll just lie there for a
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: long while sometimes. But
Victoria Torry: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: as soon as you pick it up it moves and then again it uh re recharges or something.
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: And the fourth option is the solar cells,
Glenda Price: Yay.
Marian Miguel: which are also made by the company. Environment friendly. Okay um so I'll list things and then we can come back and discuss
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: what what we think from uh everybody's perspective. There are different cases that can be provided. They can be basically the shape of the cases, they can be flat,
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: they can be curved with uh one-sided curved and one side flat, and they can be curved with on both the sides.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: These are the three options, right? Um
Victoria Torry: Um you mean this would be like the the overall shape of the remote control, yeah,
Marian Miguel: Yeah,
Victoria Torry: mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: would it be flat on both the
Victoria Torry: Yeah,
Marian Miguel: sides,
Victoria Torry: mm-hmm,
Marian Miguel: would be curved
Victoria Torry: mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: from one side, or
Victoria Torry: Mm-hmm
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: whatever
Victoria Torry: mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: uh there were different kind of supplements available, um like it can be in plastic, rubber, wood, or
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: titanium,
Arlene Bustos: Okay.
Marian Miguel: right?
Glenda Price: Did you say
Marian Miguel: Wo
Glenda Price: wool?
Arlene Bustos: Wood,
Marian Miguel: wo wood.
Arlene Bustos: wood.
Glenda Price: Wood.
Marian Miguel: Yeah.
Glenda Price: Oh right.
Arlene Bustos: A fluffy
Marian Miguel: Not wool.
Arlene Bustos: remote.
Glenda Price: Yeah, you'll understand why when we get to my presenta.
Marian Miguel: Oh really? Okay.
Arlene Bustos: Huh.
Marian Miguel: Um the so uh we can use even um a certain titanium is also used uh in the company to make uh uh some space design equipment, so it's kind of um uh it'll be probably nicer to use, because it relates to the overall image of the company, but uh it cannot be used on a double curved surface. If we choose this, we cannot use titanium.
Arlene Bustos: Mm.
Marian Miguel: For for these two we can use titanium, wood, rubber, or plastic.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: Yeah? Uh okay, the interface options now. So we can have push-buttons, like most remotes do and our company is an expert in making push-buttons. Ooh. Uh we can have scroll wheels like the ones on um
Glenda Price: Sony.
Marian Miguel: uh mouse pointers
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: uh uh
Glenda Price: Sony Ericsson mobile phones has it.
Marian Miguel: Yeah, yeah, something like that.
Glenda Price: Mm.
Marian Miguel: So, and they have they can even have an an integrated uh push-button inside the scrolling
Arlene Bustos: Okay.
Marian Miguel: thing. The scroll plus push. So this is something that has been recently developed by the company, um in the last decade, so not too recent. And L_C_D_s, we can have L_C_D_s.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: The various electronic options are um uh so th this concerns firs first of all the the chips I I showed you at uh so there's there's a chip behind this one, right? The P_C_B_ is uh inexpensive, so we can put put in uh whatever we want, but
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: the various integrated circuit options are, we have either a simple one or a regular or advanced. And uh the price goes up
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: as we go down, obviously. Um okay, so the good thing about uh wh wh why why we would want to use advanced u why we might want to use advanced is that L_C_D_s can only come with the advanced chip.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: Um the we need regular or advanced for uh scroll wheels. Right? Um and the chip basically includes the infra infrared sender.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: Yeah. Uh besides this in electr under electronics uh also the company has started making a sample sender, which is did not explained what i what it was, but I'm guessing that uh so they have a sample sender and a sample speaker. So I'm guessing that uh the sample speaker is probably something like um uh you know, as soon as you press a button, it it mm uh give gives you feedback, one five or whatever. Yeah,
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: on. Um and uh I dunno whether sample sender sender has to do something with voice recognition or not, but anyway.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: So, these are the different options that we have. Okay, so th that's that's basically now now uh I think that uh we can integrate um uh you know, uh the user interface uh and uh the marketing things in that,
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: keep uh taking out things from this and uh
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: underlining things that are important,
Arlene Bustos: Excellent.
Marian Miguel: yeah.
Arlene Bustos: Do you wanna
Victoria Torry: Okay.
Arlene Bustos: stay somewhere near the board, so that if we need to
Marian Miguel: Yeah, yeah, sure.
Arlene Bustos: you can sit down, but
Marian Miguel: Sure.
Arlene Bustos: just
Marian Miguel: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: we might need you to leap up. What
Victoria Torry: Okay.
Arlene Bustos: are you, PowerPoint, or
Victoria Torry: Um I have some PowerPoint, yeah.
Marian Miguel: Right.
Arlene Bustos: Okay.
Victoria Torry: Oh.
Arlene Bustos: Do you
Victoria Torry: 'Kay.
Arlene Bustos: think these pens can give you cancer of the hand? Some sort of radiation?
Glenda Price: No it's got its little camera in there
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Glenda Price: plug, it in.
Victoria Torry: Okay.
Glenda Price: 'S a
Marian Miguel: Yeah, it should should do it. Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: Right, interface concept.
Victoria Torry: Okay. Um to be honest, I mentioned some some of the things which which could fit on the on the this talk um this time, I I mentioned them already in the previous talk.
Arlene Bustos: That's fine.
Victoria Torry: So um yeah, this time um I might not have them on the slides but I I can just
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Victoria Torry: mention them aw again. Okay. So um I thought um I would also include the definition of user interface um so it's the aspects of a of of a computer system or programme which can be seen uh by the user um and and which uh the mechanisms that the user uses to control its operation and input data. So this would p includes things like shape and size and buttons and um voice recognition as well, and colour,
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Victoria Torry: and so on. Um um the method I employed this time was a again having a look to related products and mainly on the internet and then um analyse them uh from the point of view of user fen friendliness and also um whether their appearance was was pleasant. Um and then um this uh this um this can help us to decide which features we want to incorporate
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Victoria Torry: in our product. So some findings um um. So in in the case of many user interfaces, they're just so full of buttons that it's actually uh hard to find the ones you you really um want to use and um and it's just confusing, it takes y know time to learn. Um okay, and I thought I would just quickly show some of them that I found. Okay, some of them are here. Um well the picture is not very clear, but as you can see, there are actu oi, oh oh oh, sorry for that. 'S go back.
Marian Miguel: That's
Victoria Torry: Ah,
Marian Miguel: nice one.
Victoria Torry: no, please. Okay, so yeah, they're quite big and have many many buttons. Actually of the of all these I personally p prefer this one, because it's it's the smallest and and with with least uh with the smallest number of buttons as well. And I would say even the appearance of some of them is kind of
Glenda Price: Ugly.
Victoria Torry: not so nice.
Arlene Bustos: Mm.
Victoria Torry: Um okay. So let's carry on with this. Um So uh um o other findings um some new things um used, uh some of them were mentioned already by our Technical um Designer uh. Our own company has developed a new in user interface uh wait, no this is not the one. Okay, there is a we can uh include voice recognition and um it allows i it's possible to record eighty different voice samples
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Victoria Torry: on it.
Marian Miguel: Mm.
Victoria Torry: Uh so uh this uh this one was already mentioned uh the L_C_
Arlene Bustos: It's
Victoria Torry: display.
Arlene Bustos: yeah.
Victoria Torry: Um s another new development is a scroll button, which was also th also already mentioned. And uh our own manufacturing division ha has uh designed a new um uh programmable speech uh mm sorry uh speaker unit I guess it's it should be.
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Victoria Torry: Um and this means that um once uh uh it it it comes together with a voice recognition, but it's once once the mm um gadget uh recognises uh the voice of the speaker, there can be a um pre-programmed answer, for example, you can pick up the remote control and say something to it like hello and it says
Arlene Bustos: Uh-huh,
Victoria Torry: some hello and
Arlene Bustos: hi
Victoria Torry: your name or whatever.
Arlene Bustos: yeah.
Victoria Torry: So
Marian Miguel: Mm.
Victoria Torry: I mean this is also one of the n dev new developments which we might consider if we wanted to
Marian Miguel: Uh
Victoria Torry: include.
Marian Miguel: sorry, uh can you go back for a second? Um uh are you sure wha what this means, a spinning wheel with the L_C_ display? Uh oh
Arlene Bustos: It's like the like you said, no? The scroll scroll
Glenda Price: Yeah,
Marian Miguel: yeah
Glenda Price: you
Victoria Torry: No
Glenda Price: can't
Arlene Bustos: wheel.
Marian Miguel: are
Victoria Torry: no,
Marian Miguel: th
Victoria Torry: the scroll button is a different thing. I I have a picture if you just a moment, I'll I'll show you. I wasn't completely sure myself, but I think it's just like um it's it's a wheel, it's like not separate buttons. Look,
Marian Miguel: Oh okay,
Victoria Torry: this one here.
Glenda Price: Oh,
Marian Miguel: the iPod
Glenda Price: it's like
Victoria Torry: But
Glenda Price: the
Marian Miguel: thing,
Victoria Torry: I'm
Glenda Price: iPod.
Marian Miguel: yeah.
Victoria Torry: I'm not really sure whether whether you can really turn it round,
Glenda Price: G yeah,
Victoria Torry: it's
Glenda Price: no,
Victoria Torry: like you
Glenda Price: you
Victoria Torry: press
Glenda Price: can.
Victoria Torry: this
Marian Miguel: Uh
Victoria Torry: or
Marian Miguel: it's
Victoria Torry: this
Marian Miguel: the
Glenda Price: It's
Marian Miguel: iPod
Victoria Torry: or
Glenda Price: like
Marian Miguel: uh kind of uh
Glenda Price: it's like where you you know how you have your your mouse, and
Arlene Bustos: Uh-huh.
Glenda Price: y you go round and i it's kind
Marian Miguel: Alright,
Glenda Price: of like that and you
Marian Miguel: right.
Glenda Price: spin round and it
Marian Miguel: Okay, okay.
Glenda Price: yeah.
Marian Miguel: So
Glenda Price: It
Marian Miguel: instead
Glenda Price: is
Marian Miguel: of going down you just spin
Glenda Price: You
Marian Miguel: yeah,
Glenda Price: just
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: go round and it is a bit
Marian Miguel: yeah.
Glenda Price: weird at first, but it's actually very like fast.
Marian Miguel: Uh-huh.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: I like the the wheels that click on the side you you get 'em much slower, so it's quite good if you like searching quite a lot of stuff.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: Right.
Victoria Torry: Uh-huh.
Glenda Price: Do you know, if you're lookin if you're th scrolling through the A_ to Z_ of your music and you're looking for something at T_,
Marian Miguel: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: then it's a lot faster than the wheel, but you've got a lot less control over it.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: Right. So
Victoria Torry: Mm.
Marian Miguel: maybe I should include that here as well, L_C_D_s
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: um
Victoria Torry: Uh
Marian Miguel: plus spinning.
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Victoria Torry: Okay, and the personal preferences are pretty much the same as as as last time.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Victoria Torry: It it has to be small, simple. Okay, we decided to include voice recognition, so to have the standard uh major buttons like on, off, um ch the channels and and then um volume and then the rest would be a menu on the screen. Um and I I also thought uh if we want to keep it small and nice um and actually I I quite like the idea of a scroll a scrolling button, I thought it could be for for voice like, I dunno, it mm like on a um i like it used to be on Walkmans or something. There is uh I think there is no reason why we couldn't use something like this for for the remote control.
Marian Miguel: Mm-hmm.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm. Excellent. Okay, straight to trends, and then we can discuss it
Marian Miguel: Right.
Arlene Bustos: all at once.
Glenda Price: Okay, I've put the copy of the presentation in um the
Arlene Bustos: The project documents.
Glenda Price: yeah.
Arlene Bustos: Excellent. If you two could both do that
Marian Miguel: Mm-hmm.
Arlene Bustos: as well, in case we need to refer to it.
Glenda Price: Cool.
Arlene Bustos: Here it comes.
Arlene Bustos: Okay.
Glenda Price: Fabulous. Okay, cool. Um so what I did was to search the internet to come up with market trends and you know what users are gonna be wanting in the the near future.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: Okay. Right. Now, the first aspect is apparently twice as important as the second aspect, which is twice as important as the third a aspect.
Arlene Bustos: Okay.
Glenda Price: So, I mean the the easy to use thing is fairly low down on
Marian Miguel: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: the which I think given the target group is what you would expect, really.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: Um, you know, people want something new, something technologically innovative and different, so the whole idea with the L_C_D_s and the spinning and the colours and the voice recognition is quite like, quite the thing to go for.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: Okay.
Glenda Price: And um, yeah it wants to look fancy, fancy look and feel.
Marian Miguel: So
Glenda Price: So
Marian Miguel: um uh maybe uh as you're discussing things, is it okay if we
Arlene Bustos: Yeah,
Marian Miguel: just
Arlene Bustos: yeah,
Marian Miguel: uh
Arlene Bustos: sure.
Marian Miguel: keep
Glenda Price: Yeah,
Marian Miguel: highlighting things
Glenda Price: yeah.
Marian Miguel: here?
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: Right. So mm
Arlene Bustos: That's
Marian Miguel: uh
Arlene Bustos: over on the interface,
Marian Miguel: so it
Arlene Bustos: if if
Marian Miguel: yeah,
Arlene Bustos: you could put
Marian Miguel: so probably voice recognition is is kind of
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: important, right? Um
Arlene Bustos: And maybe the L_C_D_
Marian Miguel: and
Arlene Bustos: and spinning
Marian Miguel: an yeah.
Arlene Bustos: so
Marian Miguel: Okay,
Arlene Bustos: that
Marian Miguel: I
Arlene Bustos: means
Marian Miguel: I
Arlene Bustos: we
Marian Miguel: have
Arlene Bustos: need
Marian Miguel: a
Arlene Bustos: an
Marian Miguel: point
Arlene Bustos: advanced
Marian Miguel: about L_C_D_,
Arlene Bustos: thing.
Marian Miguel: I dunno if it is the right point to take it up. W uh L_C_D_s are basically for feedback, right, to
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: the user who's pressing
Glenda Price: Mm.
Marian Miguel: buttons, and the feedback can come through television itself, so do we need an L_C_D_ on the remote?
Glenda Price: Depends how fast your television runs, really, don't don't you think? I mean we've got one of those um Telewest boxes and
Marian Miguel: Mm.
Glenda Price: you put the number in the remote and then you wait and then it goes to the T_V_ and then you wait, and then it comes, so i it actually takes quite a long time.
Arlene Bustos: Mm.
Glenda Price: And
Marian Miguel: Right.
Glenda Price: if you get the number in wrong, then it's a bit of a pain, so I think, you know, a screen on the remote would probably cut down your time on that. But like remotes do tend to get f thrown about a bit.
Marian Miguel: Right.
Arlene Bustos: It it is also
Glenda Price: You know?
Arlene Bustos: quite nice though to to have something here so you don't interrupt the picture on the screen, so if you're
Glenda Price: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: watching something
Marian Miguel: That's true,
Glenda Price: And
Marian Miguel: yeah,
Glenda Price: i
Marian Miguel: that's
Glenda Price: it would
Marian Miguel: also
Glenda Price: be like I mean if you could make it integrate with the T_V_ then it could come up with new information about what's on, and you could just see that on the remote rather
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Glenda Price: than
Arlene Bustos: Rather than having to interrupt your
Glenda Price: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: viewing pleasure.
Glenda Price: But
Marian Miguel: Right.
Glenda Price: um I think maybe a way to do it would be a similar way to how you have your mobile phone, you know, like you have the slidey ones and you have the flippy ones and then the screen's protected so it doesn't
Arlene Bustos: Mm.
Glenda Price: actually get scratched.
Marian Miguel: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: So you can have like what looks like a normal remote control, you know or
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Glenda Price: like a minimalist remote control. So you got your buttons one to nine, your on and off
Marian Miguel: Mm right.
Glenda Price: and your volume on that and then
Arlene Bustos: And
Glenda Price: if
Arlene Bustos: then
Glenda Price: you
Arlene Bustos: you
Glenda Price: want
Arlene Bustos: can
Glenda Price: to
Arlene Bustos: flip
Glenda Price: mess about
Arlene Bustos: it open.
Glenda Price: with it, you flip it open and, yeah.
Marian Miguel: Okay. So now we seem to have a consensus that L_C_D_s are definitely the way to go
Arlene Bustos: Yeah,
Marian Miguel: because
Arlene Bustos: I think
Marian Miguel: of
Arlene Bustos: so.
Marian Miguel: style and
Glenda Price: Yeah, so that kind of decides your whole chip thing.
Marian Miguel: Right.
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: You you agree? Maarika,
Victoria Torry: Yep, yeah.
Marian Miguel: yeah? Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: Right.
Marian Miguel: So
Glenda Price: Okay?
Marian Miguel: L_C_D_s, yeah, definitely. Go on.
Glenda Price: Cool. Okay, apparently, fruit and vegetables will be providing inspiration. Sorry, I discovered clip art. Um so these will be an important feature for clothes, shoes and furniture. So I mean, I'm taking this to mean, you know, curviness. Do you know? 'Cause you don't tend to get flat vegetables.
Arlene Bustos: Yeah, and
Marian Miguel: Mm-hmm.
Arlene Bustos: possibly
Glenda Price: You know?
Arlene Bustos: even uneven, like
Glenda Price: Yeah,
Arlene Bustos: not
Glenda Price: bit of asymmetry
Arlene Bustos: not symmet yeah.
Glenda Price: and stuff. But that would be a good way to to get in the whole um R_S_I_ issue in there,
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: because
Marian Miguel: Right.
Glenda Price: I mean if you think most people use the remote control with their right hand ha right hands so you wanna you curve it so that it's suitable for use
Victoria Torry: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: with the right hand.
Marian Miguel: Mm.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: Um yeah, I'm not quite sure about the relevance of material will be spongy. Um
Arlene Bustos: Something a bit squishy and
Glenda Price: Yeah, but I mean
Marian Miguel: Yeah, we
Victoria Torry: So
Glenda Price: y
Marian Miguel: we
Victoria Torry: it
Glenda Price: you
Marian Miguel: have
Victoria Torry: could
Glenda Price: have
Victoria Torry: be
Glenda Price: to
Victoria Torry: like a rubbery
Marian Miguel: we have rubber,
Victoria Torry: yeah, uh-huh.
Marian Miguel: but there is a problem that I forgot to discuss with the um with using
Glenda Price: Well I suppose you wouldn't get a remote uh an electric shock off your remote control if it was made of rubber.
Arlene Bustos: Yeah, and it'd help if you drop it, it protects it as well.
Glenda Price: Yeah, yeah.
Arlene Bustos: To some degree.
Marian Miguel: So if if we use uh latex cases, they won't allow us to use solar cells, as an energy source that is the constraint,
Arlene Bustos: Uh-huh.
Marian Miguel: so um we could use titanium, wood or plastic uh
Arlene Bustos: Or if
Marian Miguel: or
Arlene Bustos: we want to use the
Marian Miguel: uh
Arlene Bustos: the latex, then we have to go with one of the other um
Glenda Price: If
Marian Miguel: Yeah,
Glenda Price: it's
Marian Miguel: w
Glenda Price: made
Arlene Bustos: power
Glenda Price: of
Marian Miguel: energy
Glenda Price: rubber
Arlene Bustos: things.
Glenda Price: you
Marian Miguel: source.
Glenda Price: could get the kinetic energy fairly easily there, you
Arlene Bustos: From
Glenda Price: could just
Marian Miguel: Yeah,
Arlene Bustos: from
Glenda Price: bounce
Marian Miguel: tap it
Glenda Price: it
Arlene Bustos: bouncing
Marian Miguel: on
Glenda Price: up
Marian Miguel: the desk,
Glenda Price: and down.
Arlene Bustos: it.
Marian Miguel: yeah.
Arlene Bustos: You can have it as like a little ball to bounce, that
Glenda Price: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: flips open.
Glenda Price: Um
Marian Miguel: Mm.
Glenda Price: so yeah, um
Marian Miguel: So probably
Glenda Price: okay.
Marian Miguel: double curved surface is the way to go, yeah,
Glenda Price: Yeah,
Arlene Bustos: Mm yeah.
Glenda Price: yeah.
Marian Miguel: Or or curved at one end and flat on the top, because I I'm not sure if it is flat on both both the sides, then ho how much easy would it be to reach for buttons, etcetera. Um
Glenda Price: You have to have a certain element of flatness, I think.
Marian Miguel: Yeah.
Glenda Price: It it depends on the whole ergonomics of it, you know, put your hands so y it's the least
Marian Miguel: Yeah.
Glenda Price: movement
Marian Miguel: Yeah,
Glenda Price: basically.
Marian Miguel: singe
Arlene Bustos: Uh-huh.
Marian Miguel: single side curved or double side curved does not say too much, does it? It
Glenda Price: No, I
Marian Miguel: uh
Glenda Price: d I don't think it makes a lot of difference. I I have one of those s slidey phones and I mean the back is essentially straight,
Arlene Bustos: Mm.
Glenda Price: but it's curvy,
Marian Miguel: Mm.
Glenda Price: so. Besides,
Arlene Bustos: Yeah,
Marian Miguel: Uh
Arlene Bustos: 'cause
Glenda Price: you have
Arlene Bustos: the
Glenda Price: four sides
Marian Miguel: I think
Glenda Price: to a
Marian Miguel: uh
Glenda Price: thing, so I mean
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Glenda Price: does curved one side mean one side is straight
Marian Miguel: Right.
Glenda Price: and, you know curved two sides means the whole thing is just a big curvy p thing?
Marian Miguel: Right.
Arlene Bustos: Dunno.
Marian Miguel: Di now did it say anywhere in your research material about this sliding stuff uh because um according to the information that I have, I think uh the onl only options that we have with the case is are these three.
Glenda Price: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: Uh eith either we have uh a flat surfaced uh case or a curved surfaced case. It does
Arlene Bustos: Nothing
Marian Miguel: not say anything
Arlene Bustos: to
Marian Miguel: about uh
Arlene Bustos: open
Marian Miguel: whether
Arlene Bustos: them.
Marian Miguel: technically, you know, this this stuff is available at all.
Glenda Price: Yeah. Uh it's it's more about the protecting the L_C_D_, which I
Marian Miguel: Right,
Glenda Price: think is where it came
Marian Miguel: yeah,
Glenda Price: from.
Marian Miguel: yeah.
Glenda Price: But no, my research didn't tell Glenda Price anything, which is why we have all the pictures, 'cause I had nothing better to
Marian Miguel: Right.
Glenda Price: do with my time.
Marian Miguel: Okay.
Glenda Price: Okay, cool.
Arlene Bustos: Anything else? What've we got?
Glenda Price: Uh combine style with a level of functionality, um beauty and practicality and a thing of beauty and p function.
Arlene Bustos: Okay,
Marian Miguel: Cool, thanks.
Glenda Price: Okay?
Arlene Bustos: so.
Victoria Torry: Thanks
Arlene Bustos: Looking at what we've got, we we want an L_C_D_ display with a spinning
Marian Miguel: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: wheel.
Marian Miguel: Let's let's try to r rub off
Arlene Bustos: Yeah,
Marian Miguel: things
Arlene Bustos: rub off
Marian Miguel: and
Arlene Bustos: some
Marian Miguel: yeah,
Arlene Bustos: of those.
Marian Miguel: so um hand dynamos are definitely out, right? You
Victoria Torry: Yeah
Marian Miguel: you
Arlene Bustos: Yeah,
Marian Miguel: got a wind
Victoria Torry: uh-hum
Marian Miguel: dynamo,
Arlene Bustos: it's
Victoria Torry: yeah.
Arlene Bustos: not
Marian Miguel: yeah.
Arlene Bustos: that's not streamlined and sexy, having
Marian Miguel: Okay.
Arlene Bustos: a having a wind
Marian Miguel: Um
Arlene Bustos: up.
Marian Miguel: kinetic energy does seem to have some kind of uh
Arlene Bustos: I think
Marian Miguel: uh
Arlene Bustos: tha
Marian Miguel: appeal, but uh
Glenda Price: It's
Marian Miguel: it's
Glenda Price: about the practicality of it really, isn't
Marian Miguel: Yeah.
Glenda Price: it? You know?
Marian Miguel: As
Glenda Price: I mean
Marian Miguel: against
Glenda Price: if
Marian Miguel: a watch, which constantly keeps moving, this this thing will have to be tapped every time, which which might be very frustrating for the user.
Arlene Bustos: Depends how much how much movement
Marian Miguel: Kinetic energy
Arlene Bustos: it really
Marian Miguel: it
Arlene Bustos: needs.
Marian Miguel: needs
Arlene Bustos: Pr
Marian Miguel: I don't have too
Arlene Bustos: presumably
Marian Miguel: much technical information
Arlene Bustos: if they're suggesting
Marian Miguel: on that, yeah,
Arlene Bustos: it, then we
Marian Miguel: right.
Arlene Bustos: could use it.
Marian Miguel: Okay, let's keep it
Arlene Bustos: I'd
Marian Miguel: option
Arlene Bustos: I'd keep
Marian Miguel: uh keep
Arlene Bustos: it
Marian Miguel: an
Arlene Bustos: on.
Marian Miguel: option, yeah. Um the flat co completely flat case is definitely out,
Arlene Bustos: We
Marian Miguel: right?
Arlene Bustos: don't want
Marian Miguel: It
Victoria Torry: Yeah
Arlene Bustos: that
Marian Miguel: has
Arlene Bustos: it's
Marian Miguel: to
Victoria Torry: it's
Arlene Bustos: no
Marian Miguel: be at
Arlene Bustos: it's
Marian Miguel: least
Victoria Torry: yeah.
Arlene Bustos: not
Marian Miguel: curved from
Arlene Bustos: not
Marian Miguel: one
Arlene Bustos: vegetable.
Marian Miguel: side, yeah. Um okay, we still have all all the options. Wood, do you think wood
Victoria Torry: N
Marian Miguel: will
Victoria Torry: wood
Marian Miguel: be a good
Victoria Torry: is
Marian Miguel: idea?
Victoria Torry: I can't n how do you uh I mean you can't keep it really small
Marian Miguel: Mm.
Victoria Torry: uh you can't make it like thin and
Marian Miguel: Right.
Victoria Torry: The
Arlene Bustos: Mm.
Victoria Torry: wood
Glenda Price: I
Victoria Torry: thing.
Glenda Price: can't
Victoria Torry: Because
Glenda Price: imagine
Victoria Torry: you need to
Glenda Price: a m
Victoria Torry: you
Glenda Price: wooden
Victoria Torry: n you need
Glenda Price: remote
Victoria Torry: to put all
Glenda Price: control.
Victoria Torry: the technology in, so I mean if the case you add the case and
Marian Miguel: Yeah if
Victoria Torry: it
Marian Miguel: if
Victoria Torry: it
Marian Miguel: it is
Victoria Torry: becomes
Marian Miguel: really
Victoria Torry: a bit
Marian Miguel: thin
Victoria Torry: bulky wi mm-mm yeah.
Marian Miguel: if it
Arlene Bustos: Mm.
Marian Miguel: is really thin it it's likely to break, it's
Victoria Torry: Yeah,
Marian Miguel: it's much
Victoria Torry: yeah.
Marian Miguel: more
Arlene Bustos: Yeah,
Victoria Torry: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: uh
Arlene Bustos: and given that we're we're looking at more spongy material preferences, I ha would think maybe
Victoria Torry: U yeah
Arlene Bustos: rubber
Victoria Torry: wood is
Arlene Bustos: or
Victoria Torry: not
Arlene Bustos: plastic
Victoria Torry: really
Arlene Bustos: is more
Marian Miguel: Right.
Victoria Torry: yeah.
Glenda Price: Well it's not very cleanable either,
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: That's
Glenda Price: do you
Victoria Torry: Yeah.
Glenda Price: know.
Marian Miguel: true.
Glenda Price: It's it's not a practical I mean it's it's alright for a table, but for a remote control, you know.
Marian Miguel: Yeah.
Glenda Price: And splinters and stuff
Marian Miguel: Yeah,
Glenda Price: and
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: okay wood
Glenda Price: It
Marian Miguel: is
Glenda Price: just
Marian Miguel: out.
Glenda Price: m doesn't make any sense, I think is
Marian Miguel: Right.
Victoria Torry: Yeah,
Glenda Price: the thing
Victoria Torry: yeah,
Glenda Price: with wood.
Victoria Torry: in the case of remote control not really.
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: Okay, now for the really interesting stuff, the interface.
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: Right, so uh the the push-buttons is is our expertise uh in the industry, but uh it seems to be out of trend, you know, nobody seems
Glenda Price: You have
Marian Miguel: to
Victoria Torry: Yeah,
Glenda Price: to
Victoria Torry: but
Marian Miguel: be
Glenda Price: have some push-buttons,
Victoria Torry: you
Glenda Price: don't
Victoria Torry: um I think
Glenda Price: you?
Victoria Torry: for for the channel numb uh channel numbers you still need them,
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Victoria Torry: wouldn't you?
Glenda Price: G yeah,
Marian Miguel: Mm
Glenda Price: yeah.
Victoria Torry: Yeah,
Marian Miguel: right.
Victoria Torry: so for
Marian Miguel: Oh,
Victoria Torry: channel
Marian Miguel: if
Victoria Torry: numbers
Marian Miguel: if
Victoria Torry: but
Marian Miguel: we have L_C_D_ displays, that opens up a whole world, you know, if you have an L_C_D_ display, then mm you can select
Victoria Torry: But I
Marian Miguel: almost
Victoria Torry: th
Marian Miguel: everything on
Victoria Torry: yeah
Marian Miguel: the L_C_D_
Victoria Torry: but
Marian Miguel: display.
Victoria Torry: I think the L_C_D_
Arlene Bustos: Just for
Victoria Torry: display
Arlene Bustos: fast
Victoria Torry: is kind of yeah, it's faster with a m yeah and w if we dis and when we s um discussed that we might like this flipping open thing, then
Marian Miguel: Right.
Victoria Torry: I mean
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Victoria Torry: y you can use it as a normal remote control,
Marian Miguel: Okay.
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Victoria Torry: but if you do want to use L_C_D_, then you flip it open, but it's it it's
Glenda Price: Yeah.
Victoria Torry: more time-consuming.
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Glenda Price: I think this is going back to the the graph at the beginning that I made, where, you know, the buttons that people use all the time, you want buttons for them
Marian Miguel: Mm right.
Victoria Torry: Yeah.
Glenda Price: and everything
Arlene Bustos: And it
Glenda Price: else
Arlene Bustos: yeah
Glenda Price: menu-driven.
Arlene Bustos: L_ L_C_D_.
Marian Miguel: So uh in in the buttons we have for the channels also we have options. Do you do we enumerate everything from zero to nine? Or do we have just uh channel plus, channel minus, just
Victoria Torry: No,
Marian Miguel: to
Victoria Torry: no,
Marian Miguel: just to scroll?
Victoria Torry: I mean mm we we definitely need the the numbers, because
Marian Miguel: The numbers.
Victoria Torry: it's uh
Glenda Price: Yeah.
Victoria Torry: otherwise people don't want to flip through all the channels.
Glenda Price: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: Do we
Marian Miguel: Right.
Arlene Bustos: need
Victoria Torry: Um
Arlene Bustos: them on as buttons or
Marian Miguel: Or
Arlene Bustos: do we need them as L_C_D_?
Marian Miguel: on the L_C_D_ we can, you
Glenda Price: G yeah,
Marian Miguel: know
Victoria Torry: Yeah, I would say
Glenda Price: I would think
Victoria Torry: buttons,
Glenda Price: buttons, yeah.
Victoria Torry: because
Arlene Bustos: Buttons.
Victoria Torry: it's yeah.
Glenda Price: It's
Marian Miguel: Okay.
Glenda Price: it's the
Victoria Torry: I
Glenda Price: I think
Marian Miguel: So
Glenda Price: the thing is, so if
Marian Miguel: mm
Glenda Price: someone just wants to turn on their T_V_
Arlene Bustos: Mm.
Glenda Price: and put on a channel, then
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Glenda Price: it should be easier to
Victoria Torry: Yeah.
Glenda Price: use than any other remote, and then if someone wants to, you know, change the contrast on their T_V_ and
Marian Miguel: Alright.
Glenda Price: they should be able to do that and it should be accessible, but,
Victoria Torry: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: you know, I mean most of the time I mean there's a limit to how much the biggest techno geek can spend fiddling with the T_V_,
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: Right.
Glenda Price: I think is the the the issue there.
Marian Miguel: Okay, so buttons definitely in but oh shall we uh try to draw a prec um
Arlene Bustos: I think that's what you guys are gonna do next,
Marian Miguel: Uh okay.
Arlene Bustos: so if we put down the key
Marian Miguel: Okay,
Arlene Bustos: um
Marian Miguel: okay,
Victoria Torry: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: so the
Arlene Bustos: things
Marian Miguel: components. Right,
Arlene Bustos: that
Marian Miguel: so
Arlene Bustos: we want.
Marian Miguel: uh what about the the scrolling uh?
Victoria Torry: Yeah but n I I'm not completely um completely clear uh I yeah, about the spinning wheel. So I think it it doesn't make sense to have both like a scrolling
Glenda Price: E
Victoria Torry: and spinning
Glenda Price: either
Victoria Torry: thing, it's
Glenda Price: or
Victoria Torry: uh you can al include everything in the spinning if you
Arlene Bustos: Just spinning
Glenda Price: G
Victoria Torry: yeah,
Glenda Price: yeah.
Arlene Bustos: and not scrolling,
Victoria Torry: yeah,
Arlene Bustos: I would say.
Victoria Torry: in
Glenda Price: I
Victoria Torry: that
Glenda Price: would
Victoria Torry: case.
Glenda Price: say the s the s the spinning goes at a high speed to th to
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Glenda Price: the scrolling wheel, so you have to decide whether you you know, you want to be going so fast or not. But I mean the the thing with this whole if y you're planning on making it out of rubber, on the basis that it's spongy,
Arlene Bustos: Hmm.
Glenda Price: then I'm not sure how well a scrolling wheel would work.
Marian Miguel: Mm um
Arlene Bustos: But if you've got a if
Victoria Torry: Ah, but I mean you can
Arlene Bustos: if you've got a flipped thing, effectively it's something that's curved on one side and flat on the other side, but you folded
Glenda Price: Yeah,
Arlene Bustos: it in
Glenda Price: but
Arlene Bustos: half.
Glenda Price: y your spinning wheel tends
Arlene Bustos: Th
Glenda Price: to go to one side.
Arlene Bustos: that would be on one side, uh-huh.
Marian Miguel: I'm not sure it'll be a good idea to construct the whole thing out of rubber.
Victoria Torry: Yeah, I
Marian Miguel: Uh
Victoria Torry: um
Arlene Bustos: No,
Victoria Torry: I think
Marian Miguel: i it
Victoria Torry: so too,
Arlene Bustos: I
Victoria Torry: I
Arlene Bustos: think
Victoria Torry: mean
Arlene Bustos: it's
Victoria Torry: the
Arlene Bustos: just
Victoria Torry: case
Arlene Bustos: the casing
Victoria Torry: would be yeah
Glenda Price: You want
Arlene Bustos: rubber
Victoria Torry: the case
Glenda Price: an
Arlene Bustos: on
Glenda Price: outside
Victoria Torry: would
Arlene Bustos: the
Victoria Torry: be
Arlene Bustos: outside.
Victoria Torry: rubber
Glenda Price: of rubber
Victoria Torry: and the
Glenda Price: and then
Victoria Torry: the buttons,
Glenda Price: open it up
Marian Miguel: Or
Glenda Price: and
Marian Miguel: or at
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: the corners,
Victoria Torry: rubber buttons,
Marian Miguel: edges,
Victoria Torry: but then
Marian Miguel: just the edges covered by rubber or something
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: like that. Everything else in plastic
Victoria Torry: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: or even titanium if we want to use it.
Glenda Price: Or maybe like interchangeable cases.
Marian Miguel: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: 'Cause I know like we're going back to iPods again n the whole spinning wheel, but I have like a you know, obviously my iPod's not made of rubber, but then I have a little rubber case that goes over the top of it and
Marian Miguel: Right,
Glenda Price: I can
Arlene Bustos: Mm.
Glenda Price: change the colour,
Marian Miguel: right.
Glenda Price: theoretically, to match my outfit.
Marian Miguel: Right, okay, so so that gives us a more trendy look as well. Um
Glenda Price: Yeah, I think the spinning wheel is definitely very now.
Marian Miguel: Right.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: Yeah,
Victoria Torry: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: and uh we're going more for the trends than for the usability anyway,
Arlene Bustos: That's right,
Glenda Price: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: that's what
Marian Miguel: right?
Arlene Bustos: they're after.
Marian Miguel: So I'll rub that out. And uh colours can be provided with the case rather than Um
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: but we still need to te think about the colour of our remote as such, you know, just keep
Victoria Torry: Yeah
Marian Miguel: it black,
Victoria Torry: I think
Marian Miguel: or
Victoria Torry: we um it was a a requirement that we use our um th the colours of our company, so would it be like yellow, grey and black or something, or
Arlene Bustos: I guess.
Glenda Price: That doesn't fit in
Victoria Torry: Yeah, does
Glenda Price: with the whole vegetable theme though.
Arlene Bustos: Bananas.
Victoria Torry: Yeah. Banana's yellow, yeah,
Glenda Price: Yeah,
Victoria Torry: definitely.
Glenda Price: but I mean do you think we could incorporate the colours of the company into the buttons and then make the colour of the main remote the colour like vegetable colours, do you know? So
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: you could have like I mean I suppose vegetable colours would be orange and green
Arlene Bustos: Green.
Glenda Price: and some reds and um maybe
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Glenda Price: purple and that and then you'd pick the buttons in company colours to to match
Marian Miguel: Mm.
Glenda Price: with it.
Marian Miguel: Okay. Um okay, if you g go over to uh the integrated circuits. Uh since we're having L_C_D_s there there's no way that we're
Arlene Bustos: yeah.
Marian Miguel: will be able to um what we do need to consider, however, is that the price is going up for the ever every such thing that we are considering,
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: but since L_C_D_s seems to be uh a definite yes, so
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: it seems to be one area where we would want to spend. So I'll rub off the other
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: two.
Glenda Price: So are we discounting solar energy because rubber's gonna be used in there somewhere or
Arlene Bustos: That was the
Marian Miguel: Oh is oh the constraint was uh
Arlene Bustos: We
Glenda Price: If
Arlene Bustos: can't have
Marian Miguel: yeah.
Glenda Price: solar panels
Arlene Bustos: solar
Glenda Price: with
Arlene Bustos: panels
Glenda Price: the rubber.
Marian Miguel: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: with rubber,
Marian Miguel: So
Arlene Bustos: so.
Glenda Price: Yeah, okay, so we lose that I think.
Arlene Bustos: Shall we go for if we're going for rubber, we think uh on as our case,
Victoria Torry: Mm-hmm.
Arlene Bustos: and then
Victoria Torry: And the buttons as well, I think.
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Victoria Torry: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: I think
Arlene Bustos: We've
Marian Miguel: uh
Arlene Bustos: got five more minutes.
Marian Miguel: we'll have uh uh using the simple battery will be a safer option as compared to the kinetic energy one, I
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: mean, a although it does seem uh interesting.
Glenda Price: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: But it does not hold any advantages as
Arlene Bustos: Yeah,
Marian Miguel: such
Glenda Price: It's
Marian Miguel: for
Glenda Price: just a
Marian Miguel: a
Glenda Price: gimmick.
Arlene Bustos: mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: yeah. Okay. Uh okay, so r we understand this better now that uh the the speaker is for the feedback, right?
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: It it says uh the things that you type in or something like that,
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: so
Arlene Bustos: I think if we can if we can include them at not too much extra
Marian Miguel: Ye
Arlene Bustos: cost,
Marian Miguel: yeah,
Arlene Bustos: then I'd put them in,
Marian Miguel: we
Arlene Bustos: but if
Marian Miguel: we
Arlene Bustos: it's
Marian Miguel: don't have too much information about it,
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: um
Victoria Torry: Yeah, but it it I think it should be quite cheap because it's from our own
Arlene Bustos: It's
Victoria Torry: company,
Arlene Bustos: from the company,
Victoria Torry: yeah.
Marian Miguel: Yeah, okay,
Arlene Bustos: so
Marian Miguel: so so th this is in as well then, the
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: sample speaker.
Arlene Bustos: Okay.
Marian Miguel: Right.
Arlene Bustos: And the case is curved on one side, but then
Marian Miguel: Flat
Arlene Bustos: flat
Marian Miguel: on the top.
Arlene Bustos: flat, so it's flipped into
Victoria Torry: Mm-hmm.
Marian Miguel: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: each other.
Marian Miguel: Okay.
Arlene Bustos: Can I pull the
Glenda Price: Yeah,
Arlene Bustos: thing
Glenda Price: sure
Arlene Bustos: out the back of your
Glenda Price: j
Arlene Bustos: computer? Just so we can
Glenda Price: Sorry, do you want Glenda Price to
Arlene Bustos: Nothing, it's right, I'm just There we go.
Glenda Price: What does um I_C_S_ mean?
Marian Miguel: I_C_s? Uh integrated circuits.
Glenda Price: Okay, cool. So it's advanced integrated circuits?
Marian Miguel: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: Uh oh now I've gone too far.
Marian Miguel: Uh um we we're definitely going in for voice recognition as well as
Victoria Torry: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: L_C_D_s,
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Marian Miguel: mm.
Arlene Bustos: We're on our way.
Arlene Bustos: Okay. So we've basically worked out that we're going with a simple battery, the advanced chip
Marian Miguel: Right.
Arlene Bustos: and a curved on one side case which is folded in on itself,
Marian Miguel: Yep.
Arlene Bustos: um made out of rubber and the buttons are also rubber. We're having push-buttons on the outside and then on the inside an L_C_D_ with spinning wheel, and we're incorporating voice recognition. That's our overall concept,
Victoria Torry: Um
Arlene Bustos: and it's gonna look sort of vegetable, and be in bright vegetable colours.
Victoria Torry: Uh-huh. So w w would with have the spinning wheel inside with the L_C_D_, or would it be on the outer
Arlene Bustos: I think
Glenda Price: Imagine
Arlene Bustos: it's on
Glenda Price: it would
Arlene Bustos: the
Glenda Price: be inside.
Victoria Torry: Okay.
Glenda Price: So um actually that could
Marian Miguel: Mm.
Glenda Price: like really cut down your thing, so you've got your outside, which is like minimalist,
Victoria Torry: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: and then you open it up and
Victoria Torry: Yeah,
Glenda Price: you've got
Victoria Torry: okay.
Glenda Price: a screen and a spinning wheel, which you can incorporate buttons into.
Victoria Torry: Mm-hmm.
Arlene Bustos: Mm-mm.
Glenda Price: Um so you've
Arlene Bustos: Yeah.
Glenda Price: still not got like a lot of stuff in the
Arlene Bustos: On the
Glenda Price: You've maybe got, you know like if you're modelling on iPod you've got five buttons and
Arlene Bustos: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Price: a wheel, and four of the buttons are in the wheel, and the other one's the little bit inside the
Arlene Bustos: In
Glenda Price: wheel,
Arlene Bustos: the centre, yeah,
Glenda Price: yeah.
Victoria Torry: Mm yeah.
Arlene Bustos: sure. Okay, so now we've got thirty minutes before our next meeting. In the meantime, Marian Miguel over here is gonna work on the look and feel design,
Marian Miguel: Mm-hmm.
Arlene Bustos: which I'll presume he'll work out what that means. Um Victoria Torry will work on the user interface design and Glenda Price is going to work on product evaluation. And as well as that, the two designers are going to work together on our prototype following those instructions that we've just come up with using modelling clay and you will get extra
Victoria Torry: Mm-hmm.
Arlene Bustos: instructions from your
Marian Miguel: Cool.
Arlene Bustos: personal coach. Is that all okay? And anyone
Victoria Torry: Yeah.
Arlene Bustos: who hasn't put their their presentation in the project documents
Marian Miguel: Yeah,
Arlene Bustos: folder,
Marian Miguel: okay.
Arlene Bustos: it would be good just so in case
Victoria Torry: Mm-hmm.
Arlene Bustos: we have to refer to it.
Glenda Price: Cool, I'm gonna go and sit on my own.
Arlene Bustos: Y ah nobody wants to talk to you.
Glenda Price: I know,
Arlene Bustos: Unplug yourself.
Glenda Price: I'm hated.
Victoria Torry: Hmm.
Glenda Price: I've got a bit tangled up in all this.
Victoria Torry: So but shall I move away first or shall I stay here with
Arlene Bustos: I dunno, maybe
Victoria Torry: we need to
Arlene Bustos: I would car | Arlene Bustos opens the meeting by stating the agenda. Marian Miguel begins presenting, first describing the insides of a remote control. He lists the options for types of batteries, shapes for the remote case, materials to use, and functions to include such as push buttons, scroll wheels, and LCD screens. He then talks about the type of chip certain features would require. The interface specialist begins presenting, first defining user interface and then showing some examples of remotes. She mentions that many existing remotes do not have a nice appearance, and states her preference for a remote that is small and simple and contains a scrolling wheel. Glenda Price gives her presentation about user requirements and current trends. She shares that fruits and vegetables are popular, meaning curviness and assymetry are in. The group decides to use LCD screens to give the remote style. They discuss what material should be used, talk about how the surface of the case should look, and plan out the general user interface. After they make some decisions about the remote, Arlene Bustos closes the meeting by telling them what their tasks will be until the next meeting. | 2 | amisum | train |
Jane Riendeau: Mm-hmm?
Jane Riendeau: Okay.
Jane Riendeau: Ooh.
Yolanda Wessells: So we're 'kay? On the or No. I dunno where to put it 'cause the Okay. Could you s take it off?
Hazel Brown: Is that alright? or Okay.
Yolanda Wessells: Okay.
Hazel Brown: Keeps coming off. 'S fiddly.
Jane Riendeau: Hmm.
Hazel Brown: Right.
Jane Riendeau: How we sta wa how do we start Does anybody know?
Hazel Brown: Oh, another one.
Jane Riendeau: So that's this Oh okay, right.
Yolanda Wessells: Are we free to take notes uh Okay.
Jane Riendeau: Uh.
Jane Riendeau: Hmm. Okay, just hang on a second everybody. I haven't actually looked at this yet.
Hazel Brown: Ah.
Jane Riendeau: um
Hazel Brown: Very nice.
Jane Riendeau: I haven't looked at it, but let's just start it off and we'll see what happens. If you're all ready.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: So is the agenda? Opening, acquaintance, tool training and project plan then closing. Project aim is a new remote control. It's original, uh trendy and it's user-friendly.
Hazel Brown: 'Kay.
Jane Riendeau: Project method, functional design, individual work, another meeting, conceptual design, individual work, and a meeting of details design, individual work and a meeting. Tool training. Try out the whiteboard, every participant should draw their favourite animal and sum up their favourite characteristics of that animal.
Hazel Brown: Okay.
Jane Riendeau: Um. Uh Miss Industrial Designer, would you like to
Yolanda Wessells: Okay.
Jane Riendeau: go first?
Yolanda Wessells: So are we supposed to bring the little things for the
Jane Riendeau: Yeah, why don't you just c, I think just clip on clip do you have a belt?
Hazel Brown: Clip.
Yolanda Wessells: Mm.
Jane Riendeau: Or put 'em in your pocket,
Yolanda Wessells: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: yeah.
Yolanda Wessells: okay. So my favourite animal
Jane Riendeau: Yeah, what's your favourite animal?
Yolanda Wessells: 'Kay um
Hazel Brown: Ah.
Jane Riendeau: Is it rude?
Hazel Brown: It's an elephant.
Jane Riendeau: That's a very good elephant.
Adrienne Leon: The back end of an elephant.
Hazel Brown: Oh my gosh, I'm never gonna be able to draw that well.
Jane Riendeau: 'Kay, and you want to write up on there, it says you've gotta sum up your f f your favourite characteristics of that animal.
Yolanda Wessells: Um okay, it's big, it's got a great memory.
Hazel Brown: Does it? Oh.
Yolanda Wessells: Supposed to have a great memory,
Jane Riendeau: Mm.
Hazel Brown: Mm.
Yolanda Wessells: And uh dunno know why but looks like nice to Hazel Brown.
Jane Riendeau: Okay.
Yolanda Wessells: Nice animal.
Jane Riendeau: Wonderful, well done. Do you want to use the wipe the m the
Yolanda Wessells: Okay.
Jane Riendeau: wiper and wipe it off? And Mister aesthetics designer do you wanna
Adrienne Leon: Aesthetic
Jane Riendeau: go next?
Adrienne Leon: yep,
Hazel Brown: I have no
Adrienne Leon: sure.
Hazel Brown: idea what my favourite animal is.
Adrienne Leon: 'Kay, my favourite animal, uh let's see.
Hazel Brown: Oh. It's
Adrienne Leon: Dunno if any of you have seen Napoleon Dynamite before. It's a liger,
Jane Riendeau: No.
Hazel Brown: A what?
Adrienne Leon: a combination of a lion and tiger.
Hazel Brown: Alright.
Adrienne Leon: Have
Hazel Brown: How.
Adrienne Leon: you not seen Napoleon Dynamite?
Jane Riendeau: No.
Yolanda Wessells: No.
Hazel Brown: No.
Adrienne Leon: Oh it's a hilarious movie. You have to see it. And and it's best characteristic is it's pretty much the awesomest animal. But you have to see the movie to fully appreciate it.
Jane Riendeau: Okay, well done.
Hazel Brown: Great. Hazel Brown?
Jane Riendeau: Yeah. Miss mar Miss Marketing?
Hazel Brown: Okay. quite sure how this is gonna work. Cool. Uh well I'll try my best to draw.
Hazel Brown: Can I just draw the face?
Jane Riendeau: Um yeah, I think you can just draw the face, but then you'll have to describe in writing how the rest of it looks.
Hazel Brown: Ooh. It's a cat.
Jane Riendeau: That's a very pr pretty cat.
Hazel Brown: Which also has what? A big fat body and big and a long tail.
Jane Riendeau: Okay, do y do you wanna do some write you wanna just write some words about it?
Hazel Brown: Why? Because um cuddly. And usually cats are very friendly. Usually. And they're healing as well. They heal. And they can feel when a human's
Jane Riendeau: Wow,
Hazel Brown: got problems so
Jane Riendeau: so they're kinda spiritual.
Hazel Brown: So, that's why I like cats.
Jane Riendeau: Well done.
Hazel Brown: There we are, that's Hazel Brown.
Jane Riendeau: Okay.
Hazel Brown: Mm.
Jane Riendeau: Um, I don't actually have a favourite animal, but for the for th for this meeting I'll s draw a little
Hazel Brown: Mm-hmm.
Jane Riendeau: Uh. I honestly can't draw for toffee. Uh.
Yolanda Wessells: Really? Oh
Jane Riendeau: Yeah.
Yolanda Wessells: that's a
Jane Riendeau: no
Adrienne Leon: A prairie dog?
Jane Riendeau: no uh
Adrienne Leon: Oh a squirrel?
Jane Riendeau: That's exactly what it is. Uh not a very good one
Yolanda Wessells: Not bad I would say.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah, that's pretty good.
Jane Riendeau: Okay, well, you got it's a s It's a squirrel, and I like them, because they're cute and stupid.
Yolanda Wessells: Very good.
Hazel Brown: Ah.
Adrienne Leon: Alright.
Jane Riendeau: Right. Okay, so, I guess that was the test to see if this equipment is all working. Mm. Let's move on to the next page. Okay, project finance, selling price twenty five Euros, profit aim fifty million Euros.
Hazel Brown: Market range internationally sold.
Jane Riendeau: Yeah. Production cost, ah right it's gotta be
Hazel Brown: Ah right
Jane Riendeau: can't
Hazel Brown: okay.
Jane Riendeau: cost any more than twelve fifty to make. experience with with remote control, so talk about who who's used what. Any ideas? Stuff like that. Next meeting starts in thirty minutes. At quarter to twelve.
Adrienne Leon: So I think before we close uh, we are expected I mean the last slide wanted us to maybe discuss longer what our what our ideas where. I mean if you wanna go back to the last slide. Uh
Jane Riendeau: Yeah.
Hazel Brown: Yeah.
Adrienne Leon: S Yeah, I think we're I mean before we close the meeting, we're supposed to come up with some ideas for
Jane Riendeau: Oh k so we're actually supposed to be doing this discussion like right now are we
Hazel Brown: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: or
Adrienne Leon: Yeah.
Yolanda Wessells: Mm.
Jane Riendeau: oh okay.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: I thought this was just t giving us instructions for the re to do next,
Adrienne Leon: Yeah,
Jane Riendeau: but
Adrienne Leon: I think this is just the preliminary, get some rough ideas for what our experiences with remote controls have been and and what we would roughly what we would incorporate into a new one maybe.
Jane Riendeau: Okay. Right, who's got experiences with remote controls then? Pretty much everybody.
Yolanda Wessells: Yeah.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah, I think we've all got
Hazel Brown: Uh.
Jane Riendeau: Um.
Yolanda Wessells: Is this a T_V_ one we are supposed to make?
Hazel Brown: Yeah. Yeah it's a T_V_ remote control.
Yolanda Wessells: Okay.
Jane Riendeau: 'Kay
Hazel Brown: Well.
Jane Riendeau: um.
Yolanda Wessells: T
Hazel Brown: A new remote control for T_V_. What would I like?
Jane Riendeau: W what
Hazel Brown: Um.
Jane Riendeau: You want it big do you want it small.
Hazel Brown: Medium.
Jane Riendeau: Are we are we going for like like telephones are going little teeny tiny things or we are going for something that's
Adrienne Leon: Mm.
Jane Riendeau: that's big and
Adrienne Leon: Yeah it seems like there's like there's sort of a tension between two ideas, I mean, you want you want one remote that maybe can work uh all all of the functions of T_V_ and if you have whatever associated with T_V_ the D_V_D_ player, or
Jane Riendeau: Video
Adrienne Leon: something like that,
Jane Riendeau: and ts hi-fi
Adrienne Leon: but like at
Jane Riendeau: and
Adrienne Leon: the
Jane Riendeau: stuff.
Adrienne Leon: same time you don't wanna really busy remote with a thousand buttons on it or something.
Jane Riendeau: Maybe you
Adrienne Leon: Mm.
Jane Riendeau: yeah now th that's the other thing is it's gotta be cheap.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: 'Cause I I I mean I was thinking something that's got different like maybe a a an L_C_D_ display on it that's got different pages for different devices,
Hazel Brown: Mm.
Jane Riendeau: but that would p that would probably be quite expensive.
Yolanda Wessells: But how do we know how much uh, I mean, how much do we have per how
Hazel Brown: Twelve
Yolanda Wessells: much?
Hazel Brown: fifty.
Yolanda Wessells: Twelve
Adrienne Leon: It
Yolanda Wessells: fifty.
Adrienne Leon: g can't be more
Hazel Brown: Each.
Adrienne Leon: than twelve fifty per unit.
Jane Riendeau: Per unit, yeah.
Adrienne Leon: Cost.
Yolanda Wessells: So do we have to be realistic within the budget or
Jane Riendeau: Well
Yolanda Wessells: Close
Jane Riendeau: at the
Hazel Brown: Guess
Jane Riendeau: moment
Yolanda Wessells: pr I don't
Jane Riendeau: we could,
Yolanda Wessells: know
Jane Riendeau: wa
Yolanda Wessells: how
Jane Riendeau: I
Yolanda Wessells: much
Jane Riendeau: mean we
Yolanda Wessells: it
Jane Riendeau: 'cause
Yolanda Wessells: would
Jane Riendeau: we
Yolanda Wessells: cost.
Jane Riendeau: this
Yolanda Wessells: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: is what we th what we're doing at the moment is just saying what what we'd like, and then after we after we've found out what we can like, some different ideas, we can then go and do the research to find out if these any of these ideas are feasible
Yolanda Wessells: Right.
Jane Riendeau: or not. So would be nice to have something that that controls lots of different things.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: Um.
Hazel Brown: Couldn't we have like one that comes out? Like so you have one in like
Yolanda Wessells: Yeah.
Hazel Brown: mm it doesn't have to be really thick. I mean remote controls can be thin bits. And then you have one for your D_V_D_ and you sort of slide it out, and then you have another one, you slide it out.
Jane Riendeau: 'Kay.
Hazel Brown: have slides. And then it all comes compact
Jane Riendeau: Okay, that's.
Hazel Brown: into one. So it's not you actually just putting three or four different remotes together but making them thinner, and um into one basically.
Jane Riendeau: Th that's an idea.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah.
Hazel Brown: So you just flip them out.
Jane Riendeau: Okay.
Yolanda Wessells: Um have uh one very complicated one on one side with all the D_V_D_ and V_C_R_ access and stuff, and then on the other side o one uh a remote control that would be very very simple with just the channel, program plus and minus, and the just the mute button, for example. I can real keep it really really simple on one side and the other side be very complicated.
Jane Riendeau: One side for kids, one side for adults.
Yolanda Wessells: Yeah.
Adrienne Leon: I'm not sure
Yolanda Wessells: Or grandma
Adrienne Leon: if that's like
Yolanda Wessells: as well, you know it's like what is
Adrienne Leon: I'm
Yolanda Wessells: the
Adrienne Leon: not
Yolanda Wessells: mute
Adrienne Leon: sure if
Yolanda Wessells: button.
Adrienne Leon: it's a good idea to have a two sided remote though, 'cause it would be very hard to use in the way that you
Yolanda Wessells: No, but you
Adrienne Leon: mani
Yolanda Wessells: would slide
Adrienne Leon: manipulate
Yolanda Wessells: it
Adrienne Leon: it.
Yolanda Wessells: into uh someth like something on the back would hold like you wouldn't
Adrienne Leon: Oh.
Yolanda Wessells: be able to press the buttons,
Adrienne Leon: Oh okay.
Jane Riendeau: Like
Yolanda Wessells: but
Jane Riendeau: it or
Adrienne Leon: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: something like a flip telephone, something like that maybe.
Adrienne Leon: Okay.
Hazel Brown: That would be cool. I was thinking
Jane Riendeau: F flip
Hazel Brown: that
Jane Riendeau: it open
Hazel Brown: like a
Jane Riendeau: and you've
Hazel Brown: flip.
Jane Riendeau: got all the buttons, or you flip it closed and you've just got the basic buttons on the outside maybe.
Adrienne Leon: Mm-hmm.
Jane Riendeau: Um, oh we've got five minutes left.
Yolanda Wessells: Start breaking up.
Hazel Brown: Okay.
Jane Riendeau: But okay.
Hazel Brown: Um.
Jane Riendeau: Well we've got a k we've got a few ideas there.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah, we should uh I guess by the end of this meeting we should have at least a a rough conception you know stage one was technical functions design, what effect the apparatus should have. Okay. Um so I mean we still have time in our next meeting to come up with the actual concept for the user interface, but the the functions that we're sure that we want are that it can control the T_V_, but also devices connected to the to the T_V_, I mean,
Jane Riendeau: Yeah.
Adrienne Leon: be able to operate D_V_D_ players, things like that.
Jane Riendeau: I have got I think we should also have a back-up plan of I 'cause I I I just think that it might be expensive to make something that I mean we don't, we haven't been told it has to be something that will control everything.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah.
Yolanda Wessells: Yeah.
Adrienne Leon: Okay. Right.
Jane Riendeau: What do you reckon?
Adrienne Leon: Yeah, I mean.
Jane Riendeau: See 'cause, I'm just thinking bearing in mind th we've gotta we have to have something that's cheap to make.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah, that's true, maybe we should just concentrate on having a a good T_V_ remote, and have it be um
Jane Riendeau: I think we'll be able to come up with ideas and stuff a lot quicker.
Adrienne Leon: have it be like ergonomic
Jane Riendeau: Yeah.
Adrienne Leon: so it's comfortable to use, uh simple to use, and looks decent
Jane Riendeau: May
Adrienne Leon: and
Jane Riendeau: w you
Hazel Brown: But what'll
Jane Riendeau: know, maybe
Hazel Brown: make
Jane Riendeau: even
Hazel Brown: it what'll make it interesting for people to buy though?
Jane Riendeau: Or
Hazel Brown: I mean
Jane Riendeau: maybe
Hazel Brown: if it's
Jane Riendeau: even
Hazel Brown: if
Jane Riendeau: so
Hazel Brown: it's
Jane Riendeau: something
Hazel Brown: just like
Jane Riendeau: that's for disabled people or so people that uh b don't see very well or big buttons for touchy buttons for
Adrienne Leon: Sorta find a niche for our remote, like market it to a certain
Jane Riendeau: Yeah.
Adrienne Leon: kind
Yolanda Wessells: Yeah.
Adrienne Leon: of p kind of people, certain
Jane Riendeau: Or just
Adrienne Leon: certain demographic
Jane Riendeau: one that looks really fucking cool.
Hazel Brown: Mm-hmm.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah, no
Yolanda Wessells: Could
Adrienne Leon: I think
Yolanda Wessells: be
Adrienne Leon: you're
Yolanda Wessells: really
Adrienne Leon: right.
Yolanda Wessells: light or, I dunno, something special.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah, rathe rather than focus on
Jane Riendeau: Otherwise
Adrienne Leon: Y
Jane Riendeau: we'll be we'll be here all day talking about do this let's do
Adrienne Leon: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: that n I think we sh I think
Yolanda Wessells: Yeah,
Jane Riendeau: we
Yolanda Wessells: 'cause
Jane Riendeau: should
Yolanda Wessells: at the end of the day if it says just T_V_ remote, doesn't say com combination
Adrienne Leon: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: Yeah.
Yolanda Wessells: with all all the r
Jane Riendeau: I mean obviously everyone we're uh you know uh sounds like we're all a bit sort of gadget heads and we like things that do everything at once, but you know, that's
Adrienne Leon: Remotes spinning out from other remotes and
Jane Riendeau: Yeah.
Hazel Brown: Mm.
Adrienne Leon: having little nested remotes inside.
Jane Riendeau: Yeah, that's right. Yeah. I mean I'd like one that makes tea as well, but that's not gonna happen.
Hazel Brown: I think a flip up thing, 'cause you always have this problem of like if it's on this well I did anyway, like we had five or six remotes and they would be lying on the c on the coach, and you'd come and sit down and ooh, the telephone's the television switched on or something. So maybe something that like does have a lid or closes, so you don't accidentally press a button or
Jane Riendeau: Okay, like
Hazel Brown: record
Jane Riendeau: a lock
Hazel Brown: button
Jane Riendeau: f like
Hazel Brown: for something.
Jane Riendeau: a lock functs function on it like you have on your telephones,
Hazel Brown: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: yeah.
Hazel Brown: But make it like really snazzy and cool people will want it. So make it Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: Yeah, it's gotta be sellable.
Hazel Brown: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: Yeah.
Adrienne Leon: Yeah, that's true what you were saying, I mean it doesn't have to have a flip function, it can just have a lock function, so
Hazel Brown: Mm.
Adrienne Leon: that it's
Jane Riendeau: Yeah.
Yolanda Wessells: Mm.
Adrienne Leon: not uh not usable when you don't want it to be usable.
Hazel Brown: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: Okay.
Hazel Brown: And even for kids as well. It's um it's safer for them, I guess. Like they don't flick onto channels and all that sl flick onto.
Jane Riendeau: No porn channel for children.
Yolanda Wessells: Okay.
Jane Riendeau: Okay. Um alright, so we've got some ideas, we've got um
Adrienne Leon: I guess that's
Jane Riendeau: Let's move on.
Adrienne Leon: good good for now.
Hazel Brown: Mm.
Jane Riendeau: Oops, let's close that. Next meeting, uh
Hazel Brown: W
Jane Riendeau: okay.
Hazel Brown: What does I_D_V_I_D_N_M_E_ stand for?
Jane Riendeau: Industrial Designer
Hazel Brown: Ah
Jane Riendeau: um
Hazel Brown: ri okay.
Jane Riendeau: which is
Hazel Brown: these are requirement specification.
Yolanda Wessells: That's
Jane Riendeau: Um.
Hazel Brown: And I'm marketing.
Yolanda Wessells: Mm.
Jane Riendeau: Yeah, there you go. So User Interface Designer, that's
Adrienne Leon: That's Hazel Brown.
Jane Riendeau: that's
Adrienne Leon: Okay.
Jane Riendeau: that's you, so you gotta you go, you're you're gonna be the one that's working out what what buttons
Adrienne Leon: Right.
Jane Riendeau: we need.
Adrienne Leon: Right.
Jane Riendeau: Um. Industrial Designer, you are the one, you know, you're gonna be working out kind of box it goes in, I guess so, um whether it's what goes into the box, somehow.
Yolanda Wessells: Mm. Har how it works an
Jane Riendeau: And in marketing
Hazel Brown: These
Yolanda Wessells: Bu
Hazel Brown: are requirement specification.
Jane Riendeau: User requirements specifications.
Hazel Brown: So what the user requires
Jane Riendeau: Yeah,
Yolanda Wessells: Do you think
Hazel Brown: in
Jane Riendeau: what
Hazel Brown: a remote.
Yolanda Wessells: our two kind of overlap,
Jane Riendeau: Right, okay, yeah.
Yolanda Wessells: because
Adrienne Leon: Yeah, it does
Hazel Brown: I
Adrienne Leon: seem
Hazel Brown: guess
Adrienne Leon: like our
Hazel Brown: that's
Jane Riendeau: You
Adrienne Leon: our
Jane Riendeau: two
Hazel Brown: what
Adrienne Leon: responsibilities
Hazel Brown: it says.
Adrienne Leon: have
Jane Riendeau: you two are gonna
Adrienne Leon: some
Jane Riendeau: be
Adrienne Leon: overlap.
Jane Riendeau: just, I think, you just double up, you know,
Yolanda Wessells: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: you working
Adrienne Leon: Yeah.
Jane Riendeau: together. You're the one that's gotta go and find out do th do the research, see what people want in a remote, what buttons are used more often, and s
Hazel Brown: Mm.
Jane Riendeau: stuff like that. Oh, we've been warned to finish the meeting now. Okay. Okay everyone, well done. Good meeting.
Adrienne Leon: Alright, see you in thirty minutes.
Jane Riendeau: Yeah.
Hazel Brown: So, do we take these off?
Yolanda Wessells: I don't | Jane Riendeau introduced the upcoming project to the team and then the team members participated in an exercise in which they drew their favorite animals and discussed why they liked those particular animals. Jane Riendeau discussed the project finances and the team engaged in a brainstorming session about various features to consider in designing a remote. Jane Riendeau then further discussed the roles of the team members. | 2 | amisum | train |
Patti Weaver: Oh right okay. I cover myself up.
Deloris Begum: I feel like Madonna with one of these on I. said I feel like Madonna with one of these on.
Patti Weaver: I've always wanted one of these, I really have. Where do you buy 'em from? They're.
Deloris Begum: Right. Hello everybody.
Joyce Love: Hello.
Deloris Begum: Back again for another wonderful meeting. Is uh everyone ready?
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Patti Weaver: Yeah.
Betty Morgan: Almost.
Deloris Begum: Okay, we c we can hold on for a minute.
Patti Weaver: Oh my gosh.
Deloris Begum: I figured with the spam thing, if you can't beat it, join in.
Joyce Love: That's the kind of spam that everybody likes to receive.
Betty Morgan: Mm 'kay.
Deloris Begum: Are you ready?
Deloris Begum: Okay, right, well, I take it that you are all ready now. Um alright first off we'll just uh recap our last meeting. Um which was we got together just to basically decide on well to talk about what it is that we were actually uh supposed to be doing, and who we all are and stuff like that, mm get bit more of an idea together of what's going on. Um what we are gonna talk about in this meeting is um now that we know what it is that we are doing, now we know that it's a T_V_ remote and stuff and you guys have just been off doing some some uh R_ and D_ for that, that's research and development for
Patti Weaver: Mm-hmm.
Deloris Begum: those that haven't heard that before, see I'm learning all sorts of new technologi terms in technology today. Um yeah, we're gonna hear your uh th three little presentations, whether
Joyce Love: Hmm.
Deloris Begum: they be on computer or on the whiteboard or whatever you want.
Joyce Love: Do you have any preference uh of order?
Deloris Begum: Um I'd like to um hear o I'd like to hear who's g who's on the um from from uh Catherine actually first. I want what I'd like to hear about is uh if we've finally decided on um what
Patti Weaver: Batteries.
Deloris Begum: sort of energy we're gonna be using and
Joyce Love: I think she is still finishing her.
Betty Morgan: No no no no, it's fine I'm just preparing.
Deloris Begum: It's just that yeah, let's let's hear from you first.
Joyce Love: Hmm.
Betty Morgan: Okay. Where is that
Joyce Love: Okay,
Betty Morgan: thing?
Joyce Love: it's uh
Patti Weaver: It's here.
Betty Morgan: Oh sorry, couldn't see. Would that work?
Deloris Begum: Get yourself in position.
Patti Weaver: Ah.
Betty Morgan: Okay, so that's Patti Weaver again. Um so um for the energy sources we can have a basic battery, a hand dynamo which is which was used uh in the fifties for torches, if you remember that kind of which wouldn't
Deloris Begum: I don't
Betty Morgan: be v
Deloris Begum: think any of us remember
Betty Morgan: wouldn't
Deloris Begum: the fifties.
Betty Morgan: be v
Joyce Love: Is it like
Betty Morgan: v
Joyce Love: a crank
Betty Morgan: yeah,
Joyce Love: thing
Betty Morgan: yeah.
Joyce Love: or something.
Betty Morgan: It wouldn't be very fancy. You can have a kinetic provision of energy, which is used on some watches these days. So if you have just a bit of gentle movement that it will give
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Betty Morgan: it the energy to work. Or you can use solar cells, but I'm not sure about that indoors, really, but
Joyce Love: Well, there's sometimes combinations, I mean, like calculators
Betty Morgan: Yeah.
Joyce Love: do combinations of battery with but also using some solar power.
Deloris Begum: Do
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Deloris Begum: sol solar panel things, do they have to work from the sun or can they work from a light bulb?
Betty Morgan: I dunno
Deloris Begum: Does anybody
Betty Morgan: actually.
Deloris Begum: know?
Joyce Love: Uh I think, it has to be on the on the solar energy, but I know.
Betty Morgan: I dunno. Um. Think the the uh
Deloris Begum: Okay.
Betty Morgan: what would cost the less would be the basic battery, really.
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Betty Morgan: And uh if we want something fancier, I think the kinetic provision of energy could be nice, but I don't know if it's worth the cost. So we've got to discuss that.
Deloris Begum: Mm. Okay, jolly good.
Betty Morgan: For the case of the remotes itself, um they can be a general case, which is just a flat one. You can have uh a curved one or a double curved one, if you know what I mean, so
Deloris Begum: What's a double curved one?
Betty Morgan: You know, kind of more ergonomic, that kind of suits the palm of your hand, that kind of thing. So
Deloris Begum: Okay.
Betty Morgan: Um then the case material itself, so it can be uh uh either plastic or latex, uh rubber, wood, or titanium. And th for each of them you have uh cases where for example titanium, you can't use it for if you if we're choosing a double curved case, we can't choose titanium. And if we are choosing um solar cells then we can't choose latex for the case material, so we just have to take that into account. But if we're choosing just the flat case then we can go for anything. And I think we discussed earlier on the R_ S_ I_ problem thing, so we could uh
Deloris Begum: So that might be an idea of using
Betty Morgan: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: the rubber, but then it should, you know
Joyce Love: Let's have a squeezable remote.
Deloris Begum: yeah.
Betty Morgan: Yeah. And also it doesn't break as easily maybe, I dunno
Deloris Begum: when a T_V_ programme's got one watching the match and your team's just lost, you can fuzz it across the room and it'll bounce off the wall back
Patti Weaver: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: at you. Yeah, I like that idea.
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Betty Morgan: So rubber would be Okay.
Patti Weaver: I think rubber's
Deloris Begum: Rubber, we're all we're all going we're all liking that idea? You think you can market
Patti Weaver: But after
Deloris Begum: that?
Patti Weaver: my after my fashion thing, I think you'll realise that rubber is more
Betty Morgan: Uh
Deloris Begum: Ooh, we
Betty Morgan: s
Deloris Begum: like rubber, ooh.
Patti Weaver: People.
Betty Morgan: so if d okay. And then there are the push-buttons, so you can have basic push-buttons or a scroll-wheels, like you have on a mouse, um or you could have um L_C_D_, which gives you a display. Um scroll buttons, as well.
Deloris Begum: Uh-huh.
Betty Morgan: So if you use a rubber double curved case, you must use rubber push-buttons. So if we're going for rubber then we have to decide for the case. Um and if we choose double curved then we have to go for rubber push-buttons. So it's
Deloris Begum: Well,
Betty Morgan: a constraint.
Deloris Begum: we're gonna go with I think we've decided that it's gonna be a rubber case
Betty Morgan: Yeah, but
Deloris Begum: so
Betty Morgan: is it a double curved one or not? If it's not a double curved, then we've got the choice for the push-buttons, if it's a double curve, we've gotta go for rubber push-buttons. If that makes sense.
Deloris Begum: push buttons instead of the wheel?
Betty Morgan: Yeah.
Joyce Love: If it's rubber, isn't it malleable anyway, it doesn't matter if it's double I mean isn't a rubber case, mean it's completely flexed, I mean, it it flexes to whatever they want it to? Mean so what's the difference between a normal rubber case and a rubble doub double rubber double curved
Betty Morgan: No, but
Deloris Begum: rubble
Joyce Love: case?
Deloris Begum: double double.
Betty Morgan: na le you see, you've got, okay, the energy that's
Deloris Begum: I'll have
Betty Morgan: one
Deloris Begum: a Big
Betty Morgan: thing,
Deloris Begum: Mac, please.
Betty Morgan: then you have the case is uh, whether it's flat or curved. And that's we don't care if it's rub rubber or not, but then we've decided that we going for rubber for the case material. So if we've chosen rub rubber and if now we have the choice for the case whether it's flat, single curved or double curved. And I'm just saying if it if we choose it to be double curved then we need to go I dunno why, but we need to go for uh rubber push-buttons.
Joyce Love: Okay.
Betty Morgan: So, either I dunno we just need to decide on the
Deloris Begum: Let's have
Betty Morgan: on
Deloris Begum: rubber
Betty Morgan: the case.
Deloris Begum: push buttons, hey.
Joyce Love: Okay. Go rubber. Go
Betty Morgan: Let's
Joyce Love: rubber
Betty Morgan: go crazy.
Joyce Love: the whole way.
Betty Morgan: And then, do I have a last slide? Yes, I do. Um so the push-buttons themselves they can be just simple or they can be so that's just the electronics between the but behind the push-buttons.
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Betty Morgan: Um and the price that go with it with it, so the simple push-buttons are gonna be the cheapest. Uh if we get a scroll-wheel, that's a higher price range. If we get an advanced chip which is um used for the L_C_D_, the display thing, then that's even more expensive.
Deloris Begum: Simple, yeah. Chip on print. It's a bit.
Deloris Begum: Okay, uh what I'm not understanding here
Betty Morgan: Mm.
Deloris Begum: is uh, okay, advanced chip on print, which I presume is like one P_C_B_ and that's got all the electronics on one board
Betty Morgan: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: including the um
Betty Morgan: The infra-red.
Deloris Begum: infra-red sender?
Betty Morgan: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: Right. Um what a what alternatives do we have to that? Y um what alternatives do we have to the chip
Betty Morgan: Well,
Deloris Begum: on
Betty Morgan: if
Deloris Begum: print?
Betty Morgan: if it's not chip on print then, I guess, you get different chip components, and you build them separately and doesn't include the infra-red. It's less expensive mm
Deloris Begum: so it sounds
Betty Morgan: Technically speaking, it's not as advanced, but it does the job, too.
Deloris Begum: So, why would we not go for that? If it's something
Betty Morgan: Fo
Deloris Begum: that's inside the the unit.
Betty Morgan: It doesn't,
Deloris Begum: I it
Betty Morgan: yeah, yeah, yeah.
Deloris Begum: doesn't affects whether the customer's
Betty Morgan: Totally.
Deloris Begum: gonna buy it or not.
Betty Morgan: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: Um
Betty Morgan: So let's not
Deloris Begum: we
Betty Morgan: go
Deloris Begum: wanna
Betty Morgan: for
Deloris Begum: go
Betty Morgan: the
Deloris Begum: for an i i all so long as it works,
Betty Morgan: Yeah, yeah.
Deloris Begum: you
Betty Morgan: I
Deloris Begum: know.
Betty Morgan: agree.
Deloris Begum: So let's not let's uh not bother with the chip on print.
Betty Morgan: So it's either um the scroll-wheel or the push-buttons.
Deloris Begum: Yeah. S yeah, push buttons.
Patti Weaver: What about the just
Joyce Love: I
Patti Weaver: developed
Joyce Love: think push-buttons
Patti Weaver: uh sample
Joyce Love: is
Patti Weaver: sensor?
Deloris Begum: What about what?
Patti Weaver: G there, the sample sensor, sample
Betty Morgan: Well
Patti Weaver: speaker thing.
Deloris Begum: Well, what do we need a speaker for in a remote control unit?
Patti Weaver: Mm, I dunno. Be cool.
Betty Morgan: It'd
Patti Weaver: Channel
Betty Morgan: be it'd
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Betty Morgan: be cool,
Patti Weaver: two.
Betty Morgan: but they are saying they've just developed it, I'm just guessing. But it's gonna
Deloris Begum: S
Betty Morgan: be the most expensive option, probably and
Joyce Love: Th the the speech recognition um option is it doesn't seem really very promising for us
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: uh, 'cause
Deloris Begum: It's not
Joyce Love: uh
Deloris Begum: something that we wanna t go into with this
Joyce Love: The
Deloris Begum: product.
Joyce Love: yeah the example that they're already using it for is with the coffee machine, where, basically, you can program a sample wi um That when you say something it will give a response, and you program the response as well. Just uh clips of tha that you record yourself. So you can program your coffee-maker that when you say, good morning, to it it says, hello Rick, or whatever.
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: But, I mean, it's not it would
Betty Morgan: Hm.
Joyce Love: be one thing if it was speech recognition where you say something and it turns the T_V_ on like, turn the T_V_ on, and i turns comes on, but it's not that. It just gives
Patti Weaver: Oh,
Joyce Love: you
Patti Weaver: it
Joyce Love: a
Patti Weaver: just gives an answer.
Joyce Love: it just gives you a verbal response. So, yeah, I mean,
Patti Weaver: Oh, then then
Joyce Love: like what's the point of saying,
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: Hello remote, I mean, hello,
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: how how are
Patti Weaver: I
Joyce Love: you?
Patti Weaver: thought I thought it was when
Betty Morgan: Just
Patti Weaver: they
Betty Morgan: if
Patti Weaver: said
Betty Morgan: you are really lonely,
Joyce Love: Yeah,
Betty Morgan: maybe.
Joyce Love: if you're really lonely, it
Patti Weaver: I thought
Joyce Love: is it's
Patti Weaver: when they said, voice recognition, they meant um like, channel five, and it
Joyce Love: No,
Patti Weaver: will change.
Joyce Love: tha that
Patti Weaver: Like
Joyce Love: w
Patti Weaver: you
Joyce Love: that
Patti Weaver: talk
Joyce Love: w
Patti Weaver: to it.
Joyce Love: that would be
Patti Weaver: Can
Joyce Love: more
Patti Weaver: I
Joyce Love: promising.
Patti Weaver: have channel five?
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: It it's just a remote that talks to you. Uh.
Patti Weaver: Oh,
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Patti Weaver: then forget
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Patti Weaver: about it. Oh right okay.
Joyce Love: I mean to certain cues.
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Betty Morgan: Okay, so I'll go back, maybe, to the previous slide and we can decide for each problem, what we should choose. So
Joyce Love: 'Kay.
Betty Morgan: for the energy source, do we go for the battery or the
Joyce Love: Yeah, I'm fine with the basic battery.
Deloris Begum: Basic
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Deloris Begum: battery. It's cheap, it's cheerful, it's worked, does work.
Joyce Love: Hmm.
Betty Morgan: Cheaper option. Are
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Betty Morgan: you happy with that?
Patti Weaver: Yeah.
Betty Morgan: Okay. So we'll go for the battery. Then the case, do you want it flat or curved or sing or
Deloris Begum: We
Betty Morgan: double
Deloris Begum: were go
Betty Morgan: curved?
Deloris Begum: we were going with the late with the the R_S_I_ rubber, weren't
Joyce Love: Yeah,
Deloris Begum: we?
Joyce Love: so we want it rub rubber double curved.
Deloris Begum: The the
Patti Weaver: So it will look like
Betty Morgan: Double?
Patti Weaver: something like
Deloris Begum: The double
Patti Weaver: this.
Deloris Begum: whopper, please.
Betty Morgan: Okay, so then if we use double
Deloris Begum: Yep,
Betty Morgan: curved
Deloris Begum: but
Betty Morgan: case, then we have
Deloris Begum: we're going
Betty Morgan: to
Deloris Begum: for
Betty Morgan: u
Deloris Begum: the simple
Betty Morgan: choose
Deloris Begum: buttons.
Joyce Love: So rubber
Betty Morgan: rubber push-buttons,
Joyce Love: rubber keys,
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Betty Morgan: and that's
Joyce Love: yeah.
Betty Morgan: fine?
Deloris Begum: And it's cheapest all round, it sounds kinda funky, and
Betty Morgan: P
Deloris Begum: we can also
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: market it as i 'cause we were s saying earl you were saying earlier in your research that um the the people have the R_ people were getting the complaining about R_S_I_, and this is anti-R_S_I_.
Patti Weaver: Yeah.
Betty Morgan: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: So that's another marketing point that we can use.
Patti Weaver: Well the rubber push-buttons. Don't you have to move
Deloris Begum: But
Patti Weaver: your
Deloris Begum: anything is gonna have buttons.
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Deloris Begum: Even if it's a jog wheel, it's still repetitive.
Betty Morgan: I thought they
Deloris Begum: You
Betty Morgan: would give an option of flat buttons or a
Deloris Begum: You see, you can
Betty Morgan: That
Deloris Begum: still
Betty Morgan: they don't.
Deloris Begum: get it does you still get repetitive strain injury, whether you are pressing a button or pressing a flat bit of screen. It's the v it's the
Betty Morgan: Mm.
Deloris Begum: fact that you are pressing the same doing the same movement. It's not actually what you are doing. But the fact that this this rubber i is actually used in these anti-R_S_I_ ps specific
Patti Weaver: Mm. Yeah, the
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Patti Weaver: rubber's good.
Joyce Love: We're giving them a way to burn off steam, basically, yeah.
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Patti Weaver: Yeah, so they can sit there and go like
Joyce Love: Not that watching T_V_ should be that stressful.
Deloris Begum: And you know, yeah, you can fuzz it across the room and throw
Joyce Love: Oh
Deloris Begum: it
Joyce Love: yeah,
Deloris Begum: at throw
Joyce Love: I guess
Deloris Begum: it
Joyce Love: T_V_
Deloris Begum: at your
Joyce Love: can
Deloris Begum: children
Joyce Love: be stressful, yeah, if you're watching sports.
Deloris Begum: yeah.
Betty Morgan: Alright, that's Patti Weaver done.
Joyce Love: Alright. Alright.
Deloris Begum: about the um it's the interface.
Joyce Love: Yeah, some of what I have to say ties into what Catherine was just talking about.
Deloris Begum: Great.
Betty Morgan: Sorry.
Joyce Love: Okay, so I'm continuing with the user interface uh topic. And so basically I consulted with our manufacturing division. It sounded like Catherine was also speaking with them. Uh I also took uh Reissa's marketing findings from the last meeting into consideration um, 'cause I think that's that's crucial as far as uh what keys we're going to inc inclu what buttons we are going to include and and how they're laid out.
Deloris Begum: Mm.
Joyce Love: Uh and so the manufacturing division uh sent some some samples of of uh interface components that we might be interested in using that have been used in other products, uh like the coffee machine. So I already mentioned the speech recognition interface. I guess, we we basically vetoed that idea. It's it's pointless.
Deloris Begum: Mm.
Joyce Love: Uh it's just a sample sensor sample output. It would just be probably the most expensive part of our remote without any actual interesting functionality as far as operating the T_V_. Uh so yeah, they they also give the uh they they suggested the idea of using a spinning wheel like you use on the
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Joyce Love: side of
Deloris Begum: Mm.
Joyce Love: an M_P_ three player like iPod. Um so we've already addressed that and I think that would actually be worse for something like R_S_I_ I mean you got that thumb movement
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: that you're constantly
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Joyce Love: doing.
Patti Weaver: That does get
Joyce Love: Um
Patti Weaver: annoying.
Joyce Love: the other suggestion, and I I have a feeling that we're interested in in something more general, but they suggested uh, you know, going i a little bit into a a niche, like either gearing our remote towards kids, where you could have lot of colours um, the keys might be you know, funny or or, or uh something
Deloris Begum: Mm-hmm.
Joyce Love: for the elderly, where the remote's very large and the buttons are very large and there's only a few buttons. But you know we can we can discuss this, but it sounded like from our last meeting we really wanted something that was general, but done well. Uh
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: um So, the key layout and design are really crucial. You don't want uh you want people to be able to quickly access the buttons that they use a lot without uh always pressing the wrong one um. And I didn't mention that we need a power button in our last I can give you an example here of uh, good layout and bad layout uh from our manufacturing department. So this would be an example of bad layout,
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: of them, so
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: uh it's sort of confusing for the user. Uh
Deloris Begum: Do we have an uh example
Joyce Love: this is
Deloris Begum: of
Joyce Love: the
Deloris Begum: a
Joyce Love: example
Deloris Begum: good one?
Joyce Love: of the giant remote that's impossible to lose.
Patti Weaver: Uh-huh.
Deloris Begum: Brilliant.
Patti Weaver: Well
Joyce Love: And for something for kids. Yeah. Um.
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: And so, yeah, I th I think my personal preferences of we've all kind of talked about and seemed to be on the same page um. Uh so I was against the speech recognition and against going uh towards anything in in a niche sense. I think it should be more general.
Deloris Begum: Mm-hmm.
Joyce Love: I didn't I didn't think the spinning-wheel or the uh L_C_ display were were crucial for us. And, yeah, that's it for Patti Weaver.
Deloris Begum: Okay. Well let's um so w what are our definite decisions on this then as a team? The um The the um the interface type we're going for
Joyce Love: So we're we're not gonna have any sort of display I think uh.
Deloris Begum: Just the simple
Joyce Love: So, yeah,
Deloris Begum: s
Joyce Love: it's just gonna be
Deloris Begum: simple straight set
Joyce Love: just
Deloris Begum: of
Joyce Love: gonna
Deloris Begum: buttons.
Joyce Love: be push-buttons. Um. I think we shall have a limited number of buttons, ideally, I mean
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: a a power, channel up, channel down, volume up, volume
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: down, and a numerical keypad. Uh. And some sort of it will either have a a lock button like we mentioned or or a cover or something like that.
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: I guess it's to the point where we need to decide about that.
Deloris Begum: Okay, and we're not yeah.
Joyce Love: Well now that we've decided
Deloris Begum: Are
Joyce Love: on
Deloris Begum: we
Joyce Love: our
Deloris Begum: gonna hav hav an are we d have we decided on whether w we're gonna s supplement it with anything, you know, colours or particular gimmicky bits to it, we're not we're just gonna go for something
Joyce Love: Um
Deloris Begum: We're
Joyce Love: it seems
Patti Weaver: Maybe
Joyce Love: like we wouldn't wanna
Patti Weaver: we can
Joyce Love: make it too busy and too sort of gaudy, but um Yeah, I would say mayb maybe a couple of colours like uh like a black with with yellow and somewhere, like maybe the R_R_
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: can be yellow, or something like that.
Deloris Begum: Yeah. Okay. Okey-dokey. Yeah, I don't have any other questions on this. Let's move over
Joyce Love: I
Deloris Begum: to
Joyce Love: I guess the fact uh also that we are having a rubber case uh would prevent us from having the cover function that we thought of before. I mean, 'cause
Deloris Begum: Yeah,
Joyce Love: uh s
Deloris Begum: sure.
Joyce Love: so if we wanna have a lock of some sort it would have to be a button. But I think that should be I mean um, I can speak with the button department, but uh I think that it should be easy to have a button that just
Deloris Begum: Yeah, the
Joyce Love: prevents
Deloris Begum: button that
Joyce Love: prevents
Deloris Begum: just does
Joyce Love: the
Deloris Begum: that,
Joyce Love: other
Deloris Begum: yeah.
Joyce Love: uh the other buttons from operating. So that should be simple.
Deloris Begum: Cool.
Patti Weaver: Right. Well, I'm just basically letting you know what's happening in the markets
Deloris Begum: Mm yeah.
Patti Weaver: and what the fashions are for next year. Um. So yes, so from looking at this year's trends and fashions
Deloris Begum: Mm-hmm.
Patti Weaver: and also recent investigation that we've done in the remote control market, we have found that for the remote control market these are like most important aspects like that we really need to which we've already probably discussed. Um the most important aspect is look and feel. So the remote control has to look and feel fancier than the ones that already that we already have. So it has to be
Deloris Begum: Yeah, why should people
Patti Weaver: Yep.
Deloris Begum: buy this when they're already got
Patti Weaver: Exactly.
Deloris Begum: a remote
Joyce Love: Mm.
Deloris Begum: that came with the T_V_?
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Patti Weaver: Um second, uh it should be technologically innovative innovative. So
Deloris Begum: What's that mean?
Patti Weaver: Technologically it should be like um work, basically, I guess. It should work.
Joyce Love: Well it should be it should be
Patti Weaver: Should
Joyce Love: maybe cutting edge in some sense, I mean have something that's little more
Patti Weaver: That's
Joyce Love: technologically
Patti Weaver: new.
Joyce Love: advanced
Deloris Begum: Okay,
Joyce Love: than what's on the market.
Patti Weaver: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: now the trouble is is we've
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: already decided that we're going with the stuff that works already, that's
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: cheap.
Joyce Love: Actually,
Patti Weaver: Yeah.
Joyce Love: I mean, these first two points we've already sort of gone away from, 'cause
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: our rubber one is not fancy I mean it's different, but I wouldn't say like a rubber remote is fancy. If that's what people want then we maybe we're going in the wrong direction. And it's it's not technologically innovative either.
Patti Weaver: So,
Deloris Begum: Maybe
Joyce Love: Mm.
Deloris Begum: we
Patti Weaver: no loose
Deloris Begum: could um
Patti Weaver: That's why I was thinking, Bluetooth, 'cause if you like put up Bluetooth, and it's like a Bluetooth remote control, everybody's gonna like, oh, 'cause Bluetooth is the in thing nowadays, like it really is, like people and um when it comes to marketing like that's what people go for, they don't really care whether, you know, at the end of the day whether it works properly or not.
Deloris Begum: Of course, they do.
Patti Weaver: Well, they do, but it's
Deloris Begum: One
Patti Weaver: like
Deloris Begum: hundred
Patti Weaver: it's not
Deloris Begum: per cent, that's your first thing, you go, oh I'm not gonna buy that, 'cause I dunno if it works or not.
Patti Weaver: Yeah, but it looks good. If it looks good and it's it can just be there for decoration.
Deloris Begum: Okay, well, what do you two think about this?
Joyce Love: So is is the advantage
Patti Weaver: But
Joyce Love: of
Patti Weaver: like
Joyce Love: Bluetooth that you can just like synchronise it with other electronics?
Deloris Begum: Yeah, what I don't understand what
Patti Weaver: You could always insert,
Deloris Begum: m
Patti Weaver: yeah.
Joyce Love: Yeah, that's basically what it allows you to do, right?
Deloris Begum: Yeah, and it this is just gonna all this is being used for is your television.
Patti Weaver: Yeah, but, I mean, people
Deloris Begum: It
Patti Weaver: like
Deloris Begum: would that would mean you'd need a television that has Bluetooth in it, which
Patti Weaver: Well,
Deloris Begum: no no
Patti Weaver: if you're
Deloris Begum: television
Betty Morgan: Well
Patti Weaver: looking at
Deloris Begum: does, does it?
Patti Weaver: if you looking at something that's going to be bought by people, you have to make it new, you have to make it
Deloris Begum: That would mean
Patti Weaver: state
Deloris Begum: we'd have to
Patti Weaver: of
Deloris Begum: make
Patti Weaver: the art.
Deloris Begum: a television as well.
Betty Morgan: Bluetooth would, for example, enable you, I think, to um um connect for example you if you get a w call on your mobile phone, but your mobile phone is downstairs or something, you would get on your television you're being called by this person right now. Things like that.
Deloris Begum: No, that would be your telephone in with your television.
Joyce Love: Yeah,
Betty Morgan: No
Joyce Love: the that wouldn't
Betty Morgan: i
Joyce Love: be the remote so much,
Deloris Begum: Yeah,
Joyce Love: I mean
Betty Morgan: No,
Deloris Begum: and
Betty Morgan: but
Deloris Begum: i
Betty Morgan: if you get Bluetooth on the remote, you'd be able to
Deloris Begum: Nah, the televi
Betty Morgan: I with the television, yeah.
Deloris Begum: the television would have to be
Betty Morgan: I
Deloris Begum: a
Betty Morgan: was
Deloris Begum: Bluetooth
Betty Morgan: just trying to find
Deloris Begum: compatible,
Betty Morgan: an advantage.
Joyce Love: Mm.
Deloris Begum: basically.
Betty Morgan: Wha what w
Patti Weaver: Well,
Betty Morgan: what
Patti Weaver: it doesn't
Betty Morgan: advantage
Deloris Begum: An
Betty Morgan: would
Deloris Begum: and
Betty Morgan: you
Deloris Begum: there
Betty Morgan: get
Deloris Begum: is no
Betty Morgan: for
Deloris Begum: there
Betty Morgan: the
Deloris Begum: is no such thing.
Patti Weaver: Like it doesn't have to be, you know, Bluetooth, that was just an idea, but like it needs do something that, you know, is new. Whether it's a battery it could be something really really minor, you know, like but I think we are really keeping to what is already out there, and people've already seen it, people've already got it.
Deloris Begum: Okay.
Patti Weaver: If we want something new, we need to move away from what we already have and um
Betty Morgan: Maybe the kinetic
Patti Weaver: just go creative.
Betty Morgan: mo provision of energy then. It's been done for watches, but I haven't seen that for remotes,
Deloris Begum: Okay.
Betty Morgan: yet.
Deloris Begum: Yeah, this that's that's
Patti Weaver: And then
Deloris Begum: very
Patti Weaver: you can market
Deloris Begum: good.
Patti Weaver: it. Never have to change
Betty Morgan: Change
Patti Weaver: a
Betty Morgan: the
Patti Weaver: battery
Betty Morgan: batteries
Patti Weaver: again.
Betty Morgan: ever again.
Deloris Begum: And and this is all tying in very nicely. The fact that it's made out of this rubber, we can throw it about. Th we should encourage people to throw their remote controls about, because it charges itself
Betty Morgan: Yeah, well,
Deloris Begum: up by
Joyce Love: Yes,
Deloris Begum: doing
Betty Morgan: and
Joyce Love: so
Deloris Begum: it.
Joyce Love: can
Betty Morgan: in little characters you say, yeah, but not too much.
Patti Weaver: I think, safety
Deloris Begum: But yeah, by the squeezing it
Patti Weaver: s
Joyce Love: Yeah,
Deloris Begum: the
Joyce Love: we can make the squeezing of the rubber be the be the generating
Deloris Begum: Yeah,
Joyce Love: like the energy
Patti Weaver: Yeah.
Joyce Love: generator.
Deloris Begum: that's a great idea. Well done.
Patti Weaver: Third most important aspect uh is it's easy to use. And I think we've all
Joyce Love: we're
Patti Weaver: um
Joyce Love: all about that.
Patti Weaver: worked that out. Um okay, in the fashion, how it's supposed to look. Next year's fashion i very much in fruit and vegetables are thm are like the theme for cloths, shoes and furniture. So next year people will be buying, I found this really funny, you know, strawberry shaped chairs,
Joyce Love: Okay, so we
Patti Weaver: and
Joyce Love: could have
Patti Weaver: things.
Joyce Love: keys that are like a b like a broccoli key and a
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: uh
Patti Weaver: Yeah.
Joyce Love: and an avocado
Patti Weaver: Rubber
Deloris Begum: I wanna
Joyce Love: key
Deloris Begum: watch
Joyce Love: on
Deloris Begum: the
Joyce Love: them.
Patti Weaver: things.
Deloris Begum: pineapple channel.
Patti Weaver: Um and as it's rubber the feel which is in this year is spongy, so it's it's not quite spongy,
Deloris Begum: Well
Patti Weaver: but
Deloris Begum: spongy,
Patti Weaver: spongy,
Deloris Begum: that's
Patti Weaver: I would
Deloris Begum: where.
Patti Weaver: say
Deloris Begum: Yeah,
Patti Weaver: is
Joyce Love: Yeah,
Deloris Begum: we're
Joyce Love: that's
Patti Weaver: yeah,
Joyce Love: great
Deloris Begum: we're
Joyce Love: for us.
Patti Weaver: so
Deloris Begum: ahead
Patti Weaver: we're
Deloris Begum: of
Patti Weaver: in.
Deloris Begum: the game there.
Patti Weaver: Yeah. And so personal what I was just saying like move away from the current remote controls uh like the look and the feel of the current ones and change the look and feel, while still keeping to the company's image, basically. So yeah.
Deloris Begum: Okay.
Patti Weaver: I had to say So
Joyce Love: Right.
Patti Weaver: we're moving in the right direction
Deloris Begum: Alright,
Patti Weaver: like
Deloris Begum: yeah, no,
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: this i this is good, so through all that we've we go we're right, we're gonna go go back to um going with the kinetic
Joyce Love: Yeah,
Betty Morgan: Yep.
Joyce Love: that's great.
Deloris Begum: thing, that's great, using the spongy rubber that we were talking about that anti-R_S_I_ you can as you squeeze it you are not only therapeuticising yourself, you are charging the batteries,
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Deloris Begum: and um I'm not sure about the buttons being in the shape of fruit though.
Joyce Love: Yeah, I don't know how we
Betty Morgan: No
Joyce Love: incorporate
Betty Morgan: vegetables.
Joyce Love: We don't have
Patti Weaver: Maybe
Joyce Love: to follow
Patti Weaver: make
Joyce Love: every
Patti Weaver: it
Joyce Love: trend,
Patti Weaver: like
Joyce Love: I guess.
Patti Weaver: fruity colours or something. Some
Joyce Love: Uh-huh.
Patti Weaver: sort. Or
Joyce Love: The power
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Joyce Love: button could be like a big apple or something.
Betty Morgan: Well yeah, but Apple would sue you for that.
Deloris Begum: Yeah, this is true.
Joyce Love: They don they don't own all images of apples.
Betty Morgan: sued the Beatles so
Joyce Love: Okay, we'll make it a uh pomegranate, a big pomegranate.
Deloris Begum: Well, okay, it seems like the only thing that we haven't really finally um agreed on is its image. Like, yeah, we're we're saying no we don't want it to be fruit and vegetables, but we dunno what it should be, or like are we going yeah it looks slick, but
Patti Weaver: Well
Deloris Begum: what do what do we mean by slick sort of thing?
Patti Weaver: I think, if it's rubber it needs to be
Deloris Begum: I mean you said earlier on i it should be funky.
Patti Weaver: different. I think, it's it should be you associate with rubber? You know like really different
Deloris Begum: L
Patti Weaver: colours
Deloris Begum: keep it
Patti Weaver: basically.
Deloris Begum: clean, keep
Patti Weaver: Okay,
Deloris Begum: it clean.
Patti Weaver: sor I sorry, I used the wrong word, what do you associate with the mate the material that material? Um Um like I'm just thinking bright colours.
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Patti Weaver: Bright natural colours, nothing too
Deloris Begum: Bright, but not too
Patti Weaver: Bright,
Deloris Begum: bright.
Patti Weaver: but too not yeah.
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Patti Weaver: Like no lime green or bright yellow or bright pink. Wanna make it different colours so anybody can choo like
Deloris Begum: Like the volume
Patti Weaver: like
Deloris Begum: buttons should be the all the same colour and the d and the the channel buttons
Joyce Love: Mm.
Deloris Begum: should be one colour and stuff like that, do you mean?
Patti Weaver: Yeah. And on the back of it have the logo.
Deloris Begum: Okay, what?
Betty Morgan: Yeah.
Joyce Love: Sure.
Betty Morgan: Why not?
Deloris Begum: Okay.
Joyce Love: The one
Deloris Begum: Tha
Joyce Love: thing I'm wondering about, I hope that we're not going like too much down a gimmicky road of of
Deloris Begum: Yeah,
Joyce Love: having
Deloris Begum: I mean
Joyce Love: I
Deloris Begum: we
Joyce Love: mean
Deloris Begum: that's
Joyce Love: if somebody
Deloris Begum: we
Joyce Love: go goes
Deloris Begum: we
Joyce Love: into the store they're gonna see like three or four normal remotes, and then a big spongy pink t tomato
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: uh remote.
Deloris Begum: This
Joyce Love: I mean what are ninety
Deloris Begum: is
Joyce Love: per
Deloris Begum: the
Joyce Love: cent
Deloris Begum: remote
Joyce Love: of people
Deloris Begum: control
Joyce Love: gonna take?
Deloris Begum: tomato.
Patti Weaver: Well I can say in this country, you'll get, you know, lots of people wanting something really funky and cool. Like and kids will be walking in with their parents saying, Mummy I wanna buy that one. And uh parents will see the will see the pro as well, because it's um like kids won't break it, it's not breakable if you throw it around.
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Patti Weaver: Especially with younger kids, you know they can pick it up and and Yeah. The only thing is is that really small kids might chew on it, but
Deloris Begum: Well, it's it's gotta be chew proof.
Patti Weaver: Yeah. So
Betty Morgan: I'm gonna write that
Patti Weaver: so it's
Betty Morgan: down.
Patti Weaver: rea it's quite it's quite like um user friendly and also for different families, like like family use as well, so for little kids and for old ki like teenagers will like it, I think. Especially maybe younger girls if it's in pink they'll be like pink remote control for their room something.
Deloris Begum: So, what are you saying, maybe we should market it in different colours
Patti Weaver: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: for different so we could do
Betty Morgan: That's
Deloris Begum: like
Joyce Love: Mm.
Deloris Begum: the pink
Betty Morgan: yeah.
Deloris Begum: range, the blue range, the green range, the
Patti Weaver: So like you walk in, you're like, oh I like that remote control, because it's so bright, and then, and then the shop assistant comes up and says, oh what colour would you like? and then they go like, oh I can choose the colour wow. So it puts, I think, even the customer into more control over what they're buying instead of, you've got all colour it's either that or nothing. So they also get to pick. Well, personally I like walking into a shop and choosing a colour.
Joyce Love: Yeah I mean, that that seems
Patti Weaver: It's
Joyce Love: to work
Patti Weaver: um
Joyce Love: well with for products like iPod, where, you know, you have
Patti Weaver: Yeah.
Joyce Love: a
Deloris Begum: Mm.
Joyce Love: variety of colours, that people feel like they're customising it
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Joyce Love: when they buy it, even, you
Patti Weaver: D
Joyce Love: know,
Patti Weaver: you've
Betty Morgan: Although
Joyce Love: just
Patti Weaver: got
Joyce Love: just
Betty Morgan: I'd
Joyce Love: by
Patti Weaver: the
Betty Morgan: be
Joyce Love: the
Betty Morgan: curious
Joyce Love: fact of choosing.
Betty Morgan: to see how many uh You know, there are some colours that I wouldn I would never choose, and I would be curious how many people choose that colour.
Joyce Love: Right.
Deloris Begum: Well that's that can be down to bit of market researching
Betty Morgan: Mm.
Deloris Begum: you know, if that's
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: easy enough to find out what colours are more popular.
Betty Morgan: And produce less of the silly colours, maybe.
Deloris Begum: Mm. Okay. Alright. Well um, we'll alright let's what we're gonna aim to get together by the next meeting then um is from you Catherine wi your y y you know you're gonna be working on the the look and feel design.
Betty Morgan: Yep.
Deloris Begum: Um Gabriel, you're gonna be working on, you know come up with the the user interface design. Then basically, you two are gonna be working together on this. You won't be going off
Betty Morgan: Alright.
Deloris Begum: to your separate offices.
Joyce Love: Okay.
Deloris Begum: Um and I think you are gonna get a chance to play with some clay.
Joyce Love: Oh right.
Deloris Begum: I think, yeah, it's gonna
Betty Morgan: Mm.
Deloris Begum: you know, come up ki you know, be ab for the next meeting be able to come in and show us some some i some physical ideas. 'Cause at
Betty Morgan: Cool.
Deloris Begum: the moment, uh you know, it's it's hard.
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: We
Betty Morgan: It
Deloris Begum: were
Betty Morgan: is.
Deloris Begum: kinda going, yeah, it's gotta feel nice, it's gotta look cool and that it's you know now we can actually start, you know, s some sort of physical something or other.
Joyce Love: That sounds good.
Deloris Begum: Um and you're gonna be working on the product evaluation.
Patti Weaver: Evaluation.
Deloris Begum: Um. And I will be uh talking to the bosses, basically, and uh f fielding off some more spam and uh
Betty Morgan: Great.
Deloris Begum: that's it really. Keeping things t well, uh you know, ho hopefully uh keeping things together. Um. Yeah, that's This is this is uh good. So we know for definite we know we've we've now got some definite things going on. We definitely
Joyce Love: Mm.
Deloris Begum: know how it's powered, we definitely know that um it's gonna be a simple buttons, we're not gonna be going for the new technological chip on print expensive things, so we've we're keeping the costs down. It's this rubber casing that we can sell as um fun and funky. Don't know of any other remote controls that are made out of this stuff.
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Deloris Begum: People, you know, people are saying, oh, standard stuff gives you repetitive strain injury, well this remote control is designed to do the complete opposite,
Patti Weaver: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: It's supposed to fix it rather than cause it. Um. you know, we're gonna we we're gonna as a sort of extra something on it, you know what what extra things are there extra things this product have? We'll look into this lock key
Joyce Love: Right.
Deloris Begum: facility, although whether or not it happens, or is possible, I don't know, but something to look into. Okay. I think that's um well done everybody.
Joyce Love: Alright.
Deloris Begum: Anyone have any uh any questions, everyone know what they're doing?
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: 'Cause if you don't, you'll I'm sure you'll soon get an e-mail about it.
Joyce Love: Yeah. Mm, I think we all know what
Patti Weaver: S
Joyce Love: we need to do now.
Patti Weaver: This gives you all the details?
Deloris Begum: Okay.
Joyce Love: Okay.
Deloris Begum: right well. It's um we're we've still couple of minutes until our meeting's due to finish. But um I got a note saying that you two who are gonna be working together so
Joyce Love: Okay, I'll stay
Deloris Begum: bef
Joyce Love: in here.
Deloris Begum: before you all disappear off just
Patti Weaver: um.
Deloris Begum: hold hold fire. Um.
Joyce Love: Does the pay-raise immediately come into effect on our next pay-check, or is that
Deloris Begum: Um I think, it's uh, yeah, I think, it's gonna be par part more of a profit sharing on the product.
Joyce Love: So we're buying fut I mean, we're getting futures in the company.
Deloris Begum: Yeah, I think i I think that's I think that's the way it's gonna happen at the moment.
Joyce Love: So we really have a incentive to make this remote work.
Deloris Begum: Yeah. Yeah.
Joyce Love: I'd like to share in the coffee machine profits, because that's really doing well.
Deloris Begum: I want a share in the space rocket. Did you see that this k
Joyce Love: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: that this company we've made
Patti Weaver: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: a spaceship.
Joyce Love: This company has its its fingers in a lot of different pots.
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: Yeah, we're definitely not in the money making department.
Joyce Love: Well I I did notice looking at I mean, they told you that they wanted whatev our product to represent the the R_R_ brand and and to be immediately
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: noticeable. I mean, if you look like at the coffee maker at the at the corporate web page, it's
Patti Weaver: Mm.
Joyce Love: not obvious. R_R_. Well it is to us, because we we worked worked here for years and we use that coffee machine, but it's doesn't have the colour scheme of of the of the company anywhere on it obviously it's just
Deloris Begum: Mm.
Joyce Love: sil silver and black.
Betty Morgan: That's true.
Deloris Begum: And the spaceship doesn't have the R_
Joyce Love: No.
Deloris Begum: have a massive R_ and R_ down the side of it but
Joyce Love: Mm.
Betty Morgan: Doesn't
Deloris Begum: I still want one. Okay. Um I've just had a sign flashing up saying, finish the meeting.
Betty Morgan: Yeah.
Deloris Begum: Uh.
Joyce Love: Okay.
Deloris Begum: Yeah.
Joyce Love: Right, well, I guess that's us.
Deloris Begum: Yeah. It's not telling it's not saying do anything in particular just yet. So maybe you should go back to your own offices.
Joyce Love: Okay. Right.
Betty Morgan: Are we taking these off?
Deloris Begum: Yeah. Yeah, it says you two. | Deloris Begum recapped the decisions made in the previous meeting. Betty Morgan discussed different options for batteries, materials, and components, as well as restrictions involved in combining particular materials, components, and batteries. The team then discussed and decided what materials, components, and what type of battery to use in their product. The interface specialist presented examples of existing remotes on the market with good and bad layouts and stated what features the remote required. Patti Weaver discussed research from trendwatching reports, finding that products now require technological innovativeness, a fancy look and feel, a spongy feel, and a fruit and vegetable theme. This lead to a discussion on whether to use Bluetooth or infra-red technology in remote. The team then discussed how to incorporate a fruit and vegetable theme into the remote. | 2 | amisum | train |
Lorena Turner: It's Play-Doh.
Shirley Schechter: Play-Doh's edible. Did you know that? It's definitely
Lorena Turner: Because kids
Tiffany Snowden: I
Cassandra Ramos: I've,
Tiffany Snowden: used to eat
Lorena Turner: yeah.
Tiffany Snowden: it.
Cassandra Ramos: I've definitely eaten it before. I didn't know was
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: edible.
Lorena Turner: But um,
Shirley Schechter: It's
Lorena Turner: it's it's
Shirley Schechter: it's
Lorena Turner: made
Shirley Schechter: chew
Lorena Turner: edible
Shirley Schechter: proof.
Lorena Turner: 'cause, yeah. It's made edible 'cause kids eat it, and
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Lorena Turner: if it's wasn't edible then Well, normal
Cassandra Ramos: Actually
Lorena Turner: babies.
Cassandra Ramos: that makes sense, because I remember like, peopl I dunno if my Mom ever did it but I remember other people's Moms making like home-made Play-Doh where you just like make the colouring and make some sort of sort of
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: dough.
Lorena Turner: Oh yeah it is, yeah. Oh yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Shirley Schechter: Right. Everybody everybody ready?
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Tiffany Snowden: Yep.
Shirley Schechter: Okay, let's have your um
Cassandra Ramos: We've got
Shirley Schechter: let's
Cassandra Ramos: some.
Shirley Schechter: get have the uh presentation?
Tiffany Snowden: We've
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah,
Tiffany Snowden: got a cool prototype.
Cassandra Ramos: it's pretty exciting. So, everything uh that we wanted we wanted it to be ergonomic and to be made out of rubber, simple and easy to use,
Tiffany Snowden: Double curved.
Cassandra Ramos: yeah,
Shirley Schechter: Nice.
Cassandra Ramos: double curved, um but also something that was gonna jump out at people, something that would be different uh, separate it from the other remotes out on the market. So uh I think if you put this in the palm of your hand, you'll see what a nice thing we have going here.
Lorena Turner: That is cool.
Cassandra Ramos: So, basically, if you hold it like that, the one on your thumb, yeah,
Shirley Schechter: Mm-hmm.
Cassandra Ramos: the thumb button is the power button.
Shirley Schechter: Mm-hmm.
Cassandra Ramos: Your index finger is channel up, middle finger is channel down, ring finger is volume up, your pinkie is volume down.
Lorena Turner: What's the big blue thing?
Cassandra Ramos: That's the lock button, has a L_
Lorena Turner: Oh
Cassandra Ramos: L_ on
Lorena Turner: cool.
Cassandra Ramos: it and then the M_ is a mute button. And then it also has digit
Shirley Schechter: what button? Um.
Lorena Turner: And
Cassandra Ramos: For muting
Lorena Turner: mute.
Cassandra Ramos: the
Shirley Schechter: Oh
Cassandra Ramos: uh
Shirley Schechter: mute.
Cassandra Ramos: Um and then then you can also there's a numeric keypad on the top so you can key directly to the
Shirley Schechter: Okay.
Cassandra Ramos: to the channel if you want. So it's really basic functionalities as far as what keys are available, but we think it's very comfortable and very innovative and it looks different.
Shirley Schechter: That certainly does.
Cassandra Ramos: So all the, I mean the important keys are right at your f f you know right at uh at a convenient place for you to to access them.
Shirley Schechter: Mm.
Cassandra Ramos: So
Tiffany Snowden: Which
Cassandra Ramos: you
Tiffany Snowden: is
Cassandra Ramos: don't
Tiffany Snowden: ant
Cassandra Ramos: you
Tiffany Snowden: anti-R_S_I_.
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: Mm.
Cassandra Ramos: It should be. And it's also conformable to the size of your hand. I mean if that's too big, it's a rubber remote,
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: so you can, you know
Shirley Schechter: 'S great.
Cassandra Ramos: change that.
Lorena Turner: Oh it's
Cassandra Ramos: So
Lorena Turner: so
Cassandra Ramos: d
Lorena Turner: cute.
Cassandra Ramos: does that uh what mesh with what you guys were hoping and for and expecting or
Shirley Schechter: I
Cassandra Ramos: does it
Shirley Schechter: have one thing about it, but it's a small thing, but it'd mean we'd have to make a right-handed one and a left-handed one.
Cassandra Ramos: Ah,
Tiffany Snowden: Oh right, yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: that's good thinking, yeah.
Shirley Schechter: But, that's I don't see why that's not
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah,
Shirley Schechter: possible.
Cassandra Ramos: if we build rocket ships why can't we build left-handed and right-handed
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: uh remotes.
Shirley Schechter: They make left-handed scissors, you know.
Lorena Turner: Yeah,
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah,
Lorena Turner: but
Cassandra Ramos: I
Lorena Turner: then
Cassandra Ramos: didn't I didn't think about that, but I'd yeah,
Lorena Turner: but then you can learn to use your right h like I was if there's left-handers and right-handers family, what, they have two remotes?
Shirley Schechter: Yes
Tiffany Snowden: Yeah, I know I know people
Shirley Schechter: s
Tiffany Snowden: who have left-handed and right-handed people in the family and they all use the computer for the whole the same computer the fes family
Shirley Schechter: Mm.
Tiffany Snowden: and they have
Shirley Schechter: Sure.
Tiffany Snowden: a mouse,
Shirley Schechter: Sure.
Tiffany Snowden: and everybody is using right-handed mouse.
Lorena Turner: Yeah, I'm sure they'll be able to
Cassandra Ramos: Uh-huh.
Lorena Turner: I mean it's only pressing buttons, you don't have to do anything, you know, extraordinary. I think everybody can
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Lorena Turner: press a button with their left and right hand so
Tiffany Snowden: Imagine d are you right handed?
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Tiffany Snowden: Imagine you're doing it with your left hand, I don't think it's too
Lorena Turner: Yeah, it's not
Tiffany Snowden: have both uh
Lorena Turner: Yeah. Have them in stock.
Tiffany Snowden: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Lorena Turner: Make 'em more appealing as well.
Shirley Schechter: But um other than that, I mean uh and that's um, you know, that's just something, I think I think it's great, yeah, great idea.
Cassandra Ramos: Do you think it says R_R_?
Tiffany Snowden: I think it does.
Shirley Schechter: I think it's, well, if the R_R_ motto is, we bring
Cassandra Ramos: Fashion
Shirley Schechter: fashion
Cassandra Ramos: to electronics.
Shirley Schechter: to to electronics, I'd
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: say
Tiffany Snowden: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: that could be quite fashionable.
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah. And it's got the b the black and yellow and blue. Plus red, which
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: is sort of a a fruit and vegetable uh uh.
Tiffany Snowden: There you go.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: So that's that's our end of things wha uh That's
Shirley Schechter: Yeah, very good, yeah. It's come up with what we've you know, the things that's what we've what we were looking at doing, hasn't
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: it, all seems to be there. Well done.
Lorena Turner: And all the playing around is uh
Shirley Schechter: Um before we move on
Lorena Turner: Yeah, I'm just do you wanna plug in?
Shirley Schechter: I need that cable.
Lorena Turner: Okay.
Shirley Schechter: Thank you. Yeah. Um. One thing I do need to do we need to look at, is the costs.
Cassandra Ramos: The costs, was that what you said?
Tiffany Snowden: Play-Doh is very cheap.
Shirley Schechter: Well, yeah.
Lorena Turner: Mm. Play-Doh
Shirley Schechter: um
Lorena Turner: won't last very long everybody'll go like, oops, it's gone.
Cassandra Ramos: But it's edible.
Lorena Turner: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Tiffany Snowden: Chew proof.
Lorena Turner: Well, they'll buy more of them if you eat them,
Cassandra Ramos: That was the main criteria from the last meeting, it had to be chew proof.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah. Uh right. Okay, now I think we'll do this
Lorena Turner: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: I could do you know, I can do this
Tiffany Snowden: Oh
Shirley Schechter: o
Tiffany Snowden: ho-ho.
Shirley Schechter: on my own or I could do it with you, but it's just easy enough to go through it with you, so we're going for the kinetic power.
Tiffany Snowden: Yep.
Shirley Schechter: And the electronics, we decided on it being just a simple, the easiest thing that's inside it. Ooh. So the case, we've gone for the double curved. Um and it's made out of rubber. The interface is push-buttons. And button supplements well they're in diff special colours, aren't they?
Lorena Turner: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: So
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: special colours.
Lorena Turner: It's better for
Shirley Schechter: Special form, yeah, they're a special form there in shapes and stuff.
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah,
Lorena Turner: And
Cassandra Ramos: I mean,
Lorena Turner: special
Cassandra Ramos: these
Lorena Turner: material.
Cassandra Ramos: these ones on the side are
Shirley Schechter: Yep.
Cassandra Ramos: curved kind
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: of, so
Shirley Schechter: Um. Are they made
Tiffany Snowden: Rubber.
Shirley Schechter: out of any special material? No they're not. They're not made out of wood or titanium or rubber or anything, they're just simple
Lorena Turner: Well they're rubber,
Cassandra Ramos: The buttons
Lorena Turner: aren't
Cassandra Ramos: are
Lorena Turner: they?
Cassandra Ramos: rubber.
Shirley Schechter: Okay.
Tiffany Snowden: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: Right. So let's see if that comes within budget. And it does. That is gonna
Lorena Turner: We're under
Shirley Schechter: cost
Lorena Turner: budget.
Shirley Schechter: uh Yeah. That's gonna cost ten ten Euro seventy cents a unit to make. And
Cassandra Ramos: That's
Shirley Schechter: our target
Cassandra Ramos: cool.
Shirley Schechter: was it had to come in at under twelve
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: fifty.
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: So,
Cassandra Ramos: And we're actua actually making a better profit than we expected.
Shirley Schechter: this is all very very good. The bosses will be very pleased. Okay, let's just save this so I can e-mail it to you. Uh. Save
Lorena Turner: It's already
Shirley Schechter: it
Lorena Turner: saved,
Shirley Schechter: in
Lorena Turner: I think.
Shirley Schechter: save it in the uh my documents.
Shirley Schechter: Splendid. Okay. So uh, that's done with this with this um doodah, so you're. Gonna do
Lorena Turner: Thank
Shirley Schechter: what you
Lorena Turner: you.
Shirley Schechter: were gonna do,
Lorena Turner: Mm.
Shirley Schechter: your evaluation.
Lorena Turner: Oh, yeah. This is where we all get to I get to write on the, oops, on the board. Right. Oh. 'S function
Shirley Schechter: F_ eight.
Lorena Turner: Okay.
Shirley Schechter: I love the smell of that Play-Doh.
Lorena Turner: Mm.
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah, have some
Shirley Schechter: I
Cassandra Ramos: have some.
Shirley Schechter: cou.
Lorena Turner: Okay. So, evaluation. We're gonna do it all together so we evaluate each criteria. I've got the criterias. And we have to do it on a scale of one to seven, one being true, so it's it's more like it's fits the criteria, and seven being as in it doesn't fit the criteria. And the criterias are, and I'll draw this up on the board so we have a box
Lorena Turner: And this is false, this is just like to keep you informed. So seven's here and one's here and then you've got in the middle. So the first criteria. Do you all get what we're doing?
Cassandra Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Tiffany Snowden: Mm-hmm.
Lorena Turner: Okay, cool. Okay, first criteria, look and feel. So the does remote look and feel fashionable to what we talked about? As it is it colour-wise and is it spongy? So what
Cassandra Ramos: Mm.
Lorena Turner: mark should we
Shirley Schechter: I
Lorena Turner: give
Shirley Schechter: would give it
Lorena Turner: for
Shirley Schechter: a seven.
Lorena Turner: that?
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Lorena Turner: As in it's not.
Cassandra Ramos: Oh, sorry, one.
Shirley Schechter: Oh sorry,
Tiffany Snowden: A
Shirley Schechter: one,
Tiffany Snowden: one.
Lorena Turner: A one a
Shirley Schechter: d
Lorena Turner: one.
Shirley Schechter: yeah.
Lorena Turner: So I'll just write criteria criteria one we get one. Second criteria, new technology. Have we implemented new technology? As in the new
Tiffany Snowden: Well,
Lorena Turner: high-tech
Tiffany Snowden: the kinetic thing, yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: That was our main technological innovation w every everything
Lorena Turner: So
Cassandra Ramos: else
Lorena Turner: it's.
Cassandra Ramos: was fairly simple, but the fact
Lorena Turner: So we'll give
Cassandra Ramos: that we
Lorena Turner: it
Cassandra Ramos: used
Lorena Turner: a
Cassandra Ramos: the kinetic energy was
Tiffany Snowden: Well
Cassandra Ramos: new.
Tiffany Snowden: so the um
Cassandra Ramos: It's ergonomic, but that's
Tiffany Snowden: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: not
Shirley Schechter: Yeah,
Cassandra Ramos: that's
Shirley Schechter: but that's not a technological
Cassandra Ramos: that's a design
Tiffany Snowden: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: thing,
Cassandra Ramos: that's
Shirley Schechter: that's
Cassandra Ramos: a des
Shirley Schechter: another
Cassandra Ramos: that's
Shirley Schechter: thing,
Cassandra Ramos: a design
Shirley Schechter: i that's
Tiffany Snowden: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: thing,
Shirley Schechter: another
Cassandra Ramos: yeah.
Shirley Schechter: marketing
Tiffany Snowden: True.
Shirley Schechter: thing.
Lorena Turner: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: So on the technical side of it
Lorena Turner: I'd
Shirley Schechter: it
Lorena Turner: say it's about a a
Cassandra Ramos: It's
Lorena Turner: twoish?
Cassandra Ramos: about
Tiffany Snowden: Two.
Cassandra Ramos: in the mid in
Lorena Turner: Two.
Cassandra Ramos: the middle somewhere, maybe, yeah, I dunno.
Lorena Turner: Three.
Tiffany Snowden: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: Maybe three, yeah.
Lorena Turner: three. So criteria three is is
Shirley Schechter: Easy
Lorena Turner: it easy
Shirley Schechter: to
Lorena Turner: to
Shirley Schechter: use.
Lorena Turner: use? I think it's a one,
Shirley Schechter: I'd
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: say
Lorena Turner: I think.
Shirley Schechter: it's I wouldn't not if you're left-handed it's not. I would
Cassandra Ramos: Mm.
Shirley Schechter: give it a I would give it a two,
Lorena Turner: Two, so it's
Shirley Schechter: 'cause i i it
Cassandra Ramos: Okay.
Shirley Schechter: i it i it is more geared for right-handed people than left-handed people, but
Lorena Turner: But if
Tiffany Snowden: Mm.
Lorena Turner: we make a right-handed and a left-handed then?
Cassandra Ramos: If we're gonna have one left-handed and one right-handed then I would give it a one, but otherwise
Lorena Turner: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: otherwise a two.
Tiffany Snowden: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: Give it a t give it a two.
Lorena Turner: Yeah, okay. 'Kay, criteria four is
Shirley Schechter: Cost.
Lorena Turner: costs.
Shirley Schechter: It's come
Lorena Turner: 's
Shirley Schechter: in under budget.
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: So
Lorena Turner: great.
Shirley Schechter: that's a definite one.
Cassandra Ramos: That was great.
Lorena Turner: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: Amount of buttons.
Lorena Turner: Like the amount of buttons, 'cause people
Shirley Schechter: Contains
Lorena Turner: like a lot le
Shirley Schechter: only the
Lorena Turner: like
Shirley Schechter: necessary buttons.
Lorena Turner: So it's a one?
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Tiffany Snowden: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Lorena Turner: Um criteria six. R_S_I_ is it good against? Yes.
Tiffany Snowden: Yes
Shirley Schechter: So
Lorena Turner: Very
Shirley Schechter: it's
Lorena Turner: good.
Shirley Schechter: anti-R_S_I_.
Tiffany Snowden: s
Lorena Turner: It's
Tiffany Snowden: yeah.
Lorena Turner: one. And criteria seven, which is the last one, does it get lost? Is it easy
Tiffany Snowden: It's
Lorena Turner: to get
Tiffany Snowden: yellow.
Lorena Turner: lost?
Shirley Schechter: I don't think it's gonna get
Cassandra Ramos: It is
Shirley Schechter: lost
Cassandra Ramos: very
Shirley Schechter: easily.
Cassandra Ramos: bright, yeah.
Lorena Turner: No? But it is smallish.
Cassandra Ramos: It's not the kinda
Tiffany Snowden: Two.
Cassandra Ramos: thing that's gonna slip like between a couch cushion or something, you know. Maybe it will. Uh.
Tiffany Snowden: T
Lorena Turner: Mm. I think i it would, could be, could get
Cassandra Ramos: You think
Lorena Turner: lost.
Cassandra Ramos: it could lost
Lorena Turner: Mm.
Shirley Schechter: two.
Lorena Turner: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: Mm.
Lorena Turner: I mean it's
Shirley Schechter: I
Lorena Turner: not
Shirley Schechter: mean it
Lorena Turner: fully it's not fully like
Shirley Schechter: No,
Lorena Turner: you can't
Shirley Schechter: I mean
Lorena Turner: say I mean, it's not a one, definitely.
Shirley Schechter: I mean, you could
Cassandra Ramos: Okay.
Shirley Schechter: still flush it down the toilet theoretically,
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah,
Shirley Schechter: but
Cassandra Ramos: anything, I mean. Okay. It's bigger than the average mobile, I guess.
Lorena Turner: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: But, yeah, it can get lost.
Lorena Turner: The mobiles get lost all the time.
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah. Okay, yeah, two is
Lorena Turner: But then
Cassandra Ramos: fine.
Lorena Turner: you ring 'em and you
Tiffany Snowden: Mm.
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah,
Lorena Turner: find them.
Tiffany Snowden: Mm.
Cassandra Ramos: yeah.
Lorena Turner: So
Shirley Schechter: Okay.
Lorena Turner: Yeah. So, that's that. So that's the evaluation, so I'd say Yay.
Shirley Schechter: Alright it's
Lorena Turner: It's
Shirley Schechter: all
Lorena Turner: like
Shirley Schechter: all
Tiffany Snowden: We've,
Shirley Schechter: systems go.
Tiffany Snowden: we've done well.
Lorena Turner: like
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Lorena Turner: a number one. Um. Number one product.
Cassandra Ramos: Mm.
Lorena Turner: All done, thanks.
Shirley Schechter: We can't
Lorena Turner: We
Shirley Schechter: fail.
Lorena Turner: fitted all the criterias. Yeah. Yeah, so
Shirley Schechter: Well done, Reissa.
Lorena Turner: So that's that one.
Shirley Schechter: Okay, I I think um I just wanna put in as Project Manager the you know, little bit of praise for everybody here for how they've worked on it, you know, both individually and as a team. You know you've w everyone's come up with their own individual ideas in their own different departments, um and then come together and worked in, you know, integrally, you know, at the right times, psp, you know, especially you two. That's all, you know,
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: gone very very well and and and be you know, has been good communication going on.
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah, during our design I mean there was some s some heated heated discussion, but we we kept we tried to keep it cool and and just
Shirley Schechter: Did you
Cassandra Ramos: just
Shirley Schechter: have to go down to the the corporate squash court and bash a few
Tiffany Snowden: Well.
Shirley Schechter: balls about?
Cassandra Ramos: We just
Tiffany Snowden: You
Cassandra Ramos: had
Tiffany Snowden: know
Cassandra Ramos: to we just had to squeeze our product a little bit and
Shirley Schechter: Fantastic.
Cassandra Ramos: Now
Tiffany Snowden: It
Cassandra Ramos: you guys
Tiffany Snowden: is.
Cassandra Ramos: have been a a great team. Think we're the we're the envy of all
Lorena Turner: been
Cassandra Ramos: the
Lorena Turner: cool.
Cassandra Ramos: of all the other R_R_ teams,
Shirley Schechter: I think So I I, you know, and I think we've co we have come we've come up with something new, something that hasn't been done before, we haven't we're not just rehashing an old design.
Lorena Turner: In four diff in in four meetings.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Lorena Turner: Funny, all designer meetings could be this quick.
Shirley Schechter: this isn't a simulation, maybe this is actually so it's like
Cassandra Ramos: Yeah I think they're actually
Shirley Schechter: Sony
Cassandra Ramos: trying to find
Shirley Schechter: or
Cassandra Ramos: ideas
Shirley Schechter: someone
Cassandra Ramos: for
Shirley Schechter: like that
Cassandra Ramos: a ideal
Shirley Schechter: they're
Cassandra Ramos: remote.
Shirley Schechter: they're just, yeah, they
Lorena Turner: They're using
Shirley Schechter: get
Lorena Turner: our ideas.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah. Yeah, two years' time this will be on the market. Ex exactly that product um thum we'll go, yeah, we designed that and no-one will believe us. But um
Cassandra Ramos: So at this stage, I mean, is this the last meeting of the project? We don't uh have
Lorena Turner: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: another one after it's gone gone
Shirley Schechter: No,
Cassandra Ramos: to marke market
Shirley Schechter: I think
Cassandra Ramos: or something?
Shirley Schechter: when this meeting's finished like
Tiffany Snowden: Y
Shirley Schechter: officially, there b we'll get a uh questionnaire
Tiffany Snowden: Oh really?
Shirley Schechter: to fill in. Or six,
Lorena Turner: Just
Shirley Schechter: uh
Lorena Turner: start summarising now. You can reply to the same message.
Shirley Schechter: I haven't got message.
Lorena Turner: See summary, there. If you just reply to that one.
Cassandra Ramos: So there's no way to like predict what our 'Cause we had a we originally had a As far as our financial uh um goals, we had a specific number for profits that we wanted. It was fifty mil fifty million
Lorena Turner: Was it was it fifty or five?
Cassandra Ramos: I don't remember. But there's not a way to compute that, mean, since we saved on the on the production cost, do we know how much we're making on profit?
Shirley Schechter: It
Lorena Turner: Depends
Shirley Schechter: gets
Lorena Turner: how
Shirley Schechter: handed
Lorena Turner: much we sell.
Shirley Schechter: over to another department.
Cassandra Ramos: Uh.
Shirley Schechter: What our what our project was was to come up with the product,
Cassandra Ramos: Hmm.
Shirley Schechter: basically. the for the and just basically is it it come can is it within budget. When it c when it comes to all the other things of how to sell it and, you know, the b the profits and all that that's other departments it's another team that actually work out the mai the
Cassandra Ramos: But we have a vested interest
Shirley Schechter: oh
Cassandra Ramos: prof
Shirley Schechter: yeah,
Cassandra Ramos: profit
Shirley Schechter: the all
Cassandra Ramos: sharing.
Shirley Schechter: the guys in the profit sharing, yeah. Um. Yeah, that's it. You know, we've we've
Lorena Turner: We finished an hour earlier.
Shirley Schechter: we've made i we've made we've designed the product, we've ma we've got the prototype, it's within budget, it's does everything that we wanted it to do. It's new, it's it's um something that uh that isn't out there already.
Cassandra Ramos: I think actually and one advantage of of this is that after the uh, you know, after this fad of fruit and vegetables passes this will still be c a cool
Lorena Turner: Mm.
Cassandra Ramos: remote, you know. We're not we're not you know, tying tying our cart to that one horse.
Lorena Turner: Mm.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah. Well, this
Lorena Turner: Definitely.
Shirley Schechter: is very marketable in that it is it's it's something that's kind of new and looks a bit quirky for people who want that, it's that it's um, hang on, I wrote it down here somewhere Oh no I thi I put it in one of my e-mails that I sent off. Um that, you know, it's marketable in the sense that it's whilst all these other remotes uh actually do give you repetitive strain injury, our one
Cassandra Ramos: Mm.
Shirley Schechter: does the complete opposite,
Cassandra Ramos: Mm.
Shirley Schechter: you know, so that's something that's new, which is one of the criteria they asked us to come up with something
Cassandra Ramos: Mm.
Shirley Schechter: with something new.
Cassandra Ramos: It make watching T_V_ healthy.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah, and
Lorena Turner: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: if you're not having a good time with the T_V_, you can f throw it about, you know. It's fine, it's kid proof.
Lorena Turner: Just don't sh don't
Cassandra Ramos: Uh.
Lorena Turner: throw it at any of the ornaments and break them.
Shirley Schechter: Well, you can break the ornaments, but you won't break that.
Lorena Turner: No.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah. So all in all, I think we've done very well.
Tiffany Snowden: Mm yep.
Shirley Schechter: Well done everybody.
Lorena Turner: Yay.
Cassandra Ramos: Right, you too.
Shirley Schechter: Um. Drinks are on the company.
Tiffany Snowden: Cool.
Shirley Schechter: In the corporate bar that's next to the corporate swimming pool on the top floor that we're that've all just gained access to.
Cassandra Ramos: Mm.
Tiffany Snowden: Glad to hear that.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah. That's it.
Cassandra Ramos: That's it.
Shirley Schechter: Well, as far as I t as far as I know. Um.
Lorena Turner: Yep. We haven't got the five minute left thing yet.
Shirley Schechter: No. Anyone wanna
Lorena Turner: Mm
Shirley Schechter: play I spy?
Lorena Turner: mm.
Cassandra Ramos: I guess it's probably better that we wrap it up than have five minutes of silence. Should we call the day then?
Shirley Schechter: Yeah, I guess. I mean we're gonna get asked to fill out another questionnaire.
Cassandra Ramos: Uh, right.
Shirley Schechter: Um. It's probably gonna be the same as one we've done before.
Cassandra Ramos: Mm-hmm.
Lorena Turner: In
Shirley Schechter: But
Lorena Turner: project.
Shirley Schechter: I'm not the authority to say that it is. Um how does everyone feel about the technology that's been used in this? The sort of using of the the pens and writing on these special pads and all that?
Lorena Turner: I love it. I love it. I think it's cool. Being all wired up and a vibrating pen and it's cool. Being watched. Um
Cassandra Ramos: Your moment to shine.
Lorena Turner: Wow.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah. I thi you know, I'd I'd n yeah, as we said earlier, I've not never seen that before. something that t the whiteboard
Tiffany Snowden: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: thingy, that's great. Um, but a p a pen with a camera on it, I don't think it's such a new thing. I mean it's i or in such a new idea. It would be different if it was sort of hand writing recognition stuff,
Tiffany Snowden: Yeah.
Shirley Schechter: but as it's not it's literally that'll come up on a computer screen as a picture file rather than actual text.
Lorena Turner: Mm.
Cassandra Ramos: Right, I think they do want to do hand writing recognition
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: on that, it's just
Shirley Schechter: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: the first step.
Shirley Schechter: Mm.
Lorena Turner: Logitech.
Cassandra Ramos: I guess we should end this, since we're off off topic.
Lorena Turner: Yeah.
Cassandra Ramos: So. Shall we
Lorena Turner: Meeting adjourned.
Cassandra Ramos: Right.
Shirley Schechter: Yeah. | The interface specialist and industrial designer presented their prototype to the team and discussed the features the prototype contained. In presenting the prototype, the issue arose that the prototype could only be used with the right hand. The team then looked at the production costs of the remote and found that their remote was actually under budget and that they could retain all the features they had originally decided upon without exceeding the target cost. The team evaluated the prototype on the basis of its look and feel, technological innovation, ease of use, costs, and its ability to be misplaced. Overall, the prototype performed very well in meeting all the criteria of the evaluation. The team then evaluated the project process, finding that they we
re happy with their product and their performance in the project. | 2 | amisum | train |
Whitney Shoemaker: Hmm.
Cassandra Tarzia: Okay. Good morning everybody. Um I'm glad you could all come. I'm really excited to start this team. Um I'm just gonna have a little PowerPoint presentation for us, for our kick-off meeting. My name is Rose Lindgren. I I'll be Cassandra Tarzia. Um our agenda today is we are gonna do a little opening and then I'm gonna talk a little bit about the project, then we'll move into acquaintance such as getting to know each other a little bit, including a tool training exercise. And then we'll move into the project plan, do a little discussion and close, since we only have twenty five minutes. First of all our project aim. Um we are creating a new remote control which we have three goals about, it needs to be original, trendy and user-friendly. I'm hoping that we can all work together to achieve all three of those. Um so we're gonna divide us up into three compa three parts. First the functional design which will be uh first we'll do individual work, come into a meeting, the conceptional design, individual work and a meeting, and then the detailed design, individual work and a meeting. So that we'll each be doing our own ideas and then coming together and um collaborating. Okay, we're gonna get to know each other a little bit. So um, what we're gonna do is start off with um let's start off with Amina. Um
Elizabeth Perry: Alima.
Cassandra Tarzia: Alima, sorry, Alima. Um we're gonna do a little tool training, so we are gonna work with that whiteboard behind you. Um introduce yourself, um say one thing about yourself and then draw your favourite animal and tell us about it.
Elizabeth Perry: Okay. Um I don't know which one of these I have to bring with Whitney Shoemaker.
Cassandra Tarzia: Probably both.
Elizabeth Perry: Right, so, I'm supposed to draw my favourite animal. I have no drawing skills whatsoever. But uh let's see, introduce myself. My name is Alima Bucciantini. Um I'm from the state of Maine in the US. I'm doing nationalism studies, blah, blah, blah, and I have no artistic talents.
Cassandra Tarzia: How do you spell your name?
Elizabeth Perry: A_ L_ I_ M_ A_.
Cassandra Tarzia: Thanks.
Elizabeth Perry: Oh, on this project. So let's see if I can get um here. I will draw a little turtle for you all. Not necessarily 'cause it's my absolute favourite animal, but just that I think they're drawable. And you have the pretty little shell going on. Some little eyes. Happy. There you go. That's a turtle.
Whitney Shoemaker: Yes.
Cassandra Tarzia: So what are your favourite characteristics?
Elizabeth Perry: Um. I I like the whole having a shell thing.
Cassandra Tarzia: Mm.
Elizabeth Perry: It's quite cool carry your home around where you go, um quite decorative little animals, they can swim, they can, they're very adaptable, they carry everything they need with them, um and they're easy to draw.
Cassandra Tarzia: Excellent. Shall we just go around the table?
Cynthia Tapia: Uh Okay. Well, my
Cassandra Tarzia: Mm.
Cynthia Tapia: uh and I'm Cynthia Tapia for the project. Um. And I'll try and draw my favourite animal. I'll I should leave that one on there
Elizabeth Perry: No,
Cynthia Tapia: shouldn't
Elizabeth Perry: you
Cynthia Tapia: I
Elizabeth Perry: can erase
Cynthia Tapia: before
Elizabeth Perry: the
Cynthia Tapia: I
Elizabeth Perry: turtle, it's alright.
Cynthia Tapia: callously rub it off.
Cassandra Tarzia: Might be nice to have them all up there at same time.
Cynthia Tapia: Um I'm not gonna draw it quite to scale um.
Cynthia Tapia: Is that at least identifiable?
Elizabeth Perry: Snake.
Whitney Shoemaker: Well.
Cynthia Tapia: It's
Cassandra Tarzia: Em
Cynthia Tapia: a whale,
Elizabeth Perry: Well, snake? It's
Cynthia Tapia: yes. Thanks.
Whitney Shoemaker: Oh my god, it's better than what I'm gonna
Elizabeth Perry: w
Whitney Shoemaker: be able to do.
Cynthia Tapia: Um and, yeah, all they're quite intelligent um and also they're they're kind of mysterious, like we don't really know much about them or or understand how they work, how they form groups. And I just find them interesting animals.
Whitney Shoemaker: Take my contraptions with Whitney Shoemaker. Alright, I'm Jessy. I'm from around D_C_ ish sort of in the U_S_. And we're gonna keep the deep sea sort of theme going on, animal. Don't really know how to draw this. Just where can I Mm. Mm. Maybe if I do the water, but how? Sort of give an idea. idea how one would explain this. Mm maybe with some whiskers. Briefly, it's supposed to be a seal. You can imagine it in the water. I like them, because they are like playful and silly sort of have a good time. Not gonna try and pretend like I can get any better than that.
Cassandra Tarzia: Mm 'kay. Mm 'kay? I'm Rose and I'm Project Manager, from California. Um. Hmm.
Cassandra Tarzia: S
Whitney Shoemaker: It's definitely significantly
Elizabeth Perry: Oh, a cat.
Whitney Shoemaker: harder once you are doing it.
Elizabeth Perry: Yeah.
Cassandra Tarzia: Um it's actually a coyote. Let's see.
Elizabeth Perry: Right.
Cassandra Tarzia: Let's see,
Whitney Shoemaker: That's impressive.
Cassandra Tarzia: let's give it a little bit of a snout, I don't know,
Elizabeth Perry: That's
Cassandra Tarzia: some teeth. Yeah.
Elizabeth Perry: That's pretty
Cynthia Tapia: Cool.
Elizabeth Perry: impressive.
Cassandra Tarzia: Oh dear. Yes. I live um I live right across the street from an open space in California. We have coyotes howl all the time. So I really enjoy their their singing, you they're really beautiful animals. Mm. Okay um, moving on to slightly more serious stuff. We're gonna talk about project finances. Um we have a couple we'd like to sell it for about twenty five Euro with the profit aim of um fifteen million Euro um from our sales and because this is such this is for television it's a we have a market range of Internet, like it's an international market range, we don't have to worry about specifics. Um in order to make a profit of this magnitude, we need to um be able to produce each one at a maximum of twelve fifty Euro. So we're selling it for twice what we'd like to produce it for. Okay um, just to generate a little bit of discussion about the project um, I could I'd like to hear about your experiences using ro remote controls, um your first ideas about um creating a new r remote control, what would be the best um like you what are the features that you really like what are the features that you don't like, etcetera, so
Whitney Shoemaker: Um I hate when there's like four different buttons and you have to press to actually turn on the T_V_ like you have to do one for the power of the T_V_ and then like another one to get the actual screen on and something else to get it all going, I don't know. Now they keep combining all different remotes together, and I don't know if I necessarily like that 'cause I feel like you end up with multimedia overload. I just wanna watch the T_V_
Cassandra Tarzia: Hmm.
Whitney Shoemaker: um. Always gets lost. Some sort of like device to help you find it.
Cynthia Tapia: I've used, I've used remote controls, for things like T_V_ and the C_D_ player and video recorder and I I guess they're they're pretty neat neat little tools uh. You don't have to get up and walk across the room to change
Cassandra Tarzia: Mm.
Cynthia Tapia: a channel. So especially if you're someone really lazy like Whitney Shoemaker they they're pretty nice. Um. I find them they can be a bit annoying, especially, like you know if I'm watching T_V_ I have have to have three separate remote controls of in front of Whitney Shoemaker, you know, one for the T_V_, one for the digital box, one for m the video recorder as well. Um. And also they tend to they tend to be a bit confusing, they've got too many buttons on them uh too too sort of too sort of complicated when all I really wanna do is switch on and off, change the channel, change the volume.
Elizabeth Perry: Yeah um. I agree with having too many remotes around. My dad has a whole drawer at home of remotes for various things, and I don't know how to work half of them um. What's important for Whitney Shoemaker, I guess, is that it's easy to use and that there's not too many buttons, they are not too small, you know you know you need to n to know what you're doing. And one thing I particularly like is if you are not um sort of moving it around to get it to work with the infra-red.
Whitney Shoemaker: Yeah.
Cynthia Tapia: Yeah.
Elizabeth Perry: Um, I think there is a way around that, but I know in my residence right now the the television you sort of have to walk all around the room to
Cassandra Tarzia: Mm-hmm.
Elizabeth Perry: get it to turn on, so i it's just simpler just to just turn around the T_V_ itself, and I think that's if we're gonna make a remote control, it should actually work for what it's doing. So
Whitney Shoemaker: What about like batteries and things like that, like are there some remotes that don don't require like batteries or do all remotes require batteries?
Cassandra Tarzia: Um I would imagine
Elizabeth Perry: I know.
Cassandra Tarzia: all of them, but we could but it's possible we could use like a lithium battery um
Elizabeth Perry: Yeah, something
Cassandra Tarzia: that
Elizabeth Perry: that
Cassandra Tarzia: would
Elizabeth Perry: doesn't
Cassandra Tarzia: last a lot longer than like
Whitney Shoemaker: Mm-hmm.
Cassandra Tarzia: double A_s. Um like tho those are the batteries that are used in a lot of um M_P_ three players now and that kind of thing.
Whitney Shoemaker: Mm-hmm.
Cassandra Tarzia: Um.
Elizabeth Perry: Mm.
Cassandra Tarzia: Um. Okay, it seems we have a little bit of a conflict over um to uh combining all the remotes cont together versus having f five different remotes. So um like you said you don't like having all the buttons on one on one remote, and yet you don't wanna have five remotes. So how
Cynthia Tapia: Mm.
Cassandra Tarzia: do we work
Elizabeth Perry: Yeah.
Cassandra Tarzia: with that?
Elizabeth Perry: Could we get something that just has No doesn't have all the buttons that you need to program the video recorder or program s other things that I'm not very coherent about, but that just has your major buttons for that work for everything, you know volume control,
Cassandra Tarzia: Mm-hmm.
Elizabeth Perry: on, off, channel changing.
Whitney Shoemaker: And maybe that spatially divides it, so it's like if you're looki if you're trying to get the T_V_ on that's, you know, like the top thing on the remote, I dunno if d be vertical or horizontal in terms
Elizabeth Perry: Yeah.
Whitney Shoemaker: of how we're gonna make it, but if it's like all the T_V_ stuff was here, then all the V_C_R_ stuff was here, all the whatever else we
Cassandra Tarzia: Mm.
Whitney Shoemaker: have programmed
Elizabeth Perry: N that way
Whitney Shoemaker: into it it's all just in its
Elizabeth Perry: Yeah.
Whitney Shoemaker: separate place and not like all the on buttons together, 'cause then you like, I don't even know what I'm turning on.
Cassandra Tarzia: Mm.
Elizabeth Perry: Yeah, and if um if you'd save the more complicated functions maybe for separate remotes that you wouldn't need to use every day.
Whitney Shoemaker: Mm-hmm.
Cassandra Tarzia: Okay, so
Elizabeth Perry: Um.
Cassandra Tarzia: maybe have like one remote that has the main functions on, off, channel changing, volume, and another rote remote with all the special things. Because
Elizabeth Perry: Yeah.
Cassandra Tarzia: that is one thing that um remotes tend to have buttons that the T_V_s no longer have as well.
Elizabeth Perry: Mm.
Cassandra Tarzia: So
Cynthia Tapia: Yeah.
Cassandra Tarzia: like you have to have them somewhere, 'cause you're gonna m need those special functions occasionally.
Elizabeth Perry: Right.
Cassandra Tarzia: Um but not necessarily on the m the normal remote.
Cynthia Tapia: Can I ask, are we designing a remote control for a television only um,
Cassandra Tarzia: Good question.
Cynthia Tapia: and if if this device is just to be used for the television would we even technically be possible to include video recorder functions on it?
Cassandra Tarzia: I don't know
Cynthia Tapia: Um
Cassandra Tarzia: that yet.
Cynthia Tapia: or should we just stick to just stick to having television television related buttons on
Elizabeth Perry: Mm.
Cynthia Tapia: it?
Cassandra Tarzia: It's a good question. Um.
Whitney Shoemaker: Mm-hmm
Cassandra Tarzia: I'll look into
Whitney Shoemaker: hmm.
Cassandra Tarzia: that. If I can.
Whitney Shoemaker: I think it's just T_V_, I mean, if it if we're taking it just new product a new television remote control that's not like doesn't say.
Elizabeth Perry: Mm yeah.
Whitney Shoemaker: You know, things might be more advanced than that.
Cassandra Tarzia: Mm.
Cynthia Tapia: So we should maybe we should assume that i t it's just a television that we're wanting to control. Well, I mean I suppose it would be nice to have playing and record and stop buttons on it for the video recorder as well I I don't know if that works technologically or not.
Elizabeth Perry: Yes. I guess we have to define what what we're aiming for. If it's just a television then that it's a bit simpler, 'cause there's less buttons that would even need to be on it.
Cynthia Tapia: Yeah.
Whitney Shoemaker: It's an idea with the buttons being really.
Elizabeth Perry: Large.
Whitney Shoemaker: Yeah.
Elizabeth Perry: If you have older people or people like Whitney Shoemaker that aren't very co-ordinated hand-eye, it's really quite important that you are
Cassandra Tarzia: Mm.
Elizabeth Perry: not pressing a small like teeny mobiles phone size buttons,
Cynthia Tapia: Yeah.
Elizabeth Perry: if we can help it.
Cassandra Tarzia: Okay. 'Kay sounds like we've had a good little discussion for our first ideas. Mind if we move on? Ps
Cynthia Tapia: 'Kay.
Whitney Shoemaker: Mm-hmm.
Cassandra Tarzia: mm okay. Um now our next meeting starts in thirty minutes. I believe we've actually been only working on this this one for about twenty, so we can
Elizabeth Perry: Hmm.
Cassandra Tarzia: continue discussing more new ideas if you'd like um, breakdown of what we'll be doing individually. Um the industrial design, Alima will
Elizabeth Perry: Yeah.
Cassandra Tarzia: be doing um the working design. Um Cynthia Tapia, that's for. Technical functions, I guess like keeping in mind the buttons thing, the size of the buttons. Um user requirements um, so you'll be hearing about different trends, uh about different things that people need, um I guess kind of the same uh discussion that we've been having, we'll
Whitney Shoemaker: Mm-hmm.
Cassandra Tarzia: get from the actual consum s consumers. Mm 'kay um. And you will get specific instructions sent by your personal coach. I realised in this past one we we didn't have much, we just wanted to get a little brain-storming done. Um so very exited to see all your animals and how what wonderful um artists we all are um. Any questions?
Cynthia Tapia: What we're gonna be discussing at the next meeting? Do we know that?
Cassandra Tarzia: I haven't gotten an agenda yet, um I'll put that together. I'm sure
Cynthia Tapia: Right.
Cassandra Tarzia: as we'll each get our own instruction and then um because what we gonna do is first our individual actions and then we'll come back together.
Cynthia Tapia: Yep.
Cassandra Tarzia: So I'm
Elizabeth Perry: 'Kay.
Cassandra Tarzia: sure we'll all have more concrete things to contribute next time
Cynthia Tapia: Yep.
Elizabeth Perry: I'm sure we'll be busy.
Cassandra Tarzia: Mm 'kay um I'll type up mi minutes and probably email those out to all of you.
Cynthia Tapia: Okay.
Cassandra Tarzia: Um just including all the things that we talked about.
Cynthia Tapia: Can
Cassandra Tarzia: Um.
Cynthia Tapia: you e-mail your slides as well? Is that possible?
Cassandra Tarzia: Yes, I yes, I think I can. Mm-hmm.
Cynthia Tapia: Cool.
Cassandra Tarzia: I'll just attach it to an email. And you're you're number two,
Elizabeth Perry: I'm two.
Cassandra Tarzia: three, four?
Whitney Shoemaker: I'm four.
Cassandra Tarzia: Is that correct? Okay.
Elizabeth Perry: Alright.
Cassandra Tarzia: Excellent. It was lovely meeting you all.
Cynthia Tapia: 'Kay
Cassandra Tarzia: Just make sure you keep checking the company web site and the emails.
Elizabeth Perry: 'Kay.
Cassandra Tarzia: Let Whitney Shoemaker see if I can do that right now. | Cassandra Tarzia opened the meeting and introduced herself to the team. Cassandra Tarzia introduced the upcoming project in which the team is to create a remote control. The team members participated in a tool training exercise in which they each drew their favorite animal on the white-board and discussed why they liked the animal. Cassandra Tarzia then talked about the project finances and discussed selling prices, profit aim, market range, and production costs. Cassandra Tarzia then led the team in a discussion on their experiences with remotes and what features they would like to include in the remote they are producing. The team members discussed the option of combining remotes and how to produce a remote which is capable of controlling multiple devices. | 2 | amisum | train |
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Jasmine Tafolla: Mm yeah.
Anna Bauer: Okay. I g yeah. Time it?
Dana Jackson: Fourteen twenty six.
Anna Bauer: Okay. Lovely to see you all again. Um it's our conceptual design meeting and it's starting at approximately fourteen twenty five and so we have forty minutes for this one again and so we'll go just after three o'clock. Um okay our agenda, we're gonna do an opening, I'm gonna review the minutes of the last meeting, then we'll have your three presentations um and then we'll have to make a decision on the remote control concepts, and we'll close.
Jasmine Tafolla: Okay.
Anna Bauer: So opening. Um these are our minutes from r the functional design. We decided our target group is the focus on who can afford it, because we have international appeal and we said it's for all age groups, different um functions of it. Our main objectives were simplicity and fashion. And s um in specific functions are something to keep the remote from getting lost, large buttons for the essential functions, a possibility for extra functions, like a sliding a sliding piece and a long-life battery or a charging station. Okay, now three presentations. I'd like to do it in this order, first do the conceptual specification of components, properties and materials um
Jasmine Tafolla: That would be Dana Jackson.
Anna Bauer: and then the conceptual specification of user interface
Monica Stallins: Yep.
Anna Bauer: and finally trend watching.
Jasmine Tafolla: Alright. Well.
Anna Bauer: Mm. 'kay.
Anna Bauer: Function F_ eight it. There we go.
Jasmine Tafolla: Alright. Um I'm very excited by this one actually guys I uh had a lot of fun doing it. Components design. This is where you look at what does it take to make a remote control and what should we make our specific remote control out of. Um. So, we need to examine each element separately, but we're designing a full thing, so you wanna keep it integrated as a whole. The main elements of remote controls in general, and therefore ours as well, are the case, the buttons, the circuit board with the chip and the battery. These are all things that we had sort of addressed before, but I'm gonna take each one a little bit separately here as we figure out what they should be made of and what they should look like. The case, uh the options that I've gotten from headquarters about what we can do, um there's there's the shape of a case, we could do a flat sh a flat case, a curved case or maybe even a double double-curved case. I haven't seen any pictures of what this exactly looks like yet, just keep that in mind, but these are the options that we have from manufacturing and we can make our case out of plastic, the m the main base will be plastic, but we have all these sort of fashion and technological elements we can add in, wood, latex, titanium, rubber or other coloured types of plastic. That would be our case. Um buttons, for buttons we have um pushbuttons, which is what Real Reaction uses the most often, but we also have scror scroll wheels, which can
Anna Bauer: Mm.
Jasmine Tafolla: have integrated pushbuttons, or we could go all high-tech and have an L_ L_C_D_ screen. Um circuit board and chip we can have a simple one, a regular one or an advanced one, depending on what our other needs are. And then battery I think is where things get most exciting. We're talking about long-life batteries here. Um we can we can have your sort of basic double A_ batteries, but we also have these options of um using a kinetic battery, like are used in high-tech watches, where you just have to move it a little bit to get it to power up. Um so simple movements like pushing buttons would recharge the battery. Or a solar battery, although there are slight um complications with solar batteries as in we can't use a latex case if we have a solar battery.
Anna Bauer: Hmm.
Jasmine Tafolla: Or um something they only described as the type of battery you find in torches from about fifty years ago, flashlights. Not quite sure what that is, but that's the description that I received, so that's what I'm passing on to you. So those are our options. Um personal preferences that I was thinking through here's what we've been talking about all through, fashion and simplicity. So if we're going for fashion in our cases, I think that what we're gonna wanna look at is a curved or a double-curved case, probably with a variety of design elements. Maybe titanium, maybe some wood. We're gonna have to investigate that better when I get specifics of the actual materials, but that's sort of what I have in mind. And we wanna go for simplicity. Probably pushbuttons, but I'm sort of intrigued by the idea of a scroll scroll
Anna Bauer: Mm.
Jasmine Tafolla: wheel, if anyone has anything any ideas on that? I mean I know the iPods and things right now have touch scroll um buttons which are exactly like what they're describing, so that might be something we wanna look into. And I'm really intrigued by the idea of a kinetic battery. Solar I don't think would be such a good idea, because how often are you sure that your remote control will get a certain amount of light. But this idea of the kinetic, that you don't have to replace, and that a simple just shaking it around will make it work, I think that that m would be a very interesting thing. But I think we'd also wanna go for e a simple chip or regular chip to keep our costs down. Uh we really only need a regular or advanced chip t if we're gonna start using an L_C_D_. So I think we want to be aware of not making things overly t technological if they don't need to be, 'cause that'll keep our manufacturing price way down. That's what I have for options. Um I'd appreciate anyone's input, but that's what I'm seeing for the future of the the look of this thing.
Dana Jackson: Is double-curved like would be like two hands kind of thing?
Jasmine Tafolla: I'm not sure. I haven't received any specific
Dana Jackson: Okay.
Jasmine Tafolla: visuals
Dana Jackson: 'Cause I'm
Jasmine Tafolla: of
Dana Jackson: imagining
Jasmine Tafolla: this yet.
Dana Jackson: like double-curved is like, you know, like two sides that curve
Jasmine Tafolla: This is
Dana Jackson: and
Jasmine Tafolla: what
Dana Jackson: then like
Jasmine Tafolla: I'm sort
Dana Jackson: one
Jasmine Tafolla: of
Dana Jackson: curve would just be like a single vertical-ish kind of looking
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: thing, but I've
Jasmine Tafolla: I'm
Dana Jackson: no idea.
Jasmine Tafolla: not sure, but I'll let you know as soon as I get any pictures.
Dana Jackson: Sounds good.
Anna Bauer: Yeah, I wonder
Jasmine Tafolla: I know if we do have a double-curved case, it can't have any titanium in it. But the titanium, they were quite they're marketing quite hard to us as being used in the space programme, so that could be quite interesting. Space-age remote.
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Jasmine Tafolla: Just all things
Anna Bauer: Just
Jasmine Tafolla: to
Anna Bauer: an interesting
Jasmine Tafolla: keep in mind.
Anna Bauer: marketing kind of
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: element.
Jasmine Tafolla: That's about all I have to do, guys. quickly.
Anna Bauer: Uh just a real quick question um the weight of these different elements,
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah,
Anna Bauer: have
Jasmine Tafolla: n
Anna Bauer: you
Jasmine Tafolla: no
Anna Bauer: no
Jasmine Tafolla: idea,
Anna Bauer: idea, okay.
Jasmine Tafolla: no idea. Um I'm assuming that a kinetic battery isn't gonna take up that much weight,
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Jasmine Tafolla: and that a tita titanium is very light, I know,
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Jasmine Tafolla: um but other than that's really basic, I mean, that's all I have gotten so far.
Anna Bauer: Okay.
Jasmine Tafolla: Alright? Any other questions?
Monica Stallins: Uh-huh. Don't think so.
Jasmine Tafolla: No? Okay.
Anna Bauer: Mm 'kay.
Jasmine Tafolla: I have save this in the uh shared projects, if anyone wants to look
Anna Bauer: Thank you, perfect.
Jasmine Tafolla: and
Dana Jackson: Thanks.
Jasmine Tafolla: I have c considerable notes on the topic as well, if anyone needs any more information. Uh
Anna Bauer: Um if you made notes yourself you can put those on our um underneath our
Jasmine Tafolla: Just in
Anna Bauer: oh,
Jasmine Tafolla: my notebook,
Anna Bauer: uh in your book, then don't worry about
Jasmine Tafolla: but if
Anna Bauer: that.
Jasmine Tafolla: anyone has any specific questions, don't hesitate to email Dana Jackson or something. Alright? Uh I guess I can
Anna Bauer: 'Kay now we're um concepts concepts of user interface. Yeah, um. This one's so much tighter than the other one.
Jasmine Tafolla: I know.
Anna Bauer: Okay. Nope. There we go. Here you are.
Monica Stallins: Jess.
Jasmine Tafolla: G oh, geez.
Monica Stallins: Alright, so I'm gonna describe the the concept of the user interface of this des device. Um we've talked about uh the two essential properties of the user interface. We want it to be simple and we want it to be fashionable. Um other we've also got to remember that this is a device that serves as a useful purpose. Uh we want people to be able to use it s as a remote control, so we need determine what the essential functions of the d of the device are and make sure that we include that we've included all of those and that we actually end up with a device that is going to be useful to people. We have a number of different choices for a design concept um and s that's that's something that that I'll show you some examples of um, but essentially we need to choose how how is this device going to work, how how what kind of model is there going to be for user interaction with this device. Uh once we've chosen a a concept for it, we can then design the features around the concept, making sure that we get all the essential functions in the device and uh the extra functions and the more advanced features. And of course we also have to make it look cool. So basically, that's what we don't want. M we don't want lots of buttons, uh complicated features. We want something that looks nice and simple. Here's a
Jasmine Tafolla: Hmm.
Monica Stallins: a fairly simple device. This is an an iPod from Apple. Um I think the main thing to notice about it is it just has four buttons. It's very minimalistic in its design. Uh you use these four buttons to m to move around a range of settings on the small L_C_D_ screen. Um the thing I like about this is that it's very very quick to access the main features. Uh you can just about make out uh that the button three buttons are uh previous track, next track and play pause. They're the main the main features of the iPod, the things you will use a all the time. Um then if you want to do anything more advanced, you go into the little menu on the L_C_D_ screen and you use the buttons just to scroll around and and find the more advanced features that you want. So I think that's that's a good a good kind of model that we could have. Um here's a another example. This is uh it's an interesting idea and I think i it looks pretty cool. Um it's certainly got novelty value. Uh
Anna Bauer: Mm.
Monica Stallins: it's nice and colourful, it's nice and bright. Uh it's also something that you can kind of feel your way around. The buttons are are different shapes and and you can sort of yeah if you're watching T_V_ in the dark or whatever, you can work out which button's which and basically, yeah it's ith it's fun. So I I like I like this idea of just having buttons for the features that you use most often. So you'd need a few buttons to select your favourite channels. I mean most people, when they watch T_V_, they have two hundred and fifty channels on their T_V_ and they watch of 'bout four of them at the most. So, you have buttons for your favourite channel, changing the volume, which is something you do all the time when you're watching T_V_, and the button to switch it off, in case you get bored. Um other features, things like adjusting the brightness, tuning the T_V_, uh I don't know what else you do with a T_V_. Um but these are these are all necessary functions. Uh you can't have a t there's no point having a television that you can't tune or that you can't set the contrast, so we need to find a way of including these somehow. Um and one other suggestions I'd make is to in is to include in a menu system, a bit like on the iPod. So we'd either have a small L_C_D_ display on the device itself, or uh have a dis a menu display that comes up on your television and can b be controlled through the device.
Jasmine Tafolla: Hmm.
Monica Stallins: And that would allow you to access access the advanced features uh whilst keeping a very small and simple set of buttons for the features that you use most often.
Anna Bauer: Okay.
Jasmine Tafolla: So you'd be advocating an L_C_D_ then?
Monica Stallins: I think that's that's one way to go, yes.
Jasmine Tafolla: Okay.
Monica Stallins: Um I mean there are there are advantages and disadvantages if you if you have an L_C_D_ display, it's it's nice, because it's it it lets you just sort of sit there and st and control your television from your armchair.
Jasmine Tafolla: Mm-hmm.
Monica Stallins: There are disadvantages, an an L_C_D_ display would have to be quite small, 'cause we're
Jasmine Tafolla: Right.
Monica Stallins: we're I well we're I assume we're gonna be making quite a small device. Um it would also have to have uh a kind of backlighting in it, 'cause you ten you tend to watch
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Monica Stallins: T_V_ in the dark,
Jasmine Tafolla: Right.
Monica Stallins: but you need to be able to see your L_D_D_ L_C_D_ display. The alternative is to have a an on-screen display on your television that you control through your remote control. Uh have these um digital boxes where you you press the buttons and it comes up with your this thing of watch lo what's
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Monica Stallins: on each channel. I mean
Jasmine Tafolla: Okay.
Monica Stallins: that that's also a good idea. It's it can it does have it's problems as well, if you've got a small T_V_ and you're sitting on the other
Anna Bauer: Mm.
Monica Stallins: side of a room, it's hard to read the little text that comes up.
Jasmine Tafolla: Mm-hmm.
Monica Stallins: Uh but that's a that's a design decision that we can make.
Jasmine Tafolla: 'Kay.
Anna Bauer: I do think that um one of the important features for a remote is seeing a menu and seeing what's on. Um
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: and so like favourite channels is is applicable, but I think th that you do need to have some kind of function where it's um you have t you can see
Jasmine Tafolla: Well
Anna Bauer: the title of the show or possibly a description of it.
Jasmine Tafolla: Are you
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: Like
Jasmine Tafolla: are you
Anna Bauer: I
Jasmine Tafolla: tak
Anna Bauer: I know I use
Dana Jackson: Wait,
Anna Bauer: that
Dana Jackson: but is
Anna Bauer: often
Dana Jackson: that separate
Anna Bauer: enough.
Dana Jackson: from what he was saying?
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: Well if it if it was a L_ L_C_D_ on th on the remote, I don't know that you could f that you'd
Jasmine Tafolla: No,
Anna Bauer: be able to
Jasmine Tafolla: I
Anna Bauer: see
Jasmine Tafolla: think
Anna Bauer: a
Jasmine Tafolla: I think we're talking menu like contrast and
Anna Bauer: Okay.
Jasmine Tafolla: tuning the V_C_R_ or something if I've understood you correctly,
Monica Stallins: Yeah, that
Jasmine Tafolla: rather than
Monica Stallins: that
Jasmine Tafolla: menu
Monica Stallins: would be one
Jasmine Tafolla: as
Monica Stallins: of the
Jasmine Tafolla: what's
Monica Stallins: features,
Jasmine Tafolla: on.
Monica Stallins: yes.
Anna Bauer: Okay.
Monica Stallins: But it's
Anna Bauer: 'Cause that would
Monica Stallins: it's
Anna Bauer: be more specifically
Monica Stallins: it's
Anna Bauer: a
Monica Stallins: something
Anna Bauer: digital
Monica Stallins: to bear
Anna Bauer: box,
Monica Stallins: in mind is that
Anna Bauer: mm-hmm.
Monica Stallins: if we put a display on the remote control the c uh communication is one way, so you can't have the televisions and information back to the remote control,
Jasmine Tafolla: Oh,
Monica Stallins: at
Jasmine Tafolla: good
Monica Stallins: least
Jasmine Tafolla: point.
Monica Stallins: I
Anna Bauer: Mm.
Monica Stallins: don't think you can. Um I'm not sure.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: Okay, now
Dana Jackson: Should
Anna Bauer: we're
Dana Jackson: I plug
Anna Bauer: moving
Dana Jackson: that
Anna Bauer: on
Dana Jackson: in?
Anna Bauer: to market. Marketing.
Monica Stallins: Is that going on? Okay.
Dana Jackson: Maybe it's just not
Monica Stallins: Uh that should
Dana Jackson: Is it
Monica Stallins: be
Dana Jackson: on?
Monica Stallins: alright, actually.
Dana Jackson: Ri What F_ do you have to press, five?
Anna Bauer: Eight.
Dana Jackson: I just keep pressing lots of 'em. Well, I don't know how relevant all of this gonna be. If anything, the that they gave Dana Jackson.
Jasmine Tafolla: No
Anna Bauer: Oops,
Jasmine Tafolla: signal.
Anna Bauer: it's not plugged in, quite
Dana Jackson: Alright.
Anna Bauer: in well enough. There we are.
Jasmine Tafolla: Oop, there we go.
Anna Bauer: Mm 'kay.
Dana Jackson: Oh yeah. Okay, so we're gonna look a little bit at trend watching. Basically, I was given um an executive summary that was a market investigation on remote controls that was recently conducted, and then also some fashion watchers in Paris and Milan commented on some things that are gonna be going on this year. So first um they had people they ranked um the important aspects of r remote controls, and right now i d they're saying that currently there's a functional look and feel preference, but that really, over the next year it it that's gonna be switching to fancy look and feel remotes, so that just goes back to the whole desire of our c Real Reaction company wanting to focus on fashion and so, even though we're stressing, when we're talking, we've all been talking about this like simplicity and easy to use idea, they're sort of wanting us to remember that the number one thing for everyone is that it's fancy look and feel. And as these are ranked, the top one is doubly important to the second one, which is doubly important to the third one, so
Jasmine Tafolla: Okay.
Dana Jackson: just to take that weight into account. The second thing that was mentioned as important was the technological innovations. That would be like if we use something like the space material or the L_C_D_ screen, things like that. And then ease of use was the third most important, whi so really, no matter what, we need to focus the most on fancy look and feel, according to this. I don't know how much we agree with that. And then the fashion watch talks about that this year's top trend for clothes, shoes and furniture is fruits and vegetables and tha that there's a preference
Anna Bauer: S sweet.
Dana Jackson: for spongy, tight material. And so that brings us to my personal preferences. Who wants a spongy remote or one with fruit and vegetable padding. Personally, I don't really think that I want one that's gonna go out of style or go stale, excuse the pun, um in a year, so even though this is coming from us as, you know, trend watch, market research, I don't know how much of it we necessarily wanna take away. Also, considering that the d research b has been carried out by Real Reaction, I'm a little hesitant as to like, how these questions may have been worded, and if necessarily this whole fashion to technology y edas ease of use is necessarily the right ranking. Personally, like I might reverse it, but if we're working for this company then I guess no matter what, we have to stress fashion the most. But it
Jasmine Tafolla: Mm.
Dana Jackson: doesn't necessarily need to be a spongy material.
Jasmine Tafolla: That there's all kinds of scope for imagination in that one though.
Dana Jackson: Yeah. I don't have a lot of notes to share if you want them, that pretty much sums it up. So yeah.
Anna Bauer: Okay, do we have any s some questions for this, let's
Dana Jackson: Yeah,
Anna Bauer: see um.
Dana Jackson: what can I possibly enlighten on?
Anna Bauer: Um do you have any ideas how to possibly use these? Um how to how to use a fruit or vegetable or um or the spongy material at all? Like could we make a s like could we make a spongy remote? It would be easier
Jasmine Tafolla: If
Anna Bauer: on
Jasmine Tafolla: it's
Anna Bauer: the hands.
Jasmine Tafolla: latex if it's latexy
Anna Bauer: It's kind of
Jasmine Tafolla: Um,
Anna Bauer: and then it
Jasmine Tafolla: mean
Monica Stallins: A kind of
Anna Bauer: we
Monica Stallins: thing
Anna Bauer: would have to
Monica Stallins: that
Anna Bauer: find a way to protect like the chip and all that, I dunno.
Jasmine Tafolla: An
Anna Bauer: But
Jasmine Tafolla: uh I if th my understanding of a latex case is that it's in fact hard to protect stuff inside, but that
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Jasmine Tafolla: it's covered with the latex, which is spongier and softer on your hands. It's there's something to be said, I mean we we got that thing earlier from you about um not wanting it to R_ R_ repetitive stress injuries
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Jasmine Tafolla: and
Dana Jackson: Mm-hmm.
Jasmine Tafolla: things
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Jasmine Tafolla: and and Yeah,
Dana Jackson: Yeah, so something, m
Jasmine Tafolla: something
Dana Jackson: m instead of
Jasmine Tafolla: grippable,
Dana Jackson: a necess
Jasmine Tafolla: I mean
Dana Jackson: yeah,
Jasmine Tafolla: we don't
Dana Jackson: grip,
Jasmine Tafolla: we don't
Dana Jackson: I'm thinking
Jasmine Tafolla: we don't wanna go
Dana Jackson: grip
Jasmine Tafolla: spongy,
Dana Jackson: more than
Jasmine Tafolla: maybe.
Dana Jackson: like sinking into your hands,
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: you know, i and I
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: think I'm envisioning more like,
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: you know, the material that you have when you sit on like a bicycle, so
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Dana Jackson: that it doesn't hurt when
Jasmine Tafolla: Mm-hmm.
Dana Jackson: you're sitting down for a long time, like I'm imagining that sort of thing, I don't know what th that
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah,
Dana Jackson: material's
Jasmine Tafolla: I think
Dana Jackson: called.
Jasmine Tafolla: that given the list of materials I w I was forwarded it's that seems doable. could we go in fruit and vegetable colours? We could colour-co-ordinate
Anna Bauer: F for
Jasmine Tafolla: them,
Anna Bauer: sure, or maybe
Jasmine Tafolla: li
Anna Bauer: like um couple main ones being like, I dunno, lemons or strawberries or something.
Jasmine Tafolla: The buttons could be fruit-shaped.
Anna Bauer: Could they be smelly?
Monica Stallins: I
Jasmine Tafolla: Oh
Dana Jackson: Oh God.
Monica Stallins: Is it supposed to be shaped like a vegetable? Uh
Anna Bauer: I
Monica Stallins: like
Anna Bauer: don't
Monica Stallins: uh
Anna Bauer: know.
Monica Stallins: I dunno, like uh carrots or something.
Jasmine Tafolla: well it's
Anna Bauer: Or
Jasmine Tafolla: quite easy
Anna Bauer: carrot
Jasmine Tafolla: to s
Anna Bauer: shaped,
Jasmine Tafolla: shape thing
Anna Bauer: mm.
Jasmine Tafolla: like carrot isn't it?
Monica Stallins: Maybe,
Jasmine Tafolla: Or maybe the
Monica Stallins: or
Jasmine Tafolla: buttons could be shaped
Anna Bauer: Like large
Jasmine Tafolla: like different
Anna Bauer: button,
Jasmine Tafolla: fruits.
Anna Bauer: that's what I was thinking of, yeah.
Dana Jackson: What about the idea of like a round remote? Instead of like a vertical up and down one. Like
Monica Stallins: Kind
Dana Jackson: in
Monica Stallins: of
Dana Jackson: terms
Monica Stallins: like a
Dana Jackson: of
Monica Stallins: potato.
Dana Jackson: holding it. Like that's a f shape
Jasmine Tafolla: be yeah.
Dana Jackson: of a fruit.
Jasmine Tafolla: It'd
Dana Jackson: Just
Anna Bauer: Might
Dana Jackson: to
Anna Bauer: would you
Dana Jackson: tie
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: think you
Dana Jackson: it
Anna Bauer: you
Dana Jackson: in a little.
Anna Bauer: do you think you'd be able to hold it? 'Cause I think the reason they're long
Jasmine Tafolla: be harder
Anna Bauer: is
Jasmine Tafolla: to f bu uh buttons
Anna Bauer: yeah.
Jasmine Tafolla: I think. It'd be harder to press
Monica Stallins: Depends.
Jasmine Tafolla: button.
Anna Bauer: Harder to push.
Monica Stallins: When you when you use a remote, do you press the buttons with your thumb, usually?
Dana Jackson: Yeah.
Monica Stallins: Or your fingers?
Jasmine Tafolla: Um
Anna Bauer: I usually hold it in one hand. Maybe
Monica Stallins: Or maybe
Jasmine Tafolla: I
Monica Stallins: you want something that's shaped like a mobile phone, so you you hold it in one hand, and you press the buttons
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah,
Anna Bauer: But then
Monica Stallins: with
Anna Bauer: the buttons
Monica Stallins: your thumb.
Anna Bauer: would
Jasmine Tafolla: that's
Anna Bauer: have to be very small.
Jasmine Tafolla: ts how I tend to do it.
Dana Jackson: Yeah,
Anna Bauer: Don't
Dana Jackson: 'cause
Anna Bauer: you think?
Jasmine Tafolla: No
Dana Jackson: otherwise
Jasmine Tafolla: just
Dana Jackson: your
Jasmine Tafolla: thumb-sized.
Dana Jackson: fingers can't move around.
Jasmine Tafolla: Jus
Dana Jackson: But
Anna Bauer: But
Dana Jackson: I like
Anna Bauer: I mean
Dana Jackson: i
Anna Bauer: in order to get to all of them,
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: you know.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: They would have to be within
Monica Stallins: Maybe.
Anna Bauer: a certain amount
Jasmine Tafolla: That's
Anna Bauer: of
Monica Stallins: But
Jasmine Tafolla: true.
Anna Bauer: space
Monica Stallins: if you've only
Anna Bauer: with
Monica Stallins: got
Anna Bauer: each other.
Monica Stallins: like four or five buttons anyway, then it's it's not
Jasmine Tafolla: Right.
Monica Stallins: so much a problem, perhaps.
Jasmine Tafolla: I When I'm when I'm pressing buttons on my iPod, that's how I do it, hold it and press
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Jasmine Tafolla: the
Monica Stallins: So
Jasmine Tafolla: four.
Monica Stallins: you hold it in one hand
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Monica Stallins: and you press you press the buttons
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah,
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Monica Stallins: with
Jasmine Tafolla: or
Monica Stallins: your thumb
Jasmine Tafolla: in and use
Monica Stallins: and
Jasmine Tafolla: my thumb or my pointer finger on the touch scroll wheel.
Monica Stallins: And
Dana Jackson: I
Monica Stallins: you find
Dana Jackson: love
Monica Stallins: that works
Dana Jackson: the idea
Monica Stallins: quite well?
Dana Jackson: of the
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Dana Jackson: wheel like the iPod.
Monica Stallins: Is
Dana Jackson: 'Cause
Monica Stallins: that
Dana Jackson: th
Monica Stallins: The button on an iPod, is it what is it, is it just four buttons or is it
Dana Jackson: It's
Monica Stallins: li
Dana Jackson: like
Monica Stallins: more
Dana Jackson: five,
Monica Stallins: like
Anna Bauer: It's a
Monica Stallins: a
Anna Bauer: scroll,
Monica Stallins: scroll
Dana Jackson: 'cause
Monica Stallins: thing?
Dana Jackson: there's
Jasmine Tafolla: It
Anna Bauer: yeah,
Dana Jackson: one
Jasmine Tafolla: wel
Anna Bauer: it's
Dana Jackson: in the
Anna Bauer: a
Dana Jackson: middle.
Anna Bauer: wheel.
Jasmine Tafolla: well yeah, it would I mean each version of it has been a little bit different,
Anna Bauer: The one I have
Jasmine Tafolla: but
Anna Bauer: doesn't have the four on i like
Jasmine Tafolla: Oh yeah,
Anna Bauer: around
Jasmine Tafolla: you had
Anna Bauer: it,
Jasmine Tafolla: one
Anna Bauer: I don't
Jasmine Tafolla: of the
Anna Bauer: think.
Jasmine Tafolla: in-between ones, when they weren't doing that anymore.
Jasmine Tafolla: Ts
Monica Stallins: Right.
Jasmine Tafolla: and you press the centre button, that's that's
Monica Stallins: Oh,
Jasmine Tafolla: your all-purpose
Monica Stallins: I see,
Jasmine Tafolla: select
Monica Stallins: right, yeah.
Jasmine Tafolla: button right there.
Monica Stallins: Oh, okay.
Jasmine Tafolla: Since it's the
Monica Stallins: Yeah,
Jasmine Tafolla: one
Monica Stallins: that's
Jasmine Tafolla: in the
Monica Stallins: quite
Jasmine Tafolla: centre
Monica Stallins: a good
Jasmine Tafolla: that's
Monica Stallins: design.
Jasmine Tafolla: not marked, yeah.
Dana Jackson: I think why it would be good for us is 'cause like you could have the same wheel sort of effect for like channel flipping and then the other
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: one could be like for volume. Like just the idea of like those so few buttons
Jasmine Tafolla: Uh
Dana Jackson: for main
Jasmine Tafolla: uh t
Dana Jackson: things, but then how you could go back to the menu and like, I dunno if we would want it on the screen there or on the actual T_V_. I kind of am wanting
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: to say on the T_V_, 'cause if you're changing
Jasmine Tafolla: Hmm.
Dana Jackson: the brightness, don't you wanna see it happening, kind
Anna Bauer: Mm.
Dana Jackson: of?
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: And then
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah, I
Dana Jackson: you
Jasmine Tafolla: think
Dana Jackson: could still
Jasmine Tafolla: an
Dana Jackson: have
Jasmine Tafolla: L_C_D_
Dana Jackson: that available.
Jasmine Tafolla: screen might be good in theory, but not as useful
Monica Stallins: I think
Jasmine Tafolla: in
Monica Stallins: it
Jasmine Tafolla: practice.
Monica Stallins: could be difficult in practice, yeah.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Monica Stallins: Also z yeah, 'cause you would be z looking down at the L_C_D_ screen, than
Jasmine Tafolla: Right.
Monica Stallins: back up at your T_V_ and
Dana Jackson: Mm-hmm.
Monica Stallins: people
Jasmine Tafolla: Um
Monica Stallins: don't wanna do that.
Anna Bauer: Okay um
Jasmine Tafolla: Oh we
Anna Bauer: we
Jasmine Tafolla: probably have
Anna Bauer: have
Jasmine Tafolla: to get going, don't
Anna Bauer: we've
Jasmine Tafolla: we?
Anna Bauer: about fifteen minutes left, so I'm I'm gonna
Dana Jackson: Uh-huh.
Anna Bauer: continue with my pres presentation. Um I've one more slide before we close, but in that slide is when we need to make decisions about this these kinds of things, so I'll just
Jasmine Tafolla: 'Kay.
Anna Bauer: bring that up and show you all before we move on. Um
Dana Jackson: If I get
Jasmine Tafolla: Could
Dana Jackson: any more information of fruits and vegetables,
Jasmine Tafolla: Could we
Dana Jackson: I'll let
Jasmine Tafolla: uh
Dana Jackson: you know.
Jasmine Tafolla: could we have changeable covers like for your mobile?
Monica Stallins: Like,
Jasmine Tafolla: In different
Monica Stallins: to
Jasmine Tafolla: fruit
Monica Stallins: make
Jasmine Tafolla: and
Monica Stallins: it
Jasmine Tafolla: vegetable
Monica Stallins: different fruits.
Jasmine Tafolla: colours, yeah.
Monica Stallins: Yeah, it's possible.
Anna Bauer: Yeah, and then like the the covers could be spongy latex
Jasmine Tafolla: Exactly.
Anna Bauer: wherea but the actual model could be titanium.
Jasmine Tafolla: And you could co-ordinate with your house or whatever.
Monica Stallins: I
Jasmine Tafolla: All
Monica Stallins: think
Jasmine Tafolla: these
Monica Stallins: maybe
Jasmine Tafolla: options.
Monica Stallins: th the packaging, it should be like a lemon and the the packaging is like the peel. So
Jasmine Tafolla: Ooh.
Monica Stallins: instead of opening the box you just kind of peel it, and the remote control's inside.
Dana Jackson: Well, there we
Jasmine Tafolla: Oh.
Dana Jackson: go.
Monica Stallins: Don't know.
Anna Bauer: Ah hmm
Dana Jackson: The
Anna Bauer: hmm
Dana Jackson: iPod packaging
Anna Bauer: hmm.
Dana Jackson: is Dana Jackson like was so that was like half the fun. It's
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: like the way it all comes all cute.
Jasmine Tafolla: Mm.
Dana Jackson: Lemons?
Jasmine Tafolla: Options.
Anna Bauer: Okay, um components concept. Energy, chip
Jasmine Tafolla: Uh-hu oh,
Anna Bauer: on print.
Jasmine Tafolla: oh yes. Right,
Anna Bauer: G
Jasmine Tafolla: I had sort of skipped over that hoping it wouldn't get be necessary but um
Anna Bauer: That's th th this is the agenda they gave Dana Jackson. So
Jasmine Tafolla: Alright,
Anna Bauer: can you just explain
Jasmine Tafolla: so
Anna Bauer: what that
Jasmine Tafolla: um
Anna Bauer: is real quick?
Jasmine Tafolla: decisions, what the okay deci decisions on energy I'm thinking is based on the battery.
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Jasmine Tafolla: Um I dunno, what do people think about this kinetic battery idea?
Anna Bauer: I think it's awesome. I
Jasmine Tafolla: Am
Anna Bauer: think
Jasmine Tafolla: I
Anna Bauer: it's really cool.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: Yeah, I mean, it would t totally take care of our problem of not wanting to change batteries.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Monica Stallins: Yeah, um I think it's good, as as long as we consider the the cost and the uh how reliable it is, but
Jasmine Tafolla: Right,
Monica Stallins: as far
Jasmine Tafolla: I haven't
Monica Stallins: as I know,
Jasmine Tafolla: gotten
Monica Stallins: the technology
Jasmine Tafolla: any
Monica Stallins: is good.
Dana Jackson: Costs.
Jasmine Tafolla: yeah, any more information on cost other than it's more expensive than a regular battery, but um
Dana Jackson: But over time
Jasmine Tafolla: but if we're using a an i a cheaper chip, then it'll even out, I think. Um circuit boards. Um yeah, I got a whole bunch of information on how circuit boards are produced. They're they're thin fibreglass with copper wires etched on to them, and di I think they're quite easily printed on by machine, which is chip on print is where the machine prints on the wires and solders it all together for us. I don't really know what to tell you as far as decisions. I wasn't really given any options, I was just given that this is how they're done.
Anna Bauer: Okay.
Jasmine Tafolla: Um yeah, I can't can't really tell you. I can I can tell you a whole lot about how it works. But I don't know any decisions on
Anna Bauer: If they're if they're really options.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah. I'm sorry, I did
Anna Bauer: Okay.
Monica Stallins: Al
Jasmine Tafolla: f
Monica Stallins: all circuit boards are pretty much the same, I think. Uh it's fairly fairly standard.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: then we'll move on to the case. Um oh bu I guess maybe if we decided on like a simple, a regular, or an advanced
Jasmine Tafolla: Right.
Anna Bauer: chip,
Jasmine Tafolla: Well
Anna Bauer: maybe.
Jasmine Tafolla: okay, here's the here's the thing on the chips that I that I got. Um simple, regular, advanced chip on print. The chip on print includes an infrared sensor, so we don't have to worry about that. Um, 'kay, the pushbutton if we're gonna have pushbuttons, they require a simple chip, but a scroll wheel requires a regular chip, and an L_C_D_ requires advanced. Do we want a scroll wheel, or do we just want pushbuttons?
Monica Stallins: Um I don't think we ne really need the scroll whe wheel. I mean it might be nice for changing the volume.
Jasmine Tafolla: Oh.
Anna Bauer: It would
Monica Stallins: Uh
Anna Bauer: be nice for changing
Monica Stallins: but
Anna Bauer: the volume, but I don't know how useful it'd be for changing the channel.
Monica Stallins: I don't
Anna Bauer: 'Cause
Monica Stallins: think
Anna Bauer: you
Monica Stallins: it
Anna Bauer: don't
Monica Stallins: would
Dana Jackson: Yeah,
Anna Bauer: have
Dana Jackson: it's
Monica Stallins: really
Anna Bauer: control
Monica Stallins: work.
Dana Jackson: a
Anna Bauer: over numbers or
Monica Stallins: Yeah, you
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah,
Monica Stallins: really need buttons
Jasmine Tafolla: th
Monica Stallins: for
Jasmine Tafolla: it'd
Monica Stallins: changing
Jasmine Tafolla: be
Monica Stallins: a channel.
Jasmine Tafolla: it'd be handy for going through if there was an on-screen menu of your channel choices,
Dana Jackson: But
Jasmine Tafolla: than
Dana Jackson: if
Jasmine Tafolla: you
Dana Jackson: you
Jasmine Tafolla: can
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Jasmine Tafolla: scroll
Dana Jackson: c if you
Jasmine Tafolla: down
Dana Jackson: could scroll
Jasmine Tafolla: on the scroll.
Dana Jackson: through the channels, and then
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: the volume would just
Anna Bauer: We have
Dana Jackson: be
Anna Bauer: five minutes left for the meeting, so.
Dana Jackson: and the volume would just be like the same way,
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: forward and backward as I'm just thinking like it would make it much like sleeker sort of looking.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: And
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: otherwise, no matter how may buttons we have, we're gonna have like, you know, black with red sticking out and th no it's gonna inevitably sort of start looking like
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Dana Jackson: those group of sort of ugly ones that we saw stacked up.
Jasmine Tafolla: Hmm.
Anna Bauer: So, have a scroll for volume?
Jasmine Tafolla: F or for all those secret
Anna Bauer: F
Jasmine Tafolla: functions? When you get on the on-screen menu of all your functions that your remote could do for you without the buttons and you could have a scroll wheel to go through those menus.
Monica Stallins: I think yeah, I think a scroll wheel would be nice, but it's not necessary.
Jasmine Tafolla: Right.
Monica Stallins: Um
Jasmine Tafolla: So we could either go with a simple or a regular chip, depending and maybe we could table that decision for later.
Anna Bauer: Um.
Jasmine Tafolla: I don't know.
Anna Bauer: I think w well I think when we go on to the une userface, we're gonna have to decide the interface we're gonna have to decide
Jasmine Tafolla: Okay.
Anna Bauer: um whether we're gonna have a scroll or not.
Jasmine Tafolla: Well, let's think about that while we talk about the case.
Anna Bauer: Okay, let's do case.
Jasmine Tafolla: Uh I'm kinda liking the idea of latex, if if spongy
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Jasmine Tafolla: is the in thing.
Anna Bauer: I'm a little um I'm a little hesitant about it, because I'm worried about protecting the stuff on the inside.
Jasmine Tafolla: Okay.
Anna Bauer: Um
Dana Jackson: Oh could it be hard, and then
Jasmine Tafolla: Uh yeah,
Dana Jackson: something around
Jasmine Tafolla: everything
Dana Jackson: it?
Jasmine Tafolla: I've
Anna Bauer: Yeah, I would be more okay with like a titanium actual thing and then maybe
Jasmine Tafolla: N oh
Anna Bauer: like
Jasmine Tafolla: wha
Anna Bauer: a mobile phone
Jasmine Tafolla: what I've
Anna Bauer: kind of thing.
Jasmine Tafolla: what I've seen, just not related to this,
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Jasmine Tafolla: but of latex cases before, is that there's uh like a hard plastic inside, and it's just covered with the latex.
Anna Bauer: Okay.
Jasmine Tafolla: Not too thick a layer
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Jasmine Tafolla: of latex, just enough to be grippable,
Anna Bauer: Okay.
Jasmine Tafolla: like bike handles or or anything that you've seen like that. The inside is hard. I don't think we need to worry about protecting
Anna Bauer: Ge o
Jasmine Tafolla: the circuit board, I think that that's done for us.
Anna Bauer: Okay.
Monica Stallins: 'Kay. Yeah.
Anna Bauer: So we uh we do want latex.
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: Okay. Latex. Um and probably in colours, maybe fruity, vegetable colours.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: Fruity colours. Okay um let's go to the ufe user interface then we'll come back to the chip I suppose.
Jasmine Tafolla: Oh and we want a curved case, yeah? Or a double-curved?
Anna Bauer: Well, we don't really know what the difference is, right?
Dana Jackson: I'm thinking curved of some sort.
Anna Bauer: Yeah.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah,
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Jasmine Tafolla: okay. We don't really know what the difference
Anna Bauer: Um okay, interface, the type and the supplements. So
Monica Stallins: Um
Anna Bauer: push or scroll, right?
Monica Stallins: Yep.
Anna Bauer: Or both?
Monica Stallins: Um And I think if we wanna keep our costs down, we should just go for pushbuttons, 'cause then we can have a a simple chip and it's simpler, it's it's cheaper to make pushbuttons than it is a scroll button.
Jasmine Tafolla: Good point.
Monica Stallins: So in terms
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Monica Stallins: of uh in terms of uh economics it's probably better to have pushbuttons.
Anna Bauer: And if we had a sc an on-screen um kind of thing that you could scroll through, like you can use your buttons to scroll through things.
Monica Stallins: Yeah, yeah, it's uh
Anna Bauer: I think
Monica Stallins: it's
Anna Bauer: that
Monica Stallins: it's fairly simple.
Anna Bauer: yeah. For channel surfing I think a scroll an actual like an iPod's kind of scroll thing would be too fast,
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: I dunno.
Jasmine Tafolla: I say pushbuttons at least unless we get any information but I have no idea how much more expensive a scroll wheel is than than a pushbutton, but it's gotta be some more expensive, so
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Jasmine Tafolla: I think it might be better to put our money into the stuff like the kinetic battery and the cool case
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Jasmine Tafolla: because
Anna Bauer: Is that okay
Monica Stallins: Interesting.
Anna Bauer: with you? How you feeling?
Dana Jackson: Yeah. And let's like see if we get anything else. I mean I'm not like hard-sold on the scroll wheel, it's more just to give it a different kind of look,
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm.
Dana Jackson: but if it's gonna be in a latex type thing
Anna Bauer: It might
Dana Jackson: and that's
Anna Bauer: be cool
Dana Jackson: gonna look
Anna Bauer: enough.
Dana Jackson: cool, then that's probably gonna have a bigger impact than the scroll wheel.
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: Okay, so we're gonna go with um type pushbuttons,
Monica Stallins: Yep.
Anna Bauer: and then supplements, how are we gonna do that?
Monica Stallins: Uh what do you mean by supplements, exactly?
Anna Bauer: Um I assume that's what else we're gonna like h ha the um the additional buttons we can use.
Monica Stallins: Um
Jasmine Tafolla: Oh.
Anna Bauer: So we're gonna have like a menu button,
Monica Stallins: Yep.
Anna Bauer: so that we can access on-screen things
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: then? Okay, um
Jasmine Tafolla: Alright.
Anna Bauer: so
Monica Stallins: Um
Anna Bauer: we're
Monica Stallins: in
Anna Bauer: doing an on-screen menu
Jasmine Tafolla: So what
Anna Bauer: that
Jasmine Tafolla: are
Anna Bauer: we
Monica Stallins: Yeah.
Anna Bauer: can
Jasmine Tafolla: what
Anna Bauer: scroll
Jasmine Tafolla: are our
Anna Bauer: through.
Jasmine Tafolla: buttons gonna be? On off
Monica Stallins: On off, uh volume, favourite channels, uh
Jasmine Tafolla: So like one
Monica Stallins: and
Jasmine Tafolla: through
Monica Stallins: menu.
Jasmine Tafolla: five, or
Monica Stallins: Yeah,
Dana Jackson: Like a
Monica Stallins: yeah
Dana Jackson: radio
Monica Stallins: about
Dana Jackson: type sorta situation?
Monica Stallins: yeah like yeah, a bit like radio presets. Um
Anna Bauer: Pre-set channels and then we're gonna need um numbers one through zero, right?
Monica Stallins: Uh we wouldn't even need
Jasmine Tafolla: No.
Monica Stallins: the numbers. I think maybe numbers seems is kind of
Anna Bauer: Well,
Monica Stallins: old-fashioned.
Anna Bauer: but in order to pre-set a cha oh I guess you can just hold it down
Monica Stallins: Yeah,
Anna Bauer: when you get
Monica Stallins: yeah,
Anna Bauer: to one
Monica Stallins: you can just
Jasmine Tafolla: Mm.
Anna Bauer: when you're scrolling through.
Monica Stallins: and you need some kind of, I dunno, sort of up down kind of button,
Jasmine Tafolla: Yeah,
Monica Stallins: but
Jasmine Tafolla: up
Monica Stallins: the volume
Jasmine Tafolla: down.
Monica Stallins: control could double for that, for example.
Anna Bauer: Mm-hmm. Okay, um finishing the meeting now. Um our next meeting starts in thirty minutes, um you each have things to do, look and feel design, user interface design, product evaluation, and you two are going to work together on a prototype using modelling clay. You'll get specific
Jasmine Tafolla: Ooh.
Anna Bauer: instructions
Monica Stallins: Cool.
Anna Bauer: from your personal coach.
Dana Jackson: Wow.
Anna Bauer: Um did we decide on a chip? Let's go with a simple chip?
Jasmine Tafolla: Simple chip.
Monica Stallins: Yep.
Anna Bauer: Okay. We are done. Thank you everyone. Oh I di these are already in our shared folder,
Jasmine Tafolla: Okay, cool.
Anna Bauer: so.
Jasmine Tafolla: Clay.
Monica Stallins: Clay. I wasn't expecting that. | Anna Bauer recapped the decisions made in the previous meeting. Jasmine Tafolla discussed possible materials to use in making the case for the remote, options for buttons, and options for batteries. The interface specialist presented two existing products which incorporate features the team is seeking to embed in their remote. The interface specialist also discussed other features to possibly incorporate into the design of the remote, such as an LCD screen. Dana Jackson discussed recent findings from trend watching reports and how to incorporate these findings into the remote design with respect to what materials to use and the overall appearance of the product. The team then discussed other options for how they could incorporate a fruit and vegetable theme into the appearance of their product. The team then discussed other options for batteries, chips, buttons, and materials for the case, as well as the option to have a menu function. | 2 | amisum | train |
Mary Crum: Are you sure I got it all head's kinda small.
Jennifer Cage: How're
Mary Crum: Okay.
Jennifer Cage: we placed in terms of the alright.
Mary Crum: We're okay?
Eileen Hogan: I should probably try sit straight.
Glenda Scott: Like that? Okay, cool.
Mary Crum: We're good?
Eileen Hogan: Oh, I think mine's fallen off.
Jennifer Cage: It fell That's why.
Mary Crum: I guess it's gonna be hard to drink coffee. Mm. Uh okay.
Jennifer Cage: Ah.
Glenda Scott: Okay? Right, so I'm just gonna start this PowerPoint real quick.
Eileen Hogan: Wow.
Glenda Scott: Yeah, PowerPoint.
Mary Crum: Very official.
Glenda Scott: Yeah, well, you know,
Glenda Scott: Yeah I kinda like this I'm kinda getting into it. Right. Um. So just to kick off the meeting basically um so we're working now for a real reaction, this is uh so it right. Just got an agenda to set out what we're gonna try to accomplish in this particular first meeting. Um We're gonna just do a quick opening and we can hopefully all get acquainted with one another um then we're gonna start talk a little bit about tool training. Essentially that means getting used to the only thing that we haven't tried out yet, the whiteboard. Um we've got a general plan for the project how we're gonna go about accomplishing this and then just a bit of discussion close up. Um I guess you know game or something um in real life um so yeah basically I want to I'm just gonna you got of course you can discuss that, I'm thinking about um uh proposing that since we've got this weird blend of ourselves and our roles that we just don't ask, don't tell. Um so um if you say something about marketing, right, sorted, um
Mary Crum: You're just
Glenda Scott: y
Mary Crum: gonna
Glenda Scott: is
Mary Crum: believe Mary Crum, we'll go from there.
Glenda Scott: Exactly.
Mary Crum: Fair enough.
Glenda Scott: Um I mean obvi if if you guys if if at the same time if you like logically if something doesn't like if I'm like we're gonna sell a remote control that's the size of this paper book you know um you say like well that doesn't seem like such a good idea because of X_ obviously go with it. I mean we'll discuss it but I'm not gonna ask do you know that or uh yeah it seems like
Mary Crum: Prove it yeah,
Glenda Scott: yeah yeah exactly
Mary Crum: okay.
Glenda Scott: so, 'cause we're what we're sort of role playing is y g yeah you're gonna tap into your own knowledge as well um. And that's the same for your when we do introductions I mean um and you talk about your background you know have fun, you know maybe you went to um uh you know maybe i you're like in Maine you went to U_C_S_B_ but you wanna say you went to Harvard or something like that, why not, you know you can this is you know I guess we can have a little bit of fun with it. So are you guys okay with that does that seem logical?
Eileen Hogan: Oh yeah, that's fine.
Jennifer Cage: Sure.
Mary Crum: Works for Mary Crum.
Glenda Scott: Sweet. Cool. So I guess that that we're totally we're making a remote control which is
Eileen Hogan: Right.
Glenda Scott: thrilling um uh but the idea is that we can make something based on the whole corporate model I dunno if you guys had time to check the in real life I dunno if you guys uh checked the um uh the corporate website. Um we've got to make something as fashionable as possible, that's kind of the corporate strategy is we're gonna try to take ordinary stuff that nobody really thinks about and try to make it nice you know like John Lewis nice or you know if you go to Debenham's or something. So um basically we are reinventing the wheel but we wanna try to do it in a user friendly um slick sleek kind of way. Um way we're gonna go about doing that is basically at first we're gonna start on the basics. And that's where I'm gonna need you guys the User Interface Designers and the um um the other designer that I can't remember, the the I_D_ and the U_I_D_ right um Eileen Hogan hey
Jennifer Cage: Mm.
Glenda Scott: right on
Mary Crum: There
Glenda Scott: alright,
Mary Crum: you go.
Glenda Scott: getting into it um to guide Mary Crum and guide us on this project 'cause you're gonna be you're g you guys are the bottom you know you're like no you can't do that you can't have you know X_ and Y_ um at the same time. And then um we'll work up from what is necessary to more like what would be good, you know like um I I think you guys probably got the same emails I did but the idea of um, yes a coffee pot needs to be able to hold coffee but it's also better if it's not like really cheap glass so that it if you touch it you hurt your hand, or something like that. Um and so we'll work up from there and um then we'll meet on and talk about it and then finally we'll incorporate as kind of the last stage you know where you guys build or tell Mary Crum tell us what's possible and then you tell us what we can um hope for and what way to go take the the the take the basics and make it nicer and then ov obviously uh the U_I_D_ and the I_D_ you know you you can keep on the you know sort of at the cutting edge of how to get about maximising what is possible um to try t of sync it all up. So that's the detailed design. So it's a three stage kind of thing. Um right so for now just for th the white board um basically uh just to get used to it, I haven't tried it yet either um I'm just gonna start and um mm carry like five remotes around um and just write down I'm just gonna write down one of the names of my um desert discs you know if you if you were trapped on a desert island and you could only bring five C_D_s along with you name one of them that you could, not all five, if you wanna write all five go for it but name one of them that you could um. Oh, we skipped introductions. Nice. I'm a excellent Project Manager. Um. I'm Marty, um I went to uni at uh U_C_ Santa Barbara and I'm here working on a P_H_D_ in psychology. Um yeah. So
Mary Crum: I'm Sarah, I went to Michigan, and I'm here doing cultural studies and I'm the Marketing Manager or something. Marketing,
Glenda Scott: Expert
Mary Crum: Expert.
Glenda Scott: Don't
Mary Crum: Expert.
Glenda Scott: play yourself down.
Mary Crum: Fine.
Glenda Scott: Expert
Mary Crum: That's Mary Crum.
Jennifer Cage: I'm Ron. I uh once upon a time studied in Victoria and I am Jennifer Cage.
Eileen Hogan: I'm Nathan, I'm from California, and I'm here doing a Masters degree in social anthropology.
Glenda Scott: Where did you go to uni Nathan?
Eileen Hogan: U_C_L_A_.
Glenda Scott: Oh brilliant.
Eileen Hogan: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: Cool. My little brother goes there.
Eileen Hogan: Okay.
Glenda Scott: Right so desert island
Mary Crum: So.
Glenda Scott: discs. Yeah.
Mary Crum: So do we have to wait for you to write it down or are you gonna tell us?
Glenda Scott: Well
Mary Crum: I'm
Glenda Scott: I'll t
Mary Crum: waiting
Glenda Scott: i
Mary Crum: to
Glenda Scott: no
Mary Crum: know.
Glenda Scott: no yeah I'm just gonna write a couple of 'em down. See I'm a big music fan I don't know if you
Mary Crum: Uh
Glenda Scott: guys are, I'm assuming everybody likes music to some lesser or greater extent but
Mary Crum: Fair
Glenda Scott: there's
Mary Crum: enough.
Glenda Scott: some other options, if you're a T_V_ slut like I am like Smallville terrible television
Mary Crum: Oh,
Glenda Scott: show but I
Mary Crum: Smallville.
Glenda Scott: happen to love it, it's rubbish but I love
Mary Crum: I
Glenda Scott: it.
Mary Crum: went to high school with Tom Willing actually.
Glenda Scott: T the the main c the
Mary Crum: The
Glenda Scott: main
Mary Crum: guy.
Glenda Scott: character? Wow.
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: Is he a wanker?
Mary Crum: Yeah. Very much so. Hell of a soccer player but a total bastard nonetheless.
Glenda Scott: He looks really tall, like he's gotta
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: be like six six.
Mary Crum: He is a big guy.
Glenda Scott: Yeah.
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: Um okay so I really like Jeff Buckley. You guys heard of Jeff Buckley?
Mary Crum: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Hogan: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Scott: Um that's cool 'cause like not very many people have. Um and um oh well I might as well throw a British person in there um you can't go wrong with Radiohead. It's a r
Mary Crum: Good call.
Glenda Scott: Okay so it really works just like a pen only makes noises I think. It's kinda weird. Anyway
Mary Crum: Interesting.
Glenda Scott: yeah. Yeah, you're like press and it's. Kinda cool. You'll see. Alright so um whoever wants to get up next, you can write down some telly that you watch or whatever you want.
Mary Crum: I guess I'll go next then.
Jennifer Cage: Go
Glenda Scott: Right
Jennifer Cage: for
Glenda Scott: on.
Jennifer Cage: it.
Mary Crum: Okay. Don't wanna lose all my mikes, plugged in here. Okay. This is basically just pen practice huh?
Glenda Scott: W
Mary Crum: Okay. Oh you're much taller than Mary Crum so I'm gonna write down here. Um. Right now I'm listening to a lot of somebody nobody's ever heard of, Chris Bathgate,
Glenda Scott: Mm.
Mary Crum: local Michigan folk singer,
Glenda Scott: Nice.
Eileen Hogan: Wow.
Mary Crum: really lame and uh uh what else did I bring with Mary Crum? Probably classical, to totally geek
Glenda Scott: Okay
Mary Crum: it out,
Glenda Scott: yeah yeah.
Mary Crum: yeah I think. And my family guy D_V_D_s
Glenda Scott: Well
Mary Crum: but
Glenda Scott: yeah.
Mary Crum: we don't need to write that one down.
Glenda Scott: Oh, family
Mary Crum: So
Glenda Scott: guy. Isn't h has
Mary Crum: yeah.
Glenda Scott: h do you watch the new season?
Mary Crum: No. Are you getting it online, or is it
Glenda Scott: I
Mary Crum: on
Glenda Scott: think I'm gonna
Mary Crum: sky?
Glenda Scott: start downloading it yeah.
Mary Crum: Yeah, that'd be nice.
Jennifer Cage: Alright. Think I'm just gonna put down one uh one C_D_.
Jennifer Cage: Anybody?
Glenda Scott: Mm-mm.
Eileen Hogan: No.
Jennifer Cage: No?
Mary Crum: 'Fraid
Jennifer Cage: no?
Mary Crum: not.
Jennifer Cage: Afro beat orchestra, very cool.
Glenda Scott: Afro beat orchestra?
Jennifer Cage: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: Very
Mary Crum: Mm.
Glenda Scott: cool.
Jennifer Cage: Fift
Eileen Hogan: Sounds
Glenda Scott: Mm.
Jennifer Cage: S
Eileen Hogan: nice.
Jennifer Cage: they like fifteen members from Brooklyn. I'm hoping to go to the concert in Belgium, in Brussels in
Glenda Scott: Wow.
Mary Crum: Exciting.
Jennifer Cage: April first. Yeah. It's supposed to be
Mary Crum: That'd
Jennifer Cage: in Brussels
Mary Crum: be.
Jennifer Cage: anyways. Um thing I love about Edinburgh
Mary Crum: Oh. I didn't even read those. Oops. I shouldn't admit
Glenda Scott: That's
Mary Crum: that.
Glenda Scott: what a PowerPoint presentation
Eileen Hogan: Oh,
Glenda Scott: is for. It's
Eileen Hogan: wow.
Glenda Scott: they're designed specifically to ignore. I
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: it's th brilliant.
Mary Crum: It's the five by five, I can't read that much.
Glenda Scott: Ah yes yes yes okay I see that. Vomit. Yes.
Mary Crum: Yeah oh
Glenda Scott: Street pizza. It's so brilliant.
Jennifer Cage: Love
Mary Crum: it's so horrible.
Jennifer Cage: um
Glenda Scott: I've seen more urine in this city
Mary Crum: Oh
Glenda Scott: than
Mary Crum: my
Glenda Scott: ever
Mary Crum: God.
Glenda Scott: before, I
Mary Crum: Seriously?
Glenda Scott: mean
Jennifer Cage: I just came from Glasgow and I'm um happy to say that
Eileen Hogan: There's
Jennifer Cage: there's
Eileen Hogan: more
Jennifer Cage: the
Eileen Hogan: vomit
Jennifer Cage: there's
Eileen Hogan: there.
Jennifer Cage: the same quantity approximately. Um.
Glenda Scott: It's
Jennifer Cage: I w
Glenda Scott: so minging.
Mary Crum: It really
Glenda Scott: Uh.
Mary Crum: is
Jennifer Cage: Does uh yeah. Ready?
Eileen Hogan: Alright. Yep.
Jennifer Cage: Minging? Nice.
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: I'm going
Mary Crum: Slide
Glenda Scott: local.
Mary Crum: it in there.
Glenda Scott: Going
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: local. I have to be here for three years so I might
Mary Crum: Yeah
Glenda Scott: as
Mary Crum: fair
Glenda Scott: well get
Mary Crum: enough.
Glenda Scott: the terminology right.
Mary Crum: I've already got more than I can keep track of. And I'm gonna go home next week and everyone's gonna be like oh my God you're turning
Glenda Scott: Oh,
Mary Crum: into one of those people,
Glenda Scott: have you been home yet?
Mary Crum: no.
Glenda Scott: They'll be like, say something British, and you're like
Mary Crum: I
Glenda Scott: oh shut
Mary Crum: know.
Glenda Scott: up family.
Mary Crum: I
Jennifer Cage: Uh-huh.
Mary Crum: know.
Eileen Hogan: Um
Mary Crum: Oh it should be interesting. Wait until I
Eileen Hogan: Let's
Mary Crum: tell them I'm
Eileen Hogan: see.
Mary Crum: not coming back. They're gonna love that one.
Glenda Scott: Right you s you're gonna stay here?
Mary Crum: Probably. Or at
Glenda Scott: Wow.
Mary Crum: least get a work visa for a while and then decide. 'Cause
Glenda Scott: Bad
Jennifer Cage: Nice.
Glenda Scott: religion?
Eileen Hogan: Yeah,
Mary Crum: nice.
Eileen Hogan: up listening to.
Mary Crum: Of
Glenda Scott: Yeah
Mary Crum: course.
Glenda Scott: yeah, yeah.
Mary Crum: Oh,
Eileen Hogan: And
Mary Crum: now I can think of so
Eileen Hogan: so
Mary Crum: many other
Eileen Hogan: there
Mary Crum: ones.
Glenda Scott: Well yeah that's why
Mary Crum: That's how it works.
Glenda Scott: yeah.
Eileen Hogan: Something I miss about my hometown.
Glenda Scott: I miss coffee.
Eileen Hogan: Burritos
Mary Crum: Mm.
Jennifer Cage: Nice.
Glenda Scott: Burritos.
Mary Crum: Oh
Eileen Hogan: that cost less than
Glenda Scott: Oh yeah two two
Mary Crum: Any
Eileen Hogan: eight
Glenda Scott: bucks.
Eileen Hogan: Pounds.
Mary Crum: thing that are like free.
Glenda Scott: Where are you from in California by the way?
Eileen Hogan: I grew up in San Diego, but
Glenda Scott: Did you really? What
Eileen Hogan: yeah
Glenda Scott: part?
Eileen Hogan: um La Jolla, P_B_.
Glenda Scott: Yeah I'm from San Diego as well.
Mary Crum: Nice.
Glenda Scott: Yeah oh
Eileen Hogan: But
Glenda Scott: man.
Eileen Hogan: really uh I last lived in San Francisco, I haven't lived in Cali well I haven't lived in southern California since I was eighteen.
Glenda Scott: Going to s like North Carol I'm sorry you you just can't get a better burrito than what's available in the s in San Diego.
Eileen Hogan: It's different. 'Cause in San Diego th the tortillas are cooked on the grill and in northern California they steam them.
Mary Crum: It must make all the difference.
Eileen Hogan: Yeah, it really does.
Glenda Scott: Well it's it's i there's other things too there's you just can't
Mary Crum: Ah.
Glenda Scott: place it like I when I went to school in the U_ in Santa Barbara which is central California the Mexican food is okay, it's just not good like
Eileen Hogan: Mm.
Glenda Scott: and yeah it's like two bucks, like literally two bucks for this massive
Mary Crum: Right.
Glenda Scott: I miss yeah good call on that.
Eileen Hogan: Yeah. Where you from in
Mary Crum: Mm.
Eileen Hogan: San Diego?
Glenda Scott: Um just literally just metropolitan San Diego, I live like five minutes from the zoo.
Eileen Hogan: Okay.
Glenda Scott: So North Park actually if you want to get real
Eileen Hogan: Yeah,
Glenda Scott: specific.
Eileen Hogan: my grandparents lived on um thirty second.
Glenda Scott: Yep.
Eileen Hogan: Close t uh do you know where Clare de Lune coffee shop
Glenda Scott: Yes.
Eileen Hogan: is, and
Glenda Scott: On university, yeah.
Eileen Hogan: Cafe Forte
Glenda Scott: Yeah it's actually like literally half a mile from my house.
Eileen Hogan: Cool.
Glenda Scott: Yeah, pretty cool. Small world
Eileen Hogan: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: as we were discussing before. Especially when we're all from the same general region. Right so okay, success on the whiteboard.
Mary Crum: There you
Glenda Scott: You can harness
Mary Crum: go.
Glenda Scott: the awesome power
Eileen Hogan: Wow.
Glenda Scott: a little bit introductions we talked about some of our C_D_s and things we like about the city you know, I think we'll Um right so moving on to not fun stuff uh project finance. Um basically what we're trying to do is sell this remote for twenty five Euros. Um. This is what the finance department has told Mary Crum, the C_F_O_ but I don't know, I'm not sold on this, it's pretty dear, I mean twenty f that's like you know forty bucks for a remote. It would have to pretty much like do my laundry for Mary Crum.
Mary Crum: Mm.
Glenda Scott: Um so what we can maybe work on that a later but we're gonna make a lot on it, the profit aims to make fifty million Euros on it. Eur internationally. So um one of the things I I was gonna mention to you um you guys the designers is that um it m we probably need a rever it needs to be a universal remote control probably.
Eileen Hogan: Okay.
Glenda Scott: Um so something that could do
Mary Crum: Makes
Glenda Scott: N_T_S_C_
Mary Crum: sense.
Glenda Scott: as well as PAL as well as various other formats like if it's gonna control D_V_D_s
Mary Crum: Uh.
Glenda Scott: but um you know I'll leave that to you guys but that's something that i i it is gonna be an international sold thing. Um but we wanna try to make it for twelve fifty. So we wanna try to make a hundred percent profit on it if we can. Um s right so um just to close up, I'm not sure how much time I've used mm next time right Project Manager, sorted. Um. Is uh we'll meet in another half an hour or so um and I'd like the um Industrial Designer to get ge think about what needs to be done, like what the basic function of it. Um U_I_D_ well yeah you right g your assignments are up there and you'll also get s assignments from in your email as well more spec specifics on what do do. Um mm basic and um so I need you to tell us what um we what the user's gonna
Mary Crum: What
Glenda Scott: want.
Mary Crum: they're looking for.
Glenda Scott: So actually in a way you guys c maybe in our next meeting chat a bit about what the user's gonna want and what the user can have, you know like uh
Mary Crum: And negotiate
Glenda Scott: so
Mary Crum: that.
Glenda Scott: yeah well it is
Mary Crum: Uh.
Glenda Scott: and we'll discuss the trade-offs in between um so yeah specific instructions will be sent in your email. But I think that that is more or less a good place to start for now um and as more things come up we'll have meetings and you'll get emails and so forth. Um any questions, before we get started?
Jennifer Cage: I assume that we're building a stand alone uh remote control, we can't kind of build it into other uh products.
Glenda Scott: You mean to like
Jennifer Cage: For instance like a mobile phone or something
Eileen Hogan: Mm.
Jennifer Cage: like that.
Glenda Scott: Hmm.
Eileen Hogan: Sounds interesting.
Glenda Scott: Yeah.
Mary Crum: I don't think there's any rules about it yet. So
Eileen Hogan: Maybe our personal coach will
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Jennifer Cage: Or or
Eileen Hogan: have something
Jennifer Cage: you know
Eileen Hogan: to say about
Jennifer Cage: can
Eileen Hogan: that.
Jennifer Cage: we produ can we sell a remote control phone for twenty five pounds or less?
Glenda Scott: Well,
Mary Crum: Mm.
Glenda Scott: have a think about it. I mean
Jennifer Cage: Yep. Okay.
Glenda Scott: I'm I'm certainly op it seems like yeah it
Mary Crum: W
Glenda Scott: it seems like
Mary Crum: yeah.
Glenda Scott: it's certainly do-able isn't it. I mean um or if we can't have a full mobile phone maybe a remote that has some other kind of useful
Jennifer Cage: Mm-hmm.
Eileen Hogan: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: function. The clapper. No I mean no, good idea, good idea. We'll see what
Eileen Hogan: Maybe
Glenda Scott: see what
Eileen Hogan: a remote with changeable faces, like the faces that you can buy for phones.
Mary Crum: I like
Jennifer Cage: Nice.
Mary Crum: the
Glenda Scott: Uh-huh
Mary Crum: little cover
Eileen Hogan: Yeah.
Mary Crum: thingies.
Glenda Scott: y I like that
Jennifer Cage: Hot.
Glenda Scott: Yeah. That's true, I guess we we probably have some time, maybe we should brainstorm a bit like what we wanna do, go back to um I don't really have any. Let Mary Crum bring up something about our basic goals here, what we want to accomplish. Uh project announcement. Ts ts ts
Glenda Scott: Yeah. Not so much.
Mary Crum: Hmm.
Glenda Scott: All right we'll find them, we're on our own.
Jennifer Cage: Now are we also discussing kind of our initial ideas at all
Glenda Scott: Yeah
Jennifer Cage: here?
Glenda Scott: yeah let's do it, let's do.
Jennifer Cage: S does anybody have any initial ideas?
Glenda Scott: I'm gonna go ahead and take notes on this too 'cause
Mary Crum: Good idea. Start your minutes.
Glenda Scott: Yeah I mean
Mary Crum: Um
Glenda Scott: oh yeah right. So initial ideas.
Mary Crum: Well it's pretty much given it's gonna be universal right,
Glenda Scott: Yeah.
Mary Crum: we decided that already and it may be functioning for other things, as soon as you said that I was thinking like all the other things you could get a remote to do, like your microwave or your front
Eileen Hogan: Yeah.
Mary Crum: door or like to have everything on one thing, but then, I've never been a fan of those huge remotes that have like a million buttons, you
Eileen Hogan: S
Mary Crum: can't tell
Glenda Scott: Mm-hmm.
Mary Crum: what they do.
Eileen Hogan: smaller's better. Simple.
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Jennifer Cage: But I'm thinking
Mary Crum: Specific.
Jennifer Cage: I'm thinking kind of P_D_A_ uh design so touch screen design rather
Mary Crum: Okay.
Jennifer Cage: than button
Eileen Hogan: Oh
Jennifer Cage: so
Eileen Hogan: right.
Jennifer Cage: that you
Eileen Hogan: That'd
Jennifer Cage: can
Eileen Hogan: be different.
Jennifer Cage: kind
Mary Crum: Interesting.
Jennifer Cage: of flip around all sorts of different things.
Glenda Scott: Yeah that's slick isn't it. I mean like stylist yeah like a just
Mary Crum: True.
Glenda Scott: a yeah. Right so we got five minutes more to chat about this, perfect. Um so we've got this kind of an idea of a trade-off between um
Mary Crum: Mm.
Glenda Scott: uh size and functionality.
Mary Crum: Mm.
Glenda Scott: Um
Mary Crum: Right.
Glenda Scott: and
Mary Crum: We
Glenda Scott: we
Mary Crum: want
Glenda Scott: also
Mary Crum: it to be munt multifunctional but at the same time if you get it to do too much you're not gonna be
Eileen Hogan: Yeah.
Mary Crum: able to
Jennifer Cage: Too
Mary Crum: tell
Jennifer Cage: confusing.
Mary Crum: them apart,
Eileen Hogan: It's
Mary Crum: that
Eileen Hogan: gonna be
Mary Crum: whole
Eileen Hogan: too complicated,
Mary Crum: yeah.
Eileen Hogan: too crowded with buttons and things.
Glenda Scott: I'm also gonna note
Mary Crum: Hmm.
Glenda Scott: for future reference this idea of um so you like maybe like an L_ like a touch screen type of remote?
Jennifer Cage: Mm-hmm.
Mary Crum: Mm.
Jennifer Cage: Possibly.
Glenda Scott: I don't think one exists.
Mary Crum: An interesting option.
Glenda Scott: Be a
Eileen Hogan: Needs
Glenda Scott: good idea.
Eileen Hogan: it needs one outstanding
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Eileen Hogan: feature to set it apart from all the
Mary Crum: Definitely.
Eileen Hogan: other remotes.
Glenda Scott: Yeah all the other universal remotes. Um I don't know if there's such a thing out there, I guess we could do some uh do some research on or one of us could do some research on it about whether or not there are um multi-format like um you know PAL, N_T_S_C_, region one
Mary Crum: Right.
Jennifer Cage: I'm pretty sure there is. I mean I
Glenda Scott: Okay.
Jennifer Cage: I have a friend who has a P_D_A_
Glenda Scott: Okay.
Jennifer Cage: that he just
Mary Crum: That
Jennifer Cage: points at his telev any television he wants and
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Jennifer Cage: it'll figure out the the specifications of it and will control it
Glenda Scott: Interesting.
Mary Crum: Awesome.
Jennifer Cage: um
Glenda Scott: Okay.
Jennifer Cage: so I th I assume that that can be done with uh kind
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: Okay.
Jennifer Cage: of around the world.
Glenda Scott: Okay. Um all right. So. I li I'm liking that idea, this idea of a touch screen remote with multi-format features.
Mary Crum: Mm-hmm.
Glenda Scott: Um.
Eileen Hogan: Right.
Glenda Scott: Um. Let's see.
Eileen Hogan: I think, making it out of a nice material would be very important, because so many of those remotes that you see, these universal
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Eileen Hogan: remotes look so cheap and
Glenda Scott: Mm.
Eileen Hogan: low quality.
Mary Crum: Yeah. Keeping it nice and slick, would be important. And I don't know, like, there's such a problem with losing them, that adding this whole like P_D_A_ pen
Eileen Hogan: Mm.
Mary Crum: business is only one more thing to lose, so we're gonna have to be careful with
Jennifer Cage: Oh.
Mary Crum: what like Just something like keep in mind when we start actually dealing with this stuff but that would be really cool.
Glenda Scott: Uh let's see. Um.
Jennifer Cage: I like the idea of the uh multi plate.
Glenda Scott: Yeah
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: yeah okay.
Mary Crum: Fi
Jennifer Cage: In
Mary Crum: b like what
Jennifer Cage: in
Mary Crum: are they called, those face plate things? Isn't
Glenda Scott: Think
Mary Crum: there
Glenda Scott: they're
Mary Crum: a
Glenda Scott: just
Mary Crum: name
Glenda Scott: called
Mary Crum: for them?
Glenda Scott: face plates?
Mary Crum: Are they?
Glenda Scott: I don't know.
Eileen Hogan: something,
Mary Crum: I dunno.
Eileen Hogan: uh
Jennifer Cage: I like.
Eileen Hogan: we'll have to come up with a name,
Jennifer Cage: We
Eileen Hogan: patent
Jennifer Cage: should
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Jennifer Cage: c
Eileen Hogan: it.
Jennifer Cage: we should come
Mary Crum: Something
Jennifer Cage: up with
Mary Crum: really
Jennifer Cage: a fuzzy
Mary Crum: cool.
Jennifer Cage: one as well. For
Mary Crum: Leopard
Jennifer Cage: those cold
Mary Crum: print
Eileen Hogan: Leopard
Jennifer Cage: winter
Mary Crum: or something.
Eileen Hogan: print.
Jennifer Cage: days.
Glenda Scott: Um.
Mary Crum: Hmm.
Eileen Hogan: I think, it wouldn't be such a bad idea to have a like a locator device, maybe a simple button that you have on your television to help you find your remote.
Mary Crum: True.
Glenda Scott: Mm. But if we're bundling it unless we're selling their telly with the remote.
Mary Crum: Right.
Eileen Hogan: Mm.
Glenda Scott: Um
Jennifer Cage: Well if we bundle it as a phone then you can always call it.
Eileen Hogan: True.
Jennifer Cage: If you're
Mary Crum: True.
Jennifer Cage: not doing that then we can have something that just kind of rings from either well there used to be those whistling devices but that's a
Mary Crum: Right.
Jennifer Cage: little bit annoying.
Glenda Scott: Cou could we not do something where like just a little lit like literally just a very small kind of thing that comes with the remote that you could place something else that you press and it makes the remote page. Kinda
Jennifer Cage: Th
Glenda Scott: like
Mary Crum: Right.
Glenda Scott: how on a lot of um uh cordless regular
Jennifer Cage: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: phones,
Eileen Hogan: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: you have a page button and it goes,
Mary Crum: Right.
Glenda Scott: could we do something like that?
Jennifer Cage: That's cool.
Eileen Hogan: I think
Mary Crum: Probably.
Eileen Hogan: so.
Jennifer Cage: I think we could design into
Eileen Hogan: Yeah.
Jennifer Cage: that.
Mary Crum: Good.
Glenda Scott: Um yeah I think this material quality as well like I guess what we can think about what kind of um uh you know Apple 's been really successful with
Mary Crum: Mm.
Glenda Scott: this surgical white kind of business or this
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: sleek kind of
Mary Crum: And
Eileen Hogan: Mm.
Glenda Scott: you
Mary Crum: that
Glenda Scott: know
Mary Crum: titanium the new silver sleek ones that's last couple of years,
Glenda Scott: Yeah.
Mary Crum: very much so.
Jennifer Cage: Curves.
Mary Crum: Mm.
Glenda Scott: Yeah. We do have the minimum am amount I mean we were talking finances I dunno, selling a a forty Pound remote would h or a forty Dollar remote, twenty five Euro remote would be pretty you know
Mary Crum: Right.
Glenda Scott: it's pretty expensive so maybe we might wanna trade off some of the features for a lower price. Without without getting into that whole like you know go down to bargain store remote you know bargain store universal
Mary Crum: Right.
Glenda Scott: remote that's black
Eileen Hogan: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: and you know m massive, some kind of
Mary Crum: Mm.
Glenda Scott: I dunno a balance there in somewhere.
Mary Crum: Definitely.
Glenda Scott: But um have a think about what we can do, have a think about what we want to do,
Mary Crum: Yeah.
Glenda Scott: how we're gonna sell it and
Mary Crum: Or if
Glenda Scott: um
Mary Crum: you our users in mind, like these grandmas are not gonna be into this whole new let's design, no it's they're used to the buttons so we'll have to be careful of exactly who we're marketing this to,
Eileen Hogan: Yeah.
Mary Crum: and
Glenda Scott: Mm.
Mary Crum: who we're gonna be able to get it out of.
Eileen Hogan: 'S true.
Mary Crum: But
Jennifer Cage: We're talking twenty five Pounds or twenty five Euros?
Glenda Scott: Twenty five
Mary Crum: Euros.
Glenda Scott: Euros.
Jennifer Cage: Slight difference I guess.
Glenda Scott: Yeah. They're all weaker than they're all stronger than the Dollar.
Mary Crum: Mm.
Glenda Scott: Although, computer parts, all if you're gonna upgrade your computer, buy it in the States. Like um do you guys know Fry's? Huge
Jennifer Cage: No.
Glenda Scott: computer
Mary Crum: Mm-mm.
Glenda Scott: uh electronics store? They serve um right they sa tha s they will sell things overseas so
Mary Crum: Mm.
Glenda Scott: you can buy stuff in America and have it shipped over for like twenty thirty Pounds about. Right so um let's go ahead and wrap that up here for now, I'm gonna put these initial ideas that we've got in the um project documents, so if you guys wa need a reminder about what we've talked about
Mary Crum: Okay.
Glenda Scott: um the
Eileen Hogan: Okay.
Glenda Scott: different you know kind of trade-offs that we've got and the other ideas, you can consult them at your leisure. And uh right so thanks for that. Let's just uh head back to work on what we were talking about bef uh goi h h getting into.
Mary Crum: half an hour?
Glenda Scott: Um. Yes.
Mary Crum: 'Kay. Perfect.
Glenda Scott: Thanks guys.
Mary Crum: Cool.
Jennifer Cage: Thank you.
Eileen Hogan: Alright. | Glenda Scott presented the project to the other participants by discussing the aim of creating a new, fashionable remote control device and defined the roles and tasks of each participant. The group introduced themselves to each other and trained themselves how to use the whiteboard tools. Glenda Scott discussed the financial goals of the project, including the projected profit aim and price point for the device. Glenda Scott gave each participant their assignments. The group then began a discussion of their initial ideas about the remote control and possible features. Glenda Scott announced that he would make a report containing the discussion of the group's initial ideas about the device. | 2 | amisum | train |
Lynn Tango: All set? Okay. Cool. Right. So um basically I'm just gonna go over real quickly um some news I've just got from the board on how we're supposed to do with this um remote control. And then I'm gonna turn over to you guys to make brief presentations um on what you've found and then we'll have a bit of discussion. So basically uh what I've just found out from the board I dunno if you guys got this email as well but it needs to be television only. So no we're not doing D_V_D_,
Josette Hoffman: Okay.
Lynn Tango: we're not doing anything else, it's just gonna be a television remote. Um it also needs to have the company colours included in it. Um so that's red and black. And it has to have the slogan, case you guys forget the slogan it's, we put fashion in electronics. Um and no teletext. I'm not sure what teletext is but I'm assuming you guys do, so we don't wanna include that um in this particular design. For reasons that I don't really know. There's but it's the board so there you go. So basically um given those guidelines which will have some effect on how we design we'll discuss it later I mean 'cause it's television only we'll be able to change our uh um well we can s sacrifice more function for a better television remote. Anyway. So I'm gonna turn over to Andrea Scott uh to go ahead and make a presentation on
Andrea Scott: Okay. So do I unplug
Josette Hoffman: Gotta
Lynn Tango: Oh,
Josette Hoffman: plug
Lynn Tango: right yeah.
Josette Hoffman: you in.
Andrea Scott: this bit here?
Lynn Tango: Yep.
Lynn Tango: Might have to hit function F_ eight but it looks like it's gonna come up. Yep. Cool.
Andrea Scott: Okay. Right. That's page one of my presentation.
Lynn Tango: Brilliant.
Josette Hoffman: Very nice For. your first PowerPoint it's lovely.
Andrea Scott: So the uh method. We're gonna have to understand how remote controls work and res uh successfully complete this project. Um remote control works as follows. This is all pretty basic stuff you guys. Um sends message to another system, so there's an energy source involved in that like a battery or solar power, something along those lines, there's an integrated circuit, which is the microchip, actually compose the messages and usually the way a a remote control works is it sends infrared bits to another system. A user interface controls the chip, basically that's the casing and the buttons and um accordingly the messages as well. So my findings, um I just did a preliminary study here and uh I found that too much metal in remote design could potentially cause interference with the ability of the remote to send commands. And too much metal can cause remotes to behave unexpectedly by receiving false signals. Um too much metal is used sometimes and people pick up radio signals and the like, and there's also the possibility of the remote catching on fire and injuring the customer, just think of those lawsuits, that'd be really bad. Therefore I suggest primarily plastic construction.
Lynn Tango: 'Kay.
Andrea Scott: Um, components. Just some ideas that I had, um, energy source, it's kinda hip to be eco friendly so I thought maybe we could do something with solar power with an alkaline battery backup. Um the user interface, I was since we can't use metal I was thinking maybe a high grade recycled plastic.
Lynn Tango: Mm.
Andrea Scott: The chip, um, silicon based chip I don't really see any way around that, we can't really be different in that respect. Um, the sender well I'm thinking infrared 'cause it is the industry standard, multi channel, that's a word I made up, I don't really know what it means.
Lynn Tango: 'Kay.
Andrea Scott: Uh PAL
Lynn Tango: Fair enough.
Andrea Scott: and N_T_S_C_ compatible and uh probably a two hundred foot range.
Lynn Tango: 'Kay.
Andrea Scott: Uh and the receiver of course is any number of electronic devices. Um but in this case it'll only be T_V_s. Um personal preferences, I really think that we should use plastic as opposed to metal, um, the company simply
Josette Hoffman: Fine.
Andrea Scott: can't afford this kinds of lawsuits which adm admittedly is gonna come at the cost of a certain aesthetic value, 'cause we were thinking
Lynn Tango: Is is there a way that we can use um modern types of polymers, or mo modern types of plastics that maybe do have some kind of aesthetic value um like if a white like if we talk about like well like on the lapt on these laptops and other
Andrea Scott: Right.
Lynn Tango: ones
Josette Hoffman: It
Lynn Tango: they
Josette Hoffman: needs,
Lynn Tango: use a
Josette Hoffman: yeah.
Lynn Tango: a pretty nice, you can do i is there some kind of nice colo der quality plastic that we can work with?
Andrea Scott: Yeah that shouldn't be a problem. Um for example the plastic they have on your laptop there is something that's perfectly possible for
Lynn Tango: Okay,
Andrea Scott: us to do.
Lynn Tango: okay.
Josette Hoffman: Cool.
Andrea Scott: That's
Lynn Tango: Great.
Andrea Scott: the end of my presentation.
Lynn Tango: Thank you very much Nathan. Um if next we can have the um User Interface Developer go ahead and make a brief presentation that'd be great as well. S plug yourself in here.
Lynn Tango: Mm. Um hit function F_ eight real quickly, hold down Mm.
Josette Hoffman: Looks like you're in okay.
Andrea Scott: Is it plugged in well? There it goes. Computer
Joann Seamon: Th
Andrea Scott: adjusting.
Josette Hoffman: There you go.
Lynn Tango: There you go. Sweet.
Joann Seamon: Well so. Here we have a functions design presentation. Um so a few of the requirements we need here. Uh we n basically need to operate an electronic device, it needs to be universal um and possibly uh operate several different types of devices although we now uh find that
Lynn Tango: Yeah
Joann Seamon: uh
Lynn Tango: sorry I
Joann Seamon: that
Lynn Tango: couldn't get that g to use before.
Joann Seamon: that's no problem. Um so some of my findings. Um basically wanna send messages uh to a television set.
Joann Seamon: I think we're all quite uh quite uh intelligent and know know what a normal remote control does. Um now some of the other things I found is a a complicated remote control sorry that we can't quite
Lynn Tango: Oh yeah
Joann Seamon: see
Lynn Tango: look
Joann Seamon: my
Lynn Tango: at
Joann Seamon: red
Lynn Tango: that.
Andrea Scott: Mm.
Joann Seamon: there very well but uh this remote control has many functions um so it can do a lot of things but it uh it is quite complicated and most
Lynn Tango: Mm-hmm.
Joann Seamon: users will find it uh find that they won't use most of the functions because they don't know how to use them and don't wanna take the time to learn how to do it. As you also notice it's quite a boring design. Um. Another remote control, slightly different, it's a simpler remote control uh many less buttons but uh has many fewer functions, um m much easier for the user to manipulate and use. Um it also has a bit of a cheap look and it's also quite boring. So my personal preferences. Revolutionise
Lynn Tango: Nice.
Joann Seamon: the idea of uh a remote control. Um so attain the functionality of a complicated device but use a simple formatted display uh for the user to to work with. And I was gonna add another uh slide here but I didn't quite have time there. Um.
Lynn Tango: Okay.
Joann Seamon: Just incorporating some of the ideas that we had previously like uh having multiple face but it's uh.
Lynn Tango: Great. Thanks for that Ron.
Josette Hoffman: Right. Does that mean I'm
Lynn Tango: 'Kay
Josette Hoffman: up?
Lynn Tango: yep that's you.
Josette Hoffman: I think so. Okay.
Joann Seamon: I can plug you in.
Josette Hoffman: Oh that would be perfect. Thank you. Slide show up and running. Or not.
Lynn Tango: Give it a little
Josette Hoffman: Uh.
Lynn Tango: bit.
Josette Hoffman: Oh there we go. Perfect. Okay. So this is Josette Hoffman. Um basically I was looking through some marketing reports that we've got we had a usability test where we were actually sort like watching a hundred people use T_V_ remotes and see what it is that they're using and then they filled out a questionnaire about what they like and what they don't about their general T_V_ remote control practices. Um pretty much through testing we were finding out that most of the time, everybody's used to using changing the channel, turning it on, using the volume, m the majority of the time that's all that's going on, the other functions happen, for some people they're important, but the primary uses are really really basic. Um and so big complicated remotes like one we saw in the last presentation are really not the general public's use, they're not using a lot of it, they don't need it, they even find it frustrating when there are all those buttons that they don't know what to do with. And um we also found out that uh fifty percent of our people, their the worst thing about a remote is how often they lose it. And then they can't find it in the room. So I think what we were talking about with a pager or something, will really come into play with a lot of these people. Um there's also a survey about what they liked about remotes, and pretty much they all think they're hideous and not very useful, and the younger demographics are all really interested in voice recognition options. I don't know if that's something we're ready to look into technically, that's up to the design people, but it is s something worth thinking about, especially since the younger demographic's obviously the one that's gonna keep growing, so if that's the direction we're headed in it's something to think about. Um but basically it really is the primary functions and getting it to look nice, which are the standards. So it's a good start for us.
Lynn Tango: That's great. Thank you Sarah. Right.
Josette Hoffman: Need to unplug
Lynn Tango: So
Josette Hoffman: this?
Lynn Tango: um yep I'll just uh switch that
Josette Hoffman: Need it
Lynn Tango: back
Josette Hoffman: back.
Lynn Tango: here. I'll finish up with just a bit of discussion
Josette Hoffman: There you go.
Lynn Tango: plan on for the next phase.
Lynn Tango: Right so I think we've covered most of these important questions through this um through you guys's presentations um we've got uh y Andrea Scott suggests uh or pretty much emphatically suggested that we need to go with plastic. Um Sarah, she's recommended that we go for simpler functions, so fewer functions um but we need to decide who are we selling this to, you s your stats suggested that seventy five percent of people under thirty five wanted,
Josette Hoffman: Oh right.
Lynn Tango: thought about voice control, um so do we wanna go for that, or do we want to go for an older demographic, and my thought is um we've got w if we're gonna go for a sleek look I mean we are putting the fashion in electronics um.
Josette Hoffman: We're not catering to the pensioners of the world
Lynn Tango: Yes.
Josette Hoffman: I don't think so.
Lynn Tango: So maybe this we should look into this younger demographic. Um.
Josette Hoffman: Right.
Lynn Tango: So uh we need to wonder ah h about how we make it better and smaller and faster um think we're constrained to plastics very well, we've got this idea, Ron was saying we need to think about uh revolutionising the way it's looking
Josette Hoffman: Right.
Lynn Tango: um, which might be easier given that we're going for simpler function and that we're
Josette Hoffman: Uh.
Lynn Tango: only going for a telly. Um so um. How th this voice operation thing is I think is a good idea um assuming that it's doable, um at least for the basic controls, maybe we can balance
Josette Hoffman: Right.
Lynn Tango: it that way, you
Andrea Scott: Mm.
Lynn Tango: know we can see. Okay you can't say record alias tonight at seven P_M_ but we might be able to say um volume up.
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Andrea Scott: Right. I think it would be possible to uh combine the locator device and the voice recognition technology.
Lynn Tango: Mm.
Josette Hoffman: Oh. That could work. I like that.
Andrea Scott: With a simple command like locate.
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Andrea Scott: And then
Josette Hoffman: Something very basic.
Andrea Scott: it could start to beep
Josette Hoffman: Right.
Andrea Scott: and
Lynn Tango: Right.
Andrea Scott: therefore be found.
Joann Seamon: Sounds
Josette Hoffman: Is that only
Joann Seamon: good.
Josette Hoffman: gonna be within our two hundred foot range then?
Andrea Scott: Oh yeah I think that's
Josette Hoffman: Okay.
Andrea Scott: very doable.
Lynn Tango: The difficulty wh would be in um I think like i you couldn't speak into the remote that you're trying to find. 'Kay you have something that picks up
Andrea Scott: Mm.
Lynn Tango: a voice
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Lynn Tango: from far away
Andrea Scott: It's a good point.
Lynn Tango: If it's hidden under the couch but then again you have this wee this wee thing you know that's just a little chip or whatever that has the page button, maybe that could be voice activated too.
Joann Seamon: A little
Josette Hoffman: Mm.
Joann Seamon: sticky pad to stick on top of your uh television. And
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Joann Seamon: you just say something to into that and it
Lynn Tango: Yeah.
Andrea Scott: Yeah.
Joann Seamon: finds
Josette Hoffman: K
Joann Seamon: your
Lynn Tango: Or an isolated magnet or something like, or you know something that wouldn't interfere I don't know that'd
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Lynn Tango: be the technical thing but yeah I like that, I like that, the voice recognition for the paging system.
Joann Seamon: The other thing is we might be able to handle the simplicity of a remote control and kind of put the more complicated things into a voice control. So it could be sold to both the younger market
Josette Hoffman: True.
Joann Seamon: and the older market. And the younger market could use kind of the voi voice control method and the older market
Josette Hoffman: Making
Joann Seamon: might
Josette Hoffman: it just
Joann Seamon: might
Josette Hoffman: an option?
Joann Seamon: k
Andrea Scott: Mm.
Joann Seamon: exactly
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Joann Seamon: and might consider the older market could use the simpler design with
Josette Hoffman: Right.
Joann Seamon: the traditional buttons and what not.
Andrea Scott: I
Lynn Tango: Yeah.
Andrea Scott: was thinking
Josette Hoffman: Are we still
Andrea Scott: uh
Josette Hoffman: thinking about this screen sorry.
Andrea Scott: Oh
Josette Hoffman: Go
Andrea Scott: go
Josette Hoffman: ahead.
Andrea Scott: ahead.
Josette Hoffman: The uh if we're gonna do this touch pad screen thing, it would be
Lynn Tango: Mm-hmm.
Josette Hoffman: still, do we know if that's an option technically right
Joann Seamon: 'S
Josette Hoffman: now
Joann Seamon: definitely
Josette Hoffman: to that?
Joann Seamon: an option technically.
Josette Hoffman: Okay.
Joann Seamon: I've looked into uh costs of uh touch screen methods
Josette Hoffman: Okay.
Joann Seamon: and what not, they seem to be uh you know almost
Josette Hoffman: We're doing okay.
Joann Seamon: as cheap as a button method at this point.
Josette Hoffman: 'Cause
Lynn Tango: Okay.
Josette Hoffman: it seems like an interesting option especially because then you could have like your primary screen just be these you know four or five basic functions, you can have
Lynn Tango: Mm.
Josette Hoffman: menu
Andrea Scott: Yeah.
Josette Hoffman: options or something to have all these other complicated voice recognition, settings, things that you're not gonna use every day and that a lot of people aren't gonna use but it is an option there for this hi-tech market that sort of re is the sleek thing we're going for.
Andrea Scott: Gotta wonder though, if we're adding so much technology to this one remote, are we still gonna be able to meet out twelve pou our twelve
Lynn Tango: Mm-hmm.
Andrea Scott: fifty
Josette Hoffman: True.
Andrea Scott: Euro you
Josette Hoffman: Worth
Andrea Scott: know
Josette Hoffman: looking
Andrea Scott: goal
Josette Hoffman: into.
Andrea Scott: for selling these things.
Lynn Tango: Mm-hmm.
Andrea Scott: It
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Andrea Scott: seems
Lynn Tango: Mm-hmm.
Andrea Scott: like, we're not gonna be able to handle all these functions with just one microchip. The microchip is probably the most expensive part of
Josette Hoffman: True.
Lynn Tango: Okay.
Andrea Scott: the the whole mechanism.
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Andrea Scott: So
Lynn Tango: Okay.
Andrea Scott: it's just something to consider.
Lynn Tango: Absolutely. um well yeah I guess we'll cross that bridge um in a la slightly later stages of development um but yeah I know, that's perfectly viable question. Mm 'kay um so I'm seeing that we're gonna just basically focus on this young demographic group, aim it at them, but then in a sense that its bells and whistles are available for anybody who wants them but basically we'll make a sleek simple
Josette Hoffman: Mm-hmm.
Lynn Tango: functioned um uh remote control. Um I think this voice recognition thing is a we've got a market for it uh I don't think there's too
Josette Hoffman: Mm.
Lynn Tango: many, we'd more or less be cornering the market on it as well, we don't have many um.
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Lynn Tango: I appear to have lost my microphone. Mm. Right um we don't have many people or there's not very many competitors out there that do that so cool. Um right. I guess we've c we've touched on most of this. The idea of a paging function, a touch screen, and face plates. Um. The thing with I see would there not be a we'd have to maybe sacrifice the face plates for a touch screen?
Joann Seamon: Um I'm not sure that's sincerely correct, I think
Lynn Tango: Okay.
Joann Seamon: if you kind of take the example of a mobile phone that uh trying to pass a portion of the device is not interchangeable whereas the surrounding portions
Josette Hoffman: Mm.
Joann Seamon: are interchangeable.
Lynn Tango: Okay.
Josette Hoffman: Just the casing.
Joann Seamon: We could have the casing, the the face plates.
Lynn Tango: Okay.
Andrea Scott: Back to the uh the cost the material. We have to ask whether we're going to include a certain number of face plates with the package? That's something I w for say we're including
Josette Hoffman: Mm.
Andrea Scott: three or four face plates, it's gonna drive the cost up.
Lynn Tango: Mm.
Andrea Scott: And
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Andrea Scott: the other question is, if we do include them are we really in a position to evaluate that market? We haven't done any tests on face plates and whether
Josette Hoffman: Right.
Andrea Scott: See
Lynn Tango: Okay.
Andrea Scott: if there if there's even interest out there.
Lynn Tango: Okay. Right.
Andrea Scott: Off the top of my head it sounds kind of like a gimmick that wouldn't really go anywhere.
Lynn Tango: Yeah 'cause then ha you
Josette Hoffman: Mm.
Lynn Tango: would have to who all it's not like with cell phones like where you have a you know Nokia model X_ and then ten people make face plates for it, we'd
Josette Hoffman: Right.
Andrea Scott: Yeah.
Lynn Tango: be just our model of pho of t remote control.
Josette Hoffman: Well in the publicity of a face plate on a phone is you have it out and around, it is sort of emblematic whereas
Lynn Tango: Mm-hmm.
Josette Hoffman: you're just sit at home, so unless somebody comes
Lynn Tango: Mm.
Josette Hoffman: over
Lynn Tango: Mm-hmm.
Josette Hoffman: to watch T_V_
Lynn Tango: Yeah.
Joann Seamon: Well hopefully some people have people coming t over to w
Josette Hoffman: True.
Joann Seamon: to hang out at
Josette Hoffman: True.
Joann Seamon: your house and most people
Josette Hoffman: True.
Joann Seamon: have their televisions in the living room. Uh.
Lynn Tango: Alright well we can
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Lynn Tango: we can discuss that one further when we think about
Josette Hoffman: Oh yeah.
Lynn Tango: um whether th when we do costs
Joann Seamon: Sure.
Lynn Tango: and so forth, um. True, if plastic is dead cheap and if we're making the whole thing out of plastic anyway um yeah we'll cross that bridge later um but yeah we will have to evaluate what's most important. Um I think we've had a bit of discussion already on this thing, n s there any other questions comments that came up in these presentations?
Joann Seamon: Well have we confirmed that we're gonna go ahead with a uh touch screen um
Lynn Tango: Yeah yeah
Joann Seamon: Interface?
Lynn Tango: okay. Um Yeah I think that would be best. Let's based on what sh on what you guys have all said to Josette Hoffman let's go for a plastic built or uh b plastic cased 'cause tha tha that's easy on the cost, try to look for some kind of high quality recycled plastic as you recommended and I think that's a great idea. With a touch screen for the basic functions. Um And we'll yeah tha let's provisionally let's go for a touch screen one with several submenus um for possible extra stuff that one basically put the channel and the on and off switch on the touch screen. Um do we have Mm wait a minute it occurs to Josette Hoffman that if we have a touch screen people are going to have to recharge their remote controls. Yet
Josette Hoffman: True.
Lynn Tango: at the same time that might help for this whole complaint of it being lost.
Josette Hoffman: 'Cause it would have a docking base?
Lynn Tango: Mm-hmm. But then again that costs as well.
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Lynn Tango: Hmm.
Joann Seamon: So these new lithium batteries they last twenty years even with the touch screen?
Lynn Tango: Do they?
Joann Seamon: Those
Lynn Tango: Okay.
Joann Seamon: new ones.
Josette Hoffman: Can we afford
Andrea Scott: Can we
Josette Hoffman: that?
Andrea Scott: afford to include one of those?
Josette Hoffman: And will somebody buy it if we don't?
Lynn Tango: Well I I don't think yeah I can't see anybody buying a lap a remote control that they have to plug in so we'd have to see some kind of new
Josette Hoffman: Right.
Lynn Tango: battery technology. Okay so let's go with a um touch screen with um some kind of you know with with some kind of cutting edge battery technology
Josette Hoffman: For twelve Euros?
Lynn Tango: Yeah well hey you know well it's it's worth looking into, if not we can always
Josette Hoffman: It is.
Lynn Tango: default to just doing a a well
Josette Hoffman: Fair enough.
Lynn Tango: presented plastic simple you know so
Josette Hoffman: The
Lynn Tango: you
Josette Hoffman: basics.
Lynn Tango: know. Well yeah I mean you can put the we could I I dunno I mean I suppose we could put the the basics on the centre easiest you know, you know people know the channel and volume function make them large and easy to get at and then the the other the other bits and bobs
Josette Hoffman: Mm.
Lynn Tango: you know go through menu um w we'll do the aesthetics. Okay so we'll touch screen and the battery,
Josette Hoffman: 'Kay.
Lynn Tango: focus on um uh presentation. Um it's th uh with this voice recognition option as well um just as for the simple functions the um the on off, channels, volume,
Andrea Scott: Right.
Lynn Tango: um and um a small paging function. Even if you can't do voice recognition for the paging you know just some kind of simple button that's just a I guess another infrared signal to the remote control and while to emit some kind of paging. Just
Andrea Scott: Okay.
Lynn Tango: a beep. Um right so any comments? Thoughts before we break into go into the next round of individual work on this.
Andrea Scott: Since we're doing uh touch screen, do we wanna look into the possibility of people being able to input different types of skins for the you know the actual interface part of it and things like that? Or is it just gonna be one touch screen for everybody.
Joann Seamon: Be interesting.
Josette Hoffman: Mm.
Andrea Scott: What what would be on that touch screen? 'Cause you said earlier that we have to think about company colours and um logo or
Josette Hoffman: And
Andrea Scott: something or motto,
Josette Hoffman: oh.
Andrea Scott: I can't remember exactly
Josette Hoffman: Yeah the
Andrea Scott: what you said.
Joann Seamon: We put fashion
Josette Hoffman: the fashion
Joann Seamon: into
Josette Hoffman: do.
Joann Seamon: electronics.
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Lynn Tango: W it's my understanding that if you were going to do a skin you'd need to have some way for people to download or import skins
Josette Hoffman: Right, and then you're
Lynn Tango: into
Josette Hoffman: dealing
Lynn Tango: the remote
Josette Hoffman: with ports
Lynn Tango: control.
Josette Hoffman: and cords and
Lynn Tango: Yeah I think perhaps
Andrea Scott: 'S too much.
Lynn Tango: good idea
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Lynn Tango: but yeah I think that that one m might just be um and they just yeah I think that one might just be out of the range for this particular
Josette Hoffman: For now.
Lynn Tango: a P_D_A_ would they would makes a lot of sense for a P_D_A_ 'cause you're gonna be using it to connect up to things anyway but I dunno, what do you guys think?
Andrea Scott: Think we just need to come up with a nice black and red
Josette Hoffman: Yeah. Nice.
Andrea Scott: interface on the touch screen. That'd
Joann Seamon: Yeah.
Andrea Scott: be okay.
Joann Seamon: Uh I I'm I'm in agreement with that, I'm wondering
Josette Hoffman: Um.
Joann Seamon: how we're gonna get uh we put fashion into electronics
Josette Hoffman: Well but
Joann Seamon: onto
Josette Hoffman: if we're
Joann Seamon: this
Josette Hoffman: gonna
Joann Seamon: device.
Josette Hoffman: use a touch screen where it's gonna come on like on your cell phone it'll have your
Lynn Tango: Hmm.
Josette Hoffman: your carrier provider name come up first like while it's loading and then it goes away, perhaps it could be like a temporary
Lynn Tango: Mm.
Josette Hoffman: Comes on every time you turn it on and then that's it 'cause it is a bit much to have it like engraved
Andrea Scott: Mm.
Josette Hoffman: on the back or
Lynn Tango: Yeah.
Josette Hoffman: something
Andrea Scott: True.
Josette Hoffman: I think.
Lynn Tango: Yeah.
Joann Seamon: I'm hoping for a subliminal maybe half a millisecond
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Joann Seamon: as it turns on.
Josette Hoffman: Y
Lynn Tango: Yeah. Yeah I know I d it seems like it would suffice to have just the R_R_ on there.
Joann Seamon: Mm-hmm.
Josette Hoffman: Yeah
Lynn Tango: Jus
Josette Hoffman: you would think. But.
Lynn Tango: But apparently not.
Josette Hoffman: If it
Andrea Scott: People
Josette Hoffman: comes
Lynn Tango: So.
Josette Hoffman: from
Andrea Scott: aren't gonna
Josette Hoffman: above.
Andrea Scott: want their remote to boot up and to see flashing things come on. They just want it to be on and ready to go.
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Lynn Tango: Yeah. Well fair enough. Um and yeah that would help the battery life too and if it the remote they do have to press a button for the remote to turn on. But then again who wants to turn on a remote control.
Joann Seamon: Well
Lynn Tango: Kind
Joann Seamon: all
Lynn Tango: of
Joann Seamon: you
Lynn Tango: if
Joann Seamon: have to
Lynn Tango: i
Joann Seamon: do is touch the screen and it automatically
Josette Hoffman: Mm.
Lynn Tango: Oh
Joann Seamon: goes
Lynn Tango: to wake
Joann Seamon: on.
Lynn Tango: up okay
Joann Seamon: Yep.
Lynn Tango: or go into like
Joann Seamon: Goes
Lynn Tango: a dormant
Joann Seamon: into a
Lynn Tango: mode.
Joann Seamon: sleep mode.
Lynn Tango: Okay. Oh yeah I like that I like the idea of um putting the logo in the boot up screen, nice. Um. Um cool so any last things before we break? Alright. Fair enough.
Josette Hoffman: We're
Lynn Tango: Sounds
Josette Hoffman: good?
Lynn Tango: good. I'm gonna save th a copy of this in case you guys need any reminders. I'm gonna save a copy of this and the minutes that I'll do it in a second and put them in the shared folder for later reference.
Joann Seamon: I've put my files in the shared folder as well.
Lynn Tango: Brilliant.
Josette Hoffman: Yeah.
Lynn Tango: That's fab guys. Cool. | Lynn Tango went over new requirements for the project: that the device was solely to control television, and that there would not be a teletext component. Andrea Scott gave his presentation on the basic components of a remote control device, and advised the group to use plastic for the casing material instead of metal. Joann Seamon presented the technical functions of remote controls and compared the interfaces of two existing remote control products. Josette Hoffman made a presentation of the needs and the desires of the consumer and emphasized simplicity as one of the most desired features. The group discussed in more detail the features that will be added to the device: the possible applications of voice recognition, the touch screen menu interface, faceplates, and the look of the company logo. | 2 | amisum | train |
Sandra Preston: That went well, thank you.
Eleanor Alvarez: That's great.
Sandra Preston: Perfect.
Bridget Irvine: 'Kay.
Eleanor Alvarez: Alright, let Sandra Preston just PowerPoint this up.
Eleanor Alvarez: Right so um this meeting will be about the conceptual design, don't ask Sandra Preston s precisely what conceptual design is, it's just something important that we need to do. Um, think of it 's kind of uh turning the abstract into slightly more concrete. In this meeting ideally we'll come to some final decisions on what we're gonna do for the prototype. Um. Right so um, apologies for the last meeting, it was brought my attention that I did not make the roles clear enough, um, so I will attempt to do so more accurately in this particular meeting. Um, fair enough, thanks for the input, 's always good. Um. So, basically all we're gonna do is have some presentations again much like last time, um, and gonna go through you, uh whoever wants to go first is f fine by Sandra Preston um and we'll collate what we know about um what we discussed in the last meeting, possible directions. And then we'll make some more decisions on um basic uh firm up our idea on how we want this remote control to look and work. So, perfect. So, without th further ado, whoever wants to go first is free to.
Bridget Irvine: I'll go first.
Sandra Preston: Go ahead.
Eleanor Alvarez: Alright Nathan, take it away.
Eleanor Alvarez: It is Nathan right? I'm not calling you the wrong name over
Bridget Irvine: No
Eleanor Alvarez: and over
Bridget Irvine: Nathan's
Eleanor Alvarez: again?
Bridget Irvine: fine.
Eleanor Alvarez: Good.
Bridget Irvine: It's either Nathan or participant two.
Laurie Lockett: Mister
Bridget Irvine: Uh.
Laurie Lockett: participant two that is.
Sandra Preston: Nice.
Bridget Irvine: Okay.
Eleanor Alvarez: Nice.
Bridget Irvine: Um, basically what I'm gonna have to talk to you about today is um component design and it's been brought to my attention that we may be somewhat limited as to what we can do because of what our manufacturer offers, so
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Bridget Irvine: Basically what I'm gonna be doing is talking to you about that. Um, components of a remote control, okay. We've already kind of gone over this but we're gonna have to get into more detail and probably have to reach some conclusions some time soon. Energy source, um, our manufacturer offers a variety of energy sources, your standard battery, solar cells. Our manufacturer didn't say anything about lithium so we might have to look if we do go that route, we might have to look elsewhere. Um, and also there's a kinetic energy possibility. Basically, it's like a um the idea of moving the remote would create enough energy to keep it running. So that's one possibility but I don't know whether that would be powerful enough to illuminate a touch screen.
Eleanor Alvarez: Hmm.
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Bridget Irvine: So we'll have to look into that. Um, the case, we have a few options, plastic, rubber or wood. Um and then as far as the way it's shaped, we can do standard boring flat, which we probably don't wanna do, curved or very sexy double curved.
Eleanor Alvarez: What kind of th thickness are we looking at?
Bridget Irvine: Um, I imagine that we could specify. Um, I don't see any reason to go outside of the convention of three or four millimetres.
Eleanor Alvarez: Okay,
Bridget Irvine: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: brilliant.
Bridget Irvine: Um, the buttons, there are multiple scroll buttons available from our manufacturer, but to use those we'd have to use more chips, um and that would cost us more. And if we do go with the rubber doubled curved case um we'll have to use rubber push buttons because the other buttons aren't compatible
Eleanor Alvarez: Hmm.
Bridget Irvine: with that.
Sandra Preston: Right.
Bridget Irvine: Um and just a little note there, touch screen equals many chips which equals many Euro.
Sandra Preston: Right. Nice.
Bridget Irvine: Um, one thing that I noticed was that most remotes operate on a infrare on the infrared part of the spectrum. So you notice when you push a button on a remote you can't see anything coming out of it but in fact there is light coming out of the remote and you know the television can detect that. And if you were to record if you were to make a video recording you could actually see the light. Uh one thing that I thought might be interesting was to use part use visible light coming out of the remote, just kind of as a fun gimmick.
Eleanor Alvarez: Hmm.
Bridget Irvine: So you
Sandra Preston: Interesting.
Bridget Irvine: could actually see something coming out of the remote when you pushed it. Course it'd have to be a part of the spectrum that wouldn't damage the human eye or anything
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Bridget Irvine: like that.
Sandra Preston: Good call.
Eleanor Alvarez: M Maybe is there an option that we can have that off or on so a person can select like
Sandra Preston: Choose
Bridget Irvine: Yeah.
Sandra Preston: it.
Bridget Irvine: I am sure that we could do that. Um, of
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah
Bridget Irvine: course
Eleanor Alvarez: I like the idea, it's a good idea.
Bridget Irvine: Yeah, just as a fun gimmick.
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah.
Bridget Irvine: Just to set us apart a little bit. Um, and then on to the circuit board that we're gonna use, also known as the chip. Uh, we really don't have any way around the T_A_ one one eight three five. Um findings, okay, we're very limited by what our current manufacturers can offer, um and my question to all of you is, should we look to other manufacturies or should we just make do with what we have available?
Laurie Lockett: Interesting question.
Bridget Irvine: 'S a bit of a challenge question.
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Sandra Preston: Well
Laurie Lockett: Yes.
Sandra Preston: I'd say shop around but with our time constraints, is that really a feasible option?
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Bridget Irvine: Right, that's my concern too. Um, if we do go the lithium battery route then we'll have to go outside our current manufacturer. My personal preference is I'll just throw my cards on the table, uh I think we should probably go the solar battery route, just to kinda keep with the environmentally friendly theme that we have going on. Uh, I like the idea of the visible light signalling, that's something to set us apart and uh I was thinking about I was thinking of ways that we could produce the remote in a variety of different case materials to suit different tastes. So we're not so confined by one style and say some
Sandra Preston: Right.
Bridget Irvine: you know, say our the one if we just go with one and it doesn't go over well then we're in a bad situation.
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Sandra Preston: Right.
Eleanor Alvarez: Can we do marketing piloting too? Try to see what kind before we launch can we see
Sandra Preston: Um
Eleanor Alvarez: how they're received?
Sandra Preston: It's an option, uh but actually there's I've got some research already on like what we're looking at and trends
Eleanor Alvarez: Okay.
Sandra Preston: in casing right now
Eleanor Alvarez: Okay.
Sandra Preston: which actually might even come into play beforehand,
Eleanor Alvarez: Okay,
Sandra Preston: it
Eleanor Alvarez: perfect.
Sandra Preston: may help us decide for now.
Eleanor Alvarez: Great, thank
Sandra Preston: Temporarily
Eleanor Alvarez: you very much
Sandra Preston: anyway.
Bridget Irvine: Oh yeah,
Eleanor Alvarez: Nathan. That's
Bridget Irvine: you're
Eleanor Alvarez: perfect,
Bridget Irvine: welcome.
Eleanor Alvarez: so I guess that makes sense for you to take it from here.
Sandra Preston: I guess so, 'cause I found some interesting things. You
Eleanor Alvarez: Fascinating,
Sandra Preston: waiting
Laurie Lockett: Did
Eleanor Alvarez: compelling
Laurie Lockett: you?
Sandra Preston: for Sandra Preston?
Eleanor Alvarez: even.
Sandra Preston: I know, what a teaser ain't it. Um. Right. So current market trends. Screen. Um, basically I was looking at what's going on in the remote control market right now and what's going on in other design fields, to see sort of what's what's trendy, what's new, what's happening. Um, remote control right now basically everybody says they want newer, fancier, more exciting they're sick of this boring, normal, functional, um that we need innovative design options and there needs to be an easy user interface. Um the challenge is that current trends right now, across the board in fashion, in furniture, in technology, is a very organic fruit and vegetable kind of thing. Now I'm not saying we should have, you know, tomato shaped remote controls or anything, but I think it is possible maybe to use um natural colours, like if wood is an option,
Bridget Irvine: Mm.
Sandra Preston: that whole organic, sleek, clean, v line thing may be something we can look into. Different skin options, or if we can't afford this touch plate thing, or touch face screen interface um, maybe having the b images be specific, like you could choose your menu bullets to be
Eleanor Alvarez: Tomatoes.
Sandra Preston: a different shape or okay, not the example I would choose, but you know what I mean to t sort of and th apparently the feel of the next couple of years is spongy,
Bridget Irvine: Mm.
Sandra Preston: uh not
Laurie Lockett: I
Sandra Preston: something
Laurie Lockett: like
Sandra Preston: I
Laurie Lockett: it,
Sandra Preston: I've
Laurie Lockett: I like
Sandra Preston: come
Laurie Lockett: it.
Sandra Preston: up with a though if we can get around to getting piloting, I thought maybe a casing option like uh not like a skin, but like a holder almost
Bridget Irvine: Hmm.
Sandra Preston: if you could do like um, leather options or wood options or something
Bridget Irvine: I should have mentioned this um. As far as the rubber that we can use
Sandra Preston: Mm-hmm.
Bridget Irvine: we can use a rubber as part of the case, it has a consistency of those stress balls.
Laurie Lockett: Yes.
Sandra Preston: Mm. Might be an
Laurie Lockett: Fabulous.
Sandra Preston: interesting
Eleanor Alvarez: Slick,
Sandra Preston: way to go.
Eleanor Alvarez: slick.
Sandra Preston: Um, yeah so something to sit on for now. So overall I think we should stick with what we're finding, everyone's looking for easy to use, technologically innovative and this fancy new I think perhaps the double curve thing and maybe this rubber
Bridget Irvine: Mm.
Sandra Preston: option is our best way to go for right now. Um.
Eleanor Alvarez: Interface, oh the interface graphics for
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: the um
Sandra Preston: Um. Well I d but then if the touch screen thing isn't
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah.
Sandra Preston: gonna work out for us that's really a non-issue.
Bridget Irvine: I like the idea of of rubber too because it's tends to be associated with being durable, something that you can drop and it doesn't
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Bridget Irvine: matter.
Sandra Preston: True.
Bridget Irvine: 'Cause so many you go to so many houses these days and you see broken remote controls.
Sandra Preston: Very true.
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah,
Sandra Preston: Very
Bridget Irvine: Taped
Eleanor Alvarez: it's
Sandra Preston: true.
Eleanor Alvarez: like,
Bridget Irvine: with duck tape
Eleanor Alvarez: yep
Bridget Irvine: and
Sandra Preston: Very
Bridget Irvine: what have
Sandra Preston: much
Bridget Irvine: you,
Sandra Preston: so.
Bridget Irvine: you wouldn't have that problem
Sandra Preston: Um
Eleanor Alvarez: it's
Bridget Irvine: if
Eleanor Alvarez: ubiquitous
Bridget Irvine: you used rubber.
Laurie Lockett: We can
Eleanor Alvarez: isn't
Laurie Lockett: have a
Eleanor Alvarez: it?
Laurie Lockett: duck tape casing.
Sandra Preston: We could. I think that goes against the whole fancy something, a new line, but worth a shot.
Laurie Lockett: It could go with the granola crowd.
Sandra Preston: Ah, it could be, it could be, um. Yeah that's what I know.
Eleanor Alvarez: Great, thanks for that Sarah.
Sandra Preston: No problem.
Eleanor Alvarez: Ron?
Laurie Lockett: Phew.
Laurie Lockett: Computer's adjusting. One moment please. So interme interface concept by your faithful user interface designer. So yur user interface, guys, is basically aspects of a computer system that can see or hear otherwise uh perceive. Uh, commands and mechanisms, that basically user uses to control the operator operating system. Here's a d series of different remote controls that are out on the market today. I think we're definitely trying to get away from this kind of a look.
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah
Laurie Lockett: Um, so the following are a bunch of different uh interface uh concepts. Uh voice recognition, we we um actually have some new uh information from our research design team but uh I'll get to that in a moment. Um, so current voice recognition starts up to about eighty speech samples, um and basically you record your own verbal labels c and connect them to the remote control. Now our design team, research team, has been able to uh set up a system in which uh you can teach the remote control voice c recognition system to respond to um with standard responses. Like you could say good morning uh remote control and it'll say in a sexy female voice, Good morning Joe. Um. In fact we already have
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Laurie Lockett: this for a coffee maker line
Eleanor Alvarez: Lot of single people on the um on the re on the remote control
Laurie Lockett: On the remote
Eleanor Alvarez: research
Laurie Lockett: control
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: team at the
Laurie Lockett: right.
Sandra Preston: Very true, very true.
Laurie Lockett: Um, another concept is what uh Apple has come up with, the spinning
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Laurie Lockett: wheel with uh L_C_ display like on the uh iPod which I am sure most of you know about.
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Laurie Lockett: Um and then we have the scroll button with integrated push-button, kind
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Laurie Lockett: of like a modern a bit
Bridget Irvine: Mm.
Laurie Lockett: bulky, a bit crazy, I don't think that's we're necessarily going for.
Bridget Irvine: No.
Laurie Lockett: And uh some special components, uh ideas like uh blocking, having the ability to block channels from your for your children um and uh dedicated buttons for for commonly used uh channels and even uh ideas like secured or hidden programming but uh I again if we go with touch screen I don't think that's a big issue. Um and uh this is kind of the uh the big daddy
Sandra Preston: Hmm.
Laurie Lockett: of remote controls here. Uh the jumbo universal remote control is almost impossible to misplace or
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah,
Laurie Lockett: lose.
Eleanor Alvarez: I can see.
Laurie Lockett: Um, again probably not what we're going for so I I mean my ideas here and kind of where I think we're heading is something slightly larger than a regular iPod uh with a hard cla
Sandra Preston: Okay.
Laurie Lockett: c uh plastic casing although I think some of the suggestions we've come up with are definitely uh very good ideas. Uh changeable casings uh our design team was possibly talking about including one extra face plate with the package to kind of set the idea that you can
Sandra Preston: Mm,
Laurie Lockett: change
Sandra Preston: right.
Laurie Lockett: it and you can try changing it and kind of get used to thinking about maybe buying another one which can add value to our uh bottom line. Uh touch screen interface, um possibly having go-to buttons being uh stuck into the system so those don't move away from the screen, uh, the important ones like power, volume and jump between channels. Um, and of course our voice command system which I've talked a little bit about already
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Laurie Lockett: and uh the use of recognisable colours and shapes to aid recognition of the features um that are around so red for power, um
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Laurie Lockett: arrows for different volume ups and downs and channels ups and downs and what not. And uh perhaps even adding in some stupid little jokes with the voice recognition idea like perh mm for instance my toastie maker that I got from my bank has jokes when it's ready.
Sandra Preston: Nice.
Eleanor Alvarez: Great.
Laurie Lockett: And uh that is about it.
Eleanor Alvarez: Great, wonderful Ron, cool. Lot of good ideas, good facts to have.
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Eleanor Alvarez: That's what they need, it's like a little dongle it just sticks up this further so you don't have to stand up every time, just
Bridget Irvine: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: connect
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Eleanor Alvarez: it, my kingdom. Right so, good to know all that stuff, thanks guys, um. Now we kind of have to come to some decisions, um, I figure we can just go down the line and all three of us can have a chat about it. Um. Based on what Nathan presented as far as the um various costs and benefits um I think, I dunno, what do you guys think about the touch screen at this point?
Sandra Preston: I think it's our most marketable feature just because it's so new and it's something that is showing up in other places.
Eleanor Alvarez: 'Kay. 'Kay.
Sandra Preston: But can we really afford it 'cause it looks like they would be, that would be a really main cost source then
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm-hmm.
Sandra Preston: right?
Bridget Irvine: My estimate is that in order to incorporate touch screen technology it's gonna cost us upwards of seventeen fifty Euro
Eleanor Alvarez: To produce
Sandra Preston: Per?
Bridget Irvine: per remote,
Eleanor Alvarez: each one.
Bridget Irvine: yeah that's just an estimate
Sandra Preston: Piece.
Bridget Irvine: though.
Laurie Lockett: Oh you guys are always the dampers on these projects.
Sandra Preston: I know
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Laurie Lockett: You industrial designers.
Bridget Irvine: I know. It's
Eleanor Alvarez: Hmm.
Bridget Irvine: fun.
Sandra Preston: And our goal was to be under twelve fifty or we have to be under twelve fifty?
Eleanor Alvarez: Well.
Sandra Preston: Do we remember?
Bridget Irvine: I thought there was some flexibility with that.
Sandra Preston: Okay.
Eleanor Alvarez: There is, it's just, it is a question
Sandra Preston: Can
Eleanor Alvarez: of
Sandra Preston: we justify it?
Eleanor Alvarez: and how much ca o does that mean we're gonna have to increase the price to make money. Um, from twelve fifty if we d wanna get our fift uh hundred per cent profit margin um that would mean selling it from twenty five. If you multiply seventeen fifty by two that's thirty five.
Sandra Preston: Right.
Eleanor Alvarez: So
Laurie Lockett: Where do you guys come up with these numbers?
Bridget Irvine: That's just off the top of my head, it is pending further emails.
Eleanor Alvarez: From the board,
Bridget Irvine: Right.
Eleanor Alvarez: um, well
Sandra Preston: Though I think that's what people would pay for, I mean if you're gonna pay for an expensive high class remote, you're gonna expect it to do something
Eleanor Alvarez: That's true, I mean
Bridget Irvine: It is the new it would be in a class of its own.
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: And that's to be fair the um the per cent of the market we're not going for mass any you know, mass sales anyway, we're gonna make I mean we we're not talking about selling eight zillion of these things, we just couldn't,
Sandra Preston: Right.
Eleanor Alvarez: not for twenty-five Euros, so we could probably maybe shrink the profit margins rather than selling for twenty five, sell 'em for thirty, but that's something that we can have finance deal with.
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: Um, I say that we provisionally go with the touch screen or wh y wh what was your thought on the matter Ron?
Laurie Lockett: I'm thinking that's uh definitely a good idea and I also think that we could probably come up with some sort of a cheaper uh means to to go about this kind of production,
Sandra Preston: See if we can cut
Laurie Lockett: my
Sandra Preston: some corners.
Laurie Lockett: my team in the uh on the third floor suggested that uh
Sandra Preston: Right. Well and we can look into this other manufacturing option, and maybe we can get 'em somewhere else cheaper.
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Laurie Lockett: Yeah.
Bridget Irvine: It's true. We could initially go with what we have and
Sandra Preston: Right.
Bridget Irvine: if we can find them
Sandra Preston: It's
Bridget Irvine: cheaper
Sandra Preston: a starting
Bridget Irvine: later
Sandra Preston: point
Bridget Irvine: on
Sandra Preston: anyway, so.
Eleanor Alvarez: No we could have a s very simple touch screen, you know, there's always the opportunity, if it's gonna be about the size of the iPod or whatever, you know, w we yeah, I guess we can play around with it a bit. Alright, let's
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Eleanor Alvarez: let's say that okay so the touch screen will be our um our main selling point here.
Laurie Lockett: I
Eleanor Alvarez: So
Laurie Lockett: mean I think that we really have two main selling points,
Sandra Preston: Yeah 'cause
Laurie Lockett: I think
Sandra Preston: with voice
Laurie Lockett: that our casing
Sandra Preston: recognition
Laurie Lockett: and the voice recognition
Sandra Preston: I mean really this is pretty bells and whistles kinda remote.
Bridget Irvine: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: The voice rec thing, I mean, if if we're looking at bottom line, now we're looking at upping the cost to seventeen to get the touch screen on, I think we might have to drop the voice rec.
Sandra Preston: I think we'd have to decide between 'em definitely.
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah.
Laurie Lockett: To be honest, we
Sandra Preston: Price-wise.
Laurie Lockett: have the capa we have the design in-house, I mean we've we've come up with this, with
Sandra Preston: True.
Laurie Lockett: this new voice we're
Sandra Preston: We've
Laurie Lockett: using
Sandra Preston: already got
Laurie Lockett: it for
Sandra Preston: it.
Laurie Lockett: our coffee machines already. I can pass you on that email from my uh guy in uh guy down the hall. Sounds good.
Eleanor Alvarez: Hmm. voice rec?
Bridget Irvine: I think if we we do both the obviously production costs are going to go way up um but it does put it into it'd become the Rolls Royce of remote controls basically.
Sandra Preston: Pretty much.
Bridget Irvine: It would be very nice.
Laurie Lockett: I mean we we have to r reflect back on what our market research did say.
Sandra Preston: Right and they said they wanted voice recognition. Course, maybe they hadn't thought of this whole touch screen option, but definitely we know the market is there for voice recognition so to say we have the technology and we're not gonna use it even though we know it'll sell is a call I don't think I can give the highs ups.
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Sandra Preston: Like really I can't go in and say no we're gonna just ignore everything we know.
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah.
Laurie Lockett: Does having both really up our costs?
Eleanor Alvarez: I can't see how it wouldn't, I mean, there's you know the old aphorism, you can have it fast, you can have it cheap or you can have it quality, pick two of three. You know, you can't
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: you can't have all three.
Bridget Irvine: Yeah, 'cause you
Eleanor Alvarez: It's
Bridget Irvine: you
Eleanor Alvarez: just
Bridget Irvine: just
Eleanor Alvarez: impossible.
Bridget Irvine: upping the number of chips that you need to deal with each different
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Bridget Irvine: function.
Eleanor Alvarez: Well if we're gonna pick betwe e alright so we have to pick between one of the two. Um. Otherwise, yeah, we just it just becomes cost prohibitive. What which, which do we suspect we should hold o we should hold on to?
Sandra Preston: Well, we already have research backing voice recognition as you know fiscally solvent. But uh I I I personally would tend to another direction but if that's what's gonna sell I think that's what we need to go with and maybe we can table this touch screen for our next model.
Bridget Irvine: I would have to side with that, I think
Eleanor Alvarez: 'Kay.
Bridget Irvine: the voice recognition is simpler, we already have the all the technology in-house, it's ready to go, it's packaged, it's
Eleanor Alvarez: What does the cost look like Ron? Is it cheaper to do the V_R_ or to do the uh touch screen? Nathan?
Laurie Lockett: Well my p
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Laurie Lockett: is
Bridget Irvine: Um, this is just off the top of my head keep in mind, but I think the voice recognition would they're both mm they're both gonna push the costs up, but um, since we already have the technology
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Bridget Irvine: in-house for the voice recognition we're not gonna have to do as much
Sandra Preston: Right.
Bridget Irvine: design work and sometimes the design work is what push the costs up,
Eleanor Alvarez: Right.
Bridget Irvine: if you know what I mean.
Sandra Preston: Right.
Laurie Lockett: Um, I definitely have to agree with that last
Sandra Preston: And
Laurie Lockett: comment.
Sandra Preston: we're still not then we don't have to deal with this battery issue nearly as much either,
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Sandra Preston: we can stick with what we've already got. In a lot other ways too.
Eleanor Alvarez: Okay. So I'm getting alright so more or less you guys think that o o of the two of 'em, the voice recognition will be better. Okay.
Sandra Preston: I think it's our lower risk option which
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah.
Sandra Preston: for right now we can have it on the market sooner which is all in all our best option.
Eleanor Alvarez: Okay. Sorted. We will omit the touch screen in favour of voice recognition.
Laurie Lockett: It's you and Sandra Preston outside a little here.
Sandra Preston: So and when are we gonna have basic prototypes coming up next that's you guys's next step right?
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah, well we'll we'll sic we'll sort out what it what f what else we're gonna talk about
Bridget Irvine: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: for
Sandra Preston: Right.
Eleanor Alvarez: the prototype but yeah that's our next step, it'll
Sandra Preston: Okay.
Eleanor Alvarez: be a developing
Bridget Irvine: Are
Eleanor Alvarez: of
Bridget Irvine: we
Eleanor Alvarez: prototype.
Bridget Irvine: going to talk now about um the materials that we're gonna use for
Eleanor Alvarez: Yes.
Bridget Irvine: the case and
Sandra Preston: Mm-hmm.
Eleanor Alvarez: We'll
Bridget Irvine: all
Eleanor Alvarez: just
Bridget Irvine: those
Eleanor Alvarez: run
Bridget Irvine: things?
Eleanor Alvarez: through it yeah,
Bridget Irvine: Okay.
Eleanor Alvarez: yeah, um. You discussed either a lithium or a solar power. Would the solar power be enough to fuel a voice recognition? Or this kinesthetic one, would that be enough to fuel a voice recognition remote
Bridget Irvine: Um,
Eleanor Alvarez: control?
Bridget Irvine: the solar power definitely would be but I think just to keep people from getting annoyed, 'cause sometimes solar power fails and there's no way round that, we should install a small backup battery.
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Bridget Irvine: Just to cover those moments when for whatever reason, the remote hasn't
Sandra Preston: Well what
Bridget Irvine: been
Sandra Preston: of
Bridget Irvine: exposed
Sandra Preston: people with like
Bridget Irvine: to
Sandra Preston: the T_V_ in their basement,
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Sandra Preston: like what if
Eleanor Alvarez: Yep.
Sandra Preston: wha we can't guarantee sunlight everywhere so having a
Bridget Irvine: It's
Sandra Preston: secondary
Bridget Irvine: true.
Sandra Preston: source is probably
Bridget Irvine: Yeah, it works about the same as a solar powered calculator,
Laurie Lockett: Calculator.
Bridget Irvine: and you know
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Bridget Irvine: how those those don't really
Sandra Preston: True.
Bridget Irvine: require that much light,
Sandra Preston: True.
Bridget Irvine: um, but obviously a little more light than a calculator, but we're not talking about a lot of light. Doesn't have to be out taking a sunbath for
Sandra Preston: Right.
Bridget Irvine: a few
Eleanor Alvarez: Right.
Bridget Irvine: hours a day or anything.
Sandra Preston: Okay.
Eleanor Alvarez: Okay. What do you think Ron?
Laurie Lockett: I'm willing to agree with everything that's been said.
Eleanor Alvarez: Okay.
Laurie Lockett: Uh I have to say though that um another idea's come up in my head. idea of having a hand-held remote control and maybe kind of have a round remote control that kind of looks like a paperweight or something like that, kind of
Sandra Preston: Uh
Laurie Lockett: a sleek little uh
Eleanor Alvarez: Hmm.
Laurie Lockett: neat
Bridget Irvine: Hmm.
Laurie Lockett: thing that sits on your table or something.
Sandra Preston: Interesting.
Bridget Irvine: Why,
Laurie Lockett: Just a thought.
Bridget Irvine: why
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah.
Bridget Irvine: moving away from hand-held, why? What's the uh
Laurie Lockett: Well
Bridget Irvine: idea?
Laurie Lockett: if you don't need to pick it up it could kind
Sandra Preston: I
Laurie Lockett: of
Sandra Preston: if
Laurie Lockett: be
Sandra Preston: it's
Laurie Lockett: a selling
Sandra Preston: got voice
Laurie Lockett: point.
Sandra Preston: recognition it can be technically anywhere in your room and
Bridget Irvine: Hmm.
Sandra Preston: still do its job.
Bridget Irvine: Do you think people that are people that buy a remote, are they always gonna wanna use the voice recognition or is it just something that they do sometimes.
Sandra Preston: True, and i probabl I think we're banking on selling it to more than just voice recognition people, like we want it to work fundamentally
Eleanor Alvarez: Well
Sandra Preston: as
Eleanor Alvarez: we have
Sandra Preston: a basic
Eleanor Alvarez: to have buttons
Sandra Preston: manual
Eleanor Alvarez: on it too
Sandra Preston: too,
Eleanor Alvarez: as well.
Sandra Preston: right.
Eleanor Alvarez: But that's done, that's no bother I mean if you look at the catalogue from places like with sharper image or whatever you know they might have or like um who is it, Apple makes these really pretentious speakers with the th sub-woofers you know like clear and glass
Sandra Preston: Mm-hmm.
Eleanor Alvarez: and you know and
Bridget Irvine: Right.
Eleanor Alvarez: then they got these little
Sandra Preston: Yep.
Eleanor Alvarez: pyramidal type of um speakers.
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: I mean, why not have a little rounded kind of thing, it could still have the basic buttons on it. Um, 'cause we're going for basic functionality primarily as well.
Sandra Preston: With the bu yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: And maybe a menu button and so forth, you know um use a channel button to scroll through the menu d if they want to record programmes or whatever you know I mean we
Bridget Irvine: I
Eleanor Alvarez: can
Bridget Irvine: think,
Eleanor Alvarez: sort
Sandra Preston: Mm-hmm.
Eleanor Alvarez: that
Bridget Irvine: I think
Eleanor Alvarez: out.
Bridget Irvine: you're on to something because
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah.
Bridget Irvine: we need to escape the traditional shape of a remote. Maybe something
Sandra Preston: True.
Bridget Irvine: that looks nice on a table is would be good,
Sandra Preston: Way
Bridget Irvine: even
Sandra Preston: to go.
Bridget Irvine: though and hand-held the same time.
Laurie Lockett: I think it's all about following Apple's lead on a lot of these
Sandra Preston: Yeah
Laurie Lockett: things.
Sandra Preston: I'm thinking of the airport
Laurie Lockett: Mm-hmm.
Sandra Preston: portal, you know
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Sandra Preston: like that little pod looking thing?
Bridget Irvine: Yeah,
Laurie Lockett: Exactly.
Bridget Irvine: those are nice.
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah, I mean a nice although we do um wh uh is I'm recalling that she mentioned that we n need to get away from the surgical white kind of brushed
Sandra Preston: Right.
Eleanor Alvarez: aluminium thing
Bridget Irvine: Mm.
Eleanor Alvarez: and get back to it but you could have a very tasteful um wood coloured or earth
Sandra Preston: That would
Eleanor Alvarez: tone
Sandra Preston: be kinda
Eleanor Alvarez: kind
Sandra Preston: neat.
Eleanor Alvarez: of um
Sandra Preston: Terracotta bowl or something.
Eleanor Alvarez: Still, I mean, yeah, along those lines.
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah I like that, I like that idea a lot. Um, let's see what we can do as far as that goes.
Bridget Irvine: Okay.
Eleanor Alvarez: And the uh the material like the plastics and so forth, we were discussing that being uh using like a rubber kind of softer feel,
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Eleanor Alvarez: um you know li lik if you feel the the tip on this pen it's a bit gives just a bit.
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: You know something where it's uh a a more advanced f form of plastic that has some kind of a tactile response to it.
Bridget Irvine: Right. Just kind of the squishy feel.
Sandra Preston: Yeah, which is the next big thing, so that's not gonna hurt us either.
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm 'kay. Yeah let's see if we can do a squishy non-remote control-looking remote control. But to be fair, yeah, I mean, you just c you could just put it literally put it on the the ni the coffee table next to the telly and say
Sandra Preston: Right.
Eleanor Alvarez: volume up. Yeah
Sandra Preston: Handy.
Eleanor Alvarez: I like it, I like the idea, that's good. Um and we've sorted of discussed costs, um. I guess we'll a that's gonna be uh a thing, if we run a bit over-budget, that might be okay, um.
Bridget Irvine: Sorry about the uh lack of information on cost, I just haven't been provided that information by our manufacturers
Sandra Preston: Okay.
Bridget Irvine: and
Eleanor Alvarez: We'll have more
Bridget Irvine: I'm just
Eleanor Alvarez: of an
Bridget Irvine: having
Eleanor Alvarez: idea when
Bridget Irvine: to
Eleanor Alvarez: the
Bridget Irvine: guess.
Eleanor Alvarez: prototype have more of a we'll have more of an idea later on. Um. And we just yeah go from there. Um, so we've revisited the touch screen and more or less ruled that out, um, I think so we're more or less con we wh wh we're more or less in agreement that we want to have a um a simple kind of function, you
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Eleanor Alvarez: know, not too complex.
Sandra Preston: Right. Well when the majority of people are only using the most primary functions on a daily basis, although I'm not saying we should completely rule out major functions, they should be secondary, at least if not functionally then visually, like those shouldn't be
Bridget Irvine: Right.
Eleanor Alvarez: Like maybe have menu
Sandra Preston: Take precedence,
Eleanor Alvarez: things.
Bridget Irvine: If,
Sandra Preston: yeah.
Bridget Irvine: if we're not going the touch-screen route then we can um just incorporate maybe something that folds out like what
Sandra Preston: Right.
Bridget Irvine: you often see
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm.
Bridget Irvine: on these kinds of remotes is the most basic functions up here and
Sandra Preston: And
Bridget Irvine: something
Sandra Preston: they slide.
Bridget Irvine: that slides down to reveal the you know more complicated things.
Eleanor Alvarez: Yes.
Sandra Preston: Well and do we wanna consider like an iPod screen which isn't a touch screen but you're still scrolling through menu options, in p
Laurie Lockett: Think then we're hitting our cost issue again.
Sandra Preston: True, we're
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah
Sandra Preston: still
Eleanor Alvarez: we've
Bridget Irvine: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: also
Sandra Preston: not making
Eleanor Alvarez: got the
Sandra Preston: it easier
Eleanor Alvarez: Sandra Preston
Sandra Preston: then.
Eleanor Alvarez: the thing of, if we're gonna have a non-remote-looking remote,
Sandra Preston: True.
Eleanor Alvarez: how do we yeah.
Sandra Preston: Fair enough.
Eleanor Alvarez: B But no I mean we could do a slide or a compartment, you know, like if it say it's
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: a lit little vaguely ovoidal type of thing, it'd be easy to have a compartment in there. Or you know, a b a b a a series of you know three or four buttons with a menu button and then a side an s up and down type of thing, like on um like on a D_V_D_ player. You
Sandra Preston: Mm-hmm.
Eleanor Alvarez: know you see the modern D_V_D_ players'll just have um a menu button on the side and then
Sandra Preston: Yeah it's
Eleanor Alvarez: four
Sandra Preston: just a
Eleanor Alvarez: buttons
Sandra Preston: scroll.
Eleanor Alvarez: around them and you
Bridget Irvine: Right.
Eleanor Alvarez: can just kind of manoeuvre
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: through the menu like that.
Bridget Irvine: So are we gonna are we talking we need to figure out what kind of buttons we're going to use, are we going to use scroll buttons? Rubber buttons? Um
Eleanor Alvarez: Well it seems like I dunno it seems to Sandra Preston that we could just do the um stick with the rubber 'cause since we're probably gonna be using
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: some kind of um rubber for the outside case we
Sandra Preston: Probably.
Eleanor Alvarez: might as well stick with that um.
Bridget Irvine: Right.
Laurie Lockett: I think to a certain extent we have to stick with uh kind of uh a little bit traditional in terms of the buttons and then
Sandra Preston: Right.
Laurie Lockett: and then make our unique feature our casing and what not
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Laurie Lockett: and our voice command.
Sandra Preston: Well no it's basic just like four directions that are that can use as menu or channel and volume or however you wanna do it, are really versatile and everybody's already got them to some extent on the remotes they already own so it's not like we're dealing with everybody relearning things 'cause that's not something anybody's gonna wanna buy a new for.
Bridget Irvine: Right.
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm 'kay, um. We've already kind of covered this as well. That seems to be selling um and we we've more or less agreed that we want to kar target this youth market,
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Eleanor Alvarez: um. Especially now with eighteen to thirty five year olds being such a large quantity of the population.
Sandra Preston: Right, particularly in technological fields, so
Eleanor Alvarez: Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
Sandra Preston: that's exactly where we're headed.
Eleanor Alvarez: Okay. Um. Yeah alright, well, more or less covered what we need to cover I think fi an an any final thoughts before we think about doing the protot moving on to the prototype.
Laurie Lockett: Well what are we actually doing? What
Eleanor Alvarez: Right.
Laurie Lockett: were
Eleanor Alvarez: I was just gonna step on to um
Sandra Preston: Uh. Oh it wasn't in the way but
Eleanor Alvarez: I wasn't?
Sandra Preston: yeah,
Eleanor Alvarez: Oh, my
Sandra Preston: whatever.
Eleanor Alvarez: bad um sorry.
Sandra Preston: No, don't worry about it.
Eleanor Alvarez: The um, yeah okay I was just gonna assign tasks in the next
Laurie Lockett: Sure.
Eleanor Alvarez: b anyth any oth any other
Sandra Preston: Okay.
Eleanor Alvarez: final thoughts before we go ahead and cool?
Bridget Irvine: So
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Bridget Irvine: have we decided that we are gonna go with different style cases for different people? Or are we just
Eleanor Alvarez: Um.
Bridget Irvine: going to go with one? ..It's very, it's very hard thing to predict because
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Bridget Irvine: you have different cases and that might open up your market a little bit obviously, but if you have just one case and it doesn't go very well mm.
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah.
Sandra Preston: Right.
Bridget Irvine: It's a tough situation, but obviously having more cases also costs more so
Eleanor Alvarez: Well then again colours wouldn't be so hard to do, you could have uh
Bridget Irvine: There's an idea.
Eleanor Alvarez: a, you know, a um uh kind of a natural wood colour, like a stained wood and
Sandra Preston: Mm.
Eleanor Alvarez: um, I don't know, olive green or something.
Sandra Preston: Yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: That wouldn't be so much of a problem to incorporate into the colour of the thing.
Laurie Lockett: And again copying iMac's kind of for iPod Mac
Sandra Preston: Yeah,
Laurie Lockett: Apple's
Sandra Preston: get
Laurie Lockett: uh
Sandra Preston: in there.
Laurie Lockett: colour scheme.
Sandra Preston: Yeah, totally.
Eleanor Alvarez: Yeah, I think that's probably a good Bridget Irvine okay so let's work on uh multiple case colours. But yeah, stick with the same kind of kinda yeah, the same basic non-remote kind of remote design. Cool. Alright, so we'll have the next meeting about half an hour, um. I want the uh I'd like Nathan, I'd like you to work on just the basic look and feel, what can we accomplish, um, given these parameters that we're just gonna sort of have this kind of uh non-remote remote. Um,
Bridget Irvine: Right.
Eleanor Alvarez: what are our broad constraints before we deve design a prototype. And um Ron if you can figure out how probably best to lay out this idea of this simple design with the voice recognition built in and also this kind of drop down or s on the side kind of menu options simple. Somehow work out how we can get this all s in the same place. Um, and if you can check product evaluation with m some pilots and stuff. Um I need you guys to work together on making a prototype, um using um prototype building materials um. And also um specific instructions will be sent to you by your coaches as
Bridget Irvine: Oh
Eleanor Alvarez: well.
Bridget Irvine: excellent yeah.
Eleanor Alvarez: So that's what to start with for now, is that alright,
Sandra Preston: Cool.
Eleanor Alvarez: you guys feel
Bridget Irvine: That
Eleanor Alvarez: clear
Bridget Irvine: sounds
Eleanor Alvarez: about this?
Bridget Irvine: good.
Laurie Lockett: Fabulous.
Eleanor Alvarez: Alright. I guess we'll just hit the bricks. Thanks guys.
Sandra Preston: Cool. | Bridget Irvine presented an analysis of cost and the manufacturing options that were available to the group. Sandra Preston presented market trends and the organic trend that this project would adopt. She discussed materials that could be used to follow this trend. Laurie Lockett presented several interface concepts including voice recognition, a spinning wheel design, and a touch screen interface. The group then discussed the features of the device. They discussed the costs and benefits of using either voice recognition or the touch screen interface, and decided on voice recognition based on their marketing data that favored it. They decided to use solar power to power the device. The group discussed the non-traditional look the device could have since the voice recognition would allow it to be stationary. They discussed using rubber for the case. The group talked about hiding the complicated functions from the main interface, using rubber for the buttons, and having different cases to suit different tastes. Eleanor Alvarez reiterated that the product was being marketed towards the youth market, and then gave out assignments and instructed the group to work together to build the prototype. | 2 | amisum | train |
Regina Cotton: Okay. Oh I totally Yeah 'cause I moved it. 'S put it over here. Then we don't have to worry about it.
Candace Woodward: Ready for this?
Emma Brown: All set? Cool. Alright, it is PowerPoint time. I've done more PowerPoints in this particular experiment than I've ever done in my life before this experiment
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Emma Brown: which is kind of fun.
Candace Woodward: Oh man.
Emma Brown: So uh here we have our detailed design meeting where we will um look at the prototype and um right so um, I finally figured out what this whole second bullet point is about in my that my coach was sending to Regina Cotton. It means I'm supposed to read the minutes from the previous meeting.
Geneva Bozarth: Oh really? Okay.
Emma Brown: I think.
Regina Cotton: Huh.
Emma Brown: I don't know. Otherwise it's just saying I'm the secretary and I'm therefore I'm taking the minutes, s so just to go um just real briefly to go over minutes from last meeting, uh, I will open them slowly, no? Wait for it, wait for it.
Regina Cotton: Yeah that's not you.
Emma Brown: No. That's how the Wait. This is, this is very high-powered stuff here, double-clicking, there we go. So um basically the moral of the story from our last minute uh last meeting was that um we that we had meetings from uh we had presentations done by Geneva Bozarth, uh or from Nathan, and Ron and from Sarah about what we can do here um and what sort of limitations we're operating with um uh excuse Regina Cotton what limitations we're operating under, what kind of risk we'd be looking at with some of the various approaches we were discussing and we essentially came to the conclusion that we should develop a remote with uh voice recognition, I_E_ that had a vaguely non-remote like shape um because you didn't really need to use it as a remote since you could just use your voice. That would include some mostly just the simple design features for a television operation but with a slide or a fold-out bay for more advanced functions for users. Um, and uh the uh uh the U_I_D_ and the I_D_ were asked to go ahead and start developing a prototype for us to look at. So. That's sorted, back to the main meet here, um, go ahead and take it away guys.
Geneva Bozarth: Well. Uh, we have assembled our prototype, um. What's to be said about it? Um, we took into account a lot of the things that we went over in the last meeting, um. Some of the most important things to consider are that we decided not to go for the touch screen which you can see
Emma Brown: Mm-hmm.
Geneva Bozarth: and opted for some very large buttons for the primary functions, um. This is going to be the on off button and have these buttons to go through the channels um and then two volume buttons down here, d uh we decided those were the most important uh buttons. And then, for the more advanced uh functions there is a slide out panel here um and you can see that there are lots of other things going on. But this actually can slide back in and provides a very nice aesthetic when it's all put away, um. As far as the uh whole visible light thing, we decided to go with the
Regina Cotton: Ah.
Geneva Bozarth: multiple colours coming out,
Emma Brown: Nice.
Geneva Bozarth: why not?
Regina Cotton: Fair enough.
Geneva Bozarth: Of course, if that's annoying for some people that function can be turned off.
Emma Brown: Perfect.
Geneva Bozarth: Um.
Candace Woodward: No
Geneva Bozarth: Go ahead.
Candace Woodward: it's important to we talked a quite a bit about uh you know the the interchangeable uh faces
Regina Cotton: Mm.
Candace Woodward: and what we've done here is come up with a bit of a natural look here um f
Regina Cotton: Right.
Candace Woodward: we call it fruity if you will.
Regina Cotton: Appropriate,
Candace Woodward: Um.
Regina Cotton: okay.
Candace Woodward: Right, um, of course that's uh interchangeable and uh I think it would be desirable for the uh for the regular product in the in the in the
Regina Cotton: Mm 'kay.
Candace Woodward: in first to be something a little bit more subdued but this is kind of something that can be done
Regina Cotton: It is an option.
Candace Woodward: um and as you can see on the television there uh we have the uh voice detector device
Emma Brown: Oh, right.
Candace Woodward: um on
Geneva Bozarth: That's
Candace Woodward: the
Geneva Bozarth: this
Candace Woodward: top
Geneva Bozarth: here.
Candace Woodward: there.
Regina Cotton: Ah.
Candace Woodward: Um.
Regina Cotton: I see.
Candace Woodward: So that that will work quite well with with regard to finding this uh contraption. Um, what other things do we see here, well, um if you give it a touch it does have actually a bit of a spongy feel, um, so I think that will work well with regards to our market. Um and uh let's see, well clearly there's gonna be some more colours and what not available. Um uh do you have anything else to add to that?
Geneva Bozarth: Um I worried about the materials, it is uh the entire thing is covered in a rubber coating so it's very durable uh, it's not gonna break like some types of plastic that's dropped. Um, and of course as you can see and if you touch it it does have that nice squishy feel.
Candace Woodward: It's actually important to note that the television, uh you know if there's an earthquake or anything like that, that i it actually is edible inside.
Geneva Bozarth: Fact, I dunno if you noticed, but I wrote the uh the company's name
Emma Brown: Oh
Geneva Bozarth: on the telephone
Emma Brown: well
Geneva Bozarth: screen,
Emma Brown: done
Regina Cotton: Nice.
Geneva Bozarth: I thought
Emma Brown: yeah,
Geneva Bozarth: that was kinda
Emma Brown: yeah
Geneva Bozarth: nice.
Emma Brown: oh
Geneva Bozarth: This
Emma Brown: ok
Geneva Bozarth: was actually an apple on the inside.
Regina Cotton: Do we need
Geneva Bozarth: This
Regina Cotton: to worry about um rot factors?
Candace Woodward: Um it's encased in a new uh type of uh
Regina Cotton: Oh okay, there's preservatives
Candace Woodward: polymer
Regina Cotton: involved,
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: we don't
Candace Woodward: yeah.
Regina Cotton: need to worry,
Candace Woodward: It's
Geneva Bozarth: We
Candace Woodward: fine.
Regina Cotton: okay.
Geneva Bozarth: got a bit ahead of ourselves, I know we're not
Candace Woodward: Hmm.
Regina Cotton: Fair
Geneva Bozarth: talking
Regina Cotton: enough.
Geneva Bozarth: about making televisions at this point
Emma Brown: Edible
Geneva Bozarth: or anything
Emma Brown: televisions,
Geneva Bozarth: like
Regina Cotton: No
Geneva Bozarth: that, but
Emma Brown: it's a
Regina Cotton: but
Emma Brown: wave of the future.
Regina Cotton: It's a
Candace Woodward: It's
Regina Cotton: couple
Candace Woodward: pos
Regina Cotton: years off at least.
Candace Woodward: a possible new
Regina Cotton: Okay.
Candace Woodward: product. Um, but I think that's I think that sums up the main features of our of the remote, um
Emma Brown: Brilliant.
Geneva Bozarth: Right.
Candace Woodward: I dunno if you guys have any questions or f whether that uh whether we need to worry about any uh other marketing areas or anything of that nature. Um, did we come in under budget?
Geneva Bozarth: Uh we did, yeah. This cost well to put this into um production, we're looking at about what was our goal? It was twelve fifty Euro um and this actually came in at about eleven ninety nine. Um, so I was quite pleased with that.
Candace Woodward: Mm-hmm.
Geneva Bozarth: One thing that we didn't do um obviously we had a choice with the buttons whether to use scroll buttons or standard rubber buttons, but we just went for a classic rubber button
Regina Cotton: Mm.
Geneva Bozarth: and um since we did that we didn't have to use as many microchips which was quite nice and that's what helped keep the cost down.
Emma Brown: Brilliant.
Geneva Bozarth: So even though it has
Regina Cotton: Mm.
Geneva Bozarth: a lot of modern technology, um for example the voice recognition, in a lot of ways it's just a simple remote
Regina Cotton: Okay.
Geneva Bozarth: and um
Candace Woodward: Mm.
Geneva Bozarth: I think if we shopped around for other manufacturers um we might be able to get even cheaper.
Candace Woodward: Did
Geneva Bozarth: And
Candace Woodward: we talk about the voice recognition uh option?
Geneva Bozarth: Oh no, we haven't talked
Candace Woodward: So
Geneva Bozarth: about that yet
Candace Woodward: uh
Geneva Bozarth: have we?
Candace Woodward: so uh yeah on the back here you all noticed this area here which is actually the voice recognition uh
Regina Cotton: Okay.
Candace Woodward: uh console and uh I think it's nicely designed into the into the overall
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: look. Um, but basically the voice recognition uh incorporates um the latest designs that our research team has been able to cufw uh come up with. Basically uh quite similar to the coffee maker
Regina Cotton: Mm
Candace Woodward: um
Regina Cotton: 'kay.
Candace Woodward: design that we were talking about earlier and um, I think that uh has given a proven um ease of use and
Geneva Bozarth: Hmm.
Candace Woodward: what not.
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: And uh allows features like the remote actually talking back to the user
Regina Cotton: Right.
Candace Woodward: um, so.
Emma Brown: Cool.
Geneva Bozarth: Any questions?
Emma Brown: No, no I think that's
Regina Cotton: Do we have um other, for lack of a better word, skins? Covers? In play now or are those ones gonna be developed later once we see how the couple we have g go or?
Geneva Bozarth: Um, do you
Regina Cotton: Do
Geneva Bozarth: wanna
Regina Cotton: we
Geneva Bozarth: answer
Regina Cotton: know
Geneva Bozarth: this
Regina Cotton: where we
Geneva Bozarth: one
Regina Cotton: stand
Geneva Bozarth: or do you want
Regina Cotton: on
Geneva Bozarth: Regina Cotton to
Regina Cotton: that
Geneva Bozarth: answer
Regina Cotton: yet?
Geneva Bozarth: it?
Candace Woodward: Well we didn't quite have enough material uh.
Regina Cotton: Oh I wasn't expecting a prototype
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah,
Regina Cotton: I just
Candace Woodward: Oh
Regina Cotton: didn't
Candace Woodward: I see,
Regina Cotton: know if you
Geneva Bozarth: yeah.
Regina Cotton: guys had any in mind
Candace Woodward: right,
Regina Cotton: yet.
Geneva Bozarth: Um,
Candace Woodward: um.
Geneva Bozarth: well as you can see this is just a most superficial layer and um it'd be very easy to
Regina Cotton: Okay.
Geneva Bozarth: put another layer
Regina Cotton: Just
Geneva Bozarth: of
Regina Cotton: veneer
Geneva Bozarth: something else
Regina Cotton: really, yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: like
Candace Woodward: Right.
Regina Cotton: Okay.
Candace Woodward: Actually this bottom red ring here just unclips
Regina Cotton: Mm-hmm.
Candace Woodward: and then you put
Regina Cotton: And the
Candace Woodward: a
Regina Cotton: whole
Candace Woodward: a new
Regina Cotton: thing
Candace Woodward: a new uh
Regina Cotton: Okay.
Candace Woodward: a new plate on top of that.
Regina Cotton: Right.
Candace Woodward: So I mean there are I we definitely
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: priced out
Regina Cotton: There's
Candace Woodward: a spongy even spongier non-natural look
Regina Cotton: Okay.
Candace Woodward: um materials which I think worked out fine. We also continued
Regina Cotton: Mm 'kay.
Candace Woodward: on with the ideas that f following uh Apple's colour schemes
Regina Cotton: Okay,
Candace Woodward: with the kind of the
Regina Cotton: very
Candace Woodward: uh
Regina Cotton: cool.
Candace Woodward: light orange and
Geneva Bozarth: It's
Candace Woodward: the
Geneva Bozarth: not
Candace Woodward: green.
Geneva Bozarth: it's not quite a a face plate, it's more like a pseudo-face plate
Regina Cotton: Okay.
Geneva Bozarth: because it's simple enough that in the factory it could we could very easily put a different one on it, it locks into place such that, you know, it's pretty permanent but at the same time, if we wanna go the other way it's just a matter of a couple of adjustments and we could go
Regina Cotton: Okay.
Geneva Bozarth: the face plate way if you know what I mean.
Regina Cotton: Yep. It's still an option if we
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: need it. Very cool, nice job.
Emma Brown: Right, yeah thanks guys that's very, very good work. I like it, brilliant. Um, what we need to discuss now is the finance of it, um I got Regina Cotton you've got you provided a number that actually sounds quite nice. Um the trouble is I was just given this by finance.
Geneva Bozarth: Oh.
Emma Brown: Um, it's a spreadsheet of the parts and I've just tentatively put in what it's going to
Geneva Bozarth: Ooh.
Emma Brown: look like um. I'm just gonna clear this out real quickly, but it looks like So we'll just if we can just itemize what's in here, we've got this it's a solar cell thing right?
Geneva Bozarth: Right uh
Emma Brown: With
Geneva Bozarth: we
Emma Brown: a
Geneva Bozarth: didn't
Emma Brown: back-up
Geneva Bozarth: really touch
Emma Brown: battery?
Geneva Bozarth: on that but it it's in there, yep.
Emma Brown: With the ba okay. Um and
Candace Woodward: The voice recognition area actually doubles as uh as the solar cell area.
Emma Brown: Clever,
Candace Woodward: Yeah.
Emma Brown: clever, well done. Um so I guess that would mean we've got a bit of a um It's a s a speaker and a sensor at the same time isn't it?
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah, yeah. It's just making use of the same space and
Regina Cotton: Mm-hmm.
Geneva Bozarth: the same materials,
Emma Brown: Okay.
Geneva Bozarth: but
Emma Brown: Um and the case, it's more of a single-curved case, I guess would be that be the general
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah, one big
Regina Cotton: Mm-hmm.
Geneva Bozarth: curve I guess you could say.
Emma Brown: Um and we've got a rubber skin material basically throughout. Um. Push button interface um with this other drop-down so maybe we've got two push button interfaces don't
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah,
Emma Brown: we?
Geneva Bozarth: mm-hmm.
Emma Brown: Um. And um a special I guess it's uh we've got a sort of a wood materi a rubbery type material
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah, special.
Emma Brown: that throughout, yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: And s I guess you have to mark special colour and special form as well, don't you? 'Cause it i it is very unconventional,
Emma Brown: Yeah, it's it's
Geneva Bozarth: I like
Emma Brown: quite
Geneva Bozarth: to think
Emma Brown: unique.
Geneva Bozarth: of it as
Emma Brown: I
Geneva Bozarth: unconventional.
Emma Brown: like it, yeah it's So it looks like
Regina Cotton: M come in at sixteen?
Emma Brown: a bit over
Geneva Bozarth: Oh.
Emma Brown: budget,
Geneva Bozarth: Huh,
Emma Brown: um.
Geneva Bozarth: doesn't match up does it?
Emma Brown: So what we could do perhaps, a simple fix would maybe to switch away from the solar cells um or take out the back-up battery.
Geneva Bozarth: How do
Emma Brown: Uh
Geneva Bozarth: you feel about that?
Candace Woodward: I mean I think that uh if we're talking about it being one of our main selling features, being environmental and without the batteries and what not, although it does still have a battery so I'm not sure that
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: you know what the sell is on that.
Geneva Bozarth: I mean we could take we could take the battery out of it you see and it'd probably work ninety nine per cent of the time but you're gonna have to set up a call centre for that one per cent of the time when people are calling and saying oh look my remote isn't working what
Emma Brown: Mm-hmm.
Geneva Bozarth: am I
Regina Cotton: Mm
Geneva Bozarth: gonna do?
Regina Cotton: k.
Emma Brown: Mm-hmm.
Geneva Bozarth: People'd be real upset. I
Regina Cotton: True.
Geneva Bozarth: think in the long-run it's better to keep the battery, it's hard to scrap the whole cell battery idea 'cause that's so integral to the theme that we have.
Emma Brown: Hmm.
Emma Brown: What's difficult, we have all these things integral to the um to the design
Regina Cotton: Nah.
Emma Brown: of it that we just can't back out of now, it would have to be seems like we'd have to go back to square one in a way. Um if we were gonna try to undo one bit we'd probably have to undo most of it,
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Emma Brown: um
Regina Cotton: Although we don't wanna get rid of the whole environmental I mean obviously the solar cell is a big piece of the way we're marketing this as like a natural, new thing, but honestly if we cut that one piece out we're actually coming in under budget if I've done my math correctly.
Geneva Bozarth: Hmm.
Candace Woodward: I mean you might
Regina Cotton: I mean
Candace Woodward: be able to sway Regina Cotton on the idea that we our main selling point could be already this voice recognition thing I mean that's
Regina Cotton: Which,
Candace Woodward: what sets
Regina Cotton: it's
Candace Woodward: us apart right?
Regina Cotton: yeah that's what setting us into this young market, I mean that's where we started from, so I don't know, and I mean you know perhaps when the cell technology comes down in price we can bring that back into the game but it looks like at this point that may be out of our league.
Candace Woodward: And the reality
Geneva Bozarth: Right.
Candace Woodward: is you know, for Regina Cotton from an ideological stand point, I'd like to stick with the uh the solar cell, but I h kind of have to throw myself
Regina Cotton: Right.
Candace Woodward: in the in the business structure model
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: here and
Geneva Bozarth: Right.
Candace Woodward: uh you know I think
Emma Brown: It's either or.
Candace Woodward: I think that
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: I think that we need to come to a compromise here and maybe move ahead with the project, without the solar cell.
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: I think
Geneva Bozarth: I guess
Regina Cotton: unfortunately
Geneva Bozarth: we might have to
Regina Cotton: that's
Geneva Bozarth: do
Regina Cotton: our best
Geneva Bozarth: that.
Regina Cotton: option.
Geneva Bozarth: It's the only way we're gonna get below our uh goal isn't it?
Regina Cotton: Mm.
Geneva Bozarth: Of twelve fifty.
Emma Brown: 'Cause we can't remove the push buttons 'cause they're
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah,
Regina Cotton: It kind
Emma Brown: um
Regina Cotton: of yeah.
Emma Brown: and we can't get rid of the uh I mean removing the changing the case wouldn't be so much of a
Candace Woodward: Savings.
Emma Brown: mm-mm, um,
Regina Cotton: Mm-mm.
Emma Brown: nor would changing the case materials. Um. So yeah that looks like to be the only thing.
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Emma Brown: So that would be the it's a major change but Yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: Gotta
Emma Brown: Alright,
Geneva Bozarth: do what you gotta do.
Emma Brown: so we're in agreement on that.
Regina Cotton: Unfortunately I think we are.
Candace Woodward: No, I think that was a good compromise you brought forward Sarah.
Emma Brown: Right. Moving along swiftly. Um, so I guess now we just go to the project evaluation which I will allow Sarah to take
Regina Cotton: That
Emma Brown: over.
Regina Cotton: would be Regina Cotton. Um cord?
Emma Brown: Ah of course, sorry.
Regina Cotton: No problem.
Emma Brown: Whoosh.
Regina Cotton: Can you reach, that
Candace Woodward: Yep.
Regina Cotton: would be great, thank you.
Emma Brown: That'd be great
Regina Cotton: I didn't even do that one on purpose either, damn. Okay, um, basically I was just evaluating um from what we know of how our product's working right now with the criteria that we set at the beginning of these are the things we needed to do, these are the things that look like we feel they're important. Um so I was looking at basic design things, does it fulfil its functions as a remote? Is the design what we wanted it to do? I are technologies up to where we hoped they would be and does it fulfil the aesthetic qualities that our original market research was looking for? Um. Basic questions like, you know, does it turn on? Does it respond to voice recognition? And overall, in general, it looks like it's coming up to par.
Geneva Bozarth: Mm.
Regina Cotton: Um, the only thing is with with the pull-out panel, that is, can it take some adjusting because it's a new sort of interface, um that looked like it was coming up rough, but then, once you get used to it, it does make a lot of sense. So I think overall we're headed in the right direction.
Geneva Bozarth: Really good.
Regina Cotton: So.
Candace Woodward: They like that spongy feel.
Regina Cotton: Yeah. It looks like it's going over well,
Candace Woodward: And
Regina Cotton: so
Candace Woodward: the paging
Geneva Bozarth: Six?
Candace Woodward: function works well, that's
Regina Cotton: we're
Candace Woodward: good to hear,
Regina Cotton: we're good
Candace Woodward: we
Regina Cotton: yeah.
Candace Woodward: worked hard on that one.
Geneva Bozarth: We
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: did.
Regina Cotton: It's I think eventually if we do um branch out with this product maybe we do have a higher budget options and if it goes over with this model we can look into um wider range voice recognition like from other rooms of the house and stuff, but for now, what we've got is working in the range we need it for, so it's all good.
Emma Brown: Brilliant.
Geneva Bozarth: I am bit
Regina Cotton: That's
Geneva Bozarth: disappointed
Regina Cotton: everything from
Geneva Bozarth: about
Regina Cotton: Regina Cotton.
Geneva Bozarth: losing the solar panel
Emma Brown: Hmm.
Geneva Bozarth: but
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: it's okay. Mm.
Regina Cotton: Yeah, it is a set-back, but Okay, do you need the cord back?
Candace Woodward: W we might
Emma Brown: Um
Candace Woodward: have
Emma Brown: yeah,
Candace Woodward: uh
Emma Brown: I was just
Candace Woodward: we
Emma Brown: go on.
Candace Woodward: might have lost that granola market again that
Geneva Bozarth: I
Candace Woodward: we're
Geneva Bozarth: know.
Emma Brown: Well they don't own tellys anyway do they?
Candace Woodward: I guess
Geneva Bozarth: True.
Candace Woodward: that's true.
Emma Brown: Right. So, um, this one's a bit unclear to Regina Cotton to be perfectly fair, um. I got this slide from the coach and I'm not sure what it's connected to. Um so I guess we are going to discuss um our project process um and that is gonna go into my report. So I guess this is the point where we go um uh out of role it looks like and talk about our satisfaction for room for creativity and so forth and
Geneva Bozarth: Okay.
Emma Brown: how that all worked, I guess, um.
Regina Cotton: As in within the team
Emma Brown: I think
Regina Cotton: or?
Emma Brown: so yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: Right so it's
Regina Cotton: Okay.
Geneva Bozarth: just kind of a
Emma Brown: I think
Geneva Bozarth: open
Emma Brown: it's
Geneva Bozarth: mic kind of thing or
Emma Brown: I mm-hmm, I think so.
Geneva Bozarth: 'Kay.
Emma Brown: I think
Regina Cotton: It is now, you're in charge
Emma Brown: hope
Regina Cotton: so there you go.
Emma Brown: I'm not screwing up an experiment. But I trust that she would jump in if I was so okay fair enough.
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: Whatever.
Emma Brown: Um right, um so any thoughts?
Geneva Bozarth: Are we considering
Regina Cotton: Um.
Geneva Bozarth: these points here?
Emma Brown: Yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: Okay.
Regina Cotton: I think they're starting blocks yeah.
Emma Brown: What do you guys feel about the process?
Regina Cotton: Um, you know I think in general, for a day's worth of work we actually were relatively productive, considering the little amount of input we had going in.
Emma Brown: Mm-hmm.
Regina Cotton: Um, and the technology has definitely been a help, it's really been interesting to try out all this new stuff.
Candace Woodward: We didn't use the whiteboard at all.
Geneva Bozarth: No.
Emma Brown: No,
Regina Cotton: No,
Emma Brown: no
Regina Cotton: we
Emma Brown: whiteboard.
Regina Cotton: didn't. We could now if that'd make up for it but really
Candace Woodward: And
Regina Cotton: and I feel like if you guys had been designing in here perhaps that would have changed but because of room constraints, doesn't really matter.
Candace Woodward: Um, also had I not been intrigued about the pen, I don't think I woulda used it at all, I didn't write barely anything.
Regina Cotton: Yeah I think I was taking notes more often than usual just 'cause
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah,
Regina Cotton: I liked the pen,
Geneva Bozarth: it's true.
Regina Cotton: yeah.
Candace Woodward: Uh.
Geneva Bozarth: Mm.
Emma Brown: Was pretty cool tack though.
Candace Woodward: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: Mm.
Geneva Bozarth: Definitely.
Regina Cotton: I am disappointed I didn't get a note back from my personal coach.
Geneva Bozarth: As you write your personal coach.
Regina Cotton: Yeah, but I didn't get a response so we'll see.
Geneva Bozarth: What if you get a response two or three months from now?
Regina Cotton: Okay
Geneva Bozarth: That'd
Regina Cotton: that
Geneva Bozarth: be
Regina Cotton: would
Geneva Bozarth: weird.
Regina Cotton: be kinda creepy.
Emma Brown: Attempts to contact coach ineffective.
Regina Cotton: Well what kind of coaching is that really? What if I really needed something.
Candace Woodward: I so I don't n I think there was a lot of room for creativity, we could do whatever basically
Regina Cotton: I think so.
Candace Woodward: what we wanted until the budget came down on us, um.
Regina Cotton: And even then we did get a decent product turned out although it's not everything we wanted it to be.
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: With the natural look.
Geneva Bozarth: That's very natural.
Emma Brown: Very natural look.
Regina Cotton: Organic, really.
Emma Brown: That's the brilliance of they had a p they had a peeler in here.
Regina Cotton: And highly resourceful team mates might I add
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: which is always a plus.
Emma Brown: Yeah, I think, yeah re I thought it was like really creative actually, I mean.
Regina Cotton: Mm yeah,
Candace Woodward: I
Regina Cotton: I'm impressed.
Candace Woodward: think the teamwork was good
Geneva Bozarth: And to
Candace Woodward: as
Geneva Bozarth: prove
Candace Woodward: well.
Geneva Bozarth: that we weren't wasteful we didn't waste a single bit of Play-Doh, we used every bit.
Regina Cotton: Nice. All four of those little containers.
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah,
Emma Brown: Including
Geneva Bozarth: I guess
Emma Brown: the s the multi-coloured wave pattern.
Geneva Bozarth: My one my one criticism is that we didn't have enough colours to work with, we only had four,
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: wasn't enough.
Regina Cotton: You could have developed multiple skins really had
Geneva Bozarth: I know
Regina Cotton: you had
Geneva Bozarth: it
Regina Cotton: more colours.
Geneva Bozarth: could have been amazing.
Regina Cotton: Oh well.
Emma Brown: What did you guys think about the the the roles?
Geneva Bozarth: Hmm.
Regina Cotton: They were good.
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah it's f kind of fun,
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: it was I think it was pretty clever 'cause we were never able to get too far off track because the information came in at the right time and
Regina Cotton: True.
Geneva Bozarth: kind of filled in the gaps enough. At the same time you had enough room to kind of just make things up,
Regina Cotton: Do your own.
Geneva Bozarth: which was kind of fun.
Regina Cotton: Though I did feel like th the level of information dropped off severely over the course of the day.
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: I mean maybe it's just Regina Cotton but I didn't actually get any information for the last presentation at all.
Emma Brown: That's true,
Regina Cotton: Nothing,
Emma Brown: I I got this spreadsheet.
Regina Cotton: I didn't even get an email, like that was it. So, yeah, I feel like that was slightly lacking but then you know, fill in the blanks on your own, level of creativity upped.
Candace Woodward: Well
Regina Cotton: Whatever.
Candace Woodward: I think that was I think that was an issue I kept finding with regard to
Emma Brown: Of what to do.
Candace Woodward: well no but also yeah when I was reporting about what each of us was doing I was often
Geneva Bozarth: Mm.
Regina Cotton: Mm-hmm.
Candace Woodward: confused as to what you were doing
Regina Cotton: Uh-huh, that wasn't very much.
Geneva Bozarth: You know
Candace Woodward: felt
Regina Cotton: Mm.
Candace Woodward: like you know a lot of our discussion would centre around n specifically what my task was because that was kind of the interface
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: portion which was what
Regina Cotton: Yes.
Candace Woodward: the whole project was about
Emma Brown: Mm, mm.
Candace Woodward: uh
Regina Cotton: Hmm, very much so.
Candace Woodward: but and then in the end I think our jobs kind of melded together a
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: little bit more,
Geneva Bozarth: That was fun.
Candace Woodward: which
Geneva Bozarth: I think
Candace Woodward: was fine.
Geneva Bozarth: the most helpful thing out of everything was getting the the PowerPoint slides already put together
Candace Woodward: Mm-hmm.
Geneva Bozarth: for you
Regina Cotton: Yeah,
Geneva Bozarth: 'cause if
Regina Cotton: already
Geneva Bozarth: we didn't
Regina Cotton: having
Geneva Bozarth: have
Regina Cotton: the
Geneva Bozarth: that
Regina Cotton: formatted stuff
Geneva Bozarth: there's
Regina Cotton: helped
Geneva Bozarth: no way
Regina Cotton: a
Geneva Bozarth: we
Regina Cotton: lot.
Geneva Bozarth: could have got all that done in time.
Regina Cotton: Very much so.
Emma Brown: Cool.
Candace Woodward: And I think your leadership was quite good.
Geneva Bozarth: It was
Regina Cotton: Hmm.
Geneva Bozarth: really good yeah.
Emma Brown: She said I I I she actually made a comment off boy you're getting into this and I really I think it's true I did get I I
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Emma Brown: felt like I got way too into it.
Regina Cotton: That's kind of a good thing though,
Emma Brown: I felt like I
Geneva Bozarth: It's
Emma Brown: slipped
Geneva Bozarth: kinda fun.
Regina Cotton: you
Emma Brown: into
Regina Cotton: know,
Emma Brown: it a lot.
Regina Cotton: give the rest of us some structure to work with so hey.
Emma Brown: I dunno.
Candace Woodward: An so is that the first time you've taken on that kind of role?
Emma Brown: The first time I've ever done anything like yeah project project management. I usually
Regina Cotton: Hmm.
Emma Brown: organise crap, it's one thing to do, you know set up a party with your friends,
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Emma Brown: you know?
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: Little different.
Emma Brown: But you guys felt that you could keep the, yeah, suspension of disbelief kind of like like the role
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Emma Brown: and the okay?
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: I except for a couple moments where it just got out of hand and I knew we were
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: all lying through our teeth, other than that
Candace Woodward: I had to admit, as soon as w we started I mean as soon as we got the Play-Doh,
Regina Cotton: I could only imagine.
Candace Woodward: th you know the whole concept of really trying to stick with reality went out the window.
Emma Brown: Yeah, yeah. Maybe in in Legos you know?
Candace Woodward: Possibly.
Emma Brown: Be fun with Legos too, like make a remote control or spaceship, we used to have spaceship Legos did you guys ever used to build spaceships
Candace Woodward: Oh yeah,
Emma Brown: with Legos
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: still
Emma Brown: everybody
Candace Woodward: have 'em.
Emma Brown: knows
Regina Cotton: Totally.
Emma Brown: best spaceships ever. Um you guys felt like there was enough teamwork in all?
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah?
Regina Cotton: I think so.
Candace Woodward: Yep.
Emma Brown: Hmm.
Geneva Bozarth: You
Emma Brown: No
Geneva Bozarth: don't.
Emma Brown: I, no I dunno, I d I I dunno, I don't I I was just
Regina Cotton: Though
Emma Brown: I
Regina Cotton: we didn't actually I mean other than minor discussion at meetings there wasn't except for the actual building,
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: but
Emma Brown: It's true
Regina Cotton: I feel
Emma Brown: huh?
Regina Cotton: like if this was a team project there actually would have been much more of the collaborative like brainstorming, use the board well and this would have been six months' worth of work, not like
Emma Brown: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: three hours' worth of meetings.
Candace Woodward: I mean I think had the issue been more serious we probably woulda brainstormed more during our meetings as
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: That's
Candace Woodward: a
Regina Cotton: true.
Candace Woodward: team.
Emma Brown: Yeah. Course I'm I'm conscious of the idea of Emma Brown asking if you guys feel like there's a team you know it's like, kind of like, like hmm. It
Regina Cotton: Yeah
Emma Brown: d
Regina Cotton: that is kind of
Emma Brown: But yeah. Interesting. It's kind of fascinating wasn't it? I mean the whole process of
Geneva Bozarth: Wonder why is there anything about the way that we got so much inform what was it that kept us from going to the the board?
Emma Brown: I don't know. I I don't know if there was a ri I th
Regina Cotton: Mine was the mics. I didn't feel like getting up and down and dealing with all these wires,
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah,
Regina Cotton: I was afraid
Geneva Bozarth: that's
Regina Cotton: I was gonna
Geneva Bozarth: it
Regina Cotton: break
Geneva Bozarth: 'cause
Regina Cotton: something
Geneva Bozarth: the
Regina Cotton: actually.
Geneva Bozarth: mics are loose and each
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: time you get up it's s a possibility
Emma Brown: Mm.
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: of tripping over something or getting tangled or.
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: Well I dunno what I woulda shown on that board.
Regina Cotton: True, but it didn't even occur to Regina Cotton as an option, I mean I don't
Emma Brown: Nor
Regina Cotton: know that
Emma Brown: I.
Regina Cotton: I would have but I know that I consciously didn't.
Candace Woodward: I mean it's just like the paper I don't know what I really needed the paper for.
Regina Cotton: True.
Candace Woodward: Um, because I've got this laptop.
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: Standard, I just used it 'cause it's literally right in front of Regina Cotton.
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Emma Brown: I wanna see the output files
Regina Cotton: Well
Emma Brown: from
Regina Cotton: it looks
Emma Brown: these
Regina Cotton: really professional.
Emma Brown: um, from the digital paper. I wanna see wh
Regina Cotton: I know.
Emma Brown: wh what my my handwriting looks like digitized because my handwriting is crap.
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah,
Emma Brown: I mean,
Geneva Bozarth: that's
Emma Brown: just
Geneva Bozarth: it.
Emma Brown: to see what it looks like in P_D_F_ format or something.
Geneva Bozarth: Usually I would do a lot more doodling too but I didn't because
Regina Cotton: I know, I felt like I needed to be professional so I didn't like draw all over my paper and stuff. Okay, well not entirely, but still, I doodled less than I usually do.
Emma Brown: T I I'm curious about what the de-briefing is gonna be like. You know, like what is the uh what exactly we're looking for here.
Candace Woodward: So is this all we need to get through?
Emma Brown: I dunno, I'm not sure
Regina Cotton: I
Emma Brown: what the
Regina Cotton: guess.
Emma Brown: new ideas found i is about.
Regina Cotton: Um.
Geneva Bozarth: New ideas.
Regina Cotton: It
Candace Woodward: Is it
Regina Cotton: did it just say in an email that we need to discuss that?
Emma Brown: Well, that's the thing I got i in the email I got this PowerPoint file but this slide was just
Regina Cotton: That slide
Emma Brown: there,
Regina Cotton: was like that?
Emma Brown: mm-hmm. I didn't change this one at all.
Geneva Bozarth: Hmm.
Regina Cotton: Well.
Emma Brown: Um
Geneva Bozarth: I guess
Emma Brown: ch
Geneva Bozarth: we're on the right track.
Emma Brown: Yeah well.
Candace Woodward: Any new ideas with regard to
Emma Brown: W
Candace Woodward: remote control concepts?
Geneva Bozarth: No,
Emma Brown: I kinda
Geneva Bozarth: none.
Emma Brown: like
Regina Cotton: Uh
Emma Brown: th
Regina Cotton: I think they still do their job.
Geneva Bozarth: I
Emma Brown: Yeah
Geneva Bozarth: think
Emma Brown: you
Geneva Bozarth: they're
Emma Brown: can't
Geneva Bozarth: fine actually.
Regina Cotton: I am thinking outside the little square box though, with literally
Emma Brown: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: in like form I don't
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah, maybe a s a circle would be alright,
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: different.
Emma Brown: Does kinda make you wonder, I mean, how much can you do with a remote control? It's like inventing a new car. Yeah
Regina Cotton: It's still
Emma Brown: yeah, you
Regina Cotton: gotta
Emma Brown: can
Regina Cotton: be technically car shaped or it won't fit on the road, you know?
Emma Brown: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: Don't know.
Emma Brown: Hmm. Um.
Candace Woodward: What is
Emma Brown: 'Kay.
Candace Woodward: that? Our limited
Regina Cotton: Kind
Candace Woodward: ability
Emma Brown: So
Regina Cotton: of.
Emma Brown: this
Candace Woodward: to
Emma Brown: was
Candace Woodward: think outside
Emma Brown: other
Geneva Bozarth: Are we back
Emma Brown: costs.
Candace Woodward: the box?
Geneva Bozarth: into
Emma Brown: I dunno.
Geneva Bozarth: project
Emma Brown: I think this
Geneva Bozarth: mood?
Emma Brown: is
Regina Cotton: Oh, how long was our meeting supposed to be? How much time
Emma Brown: forty
Regina Cotton: do we have left?
Emma Brown: ish I I I mm we should go on a bit yeah about the project eval, um. I dunno about you guys but I felt like a bit under-stimulated on the whole thing. Like,
Regina Cotton: Mm.
Emma Brown: what like you know what am I really doing, you know what is
Regina Cotton: Yeah, at the beginning it started out and I felt actually like under pressure like the first couple
Emma Brown: Yep.
Regina Cotton: were taking a lot of work and I was like had like all
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: this brainstorming I was doing and then suddenly I was like well it's just another two minute presentation that you guys don't really care about
Candace Woodward: Why?
Regina Cotton: anyway so
Emma Brown: Hey.
Regina Cotton: type away.
Candace Woodward: Huh
Regina Cotton: You
Candace Woodward: I think it was the real.
Regina Cotton: know, you know what I mean like we all sort
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: of knew where we were headed with it so it didn't feel
Candace Woodward: Yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: Definitely when
Regina Cotton: like it mattered anymore.
Geneva Bozarth: when I first filled out the questionnaire I was marking it probably higher in terms of how much I had to
Regina Cotton: Mm-hmm.
Geneva Bozarth: how much I stressed over it and then by the time I got to the last one I was like, you know, not
Regina Cotton: Whatever.
Geneva Bozarth: very much.
Emma Brown: Mm.
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: Think it was also realisation of you basically just copy and paste what's given to
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Candace Woodward: you into
Regina Cotton: Very
Candace Woodward: your presentation
Regina Cotton: much, yeah.
Candace Woodward: which uh wasn't so clear to Regina Cotton at the beginning.
Emma Brown: I actually
Geneva Bozarth: Mm-hmm.
Emma Brown: didn't do that at all though, every single one I a all the presentations I either added slides or edited 'em. I
Candace Woodward: Oh
Emma Brown: di
Candace Woodward: I added like five slides
Emma Brown: Oh.
Candace Woodward: too,
Regina Cotton: See I only got
Geneva Bozarth: Did
Candace Woodward: but
Geneva Bozarth: you
Regina Cotton: blank
Candace Woodward: I
Geneva Bozarth: really?
Regina Cotton: ones.
Geneva Bozarth: I just got blank ones and
Emma Brown: What? Really?
Regina Cotton: My slides were all blank, they'd have a title maybe
Candace Woodward: Yeah, mine
Regina Cotton: and
Candace Woodward: too.
Regina Cotton: they were just empty.
Geneva Bozarth: Regina Cotton too.
Emma Brown: Did they not have they didn't like uh mine yeah they didn't come like this? Like with this was what it looks like.
Regina Cotton: Like
Emma Brown: This is
Regina Cotton: with
Emma Brown: what
Regina Cotton: those
Emma Brown: that
Regina Cotton: words
Emma Brown: looked
Regina Cotton: already
Emma Brown: like,
Regina Cotton: on it?
Emma Brown: literally, just
Regina Cotton: No.
Emma Brown: like
Candace Woodward: No.
Emma Brown: that. Interesting.
Regina Cotton: I wondered why yours always looked so more complicated.
Emma Brown: Uh-huh huh huh.
Geneva Bozarth: I deleted slides.
Regina Cotton: I think I added a slide one time.
Candace Woodward: I added many slides every time
Regina Cotton: Hey with the whole new background
Candace Woodward: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: being innovative,
Geneva Bozarth: That
Regina Cotton: yeah
Geneva Bozarth: was pretty cool,
Regina Cotton: that was
Geneva Bozarth: it
Regina Cotton: class.
Geneva Bozarth: was a high moment of
Regina Cotton: Mm.
Geneva Bozarth: the whole experiment.
Candace Woodward: Um.
Emma Brown: Interesting. Any other thoughts come to mind?
Regina Cotton: I wanna know how our product would fare. I
Geneva Bozarth: I
Regina Cotton: can't
Geneva Bozarth: think
Regina Cotton: just
Geneva Bozarth: it
Regina Cotton: leave
Geneva Bozarth: would fail,
Regina Cotton: it there.
Geneva Bozarth: I think it'd be a
Regina Cotton: I
Geneva Bozarth: huge
Regina Cotton: think
Geneva Bozarth: disaster,
Regina Cotton: it would take extensive
Geneva Bozarth: especially
Regina Cotton: marketing,
Geneva Bozarth: if it looks like that.
Regina Cotton: okay, an apple with a red button on top, even I am sceptical. But you know the whole
Candace Woodward: Even you.
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Geneva Bozarth: I don't we kind of designed it to look little bit like a face.
Regina Cotton: I know it
Emma Brown: Yeah but
Regina Cotton: is.
Geneva Bozarth: It's a happy face.
Candace Woodward: Actually that looked a lot
Regina Cotton: Mm.
Candace Woodward: more like a tongue from previous to uh fr
Emma Brown: Builds.
Candace Woodward: some other design uh modifications.
Emma Brown: Mm.
Candace Woodward: I hope you appreciate the uh incorporation of some tin foil from a uh
Regina Cotton: I
Candace Woodward: random Kit-Kat
Regina Cotton: I noticed
Candace Woodward: bar that
Regina Cotton: that.
Candace Woodward: happened to be consumed.
Regina Cotton: By accident.
Emma Brown: Interesting.
Regina Cotton: Well huh. An interesting day all in all
Emma Brown: Uh,
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah,
Regina Cotton: I
Emma Brown: yeah,
Regina Cotton: would
Geneva Bozarth: it's
Regina Cotton: say.
Emma Brown: I'd
Geneva Bozarth: uh
Emma Brown: say so.
Candace Woodward: So again I reiterate my question of how different we are comp compared to the other groups, especially between culture groups and
Regina Cotton: I
Candace Woodward: what not.
Emma Brown: Mm,
Regina Cotton: know.
Emma Brown: I know.
Candace Woodward: Mm.
Emma Brown: It
Geneva Bozarth: I
Emma Brown: seemed
Geneva Bozarth: wanna
Emma Brown: like
Geneva Bozarth: see
Emma Brown: everything
Geneva Bozarth: a
Regina Cotton: I
Emma Brown: flowed pretty logically. You know from the the the basics
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Emma Brown: to the conce although the whole concepts thing, the whole concepts phase, I don't think I really understood like the concept. Well Geneva Bozarth okay
Regina Cotton: 'Cause
Emma Brown: the notion
Regina Cotton: it's such a
Emma Brown: of
Regina Cotton: functional item.
Emma Brown: yeah I mean i it's not like I have a concept of a mug's material, it's just it is what it is.
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Emma Brown: You know, maybe i rather than concepts i it should be th thought of we sh I I thought of I thought of rather than in terms of concepts I thought of it in terms of um like proposed idea. And
Regina Cotton: Mm.
Emma Brown: then the final would be like th the actual specified prototype or whatever, I dunno. But.
Geneva Bozarth: Hmm.
Emma Brown: All in all it's kinda interesting.
Regina Cotton: Mm.
Geneva Bozarth: So we have more slides or?
Emma Brown: No just this closing one. No we've established that the costs weren't really within budget, but we could s you know
Regina Cotton: We
Emma Brown: do
Regina Cotton: got
Emma Brown: it
Regina Cotton: it to be.
Emma Brown: We
Regina Cotton: Like
Emma Brown: did
Regina Cotton: cutting corners.
Emma Brown: the project evaluation based on um Sarah's evaluation of on
Regina Cotton: Kind
Emma Brown: off switches
Regina Cotton: of, though it was
Emma Brown: and
Regina Cotton: really technically an evaluation of the product, not the project in general.
Emma Brown: Mm.
Geneva Bozarth: Mm.
Regina Cotton: Which
Emma Brown: True.
Regina Cotton: I'm not sure is the same thing, at the time that just i made more sense, but I could see if they were really asking about us.
Emma Brown: Yeah. 'Cause we di we had a thu think about it. Um. Yeah. And it's all recorded, woo-hoo. Yeah
Regina Cotton: Yay.
Emma Brown: what
Geneva Bozarth: Hmm.
Emma Brown: I'm gonna I'm gonna put um I'm supposed to do this final report thing at the end so I'll put all that into the final report as well, or as much as seems like maybe not like the articles and stuff, like
Geneva Bozarth: I
Emma Brown: because and if and so forth, but I'll put most of it in the reports.
Geneva Bozarth: It'd be so cool
Regina Cotton: Make
Geneva Bozarth: if
Regina Cotton: it
Geneva Bozarth: we
Regina Cotton: sound
Geneva Bozarth: get
Regina Cotton: eloquent.
Geneva Bozarth: a copy of the recording.
Regina Cotton: Oh, I have to done I've I've done
Emma Brown: Nice.
Regina Cotton: transcription before and it's really ridiculous how many words people say like
Emma Brown: Oh
Regina Cotton: just
Emma Brown: yeah.
Regina Cotton: in the middle of their sentences like that that mean nothing.
Emma Brown: There's a whole branch of psychology that looks into that, psycholinguistics.
Candace Woodward: What
Geneva Bozarth: Really.
Candace Woodward: the uhs
Regina Cotton: There's a guy
Candace Woodward: and
Regina Cotton: studying
Candace Woodward: the
Regina Cotton: it here, yeah, he's studying ums
Geneva Bozarth: Filler
Regina Cotton: and
Geneva Bozarth: words
Regina Cotton: ahs
Geneva Bozarth: or?
Regina Cotton: or something.
Emma Brown: Yep, they're called
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Emma Brown: um disfluencies.
Geneva Bozarth: Disfluencies.
Regina Cotton: That's a good word for it.
Emma Brown: Yeah we like our fancy phrases and terminologies for things.
Regina Cotton: Just add some prefixes, sounds classier.
Emma Brown: Exactly uh I will save this into the project
Geneva Bozarth: I find
Emma Brown: documents.
Geneva Bozarth: myself hitting the send and receive button on the email a lot,
Regina Cotton: I,
Candace Woodward: Mm.
Geneva Bozarth: just
Emma Brown: Yeah.
Regina Cotton: yeah,
Geneva Bozarth: out
Emma Brown: Oh
Geneva Bozarth: of boredom,
Emma Brown: yeah.
Regina Cotton: pretty compulsively
Geneva Bozarth: like c come on
Regina Cotton: during
Emma Brown: Yeah
Regina Cotton: meetings,
Emma Brown: I know.
Regina Cotton: like,
Geneva Bozarth: gimme something.
Regina Cotton: yeah.
Emma Brown: Come on give Regina Cotton some information. Well to be fair we're we're hooked we're all hooked on the internet,
Regina Cotton: Yeah,
Emma Brown: so I mean I
Regina Cotton: we
Emma Brown: do the
Regina Cotton: are addicts.
Candace Woodward: That's scary yeah?
Geneva Bozarth: It is scary.
Regina Cotton: Mm.
Candace Woodward: Well just around that eight or or
Emma Brown: I
Candace Woodward: nine
Emma Brown: know, imagine
Candace Woodward: people
Emma Brown: we went
Candace Woodward: that
Emma Brown: the
Candace Woodward: are
Emma Brown: first ten y fifteen years of our lives without the internet. It's only in the last ten that we're like where's
Regina Cotton: Yeah.
Emma Brown: the internet? I mean, you know, it just in the past five we've gone
Regina Cotton: I yeah.
Emma Brown: from twenty eight eight modems to broadband all the time.
Candace Woodward: Dude,
Regina Cotton: True.
Candace Woodward: I think we've had internet for like eighteen years.
Emma Brown: No we have
Regina Cotton: I
Emma Brown: but I not in the sense
Regina Cotton: yeah.
Emma Brown: that it's so un you know
Geneva Bozarth: Yeah.
Emma Brown: uh ubiquitous
Regina Cotton: But it's not regular I mean my grandparents had it in the eighties and I got it in ninety four, but still.
Geneva Bozarth: It's crazy.
Regina Cotton: Uh-huh.
Geneva Bozarth: So
Candace Woodward: In the eighties?
Regina Cotton: My um grammy does computer science back in the States and so they had um an E_D_U_ and gov network.
Emma Brown: Mm.
Regina Cotton: There's basically the fundamental structures, but it wasn't uh household to household yet
Candace Woodward: Right.
Regina Cotton: because it hadn't been
Candace Woodward: Yeah, it was to the like seven
Regina Cotton: partitioned
Candace Woodward: universities
Regina Cotton: off and stuff,
Candace Woodward: or something.
Regina Cotton: yeah that was him.
Candace Woodward: You guys ready to celebrate?
Emma Brown: Yeah that's
Regina Cotton: Apparently,
Emma Brown: our last step.
Regina Cotton: does that include
Emma Brown: Celebration.
Regina Cotton: like champagne or something exciting?
Geneva Bozarth: Should.
Regina Cotton: I
Emma Brown: 'Kay
Regina Cotton: think
Emma Brown: I guess
Regina Cotton: so.
Emma Brown: we can probably call that meeting to an end
Regina Cotton: I
Emma Brown: for
Regina Cotton: think
Emma Brown: the most
Regina Cotton: that's
Emma Brown: part.
Regina Cotton: a closer.
Emma Brown: Cool.
Geneva Bozarth: Has it been forty minutes or whatever? this has been long enough.
Candace Woodward: Celebrate.
Emma Brown: Where do you find that?
Regina Cotton: I have no idea.
Geneva Bozarth: Is that the only song you have?
Candace Woodward: There is another one.
Emma Brown: Is this one of those media player?
Candace Woodward: Huh? Yep.
Emma Brown: W oh.
Geneva Bozarth: That's awesome.
Emma Brown: The default track.
Geneva Bozarth: Maybe I have
Emma Brown: I
Geneva Bozarth: a
Emma Brown: thought
Geneva Bozarth: different
Emma Brown: it was
Geneva Bozarth: one.
Emma Brown: David Burns, look into the eyeball. That's one that seems to be shipping with it uh shipped with for a while, maybe this is the new version.
Regina Cotton: So is that a close?
Emma Brown: Yeah, I guess we'll call that
Regina Cotton: Okay,
Emma Brown: a a
Regina Cotton: that's
Emma Brown: doner.
Regina Cotton: the end of the meeting.
Emma Brown: Fab.
Regina Cotton: Thank you gentlemen. I feel like I'm signing off. | Emma Brown opened the meeting by reviewing the decisions from the previous meeting (to use voice recognition instead of the touch screen, to hide the complicated features, and to start building the prototype). Candace Woodward and Geneva Bozarth then presented the prototype that featured voice recognition, interchangeable cases, visible light, and a soft casing material. Emma Brown presented what each component cost, which showed that the project was going over the alotted budget; the group decided to remove the solar panel. Regina Cotton presented an evaluation of the prototype and showed that the prototype had met many of the initial goals. The group then evaluated the project process and discussed their effectiveness as a group. Emma Brown summarized the proceedings of the meeting which will go into a final report, along with comments made during the project evaluation. | 2 | amisum | train |
Edwina Branson: Okay. Um welcome to our second meeting. This the functional design. And I hope you all had a good individual working time. Okay, let's get started. Okay, here's the agenda for the meeting. After the opening um I am going to fulfil the role of secretary, take the meeting minutes. And we're gonna have three presentations, one from each of you. Then we're gonna discuss some new project requirements. Um gonna come to a decision on the functions of the remote control. And then close up the meeting. And we're gonna do this all in about forty minutes. Okay. First I want to discuss the goals of this meeting. First we need to determine the user requirements and the question that we can ask ourselves is what needs and desires are to be fulfilled by this remote control. And then we're going to determine the technical functions, what is the effect of the apparatus, what actually is it supposed to do, what do people pick up the remote and use it for. And then lastly we're going to determine its working design, how exactly will it perform its functions, that's the whole technical side of 'Kay I'll just give you a minute, 'cause it looks like you're making some notes. 'Kay. Oh, well let's go ahead and, back, previous. So what I wanna do right now is hear from all three of you, on your research that you just did. Who would like to start us off?
Joyce Mcdowell: I don't
Edwina Branson: 'Kay.
Joyce Mcdowell: mind going first.
Edwina Branson: Okay. Um do you have a PowerPoint or no?
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah, it's in the should be in the m
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: Project.
Heather Carlton: Do you want us to do our PowerPoints now
Joyce Mcdowell: You
Heather Carlton: or
Joyce Mcdowell: know you could you could do it yourself actually.
Edwina Branson: Oh.
Michelle Brown: Did you send it?
Edwina Branson: Save
Joyce Mcdowell: Put it
Edwina Branson: it
Joyce Mcdowell: in
Edwina Branson: in the
Joyce Mcdowell: Project
Edwina Branson: project documents.
Joyce Mcdowell: Documents, yeah.
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Edwina Branson: Mm-mm-mm. This one?
Joyce Mcdowell: Sure.
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah.
Michelle Brown: Okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: Okay.
Michelle Brown: Great.
Joyce Mcdowell: Um well, the function of a remote control, as what uh we've been informed, is basically to send messages to the television set, for example, switch it on, switch it off, go to this channel, go to channel nine, turn volume up, etcetera. Um some of the considerations is just um for example the what it needs to include it's the numbers, you know, zero to nine, so you can move to a channel, the power button on slash off, the channel going up and down, volume going up and down, and then mute, a mute function. And then functions for V_H_S_, D_V_D_, for example, play, rewind, fast-forward, stop, pause, enter. And enter would be for like, you know, the menus. And then other menus for D_V_ as well as T_V_, whether that means like um we can go and decide the brightness of the screen, things like that, all the more complicated functions of menus. And we can decide if that's what we want, um if we
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: want to include that on the remote, if that's something that would stay on the T_V_ itself, for example.
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: These are two examples. Um and you can see on the left, it's got a lot more buttons, and I don't know if you can read it, but it says, step, go to, freeze, um slow, repeat, program, mute, and so those are some of the buttons and so it gives you an idea of s one example. And then on the right, it's a lot more simpler, it's got volume, it's got the play the like circle set, which is play, rewind, but it's also what is fast-forward is also like next on a menu. So you have functions that are d uh duplicating.
Edwina Branson: Right.
Joyce Mcdowell: And you have a mute button and then the numbers and the eject, and the power button. So that gives you two different kinds, a more complex and more simple version. Okay.
Edwina Branson: Ready.
Joyce Mcdowell: And then lastly, it's just the questions that we want to consider like what functions do we want it to include, and how simple, complex it should be? And what functions it needs to complete. Uh, what are needed to complete insulation process, 'cause, you know, that's something that also has to be considered and it's gonna be hopefully a one-time thing, when you set it up it should be set to go, but we have to include the functions that can allow it to set up i in the first place. So that's it.
Edwina Branson: Alright. Very good presentation. Thank you. You speak with such authority on the matter.
Joyce Mcdowell: Mm.
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: Left.
Edwina Branson: Who would like to um follow that one up? Now, that we've
Heather Carlton: I
Edwina Branson: discussed
Heather Carlton: can go.
Edwina Branson: Okay. Do you want Heather Carlton to run it or you
Heather Carlton: Yeah,
Edwina Branson: wanna
Heather Carlton: you should run it.
Edwina Branson: Okay. Functional requirements.
Heather Carlton: Mm yes.
Edwina Branson: 'Kay.
Edwina Branson: Alright. Now we have Courtney with the functional requirements.
Heather Carlton: Yes, okay so we tested a hundred subjects in our lab, and we just we watched them and we also made them fill out a questionnaire, and we found that the users are not typically happy with current remote controls. Seventy five percent think they're ugly. want are willing to more, which is good news for us um if we make look fancier, and basically w we just need something that really I mean there's some other points up there, but they it needs to be snazzy and it but yet simple. So that's really what we need to do.
Joyce Mcdowell: Wait.
Heather Carlton: And we need we need it to be simple, yet it needs to be high-tech looking. So
Joyce Mcdowell: And that meaning what?
Heather Carlton: Like They like I guess use the buttons a lot.
Joyce Mcdowell: Okay.
Heather Carlton: Yeah. I don't know. It's from my uh research.
Joyce Mcdowell: Right.
Edwina Branson: Okay, what
Heather Carlton: My
Edwina Branson: do you
Heather Carlton: team
Edwina Branson: m
Heather Carlton: wasn't very
Joyce Mcdowell: Only
Heather Carlton: clear.
Joyce Mcdowell: use
Edwina Branson: Oh,
Joyce Mcdowell: ten
Edwina Branson: I'm
Joyce Mcdowell: percent
Edwina Branson: sorry.
Joyce Mcdowell: of the
Heather Carlton: That's
Joyce Mcdowell: buttons.
Heather Carlton: okay.
Edwina Branson: What do you mean by um the current remote controls do not match well with the operating behaviour of the user, like they
Heather Carlton: I
Edwina Branson: have to press
Heather Carlton: I
Edwina Branson: the buttons.
Heather Carlton: think it's like the engineering versus user,
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Heather Carlton: whereas like the engineering she showed that the engineering ones are more complex
Edwina Branson: Oh, right.
Heather Carlton: and users don't really need all of the
Edwina Branson: The
Heather Carlton: buttons
Edwina Branson: buttons.
Heather Carlton: that are contained on there,
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Heather Carlton: because they only use ten percent of the buttons really.
Edwina Branson: Yeah. Okay.
Michelle Brown: We only use ten per cent of our brains.
Heather Carlton: Good point.
Edwina Branson: It works.
Heather Carlton: It's a necessary evil.
Michelle Brown: yeah.
Edwina Branson: Ready for the next slide?
Heather Carlton: Mm-hmm. And so people say that they typically lose it, as you yourself know, because you probably lose your remote control all the time,
Edwina Branson: Hmm.
Heather Carlton: much like any small appliance
Joyce Mcdowell: Lost.
Heather Carlton: like a cellphone, and they we need something simple, because most people, well thirty four percent say that it's just too much time to learn how to use a new one, and we don't want to go we don't want to vary too far from the normal standard
Joyce Mcdowell: S
Heather Carlton: remote, but I mean they do need to be able to identify it, and R_S_I_, I'm not very sure what that is.
Edwina Branson: It's okay. It's
Heather Carlton: Yes,
Edwina Branson: very important.
Heather Carlton: it is important for the remote control world.
Joyce Mcdowell: Wait, is that like your ergonomics
Heather Carlton: Sh
Joyce Mcdowell: like your hand movements or something?
Edwina Branson: Could be,
Heather Carlton: Uh
Edwina Branson: yeah.
Heather Carlton: possibly.
Michelle Brown: Do we really need t to provide more information on
Joyce Mcdowell: Like
Michelle Brown: what R_S_I_ is?
Edwina Branson: Oh.
Heather Carlton: Uh yeah, that's what my web site said, I
Joyce Mcdowell: Channel, volume, power.
Heather Carlton: don't
Edwina Branson: I think that's
Heather Carlton: know.
Edwina Branson: a pretty good guess though.
Heather Carlton: Yeah, I would assume so. I
Joyce Mcdowell: It's
Heather Carlton: think
Joyce Mcdowell: like
Heather Carlton: we're
Joyce Mcdowell: if you're
Heather Carlton: supposed
Joyce Mcdowell: holding
Heather Carlton: to know it
Joyce Mcdowell: it
Heather Carlton: as remote control experts.
Edwina Branson: Yeah.
Heather Carlton: But
Edwina Branson: It's
Heather Carlton: also
Edwina Branson: okay.
Heather Carlton: s so the channel, the volume and the power buttons are the most important on our company website you can find like the specific statistics concerning to how much each button is used, but those are the definitely the top ones.
Edwina Branson: Okay. Next slide?
Heather Carlton: Yes. And so personally I think that we need a modern eye-catching design, but it it really needs to be simple. So saying from y your slide, your presentation, the engineering versus the user-specified remotes, I think that we should go with something that's more user-friendly.
Edwina Branson: User-friendly.
Heather Carlton: Where the engineering ones, the boxes, tend to make it look more complicated than it really is. Um the functionality of the product really needs to be considered as to like what type of buttons do we really need on it. And it needs to be open to a wide range of consumers, so even though we need a small number of buttons, we also need to take in like are most people going to be using it for a D_V_D_ player, a TiVo, what what exactly are we using it for, as well as the age range. So we need a hip, but not a corny marketing scheme for promoting our product. And also we found our team found that speech recognition is it's like an up-and-coming thing they really consumers are really interested in it, and since our findings found that people are willing to pay more money for a remote for it to be more high-class
Edwina Branson: And so just
Heather Carlton: we could
Edwina Branson: to
Heather Carlton: consider it.
Edwina Branson: just to clarify by speech recognition you mean they would say, channel five, and the thing would
Heather Carlton: I
Edwina Branson: go
Heather Carlton: guess
Edwina Branson: to channel
Heather Carlton: so,
Edwina Branson: five?
Heather Carlton: yeah.
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: to just say, where are you, and thing beeps, you know.
Heather Carlton: Yeah, I guess
Edwina Branson: Oh,
Heather Carlton: we can interpret
Edwina Branson: that'd
Heather Carlton: it
Edwina Branson: be
Heather Carlton: like,
Edwina Branson: lovely.
Heather Carlton: we can just try out different types of speech
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah.
Heather Carlton: recognition within our
Edwina Branson: Didn't
Heather Carlton: remote
Edwina Branson: they
Heather Carlton: programme.
Edwina Branson: um didn't our rival companies manufacture a remote that you would press the button on the T_V_ and it would the remote would beep so if you
Joyce Mcdowell: It's
Edwina Branson: have
Joyce Mcdowell: kinda
Edwina Branson: lost
Joyce Mcdowell: like what
Edwina Branson: it
Joyce Mcdowell: the remote phone used to do.
Edwina Branson: Mm. Oh, yeah, that's
Joyce Mcdowell: You
Edwina Branson: true.
Joyce Mcdowell: know like
Edwina Branson: We could
Joyce Mcdowell: go
Edwina Branson: definitely
Joyce Mcdowell: to the
Edwina Branson: include
Joyce Mcdowell: base.
Edwina Branson: that if we wanted to.
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: If it's within our price. Okay. Are we ready for our last presentation, Amber?
Michelle Brown: Yeah, I'm just trying to move it.
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Michelle Brown: 'Kay. I think it should be there,
Joyce Mcdowell: Working
Michelle Brown: working
Joyce Mcdowell: design.
Michelle Brown: design.
Edwina Branson: There we go. 'Kay.
Michelle Brown: 'Kay. Uh I didn't get a chance
Edwina Branson: Oh
Michelle Brown: to complete
Edwina Branson: my
Michelle Brown: this
Edwina Branson: bad.
Michelle Brown: one, 'cause some of the tools that I was given were frustrating.
Heather Carlton: Oh that's fine.
Joyce Mcdowell: Help
Michelle Brown: okay
Joyce Mcdowell: Heather Carlton.
Michelle Brown: th some of the things that we actually need to put into this. We need a power source, we're gonna need a smart chip if we're gonna make it multi-functional. Um extra functions will probably need an additional chip. Either that or the smart chip will have to be extremely smart.
Heather Carlton: What exactly is a smart chip?
Michelle Brown: Usually a smart chip is just a chip that's been programmed and designed so that it can complete a fair range of functions.
Joyce Mcdowell: Well, how much extra would the additional chip be? Is that gonna push us over our production costs?
Michelle Brown: I wouldn't think so, 'cause we could probably get it from like, in bulk, from a a newer company.
Joyce Mcdowell: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Brown: And they tend to sell their chips pretty cheap.
Edwina Branson: Okay. Ready?
Michelle Brown: Um yep, nothing here.
Edwina Branson: That's okay.
Michelle Brown: Um power source, I figured, batteries, 'cause they're easily available. Typically a remote has either two double A_s or four triple A_s, sometimes three. Uh it really kinda depends on the size of the actual remote itself. Um a large on-off button, demographically we're moving towards an older generation of people, so a large on-off button would probably be good.
Edwina Branson: Hmm.
Michelle Brown: Selection button for various entertainment devices, so you want something that will permit you to select the D_V_D_ player or the T_V_ or the stereo system. Um smart chip that perverts uh that permits, sorry, universal application again, something that'll allow us to skip over between devices, and that's kinda it. Uh this is my fifty second design. Power source over here. We're gonna have a switch obviously between the power source and the rest of it, and you're gonna need the switch. Um extra bulb could just be for flashiness, um subcomponent which would be like a way of diverting the power to different parts of the the device. Um the chip and of course the infra-red bulb, so it can communicate with the various devices that it needs to talk to.
Heather Carlton: So what exactly we are looking at, is this like the front of the
Michelle Brown: This is just like
Heather Carlton: remote?
Michelle Brown: a rough schematic.
Edwina Branson: So
Michelle Brown: So this
Edwina Branson: this
Michelle Brown: is
Edwina Branson: would
Michelle Brown: the
Edwina Branson: be
Michelle Brown: internal
Edwina Branson: the front?
Michelle Brown: workings.
Edwina Branson: So
Heather Carlton: Oh
Edwina Branson: the
Heather Carlton: okay.
Edwina Branson: red would be the front of the remote though,
Michelle Brown: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: right?
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah,
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: that's gonna be what's communicating with the T_V_, but the other bulb, I think, is good to just to indicate, I'm doing something, it's sort of like a
Edwina Branson: The l
Heather Carlton: Like
Joyce Mcdowell: reassurance.
Heather Carlton: that we
Edwina Branson: the
Heather Carlton: know
Michelle Brown: Yeah,
Heather Carlton: the battery's
Michelle Brown: so
Edwina Branson: light
Michelle Brown: you don't
Edwina Branson: up
Heather Carlton: working.
Michelle Brown: have to stare
Edwina Branson: kind of
Michelle Brown: at that infra-red, 'cause
Edwina Branson: Yeah.
Michelle Brown: you know when the battery starts dying in your remote currently, you have to actually stare at that bulb and go, okay,
Edwina Branson: Hmm.
Michelle Brown: when I push this button, is it working?
Heather Carlton: Okay.
Edwina Branson: It'd probably be
Michelle Brown: We
Edwina Branson: lighting
Michelle Brown: can skip
Edwina Branson: up the key
Michelle Brown: that whole thing.
Edwina Branson: too, right?
Michelle Brown: Yep.
Heather Carlton: Yeah.
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: 'Kay.
Michelle Brown: So you can
Edwina Branson: The buttons.
Michelle Brown: put it in the dark.
Heather Carlton: Yeah, and that's good. We
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Heather Carlton: should make it glow in the dark.
Edwina Branson: Yeah, definitely. 'Kay nex R Ready?
Michelle Brown: Yeah, that's it.
Edwina Branson: 'Kay, any p
Heather Carlton: Mm 'kay.
Edwina Branson: 'Kay? Anything you wanna add for personal preferences though, you f you said already that we needed a large on-off button, you think.
Michelle Brown: I
Edwina Branson: Anything
Michelle Brown: think
Edwina Branson: else?
Michelle Brown: that that's a good idea, because you know that's one of the most
Joyce Mcdowell: Just
Michelle Brown: important buttons.
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: Well, should it be larger buttons in general, you know like uh the examples that I had, they were swi quite small. So should we try and go for something that has l larger buttons?
Heather Carlton: I think we should. Like I think that would be in a as in like in for the design, sorry, um. I think we should definitely go with buttons that don't look like a normal remote, 'cause most remotes have small square buttons,
Edwina Branson: Mm.
Heather Carlton: I think we should do something like
Joyce Mcdowell: Ovals.
Heather Carlton: maybe bigger and round like
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah,
Heather Carlton: bubbles.
Joyce Mcdowell: yeah.
Edwina Branson: Okay. Okay, let's talk about all of our We'll come to decision later about all the components that we need to include, let's um wrap up this one, and I'm gonna go back to my PowerPoint, 'cause we need to discuss the new project requirements which you might've already seen flashed up on the screen a bit earlier. Wait, come back. Alright. Sorry, let's go through this. Alright. Here we go. New product requirements. First it's only going to be a T_V_ remote. We're trying not to over-complicate things. So no D_V_D_, no TiVo, no stereo.
Michelle Brown: Okay.
Edwina Branson: It's not gonna be multi-functional. Hey. And we th need to promote our company more, so we need to somehow include our colour and our company slogan on the remote. We're trying to get our name out there in the world. Okay. And you know what teletext is?
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: in States we don't have it, but
Joyce Mcdowell: I
Heather Carlton: What
Edwina Branson: um
Joyce Mcdowell: know.
Heather Carlton: is it?
Edwina Branson: it's like they just have this channel where just has news and weather, kind of sports, it's very um bland looking, it's just text on the screen,
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah, it's like
Edwina Branson: not
Joyce Mcdowell: black,
Edwina Branson: even Yeah,
Joyce Mcdowell: black and
Edwina Branson: just
Joyce Mcdowell: white kind
Edwina Branson: black
Joyce Mcdowell: of
Edwina Branson: with just
Heather Carlton: Like running
Edwina Branson: text.
Heather Carlton: along the bottom?
Edwina Branson: Yeah.
Michelle Brown: You can
Joyce Mcdowell: It'll
Michelle Brown: also
Joyce Mcdowell: give
Michelle Brown: get
Joyce Mcdowell: you
Michelle Brown: the kind of the
Joyce Mcdowell: the
Michelle Brown: T_V_ guide
Joyce Mcdowell: sports.
Michelle Brown: so
Heather Carlton: Wait, is it like the Weather Channel where it's got like the ticker running on the bottom
Edwina Branson: Kind
Joyce Mcdowell: Except
Heather Carlton: or
Edwina Branson: of.
Heather Carlton: something?
Joyce Mcdowell: the entire screen.
Michelle Brown: It's the entire
Edwina Branson: Yeah it's
Michelle Brown: screen
Edwina Branson: the whole screen.
Michelle Brown: is just running information at random.
Joyce Mcdowell: You can
Edwina Branson: So
Joyce Mcdowell: pick
Edwina Branson: anyway
Joyce Mcdowell: sports,
Michelle Brown: Seemingly.
Joyce Mcdowell: you can pick the news, you entertainment, you know it's like
Heather Carlton: So it's like
Edwina Branson: Right.
Heather Carlton: a separate channel from like what
Edwina Branson: Right.
Heather Carlton: you're watching?
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: But it's becoming out-dated now, because of the Internet. and we have twenty four hour news channels now too, so Those are our new product requirements.
Heather Carlton: Okay.
Michelle Brown: Okay. So,
Edwina Branson: Alright.
Michelle Brown: do we have to
Edwina Branson: Mm-hmm.
Michelle Brown: include the company colour within that?
Edwina Branson: Yes. It's part of the logo. Okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: Company colour being yellow.
Edwina Branson: What we're going to do right now is come to some decisions, definitive that we can all agree on, about um the target group and the functions and just definite things that we need to do and then we'll close up the meeting. So. Alright. Whatever. Okay.
Edwina Branson: So our target group is You mentioned um older people?
Joyce Mcdowell: Mm-hmm.
Edwina Branson: Would it just be universal for everyone, you think? Because I think even if something has large buttons,
Joyce Mcdowell: It's gonna
Edwina Branson: as
Joyce Mcdowell: make
Edwina Branson: long
Joyce Mcdowell: it
Edwina Branson: as they are not
Joyce Mcdowell: nicer.
Edwina Branson: childishly large, like even
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: technically non-technically challenged people are gonna use it. I mean they want something user-friendly, so
Michelle Brown: Mm well, even if we kept the regular standard size of remote, if we reduced the buttons down to the ones that people are saying that they use the most often and a couple extra, 'cause
Edwina Branson: Yeah.
Michelle Brown: they're saying they only use ten per cent of them,
Edwina Branson: Yeah.
Michelle Brown: then we should be able to accommodate fairly decent sized buttons.
Edwina Branson: Okay, so we want um for our target group would we say, I mean, young and old, all age ranges, all um, not kids obviously, right? Or kids?
Heather Carlton: No, kids need to know how to use a remote,
Michelle Brown: Most
Heather Carlton: I would
Michelle Brown: of them
Heather Carlton: think.
Michelle Brown: will intuitively
Heather Carlton: They gotta
Michelle Brown: pick
Heather Carlton: change
Michelle Brown: it up
Heather Carlton: between
Michelle Brown: though.
Heather Carlton: Disney Channel, Cartoon Network.
Edwina Branson: Okay, so we're going to go anywhere from
Heather Carlton: Yeah,
Edwina Branson: kids
Heather Carlton: I think we need it
Edwina Branson: to
Heather Carlton: all.
Edwina Branson: adult in the age range Um what about technic technical um specifications, like how how technically literate are these people who are going to be using our remote?
Heather Carlton: Um I would say we should say dumber than the average person.
Joyce Mcdowell: We
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: should go for the lowest denominator.
Heather Carlton: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: Right, okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: High
Edwina Branson: So
Joyce Mcdowell: school educated.
Edwina Branson: so they need no technical experience to operate
Michelle Brown: how 'bout little to no, because there is no way that you are gonna be able to make it no.
Edwina Branson: Okay. And we also need to determine the specific functions of this, just to get it all out on paper. So we said it needs to send messages to the T_V_, needs to change the channel, turn on and off, just basic simple stuff like this. So if you have something just say it and we'll add it to my meeting minutes.
Joyce Mcdowell: Well it's channel, on-off button,
Edwina Branson: Mm-hmm,
Joyce Mcdowell: volume,
Edwina Branson: volume.
Joyce Mcdowell: mute.
Heather Carlton: And channel. Yeah. Those are the most important ones.
Edwina Branson: Right. And we wanna keep um I'll make a note here that we wanna keep the number of buttons down. Correct, because people only use ten percent.
Heather Carlton: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: 'Kay. Hey, what
Joyce Mcdowell: Um.
Edwina Branson: else?
Edwina Branson: Um.
Michelle Brown: Do we want this thing to be able to be found easily?
Edwina Branson: I think so. What do you
Heather Carlton: Sure, yeah.
Edwina Branson: A finding
Michelle Brown: And
Heather Carlton: I need
Edwina Branson: kind
Heather Carlton: we
Edwina Branson: of
Heather Carlton: we need a
Edwina Branson: device
Michelle Brown: like
Heather Carlton: like
Edwina Branson: or
Michelle Brown: if
Heather Carlton: homing
Edwina Branson: Yeah,
Michelle Brown: this is
Joyce Mcdowell: Oh
Heather Carlton: device.
Michelle Brown: gonna
Edwina Branson: ho
Joyce Mcdowell: right
Michelle Brown: get
Joyce Mcdowell: yeah
Michelle Brown: lost
Edwina Branson: homing
Joyce Mcdowell: okay.
Michelle Brown: underneath
Edwina Branson: device.
Michelle Brown: the coach, how are we going to accommodate the quick
Edwina Branson: Mm
Michelle Brown: ability
Edwina Branson: 'kay.
Michelle Brown: to find
Joyce Mcdowell: Tracking.
Michelle Brown: it?
Heather Carlton: Because
Edwina Branson: Okay.
Heather Carlton: people really are looking for a remote that's more high-tech.
Edwina Branson: Right.
Michelle Brown: What if we gave it a charger? And on the charger, just like a phone, like you get a portable phone and it's got a charger,
Joyce Mcdowell: But
Michelle Brown: and
Joyce Mcdowell: you
Michelle Brown: if
Joyce Mcdowell: got
Michelle Brown: you d
Joyce Mcdowell: a base.
Michelle Brown: leave your phone somewhere, you push the button to find it, and it finds th the phone beeps for you.
Heather Carlton: Because
Michelle Brown: It's useful for the remote phone.
Edwina Branson: Hmm.
Heather Carlton: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: Would that add to our costs at all, I wonder?
Heather Carlton: I would think so, because you'd have to develop a base.
Edwina Branson: Right.
Joyce Mcdowell: Well, if you have the base, you could start putting in a charger and then you have a different kind of battery.
Michelle Brown: Yeah.
Heather Carlton: Hmm.
Michelle Brown: Rechargeable batteries are cheaper usually.
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: Okay. I I think we can make a decision about that later. Uh we'll still put that as a point that we need to discuss. So that would include battery source Power source rather. Is it going to have a charger, or is it going to be run strictly off batteries? And we also need to deal with the issue you mentioned of speech recognition, if we want
Heather Carlton: Right.
Edwina Branson: that.
Heather Carlton: Do w
Joyce Mcdowell: Well, then we could If we have the speech recognition then we can start aiming at a like another kind of more handicapped disabled uh
Edwina Branson: Mm.
Joyce Mcdowell: demo demographic.
Heather Carlton: Well, th there's the people who desire speech recognition, there's the different demog demographics have different desires, I don't know if you guys ge
Edwina Branson: You could um
Heather Carlton: It
Edwina Branson: we
Heather Carlton: wouldn't
Edwina Branson: could
Heather Carlton: copy
Edwina Branson: hook it up.
Heather Carlton: onto the
Edwina Branson: Oh.
Heather Carlton: the thing 'cause it's black, but all the different age groups have different desires for speech recognition. So basically older people don't really care. It's really the people twenty five to thirty five. I feel those are the people that really watch a lot of T_V_ though.
Edwina Branson: Mm-hmm.
Heather Carlton: They're the ones that get addicted to soap operas and
Joyce Mcdowell: Well
Edwina Branson: And
Heather Carlton: just
Edwina Branson: if
Heather Carlton: sitcoms and stuff.
Edwina Branson: and if we introduced it when they're this age, they're going to probably always buy a remote
Heather Carlton: Right.
Edwina Branson: that has
Heather Carlton: So
Joyce Mcdowell: Well, then then do you put the voice recognition do you put the r like receiver on the actual television, in the base, or in the actual remote,
Edwina Branson: Right.
Joyce Mcdowell: whereas if you just speak in general and you don't have to have the remote in your hand and like talk at it.
Edwina Branson: Yeah. and the speech recognition could be part of the lost and found device, too. If we said,
Heather Carlton: Right.
Edwina Branson: find remote, locate remote, or something. A certain phrase then it could beep. I dunno. Just throwing it out there.
Heather Carlton: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: Well
Joyce Mcdowell: Still fifteen minutes. Um.
Edwina Branson: Okay, anything else we wanna discuss?
Joyce Mcdowell: Well, do we wanna include the numbers like zero through nine? Can we conceive of leaving them out?
Edwina Branson: Um.
Heather Carlton: Wait, on the remote itself?
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah, like you have one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, zero.
Heather Carlton: Well,
Edwina Branson: How
Heather Carlton: we definitely need those.
Edwina Branson: how, yeah, how
Michelle Brown: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: would you leave those out?
Joyce Mcdowell: Well, I don't know, I mean, if you can like well I don't
Edwina Branson: Unless
Joyce Mcdowell: know,
Edwina Branson: you
Joyce Mcdowell: if
Edwina Branson: could
Joyce Mcdowell: there's
Edwina Branson: say
Joyce Mcdowell: just a
Edwina Branson: the
Joyce Mcdowell: way
Edwina Branson: channel.
Joyce Mcdowell: of leaving them out?
Michelle Brown: I think people would find that too foreign.
Heather Carlton: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: Yeah, that's true.
Heather Carlton: You
Edwina Branson: And
Heather Carlton: definitely need
Edwina Branson: also remember that in this day in age we need, you know, like a hundred button, too. I used to have a remote that did not even go up past like fifty. So I couldn't whenever I got cable, I had to get a new T_V_.
Michelle Brown: It's when we get satellite.
Edwina Branson: Mm. get your own remote, or digital cable.
Michelle Brown: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: 'Kay. Um. I guess, we're gonna discuss the project financing later, making sure that we can fit all of the stuff that we want to on our budget. Um.
Michelle Brown: Yeah, 'cause I don't have any material pricing information available to Heather Carlton at the moment, so
Edwina Branson: 'Kay. And don't forget we need to include the colour of our company and the logo.
Joyce Mcdowell: The colour
Heather Carlton: Wait.
Joyce Mcdowell: being yellow?
Edwina Branson: I'm guessing.
Joyce Mcdowell: And how
Heather Carlton: I feel
Joyce Mcdowell: do
Edwina Branson: And
Joyce Mcdowell: we
Heather Carlton: like
Edwina Branson: the R_R_.
Heather Carlton: a ye I feel
Michelle Brown: R_
Heather Carlton: like a
Michelle Brown: the
Heather Carlton: yellow
Michelle Brown: double
Heather Carlton: one
Michelle Brown: R_.
Heather Carlton: would be too garish.
Edwina Branson: We could just
Joyce Mcdowell: Can't
Edwina Branson: have the
Joyce Mcdowell: make
Edwina Branson: logo
Joyce Mcdowell: it entirely
Edwina Branson: in yellow, or maybe a
Michelle Brown: Or
Edwina Branson: yellow
Michelle Brown: is the
Edwina Branson: light
Michelle Brown: l
Edwina Branson: for the keys.
Heather Carlton: Or put like stripes, oh yeah, yellow
Michelle Brown: Yeah,
Heather Carlton: lights.
Michelle Brown: yellow could be and it could doesn't have to be huge.
Heather Carlton: Yeah.
Joyce Mcdowell: Well if you have like a Hang on. If you have this sort of strip kind of down at the bottom the base of it, just like yellow with the R_R_.
Edwina Branson: Right. So we've simplified, we don't need all those um play, fast-forward, rewind,
Joyce Mcdowell: Right, yeah.
Heather Carlton: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: or no menu buttons. So we've pretty much pared it down to on-off, volume, mute, channel up and down, um the numbers Yeah.
Heather Carlton: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: Um can we go back to I'm gonna look really quickly back at those
Joyce Mcdowell: Two examples.
Edwina Branson: examples
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: and see if there is anything. Which one is yours, technical functions
Joyce Mcdowell: Oh, it's
Edwina Branson: or
Joyce Mcdowell: a
Edwina Branson: functional
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: requirement? Okay.
Heather Carlton: Yeah, audi audio settings and screen settings, we need those like audio settings mono, stereo, pitch, screen settings like brightness, colour, or do we just want that accessed accessed from the television
Edwina Branson: The T_V_.
Heather Carlton: itself?
Edwina Branson: I think that that's fine just for the T_V_. I mean how often does the average user need to do that kind of stuff?
Joyce Mcdowell: Well, the other option is sort of like down at the bottom, like farther away, you just have this sort of box inset where it's like the buttons that you don't use as much, but
Edwina Branson: Hmm.
Joyce Mcdowell: occasionally you will use.
Heather Carlton: Yeah, 'cause
Joyce Mcdowell: and
Heather Carlton: we need
Joyce Mcdowell: so
Heather Carlton: to
Joyce Mcdowell: it's like
Heather Carlton: we definitely need to have buttons for like sub-titles and things like that. It's 'cause the foreign film market is expanding and stuff, and like on television like I know f k living in Los Angeles it's tons of Spanish network television if it has English sub-titles it's definitely helpful.
Edwina Branson: Couldn't we do that all through one button, something,
Joyce Mcdowell: I don't well,
Edwina Branson: a menu
Joyce Mcdowell: I don't know.
Edwina Branson: button, that pops up with a menu on the T_V_ that says, you know, audio, video, whatever, language, you know?
Joyce Mcdowell: Right.
Heather Carlton: So we need up, down, and side-to-side buttons.
Joyce Mcdowell: Well, that
Edwina Branson: For
Joyce Mcdowell: could be
Edwina Branson: the menus.
Joyce Mcdowell: No you could just double up with like the channel or the volume buttons.
Michelle Brown: Mm-hmm.
Edwina Branson: That's true.
Heather Carlton: Yeah,
Joyce Mcdowell: Channel
Heather Carlton: okay.
Joyce Mcdowell: is just up and down.
Heather Carlton: Okay, yeah.
Joyce Mcdowell: And then add a
Edwina Branson: Something that
Heather Carlton: Such as, yeah, the
Edwina Branson: looks
Heather Carlton: one
Edwina Branson: mayb you know.
Heather Carlton: the one over there on the left the engineering
Edwina Branson: Y
Heather Carlton: centred
Edwina Branson: right,
Heather Carlton: one.
Edwina Branson: right
Joyce Mcdowell: Yeah.
Edwina Branson: right right. That one?
Joyce Mcdowell: So we just have it like add a menu button then for the various things needed,
Edwina Branson: Right.
Joyce Mcdowell: including v
Edwina Branson: In
Joyce Mcdowell: voice
Edwina Branson: the middle
Joyce Mcdowell: recognition if we have
Edwina Branson: perhaps.
Joyce Mcdowell: any like settings for voice recognition now included in the menu.
Edwina Branson: Yep.
Heather Carlton: Ooh, I just got an idea for a design.
Edwina Branson: good.
Edwina Branson: Anybody have anything else they'd like to bring up in this meeting?
Michelle Brown: I had something, but I forgot.
Edwina Branson: Okay. get out of here. Let's go back to the meeting closure then and see what we need to do next. Mm. Alright. After this meeting we're gonna be sent a questionnaire and summary again which we need to reply to that e-mail. And then we're gonna have lunch break. And after lunch thirty minutes of individual work time. Um I'm gonna put the minutes I put the minutes for the first meeting already in the project documents folder, if you'd like to review them. And I'm gonna type up the minutes for this one as well. Um here's what we're each going to do. The I_D_ is going to work on the components concept, um U_I_D_ the user interface concept, and you're going to do some trend watching. 'Kay. Specific instructions will be sent to you by your personal coach. And if anybody has anything they would like to add? No? Okay, well, this meeting is officially over. Thank you all. | Joyce Mcdowell presented the basic functions of the device and discussed the designs of two existing products, showing an example of the simple design that the group wants to implement. Heather Carlton presented feedback from users, showing that users want a simple but fancy-looking remote control and that young users want speech recognition. She discussed including only the most basic functions in the interface. Michelle Brown presented her internal design of the device and discussed the processor chip and the energy sources that will be integrated. She suggested integrating an extra lightbulb that lit up when the remote was communicating with the television. Edwina Branson gave the group new requirements for the product design. The group discussed marketing the product to a wide range of customers. They had a discussion about possibly including a locator function and speech recognition. They discussed integrating the company's yellow color and logo into the design, and decreasing the number of buttons in the main interface. Edwina Branson instructed Michelle Brown to prepare the components concept, Joyce Mcdowell to prepare the interface concept, and Heather Carlton to prepare a trendwatching report. | 2 | amisum | train |
Deborah Wilson: Okay. Hi Team. Hope you had a good. Okay we're back for the conceptual design meeting. Um let's get started. 'Kay, here is the agenda for today's meeting. Um we're gonna open it and I'm gonna keep the minutes as Project Manager. We're gonna have three presentations, one from each of you again. And then we are going to come to decision on the remote control concepts and then we're gonna close it up. And we have forty minutes again. 'Kay, just to reiterate after meeting team will reach a decision on the concepts of the remote control. Okay. Let's go ahead and start off with your presentations. Who would like to go first?
Elaine Hyatt: Just trying to move mine right now.
Deborah Wilson: Okay. Um Courtney would you mind starting us
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: off? Okay. Trend watching?
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: 'Kay.
Lela Williams: Okay, so trend watching. Uh since we do put the fashion in electronics, it is kind of important how our product looks. So I guess we can go ahead and go to the next. So what they want. Right now customers want fancy versus functional. Um basically about fifty eight percent of what they like of the product that they want, describing like the in order of how much they want, fifty per of the decision of what it should look like, fancy versus functional, and then it has to also be technologically innovative, and yet easy to use. So the customer basically is confused. They don't know exactly what they want. They want us to tell them.
Elaine Hyatt: They want everything, but
Lela Williams: Yes.
Elaine Hyatt: simply.
Lela Williams: Exactly.
Elaine Hyatt: Okay.
Lela Williams: So we can go to next.
Deborah Wilson: Mm 'kay.
Lela Williams: Okay. So in Milan and Paris recently the trends have been showing that clothing, shoes and furniture are basically just covered with fruits and vegetable patterns. So I don't know if we want to go with that um and also the spongy feel is in in contrast to last year. I don't know really, I mean I guess the spongy could relate to the buttons
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Lela Williams: if we want to rather
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Lela Williams: than like a hard clicky button that you find on like some mobiles and stuff, you'd want like a softer touch. I mean do you guys know what I mean.
Deborah Wilson: Right.
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah
Deborah Wilson: Yes.
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: th
Lela Williams: Um. But as for the fruits and vegetable patterns, I don't know if we really want to go with that, because it is just a trend, and
Deborah Wilson: Right.
Lela Williams: our product we want to stay around for much longer than just a few months,
Deborah Wilson: Right.
Lela Williams: because
Deborah Wilson: People
Elaine Hyatt: I
Deborah Wilson: don't
Elaine Hyatt: I
Deborah Wilson: buy
Elaine Hyatt: can
Deborah Wilson: a new remote
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: every
Lela Williams: I mean
Deborah Wilson: so
Lela Williams: that could
Deborah Wilson: often.
Lela Williams: just be a Spring thing right now.
Elaine Hyatt: I can address some of that issue, I think, with uh my presentation.
Lela Williams: Okay. Awesome.
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Lela Williams: Um so design preferences, um we need easy to read like large buttons, clearly labelled so that, I mean 'cause we talked about that being a problem. Um and then also buttons illuminating upon touch, you said that in your design, with the bulb. Um and that could also tie in with the colour scheme. Uh we need the Real Reaction logo and colour scheme obviously. That's one of our key goals, we wanna promote our product. And I was thinking about different types of designs and I came up with something. Actually right here. So what we could do is something like an old-fashioned telephone like this, where we put the buttons around, like we'd put a big on-off button or something else in the middle, I mean it could be the arrows or whatever for channel up and down, and then put the numbers around in like an old-fashioned dial shape. 'Cause then it'll appeal to older generation and like said retro's cool. So it's classically retro.
Deborah Wilson: Hmm.
Lela Williams: So I mean that's just an idea if
Deborah Wilson: Very
Lela Williams: you guys
Deborah Wilson: good. I like
Lela Williams: like
Deborah Wilson: it.
Lela Williams: it.
Deborah Wilson: Okay,
Lela Williams: And,
Deborah Wilson: ready for the next slide?
Lela Williams: yep. And that's it.
Deborah Wilson: Op mm 'kay.
Elaine Hyatt: Okay.
Deborah Wilson: Great. Great presentation. Ready?
Celia Foster: Okay hang on.
Deborah Wilson: 'Kay.
Celia Foster: See if it's there.
Deborah Wilson: Which one is it?
Celia Foster: I don't know. Hang on. Interface concepts, no?
Deborah Wilson: Interface concepts new.
Celia Foster: Either refresh it, or it sh Oh
Deborah Wilson: Y
Celia Foster: wait, maybe I didn't put it there. Hang on.
Deborah Wilson: 'Kay.
Elaine Hyatt: Mine will always read copy of something or other.
Deborah Wilson: Sorry?
Elaine Hyatt: I I copied mine before I sent it over.
Deborah Wilson: Oh okay.
Celia Foster: Sorry, hang on. Don't know.
Deborah Wilson: Oh there we go.
Celia Foster: Okay.
Celia Foster: Okay, um looking at the interface concept, it's gonna be mostly examples of possibilities of where we can go with this. Uh if you wanna start the next slide.
Deborah Wilson: Sure.
Celia Foster: uh can't really see there's two possible, on the r left, if you see on th on the sides of of the remote, you have the sort of scroll down, so you have that option right there. And then also there's the idea of the base. That's sort of like an idea there. And then on the right, we have what's really big trend right now, it's the iPod. It's becoming really and so you have this sort of very very simplistic menu section uh with the round buttons, and it's sort of like you have the both kind of trendy and hip, but also very sleek and um and very simple, but technologically advanced. So if you wanted to do that th if we could find a way of sort of like using that idea in a remote control then sort of look into it, but Anyway,
Deborah Wilson: Mm 'kay.
Celia Foster: next. Um there's the idea of like being able to do it by feel as well as by um by sight. You'd you know you're in the dark, you don't wanna be looking at the remote control. And the picture particularly is pointing out if you look at the top volume button it's a V_, and so yo you're kind of feeling a V_ like volume up. What it really is is a V_ and what it you think it is is down, because the down arrow.
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Celia Foster: And so it's like a sort of a criticism you'd probably turn that o the other way up. Um but then you have you could either do it by raised type, which could be you know, iffy, um sort of old-fashioned in a way.
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Celia Foster: Either that or just have it by shape, for example you have a specific triangular shape that you know you're looking at the up and down arrow. And then the round ones you sort of feel by, you know, that's the second one down, that sort of thing. So it's sort of looking into how we wanted t to do it by feel.
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Celia Foster: Okay. Um this is sort of an example of going for a s certain demographic. Um this is particularly geared towards children.
Lela Williams: That's cute.
Celia Foster: Um it's very cute, and we could probably change it to yellow, bright yellow for like a the for the company logo. Um and you have the shapes and it's very simplistic and friendly looking. Um and then the other thing that it would be able to do is just to pro be ab you program certain channels that only these children would watch, so it's like they ch watch, you know, the C_ Beebies or something like that, uh keep them away from other channels. So that's like another ar
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Celia Foster: Um, I mean, these are three examples sort of looking at it. You have the wider section for the main controls there. Uh you could see how many buttons there are. And then on the left you have an example of the round buttons, and a simpler design. On the bottom we probably wouldn't need that, because it's more for like a D_V_D_ function which we are not gonna be using. Um. So again it's sort of like just give you ideas and then down at the bottom you have the logos and that's where you could put the R_R_, Real Reaction.
Deborah Wilson: 'Kay.
Celia Foster: And then finally these are like the sort of same examples, but also some more, just possibilities that we could go with. None of them I'm particularly keen on by the way.
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: Hmm.
Deborah Wilson: No.
Celia Foster: But it's sort of like just taking aspects out of that and saying, well out of this one we like, you know the round section of um, b or we'd like the
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Celia Foster: the button size on this.
Deborah Wilson: Or I like, you know, the black finish or the silver finish or whatever.
Celia Foster: Right.
Lela Williams: I have four of those remotes.
Deborah Wilson: Good lord. Okay. Ready?
Celia Foster: That's it.
Deborah Wilson: Oh, yeah. Okay. Great job.
Elaine Hyatt: Okay, my turn.
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Lela Williams: Okay.
Elaine Hyatt: Whoo.
Deborah Wilson: What's the title?
Elaine Hyatt: It'll be copy of component design.
Deborah Wilson: Got it.
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah. Th that looks like it. 'Kay. So basic remote runs as follows, press button makes connection with the power source and the rest of the circuit, chip senses the connection, chip produces a morse code infra-red signal, specific to that button. So you press the button, it produces uh a signal that's encoded specifically for that button. Transistors amplify that signal and it goes to the T_V_'s centre, which interprets the signal response accordingly, changes channel etcetera. So that being said Next slide, please. Findings oh which were the required materials for the basic internal construction, so all the really simplistic functions that we just discussed, we need rubber for buttons, aluminium for battery y contacts, integrated circuit which consists of a diode, transistor, resonator, resistors, and a capacitator, all those basic things that make a circuit function. Um fibreglass and thin copper wire to create the actual circuit board itself. An L_E_D_, which is a light emitting diode, um contact discs for the buttons, plastic for the casing, and a power-source, whatever power-source we've actually determined we want. Next slide, please. Thank you. Uh personal preferences, uh to save money for the components, the remote should be mass-produced and basic materials should be bought en masse. Um if we find another company who can produce the required chips, casing, L_E_D_, any additional materials we decide we require at a less expensive rate than we ourselves are producing, we should go for it. Next slide, please. Um just talking to the um manufacturing division. They suggested power options, solar cells, hand dynamo, and kinetic power, so you shake it and it increases the power. Um I'm not sure how the hand dynamo works, they have yet to get back to Lela Williams on that. So
Deborah Wilson: Hmm.
Elaine Hyatt: next slide, please.
Deborah Wilson: Interesting.
Elaine Hyatt: Suggested casing options. Okay. We can offer options for casing such as straight, curved, double-curved, you know, very specific to the customer. Options for materials, plastic, rubber, titanium, wood. I don't think anyone's gonna go for a wood one, because splinters
Lela Williams: That would be amazing, though, yeah. No,
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah.
Lela Williams: splinters would
Elaine Hyatt: Um certain restrictions do apply here though. Uh latex, you can't do solar power with a latex one. So, if they want some a soft squishy rubber, they can't have the solar powered option. Double-curved, you can't
Lela Williams: What
Elaine Hyatt: do titanium.
Lela Williams: is that?
Elaine Hyatt: Um that would be two curvatures, so it would actually, if you the shape of your hand, you curve here and you curve here,
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Elaine Hyatt: so you could have two curves that match the shape of your hand to make it more comfortable to hold.
Lela Williams: Mm.
Elaine Hyatt: Now if you wanted that, you can't do titanium. And uh so you functions what for the buttons, scrolling
Celia Foster: Right.
Elaine Hyatt: function could be very beneficial to us instead of actual buttons themselves. I think
Deborah Wilson: 'Kay.
Elaine Hyatt: I have one more slide. No, I
Deborah Wilson: No,
Elaine Hyatt: didn't.
Deborah Wilson: okay.
Elaine Hyatt: Um the manufacturing division also has said that um they have several types of chips and they've just developed a sample sensor or sample speaker chip, which we could utilise. Um push button requires a simple chip and scroll requires more complicated chip. So depends on what we decide we wanna do. In addition to that if we're offering all those different options to the customer for producing their remote, we're going to have to have multiples of each type, like a double-curved in rubber, um you know, each option should have a certain select number produced with all those options. So we'll have to mix it up, make sure we produce enough of everyone. But that could also drive up the price of the
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Elaine Hyatt: actual remote itself if they know that we only produced five thousand, you know, double-curved
Lela Williams: Right.
Elaine Hyatt: wooden remotes.
Lela Williams: Okay.
Deborah Wilson: Hmm.
Elaine Hyatt: And
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Elaine Hyatt: that's all I got.
Deborah Wilson: Alright, well thank you for those informative presentations. Let's go back to um Now we have to make some decisions. Where were we?
Celia Foster: Let Lela Williams just add one more thing that I couldn't say before,
Deborah Wilson: Sure.
Celia Foster: and that's just that there's the new technology that they've developed on the voice recognition. Um.
Lela Williams: Oh this the thing we were talking about earlier.
Celia Foster: Right except that it's sort of odd, and I'm no not exactly sure why they are explaining it in the way they are, um there's a sample sensor and there's a sample speaker unit for So, you would say like, good morning, coffeemaker, and it would respond, good morning, Jill, but I'm not sure exactly how it's gonna work, 'cause do you programme do we program the responses and the questions. So does that mean that the user then has to ask the specific question, and can't change it
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Celia Foster: in order for it to be recognised, or can it be altered in a certain way, or does the actually user program it, to
Deborah Wilson: Right.
Celia Foster: say a channel means this.
Lela Williams: Yeah, like
Deborah Wilson: Right.
Lela Williams: using the menu to be like, enter your name into the screen like on the menu options. So
Celia Foster: Right,
Lela Williams: that way the
Celia Foster: so it's got
Lela Williams: remote
Celia Foster: like a limited
Lela Williams: reads it.
Celia Foster: memory and programme it. So it's sort of iffy,
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Lela Williams: I feel like voice recognition would be, I don't know,
Deborah Wilson: Hmm.
Lela Williams: w it would be too hard to really
Deborah Wilson: Programme.
Lela Williams: I mean we could do it, but
Deborah Wilson: If it's within our price to get that kind of chip that
Lela Williams: Technology.
Deborah Wilson: would, you know, technology
Elaine Hyatt: Well, we are making the chip.
Deborah Wilson: Hmm.
Elaine Hyatt: So, I mean But, I guess, we have to look at w what our production cost is for the chip itself
Lela Williams: And
Elaine Hyatt: anyway.
Lela Williams: it is a growing trend,
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah.
Lela Williams: the
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Lela Williams: higher technological, like the, I mean just like the more advanced it is,
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah.
Lela Williams: the better it'll
Elaine Hyatt: I
Lela Williams: sell.
Elaine Hyatt: I thought offering some of those options for different materials that it could be made of different, you know I think we'd have to decide on the power options, maybe.
Deborah Wilson: Hmm.
Elaine Hyatt: So
Lela Williams: Yeah,
Elaine Hyatt: that
Lela Williams: 'cause
Elaine Hyatt: we
Lela Williams: we
Elaine Hyatt: could
Lela Williams: need to
Elaine Hyatt: reduce
Lela Williams: know how big
Elaine Hyatt: cost.
Lela Williams: it's gonna be
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah.
Lela Williams: and how heavy.
Deborah Wilson: Okay, that kind of brings us to this, let's let's see
Elaine Hyatt: Okay.
Deborah Wilson: if we can decide what kind of energy source we want to have first and foremost. Um. Do we wanna go for batteries or a stand like the one that we saw illustrated earlier?
Lela Williams: Oh the base, yeah.
Deborah Wilson: The base, the charging base
Elaine Hyatt: I
Celia Foster: I
Elaine Hyatt: think
Celia Foster: always
Elaine Hyatt: the
Deborah Wilson: with
Celia Foster: feel
Elaine Hyatt: p
Deborah Wilson: rechargeable
Celia Foster: like first
Deborah Wilson: batteries?
Celia Foster: I wanna know what it looks like, before 'Cause
Deborah Wilson: Hmm.
Celia Foster: if it's something really really small, then it's sort of harder to imagine a base for it, that was p quite a s substantial size sort of standing up
Deborah Wilson: Yeah,
Lela Williams: W
Deborah Wilson: and we don't have multiple things that it has to control, it just has to control the T_V_. It's not gonna be a huge universal remote.
Lela Williams: We
Celia Foster: Right.
Lela Williams: need to decide, well so we can figure how big it's gonna be, like
Deborah Wilson: What
Lela Williams: exactly
Deborah Wilson: size battery
Lela Williams: what
Deborah Wilson: and
Lela Williams: buttons we want and exactly
Celia Foster: Well, the other thing is like even if it's got a few buttons, so we want
Lela Williams: It could
Celia Foster: it to
Lela Williams: be
Celia Foster: be
Lela Williams: like
Celia Foster: bigger
Lela Williams: this.
Celia Foster: than this,
Lela Williams: Yes. I'd, well
Celia Foster: 'cause
Lela Williams: uh
Celia Foster: it still fits in your hand, so you still wanted something that's comfortable and substantial, but not necessarily full of buttons.
Lela Williams: This one is really comfortable, like I like the sides whatever,
Celia Foster: Are you gonna
Lela Williams: because
Celia Foster: lose it easier?
Lela Williams: But if we have the um, the locator, then we don't have to worry about that.
Elaine Hyatt: That's true.
Lela Williams: So we can make it small if we have a l locating device.
Elaine Hyatt: If
Celia Foster: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: we do a voice-activated locator, though, we're gonna be looking at a more substantial chip. So
Lela Williams: Hmm.
Celia Foster: So i That's the other thing, it's like You know Are we gonna have certain chips that are gonna require bigger size period?
Lela Williams: Two double A_s, for this size.
Celia Foster: But like, you know, if we get more complicated then it's gonna v be
Lela Williams: Right.
Celia Foster: have to be bigger to just accommodate the chip size.
Elaine Hyatt: Honestly, I think the customer would be kind of irritated by the fact that it has a base if we did do a nice small, compact
Deborah Wilson: Right. I agree,
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: it's
Celia Foster: So
Deborah Wilson: either gonna
Celia Foster: we
Deborah Wilson: be
Celia Foster: sh
Deborah Wilson: bigger with a base or smaller
Lela Williams: Smaller,
Deborah Wilson: with
Lela Williams: without
Deborah Wilson: just
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: A battery like
Celia Foster: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: Mm
Deborah Wilson: this
Elaine Hyatt: yeah.
Deborah Wilson: guy. Alright, so what direction do you want to go in? You wanna vote?
Lela Williams: I think if we had a a locating device with the small one, I think that seems way more advanced.
Deborah Wilson: I'm kind of
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: I'm kind of
Celia Foster: I'm
Deborah Wilson: leaning in the
Celia Foster: a
Deborah Wilson: direction
Celia Foster: away
Deborah Wilson: of this
Celia Foster: from
Deborah Wilson: kind of
Celia Foster: the base.
Deborah Wilson: bigger and
Celia Foster: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: the
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: base.
Elaine Hyatt: 'Kay
Deborah Wilson: That just
Elaine Hyatt: so
Deborah Wilson: seems so clunky and
Lela Williams: Yeah, because I mean if even looking at cellphones right now, those trends the smaller
Celia Foster: Smaller
Lela Williams: the
Celia Foster: and smaller, yeah,
Lela Williams: hotter
Celia Foster: yeah, yeah.
Lela Williams: it is, yeah
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Elaine Hyatt: The only problem with that is if you forget to take it out of your pocket and it goes in wash.
Lela Williams: Oh.
Celia Foster: You're kidding.
Elaine Hyatt: You know it happens.
Deborah Wilson: Hmm.
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: I've had three watches go that way too.
Celia Foster: Oh watches
Lela Williams: Ouch.
Celia Foster: I've but I've never washed a cell
Lela Williams: A phone,
Celia Foster: phone.
Lela Williams: whoa, that would wow, that would hurt.
Deborah Wilson: Okay,
Elaine Hyatt: Pieces
Deborah Wilson: so
Elaine Hyatt: everywhere.
Deborah Wilson: what kind of material do we want to be made out of?
Elaine Hyatt: Well, we have lots of options. I don't think wood is a viable
Lela Williams: Yeah
Elaine Hyatt: option.
Lela Williams: wood.
Deborah Wilson: No.
Celia Foster: Well, titanium
Deborah Wilson: Oh what did you Oh sorry,
Celia Foster: s
Deborah Wilson: go ahead.
Celia Foster: I was saying that titanium, if we're being restricted then I would probably lean away from that.
Lela Williams: Yeah, 'cause if it's gonna cost us more to produce a chip, titanium will be more expensive.
Deborah Wilson: Right.
Elaine Hyatt: However,
Deborah Wilson: What would you recommend?
Elaine Hyatt: well,
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: we only wanna sell it for twenty five Euro right?
Celia Foster: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: 'Cause I was thinking if we wanted to get the high in market
Celia Foster: That'll
Elaine Hyatt: then
Celia Foster: Yeah,
Elaine Hyatt: you could
Celia Foster: exactly.
Elaine Hyatt: produce a few in titanium,
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Elaine Hyatt: make them a rarity
Celia Foster: The selling
Elaine Hyatt: so to
Celia Foster: point,
Lela Williams: We
Elaine Hyatt: speak.
Lela Williams: could
Celia Foster: yeah.
Lela Williams: do that, because all our research shows that people are definitely willing to spend more
Celia Foster: Are we
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah.
Celia Foster: restricted
Lela Williams: if
Celia Foster: by this?
Elaine Hyatt: Well the
Deborah Wilson: I
Elaine Hyatt: original
Celia Foster: Twenty five
Deborah Wilson: I think
Celia Foster: Euros
Deborah Wilson: we should just focus on one design and one concept right now.I'm
Elaine Hyatt: Okay.
Deborah Wilson: not sure that we'll have the time and money to produce a whole array of remotes. If this was a successful remote, we might then produce a higher end version of it, I think.
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah.
Lela Williams: Good plan.
Elaine Hyatt: Good plan.
Deborah Wilson: Okay, so we wanna go for plastic, or what would you recommend for materials?
Elaine Hyatt: Honestly I'd
Deborah Wilson: Hmm.
Elaine Hyatt: recommend like um uh since we're going with batteries instead of solar power, I'd recommend maybe a uh soft like latex, because we could produce, you know how cellphones have those overlays that you can change the colour. We could
Lela Williams: Oh.
Deborah Wilson: Mm-hmm.
Elaine Hyatt: do uh one that fits
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Elaine Hyatt: in with the trends of the year so, because this year is all fruit, God only
Lela Williams: Yeah,
Elaine Hyatt: knows why,
Lela Williams: who knows.
Elaine Hyatt: um we could do f a cherry cover for this year and then i if next year is stripes or solids, you know
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Celia Foster: So you're talking about like when it leaves our salesroom then it's all gonna be cherry-coloured or is it gonna be the kinda thing where people come
Lela Williams: O
Celia Foster: back
Lela Williams: or we
Celia Foster: and
Lela Williams: could
Celia Foster: swap
Lela Williams: like take
Deborah Wilson: They could
Celia Foster: it?
Lela Williams: off
Elaine Hyatt: They could
Deborah Wilson: buy
Elaine Hyatt: come
Lela Williams: this.
Elaine Hyatt: back.
Deborah Wilson: cases, maybe,
Elaine Hyatt: And buy the extra case.
Celia Foster: Okay.
Deborah Wilson: if they wanted. I think it's good to sell a basic thing and then sell
Elaine Hyatt: So we could do like
Deborah Wilson: options.
Elaine Hyatt: a b a hard base plastic, and
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: then we could give
Celia Foster: The
Elaine Hyatt: two
Celia Foster: what the
Elaine Hyatt: latex
Celia Foster: top face,
Elaine Hyatt: covers
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Celia Foster: right?
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Elaine Hyatt: to start.
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Lela Williams: Yeah, because the soft latex definitely is squishy. That's in. Well I mean squishier than like,
Deborah Wilson: Right.
Lela Williams: yeah,
Deborah Wilson: Right.
Lela Williams: just a hard plastic.
Deborah Wilson: Okay, and what kind of chip would we need for this guy?
Elaine Hyatt: How complicated Are we gonna go with the
Celia Foster: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: voice activated
Deborah Wilson: I don't think we should do voice, I think we should just do um the recognition for when it's lost, you know.
Celia Foster: A
Deborah Wilson: could we
Celia Foster: tracker, yeah.
Deborah Wilson: Yeah.
Lela Williams: 'Cause that uh what it type of, yeah, like a certain term what we would say like,
Deborah Wilson: Hmm.
Lela Williams: because people could just be talking and we don't want it going off all the time.
Deborah Wilson: Right.
Lela Williams: So uh
Elaine Hyatt: Well, we could give it a specific code, you know, remote missing.
Lela Williams: Ooh. Uh see I'm uh I'm strangely attracted to it, because I know that's it's definitely gonna be big, because it's, I don't know, it's
Celia Foster: Well,
Lela Williams: just so high-tech.
Celia Foster: my little sister got for Christmas she got one of those key finders that's like a key-ring, and you have to whistle in a certain frequency for it to work.
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah, see that
Celia Foster: And
Elaine Hyatt: would
Celia Foster: then
Elaine Hyatt: just
Celia Foster: she
Elaine Hyatt: irritate
Celia Foster: would laugh
Elaine Hyatt: Lela Williams.
Celia Foster: and it would start going off in her purse, and you couldn't turn it off.
Deborah Wilson: Oh dear.
Lela Williams: Oh,
Celia Foster: So
Lela Williams: then
Celia Foster: it became
Lela Williams: maybe voice
Celia Foster: highly irritating.
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Lela Williams: maybe voice
Elaine Hyatt: So
Lela Williams: activation
Elaine Hyatt: I think
Lela Williams: won't
Elaine Hyatt: having
Lela Williams: be good.
Elaine Hyatt: a key-phrase is much better.
Deborah Wilson: Okay. Alright. But it's not gonna be voice activated in the fact that you would say, channel up, and it would work, right?
Lela Williams: Yeah, n n no, we
Celia Foster: But
Lela Williams: just
Celia Foster: then
Deborah Wilson: Just
Elaine Hyatt: No.
Celia Foster: it
Lela Williams: want it to
Deborah Wilson: a
Lela Williams: be a finder.
Deborah Wilson: Okay, alright.
Celia Foster: Hmm. Okay.
Lela Williams: But do can your can the department make
Elaine Hyatt: That would be like a mid-class um
Lela Williams: Oh,
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah.
Lela Williams: brilliant then.
Elaine Hyatt: So we don't actually have to go for Well, if they've just developed the sample sensor, sample speaker, it's a brand new chip. Why not introduce
Deborah Wilson: No.
Elaine Hyatt: it in this way?
Lela Williams: Yeah,
Deborah Wilson: Mm 'kay.
Lela Williams: good point.
Deborah Wilson: Uh and what size batteries, double A_, triple A_?
Lela Williams: I think triple A_, it'll be lighter.
Deborah Wilson: Two? Could
Lela Williams: I
Deborah Wilson: it
Lela Williams: mean
Deborah Wilson: run
Lela Williams: more
Deborah Wilson: off of two
Lela Williams: more
Celia Foster: Well,
Lela Williams: come
Celia Foster: that
Lela Williams: in
Celia Foster: depends
Lela Williams: a package.
Celia Foster: on what the energy is needed.
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: I think, well, we could d r do two or we could do one small lithium, 'cause you know the lithium batteries are doing quite well in most other electronic products, right? So they're more widely available now. And they also have a longer battery life than most batteries.
Deborah Wilson: They're more expensive though, too.
Elaine Hyatt: But if you only have to replace it every five years.
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Lela Williams: That's a good
Deborah Wilson: Thoughts
Lela Williams: point.
Celia Foster: As
Deborah Wilson: anybody?
Celia Foster: long as we sell it with it.
Elaine Hyatt: Well, how about a initial, you get one battery when you buy it, 'cause
Celia Foster: Right,
Elaine Hyatt: I'm pretty
Celia Foster: that's
Elaine Hyatt: sure
Celia Foster: what
Elaine Hyatt: we can
Celia Foster: I meant.
Elaine Hyatt: get them
Lela Williams: We
Elaine Hyatt: pretty
Lela Williams: could think
Elaine Hyatt: cheap
Lela Williams: about
Elaine Hyatt: on bulk.
Lela Williams: it and
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Lela Williams: come back to it next meeting.
Deborah Wilson: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah.
Lela Williams: We still have one more meeting.
Deborah Wilson: Alright.
Deborah Wilson: Okay. So we've covered that first category, User Interface Concept, meaning design.
Celia Foster: What's it gonna Yeah, what's it gonna look like.
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Celia Foster: Um.
Deborah Wilson: I ki I kind of like your idea about the retro phone dial, and that the central button could have, maybe our logo on it? It might be the four way scroll, too.
Lela Williams: Yeah,
Deborah Wilson: I mean
Lela Williams: it could
Deborah Wilson: if
Lela Williams: be whatever,
Deborah Wilson: Yeah.
Lela Williams: as long as there's something big in the middle, because like the old phones,
Deborah Wilson: Yeah.
Lela Williams: there's like that just like piece of metal
Deborah Wilson: Mm-hmm.
Lela Williams: or like
Celia Foster: Well,
Lela Williams: a picture or something in the
Celia Foster: my
Lela Williams: middle.
Celia Foster: issue with that is if it got too big though, 'cause if you have the circle and the button in the middle, then is it gonna get wider
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Celia Foster: than
Lela Williams: Oh, that's
Celia Foster: your
Lela Williams: true.
Celia Foster: your hands are, because w And then would the buttons be too small if it was enough to fit on it?
Lela Williams: Good point.
Elaine Hyatt: In the sample ones that you showed us there was one that had the scroll buttons on the side,
Deborah Wilson: Yeah.
Celia Foster: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: which I think if we make it curved like a hand like a hand-shape like if we put the the scroll-button on the side,
Deborah Wilson: Oh, I see what
Elaine Hyatt: that
Deborah Wilson: you mean.
Elaine Hyatt: could be particularly useful.
Deborah Wilson: I think so.
Lela Williams: So scroll buttons on the side and
Deborah Wilson: Yeah,
Lela Williams: then buttons
Deborah Wilson: I like
Lela Williams: on
Deborah Wilson: that.
Lela Williams: top?
Deborah Wilson: 'Kay.
Lela Williams: But we definitely If we have scroll things on the side, we definitely have to have 'em labelled.
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Lela Williams: Yeah, like
Elaine Hyatt: Well,
Lela Williams: on
Elaine Hyatt: if it's
Lela Williams: the side
Elaine Hyatt: just up
Lela Williams: of
Elaine Hyatt: and
Lela Williams: it.
Elaine Hyatt: down
Lela Williams: Oh if it's just up and down.
Celia Foster: But is that for
Elaine Hyatt: Volume or channel.
Celia Foster: Which?
Elaine Hyatt: I don't know.
Lela Williams: Well, you could do
Celia Foster: Do we
Lela Williams: some
Celia Foster: have both
Lela Williams: on both
Celia Foster: sides?
Lela Williams: sides.
Deborah Wilson: Can
Elaine Hyatt: Mm
Deborah Wilson: we?
Elaine Hyatt: yeah. We should probably make it that you have to depress it to activate it then,
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: So that you're
Elaine Hyatt: 'cause
Deborah Wilson: just
Elaine Hyatt: oth
Deborah Wilson: not holding
Elaine Hyatt: otherwise
Lela Williams: That's
Deborah Wilson: it and
Lela Williams: squishy.
Elaine Hyatt: you're
Deborah Wilson: it
Elaine Hyatt: not
Deborah Wilson: changes
Elaine Hyatt: just
Deborah Wilson: the chan
Elaine Hyatt: holding
Lela Williams: That's
Elaine Hyatt: it
Lela Williams: squishy.
Elaine Hyatt: and going like this,
Celia Foster: Well,
Elaine Hyatt: you
Celia Foster: the
Elaine Hyatt: know.
Celia Foster: other option is in instead of a scroll you just have
Lela Williams: have
Celia Foster: the buttons
Lela Williams: buttons.
Celia Foster: up on the side which
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Celia Foster: are on the side.
Elaine Hyatt: Okay.
Deborah Wilson: Yeah.
Lela Williams: Yeah, that.
Deborah Wilson: Hmm.
Deborah Wilson: 'Kay any other ideas?
Celia Foster: Um what colour?
Deborah Wilson: Oh, yeah. Latex covers.
Elaine Hyatt: We
Deborah Wilson: W
Elaine Hyatt: have to make sure that logo always sticks out when we put the latex covers on, so we'll have to like have a little square or something, so that the
Celia Foster: Well
Elaine Hyatt: our logo's
Celia Foster: I sort
Elaine Hyatt: available.
Celia Foster: of like having the a yellow strip at the bottom with the R_R_ like that.
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Celia Foster: And that's at the bottom of it.
Deborah Wilson: I think maybe we should do it on a b button itself though, because if people are able
Celia Foster: Which
Deborah Wilson: to
Celia Foster: button?
Deborah Wilson: change the covers, maybe the on-off button, something, some the menu button, I don't know, but you know if we're gonna put our company logo on there and somebody could just get another one. Are they all gonna have our company logo on them? Every cover?
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah, I don't think we should do that, because that would just be icky.
Deborah Wilson: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: So I think maybe putting it on a button is probably a good idea.
Deborah Wilson: If we want it to be visible and Um are all those those one that you showed where they were um s met silver-metallic looking?
Celia Foster: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: But those are plastic, right?
Celia Foster: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: They're not titanium. I kind of like that look. Uh but, or if
Elaine Hyatt: For
Deborah Wilson: it was
Elaine Hyatt: our base
Deborah Wilson: really
Elaine Hyatt: one?
Deborah Wilson: Yeah, for the base or if we're going for the retro look, I think, like a really shiny black would be cool.
Lela Williams: Yeah,
Deborah Wilson: What
Lela Williams: or like
Deborah Wilson: are your
Lela Williams: a
Deborah Wilson: thoughts?
Lela Williams: gun-metal grey,
Deborah Wilson: Gun-metal
Lela Williams: 'cause then
Deborah Wilson: gray.
Lela Williams: it combines the silver and the black.
Deborah Wilson: There you go, gun-metal gray.
Celia Foster: I'm just really wary of the putting anything on a button.
Deborah Wilson: Why?
Elaine Hyatt: It'll wear off.
Celia Foster: What's the
Lela Williams: Yeah,
Celia Foster: button
Lela Williams: buttons wear
Celia Foster: Well,
Lela Williams: off.
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Celia Foster: w w then what's the button do, and how do you know that that is what the button does? I guess. Just looking at examples, y you just don't ever see the logo on a button, it's always on the actual casing.
Deborah Wilson: Right.
Lela Williams: Hmm.
Elaine Hyatt: There's nothing saying that we have to put the logo on the front
Lela Williams: But
Deborah Wilson: On
Elaine Hyatt: of
Celia Foster: But
Lela Williams: we
Elaine Hyatt: the
Deborah Wilson: the
Lela Williams: want
Celia Foster: you
Elaine Hyatt: actual
Celia Foster: don't
Deborah Wilson: back?
Lela Williams: it to be seen.
Deborah Wilson: It d visible
Celia Foster: But uh,
Lela Williams: We
Celia Foster: yeah,
Lela Williams: need it
Celia Foster: you
Deborah Wilson: Visibility
Lela Williams: to
Celia Foster: don't
Lela Williams: be seen.
Celia Foster: see it.
Deborah Wilson: though 'Cause if it was only on the back really the only time you're gonna see it is
Celia Foster: Well,
Deborah Wilson: when you drop it or
Celia Foster: hang
Deborah Wilson: when
Celia Foster: on.
Deborah Wilson: you're changing the battery.
Celia Foster: The other option is, I don't know if you can see it but it's like if
Deborah Wilson: I can find it again.
Celia Foster: Yeah, it's like the second to last slide.
Deborah Wilson: Okay. And yours was called Interface
Celia Foster: Interface,
Deborah Wilson: Concept?
Celia Foster: yeah.
Deborah Wilson: This one?
Celia Foster: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: Well,
Celia Foster: Um.
Deborah Wilson: for some reason I can't get it to just go to that slide directly.
Celia Foster: Okay, it's the very right one. You see at the bottom, it's kind of difficult to see, but you have like a d sort of s division between the bottom like, where the logo is, and if we have the replaceable section, it's like the top. It doesn't necessarily replace the entire top.
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Celia Foster: And so you have that one piece that stays and the rest just sort of clips in.
Deborah Wilson: Okay,
Celia Foster: If
Deborah Wilson: yes
Celia Foster: c you envisioning it? And so
Deborah Wilson: yes.
Celia Foster: that stays the same when you have the logo, and then you have this s slip that kinda clips in and that's the bit that changes.
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Elaine Hyatt: The only problem is we're using a latex overlay so it actually would go over top of everything and have
Celia Foster: Hmm.
Elaine Hyatt: holes for the buttons, so I was thinking maybe instead of doing that what we could do is leave a space for where
Celia Foster: Yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: the logo should
Celia Foster: Yeah, yeah.
Elaine Hyatt: be.
Deborah Wilson: Like a little cut-out kind
Elaine Hyatt: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: of
Celia Foster: Right. That's
Deborah Wilson: Okay.
Celia Foster: like, you know, a a cellphone it's like the the screen
Lela Williams: Right.
Celia Foster: is always just left opened. And so, what we are gonna do it like bright yellow with the R_R_?
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Lela Williams: Some
Deborah Wilson: Anybody
Lela Williams: of tho
Deborah Wilson: see anything that they liked in
Lela Williams: Well,
Deborah Wilson: these
Lela Williams: some
Deborah Wilson: ones?
Lela Williams: of those buttons though are blue-based. Um
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Lela Williams: well, a lot of those buttons are blue-based. Well, kind
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Lela Williams: of. Um and then if v we do have them illuminate upon contact,
Celia Foster: Yellow.
Lela Williams: they could illuminate yellow.
Deborah Wilson: Yellow,
Celia Foster: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: I like that idea.
Lela Williams: Like if we like the one all the way on the left, uh you ca you can see it on your computer better.
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Lela Williams: Um where the button is actually blue, but the number itself is clear or white or whatever so if you pressed it would illuminate yellow.
Deborah Wilson: Mm.
Lela Williams: So we'd have blue and yellow for the touch
Celia Foster: Oh,
Lela Williams: buttons.
Celia Foster: that one.
Deborah Wilson: I like
Lela Williams: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: the yellow illumination idea, very good. Okay. Any other ideas or thoughts? We
Celia Foster: Um.
Deborah Wilson: all seem to be fairly in agreement about what we wanna
Celia Foster: Ha hang on
Deborah Wilson: do with this project so
Celia Foster: Let
Lela Williams: Mm
Celia Foster: Lela Williams
Lela Williams: yeah.
Celia Foster: catch up.
Deborah Wilson: 'Kay.
Celia Foster: Did we finalise what buttons we're including or we just everything that we said before?
Deborah Wilson: I think there will be time for that later. I'm guessing. 'Kay, well we're gonna wrap this up. Um next meeting is gonna start in thirty minutes, and here's what we're each of us going to do. The I_D_ is going to do the look and feel design, the U_I_D_ the user interface design. I think you're going to get a lot of, I mean, the final say on what buttons get put We'll all talk about it, but I think, that's pretty much what you're gonna do, right?
Celia Foster: Yeah.
Deborah Wilson: I guess. 'Kay. And you're gonna do some product evaluation. Okay, and right now, the I_D_ and U_I_D_, you two are going to work together on a prototype using modelling clay.
Elaine Hyatt: Great.
Celia Foster: Fun.
Elaine Hyatt: Play Doh.
Deborah Wilson: Yeah. Okay, and you should all be getting an email pretty soon. Alright. Well,
Elaine Hyatt: Wonderful
Deborah Wilson: thank you for a very productive meeting.
Elaine Hyatt: Ooh. | Lela Williams presented more information on user requirements which showed that users wanted the look of a high-tech device that was still simple to use. She presented the fruit and vegetable fashion trend that the group will integrate into their design. Celia Foster presented several ideas for the interface design taken from existing product designs. Elaine Hyatt discussed the necessary internal components and presented options for energy sources and materials. Celia Foster also presented the sample speaker technology recently developed by the company. The group had a discussion to finalize the prototype features. It was decided that the device will be small with a locator function instead of having a charging stand. Voice recognition will not be included outside of the locator function. It will be covered by interchangeable latex casings. To incorporate the company logo and color, the buttons will be illuminated yellow when pressed and the logo will be displayed through the latex casings. Deborah Wilson instructed Celia Foster and Elaine Hyatt to build the prototype, with Celia Foster deciding which buttons will be included. Lela Williams will prepare a prototype evaluation. | 2 | amisum | train |
Elaine Orr: I wanna find our if our remote works.
Sallie Teran: Elaine Orr too.
Elaine Orr: Oh.
Sallie Teran: Okay.
Elaine Orr: Whoohoo.
Sallie Teran: Um here's the agenda for our last meeting. Um after the opening we're going to have a prototype presentation, then we're going to discuss the evaluation criteria and the financing of our remote. Then we're going to evaluate the product and I think the whole production process, and then we're gonna close it up, and we have forty minutes, so let's get started. Oh, no, let's have the prototype presentation.
Lenora Wires: Mm 'kay, you ready?
Catherine Gliem: Um sure. You or Elaine Orr?
Lenora Wires: Y you read that stuff, since
Catherine Gliem: Okay
Lenora Wires: you wrote it.
Catherine Gliem: Well. since
Lenora Wires: I'll
Catherine Gliem: our
Lenora Wires: be the Vanna.
Catherine Gliem: materials aren't exactly what we were going for, I'm just gonna translate what this all means for you. The base is gonna be gunmetal gray, which is what we had decided, and it's gonna be plastic. Um then there's the latex cover, which is what you see as red. Um because it can be replaceable, we just kinda went with the colour.
Sallie Teran: Right.
Catherine Gliem: Um and then the top. Um and the buttons will be a l much lighter blue, almost see-through.
Sallie Teran: Hmm.
Catherine Gliem: It's just sort of a very pale blue and a
Elaine Orr: That's
Catherine Gliem: light-up
Elaine Orr: nice.
Catherine Gliem: yellow.
Sallie Teran: Yeah.
Catherine Gliem: The whole thing lights up if you press any button, rather than it just that one button will light up.
Elaine Orr: Good.
Catherine Gliem: Um and then at the bottom we have our logo. Um bright yellow sort of design with the R_R_ which will actually look like our logo.
Sallie Teran: Great.
Catherine Gliem: And then on the side you have the buttons. They're one button, but they kind of push up and down.
Sallie Teran: Okay.
Catherine Gliem: I don't think they're scrolling.
Lenora Wires: No. They're just buttons.
Catherine Gliem: Right, yeah. And then yeah, the buttons.
Lenora Wires: On off switch will be here and as you've noticed on our prototype um they've ended up with a curvature kind of, by concave sort of thing, except for, you know, can't see underneath.
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Lenora Wires: So I'm hoping that when we get to production we can actually make them like that, because they're very nice to stock you know, stick your finger in
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Lenora Wires: Um.
Catherine Gliem: Thumb-shaped.
Lenora Wires: the two squared buttons are are two probably least used, menu, mute, and then these are the numbers, so our channel and our volume will be on either side.
Catherine Gliem: Yeah. And then the last thing is just that it'll be black labelling on top, just which we didn't do.
Sallie Teran: Okay. And did you determine um the curvature of the bottom part of it for the hand, is it gonna be a single or a double?
Lenora Wires: I'd say a single.
Sallie Teran: Single.
Catherine Gliem: Single.
Sallie Teran: Single sounds good, 'cause it's not
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: big enough to really constitute a double.
Catherine Gliem: Right.
Lenora Wires: Yeah, it's only actually the size of my hand.
Sallie Teran: Great. Great. I think you did an awesome job.
Elaine Orr: Yeah, I think it's a beautiful
Sallie Teran: It is beautiful, and it's everything that we discussed.
Elaine Orr: Yeah. Good job, you guys.
Sallie Teran: Good job.
Catherine Gliem: Oh thank
Lenora Wires: Whoohoo.
Catherine Gliem: you.
Elaine Orr: Those are really good.
Sallie Teran: Alright what's next in our agenda? Um we're gonna discuss the evaluation criteria, and that's with Courtney.
Elaine Orr: Okay, it's a PowerPoint presentation. I don't really know exactly what we should uh talk about. It's under evaluation.
Sallie Teran: Right.
Elaine Orr: Alright. Um so these are the criteria we're gonna ask, is it easy to use, is it fashionable uh I guess we should down so we can
Sallie Teran: Mm.
Elaine Orr: reference them.
Catherine Gliem: Feel good meaning what?
Elaine Orr: Like does it feel good,
Catherine Gliem: Physically,
Elaine Orr: like yeah, physically.
Sallie Teran: Right.
Catherine Gliem: okay.
Sallie Teran: Sqi
Elaine Orr: That's just for current trend.
Sallie Teran: Right.
Elaine Orr: It doesn't really count, you guys.
Lenora Wires: Yeah, it was a little difficult to incorporate the cover with the cherry fruit on it.
Elaine Orr: Yeah. But it's so we do have removable covers, right?
Sallie Teran: Right.
Lenora Wires: Yes.
Elaine Orr: Yeah, well then that's covered. And so
Sallie Teran: 'Kay.
Elaine Orr: we n k everybody have that?
Sallie Teran: I'll wait.
Elaine Orr: Yeah, she's got it. It's
Catherine Gliem: Yeah.
Elaine Orr: good. Yeah. Okay so, we're using the criteria uh for a seven point scale, and so we need to discuss how we feel. It falls within this range, so for easy to use, do we feel it's very easy to use?
Sallie Teran: Are we
Catherine Gliem: True
Sallie Teran: going
Catherine Gliem: or false,
Sallie Teran: to indi
Catherine Gliem: easy
Sallie Teran: I say
Catherine Gliem: to use.
Sallie Teran: we individually rate what
Elaine Orr: You
Sallie Teran: do you
Elaine Orr: guys
Sallie Teran: say? Just
Catherine Gliem: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: orally. Why not? We have okay.
Elaine Orr: Okay.
Sallie Teran: Um easy to use. I vote six.
Elaine Orr: Oh wait, that's false.
Sallie Teran: Oh, two.
Elaine Orr: Okay.
Lenora Wires: I'd say two as well.
Catherine Gliem: Yeah, two.
Elaine Orr: Two.
Sallie Teran: Uh
Elaine Orr: That's what I say.
Sallie Teran: hello, we're great.
Elaine Orr: Okay, fashionable?
Sallie Teran: Um
Lenora Wires: At the
Sallie Teran: one.
Lenora Wires: moment, no.
Elaine Orr: No.
Sallie Teran: No.
Elaine Orr: I mean like no, I think it's very
Sallie Teran: Elaine Orr
Elaine Orr: fashionable.
Sallie Teran: too, very chic.
Elaine Orr: I thi I would give it a one.
Lenora Wires: Okay.
Sallie Teran: One, I give it
Lenora Wires: I'll
Sallie Teran: a one.
Lenora Wires: give it a two, because at the moment it's not looking that way.
Elaine Orr: Well,
Sallie Teran: Oh,
Elaine Orr: that's
Sallie Teran: and
Elaine Orr: that's
Sallie Teran: ma it's
Elaine Orr: just
Sallie Teran: a
Elaine Orr: like
Sallie Teran: prototype,
Elaine Orr: that's a clay, it's
Sallie Teran: right.
Elaine Orr: a prototype. What do you
Catherine Gliem: Mm
Elaine Orr: think?
Catherine Gliem: I don't think it's that fashionable. I'd give it like three or four.
Sallie Teran: Well,
Elaine Orr: Okay.
Sallie Teran: now I'm. So, the average is about a two.
Elaine Orr: Yeah, it's a two.
Catherine Gliem: But then I'm not
Sallie Teran: Two
Catherine Gliem: fashionable,
Sallie Teran: or three.
Catherine Gliem: so don't
Sallie Teran: Two
Catherine Gliem: use
Sallie Teran: point
Catherine Gliem: my opinion.
Sallie Teran: five.
Elaine Orr: That's okay. Yeah.
Lenora Wires: Neither
Elaine Orr: Um
Lenora Wires: are all o all the customers we have, either.
Elaine Orr: does it feel good?
Sallie Teran: Imagine, since we obviously don't
Elaine Orr: I
Catherine Gliem: Does
Sallie Teran: have
Catherine Gliem: it
Elaine Orr: feel
Catherine Gliem: feel
Sallie Teran: that.
Elaine Orr: like
Catherine Gliem: good?
Lenora Wires: Uh the shape of it actually does uh.
Sallie Teran: And it's i it is very ergonomically designed. It's gonna be curved.
Catherine Gliem: Yeah, it's gonna be thicker.
Sallie Teran: Yeah.
Catherine Gliem: Depth.
Elaine Orr: I think it feels good.
Sallie Teran: I think so too.
Elaine Orr: I'll give it a two.
Sallie Teran: 'Kay. Two.
Catherine Gliem: I'll give it a one.
Elaine Orr: What do you say?
Lenora Wires: I'd say a two.
Sallie Teran: Alright,
Elaine Orr: Okay.
Sallie Teran: average is two. Is it technologically innovative? Oh sorry I'm taking over your job
Elaine Orr: Oh
Sallie Teran: here.
Elaine Orr: no, it's fine, you're
Sallie Teran: Go right
Elaine Orr: I mean
Sallie Teran: ahead.
Elaine Orr: you're Project Manager. Um yeah, I mean and it does it have voice I mean the phrase recognition on it?
Sallie Teran: Yes. Right? We were able to do it with that kind of
Catherine Gliem: Oh right, the
Sallie Teran: chip.
Lenora Wires: We could do it with the chip, yes. It wasn't we have no
Elaine Orr: And
Lenora Wires: reflection
Elaine Orr: there's no way you can
Lenora Wires: of
Elaine Orr: represent
Lenora Wires: it on the
Elaine Orr: it on
Lenora Wires: prototype,
Elaine Orr: here.
Sallie Teran: Yeah,
Lenora Wires: but that's
Sallie Teran: right.
Lenora Wires: because
Elaine Orr: Y
Lenora Wires: it's
Sallie Teran: That
Lenora Wires: only
Sallie Teran: was
Lenora Wires: two dimensions,
Sallie Teran: 'kay.
Lenora Wires: really.
Sallie Teran: And we discussed that
Elaine Orr: Yeah,
Catherine Gliem: Right.
Sallie Teran: being
Elaine Orr: so.
Sallie Teran: included.
Elaine Orr: Then yes, then I would well it isn't what else would it need
Lenora Wires: It
Elaine Orr: for it to be technologically innovative?
Sallie Teran: Well we don' have the you know, we can't say channel, and it changes the channel,
Elaine Orr: And
Sallie Teran: channel
Elaine Orr: it doesn't
Sallie Teran: eight.
Elaine Orr: cover anything other then T_V_, so
Sallie Teran: Right.
Elaine Orr: I'd probably give it a three.
Lenora Wires: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: Okay.
Elaine Orr: Even though it is for just a T_V_ remote it's uh very advanced. But it is just a T_V_ remote.
Sallie Teran: Yeah. I'd go for a three or four on that one, so
Catherine Gliem: Yeah I go four.
Sallie Teran: okay, let's go for a three point five.
Lenora Wires: Three and an half.
Sallie Teran: Alright, and the last criteria is it is it um
Catherine Gliem: Squishy and fruity.
Sallie Teran: Well,
Elaine Orr: Well
Sallie Teran: we've covered that with
Catherine Gliem: It's
Sallie Teran: the
Catherine Gliem: just trendy, basically.
Sallie Teran: trendy.
Elaine Orr: yeah, so I'd give it a two.
Lenora Wires: It's
Sallie Teran: Sure.
Lenora Wires: capable of being
Sallie Teran: Capable.
Lenora Wires: squishy
Elaine Orr: Oh, it's very
Lenora Wires: and
Elaine Orr: capable
Sallie Teran: Very
Lenora Wires: fruity.
Sallie Teran: capable.
Elaine Orr: of being squishy and fruity.
Catherine Gliem: Okay.
Sallie Teran: And it's very important.
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: 'Kay, there we go.
Elaine Orr: Okay,
Sallie Teran: So.
Elaine Orr: next.
Sallie Teran: Next.
Elaine Orr: So um our re model slightly resembling a giant delicious cookie appears to be a winner, and uh hopefully we'll sell millions. Good job, team.
Lenora Wires: How did you get that in there?
Elaine Orr: What?
Lenora Wires: The slightly resembling a giant delicious cookie.
Elaine Orr: It it does.
Sallie Teran: It does.
Lenora Wires: That was good.
Elaine Orr: Thanks.
Sallie Teran: Very good. Alright, let's go back to this No, that's it. Hmm. Oops. Okay, so now uh we're moving on to finance, okay. I'm gonna show you an Excel spreadsheet and we're going to fill it in together based on what components we're including in our remote and see if it's under twelve fifty Euro. If so, we can proceed, if not, we need to go back to the drawing board a little bit. 'Kay? So let Elaine Orr bring that up. Here we go. Alright. Um it's not hand dynamo, it's powered by battery,
Lenora Wires: Yep.
Sallie Teran: so we give it a
Elaine Orr: Two.
Sallie Teran: Number of components you plan to use. Do I just put quantity being one battery, or
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: Yeah.
Lenora Wires: Mm 'kay.
Sallie Teran: But if it's a do you wanna go for this is where we need to make a final call on if it's a lithium or do we wanna go triple A_s, 'cause triple A_s we're gonna have t do more than one battery. Oh, let's just go for a lithium. What do you say?
Elaine Orr: Yeah, let's
Lenora Wires: Yeah,
Elaine Orr: let's do a lithium.
Sallie Teran: I think
Lenora Wires: it's.
Sallie Teran: uh I think
Elaine Orr: We're gon
Sallie Teran: the people
Elaine Orr: that's gon
Sallie Teran: who purchase this are gonna be technologically
Elaine Orr: Nologically advanced,
Sallie Teran: right.
Elaine Orr: yeah.
Sallie Teran: Okay, down to the electronics um section. We're gonna need this kind, correct,
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: if we do
Lenora Wires: Yep.
Sallie Teran: the voice sensor, so one of those. It is a single-curved, so one of those.
Elaine Orr: Uh.
Sallie Teran: Oh. What's that? Yeah, that's
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: correct. 'Kay, down here,
Catherine Gliem: It's
Sallie Teran: case
Elaine Orr: We
Catherine Gliem: plastic.
Sallie Teran: material.
Elaine Orr: plastic.
Sallie Teran: Plastic.
Elaine Orr: And
Catherine Gliem: And
Elaine Orr: special
Catherine Gliem: special
Elaine Orr: colour.
Catherine Gliem: colour.
Sallie Teran: 'Kay. Down here, interface type. We're gonna have the integrated scroll scroll
Catherine Gliem: No, we
Sallie Teran: wheel.
Catherine Gliem: don't have the scroll.
Sallie Teran: Isn't oh those are just regular
Elaine Orr: But
Sallie Teran: buttons.
Elaine Orr: it's
Lenora Wires: Well,
Catherine Gliem: Buttons.
Lenora Wires: that's the push-button too, right there.
Elaine Orr: Yeah, but i
Sallie Teran: This?
Elaine Orr: so
Lenora Wires: Integrated
Elaine Orr: i
Lenora Wires: scroll-wheel or push-button. We're really having just push-button interface.
Sallie Teran: Okay, so we can just go um.
Elaine Orr: But will we w actually we'll need two, won't we? One for the top and then one for the s one e for each side.
Lenora Wires: But it that just covers the type of button we're having. Because we're not doing a scroll on the side, it's still push-button.
Catherine Gliem: Oh like the twenty nine means like you have both scrolls and
Lenora Wires: Push-button.
Catherine Gliem: push-buttons.
Elaine Orr: Okay.
Sallie Teran: Right
Lenora Wires: But we just
Sallie Teran: I
Catherine Gliem: But
Sallie Teran: think
Catherine Gliem: we
Lenora Wires: have
Catherine Gliem: don't
Sallie Teran: she's
Catherine Gliem: have
Lenora Wires: push
Catherine Gliem: any scrolls.
Sallie Teran: I think what Courtney's talking about is do we need to put two
Elaine Orr: Like
Sallie Teran: here?
Elaine Orr: because there's like one interface right here and then because it's not gonna be on the same plane when you press the button. There's
Sallie Teran: Right.
Elaine Orr: gonna have to be
Lenora Wires: Yeah.
Elaine Orr: additional signals on the sides. So
Lenora Wires: Okay.
Elaine Orr: is that gonna be an extra one on each side?
Sallie Teran: I don't know, they might put us well, let's
Catherine Gliem: Two interfaces,
Sallie Teran: just.
Catherine Gliem: is that what w should we
Lenora Wires: Let's
Sallie Teran: Two
Catherine Gliem: s
Lenora Wires: call
Catherine Gliem: say?
Sallie Teran: or
Lenora Wires: it th
Sallie Teran: would
Elaine Orr: Or
Sallie Teran: it
Elaine Orr: three,
Sallie Teran: be three?
Elaine Orr: because of one on each side and
Catherine Gliem: Okay,
Elaine Orr: one on
Catherine Gliem: fine.
Elaine Orr: top.
Catherine Gliem: Yeah.
Elaine Orr: I mean it's fine 'cause it comes out the same as twenty nine. Well less than twenty nine even.
Lenora Wires: Okay.
Sallie Teran: Okay and we're gonna button supplements the buttons are no
Elaine Orr: They're
Sallie Teran: uh
Elaine Orr: a special colour.
Sallie Teran: okay.
Elaine Orr: Um they're uh they're a special form, 'cause
Sallie Teran: Are
Elaine Orr: they're
Sallie Teran: they?
Elaine Orr: indented.
Sallie Teran: Oh, right.
Catherine Gliem: And
Elaine Orr: And,
Catherine Gliem: then
Elaine Orr: they're
Catherine Gliem: s
Elaine Orr: a special material.
Catherine Gliem: yeah.
Sallie Teran: Mm. Well, we're under cost then. Alright.
Catherine Gliem: We're over?
Sallie Teran: No,
Lenora Wires: Grand.
Elaine Orr: We're
Sallie Teran: we're
Elaine Orr: under.
Sallie Teran: under. Twelve
Catherine Gliem: Okay.
Sallie Teran: point five is our limit.
Catherine Gliem: Oh,
Sallie Teran: We've
Catherine Gliem: I see.
Sallie Teran: got eleven point two.
Lenora Wires: So
Sallie Teran: Alright.
Lenora Wires: we can go to production.
Sallie Teran: We can go to
Sallie Teran: I dunno what I just did. Okay. Now we're gonna talk about the project process um and whether or not we're satisfied with the whole process and the result. Um did we have a lot of room for creativity? Did we have a lot of room for individual leadership, um teamwork, and the means, meaning the technology that we used to produce our little guy there, we found any new ideas. Now, question is, how do we do this?
Lenora Wires: Go back.
Elaine Orr: I think we just discuss it.
Sallie Teran: Discuss,
Lenora Wires: Previous.
Sallie Teran: sure. Alright. Who want who would like to go first?
Lenora Wires: We think
Catherine Gliem: We didn't
Lenora Wires: we got
Catherine Gliem: have
Lenora Wires: stifled
Catherine Gliem: a whiteboard.
Lenora Wires: for cri creativity by the company itself, in restricting us only to using a T_V_ remote,
Sallie Teran: Hmm.
Lenora Wires: initially.
Catherine Gliem: Yeah.
Elaine Orr: Oh
Sallie Teran: Hmm.
Elaine Orr: that's true.
Catherine Gliem: And no internet.
Elaine Orr: Yeah. No, yeah, that's a good point. 'Cause I'd forgotten that that wasn't our decision, yeah.
Sallie Teran: And how did you feel about the whole the whole process though?
Elaine Orr: Oh, overall I mean I thought we did a good job like We got to choose basically we had control over minus it being just merely a T_V_ remote we got to choose what we wanted to do with it.
Sallie Teran: Right, and we got say over what how technologically advanced it should be and also how fashionable, which I kind of
Elaine Orr: And we're a fashion forward
Sallie Teran: like
Elaine Orr: technology
Sallie Teran: we
Elaine Orr: company.
Sallie Teran: yep. You
Lenora Wires: right.
Sallie Teran: know it. Um what about um the teamwork aspect? How did you guys enjoy making the model, the prototype?
Catherine Gliem: I think we did well.
Lenora Wires: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: I think ya' did. Did you work well together in there, and
Catherine Gliem: Yep.
Lenora Wires: Well,
Sallie Teran: 'kay.
Lenora Wires: no, there
Elaine Orr: Minus
Lenora Wires: was
Elaine Orr: that one
Lenora Wires: there
Elaine Orr: fight.
Lenora Wires: was scratching and fighting,
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Lenora Wires: but
Sallie Teran: Oh my
Lenora Wires: no.
Sallie Teran: God,
Catherine Gliem: Gouges.
Sallie Teran: and we've all been a pretty congenial team here, I think.
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: We hadn't
Elaine Orr: I
Sallie Teran: had any ma
Elaine Orr: mean
Sallie Teran: fallings
Elaine Orr: minus you
Sallie Teran: out.
Elaine Orr: guys being wha what is it, the survey, annoying or
Lenora Wires: Irritating.
Elaine Orr: what is it?
Sallie Teran: Irritating.
Elaine Orr: Irritating,
Catherine Gliem: Irritating.
Elaine Orr: yeah. Wow that's a it's definitely a strong one.
Sallie Teran: Okay.
Lenora Wires: The means, the whiteboard didn't work.
Catherine Gliem: And
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: Yeah.
Catherine Gliem: no internet.
Sallie Teran: I have to knock that one down a couple
Elaine Orr: Yeah,
Sallie Teran: notches.
Elaine Orr: and no internet.
Lenora Wires: A and our friend here really feels
Catherine Gliem: Misses.
Lenora Wires: strongly about the internet.
Catherine Gliem: I do.
Elaine Orr: And the digital
Catherine Gliem: There's so much available.
Elaine Orr: the
Catherine Gliem: Like
Elaine Orr: digital
Catherine Gliem: it's information
Elaine Orr: pens
Sallie Teran: Yeah, digital pens.
Elaine Orr: were they
Lenora Wires: I
Elaine Orr: were pretty
Lenora Wires: really
Elaine Orr: cool.
Lenora Wires: appreciated
Sallie Teran: They were fine.
Lenora Wires: those, yeah.
Elaine Orr: Yeah they were fun, even though I'm not really sure what I could do with them, but they are awesome.
Lenora Wires: The use of the laptops for receiving everything. It
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: Right,
Lenora Wires: was
Sallie Teran: laptops are
Lenora Wires: wireless
Sallie Teran: extremely handy,
Lenora Wires: too, so.
Sallie Teran: wireless.
Elaine Orr: And these things
Sallie Teran: And
Elaine Orr: whoa.
Sallie Teran: that we have a shared network where we can put all of the
Catherine Gliem: Yeah.
Lenora Wires: And let's not forget the sexy dual microphones everyone gets
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Lenora Wires: to wear.
Elaine Orr: And Big Brother.
Sallie Teran: Big brother.
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: 'Kay, have we found any new ideas through this process?
Elaine Orr: Um we are really gonna sell this. Ta-da.
Sallie Teran: For something that looks cool and also has what I want it to b do technologically.
Catherine Gliem: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: And that's your right brain taking over, w wanting the artistic, the fashionable, the hip,
Elaine Orr: Mm-hmm.
Sallie Teran: you know. If we all just went out and bought useful things, I don't think I mean that's not
Catherine Gliem: Well,
Sallie Teran: what
Catherine Gliem: that's
Sallie Teran: technology.
Catherine Gliem: why I don't like uh Macs or Apples, just 'cause I look at it, and I know it's probably a very good computer, but I look at it, and I'm taken back to elementary school, 'cause they look the same.
Sallie Teran: Mm.
Catherine Gliem: They
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Catherine Gliem: look like they did when I was in elementary school,
Elaine Orr: Yeah,
Catherine Gliem: and
Elaine Orr: 'cause
Catherine Gliem: that's
Elaine Orr: they're
Catherine Gliem: so old-fashioned
Elaine Orr: pretty and
Catherine Gliem: to
Elaine Orr: just
Catherine Gliem: Elaine Orr.
Elaine Orr: like
Lenora Wires: The Toronto
Sallie Teran: Yeah.
Lenora Wires: district school would only use his Macs with their kids.
Catherine Gliem: Exactly, so I associate them with like really low-tech,
Sallie Teran: Yeah.
Catherine Gliem: really cheap,
Sallie Teran: Just the Mac
Catherine Gliem: bad
Sallie Teran: font bothers
Elaine Orr: Uh yeah.
Sallie Teran: Elaine Orr
Catherine Gliem: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: even. But I do like iPods, go figure.
Elaine Orr: Yeah, no, iPods They want all those words for
Sallie Teran: Yeah.
Elaine Orr: presentation,
Lenora Wires: Well,
Elaine Orr: even
Lenora Wires: i
Elaine Orr: the
Lenora Wires: iPods
Elaine Orr: plugs.
Lenora Wires: are now quite trendy, and
Sallie Teran: Mm-hmm.
Lenora Wires: they come in different colours.
Sallie Teran: Colours. Exactly.
Lenora Wires: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: I mean how many people went out and bough a Nokia phone, back when we were like in high school, just so they could get the changeable face
Elaine Orr: Oh
Sallie Teran: plates.
Elaine Orr: yeah, everybody.
Sallie Teran: Okay. Anyway,
Lenora Wires: Not Elaine Orr.
Sallie Teran: so
Elaine Orr: Mine
Sallie Teran: that
Elaine Orr: is
Catherine Gliem: But the
Sallie Teran: is
Lenora Wires: I
Catherine Gliem: my
Lenora Wires: didn't
Sallie Teran: definitely
Elaine Orr: amber.
Lenora Wires: have a phone
Sallie Teran: at work.
Lenora Wires: 'til university.
Catherine Gliem: but my
Elaine Orr: Oh.
Catherine Gliem: one issue is just like the whole it's for T_V_ only. I was like who's gonna buy a remote just for the T_V_ unless they've lost theirs.
Elaine Orr: Look at
Sallie Teran: Yeah.
Elaine Orr: it. That is a piece
Sallie Teran: Fashionable
Catherine Gliem: You're kidding.
Elaine Orr: of
Sallie Teran: chic
Elaine Orr: work.
Sallie Teran: people
Elaine Orr: Wow.
Sallie Teran: will.
Catherine Gliem: No,
Elaine Orr: Marketing Director says yeah. Fashionable
Catherine Gliem: no.
Elaine Orr: people
Catherine Gliem: No, marketing
Elaine Orr: will buy
Catherine Gliem: has
Elaine Orr: it.
Catherine Gliem: to actually create the desire for it.
Elaine Orr: Oh, I will create
Lenora Wires: That's okay.
Elaine Orr: desire.
Lenora Wires: We can create a commercial where they think that all their needs will be met. This
Catherine Gliem: Ri
Lenora Wires: will help them find
Sallie Teran: Hmm.
Lenora Wires: the one.
Catherine Gliem: They'll be sexy with it.
Lenora Wires: That's right.
Elaine Orr: that's the fig-leaf.
Catherine Gliem: Oh right.
Elaine Orr: Mm. That'll sell.
Sallie Teran: There you
Catherine Gliem: Let
Sallie Teran: go,
Catherine Gliem: you
Lenora Wires: And
Sallie Teran: marketing.
Catherine Gliem: loose.
Lenora Wires: so the serpent says, use our remote.
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Sallie Teran: Alright.
Catherine Gliem: Yeah,
Elaine Orr: Yeah.
Catherine Gliem: no.
Sallie Teran: Okay, we're gonna wrap this up now. Um the costs are within the budget, we evaluated the project, and now we're gonna complete the final questionnaire and meeting summary, and then we're going to have a big giant party, apparently, according to this, so.
Lenora Wires: Whoohoo.
Sallie Teran: Alright, thank you team,
Lenora Wires: Margaritas
Sallie Teran: you did a great
Lenora Wires: for everyone.
Sallie Teran: job, it was lovely working with you.
Catherine Gliem: Good.
Elaine Orr: You too.
Lenora Wires: Yay. Thanks to the Project Leader. Now we know w | Catherine Gliem and Lenora Wires presented the prototype and displayed its gunmetal color, removable casing, buttons, logo, and ergonomic design. Elaine Orr gave an evaluation of the prototype using the group's initial criteria for the remote. The group decided that enough of their initial ideas and criteria for the remote were satisfied to be able to continue with the project. Sallie Teran analyzed the final production cost; the cost was lower than initially projected, at 11.2 Euros. The group decided to use one lithium battery instead of several triple A alkaline batteries. Sallie Teran then led a discussion on the project process. The group felt that they worked well together and were pleased with the prototype. They complained, though, that they felt constrained by the management's directives, that they had difficulties using the meeting-room equipment, and that they did not have internet access during the project. All participants were instructed to fill out a final questionnaire. | 2 | amisum | train |
Cleopatra Stephens: Here we go. Welcome everybody. Um, I'm Abigail Claflin. You can call Rita Sharp Abbie. 'S see. PowerPoint, that's not it. There we go. So this is our kick off meeting. Um and I guess we should all get acquainted. Let's shall we all introduce ourselves?
Rita Sharp: Hi I'm Chiara, I'm the um Marketing Expert Um. would you like Rita Sharp to talk about my aims at the moment, or would you like Rita Sharp to just say my name and then we can talk about business
Cleopatra Stephens: I think
Rita Sharp: later?
Cleopatra Stephens: we'll get around to that, yeah.
Rita Sharp: We'll
Cleopatra Stephens: So
Rita Sharp: get
Cleopatra Stephens: this
Rita Sharp: round
Cleopatra Stephens: is
Rita Sharp: to
Cleopatra Stephens: just
Rita Sharp: that later.
Cleopatra Stephens: introductions
Rita Sharp: My
Cleopatra Stephens: yeah.
Rita Sharp: name is Chiara and I'm Rita Sharp.
Cleopatra Stephens: Okay. I forgot to s say I'm Cleopatra Stephens but I figured you all knew that already, um so.
Barbara Barham: I'm Stephanie I am Barbara Barham.
Rosemary Callicutt: I'm Krista and I'm Rosemary Callicutt.
Cleopatra Stephens: Okay. Um so f here's our agenda for today. Um we're gonna do some tool training, project plan and discuss then close. Um so. So our aim is to produce a remote control that is original, trendy and user friendly. And to do this, we have to um there's certain things we have to consider about functional aspects and conceptual design of the thing. So. We'll get to that. Oh there it is. Right. Functional design, conceptual design and detailed design. So throughout our next couple of meetings we'll we'll be covering these things. Um so we're gonna try out our white board. If we'll all draw our favourite animal, to sum up the characteristics of that animal.
Barbara Barham: So
Cleopatra Stephens: Okay.
Barbara Barham: you want us to draw it and then talk about it? Or just draw it?
Rita Sharp: I think both.
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Barbara Barham: Okay. Why don't
Cleopatra Stephens: Both.
Barbara Barham: we do both.
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: Who starts?
Barbara Barham: Right.
Rita Sharp: We ought to decide who starts and all that. No?
Cleopatra Stephens: Any
Rita Sharp: Uh-huh.
Cleopatra Stephens: volunteers? Does anyone know what they wanna draw?
Barbara Barham: Mm, I gotta think about it for a second like. Uh Does it have to be functional, trendy and user friendly?
Cleopatra Stephens: I don't think so.
Barbara Barham: Um. Okay, I'll draw. I'll draw one. Make sure my things here.
Barbara Barham: Uh-oh.
Barbara Barham: Right.
Barbara Barham: Okay, my favourite animal is see.
Barbara Barham: Oops.
Cleopatra Stephens: A dolphin.
Barbara Barham: Yeah, it's
Cleopatra Stephens: 'S like playing Pictionary.
Barbara Barham: Yeah, I guess it has a fin on top too, yeah.
Barbara Barham: It's my dolphin.
Cleopatra Stephens: So what characteristics do you like about your animal?
Barbara Barham: I like its tail. Um, no, I think dolphins are really uh I dunno, they're smart and they they're cute and they like swimming and that's cool, like
Cleopatra Stephens: They're graceful.
Barbara Barham: they're graceful yeah, and they're so
Cleopatra Stephens: Sleek.
Barbara Barham: Yeah they're sleek and they look intelligent and I don't know, they're I guess it's the whole like binocular
Cleopatra Stephens: I don't know how
Barbara Barham: vision
Cleopatra Stephens: intelligent
Barbara Barham: thing.
Cleopatra Stephens: that one looks.
Barbara Barham: Yeah he he doesn't look that smart. He's a I dunno um they're I think it's cool the the um the interaction that or the th things that the reasons people seem to like you know you get ex you know people are sitting on the beach and p they're like oh look there's dolphins and it's kinda like but they're you know they jump around in the water and they're happy and they're mammals, but they
Cleopatra Stephens: Yes. Does
Barbara Barham: swim.
Cleopatra Stephens: anybody else wanna draw their animal?
Rosemary Callicutt: Suppose I can draw an animal, yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: Uh-oh there goes the ten. It's a cat.
Rosemary Callicutt: Yeah. I don't know. They sleep all day, they're easy to draw.
Cleopatra Stephens: Do you wanna
Rita Sharp: Uh yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: anything? I dunno
Rita Sharp: Well
Cleopatra Stephens: if
Rita Sharp: I
Cleopatra Stephens: the
Rita Sharp: had
Rosemary Callicutt: I think the pen is
Cleopatra Stephens: the
Rosemary Callicutt: running out of
Cleopatra Stephens: ah.
Rita Sharp: spare one. So I'll use the spare one. Um but it's harder to draw
Barbara Barham: And
Rita Sharp: um.
Barbara Barham: the pen's dying.
Rita Sharp: Um.
Cleopatra Stephens: A
Rita Sharp: Uh.
Cleopatra Stephens: horse.
Barbara Barham: Horse.
Rita Sharp: Um I don't really know
Cleopatra Stephens: That's
Rita Sharp: how
Cleopatra Stephens: very
Rita Sharp: the legs
Cleopatra Stephens: good.
Rita Sharp: go, but anyway I will do that. Um, and the main reason is they're pretty. I think they're very pretty and they go well with the environment, and I like the way they run and I used to do horse riding and they're just very sort of sturdy and nice animals. And I like the way um they feel, sort of under under the hand, I think that's pretty much it. Um
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: This cord's
Cleopatra Stephens: Uh. Right. Actually I haven't thought of anything yet. Uh
Cleopatra Stephens: It's a pig. So I'm thinking we should design a remote control that's water resistant, strong and furry. What do you think, yeah?
Barbara Barham: And furry.
Cleopatra Stephens: This is yeah, well like a cat, you know,
Barbara Barham: Textile
Cleopatra Stephens: soft yeah.
Barbara Barham: tactile, tactile remote
Cleopatra Stephens: Although
Barbara Barham: control.
Cleopatra Stephens: uh I'll just put there. Right.
Barbara Barham: You're dragging a you have a tail.
Cleopatra Stephens: Oh my gosh, this is disastrous. Sorry about that. Okay. So moving on. Our selling price goal is twenty five Euro and profit aim is fifty million Euro. So I'm guessing that we're not actually in Scotland, we're in some European country. Um, and we will hope to sell this internationally.
Barbara Barham: Sorry can you just say that what's the what are our price goals again?
Cleopatra Stephens: Um selling price is twenty five Euro.
Barbara Barham: Okay.
Cleopatra Stephens: Profit aim fifty million Euro.
Rita Sharp: How many should we sell then? Um, a lot,
Cleopatra Stephens: Anyone
Rita Sharp: two
Cleopatra Stephens: a mathematician?
Rita Sharp: two two million, two mi no, more f four million.
Rosemary Callicutt: Two million.
Rita Sharp: Four million. And it well it's the profit so if a profit for each is twelve
Rosemary Callicutt: Oh,
Rita Sharp: fifty,
Rosemary Callicutt: yeah.
Rita Sharp: that'll do four million.
Rita Sharp: It is a lot. Uh.
Cleopatra Stephens: So f that's a fifty percent um uh. Um, I don't know what these mean because I didn't actually make the slide-show. Experience with remote control. So I guess we have to reflect on our experiences with remote controls to decide what um we would like to see in a convenient, practical, nice remote control. Um so do we have any initial ideas for uh how this remote control should be designed or formatted or the the buttons
Rita Sharp: Um,
Cleopatra Stephens: it should have.
Rita Sharp: I think one thing is that it should be easy to find
Barbara Barham: I was
Rita Sharp: bec
Barbara Barham: thinking that too.
Rita Sharp: yeah
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Barbara Barham: I
Rita Sharp: bec
Barbara Barham: think we should design something that has like a so you can like somehow like you I mean you always know where your T_V_ is, so just have a call button, I've always wanted that,
Rita Sharp: Yeah,
Barbara Barham: so
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: yeah
Barbara Barham: like
Rita Sharp: yeah
Barbara Barham: you
Rita Sharp: yeah
Barbara Barham: can push
Rita Sharp: yeah.
Barbara Barham: a button
Cleopatra Stephens: I mean
Barbara Barham: on your
Cleopatra Stephens: you have
Barbara Barham: T_V_
Cleopatra Stephens: it for the portable
Barbara Barham: Yeah,
Cleopatra Stephens: phone, so
Barbara Barham: yeah
Cleopatra Stephens: why not
Barbara Barham: yeah
Cleopatra Stephens: yeah.
Barbara Barham: yeah, so you should have a call button on your television to
Rita Sharp: Yeah.
Barbara Barham: be able to find your remote control.
Rita Sharp: And even I think a little light. Um or even a maybe a vib a vibrating thing. I dunno but someth because it's usually under the sofa.
Barbara Barham: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: In which case
Barbara Barham: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: you're going to be l but if it has a sort of signal which isn't any sound I don't know
Barbara Barham: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: if it's expensive maybe to
Barbara Barham: I don't yeah I mean it
Rita Sharp: Maybe call is enough. But yeah.
Barbara Barham: but like I mean just I mean like your phone even just has so
Rita Sharp: Yeah
Barbara Barham: like
Rita Sharp: yeah
Barbara Barham: it
Rita Sharp: yeah.
Barbara Barham: can vibrate, it can light up and make
Rita Sharp: Yeah.
Barbara Barham: noise and I dunno.
Cleopatra Stephens: What if it had something like um just like a magnet on the back of it and you could I mean j just to have some place to put it besides like a base.
Barbara Barham: Yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: You know like a portable
Barbara Barham: Yeah,
Cleopatra Stephens: phone
Barbara Barham: or if it
Cleopatra Stephens: has
Barbara Barham: had a
Cleopatra Stephens: a base,
Barbara Barham: yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: like just to have a home for it.
Rita Sharp: Yeah yeah yeah yeah.
Barbara Barham: Yeah, I mean
Cleopatra Stephens: 'Cause people just stick it on top of their T_V_, but the point of having a remote is not to have to walk over to the T_V_,
Barbara Barham: Yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: so
Rosemary Callicutt: Well that's why it's always in the couch.
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Barbara Barham: Yeah, in in the couch. I dunno, it seems like though that that would be hard, 'cause
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Barbara Barham: you not you're not gonna be lazy
Cleopatra Stephens: Maybe
Barbara Barham: anyway
Cleopatra Stephens: we should
Barbara Barham: and
Cleopatra Stephens: design couches that have the remote control
Barbara Barham: Yeah
Cleopatra Stephens: in
Barbara Barham: so we
Cleopatra Stephens: the side
Barbara Barham: the project
Cleopatra Stephens: arm.
Barbara Barham: is now couches and
Rita Sharp: But
Barbara Barham: remote
Rita Sharp: even
Barbara Barham: controls.
Rita Sharp: just a thing to attach it to the w you know if you had a thing, a pretty object attached to the wall. But that would really
Barbara Barham: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: make it more expensive. But it's only a plastic thing, r
Barbara Barham: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: really,
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: the thing on the wall. Something like that. And the other
Cleopatra Stephens: Do you
Rita Sharp: thing
Cleopatra Stephens: think it
Rita Sharp: is
Cleopatra Stephens: needs to be bigger to not lose, or does that
Barbara Barham: Bigger.
Cleopatra Stephens: not factor
Rita Sharp: Not
Cleopatra Stephens: in?
Rita Sharp: well it needs
Cleopatra Stephens: Like
Rita Sharp: to be sort of
Cleopatra Stephens: Hand
Barbara Barham: Hand-sized.
Cleopatra Stephens: hand held
Rita Sharp: Yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: size, yeah.
Rita Sharp: I don't think you need a
Cleopatra Stephens: Not not huge, but
Rita Sharp: But definitely not well I don't know.
Barbara Barham: It can't be that hard to put some kind of a noise on it.
Rita Sharp: No, it can't be,
Rosemary Callicutt: No it really
Barbara Barham: Or
Rita Sharp: uh-uh.
Barbara Barham: like
Rosemary Callicutt: wouldn't
Cleopatra Stephens: Huh.
Rosemary Callicutt: be.
Barbara Barham: or like a light thing. You know. I dunno.
Rita Sharp: Like spaceship.
Barbara Barham: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: Right. Um
Barbara Barham: Or make it mobile so it runs around and comes come find you yeah. That would be really I'm sure we could do that for twenty five
Cleopatra Stephens: Little
Barbara Barham: Euros
Cleopatra Stephens: homing
Barbara Barham: a pop.
Cleopatra Stephens: device.
Barbara Barham: Yeah. Uh.
Cleopatra Stephens: Um. Okay. So what do we think this remote control should Five minutes.
Rita Sharp: Oh dear.
Cleopatra Stephens: Till the meeting oh right. This is what we have left.
Barbara Barham: I also
Cleopatra Stephens: Um,
Barbara Barham: think though that
Cleopatra Stephens: oh
Barbara Barham: it shouldn't
Cleopatra Stephens: we just
Barbara Barham: have too many buttons, 'cause I hate
Rosemary Callicutt: Yeah,
Barbara Barham: that
Rosemary Callicutt: I
Barbara Barham: when
Rosemary Callicutt: agree.
Barbara Barham: they have too many buttons and
Rita Sharp: Yeah,
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Rosemary Callicutt: button
Rita Sharp: yeah yeah.
Rosemary Callicutt: and the
Barbara Barham: I
Rosemary Callicutt: F_
Barbara Barham: mean I know
Rosemary Callicutt: button,
Barbara Barham: it has
Rosemary Callicutt: they
Barbara Barham: to
Rosemary Callicutt: don't
Barbara Barham: have
Rosemary Callicutt: do
Barbara Barham: enough
Rosemary Callicutt: anything.
Barbara Barham: functions but like, I don't know you, just have like eight thousand buttons and you're like, no, you never use half of them.
Cleopatra Stephens: You
Barbara Barham: So.
Cleopatra Stephens: what if um may be a little fancy but what if it had like a little screen, so it has less buttons but it still has all the functions.
Barbara Barham: That would be cool.
Cleopatra Stephens: Like the
Rita Sharp: Yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: way a mobile phone does.
Barbara Barham: Yeah. I mean it just seems like
Cleopatra Stephens: So you could like
Barbara Barham: yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: um like if you have I dunno if you have satellite if you have a hundred channels, you can the way you do it on your radio is that you uh what do you call
Rita Sharp: Select.
Cleopatra Stephens: it s y yeah but you
Rita Sharp: Uh.
Cleopatra Stephens: can programme, so you can programme like your favourite channels, so like if you had a s
Rita Sharp: But, would you have the screen on the thing, or would you have it on the telly transmitting the screen.
Cleopatra Stephens: That's something we could decide.
Barbara Barham: I
Rita Sharp: Because
Barbara Barham: guess
Cleopatra Stephens: Mm.
Barbara Barham: they would go together somehow? I dunno.
Rita Sharp: Because, I don't know if it's I think it's e expensive, if you have if you use the telly screen, 'cause the telly's
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: already a screen, then you can pro sort of have a programming function, really easy sort of arrow up and down, on
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: the remote, and then use the telly as a screen.
Cleopatra Stephens: Right.
Rita Sharp: But um
Barbara Barham: I'm thinking
Rita Sharp: But
Barbara Barham: kind
Rita Sharp: yeah for
Barbara Barham: of
Rita Sharp: sure. Something like not it's not on the button but it's telling you what to do,
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: is that what you mean?
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: Right. Mm.
Barbara Barham: Or like you h you see those you know people I'm thinking of like celebrity cribs kind of things when like they have all those these things that at their house you know their their entire house is so electronic, and they have like this one master control that and it's like a hand held like turns on everything sort of control and it has like a screen and like so I think it should be possible to have some kind of a screen, I don't know
Rita Sharp: Yeah.
Barbara Barham: if it must be it would probably must be ex too expensive though t like I dunno.
Rita Sharp: But like
Cleopatra Stephens: Mm.
Rita Sharp: mobile phones have screens
Barbara Barham: Yeah,
Rita Sharp: and they're cheap.
Barbara Barham: yeah. Yeah
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Barbara Barham: that's true.
Cleopatra Stephens: I mean, we have to remember our budget is twelve point
Rita Sharp: Yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: twelve fifty for to actually make the device.
Barbara Barham: Mm.
Cleopatra Stephens: Um
Barbara Barham: Well, I guess
Cleopatra Stephens: but it's
Barbara Barham: we have
Cleopatra Stephens: something
Barbara Barham: to get to
Cleopatra Stephens: to
Barbara Barham: that
Cleopatra Stephens: think
Barbara Barham: later,
Cleopatra Stephens: about, yeah.
Barbara Barham: yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: I mean we'll have to see how much that would be.
Rita Sharp: Or some it i we can find out probably on the
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: internet how much it's Um. Yeah, and the other thing you said that thing about robust and water um What was the word?
Barbara Barham: Furry.
Rita Sharp: Water resistant. No but it's I thought, ah,
Cleopatra Stephens: was
Rita Sharp: spot on.
Cleopatra Stephens: just
Rita Sharp: Good feel, tact tactile,
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: good tactile feel, maybe something didn doesn't make your hands sweat lot.
Barbara Barham: Yeah. Mm, mm.
Rita Sharp: That's quite annoying.
Cleopatra Stephens: Maybe um just like a simple thing to have a clip on it, like so you can clip it to your
Barbara Barham: Yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: like that's another
Rita Sharp: Yeah, clip. Ooh. Um.
Cleopatra Stephens: Um. We should probably start wrapping up, um we've got some initial ideas that we can all look into. Um, and come up with some new ones for the next meeting, which will be in another thirty minutes. Um. So. Yeah. Rosemary Callicutt, what does that stand
Rosemary Callicutt: Yeah
Cleopatra Stephens: for,
Rosemary Callicutt: I think
Cleopatra Stephens: I_D_,
Rosemary Callicutt: so.
Cleopatra Stephens: yeah um is going to be looking more into the working design. So I guess you'd be looking at lots of the things we discussed about screen and um that sort of thing. The something, what is the U_I_?
Rosemary Callicutt: User.
Barbara Barham: That's Rita Sharp.
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah, what does it stand for again?
Barbara Barham: Uh, User Interface
Cleopatra Stephens: User
Barbara Barham: design.
Cleopatra Stephens: Interface Designer. So that's gonna be more technical. I guess that maybe the working design has also to do with like the physical feat like just
Barbara Barham: So
Cleopatra Stephens: the way
Barbara Barham: technical
Cleopatra Stephens: it looks
Rosemary Callicutt: The
Barbara Barham: function.
Rosemary Callicutt: working
Cleopatra Stephens: and
Rosemary Callicutt: design
Cleopatra Stephens: the way
Rosemary Callicutt: is
Cleopatra Stephens: it w
Rosemary Callicutt: the structure.
Cleopatra Stephens: Yeah, yeah.
Barbara Barham: What is technical functions exactl I I don't really know what
Cleopatra Stephens: Um, I guess you'd have to find out.
Rita Sharp: It says
Rosemary Callicutt: Um.
Rita Sharp: on that email
Rosemary Callicutt: It
Rita Sharp: but
Rosemary Callicutt: was
Barbara Barham: It
Rosemary Callicutt: in
Barbara Barham: does
Rita Sharp: it
Rosemary Callicutt: the email.
Barbara Barham: but it I just don't really
Rosemary Callicutt: I wrote down what
Rita Sharp: It
Rosemary Callicutt: mine
Rita Sharp: said
Rosemary Callicutt: were.
Barbara Barham: Yeah.
Rita Sharp: um It said
Barbara Barham: What effect should the thing ha should it have, okay. Alright.
Rita Sharp: Yeah like
Barbara Barham: And working design. Okay.
Rita Sharp: Be a medium between you and the telly
Barbara Barham: Yeah,
Rita Sharp: I think,
Barbara Barham: yeah.
Cleopatra Stephens: Mm.
Rita Sharp: that's uh
Barbara Barham: Alright. And how it works, okay. Right. I'm I'm on task.
Cleopatra Stephens: And the M_E_, what does that stand for? M
Rosemary Callicutt: Marketing.
Cleopatra Stephens: Marketing,
Rita Sharp: Marketing.
Cleopatra Stephens: right.
Rita Sharp: Oh it's written
Cleopatra Stephens: Um.
Rita Sharp: here, but um.
Cleopatra Stephens: So we'll be working on the user requirements, um Yeah.
Rita Sharp: Okay.
Cleopatra Stephens: So I guess that wraps it up. I'll see you all in thirty minutes. I just did. | The group introduced themselves to each other. Cleopatra Stephens discussed the goals for the project and gave an agenda for the project as a whole. The group practiced using the meeting-room equipment by drawing on the whiteboard. Cleopatra Stephens presented the projected profit and price point. The group discussed their experiences with remote controls. They complained that remotes got lost too easily, and suggested using a locator function. They also complained that remotes had too many buttons, and suggested incorporating a screen to simplify the interface but retain all of the functions. They also suggested making the remote water-resistant and including a clip. Cleopatra Stephens instructed Rosemary Callicutt to research the working design and components, Barbara Barham to research the technical functions, and Rita Sharp to research user requirements. | 2 | amisum | train |
Mabel Nielsen: Hi everyone, hope you had a nice lunch Um. Alright we're moving on to conceptual design.
Karen Cleare: 'Scuse Cortney Norris.
Cortney Norris: Bless you.
Mabel Nielsen: Um, I'll just review what we did in our last meeting. Um, under marketing we targeted our audience, and Um, yeah. That was generally how helpful that was. Um, then we considered some design options with how it should look, um, we discussed an iPod-like button system which, uh, we haven't concluded but we're Right, um So if, you all have presentations to do, we can see what where you've come from our last time. Does everyone have
Marlys Rogers: Hmm.
Mabel Nielsen: presentations?
Cortney Norris: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: Yes.
Mabel Nielsen: Okay.
Marlys Rogers: Yes.
Mabel Nielsen: Would anybody like to go first?
Marlys Rogers: Sure.
Mabel Nielsen: Okay.
Marlys Rogers: So I've been looking at the components design. Um. Mostly by consulting remote control diagrams from the internet and also by incorporating design ideas from the last project meeting. Um, so we need some custom design parts, and other parts we'll just use standard. Um, I assume we'll be custom designing our case, probably a hard plastic or some other material case, to protect the remote and the locator. And we'll need to custom desi design a circuit board, because the board has to take the button input and send it to the output so you have to design that each time. But once we come up with a design we'll send it to the circuit people and they'll just print it out. Um, standard parts include the buttons and the wheels, um the iPod-style wheel. The infrared L_E_D_ is actually gonna be included in the circuit board that comes with it. Um, we need a radio sender and receiver, those are standard. And al we also need a beeper or buzzer or other sort of noise thing for locating the remote. So we have some material options. Um, we can use rubber, plastic, wood or titanium. Um, I'd recommend against titanium because it can only be used in the flat cases and it's really heavy. Um, and the rubber case requires rubber buttons, so if we definitely want plastic buttons, we shouldn't have a rubber case.
Mabel Nielsen: And
Marlys Rogers: And,
Mabel Nielsen: why not wood?
Marlys Rogers: hmm?
Mabel Nielsen: And why not wood?
Marlys Rogers: Uh, well we can use wood. I don't know why we'd want to. Um and also we should note that if we want an iPod-style wheel button, it's gonna require a m qu slightly more expensive chip. We can't use the minimal chip, we need the next higher grade, which is called regular. I don't think it's much more expensive, but it is more expensive. So that's what I've got on design.
Mabel Nielsen: 'S good.
Cortney Norris: Um, can I do next? 'Cause I have to say something about the
Mabel Nielsen: Hmm.
Cortney Norris: material
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: which is quite shocking.
Cortney Norris: Ha. Mm.
Cortney Norris: Right, um, I have been searching the current trends, um, both on the web and via fashion-watchers, and the findings are that the first thing to aim for is a fashion uh, fancy look and feel. Um. Next comes technologic technology and the innovations to do with that. And th last thing is the easy to use um factor Um. fancy look and feel goes far beyond the functionality of the thing, but I suppose that is included in in the ease of use. Um, our fashion-watchers in Milan and Paris have decided, well noticed, that f the fruit and vegetable theme is the is the current trend and and therefore um we need to go for that if we want, you know, wh whatever our motto is. Um. For fashion,
Mabel Nielsen: Mm.
Cortney Norris: we go for fashion. The fashion in electronics. So we want to put the fashion electronics, we need to go fruit and vegetables. And also go for a spongy feel, so the the question of our technology whate is Industrial Designer. As to the material should be limited to I don't know how spongy it can be, should discuss this together, I don't know how spongy can be achieved but apparently that's the way to go. Um. I I have been thinking about this fruit and vegetable thing and I prefer fruits to vegetables, but that's just a personal opinion. I think I think people like to have a fruit instead of a vegetables in their sitting room. Uh those are just suggestions and also we need to decide whether this should be printed, so that still has to do with the material discuss should we print the fruit stuff, or should the actual remote look like a fruit? Um, and finally again with the spongy. It has to be technologically innovative so maybe again our Industrial Designer should look into that or find come up with a solution that's better than mine. Um, yeah, to summarise these are the points that need to be um, touched in order to get a good decision, and hopefully our User Interface has more to say about the matter.
Karen Cleare: Mm-hmm.
Cortney Norris: Thank you for your attention.
Karen Cleare: So.
Mabel Nielsen: I think it's the next
Karen Cleare: Oh,
Mabel Nielsen: it's
Karen Cleare: uh,
Mabel Nielsen: the blue one,
Karen Cleare: there
Mabel Nielsen: yeah.
Karen Cleare: we go. Uh. Okay. Um. Well so that fruit and vegetables thing huh. I actually wasn't aware of the new trends in electronics and
Cortney Norris: Neither was I. Well
Karen Cleare: and
Cortney Norris: it's
Karen Cleare: uh
Cortney Norris: a trend in fashion, in clothing and um
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah but
Cortney Norris: fabrics.
Mabel Nielsen: you're not gonna wear your remote control.
Karen Cleare: So so okay, let Cortney Norris get this right. Okay, uh Okay, alright anyway. Um here we go. Conceptual User Interface. Trying we're gonna to about, um what kind of uh how people are actually going to be using this iPod-ish remote control, based on fruit vegetable design. And, um, basically, so, this is a touched ba a touch-based graphical interface system. Uh, so people are going to be looking at this little screen. Um, kind of I mean I assume, are we still on the screen idea?
Mabel Nielsen: Oh we s hadn't discussed it last
Karen Cleare: 'Cause if
Mabel Nielsen: time.
Karen Cleare: we're gonna have to ha if we have this it just seems like in order to have someone going around and using the um the wheel
Mabel Nielsen: You need a screen
Karen Cleare: you
Mabel Nielsen: for
Karen Cleare: it seems
Mabel Nielsen: it?
Karen Cleare: like you would need a screen.
Marlys Rogers: You need a screen with music because you're looking for a specific song, like you know that band or whatever.
Karen Cleare: But like if you
Marlys Rogers: With
Karen Cleare: think
Marlys Rogers: T_V_
Karen Cleare: about
Marlys Rogers: channels
Karen Cleare: it
Marlys Rogers: it's, you know, one two three.
Karen Cleare: yeah
Marlys Rogers: So
Karen Cleare: but if so is it just okay. So, b you you're gonna have to switch to like D_V_D_ and like other things like that, aren't
Mabel Nielsen: We're,
Karen Cleare: you?
Mabel Nielsen: um, we're
Karen Cleare: Are
Mabel Nielsen: actually
Karen Cleare: we
Mabel Nielsen: not having D_V_D_, that was
Marlys Rogers: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: one of th I
Karen Cleare: Okay.
Mabel Nielsen: I was sorry, I I
Karen Cleare: Alright.
Mabel Nielsen: meant to update you on that.
Karen Cleare: Okay.
Mabel Nielsen: Um.
Cortney Norris: But the screen can come up on the telly, the
Karen Cleare: Okay.
Cortney Norris: she said. That
Karen Cleare: Okay.
Marlys Rogers: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: correct?
Karen Cleare: So anyway if well we just we need to Okay so if we're not gonna have a screen I think I was thinking okay. So basically it's just gonna be a wheel then? And you're just gonna I mean I think you're gonna have to have some kind of a
Cortney Norris: Graphical
Karen Cleare: right.
Cortney Norris: interface?
Karen Cleare: Yeah
Cortney Norris: Uh
Karen Cleare: like you're
Cortney Norris: on
Karen Cleare: g
Cortney Norris: the you can have it on the telly though.
Karen Cleare: yeah
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: like you're gonna have to be able to switch to like a mode where you can okay we're not choosing that, I guess. But like choose channel control, like if you wa Because people aren't gonna be able to have like, um, you know, channels one two three four five six seven eight nine.
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: So that people seems to be
Mabel Nielsen: You've Yeah,
Karen Cleare: well
Mabel Nielsen: I know what you're saying,
Karen Cleare: You know.
Mabel Nielsen: you have
Karen Cleare: But
Mabel Nielsen: to
Karen Cleare: you're gonna have to scroll to get channels. So um I guess that's wh why I was thinking you may need to have some kind of a screen because So that people can go arou go back and forth and choose if or or then again if you just I guess I c I can see like some kind of a thing where like you sort of have like the number come up on the T_V_
Cortney Norris: Yeah,
Karen Cleare: like what channel you're on.
Cortney Norris: yeah,
Karen Cleare: You can
Marlys Rogers: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: just
Cortney Norris: yeah.
Karen Cleare: scroll and
Cortney Norris: Yeah,
Karen Cleare: you can just get
Cortney Norris: yeah.
Karen Cleare: to like five or like twelve or
Mabel Nielsen: But
Marlys Rogers: My flatmates
Mabel Nielsen: but imagine
Marlys Rogers: actually
Mabel Nielsen: someone
Marlys Rogers: had
Mabel Nielsen: with
Marlys Rogers: one with
Mabel Nielsen: s
Marlys Rogers: a wheel, and it it did show up
Karen Cleare: I
Marlys Rogers: on the T_V_.
Karen Cleare: oh yeah?
Mabel Nielsen: But i what if you have satellite and you have like two hundred channels. Then to
Karen Cleare: 'Cause
Mabel Nielsen: get to channel
Karen Cleare: you'll
Mabel Nielsen: one
Karen Cleare: have
Mabel Nielsen: eighty
Cortney Norris: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: to
Mabel Nielsen: nine
Karen Cleare: like
Mabel Nielsen: you have to
Marlys Rogers: They have to
Karen Cleare: but
Marlys Rogers: r
Karen Cleare: you can
Marlys Rogers: wheel
Karen Cleare: quickly
Marlys Rogers: really fast.
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: s you can
Marlys Rogers: But I think the wheel goes through like a hundred
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: Yeah,
Marlys Rogers: channels,
Cortney Norris: yeah, yeah.
Marlys Rogers: at least on theirs.
Karen Cleare: Yeah if you do, it w so it would have to be you I mean so you basically just kinda need to figure out like what kind of, you know, range we need to have on the wheel, and um So you're either you're you know, th you're either doing this motion to like control the channels or like once once you stop that, you know, you can like tap for, um,
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: different uh, whatchamacallits, different um, you know, functions like volume or, like you can tap just to get to different channels. Like if you just wanted to go to like from five to six you could tap or someth
Mabel Nielsen: Right.
Karen Cleare: And then there's also the concern about you know um how do you get to the menu if you wanna change the brightness of your television, or if you want to um you know switch around, I don't know, like, these different modes like turn on the timer or like
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah
Karen Cleare: something something like that, like
Mabel Nielsen: I mean with that many options, you'd uh I'd think that the screen would be better, because
Karen Cleare: I would think
Mabel Nielsen: you
Karen Cleare: so
Mabel Nielsen: could have
Karen Cleare: too,
Mabel Nielsen: that
Karen Cleare: like
Mabel Nielsen: menu option, sort of
Karen Cleare: So I mean and it seems it w it does seem a little silly to have this screen if you hardly are ever using it, you know, because
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: but then again it would it does make kind of if the screen's sort of just like an option that, like, is just there and you're not really using it, that's kind of
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Marlys Rogers: It's
Karen Cleare: m
Marlys Rogers: more expensive
Karen Cleare: yeah.
Marlys Rogers: according to the design
Mabel Nielsen: Uh.
Marlys Rogers: people.
Karen Cleare: Yeah, that's the only
Marlys Rogers: You have
Karen Cleare: thing
Marlys Rogers: to
Karen Cleare: though.
Marlys Rogers: get a an advanced chip if you wanna have a screen in, which is more expensive than the regular chip, which is more expensive than the
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Marlys Rogers: minimal.
Karen Cleare: So then basically
Mabel Nielsen: Mm.
Karen Cleare: it has to have some way to get to get to a mode on the television where you're doing, um You can get to you know, you can Like maybe it'll be that central button
Cortney Norris: Yeah,
Karen Cleare: that,
Cortney Norris: yeah,
Karen Cleare: like,
Cortney Norris: yeah.
Marlys Rogers: Mm-hmm.
Karen Cleare: then
Mabel Nielsen: Mm.
Karen Cleare: you hit that and then you can it brings up like the menu on the T_V_
Cortney Norris: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: and you can just
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: scroll around,
Mabel Nielsen: So
Karen Cleare: like,
Mabel Nielsen: the T_V_
Karen Cleare: to do
Mabel Nielsen: is
Karen Cleare: the timer,
Mabel Nielsen: the screen,
Karen Cleare: to do the
Mabel Nielsen: that
Karen Cleare: yeah,
Mabel Nielsen: yeah
Karen Cleare: yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: So it would have all these different options
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: of changing
Karen Cleare: But the remote
Mabel Nielsen: to
Karen Cleare: itself isn't really
Cortney Norris: Look
Karen Cleare: cluttered
Cortney Norris: it even
Karen Cleare: up.
Cortney Norris: has settings.
Mabel Nielsen: Okay.
Karen Cleare: Hmm?
Cortney Norris: On the
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: you can just
Karen Cleare: Yeah,
Cortney Norris: take theirs
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: well we
Cortney Norris: and
Karen Cleare: don't want the
Cortney Norris: just
Karen Cleare: screen I guess, but um 'cause that just it does seem like, it that would be, like, incredibly expensive, but I dunno, and then so, it just im really all you need is, like, this little wheel then, and you can control everything. So
Mabel Nielsen: Um, right. What if I mean, if you're thinking of the design of it now, like the a you know, physical attributes,
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: um, and you just have this, it's like just a long silver thing, or whatever we're thinking. I mean are you you gonna have any buttons on that besides power and this thing? Or
Karen Cleare: It doesn't seem that you would need anything besides pow I mean and the power button could even be like hold down the menu button for like
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: longer than one second and it turns on the T_V_.
Mabel Nielsen: So can we imagine that this would be smaller than the remote controls that you showed us before. I
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: mean
Karen Cleare: Yeah definitely. Like,
Mabel Nielsen: okay.
Karen Cleare: I think we're looking at something that could be, like like even maybe like a cir I'm f I'm seeing almost like a circular sort of like handheld like thing.
Cortney Norris: Yeah
Karen Cleare: I mean
Cortney Norris: but
Karen Cleare: it
Cortney Norris: should
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: be
Karen Cleare: it
Marlys Rogers: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: comfortable.
Karen Cleare: needs to be easy
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: to somehow it needs to be easy to like manipulate and use your
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: I mean how do how do I'm not really Like when I use an iPod, I end up just kind of using my index finger to like control it.
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah, I've
Karen Cleare: So
Mabel Nielsen: seen some people just going like that
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: with their
Cortney Norris: Yeah
Mabel Nielsen: thumb,
Karen Cleare: Or your thumb
Cortney Norris: I use
Mabel Nielsen: yeah.
Karen Cleare: or something.
Cortney Norris: it like that.
Marlys Rogers: W
Karen Cleare: So
Marlys Rogers: when we had the wheely remote control, we it was on the top I think, if you held it like that.
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: Yeah,
Mabel Nielsen: But,
Karen Cleare: so
Mabel Nielsen: were there buttons on there as well?
Marlys Rogers: Yeah well it had the wheely thing and then it had those eighteen different buttons
Mabel Nielsen: Mm.
Marlys Rogers: that I don't know what they do.
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: Mm
Marlys Rogers: So
Karen Cleare: yeah.
Marlys Rogers: we just used the top part.
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: Yeah,
Cortney Norris: Uh.
Karen Cleare: so but I mean I think it could be pretty small. Like, I d I mean, you you want it to be large enough that you can
Mabel Nielsen: What if, um, you had like a b a cover that went over buttons that you don't use very much? Like you so you could slide it up if you needed to like change the contrast or something like that? So the options are there but they're not in interfering with the design and the practicality of it.
Karen Cleare: But can't you just
Mabel Nielsen: Do do
Karen Cleare: get
Mabel Nielsen: you know what I'm talking
Marlys Rogers: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: about though? Like, uh, yeah just
Marlys Rogers: Yeah
Mabel Nielsen: something
Marlys Rogers: like
Karen Cleare: K
Marlys Rogers: maybe something on the side
Cortney Norris: Well you
Marlys Rogers: where
Cortney Norris: can
Marlys Rogers: you
Cortney Norris: have it on
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah,
Cortney Norris: the settings,
Marlys Rogers: slip a
Mabel Nielsen: that
Marlys Rogers: panel
Mabel Nielsen: you can flip
Marlys Rogers: down
Cortney Norris: no?
Marlys Rogers: and it's
Mabel Nielsen: over,
Marlys Rogers: got a
Mabel Nielsen: yeah,
Marlys Rogers: whole
Karen Cleare: Yeah,
Marlys Rogers: bunch of
Mabel Nielsen: yeah.
Karen Cleare: But, I mean, do you need that? If if you can get to, you know if so long as you're able to bring up the menu on the T_V_ screen.
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah I mean I guess
Marlys Rogers: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: that's the
Karen Cleare: That
Mabel Nielsen: thing
Karen Cleare: keeps
Mabel Nielsen: is
Karen Cleare: it
Mabel Nielsen: is if w I
Karen Cleare: really
Mabel Nielsen: if we can do this, that'd probably
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: be
Karen Cleare: Uh you wouldn't I don't I just don't think you would even need it.
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah, yeah.
Karen Cleare: So
Mabel Nielsen: So I
Karen Cleare: Mean
Mabel Nielsen: guess we have to look into the, um, like, the programming, how this how they actually programme these things,
Marlys Rogers: Oh
Mabel Nielsen: and if
Marlys Rogers: how they
Mabel Nielsen: that's
Marlys Rogers: make the menu show up on
Mabel Nielsen: yeah.
Marlys Rogers: the T_V_?
Karen Cleare: I mean
Marlys Rogers: I
Karen Cleare: you can
Marlys Rogers: don't
Karen Cleare: do
Mabel Nielsen: I
Marlys Rogers: know.
Karen Cleare: it,
Mabel Nielsen: mean
Cortney Norris: They already
Mabel Nielsen: it would
Cortney Norris: do
Mabel Nielsen: y
Cortney Norris: it.
Mabel Nielsen: would
Karen Cleare: you it's
Marlys Rogers: I
Karen Cleare: it
Marlys Rogers: believe
Karen Cleare: doesn't
Mabel Nielsen: that
Marlys Rogers: it's
Karen Cleare: seem
Mabel Nielsen: would
Marlys Rogers: ins
Karen Cleare: that
Mabel Nielsen: be
Karen Cleare: hard.
Marlys Rogers: it's gotta be inside the T_V_, not inside the remote.
Karen Cleare: I mean I've never bought
Marlys Rogers: I'm
Karen Cleare: a
Marlys Rogers: not
Karen Cleare: remote.
Marlys Rogers: sure.
Karen Cleare: It sounds like this remote's going to be purchased separately from the television, which
Marlys Rogers: Well
Karen Cleare: is a little
Marlys Rogers: they usually are. Well
Karen Cleare: My I've never bought just a remote, like, so
Cortney Norris: No.
Karen Cleare: I don't I don't really
Mabel Nielsen: Huh.
Karen Cleare: know. But um
Marlys Rogers: I guess that's right. It always comes with the T_V_.
Karen Cleare: So, um but I mean it's I've never had a hard time with like my remotes, like bringing up the menu screen if you need to like change the date or whatever, you know. And I don't think that should uh that should be too hard.
Marlys Rogers: Yeah, it most of the ones we've had have had the menu button, 'cause it's not like you need to have a button access to like change the contrast or something.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Marlys Rogers: 'Cause it just doesn't come up every day or something.
Karen Cleare: Yeah. Well so So, do we need I dunno. Well I guess we have to you know think about But I mean you just basically need the output signal
Marlys Rogers: Mm-hmm.
Karen Cleare: you know to
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: be able to bring it up.
Mabel Nielsen: Okay.
Karen Cleare: That's what it does anyway.
Cortney Norris: But also if you have it on the screen you can actually write everything out, because the problem with buttons is you like, they have these sort of abbreviations and
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Marlys Rogers: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: codes
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah,
Cortney Norris: that you're supposed
Mabel Nielsen: you
Cortney Norris: to understand,
Mabel Nielsen: don't know they mean,
Cortney Norris: and
Mabel Nielsen: yeah,
Cortney Norris: I never
Mabel Nielsen: it's
Cortney Norris: get
Mabel Nielsen: like
Cortney Norris: it.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: Never
Mabel Nielsen: yeah.
Cortney Norris: ever. So
Karen Cleare: So, but oh, you mean if we have this screen like the iPod screen?
Cortney Norris: Well on the telly.
Marlys Rogers: Or on the T_V_
Karen Cleare: On the
Marlys Rogers: too.
Karen Cleare: telly, okay, yeah. So yeah I think, I mean, I think I think the touch-based graphical interface is a really uh cool idea because you know it is so obnoxious to like have to push those like okay now I hit this you know, you have your little guide out and you're like, hit this button twice, like
Mabel Nielsen: Mm.
Karen Cleare: to
Cortney Norris: Mm.
Mabel Nielsen: And it is technologically
Karen Cleare: activate the date.
Mabel Nielsen: innovative in a way, so
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: that
Karen Cleare: I guess.
Mabel Nielsen: fits with the
Karen Cleare: And it is trendy,
Mabel Nielsen: B
Karen Cleare: the iPods are
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: really hot right now,
Cortney Norris: Did you
Karen Cleare: so
Cortney Norris: did you get that pc picture on did they provide you with that picture
Karen Cleare: Um,
Cortney Norris: on the web?
Karen Cleare: yeah, by web research, yeah, so
Cortney Norris: That's quite interesting. What are we going to do about this vegetable thing that I'm dreading?
Mabel Nielsen: Oh
Karen Cleare: Oh.
Mabel Nielsen: god.
Marlys Rogers: Oh, I was gonna say. You said uh people want spongy. Um,
Cortney Norris: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Marlys Rogers: one of your one of the material options is a sort of rubber that's in like those stress ball things. So,
Karen Cleare: Oh, okay, that
Cortney Norris: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: would
Mabel Nielsen: Ah.
Karen Cleare: be cool.
Marlys Rogers: that would be spongy.
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: Mm.
Cortney Norris: Just nice feel, but I hate spongy.
Karen Cleare: Yeah, c
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: that's e that would be kind of oh, you know, usually like the touch pad things are kind of a hard plastic typ mouse type,
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: you know, thing. But what if
Mabel Nielsen: I
Karen Cleare: we
Mabel Nielsen: mean
Karen Cleare: ha
Mabel Nielsen: definitely the area
Karen Cleare: what if
Mabel Nielsen: round
Karen Cleare: we had like
Mabel Nielsen: it.
Karen Cleare: a spongy sort of like stress balley kinda so you're like
Marlys Rogers: Yeah I think it could work.
Karen Cleare: Or what
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: if we integrated the the uh the f what if the whole thing about the fruit and vegetables we somehow made it tactilely fash you know, we c tapped into that, so like it feels like
Cortney Norris: Well
Karen Cleare: a vegetable.
Cortney Norris: it could be
Mabel Nielsen: An
Cortney Norris: like
Mabel Nielsen: orange.
Marlys Rogers: Don't think
Cortney Norris: mobiles
Marlys Rogers: I'd want it to feel
Cortney Norris: that just
Marlys Rogers: like a banana.
Cortney Norris: you just put a cover.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: If it's a small thing, you c instead of creating an object for it that looks like a banana, which frankly I'm not particularly fond of, um you could just have covers and then your mobile f it's like a mobile phone thing. You know you
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: had
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: there was a time when they had all these different covers
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Marlys Rogers: You
Cortney Norris: for
Marlys Rogers: could
Cortney Norris: mobiles.
Marlys Rogers: do like the computers where they have like the grapefruit, apple machine and they have like the blueberry,
Cortney Norris: Yeah,
Marlys Rogers: like all
Cortney Norris: yeah,
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Marlys Rogers: the colours
Cortney Norris: yeah.
Marlys Rogers: are named after fruits.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: You could name it after fruits and vegetables,
Cortney Norris: And
Karen Cleare: or
Cortney Norris: it could the colour can fit your sitting room, so if you have red sitting room you can have strawberry, and then if you have a green one you can have well I don't know.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: Um.
Mabel Nielsen: So
Karen Cleare: So
Mabel Nielsen: what
Karen Cleare: I think
Mabel Nielsen: if what
Karen Cleare: yeah, colours.
Mabel Nielsen: this is I'm just forming this idea in my head of how this thing is looking. If you have like that stress ball material kind of as what you're actually holding in your hand, so like what you're feeling is comfortable, and then there's more of a hard plastic thing
Cortney Norris: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: where that thing is.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: And on that hard plastic thing you can change either the colour or the fruit or vegetable that's on there.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: Is that kind of I 'cause I I'm thinking of silver because those are our company colours.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: Um
Karen Cleare: Unfortunately they don't have silver fruits and vegetables. I do I dunno. Um
Mabel Nielsen: I mean how are you how are you all envisioning by what we've just the feedback we've just got about the
Cortney Norris: Maybe a ball.
Mabel Nielsen: A ball?
Cortney Norris: Know, a squashy ball. A relaxing squashy ball.
Karen Cleare: That's in the shape of a fruit, like a
Cortney Norris: That you can p well I see you're thinking, it's weird, you're thinking the opposite of Cortney Norris 'cause you're thinking you change the the hard bit
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: and I'm thinking how do you change the hard would you put a um sticker sort of? Because I was thinking if you have a cover for the squashy bit, like a
Mabel Nielsen: This is just Okay.
Cortney Norris: Oh,
Mabel Nielsen: Say
Cortney Norris: okay,
Mabel Nielsen: that's the s say that's
Cortney Norris: yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: the squashy bit. Squashy.
Cortney Norris: Yeah I was thinking of getting a cover for
Mabel Nielsen: That see I was thinking
Cortney Norris: Which is
Mabel Nielsen: this
Cortney Norris: cheaper.
Mabel Nielsen: s sorry
Cortney Norris: Well I don't know if it's cheaper
Mabel Nielsen: I was
Marlys Rogers: Oh.
Mabel Nielsen: thinking
Cortney Norris: actually.
Marlys Rogers: Mm.
Mabel Nielsen: this bit here would be the cover and like that's your actual
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: thing. And like this
Karen Cleare: Oh I like
Mabel Nielsen: you
Karen Cleare: that
Mabel Nielsen: could have
Karen Cleare: shape.
Mabel Nielsen: like you could have like cherries and
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: things around there. Um
Marlys Rogers: I was thinking
Mabel Nielsen: but
Marlys Rogers: sort of a single ball shape.
Mabel Nielsen: I
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: was thinking if
Marlys Rogers: So
Mabel Nielsen: it
Marlys Rogers: you're
Mabel Nielsen: was
Marlys Rogers: holding
Mabel Nielsen: like this
Marlys Rogers: a
Mabel Nielsen: 'cause
Marlys Rogers: squishy
Mabel Nielsen: the way
Marlys Rogers: ball
Mabel Nielsen: you were
Marlys Rogers: and
Mabel Nielsen: describing
Marlys Rogers: then it has a
Mabel Nielsen: the the iPod and the thi the roll thingy
Karen Cleare: It's like it
Marlys Rogers: Mm-hmm.
Karen Cleare: has to be s yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: It's almost like your thumb is farther up,
Marlys Rogers: Yeah I guess so.
Mabel Nielsen: it lower
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: then
Cortney Norris: Yeah. So it wouldn't be very big in either like how big? This big, and then you just do that,
Karen Cleare: What
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah,
Karen Cleare: if, yeah,
Mabel Nielsen: I
Cortney Norris: I
Mabel Nielsen: know
Cortney Norris: suppose.
Mabel Nielsen: what
Karen Cleare: what
Mabel Nielsen: you
Karen Cleare: if
Mabel Nielsen: meant,
Karen Cleare: the squishy,
Mabel Nielsen: yeah.
Karen Cleare: oh so so you're saying the squishy part's like detachable, and you can so so maybe one you know you can have like the broccoli squishy thing, and then you could have like the banana squishy thing and you could get you could have your choice, you know?
Cortney Norris: Well just a li I can't des like condom thingy, like a a cover. But well the question is, which one's easiest to change can just
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: contact our relevant department for that, and
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: just see what the cost is for covering that or covering
Karen Cleare: Yeah,
Cortney Norris: that,
Karen Cleare: yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: Mm.
Cortney Norris: and for now we can do two prototypes maybe and then
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: hi try and ask users
Mabel Nielsen: Okay.
Cortney Norris: what the best is, and
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: No.
Mabel Nielsen: Okay.
Karen Cleare: Oh.
Cortney Norris: Um. That's nicer. I think it's
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: nicer to have a drawing 'cause it's neater.
Mabel Nielsen: Hmm.
Cortney Norris: Um.
Mabel Nielsen: Well that's not very neat, but
Karen Cleare: Yeah. I mean I think uh and I think the handhe I think the handheld part is definitely So you could make that into the fruit and vegetable part.
Cortney Norris: If it's a bit like those juggling balls, you can change shape according to your to the way you hold
Marlys Rogers: Yeah
Cortney Norris: it.
Mabel Nielsen: Mm-hmm.
Cortney Norris: If
Marlys Rogers: you could
Cortney Norris: it's
Marlys Rogers: squish
Cortney Norris: got sand
Marlys Rogers: it.
Cortney Norris: in it maybe, or something,
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: you it it just moulds to your hand.
Karen Cleare: Yeah. So where are the fruit and vegetables now?
Cortney Norris: We
Karen Cleare: Fruits
Cortney Norris: we don't
Karen Cleare: and veg.
Marlys Rogers: I
Cortney Norris: know.
Marlys Rogers: guess they would be either in the colour of that plastic
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Marlys Rogers: face on
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Marlys Rogers: the front, or in the colour of the squishy thing underneath.
Cortney Norris: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: And the rest is the company the company colour's silver?
Mabel Nielsen: It was, yeah, silver and yellow. It l it looks like I don't
Karen Cleare: We could
Cortney Norris: Okay.
Karen Cleare: promote the banana one.
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: Like mm.
Mabel Nielsen: I mean that's another question, where are we gonna we we should have the logo somewhere on it.
Karen Cleare: Mm.
Cortney Norris: Mm-hmm. Should also fit the batteries, which we haven't
Karen Cleare: Oh
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Karen Cleare: yeah.
Marlys Rogers: I think the batteries would have to go right under the plastic
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah,
Marlys Rogers: case.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: th and that would
Cortney Norris: Okay.
Marlys Rogers: Especially if
Mabel Nielsen: that
Marlys Rogers: you're switching out the squishy part. Then you need to have the other part just be sort of a single unit that you can snap off.
Cortney Norris: Mm-hmm.
Mabel Nielsen: Mm-hmm.
Karen Cleare: Yeah, I think, um it'd be interesting to have the b the squishy bit. The part that you, yeah, can change into the different, you know, trendy vegetables and fruits. But uh
Marlys Rogers: Well I dunno.
Karen Cleare: it
Marlys Rogers: You'd spend so much time like squishing it to your own personal hand. Then you'd get a new one and you'd have to do it all over again.
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: No but it does it automatically. Does it automatically?
Karen Cleare: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: I don't know.
Mabel Nielsen: I don't know what the rest of my notes mean because they were made for Cortney Norris.
Cortney Norris: Okay.
Mabel Nielsen: But if someone components concept. Question mark. Energy. Question
Marlys Rogers: That was Cortney Norris.
Mabel Nielsen: mark. Was that you?
Marlys Rogers: Yes.
Mabel Nielsen: Okay. Oh right right. Yeah. Um, so what d but what do we know about energy? I mean we're gonna use batteries right? And
Marlys Rogers: which is something I don't know what it is. Something
Cortney Norris: Oh,
Marlys Rogers: to
Cortney Norris: a dynamo
Marlys Rogers: do with torches.
Cortney Norris: is ah, it's a bicycle. It's a bicycle mechanism. It's the en it's like if if something moves,
Marlys Rogers: Oh
Cortney Norris: when
Marlys Rogers: okay.
Cortney Norris: it moves,
Marlys Rogers: Yeah,
Cortney Norris: it
Marlys Rogers: the other
Cortney Norris: stores
Marlys Rogers: one was
Cortney Norris: energy.
Marlys Rogers: the other one was a kinetic thing where you'd basically have to wind it yourself. So
Cortney Norris: It's quite sweet.
Marlys Rogers: I sort of picked battery. We could have talked about doing a wind-up or a dynamo or a solar power. Um but I think solar power's not available with the rubber case anyways.
Mabel Nielsen: I think batteries
Marlys Rogers: It
Mabel Nielsen: sound good. What does
Marlys Rogers: it
Cortney Norris: No.
Mabel Nielsen: everyone
Marlys Rogers: seems
Mabel Nielsen: else
Marlys Rogers: a little
Mabel Nielsen: think?
Marlys Rogers: weird for
Karen Cleare: The dynamo
Marlys Rogers: a living room
Karen Cleare: would
Marlys Rogers: anyways.
Karen Cleare: be interesting.
Cortney Norris: But dynamo the the fact with dynamo is, the moment you move it, it c it creates energy on its own.
Karen Cleare: Oh.
Mabel Nielsen: What about Kryptonite?
Cortney Norris: Which is quite cool. So if you throw it, it's gonna store loads of energy, and you don't need to buy a battery 'cause they're quite f I find them annoying. But we need to find cost.
Mabel Nielsen: Yeah.
Cortney Norris: Don't know the cost.
Marlys Rogers: Didn't have
Cortney Norris: Does
Marlys Rogers: enough
Cortney Norris: anyone
Marlys Rogers: data
Cortney Norris: have
Marlys Rogers: to actually
Cortney Norris: costs on the on the
Marlys Rogers: All
Cortney Norris: web?
Marlys Rogers: it said was it gave sort of relative, some chips are more expensive than others, sort of things. It didn't give Cortney Norris any actual
Cortney Norris: Okay.
Marlys Rogers: cost.
Cortney Norris: Right.
Karen Cleare: Hmm.
Cortney Norris: Mm.
Marlys Rogers: Most of the stuff is pretty cheap though bought in bulk. So I don't think it's that much of a problem. Like the chip is probably the most expensive part.
Mabel Nielsen: What does chip on print mean?
Marlys Rogers: Um, for things like remote controls, um, they stamp out a chip,
Mabel Nielsen: Uh-huh.
Marlys Rogers: calculators too I think. Um, so you can mass produce 'em pretty cheap.
Mabel Nielsen: Okay.
Marlys Rogers: But it's not like a computer, you can't like reprogramme your remo remote controls, it's like
Mabel Nielsen: Right.
Marlys Rogers: stamped onto the chip.
Mabel Nielsen: So, chip on print is just means like that they're mass-produced.
Marlys Rogers: Yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: Okay. And case? Uh I guess
Marlys Rogers: Case
Mabel Nielsen: that's
Marlys Rogers: is
Mabel Nielsen: what
Marlys Rogers: what
Mabel Nielsen: we've
Marlys Rogers: we
Mabel Nielsen: been
Marlys Rogers: were
Mabel Nielsen: talking
Marlys Rogers: discussing
Mabel Nielsen: about, yeah.
Marlys Rogers: yeah.
Mabel Nielsen: Casing. Yeah. thinking of like syntactic case and thi um let's see. Is there anything else we need to
Karen Cleare: Hmm.
Mabel Nielsen: talk about? Oh when we move on, you two are going to be playing with play-dough. Um, and working on the look and feel of the design and user interface design. And you're gonna be doing protu product evaluation. So you'll get mm m more instructions from your personal coach.
Cortney Norris: Oh, thank
Mabel Nielsen: Mm.
Karen Cleare: Cool.
Cortney Norris: you.
Mabel Nielsen: See you soon. Does it matter that I end early?
Cortney Norris: I it's strange because
Mabel Nielsen: How how early is it? I didn't get a pop-up thing that said | Mabel Nielsen reviewed the minutes from the previous meeting. Marlys Rogers gave her presentation on components and discussed which would have to be custom-made and which were standard. She also discussed the various materials and chips available. Cortney Norris presented current trends in the market and in fashion. She discussed the current fruits and vegetables trend and the trend toward softer, spongier materials. Karen Cleare discussed the look of the remote with the group. They discussed including a touch-based graphical user interface but noted that it was unnecessary and costly. They discussed using the menu function on the television instead. The group discussed how the menu function would be programmed. The group then talked about the casing of the device, and decided that there would be a changeable outer casing. They discussed including fruit colors in addition to the company colors. Some part of the casing will be made of a spongy material. The group also discussed energy source options and chips. Mabel Nielsen instructed Karen Cleare and Marlys Rogers to construct the prototype and Cortney Norris to work on the prototype evaluation. | 2 | amisum | train |
Beth Ryan: Right w welcome to the the first meeting of uh Real Reaction's uh um development meetings for our our new television remote control. Uh this follows our very successful entry into the the consumer market over the last year or so um which we want to to build on, taking advantage of the uh the the latest developments in in technology and the uh the latest uh uh feelings in in consumer design and and demand and uh we want to make this the the very best product th that's possible for everybody, uh one that everybody wants, uh at a good price for the consumer and at a good price for the company. Uh and to that end we need all to work together uh to do that. Um and uh b in no particular order because ev everybody is uh just
April Payton: Mm.
Beth Ryan: as vital to this project um I'll just go round th the table, Andrew, marketing, um m Kendra with the uh um designing the the the User Interface uh uh and Kate with the the industrial design. Um. What's uh the the th th project is is here to do, is is to to get this this project up and moving, ev everybody is is free to uh say wh whatever they want, uh everybody has a contribution to make and uh everybody feel free to interrupt April Payton at any time to to say what you want to say. Um in in terms of the immediate meeting the uh um everybody knows everybody else, everybody's worked for the the company for a while, if if an anybody feels that they need to say more about themselves please do, if if if anybody wants to b briefly give their their background so that everybody's quite clear what everybody uh uh everybody's experience is please do so. Uh in fact I'd I'd I'd welcome anybody to uh say something briefly about themselves, in fact we will do that by by going round the table quickly and and saying what what contribution you you're looking to make. So we'll start with Andrew.
April Payton: Oh my name's Andrew I'm a I'm Market Research person for this uh for this meeting and uh project for this new remote control and uh yeah I'll be uh presenting information statistics on what people want to want to uh get from this new design, what people want to like and from a fashion point of view and the practicality point of view.
Beth Ryan: Right Kendra.
Sharon Fisher: I'm Kendra and I'm Us User Interface and um I haven't had a whole lot of experience in this kind of thing before but I'm m so I'll be working on the design.
Beth Ryan: Right at least means you haven't got any preconceived ideas so.
Sharon Fisher: Right. Yep, I'm just open to being creative.
Beth Ryan: Yep, good.
Jacqualine Saborido: Uh I'm Katie, I'm Jacqualine Saborido I'll just be I guess presenting about the the inter workings of our little remote control and uh yeah.
Beth Ryan: Okay, very very quickly, um this I don't want to make this meeting too structured because the the whole idea is that it's a um you know a think tank. Everybody says what they what they want to say, uh and we don't want to be constrained by uh kind of convention or uh uh slides on screens or or anything else um but um briefly um th th this is what we want to do. The the remote control needs to be original, there has to be something about it that uh other remote controls don't have so that as soon as people see it they think um yes that's different, uh I want one, um and that goes along with being trendy, uh uh you know the I want it uh scenario. User-friendly as as we all know, remote controls can be uh uh very user-unfriendly so we want to make ours one that people can pick up and think oh yes that's it's obvious how that works, uh and they also want to look at the price and think oh yeah that's something that I may not need another remote control but uh it's such a nice one I'm gonna have one. And last but not least, or indeed first of all, it it must make the company money, and we make the company money by producing what the consumer wants. The uh the further work to be done is i the um the functional design, uh what it uh what it must actually do, the uh conceptual design, uh how we actually present that to the consumer and th the the detailed design i is uh how we get that into production. Uh now th the main design tool that we have available to us at the moment is is the white board and uh uh let us very quickly do what i what it says in the in the in the prompt slide here, um In fact I suggest to avoid everybody untangling themselves from the uh the the wires, that we don't do that, um So I I everybody knows what whiteboard is so we'll um uh we'll do a virtual drawing on the on on the whiteboard of of your your own uh uh favourite animal, but le let's go round the table, your favourite animal.
April Payton: Um, badger.
Beth Ryan: Mm and why?
April Payton: Uh it's it's got nice contrast with
Beth Ryan: Uh-huh.
April Payton: black and white and uh and
Beth Ryan: Oh
April Payton: they're,
Beth Ryan: right uh my
April Payton: the
Beth Ryan: my wife says my beard looks like a badger's arse 'cause of the the white streaks in it. Kendra.
Sharon Fisher: Um probably a duck I just I li I like the way they look and they're just nice animals and I like how they can fly or swim or walk around
Beth Ryan: Uh-huh.
Sharon Fisher: or whatever.
Beth Ryan: Right, okay.
Jacqualine Saborido: Uh 's horses, no particular reason why.
Beth Ryan: Uh-huh, fair enough yeah. I'm not sure that I've got any favourite animal to be quite honest, I think homo sapien because of their their uh overall ability to uh uh
April Payton: Make mobile phones and T_V_ remotes
Beth Ryan: Sorry?
April Payton: to make T_V_ remotes.
Beth Ryan: Indeed absolutely yes, tha that's um Okay and uh w we need to keep in mind here that the uh we want to sell this for for twenty five Euro um, we want to m make an overall profit for the the company of fifty million Euros so we're we're looking at selling a lot of these um ag across the the entire planet and and we're looking at a gross profit of fifty percent. It needs to cost twelve Euros fifty to make Um. so we're not only looking at a a very trendy original product, we're looking at making it at a very good price. Um, okay, um would anybody like t like to to start by giving their o um sort of quick views of of current remote controls.
Sharon Fisher: Well to use with all the different buttons and uh it's handiest when you have one that works both the D_V_D_ player or whatever and the T_V_ as well. Um, but that it's easy to if you can switch back and forth instead of
Beth Ryan: No.
Sharon Fisher: having to press a bunch of different buttons and so I think it's is best when they're clearly labelled and you can see which buttons you're supposed to use, you know.
Beth Ryan: Any any thoughts about buttons or any oth other way of approaching the p the uh the problem? Or anybody else, strong feelings about remote controls? Are there you know, bad ones they've used or good ones they've used or ones
Jacqualine Saborido: Um
Beth Ryan: that they've lost and never found again?
Jacqualine Saborido: I think it's important that you should be able to when you when you press the buttons it'll actually pick up the signals from kind of anywhere and you shouldn't have to like contort yourself
April Payton: Yeah.
Jacqualine Saborido: the signal.
Sharon Fisher: Yeah.
April Payton: Think a lot of the time, remotes that come with T_V_ players and T_V_s and D_V_
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm.
April Payton: players, like they aren't like an area that's put a lot of effort into, they're very boring, very plain. Like it's
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm.
April Payton: very a very like um making a a stylish remote control would be a very like Easily put us one step ahead of the current competition.
Beth Ryan: Um what so wh what's in in what particular style features are you thinking about?
April Payton: Um. Something that looks looks doesn't look like remote control. So if you want, something that looks like uh something that makes you think oh what's this? Like this pen doesn't really look like a pen, but it makes
Beth Ryan: Uh-huh.
April Payton: you think oh. So, sorry that's a bit vague.
Beth Ryan: Yeah d no I mean do you think there's a risk if it doesn't look like remote control, people won't see it as a remote control um and uh
April Payton: Uh I suppose suppose that's up to the marketing to to make make people aware of the product.
Beth Ryan: Uh-huh. Any other thoughts about um th the physical appearance of a of remote controls?
Sharon Fisher: I think something that's comfortable to hold because sometimes you get the remote controls that are just those
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm.
Sharon Fisher: big, rectangular
April Payton: Mm.
Sharon Fisher: things and uh they're kind of awkward to hold onto, so something that's more comfortable that fits in a person's hand better.
Beth Ryan: I mean th the thing that i immediately comes to mind is computer mouses which
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm.
Beth Ryan: um
Sharon Fisher: Yeah.
April Payton: Yeah.
Beth Ryan: I mean y you get all sorts of shapes
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm.
Beth Ryan: in the shops and s you know some quite fancy ones
Sharon Fisher: Yeah.
Beth Ryan: um than the some from personal experience which look nice but aren't particularly comfortable.
Sharon Fisher: Yeah.
Beth Ryan: Um any thoughts about buttons or flat screens or uh uh
April Payton: Well from the mouse idea you could, remote is a piece of plastic with the big rubber buttons sticking out of it which you press, whereas if you want could all be flat and the buttons are very kind of almost subtle that instead of being raised out of the device uh you push into device you see, like a mouse button.
Beth Ryan: Yes, I mean the only thing is if if you're watching television in a in a a darkened room
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm.
April Payton: I suppose.
Beth Ryan: um you need to be able to uh fi
April Payton: Easily, yeah
Beth Ryan: find
April Payton: yeah.
Beth Ryan: the button buttons easily.
Sharon Fisher: But maybe they could be concave instead of sticking up to have them be kind of down so you could feel them
April Payton: Mm.
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm.
Sharon Fisher: better.
Beth Ryan: Yeah, that's uh must admit I don't think I've ever seen one with concave buttons, that's uh certainly be different. Um do we need it to uh I can't think of any re remote controls that I know of that actually light up at all. Do we
Sharon Fisher: Oh yeah.
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm that
Beth Ryan: do
Jacqualine Saborido: would
Beth Ryan: we
Jacqualine Saborido: be
Beth Ryan: want
Jacqualine Saborido: good.
Beth Ryan: uh
Sharon Fisher: Like a like a mobile phone?
Beth Ryan: Yeah.
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm.
Sharon Fisher: Yeah.
April Payton: Mm,
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm.
April Payton: yeah that would be good.
Beth Ryan: Okay. So, Andrew have you had any thoughts yet about how we might market something which there are already millions out there and that we want to uh uh uh t take over the entire um the planet with?
April Payton: Mm-hmm, um especially if we try to sell, what two million of them. Oh sorry, four million of 'em, but uh I think if w if we market it as as not as not well this you c you could either market it as the point of view we could have the two we could have parallel marketing s schemes where you've got one where it appeals to people that want to have the new device that looks cool,
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm.
April Payton: is fashionable and like you just it's it's like uh it's one that rather than ra I wan I want rather than a kind of a need relationship
Beth Ryan: Mm-hmm.
April Payton: with the device, but that might considering the act what the device is for and the nature of some people might not like respond to having a device that they just looks nice, therefore they want it so make it practical at the same time. I think it's this is gonna have to appeal to people that want device that can enhance their living room uh
Beth Ryan: Mm-hmm.
April Payton: but also a device that uh is practically sound.
Beth Ryan: Mm-hmm.
April Payton: So um, I dunno we'll have to decide which which angle we're gonna go to or both.
Beth Ryan: Okay,
April Payton: If you.
Beth Ryan: yeah, yeah, well I d I think an any uh any facets that we identify w we aim need to aim for for all of.
April Payton: Mm.
Beth Ryan: Um okay well first thoughts on um the the industrial design side.
Jacqualine Saborido: Oh I think it's it's remote controls are kind of a unique object 'cause it's you depend on them so much, but you don't i i it's you sort of just assume they're always gonna work, you don't think of them as a comp like a computer can break down and you're kinda like oh well fair enough there's all these complex things going on, it's gonna something's gonna get messed up eventually. They they just need to be very very dependable because people sort of take them for granted and then if your remote control breaks it's God forbid you actually get up and manually change the channel
Beth Ryan: Indeed.
Jacqualine Saborido: it just it needs to be very effective, very always dependable. Uh I don't think we should make it too small I 'cause I think it needs to it can't be too big like you were saying big an and huge and um awkward, but also if you make it too small kinda like you know how mobile phones are getting smaller and smaller um, it's just gonna end up under a couch cushion somewhere
Beth Ryan: Yeah.
Jacqualine Saborido: and um yeah. But so yes dependable, and have a good medium range size.
Beth Ryan: Okay, and um colours, materials? Kendra, anyone?
Sharon Fisher: Well, most I think most of the remote controls now are either just black or grey, so maybe we should go with something different or be able to I was just thinking of um what they're doing with mobile phones now how you can get the different um what are they called? Like the face-plates
Beth Ryan: Yeah.
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm,
Sharon Fisher: that you change
Jacqualine Saborido: mm-hmm.
Sharon Fisher: so we could have maybe I don't know if it would be feasible to do something with that, where you can change the face-plates or have kind of a
Beth Ryan: Uh-huh.
Sharon Fisher: variety so people can get different different things. Have it kind of look how they want to, different colours, things like that,
Beth Ryan: Right.
Sharon Fisher: probably just plastic because that's always the lightest.
Beth Ryan: Yeah. Okay that's uh Again I don't think that's ever been done before, it's uh
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm-hmm.
Beth Ryan: the sort of the sort of thing that would get people uh thinking yes that's something that I haven't got and uh might need so. Uh Andrew, any thoughts about uh how we might market interchangeable fronts on on the remote control?
April Payton: Um, well we could either market it together by getting control in a set colour or with like you buy it with several uh like you ge you get the f uh the face-plates with it when you buy or as a separate thing, but uh maybe thinking of that, it's considering the nature of the device, maybe a second thing like a second campaign to market
Jacqualine Saborido: Mm.
April Payton: new facials for your to your might go a bit astray since
Beth Ryan: Yeah.
April Payton: it is the kind of thing where y you generally get one and then forget about it. Unless
Beth Ryan: Yeah.
April Payton: you were trying to
Jacqualine Saborido: Well you could come
Beth Ryan: I
Jacqualine Saborido: up
Beth Ryan: think
Jacqualine Saborido: with like novelty ones, like they've done with the the mobile phones, you can get like different you know scenes from different movies and stuff
April Payton: Mm.
Jacqualine Saborido: on
Sharon Fisher: Yeah.
Jacqualine Saborido: the remote control
April Payton: Oh it's
Jacqualine Saborido: and
April Payton: that's
Jacqualine Saborido: sorta
April Payton: a that's a good idea.
Jacqualine Saborido: stagger the release of them and get people like oh I want that cover on it now and
Sharon Fisher: Yeah.
Jacqualine Saborido: that'll keep them
Beth Ryan: Mm-mm.
April Payton: Mm.
Jacqualine Saborido: spending money.
Beth Ryan: Right,
April Payton: Yeah true.
Beth Ryan: okay I think we've got um a good idea now. We uh meeting is uh Needs to be k uh wrapped up fairly quickly. So uh um we've got thirty minutes to start looking at the um at the design in more detail. Um then we'll we will reconvene in in thirty minutes and try to get some of these ideas uh uh more formalised. Uh thank you very much indeed.
Sharon Fisher: Okay.
Jacqualine Saborido: Thank you. | Beth Ryan opens the meeting by welcoming everybody and saying they will be developing a new television remote control. Then each group member states his/her name and role in the group. Beth Ryan states that the remote needs to be original, trendy, and user-friendly. The further work will be on the functional, conceptual, and detailed design. Since they all know what a whiteboard is, they do a virtual drawing by each stating their favorite animal. Beth Ryan tells them the project budget. They proceed to discuss problems with current remotes as well as preferable styles and looks, such as using face-plates so the look is changable. Beth Ryan closes the meeting. | 2 | amisum | train |
Patricia Douglas: Alright? Alright. Thank you for coming to this meeting of the uh uh design group. Um I think we uh made some definite progress at the last one um and come up with some interesting uh uh w suggestions for our our new remote control. Um I'll again very quickly uh just present some notes of that meeting. Um the the the problem with existing remote controls, we felt, was that they're ugly um and that people are prepared to pay a premium for something better. Um they've got lots buttons on them that uh people don't use and find difficult to learn. Um and people lose them. And We we thought that f for our our new uh uh remote control that everybody will want to rush out and buy, um that we're we should look at speech recognition rather than r rather than buttons, and that if we have any buttons they should be very few of them and only for those functions that are actually identified that that people use. That um we want to go for uh a long lasting battery that we gua we guarantee for the life of the uh uh the product and a shape that will be instantly recognisable, A_ um as uh a trendy remote control, and and B_ as uh a Real Reaction product. So that w uh when people are uh happy with that, they will they will want to buy uh everything else from us. Uh Okay. So again um, I'll we'll have the three three presentations from the the the three of you and then uh we'll we'll make a a final a final uh decision. Um and the the decisions that we need to to make today, finally, are um what energy source we want to use, whether i it is practical to use uh um a a a long lasting one. And uh I I think our discussion was around the fact that uh if we're gonna go for uh a long lasting power supply, then basically it's uh sealed for life and uh if anybody does manage to run one down, we'll we'll give them another one. And uh it it'll be uh, you know, prominently displayed as part of the th the advertising literature that it's um um, you know, for life, guaranteed for life. Um now the the the internal chip um and uh this is where I need uh uh Kate's expert advice and given that th this has to to go to market as quickly as possible um d d do we go for a custom designed chip? Or or do we buy one off the shelf and and programme it ourselves? Uh I mean I'm I'm I'm n not an expert on these things, but presumably, there must be loads of 'em already on the market that we can modify. But uh that that's uh that's your area of expertise. And then the uh, you know, the the overall design of the case uh is is is Kendra's field and uh we we had some discussions last time as as to uh how we might go forward and we'll we'll finalise those uh da today. Um and thi this is all linked in with the the the user interface, whether we p um go for voice, buttons, or or a bit of both. Uh and then uh, you know, f for the next meeting Kate will be looking at the the the s the look, feel and design, Kendra the uh ho how the the user actually uses it and and Andrew of course the the product evaluation. And uh Kate and Kendra will be producing a a model for us to uh to look at. Uh so, if if we can have the the three presentations again please, and uh um p perhaps you'd like to start
Janet Dickens: Okay.
Patricia Douglas: uh k. Kate.
Janet Dickens: Um
Patricia Douglas: Oh I'm sorry,
Janet Dickens: Um
Patricia Douglas: oh sorry.
Janet Dickens: there we go.
Janet Dickens: 'Kay, I'll just be talking about the components design. And Okay, basically I just uh looked at what exactly do remotes do. Uh basically they wait for you to press a key or give a voice command and then this is translated uh into uh light signals which are then seen by the T_V_. Uh the materials we're gonna need to look at uh the two big ones are the integrated circuit chip and the battery and the in integrated circuit chip uh works in conjunction with a a diode transistor or resonator, uh two more resistors and a capacitor and the battery works in conjunction with a resistor and a capacitor. Um. Uh basically what happens is you'll press a number or give a voice command and this creates a a connection within the the remote that allows the chip the chip then senses this connection and produces a signal in a Morse code format. This signal's sent to the transistor which amplifies it and then sends it on to the light emitting diode and uh which is then trai changed into a infrared light which is sent to the T_V_ and sort of seen by the T_V_ and which uh changes the channels. Um. Oh. Uh cool.
Janet Dickens: Uh so as for how we should end up uh using this in our remote uh t couple of main questions are the buttons. Uh y the fewer buttons you have, I guess the fewer internal connections and internal codes you're gonna need. Um however uh to n not have buttons or to use a voice commands instead of buttons might make these connections more difficult and uh raise the production cost. That's something we should think about. Also we have to work within the company constraints, and the company has informed Emily Cashen via email that uh they're experts at pushbuttons and that seems to be the most uh cost-effective way of producing it. Um also with battery connections the company has some limits on the batteries we can use, so I was thinking perhaps a combination of solar cells with a back-up basic battery and somehow between the combination of that two we might be able to come up with something that uh will last the the lifetime or the five to ten years and we could still keep that original idea. Um we also need to look at the chips, uh v custom-designed versus off the shelf, and the custom-designed will give us much more flexibility and enable us to incorporate the voice function that we all uh seem to have agreed upon. Um, however that's gonna cost more, but uh the off the shelf is gonna be uh cheaper and it's gonna be allow us to produce it quicker and get out there faster, but it's going to be less flexible with the features, especially things like uh voice activation, which haven't really been used much on remotes, so there's not really chips out there that would be easy to uh to convert, so if we were uh definitely gonna go with the the voice option we'd probably have to design um our own chip. And that pretty much sums it up.
Patricia Douglas: Okay, so how um sorry,
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: can you uh
Janet Dickens: Oh
Patricia Douglas: just
Janet Dickens: yep,
Patricia Douglas: put
Janet Dickens: sorry.
Patricia Douglas: that one back up again, please?
Janet Dickens: Yep.
Patricia Douglas: Um. Uh d d d okay, I mean uh inevitably a b a custom design chip is gonna be more expensive.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: Do we do we know uh by how
Janet Dickens: Um
Patricia Douglas: much?
Janet Dickens: I don't actually have any price information, no.
Patricia Douglas: And and do we know how long it'll take to uh develop a a custom chip.
Janet Dickens: Um it a lot longer than an off the shelf chip. Oh w yeah, we did the the problem is the the the voice technology is not really highly
Patricia Douglas: Right,
Janet Dickens: developed, it's sort of still
Patricia Douglas: okay.
Janet Dickens: still in an ex experimental form, uh so it would uh it's hard to predict the time.
Patricia Douglas: Right, I think we need to make a a decision here. Uh given that the company wants this on the market quickly and cheaply,
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: that would appear to uh effectively constrain us to an existing chip and thus therefore conventional button technology. Um uh now before we go round everybody else, does anybody um
Gail Thrift: I
Patricia Douglas: h have any have anyti ha anything to say about that?
Gail Thrift: I just have a question about. Um does it make a difference if there are just a few commands, for example if you um can pre-programme in like numbers one through ten and pre-programme say, you know, nine channels and then just use the voice recognition to say channel one and then you've programmed in say B_B_C_ four as your channel one, as your favourite, it's like to have a certain number of favourites um
Janet Dickens: W
Gail Thrift: and that
Janet Dickens: just
Gail Thrift: w
Janet Dickens: to to incorporate the voice activation in it is is sorta the trick. Once
Gail Thrift: Okay.
Janet Dickens: you've got the whole voice chip
Gail Thrift: Then
Janet Dickens: in there,
Gail Thrift: it doesn't
Janet Dickens: then
Gail Thrift: matter.
Janet Dickens: it's pretty much
Gail Thrift: Okay.
Janet Dickens: the the world the the sky is your limit, but to actually the the big step is to actually get the voice
Gail Thrift: Okay.
Janet Dickens: activation chips in there and working.
Patricia Douglas: Cause uh I must say I find it slightly surprising given that, you know, mobile phones incorporate voice activated dialling. So uh
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: um I mean I d d for slightly different well no, I mean, it's if you you speak somebody's name and it'll dial the number for you, so uh bu I mean the this this information is from is this is the internal company
Janet Dickens: Uh
Patricia Douglas: information,
Janet Dickens: bits
Patricia Douglas: is it?
Janet Dickens: of it, yeah.
Patricia Douglas: So
Gail Thrift: Of course
Patricia Douglas: uh
Gail Thrift: mobile phones do tend to be more expensive,
Janet Dickens: Yes, as well.
Gail Thrift: you know, hundred and fifty pounds or something. As opposed to
Patricia Douglas: Yeah,
Gail Thrift: the
Patricia Douglas: mm true,
Gail Thrift: twenty
Patricia Douglas: again but
Gail Thrift: Euros,
Patricia Douglas: if it's without
Gail Thrift: twenty
Patricia Douglas: any
Gail Thrift: five Euros.
Patricia Douglas: without any uh p price informations that's uh difficult to uh uh decide.
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Emily Cashen: Also lots of mobile phones have got a lot of technology in them, not just
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Emily Cashen: that,
Patricia Douglas: Yeah,
Emily Cashen: so.
Patricia Douglas: that's that's right It's. like it's it's you can't 'cause mobile phones are expensive, you can't say it's the voice recognition
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: bit that is. But we don't know. Um. I mean uh I su i I mean if given that the um the technology is not well developed and and given that it's it's never been done before, um th th the double risk, uh perhaps we ought to uh stick to uh to buttons, since the last thing we want to do is present a product that doesn't work. Um. Thoughts?
Gail Thrift: Well, another
Emily Cashen: Would
Gail Thrift: thought I oh, sorry, go ahead.
Emily Cashen: Oh I was just gonna say mayb maybe it sh like um maybe we can like cut corners somewhere else to bring in over cost.
Patricia Douglas: I mean do w do we think that the voice technology is fundamental to the project?
Janet Dickens: Uh it's fundament well I mean I guess it it's something we've discussed uh since the the sort of the beginning, so I th I think in in our in our minds it's it's fundamental, but I don't know that the uh the upper echelons of the company would necessarily agree with that, so I think
Patricia Douglas: I mean I think
Janet Dickens: you have
Patricia Douglas: we
Janet Dickens: to
Gail Thrift: Oh yeah.
Patricia Douglas: Mm.
Janet Dickens: Hm.
Gail Thrift: Okay. Well, I kinda think if we're gonna have the voice recognition for part of it, then maybe we should have it for the whole thing.
Patricia Douglas: Yeah, I I
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: I I I think that's uh
Gail Thrift: And we've been talking about it the whole
Janet Dickens: Mm,
Patricia Douglas: Yeah,
Gail Thrift: time. Anyway,
Janet Dickens: mm.
Gail Thrift: I'm
Patricia Douglas: yeah.
Gail Thrift: I'm incli kinda inclined to say that we should just
Patricia Douglas: Mm,
Gail Thrift: go for
Patricia Douglas: right,
Gail Thrift: it.
Patricia Douglas: okay.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Emily Cashen: Uh yeah, it's the second most important aspect to users that the device should be technologically innovative.
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Emily Cashen: From uh my presentation
Patricia Douglas: Yeah,
Emily Cashen: show, so.
Patricia Douglas: it should be
Emily Cashen: Uh technologically innovative.
Patricia Douglas: Right, okay, so.
Janet Dickens: No, that
Patricia Douglas: Fine.
Janet Dickens: sounds good.
Patricia Douglas: Okay.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: I it will have voice recognition
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: um
Gail Thrift: Okay.
Janet Dickens: Cool.
Patricia Douglas: uh if if that means uh if that means we can't afford buttons but I mean b b second question, do we need the five buttons for channel change, up down, volume up down and on off, just as a a backup or
Janet Dickens: Um
Patricia Douglas: just so that people can
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: uh j j just sit
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: there pressing
Janet Dickens: I I
Patricia Douglas: buttons?
Janet Dickens: would say we do, yeah.
Gail Thrift: I think so.
Patricia Douglas: Right. Okay. Sorry, d did you want to say anything?
Janet Dickens: Uh nope,
Patricia Douglas: No?
Janet Dickens: that was it,
Patricia Douglas: Okay.
Janet Dickens: that was it.
Patricia Douglas: Shall we move rapidly
Janet Dickens: Okay.
Patricia Douglas: on to uh
Gail Thrift: Okay.
Patricia Douglas: Kendra? Uh um ra rapidly move the cable over.
Gail Thrift: Let's see.
Patricia Douglas: Mm. Oh good.
Gail Thrift: Oh. Yes. Is it gonna work?
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: Mm
Janet Dickens: it's thinking
Patricia Douglas: yeah,
Janet Dickens: about
Patricia Douglas: it'll
Janet Dickens: it.
Patricia Douglas: get there. Yep.
Gail Thrift: Okay.
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Gail Thrift: Okay, so I did some research on the internet and um what you know, the interf user interface are just aspects that are seen by users, um commands and mechanisms for the operation, and there're just kind of a variety of choices. Um findings, so a lot of times they tend to look cluttered and
Patricia Douglas: Mm-hmm.
Gail Thrift: these were just a couple examples of um different kinds that are a little bit more unusual. There're some
Patricia Douglas: Mm,
Gail Thrift: special
Patricia Douglas: yeah.
Gail Thrift: ones available, like this one right here, which is
Patricia Douglas: Uh-huh.
Gail Thrift: marketed towards children, um
Patricia Douglas: Alright.
Gail Thrift: different designs, and one of the things that n we need to watch out for is a V_ in volume because people some
Gail Thrift: Bring a little picture of what I thought ours could look like. So just kind of minimise the
Patricia Douglas: Mm-hmm.
Gail Thrift: clutter, avoid too many buttons and also um one of the things that people have used is a slide button, like you have on a mouse, that possibly we could use that on the sides
Emily Cashen: Mm.
Gail Thrift: for volume, for example, have the slide button on the side, and then you can pre-programme the channels,
Patricia Douglas: Mm
Gail Thrift: the
Patricia Douglas: yeah.
Gail Thrift: voice recognition and then the
Patricia Douglas: Sorry
Gail Thrift: voice
Patricia Douglas: y
Gail Thrift: response
Patricia Douglas: y
Gail Thrift: sample
Patricia Douglas: yeah,
Gail Thrift: locator.
Patricia Douglas: if I can interrupt you. Well d p 'kay, do you wanna say anything
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: about um slide controls? I mean I think the reason everybody uses pushbuttons is that they're
Janet Dickens: Uh
Patricia Douglas: they're si simple, cheap and
Janet Dickens: Uh I think they're
Patricia Douglas: reliable.
Janet Dickens: they're about the same cost really. I I mean, I think it's just sort of the the there's a lot of slide buttons out there. I think it's pretty much the same sort of connection.
Patricia Douglas: Okay,
Janet Dickens: Mm
Patricia Douglas: fair enough,
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Patricia Douglas: fine.
Gail Thrift: Just because I n for example if I'm using a mouse I like to be able to slide it up and
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Gail Thrift: down so I thought it might
Patricia Douglas: Yeah.
Gail Thrift: be good for volume to just be able to
Patricia Douglas: Good,
Gail Thrift: kind of roll it
Patricia Douglas: good.
Gail Thrift: and then have the up and down and then the
Patricia Douglas: Yeah.
Gail Thrift: this is my
Patricia Douglas: So
Gail Thrift: great
Patricia Douglas: three
Gail Thrift: little
Patricia Douglas: three
Gail Thrift: drawing.
Patricia Douglas: there's three buttons on a slider. Three buttons,
Gail Thrift: Y
Patricia Douglas: channel
Gail Thrift: yes,
Emily Cashen: Well,
Patricia Douglas: up channel
Gail Thrift: yes.
Patricia Douglas: up
Emily Cashen: if
Patricia Douglas: down
Emily Cashen: you g if
Patricia Douglas: and
Emily Cashen: you you got channel down, can have a slider in that as well. Because if it if you no if you notice on the thing it it kind of like has got kind of if you you know it s kind of like sticks, if you know what I mean, up like one unit, if you see what
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Emily Cashen: I mean.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Emily Cashen: So it kinda goes up one, then y like you can keep rolling it up, but it's like like like like a cog or something.
Patricia Douglas: Uh-huh.
Emily Cashen: So you kinda take it up one at a time.
Patricia Douglas: Okay.
Gail Thrift: The only advantage
Emily Cashen: D
Patricia Douglas: Um
Gail Thrift: I was thinking of to having the buttons, like the buttons on one side for the channel,
Patricia Douglas: Mm-hmm.
Gail Thrift: and then the slider is that if you're just holding in your hand, and you pick it up, it's easy to n s
Emily Cashen: Oh.
Gail Thrift: know, okay, this is just the volume and this is
Patricia Douglas: This
Gail Thrift: the channel.
Patricia Douglas: one
Emily Cashen: Uh
Patricia Douglas: on the one
Emily Cashen: you could
Patricia Douglas: side and one
Emily Cashen: you
Patricia Douglas: yeah.
Emily Cashen: could
Janet Dickens: Ye yeah, 'cause
Emily Cashen: as
Janet Dickens: I've
Emily Cashen: l
Janet Dickens: definitely
Emily Cashen: as
Patricia Douglas: Okay.
Emily Cashen: like
Janet Dickens: picked
Emily Cashen: a mouse
Janet Dickens: up remotes
Emily Cashen: you could
Janet Dickens: and like meant to
Patricia Douglas: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: change the channel and turn the volume, or
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: vice versa, so it'd be
Patricia Douglas: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: kinda good to have them be feel completely different. You'd know what you were fiddling with. Yeah.
Emily Cashen: Yeah, like
Patricia Douglas: Yeah,
Emily Cashen: the shape
Gail Thrift: That
Patricia Douglas: or
Emily Cashen: of
Gail Thrift: was
Emily Cashen: it almost
Patricia Douglas: yeah
Emily Cashen: like a
Patricia Douglas: uh
Emily Cashen: mouse,
Patricia Douglas: th th
Emily Cashen: with
Patricia Douglas: the
Emily Cashen: a
Patricia Douglas: I mean thi this is what the we have to come up with is the the actual shape that people can ins instantly pick it up and and know
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: know uh know what it's going to do.
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: Okay, so we we're looking at sliders for both a uh volume and channel change
Gail Thrift: Um well I was
Patricia Douglas: of
Gail Thrift: thinking
Patricia Douglas: one sort.
Gail Thrift: kind of just for the volume,
Patricia Douglas: Just
Gail Thrift: but
Patricia Douglas: for the volume,
Gail Thrift: what
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: uh.
Gail Thrift: what
Emily Cashen: Dep
Gail Thrift: do you guys think?
Emily Cashen: I dunno if it
Gail Thrift: We
Emily Cashen: depending
Gail Thrift: could
Emily Cashen: on the final shape of it, 'cause you could have like, I dunno, it looks like you can c control the volume with your thumb, and then you could control
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Emily Cashen: the buttons
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Emily Cashen: with your fingers.
Patricia Douglas: Fingers, yeah.
Gail Thrift: yeah.
Patricia Douglas: I
Janet Dickens: if
Patricia Douglas: mean it's
Janet Dickens: yeah,
Patricia Douglas: it's
Janet Dickens: in that kinda position the fingers would be better for pressing and
Patricia Douglas: It
Janet Dickens: the
Patricia Douglas: yeah,
Janet Dickens: that
Patricia Douglas: I mean
Janet Dickens: for
Patricia Douglas: it
Gail Thrift: B
Janet Dickens: rolling,
Patricia Douglas: it
Janet Dickens: just
Patricia Douglas: it seems
Janet Dickens: the way it
Patricia Douglas: to Emily Cashen
Janet Dickens: would
Patricia Douglas: that
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: uh it uh it al also has the advantage that it it the two are clearly different,
Janet Dickens: Mm
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: yeah, yeah,
Patricia Douglas: um
Emily Cashen: Oh yeah, yeah.
Patricia Douglas: that
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Patricia Douglas: there's no no possibility of uh confusing the two. So
Gail Thrift: I'm just
Patricia Douglas: okay.
Gail Thrift: gonna pass this along.
Patricia Douglas: Right so uh that's sorry is that that all you
Gail Thrift: Yes.
Patricia Douglas: want to say at the mo okay, fine.
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: Mm right.
Emily Cashen: Here we go.
Patricia Douglas: Right.
Emily Cashen: Uh yeah, this is my report on trend watching.
Patricia Douglas: Mm-hmm.
Emily Cashen: The data's come off internet uh from executive summary for us on the top three things wanted by the consumer. And we got reports from Paris, Milan on new fashions. And uh the most important aspect is the l the look it has to look fancy, look and feel
Patricia Douglas: Mm-hmm.
Emily Cashen: uh instead of the current functional look and feel. This is a st well I was gonna say yeah twice as important as the
Patricia Douglas: Mm.
Emily Cashen: second aspect, which is the technologically innov innovative um side of it. So uh and the third being easy to use is probably a given, we have to try and incorporate, so uh
Patricia Douglas: Well I I mean I th I think that what we're suggesting ought to address all three of those.
Emily Cashen: Uh
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Emily Cashen: exactly, yeah.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: Okay.
Emily Cashen: I s that out of sequence? Uh yeah, sorry. Uh yeah, and uh from the fashion watchers from Milan and Paris have said fruit and vegetables are an important theme for clothes and furniture and shoes, et cetera.
Gail Thrift: Oh.
Emily Cashen: Uh sorry, clothes, shoes and
Patricia Douglas: Uh-huh.
Emily Cashen: furniture and uh a spongy material to be used on the on the outside.
Patricia Douglas: Mm I hadn't thought of that, that's different, certainly.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Emily Cashen: Yeah. But uh I was gonna say um yeah, fruit
Patricia Douglas: What?
Emily Cashen: and vegetables, uh important to this year um important to furniture, I'm just gonna say uh f like it's in if if fashion if we're going for the it looks fancy, then fashion is obviously the line we gotta be going through.
Patricia Douglas: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: Mm-hmm.
Emily Cashen: But fashions do don't last very long.
Janet Dickens: Well that can kinda tie into our changing uh face things, like we could have
Emily Cashen: Mm.
Janet Dickens: the fruit and vegetable theme this year
Emily Cashen: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: and uh
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: whatever happens next year, we can have the
Emily Cashen: Yeah, we can
Janet Dickens: face
Emily Cashen: have a
Janet Dickens: plates,
Emily Cashen: sp
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Emily Cashen: like a spongy skin on it and then we
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Emily Cashen: can just
Patricia Douglas: Uh.
Emily Cashen: whip that off and
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Gail Thrift: Yeah like the kind you get on like hand weights. You know, that
Janet Dickens: Mm,
Gail Thrift: kind of spongy
Janet Dickens: yeah, that weird I dunno what that is,
Patricia Douglas: Uh.
Janet Dickens: but
Gail Thrift: yeah.
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Emily Cashen: A kind of yeah.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: Also
Emily Cashen: Oh
Patricia Douglas: means you can drop it without damaging it.
Emily Cashen: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: Uh,
Emily Cashen: That's
Janet Dickens: yeah,
Emily Cashen: c
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Janet Dickens: it's good
Emily Cashen: cool.
Janet Dickens: as well.
Gail Thrift: that's true.
Janet Dickens: Mm-hmm.
Emily Cashen: Um you have we could if we could save depending on the cost of the product itself, you know, could we have uh a cheaper b cheaper power source and then just have it annually renewed? Instead of having a ten year guarantee? With interchangeable covers, could just buy a new one every year, a new
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Emily Cashen: one when new fashions come out.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: I I mean it its uh I that's an interesting idea, it's like the old Swatch watch where uh um on only batteries ever got changed in those, 'cause people just bought a new one when it went out of fashion, but
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: it's just never been seen as a a fashion item before.
Emily Cashen: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: Um that's
Gail Thrift: Wh
Patricia Douglas: yes
Janet Dickens: I
Patricia Douglas: if if if they're made in sufficient quantity
Janet Dickens: I think it's easier sometimes to have them buy changeable covers for it than to buy a whole new one, because you don't feel like you're investing in a whole new product.
Patricia Douglas: W I mean we we can uh uh b but I mean my feeling is that
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: current power sources are such that
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: for relatively little cost you can make it last, you know, a long time.
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: Um but if we also make it cheap enough that people either change the cover every year or
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: even buy a new one every year then it it's it's even better.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Gail Thrift: What if we
Emily Cashen: Mm-hmm.
Gail Thrift: included the batteries in the cover?
Janet Dickens: Oh yeah.
Gail Thrift: So
Janet Dickens: I like
Gail Thrift: um
Janet Dickens: that. That
Gail Thrift: like
Janet Dickens: all c also kind of encourages 'em to buy new covers and yeah.
Gail Thrift: Yeah, so can I see that
Janet Dickens: Um.
Gail Thrift: thing?
Patricia Douglas: S
Gail Thrift: Just this
Patricia Douglas: Yeah,
Gail Thrift: as examples.
Patricia Douglas: yeah, I n I know the only p
Gail Thrift: So
Patricia Douglas: I mean
Gail Thrift: f
Patricia Douglas: the the the the immediate thing that comes to mind with that is that it it it y you've then got the connection and you've immediately got a sort of unreliability, whereas
Janet Dickens: Uh yeah.
Patricia Douglas: the advantage of having it plumbed in is that that the whole thing is all, you know, completely soldered together
Gail Thrift: Yeah, I
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Gail Thrift: guess that's
Patricia Douglas: and it it it you know, total
Gail Thrift: true.
Patricia Douglas: reliability, but I mean I d I I uh I know what you're saying and uh understand
Emily Cashen: Or
Patricia Douglas: where you're coming from.
Emily Cashen: well, but like uh like more than just the battery, like a complete different like you've only got like, you know like th uh this bit's the bit you keep, and this is the expensive bit, this is like the chip and this is
Janet Dickens: Mm-hmm.
Emily Cashen: the microphone. And then this is the power source and the bit everyone sees. And then
Patricia Douglas: I th I s I think if we're gonna go down that route, then we're talking about uh even if it costs slightly more than that, um just building the whole thing in one, then having
Emily Cashen: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: getting
Emily Cashen: you probably
Patricia Douglas: cheaper
Emily Cashen: are right.
Patricia Douglas: production costs um and, you know giving people the option of buying a new uh a a complete new thing, the advantage of a replaceable cover is that even if they don't it doesn't have a cover on at all, it will still work
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: um
Gail Thrift: that's true.
Patricia Douglas: totally.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: Um
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: then if,
Gail Thrift: yeah.
Patricia Douglas: you know, if people lose the cover, I mean they they might be well inclined to go out and spend however many Euros on a on a new one
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: um rather than a a complete new
Janet Dickens: Well
Patricia Douglas: re
Janet Dickens: that that's
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: remote.
Janet Dickens: just it with the covers, you're sort of tricking 'em into continuing to spend their money on our products without making 'em feel like they're being ripped off having to buy a new product.
Patricia Douglas: Yeah, I
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: mean it
Janet Dickens: So,
Patricia Douglas: is
Gail Thrift: just
Patricia Douglas: it's
Gail Thrift: another
Patricia Douglas: up to it's
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Gail Thrift: five
Patricia Douglas: up to
Gail Thrift: Euro to get
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: Yeah, it's it's up to our marketing people
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: to
Gail Thrift: Right.
Patricia Douglas: to ma to ma turn it into a a fashion item.
Janet Dickens: Mm, yeah.
Patricia Douglas: Um and, you know, as as external fashions change, then we get new new covers
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: on the market and, you know, readily available. And
Janet Dickens: And that's the
Patricia Douglas: um
Janet Dickens: sort of thing, once you get the mould set, you can just whip out different colours, different
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Janet Dickens: pictures
Gail Thrift: like they have
Janet Dickens: very
Gail Thrift: for
Janet Dickens: very
Gail Thrift: mobile
Janet Dickens: quickly.
Gail Thrift: phones
Patricia Douglas: that's
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: that's
Gail Thrift: that
Janet Dickens: yeah,
Patricia Douglas: right,
Gail Thrift: are just
Janet Dickens: exactly,
Patricia Douglas: yeah,
Janet Dickens: exactly.
Patricia Douglas: yeah.
Gail Thrift: fruits and animal prints
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Gail Thrift: and colours. Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: So
Gail Thrift: okay.
Patricia Douglas: uh i so uh okay. Um right, sorry. Um we hadn't finished your
Emily Cashen: Um oh, don't worry it's all said, I was just gonna say uh yeah, are we gonna make this as part of like like uh a part of the f like it it the fashions apply to furniture, so are we gonna make this part of the furniture?
Patricia Douglas: It's the sort of thing that we want people to have prominent dis displayed
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: on their
Janet Dickens: Mm-hmm.
Patricia Douglas: um coffee table to say this says something about Emily Cashen. Um
Emily Cashen: Yeah. This is fashionable
Patricia Douglas: this
Emily Cashen: with
Patricia Douglas: is fashionable.
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: I, you know, I'm I'm I'm with it, I'm up to date. And you know, th the the design that I've got, and and it could be a a home-made design, um you know this says this is not just a a television remote control, this is, you know, a fashion accessory. Um, so I mean the the the basic shape i is is what we uh I mean given that we've got you know one one on off button presumably,
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: two buttons for uh channel change and one slider and basically nothing else, um w we need to decide on the just the basic shape of the thing. And, know whether we go down the fruit and veg route, and I don't suggest we make it look like a banana, but um know sort of the the organic, you know, curved look,
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: you
Emily Cashen: Oh
Patricia Douglas: know,
Emily Cashen: yeah.
Patricia Douglas: t to deliberately get away from the uh um uh you know, the the the the square look of most um current uh remotes and, you know, whether whether the you know, the the fixed part of it is the corporate yellow. Um mm or uh 'cause there's certainly you know, the the corporate logo needs to be prominently uh displayed so that people s th looked at it and say right, that's a Real Reaction remote control, I want one of those.
Janet Dickens: I dunno that we should make the whole thing yellow I kinda thought with a you'd have like a yellow circle with the R_R_ in it somewhere
Patricia Douglas: Yeah uh
Janet Dickens: on
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: the
Janet Dickens: it,
Gail Thrift: like
Patricia Douglas: the
Janet Dickens: but I'd
Gail Thrift: an.
Patricia Douglas: uh
Janet Dickens: yellow
Patricia Douglas: or or b
Janet Dickens: seems a bit of a strong colour
Patricia Douglas: Yeah,
Janet Dickens: to
Patricia Douglas: I'd
Janet Dickens: make
Patricia Douglas: I'd
Janet Dickens: the ent like
Patricia Douglas: um
Janet Dickens: the thing no,
Patricia Douglas: yeah.
Janet Dickens: but I mean just
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: like
Patricia Douglas: Uh
Janet Dickens: white
Patricia Douglas: no I
Janet Dickens: or
Patricia Douglas: d
Janet Dickens: grey
Patricia Douglas: I I
Janet Dickens: or
Patricia Douglas: agree,
Janet Dickens: black
Patricia Douglas: I mean
Janet Dickens: or some sort
Patricia Douglas: we're
Janet Dickens: of
Patricia Douglas: we're we're
Janet Dickens: blah
Patricia Douglas: simply
Janet Dickens: colour.
Patricia Douglas: it's simply required
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: to
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Patricia Douglas: incorporate the
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: the the the corporate
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: logo prominently
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: um.
Emily Cashen: And make that a fashion
Gail Thrift: Well
Emily Cashen: symbol
Gail Thrift: n
Emily Cashen: as well.
Patricia Douglas: Well, th this is this is the whole point, yes, you know, I'm I've got a a Real Reaction uh remote control to go with my Real Reaction coffee maker or or whatever. And uh then people, you know, people demand more Real Reaction
Janet Dickens: Mm-hmm.
Patricia Douglas: stuff.
Gail Thrift: Well I was sort of mm kinda picturing like maybe um a shape that's almost like a mouse.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: Yeah.
Gail Thrift: So
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Gail Thrift: that, you know, when they hold it it's because a mouse is pretty comfortable to hold in your hand um maybe we could make it a slightly different shape so they could hold on to it, but that way they can have the volume on the side and then the channel buttons and
Patricia Douglas: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: Yeah.
Gail Thrift: have the power, wherever, somewhere.
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Gail Thrift: I mean
Patricia Douglas: I mean
Gail Thrift: that was
Patricia Douglas: I've
Gail Thrift: just
Patricia Douglas: uh
Gail Thrift: an
Patricia Douglas: yeah.
Gail Thrift: idea that I had.
Patricia Douglas: Oh no that well there's the sim my my idea was something a b probably you know a bit fatter than this but sort of
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: tha that sorta shape so
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: that you can
Gail Thrift: maybe.
Patricia Douglas: just sort of
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: ho
Janet Dickens: you'd want
Patricia Douglas: hold
Janet Dickens: it
Patricia Douglas: it.
Janet Dickens: narrower
Gail Thrift: Kind
Janet Dickens: than
Gail Thrift: of a
Janet Dickens: a
Gail Thrift: c
Janet Dickens: mouse though 'cause it a mouse you're kinda just resting on it, you want something you can definitely grip.
Patricia Douglas: W it
Janet Dickens: So
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: I mean
Janet Dickens: maybe
Patricia Douglas: well
Janet Dickens: it'd
Patricia Douglas: it's
Janet Dickens: be
Patricia Douglas: sort of it's it's sort
Gail Thrift: Sort
Patricia Douglas: of
Gail Thrift: of a combination.
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: uh a
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Patricia Douglas: a mouse, but held,
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: you know, so it's you sorta hold
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: it in your hand like that, i
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: with,
Janet Dickens: and
Patricia Douglas: you know,
Janet Dickens: fiddle
Patricia Douglas: and
Janet Dickens: around
Patricia Douglas: fiddling
Janet Dickens: with it and press
Patricia Douglas: with the buttons.
Janet Dickens: it.
Gail Thrift: Yeah so yeah, kind of maybe maybe a little wider than this, 'cause this is pretty comfortable to hold, and then if you had
Janet Dickens: Maybe almost like a hairbrush, like you could get the about the width of that end of the
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Janet Dickens: pen and then it widens up top
Gail Thrift: then wider
Janet Dickens: and you
Gail Thrift: up
Janet Dickens: can
Gail Thrift: here.
Janet Dickens: fiddle an
Gail Thrift: And then
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Gail Thrift: it would have a l uh wider thing
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Gail Thrift: to uh have
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Gail Thrift: the light, the
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Gail Thrift: infrared light at the T_V_ and just kinda change channels and adjust
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Gail Thrift: the volume and the power could be wherever, up up the top or something.
Janet Dickens: Yeah, cool.
Gail Thrift: What do you guys think about that?
Emily Cashen: Yeah, that sounds
Patricia Douglas: Okay, yeah, yeah.
Emily Cashen: Um I'm just I'm suddenly realising that yeah we're discussing how much how good it's gonna be to change channels t we still can just tell it to. I mean are we are we starting to get away from the the voice functionality of it?
Gail Thrift: Oh yeah.
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: It's a very good point.
Gail Thrift: It is
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Gail Thrift: a very good point.
Patricia Douglas: I think we d I think we decided that w we're actually going down both routes.
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: That
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Patricia Douglas: um the we n we need the the manual controls and that they should be of that form,
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: but that uh
Janet Dickens: But
Patricia Douglas: yeah.
Janet Dickens: do you know, this shape also kind of les lend itself to to voice 'cause if you're you're holding it and you're fiddling, but you can also
Patricia Douglas: Then you just
Janet Dickens: bring it up
Patricia Douglas: bring
Janet Dickens: like
Patricia Douglas: it up
Janet Dickens: that
Patricia Douglas: to your mouth
Janet Dickens: and it's
Patricia Douglas: and just
Janet Dickens: microphone-esque,
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: speak
Gail Thrift: say
Patricia Douglas: to it, yeah,
Janet Dickens: yeah,
Patricia Douglas: yeah.
Emily Cashen: Yeah,
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Emily Cashen: maybe we cou like w like we're leaving out the buttons for the the f less frequently used stuff, but maybe we could
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Emily Cashen: incorporate that into the voice.
Patricia Douglas: I th I th honest uh my personal view is that if it's not there, people wouldn't use it anyway
Emily Cashen: Mm I suppose, but
Patricia Douglas: um.
Emily Cashen: t there is the off chance that, you know, th the brightness is wrong on your T_V_ or the contrast needs changing.
Patricia Douglas: It's cer it's certainly possible I mean, but they
Janet Dickens: Bu
Patricia Douglas: we we're going beyond
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: w w given the state of the technology we want something that we kno we know will will work
Emily Cashen: Hmm yeah.
Patricia Douglas: um.
Janet Dickens: Well you can still i incorporate the voice with with less buttons. I mean uh if the power button was also somehow like a menu button you could press that and or do voice commands, and either volume thing could
Patricia Douglas: Uh
Janet Dickens: also be to scroll through other options like y and you could scroll
Emily Cashen: Yeah,
Janet Dickens: through brightness
Emily Cashen: that's a good idea.
Janet Dickens: and
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Janet Dickens: and
Gail Thrift: I suppose
Janet Dickens: sc and then you
Gail Thrift: I sup
Janet Dickens: can you can minimise the buttons and still have
Patricia Douglas: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: those, you know, brightness
Emily Cashen: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: and tint and stuff.
Patricia Douglas: If we we're I mean I'm getting a clear message that we think that we should have those facilities available.
Gail Thrift: So I guess we could have a
Janet Dickens: Yeah
Gail Thrift: menu button as well. We could have the channels and the power and then a menu button
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Gail Thrift: and then the volume. So have four buttons and the volume instead of three buttons and the volume.
Patricia Douglas: Uh uh uh Okay, if we if we're going down that route, then we need some sort of display. Do we
Janet Dickens: But
Patricia Douglas: need
Janet Dickens: the
Patricia Douglas: some
Janet Dickens: television
Patricia Douglas: sort of display?
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Janet Dickens: would be
Gail Thrift: that's
Patricia Douglas: We
Janet Dickens: the display
Patricia Douglas: actually
Gail Thrift: on the
Janet Dickens: that
Patricia Douglas: use
Gail Thrift: T_V_,
Patricia Douglas: the television,
Janet Dickens: things
Gail Thrift: yeah.
Janet Dickens: like that usually c pop
Patricia Douglas: okay.
Janet Dickens: up on a televi
Gail Thrift: Yeah, and
Janet Dickens: like
Gail Thrift: then
Janet Dickens: you hit
Gail Thrift: y
Janet Dickens: menu
Patricia Douglas: Okay,
Janet Dickens: and menu will come up on television
Patricia Douglas: okay,
Janet Dickens: and have like tint brightness,
Patricia Douglas: okay.
Janet Dickens: and you'd use the scroll,
Emily Cashen: Well
Janet Dickens: scroll through it
Emily Cashen: I
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Emily Cashen: mean on a
Patricia Douglas: Yep.
Emily Cashen: as well, you could press it,
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Emily Cashen: you could press that
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Janet Dickens: yeah,
Emily Cashen: and have
Janet Dickens: that's
Emily Cashen: it as
Janet Dickens: true.
Emily Cashen: a menu
Gail Thrift: press
Emily Cashen: button.
Gail Thrift: that is t yeah, that
Janet Dickens: I
Gail Thrift: might
Janet Dickens: never
Gail Thrift: work.
Janet Dickens: understood how that worked though, but yeah.
Gail Thrift: Yeah, it's like um yeah, it's like the mouse
Janet Dickens: Yeah,
Gail Thrift: where you just kinda click it.
Janet Dickens: mm.
Gail Thrift: You just press it. Yeah, and you could just click that to so if you had like the menu then you could scroll through and then
Janet Dickens: Mm,
Gail Thrift: click it
Janet Dickens: oka
Gail Thrift: to select.
Janet Dickens: yeah. Yeah.
Emily Cashen: Uh yeah.
Gail Thrift: You know what I mean?
Patricia Douglas: Mm yeah. Okay, we got five minutes to go in this
Gail Thrift: Okay.
Patricia Douglas: meeting, so um I d I think we've actually very conveniently just uh come to uh a good point to s to
Janet Dickens: Cool.
Patricia Douglas: sum up um. So um b b Kate and Kendra now go away and uh
Janet Dickens: Play with
Patricia Douglas: pa play
Janet Dickens: play-dough.
Patricia Douglas: play with a bit of Plasticine or play-dough, whatever it is on the other side of the Atlantic.
Emily Cashen: Hmm.
Patricia Douglas: Um and actually put what we've discussed into something uh I was gonna say concrete, but that's a slightly inappropriate word um to something that we can we can see and um Andrew n can go away and th th think about how we can uh actually market this as a concept and not j not just a uh um a a simple remote control.
Emily Cashen: Uh can I just get some things clear just for
Patricia Douglas: Yeah,
Emily Cashen: my
Patricia Douglas: certainly,
Emily Cashen: sake.
Patricia Douglas: of course.
Emily Cashen: Our energy source is gonna be
Patricia Douglas: I
Emily Cashen: long
Patricia Douglas: think
Emily Cashen: term.
Patricia Douglas: I think we decided that we're gonna for for simplicity of, you know, manufacturing and uh maintenance that we will go for a a long term
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: battery source
Emily Cashen: Cool.
Patricia Douglas: um,
Emily Cashen: Uh
Patricia Douglas: I you know, on the basis that um that, you know, if we're going for making it a fashion statement, then uh people are more likely to change it anyway uh before i it runs out and um make an assumption that we we can aim for a battery that will last most people for uh we'll say at least five five ten years
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: and that we'll w we will guarantee it for for five years um.
Emily Cashen: And we're having a custom chip?
Patricia Douglas: We're having a a custom chip, but given the the we've cut the functions down, um that will hopefully not be too problematic, but given that um technol technological innovation is important, then we need to, I'll say it again, technologically innovate. Um and uh we we, know, we must resist any efforts to uh to try and water that down um.
Emily Cashen: And interchangeable case?
Patricia Douglas: I i interchangeable case seems to be um
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: um important to the concept. Um it it should be cheap, you know, if if
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: we avoid any,
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: you know, electrical connections. And uh i you know, i if we can come up with some way of of allowing people to actually personalise it
Emily Cashen: Mm, mm-hmm.
Patricia Douglas: uh to whatever they want, then uh I mean uh uh this is totally new. We d we don't know whether that to what extent people do it or not, but if they've at least got a a good selection of um covers that they can use anyway, and uh and if if we can keep them, you know, rolling, then uh you know, so they can get them in the supermarket when they go down to um a any of the famous supermarkets, I won't mention any mention any names, um it's uh it's good for the supermarket and it's good for us and it hopefully makes them feel better.
Emily Cashen: And uh are we gonna have it il being illuminated from inside onto the buttons or
Patricia Douglas: Um the that I mean that's no, because we've got so few buttons that it that actually makes that redundant.
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Janet Dickens: Mm, does actually,
Emily Cashen: Cool.
Gail Thrift: I think
Janet Dickens: yeah,
Gail Thrift: so too. Yeah, and
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Gail Thrift: especially for making them so like
Janet Dickens: Mm
Gail Thrift: different
Janet Dickens: different
Patricia Douglas: Yeah,
Gail Thrift: and
Janet Dickens: to feel,
Patricia Douglas: yeah.
Janet Dickens: yeah, yeah.
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: And the you know, that that solves one of the problems of b of battery life,
Janet Dickens: Mm-hmm.
Patricia Douglas: 'cause that
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: would
Janet Dickens: Yep,
Patricia Douglas: well that would clobber
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Patricia Douglas: the battery life, so
Janet Dickens: Mm-hmm.
Patricia Douglas: no, I mean
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: given the nature of the buttons we're having, it's actually uh uh unnecessary I think.
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Janet Dickens: Mm-hmm.
Emily Cashen: Are we having it that it's any angle, or is it just
Patricia Douglas: As uh as wide
Janet Dickens: Yeah.
Emily Cashen: As wide
Patricia Douglas: cer
Emily Cashen: as possible.
Patricia Douglas: certainly wider angle than than current, so that if you're holding it, you know, anyway
Gail Thrift: Like
Janet Dickens: Mm
Patricia Douglas: like
Gail Thrift: this
Patricia Douglas: you're likely
Gail Thrift: or like
Patricia Douglas: to
Gail Thrift: this.
Janet Dickens: yeah.
Patricia Douglas: and uh it's uh you know, i i it will work most of the time um. Not like my my mum who points it at the ceiling and wonders why the th th the television doesn't work. Um yeah, I mean I d I th I sorta envisaged that if if this was the the thing, then sort of the the whole of the top would be
Gail Thrift: Yeah,
Patricia Douglas: the
Janet Dickens: Mm-hmm.
Gail Thrift: kinda
Patricia Douglas: uh
Gail Thrift: like this
Patricia Douglas: the
Gail Thrift: whole
Patricia Douglas: infrared uh.
Janet Dickens: Yeah, mm.
Gail Thrift: So
Patricia Douglas: Um
Gail Thrift: you could use
Patricia Douglas: so
Gail Thrift: like this and it would go.
Janet Dickens: Mm.
Patricia Douglas: Yeah, 'cause I mean the r reality is people are they're gonna be looking at the television whilst they're using it, the chances are, so if if
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: they're holding it anyway, the they're reasonably likely to be holding it to use it, then uh
Gail Thrift: Yeah.
Patricia Douglas: then that that's the sort of coverage that we want. Um okay, d we're all clear
Janet Dickens: Yep,
Gail Thrift: Yep.
Janet Dickens: sounds good.
Patricia Douglas: where we go from here.
Emily Cashen: Mm-hmm.
Patricia Douglas: Okay, so thank you very much indeed
Janet Dickens: 'Kay.
Patricia Douglas: and I'll s see you all again in thirty minutes.
Gail Thrift: Okay.
Janet Dickens: 'Kay. | Patricia Douglas opens the meeting by recapping the discussions of the previous meeting, telling the group this meeting's agenda, and stating what each person will do for the next meeting. Then Janet Dickens talks about the components design and explains exactly what remotes do and how they operate. He also talks about batteries and chips. The interface specialist present research from the internet about user interface. He talks about minimizing the clutter on the remote, and suggests using a slide button like on a mouse. Emily Cashen presents, talking about trend-watching and how fruits and vegetables are currently an important theme. They talk about making changable colors available and possibly including batteries with them. They discuss what the remote should look like in terms of shape color, and then talk about components, materials, and energy sources. Then they close the meeting. | 2 | amisum | train |
Elizabeth Blackburn: Right well. Welcome to the what should be the last of these meetings and uh it looks like we've uh done a good job here and uh we'll just go through the the final uh the final details. Um okay, oh the um th the the minutes of the last meeting uh I think we'll take those as read, um Okay the um th the the next uh thing we we we'll have a look at the uh th have a look at the prototypes and uh look at the uh evaluation and finance and then uh uh just tidy up with production and um and then we can close. Um So f if if you'd like to uh present your your proposals.
Barbara Boedeker: Uh okay we basically have the same kinda here it's just um you hold it like this and it gets kinda moulded to the to the shape of your hand, basically. Um on the left we've got the scroll for the volume, on the right we have buttons for the channels up and down and that kinda so you can hold it and scroll, or you can hold it and and push. Uh this is the power key, um it's kinda like the biggest
Elizabeth Blackburn: Uh-huh.
Barbara Boedeker: Uh that's the little menu key. This is the infra-red section so you g it'll be sending rays and if you're you know pointing it like that it can send it,
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yep,
Barbara Boedeker: or if you hold it up
Elizabeth Blackburn: yeah,
Barbara Boedeker: like that it'll send
Elizabeth Blackburn: good,
Barbara Boedeker: it.
Elizabeth Blackburn: good.
Barbara Boedeker: Uh we got a microphone there which for all the voice commands so you can
Elizabeth Blackburn: Uh-huh.
Barbara Boedeker: you know talk to it like that and it'll still
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yep,
Barbara Boedeker: understand.
Elizabeth Blackburn: right.
Barbara Boedeker: Um the logo is down down there
Elizabeth Blackburn: Uh-huh.
Noelle Lara: Mm.
Barbara Boedeker: um
Noelle Lara: S
Barbara Boedeker: and has the cover on it and you can see like it just kinda goes the red bit's the cover and it kinda goes over everything
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yep,
Barbara Boedeker: and then there's holes
Elizabeth Blackburn: yep,
Barbara Boedeker: for the buttons to
Elizabeth Blackburn: mm-hmm.
Barbara Boedeker: come through. Um.
Noelle Lara: And so we figured it be of you know light, just
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Noelle Lara: kind
Elizabeth Blackburn: Uh-huh.
Noelle Lara: of a light
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yep yep.
Noelle Lara: non-descript grey so that people'll wanna buy the covers
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yep.
Noelle Lara: and then the covers will be that sort of rubbery material like they make iPod covers, so they kinda just stretch over.
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: showing Jennifer Gray age, I don't know what i c iPod covers are like.
Noelle Lara: Yeah, well I
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah
Noelle Lara: I didn't know that but
Elizabeth Blackburn: yeah.
Noelle Lara: yeah they're kind of it's just kind of a rubbery
Elizabeth Blackburn: Uh-huh.
Noelle Lara: and that way
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah.
Noelle Lara: you know spongy
Elizabeth Blackburn: Okay,
Noelle Lara: like is something that people
Elizabeth Blackburn: yep,
Noelle Lara: wanted
Elizabeth Blackburn: right.
Noelle Lara: and it just sort of stretches over and
Barbara Boedeker: Mm-hmm.
Noelle Lara: that way I think probably helps protect it a little bit too as well
Barbara Boedeker: But
Noelle Lara: and
Barbara Boedeker: it's also
Elizabeth Blackburn: Okay.
Barbara Boedeker: e e easier to put on versus like mobile covers you actually have to screw them on and stuff and you kinda sometimes have to get someone to do that for you. This is very much you should be
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yep.
Barbara Boedeker: able
Noelle Lara: just
Barbara Boedeker: to stretch
Noelle Lara: kinda
Barbara Boedeker: it over
Noelle Lara: stretch it
Barbara Boedeker: yourself
Noelle Lara: over
Barbara Boedeker: and it'll be fine.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Okay,
Noelle Lara: and
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: good
Noelle Lara: it'll just stay
Elizabeth Blackburn: yeah.
Noelle Lara: on and then the
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah.
Noelle Lara: buttons come through and so and then the each one of 'em on the very end will have the logo with the yellow
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yep,
Noelle Lara: circle
Elizabeth Blackburn: right.
Noelle Lara: and the R_R_.
Barbara Boedeker: Li that'll be the covers as well,
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah,
Barbara Boedeker: yeah
Elizabeth Blackburn: yeah.
Barbara Boedeker: yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: I mean tha it's it's a detailed point, I just wondered I mean h how will people put these down I wonder?
Noelle Lara: Like that.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Right. Okay for some strange re reason I had it in my mind that they'd put them
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah
Elizabeth Blackburn: down
Barbara Boedeker: it could
Elizabeth Blackburn: vertically
Barbara Boedeker: stand,
Elizabeth Blackburn: but
Barbara Boedeker: yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: uh
Noelle Lara: Oh.
Elizabeth Blackburn: uh
Barbara Boedeker: Well we could broaden the broaden it out a bit so it would stand
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah,
Barbara Boedeker: like
Elizabeth Blackburn: uh no
Barbara Boedeker: that.
Elizabeth Blackburn: because particularly if they've dif if they're gonna have it as a you know as a fashion item
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah,
Elizabeth Blackburn: uh
Barbara Boedeker: standing.
Elizabeth Blackburn: I mean it it's uh it it's just I mean it's just a minor detailed point, but um as you say you can just make the base a little bit bigger
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah,
Elizabeth Blackburn: and
Barbara Boedeker: we could
Elizabeth Blackburn: uh
Barbara Boedeker: just widen it out uh
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah and uh it just needs another uh another logo somewhere is is is is all it gives gives people the option
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: and if if say if they've got them
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: um because actually have several upon the uh
Jennifer Gray: Could have one for your
Barbara Boedeker: Mm,
Jennifer Gray: stereo, one
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah,
Barbara Boedeker: yeah,
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Barbara Boedeker: yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: well.
Jennifer Gray: your D_V_
Barbara Boedeker: Have
Jennifer Gray: player.
Barbara Boedeker: to if we just lengthen
Noelle Lara: Yeah,
Barbara Boedeker: it I guess so it comes
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah
Noelle Lara: just
Barbara Boedeker: down
Noelle Lara: kind
Barbara Boedeker: to the
Elizabeth Blackburn: but
Barbara Boedeker: base
Elizabeth Blackburn: that
Noelle Lara: of
Barbara Boedeker: of
Elizabeth Blackburn: that's
Barbara Boedeker: the hand and then
Elizabeth Blackburn: uh
Barbara Boedeker: flatten
Elizabeth Blackburn: but
Barbara Boedeker: it out
Elizabeth Blackburn: uh
Barbara Boedeker: and
Elizabeth Blackburn: no
Barbara Boedeker: could
Elizabeth Blackburn: the
Barbara Boedeker: sit there.
Elizabeth Blackburn: the the overall
Noelle Lara: Or
Elizabeth Blackburn: uh
Noelle Lara: just make
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah,
Noelle Lara: it little.
Elizabeth Blackburn: the
Barbara Boedeker: mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: overall concept is uh
Noelle Lara: Somewhere
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah.
Noelle Lara: like that
Elizabeth Blackburn: yeah yeah,
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: no no, I mean that's
Noelle Lara: so it just
Elizabeth Blackburn: these
Noelle Lara: sort
Elizabeth Blackburn: uh
Noelle Lara: of
Barbara Boedeker: We might
Jennifer Gray: Yeah I kinda
Barbara Boedeker: have to
Jennifer Gray: had
Barbara Boedeker: lengthen
Jennifer Gray: a
Barbara Boedeker: it so it kinda your
Jennifer Gray: a kinda
Barbara Boedeker: hand still
Jennifer Gray: a natural
Barbara Boedeker: holds it and have
Jennifer Gray: kind
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Barbara Boedeker: it
Jennifer Gray: of
Barbara Boedeker: there,
Jennifer Gray: a idea where
Barbara Boedeker: yeah,
Jennifer Gray: it's like
Barbara Boedeker: yeah, yeah
Jennifer Gray: more
Barbara Boedeker: like
Jennifer Gray: of
Barbara Boedeker: that,
Jennifer Gray: a kind
Barbara Boedeker: like
Jennifer Gray: of
Barbara Boedeker: that.
Jennifer Gray: like
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah.
Noelle Lara: Bu
Jennifer Gray: a kinda maybe slightly like thinner, yeah, kinda
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah.
Jennifer Gray: like that kinda like a flower
Elizabeth Blackburn: But uh
Jennifer Gray: or a plant
Elizabeth Blackburn: yeah
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Jennifer Gray: for
Elizabeth Blackburn: but
Jennifer Gray: the more
Elizabeth Blackburn: no
Jennifer Gray: natural
Elizabeth Blackburn: th but
Jennifer Gray: kinda
Elizabeth Blackburn: the yeah the the the Yeah, yeah, yeah, I mean it it's uh
Noelle Lara: fall
Elizabeth Blackburn: wouldn't
Barbara Boedeker: The final
Noelle Lara: over.
Barbara Boedeker: product
Elizabeth Blackburn: wouldn't do
Barbara Boedeker: would
Elizabeth Blackburn: that,
Barbara Boedeker: actually
Elizabeth Blackburn: indeed
Barbara Boedeker: stand
Elizabeth Blackburn: yeah.
Barbara Boedeker: up, yeah.
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: But th th but th yeah th b the these were all minor minor
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah,
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: uh minor
Barbara Boedeker: yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: details, I think the uh the basic
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: concept
Noelle Lara: 'S a little
Elizabeth Blackburn: i i
Noelle Lara: longer.
Elizabeth Blackburn: is is absolutely bang on
Barbara Boedeker: Wee
Elizabeth Blackburn: and the i it certainly meets our criteria of being uh
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: of you know looking different.
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Um, so good that's that that's excellent. Um right let us um What's on the next one? Oh right yes, let's have a look at the um f finance. Um, now we're given a a clear design brief, uh if I get the uh spreadsheet up. Oh.
Jennifer Gray: Uh yeah, just click there. Uh the the maximise button.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Oh right. Ah. Good, this is why we need to make these things simple so that the uh the the the boss can understand. Now I've um this is the company's uh uh costing for for various uh uh aspects of design and I I I've treated some of these slightly uh liberally given the constraints placed on us, um I wouldn't know for in for instance if if they require us to have it in the corporate colours, then that is not a special colour, that's a that's a standard colour. Uh, so we're just simply on batteries, the the one th the one decision I've had to make is that um we're we will have to find a s a regular standard chip to to do this with and I I um I'm I'm I'm certain that they they are around so, um that I don't think is a a serious problem. The uh the the voice sensor is is expensive but we we made a a basic decision that that was absolutely fundamental to the to the design so that that has to stay. Um then again the the the the shape of the case means that it's it's expensive to uh um l to make 'cause of the the th the double curves but on the other hand because of our overall fashion concept um we we should exceed the the sales targets. Um it's simply made of plastic so th that's uh that's no problem and uh um just because the whole the colour of the the whole thing that's uh uh there's some cost there. Um and uh we haven't actually got a scroll wheel we we we got push buttons and and a simple uh um slider so um and the and the the buttons are uh uh well I do don't know that they're special colour. Anyway the the costings uh come in at exactly on target at twelve point five uh but I thi I think we have a a very strong case to argue that uh what what we've got is is so in innovative and uh and different that um any any slight compromise we have to make on on cost is is offset by the uh you know the uh you know the the
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: the the concept of it being a a fashion accessory and and having the the interchangeable covers so uh um you know the if if
Elizabeth Blackburn: they have to accept that we we can't operate absolutely
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: within uh the constraints that they give, so uh we we we present this as the uh the company's uh the the company's way forward and uh uh I I think we can argue that we we have uh come in on on budget. Um. Okay, uh. So um. Does anybody want to uh uh Andrew do you want what do you want to say about um the uh
Jennifer Gray: Evaluation.
Elizabeth Blackburn: yeah the evaluation where where you know well where where we're where where we're at?
Jennifer Gray: The the product or the project?
Elizabeth Blackburn: The the the well the I meant the product.
Jennifer Gray: Um, well well my presentation just now
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah.
Jennifer Gray: Sure? uh can I get the
Elizabeth Blackburn: Oh sorry yeah um, mm.
Jennifer Gray: Cheers.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Mm. More loud clicks in the microphone.
Jennifer Gray: There we go, oh. Method of evaluation testing the product was to just if it met all the criteria all the conditions that we set out to set out to solve, from the point of view of the the consumer and the management. So what I've been asked to do is, on the whiteboard um gauge our team response to these questions. So, on a scale of one to seven, one being true and seven being being false.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Seven being a nice round number to work to.
Jennifer Gray: Yeah. And then at the end just take an average
Elizabeth Blackburn: Tr On for true and seven for flase.
Jennifer Gray: Yes.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yes.
Jennifer Gray: So uh.
Jennifer Gray: So, look at these questions. Is the device f flashy and fashionable?
Elizabeth Blackburn: Well I think most
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah
Noelle Lara: I
Elizabeth Blackburn: definitely.
Noelle Lara: think
Barbara Boedeker: I'd
Noelle Lara: it
Barbara Boedeker: say
Noelle Lara: is yeah.
Barbara Boedeker: definitely a one yeah.
Jennifer Gray: So uh and also uh technologically innovative?
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yes
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah,
Elizabeth Blackburn: the
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: voice technology
Barbara Boedeker: defi yeah,
Elizabeth Blackburn: indeed.
Barbara Boedeker: yeah
Jennifer Gray: Easy to use?
Elizabeth Blackburn: I don't see
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: we could've
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: made it any easier.
Jennifer Gray: Uh suitable for the consumer? That was um
Elizabeth Blackburn: Totally.
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah definitely.
Noelle Lara: Yeah I think it made we met all of the consumer
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah.
Jennifer Gray: Yeah.
Noelle Lara: wants.
Jennifer Gray: Uh is it complicated?
Elizabeth Blackburn: No.
Noelle Lara: No.
Jennifer Gray: Doing pretty well so far aren't we? Uh functional?
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah.
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Barbara Boedeker: definitely.
Jennifer Gray: Um. Where are we?
Elizabeth Blackburn: found easily.
Jennifer Gray: We've b
Elizabeth Blackburn: yeah I mean
Jennifer Gray: built in the
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah.
Jennifer Gray: the speech,
Elizabeth Blackburn: that's
Jennifer Gray: where
Elizabeth Blackburn: that's
Jennifer Gray: are
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah.
Jennifer Gray: you,
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah,
Jennifer Gray: function.
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah.
Barbara Boedeker: mm-hmm.
Jennifer Gray: Uh-huh.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Does it take long to learn to use? Shouldn't.
Barbara Boedeker: No, not at
Jennifer Gray: Mm-hmm.
Barbara Boedeker: all.
Jennifer Gray: And uh, what else? The R_S_I_ compares to the current standards, well.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Less buttons
Barbara Boedeker: Uh
Elizabeth Blackburn: so it must be.
Jennifer Gray: We we uh yeah it
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah
Jennifer Gray: was our it was a we made
Barbara Boedeker: it
Jennifer Gray: an
Barbara Boedeker: is
Jennifer Gray: actual effort
Barbara Boedeker: sorta
Jennifer Gray: to
Barbara Boedeker: the the handle more ergonomically correct as well.
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: So yeah,
Barbara Boedeker: yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: um um.
Jennifer Gray: Um will device appeal to all age groups?
Elizabeth Blackburn: I think it will
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: because
Noelle Lara: I think so.
Elizabeth Blackburn: I mean uh old older people who can't manage the buttons anyway will actually probably
Jennifer Gray: Yeah,
Elizabeth Blackburn: like the like
Jennifer Gray: uh
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Jennifer Gray: that's a good call, yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: like the voice bit
Jennifer Gray: Well
Elizabeth Blackburn: so
Jennifer Gray: we had the we had the data saying that old people will be less likely to pay extra money but the funct the increased functionality, the e ease of use of the device might make up for that.
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: And it's it's it's well I don't think we're actually charging a particular premium anyway, in
Barbara Boedeker: I
Elizabeth Blackburn: the
Jennifer Gray: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: end,
Barbara Boedeker: I I think
Elizabeth Blackburn: so
Barbara Boedeker: it
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Barbara Boedeker: will tend to appeal more to younger aged groups just 'cause we have gone with the fashion
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah.
Barbara Boedeker: focus and the younger
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah.
Barbara Boedeker: people tend to would be more conscious of that aspect of it, but um I think it should still appeal on a certain level
Elizabeth Blackburn: It will appeal
Barbara Boedeker: to everybody,
Elizabeth Blackburn: f for dif for
Barbara Boedeker: yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: different reasons
Noelle Lara: Yeah
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah,
Noelle Lara: I
Elizabeth Blackburn: but
Noelle Lara: think
Elizabeth Blackburn: it's
Barbara Boedeker: yeah.
Noelle Lara: just
Elizabeth Blackburn: it's
Noelle Lara: the
Elizabeth Blackburn: uh
Noelle Lara: simplicity of
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah,
Noelle Lara: it
Elizabeth Blackburn: yeah
Barbara Boedeker: yeah.
Noelle Lara: and
Elizabeth Blackburn: yeah so I I yeah I
Noelle Lara: not having to learn to programme and not having you
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah,
Noelle Lara: know a
Elizabeth Blackburn: so
Noelle Lara: million buttons.
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: I think we can reasonably say it's another
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: another one, why not?
Jennifer Gray: Uh can you just click the my mouse to move onto next page? Uh, yeah and what h did we make the management's
Elizabeth Blackburn: in in in in my interpretation of management's instructions uh is that yes it it meets the requirement is t it's television
Barbara Boedeker: Yep.
Elizabeth Blackburn: only, it's
Barbara Boedeker: Mm-hmm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: it's simple to use, um it's
Noelle Lara: Under
Elizabeth Blackburn: it's
Noelle Lara: the cost.
Elizabeth Blackburn: it's within
Barbara Boedeker: Mm-hmm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: budget,
Barbara Boedeker: Yep.
Elizabeth Blackburn: um I it's uh yes an an any minor points we we we argue.
Jennifer Gray: Um.
Elizabeth Blackburn: So uh I I think we've
Barbara Boedeker: Yep.
Elizabeth Blackburn: done an amazing job in uh
Jennifer Gray: Okay.
Barbara Boedeker: Well done us.
Elizabeth Blackburn: coming up with what
Jennifer Gray: So uh one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven. Eleven divided by eleven's one so
Noelle Lara: Yeah,
Jennifer Gray: equals average of one.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Need a need a calculator for that.
Jennifer Gray: And that roughly concludes my evaluation of the
Barbara Boedeker: Excellent.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Okay,
Jennifer Gray: of the product.
Elizabeth Blackburn: nick
Noelle Lara: I
Elizabeth Blackburn: the
Noelle Lara: mixed
Elizabeth Blackburn: cable
Noelle Lara: up the colours
Elizabeth Blackburn: back
Barbara Boedeker: Oh
Elizabeth Blackburn: then.
Barbara Boedeker: no
Noelle Lara: a little bit.
Barbara Boedeker: that's
Noelle Lara: I think I all
Elizabeth Blackburn: Ooh.
Noelle Lara: wrong.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Right do um either of you want to uh say anything?
Barbara Boedeker: Uh.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Mm.
Noelle Lara: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Before I uh
Noelle Lara: Ps I don't think so, I mean
Elizabeth Blackburn: No.
Noelle Lara: I think we worked well together and
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah.
Noelle Lara: looked really at what the consumers wanted and what we
Elizabeth Blackburn: Yeah.
Noelle Lara: were trying to make and you know, seemed to discuss things pretty well and
Barbara Boedeker: Mm-hmm.
Noelle Lara: come to group consensus and
Elizabeth Blackburn: Well that's right, I mean th this this slide here I mean the satisfaction with uh room for creativity,
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: I mean I think
Barbara Boedeker: Yeah,
Elizabeth Blackburn: we've allowed
Barbara Boedeker: definitely.
Elizabeth Blackburn: ourselves uh as much creativity as the uh the the the product
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: uh allows. Um I won't comment on leadership, uh teamwork I think we've uh I think everybody's uh
Barbara Boedeker: Mm-hmm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: worked pretty well together. Um we've just about coped with the whiteboard and digital pens, uh I think the results speak
Barbara Boedeker: Mm.
Elizabeth Blackburn: for itself and new ideas found, um, again gi no given relatively everyday product,
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: I think
Barbara Boedeker: Yep.
Elizabeth Blackburn: we've v very uh very effectively come up with a a new uh uh a new approach. Um are the costs within budget? Yes. Is the project evaluated? We're
Barbara Boedeker: Yep.
Elizabeth Blackburn: we're all happy that it it meets all the criteria, um Thank you very much indeed,
Barbara Boedeker: Cool,
Elizabeth Blackburn: I think
Barbara Boedeker: thank
Noelle Lara: Alright.
Barbara Boedeker: you,
Elizabeth Blackburn: that I think that's uh
Noelle Lara: Yeah.
Elizabeth Blackburn: I think we can go f for an early bath. So I call the meeting closed.
Noelle Lara: Okay.
Elizabeth Blackburn: Not sure how far ahead of schedule we were there. | Elizabeth Blackburn opens the meeting by stating the agenda. Then Barbara Boedeker and interface specialist present the prototype, showing where they placed each button, function, and the company logo. Then they talk about the material they chose, which is light gray colored and light weight plastic so that people will want to buy covers. Next they take a brief look at the finance by examining the materials used, chip required, shape, and color. They are exactly on target at twelve point five. Next Jennifer Gray administers the product evaluation, and the group talks about whether the device is flashy and fashionable, technologically innovative, easy to use, suitable for the consumer, complicated, how long it would take to learn to use it, and its appeal to all age groups. They come up with an average of 1 for the evaluation. They briefly discuss the project process and agree that they worked well together, had excellent teamwork, and created an effective product that meets the budget cost. They close the meeting by thanking one another. | 2 | amisum | train |
Sheila Collins: Is this okay?
Regena Miniard: Uh yeah. Fine now.
Regena Miniard: Oh, it's not liking us, it went that-a-way. Computer adjusting. Oh. Uh.
Regena Miniard: Okay. So. Right.
Regena Miniard: You ready back there? Uh okay. Welcome everyone. Um this is the kick-off meeting for the day. Um we're the new group uh to create a new remote control for Real Reaction. As you can see our agenda is to open up the meeting, um become acquainted with each other, um have a little training on tools, uh create a plan, discuss things and and we only have twenty minut twenty five minutes total. Okay. The new remote control is to be original, trendy and user-friendly. That, Steph, is your part, is the user-friendliness. The originality um is gonna take all of us. Um the trendiness we'll probably go look at for some marketing research information from you, Sarah. Um and we'll get on with it. Okay, so we'll have a functional design individual work um with meeting and then conceptual design t and then detailed design. Okay? Right. Everybody's supposed to try out the whiteboard. Kate, why don't you try it first, if you can either
Helen Valle: Uh yeah, if
Regena Miniard: bring
Helen Valle: I
Regena Miniard: your things with
Helen Valle: pick with
Regena Miniard: you, I
Helen Valle: all
Regena Miniard: guess
Helen Valle: these bits and pieces, hang on.
Regena Miniard: And while you're doing that we'll try and figure out how to hook these things on as well, 'cause we're all gonna have to be able to walk around.
Helen Valle: Uh right, so you want an animal and the characteristics of that animal. Do you have to be able to recognise what animal it is?
Regena Miniard: Uh I do not think so, I think it's just to try out the whiteboard.
Helen Valle: Um
Shaina Greenlaw: Are we all gonna draw a cat?
Sheila Collins: I know.
Helen Valle: Only animal I could thin I could draw.
Regena Miniard: Ah.
Helen Valle: Its a sort of bunny rabbit cat. You can tell it's not a bunny rabbit by the ears.
Regena Miniard: Uh-huh.
Helen Valle: Um I suppose it should have a mouth as well, sort of
Regena Miniard: Okay.
Helen Valle: Right, yeah.
Regena Miniard: Great. And the characteristics?
Helen Valle: Um the favourite characteristics of the cat um the whiskers I think, um because they're the easiest to draw.
Regena Miniard: Uh-huh.
Helen Valle: In fact, I'll give it some more Oh,
Regena Miniard: Okay.
Helen Valle: and the tail
Regena Miniard: Fantastic. Since you're handy as well, why don't you do yours next, Steph.
Regena Miniard: I think it's to get us used to using the pen.
Helen Valle: Yes. Um sure it's not to test our artistic
Regena Miniard: Uh no.
Helen Valle: It's a mouse.
Regena Miniard: A mouse-y?
Shaina Greenlaw: That's not a mouse-y, no.
Helen Valle: No it's not a mouse. It's a wombat.
Regena Miniard: Oh.
Shaina Greenlaw: It's a ratty.
Regena Miniard: Argh.
Helen Valle: A what?
Shaina Greenlaw: A
Regena Miniard: Rat.
Shaina Greenlaw: ratty.
Regena Miniard: Not a mouse,
Helen Valle: A
Regena Miniard: a
Helen Valle: webbed
Regena Miniard: rat.
Helen Valle: foot. Webbed f
Shaina Greenlaw: It's clothes. That's
Helen Valle: Oh
Shaina Greenlaw: it's clothes.
Helen Valle: right.
Shaina Greenlaw: It's a ratty with a with a with a very long tail.
Regena Miniard: And your
Shaina Greenlaw: I love
Regena Miniard: favourite
Shaina Greenlaw: whiskers.
Regena Miniard: characteristics of that animal.
Shaina Greenlaw: Uh they're intelligent and they're cheeky and uh fantastic pets and very
Regena Miniard: Oh.
Shaina Greenlaw: friendly.
Regena Miniard: Okay.
Shaina Greenlaw: And
Regena Miniard: Kate?
Shaina Greenlaw: they sit on your shoulder and whisper the answers to your homework in your ear when you're doing your homework.
Sheila Collins: Thanks.
Regena Miniard: Oh, a fish.
Shaina Greenlaw: A shark?
Helen Valle: Gosh, why didn't I think of fish? That's even easier to draw than cat.
Sheila Collins: Mm this is very representational fish.
Regena Miniard: Oh, okay. Fine.
Sheila Collins: Um I like
Regena Miniard: Favourite
Sheila Collins: them
Regena Miniard: characteristics?
Sheila Collins: because they're sleek and they have a lot of freedom but they also do n uh swim in groups, so.
Regena Miniard: 'Kay. So
Sheila Collins: Do
Regena Miniard: they
Sheila Collins: you
Regena Miniard: have
Sheila Collins: have a favourite
Regena Miniard: team
Sheila Collins: one?
Regena Miniard: elements. I'm afraid I'm with Steph. And I think your pen's running out of whatever. But I'm afraid I take the coward's way out, and the cat's looking the other way. He's hiding. Um cats are sometimes very independent. My parents had cats. Uh and they can mm decide for themselves what is best. Okay. Now um we have to get down to the nitty-gritty of how to make this and this remote control has to be sold um we're to sell it for twenty five Euros, with a profit aim ultimately of fifty million Euros. That tells you something about how many um we have to sell on an international scale. Um would be an awful lot of these, would be like what, a hundred million of them um to make twenty five Euros on each one and to make a total profit of fifty million. Um the production is to only cost twelve and a half Euros per item. Now if they cost twelve and a half, you're selling it for twenty five, you're making twelve and a half Euros each. Um and we're to make a profit of fifty million, that's t uh can you do the maths and how many are we selling?
Sheila Collins: Uh yeah. I was just wondering if that's the um If fifty percent is normal
Regena Miniard: Mark-up?
Sheila Collins: B yeah. Um I would think would be more like sixty percent. But um
Regena Miniard: Okay.
Sheila Collins: let Sheila Collins I have two thoughts. fifty percent. And and your question is how many do we have to sell?
Regena Miniard: Yes, 'cause our market um is international and your problem is has to do with marketing of you know, you gotta know how many we're going
Sheila Collins: At twenty
Regena Miniard: to be selling
Sheila Collins: five.
Regena Miniard: to know how big a market you have to target
Sheila Collins: Mm-hmm.
Regena Miniard: and who is that.
Sheila Collins: Yeah, that's um
Regena Miniard: To give you a pretty good idea of where you're looking.
Sheila Collins: So that's four million of them?
Regena Miniard: Something like that? Okay.
Sheila Collins: Yeah.
Regena Miniard: That's fifty million Euros. In order
Sheila Collins: And if
Regena Miniard: to make
Sheila Collins: we make
Regena Miniard: fifty million Euros, and you're only getting twelve and a half each
Sheila Collins: Mm-hmm.
Regena Miniard: That's a lot of selling.
Sheila Collins: Yeah.
Regena Miniard: Two four
Sheila Collins: Four million.
Regena Miniard: To be fifty, be four million. You'd have to sell four million.
Sheila Collins: Hmm.
Regena Miniard: Okay? Right. Experience with a remote control. Any of you use of remote control for a television or D_V_D_ or something?
Helen Valle: That
Regena Miniard: You're
Sheila Collins: Yeah.
Regena Miniard: both
Helen Valle: that that's
Regena Miniard: nodding,
Helen Valle: the sorta
Regena Miniard: all
Helen Valle: product
Regena Miniard: three.
Helen Valle: we're talking about, one that will work for a in a home environment, for a
Regena Miniard: Well
Helen Valle: T_V_s and
Regena Miniard: I've seen some remote controls that are for more than one device at a time, but I also have heard about them not working well or not well co-ordinated and you wind up working with this one for thi this three and then this
Shaina Greenlaw: It
Regena Miniard: one
Shaina Greenlaw: is
Regena Miniard: over here
Shaina Greenlaw: true
Regena Miniard: for another.
Shaina Greenlaw: you know, you're sitting on your sofa and you wanna change something, there's five different remotes, and one for the D_V_D_ and one for the video and one
Sheila Collins: Mm-hmm.
Shaina Greenlaw: for cable and one for
Sheila Collins: Y yeah.
Shaina Greenlaw: whatever
Regena Miniard: And they don't
Shaina Greenlaw: else.
Regena Miniard: always
Shaina Greenlaw: But I presume
Regena Miniard: talk to
Shaina Greenlaw: this
Regena Miniard: each
Shaina Greenlaw: is
Regena Miniard: other.
Shaina Greenlaw: t I presume this is just for television.
Regena Miniard: Don't know. Okay. Are there any um ideas for the remote? What would it be for and what group would be be for? We have to think about that one.
Sheila Collins: We could make a Hello Kitty themed remote.
Shaina Greenlaw: I think one in b bright colours would be good.
Sheila Collins: Yeah. We
Helen Valle: I
Sheila Collins: could
Helen Valle: think
Sheila Collins: totally
Helen Valle: one that works
Sheila Collins: go for
Helen Valle: would
Sheila Collins: the
Helen Valle: be good.
Sheila Collins: Japan-a-mation. Well I mean there's also the cachet that um uh the Japanese make great products. Electrical their industrial design is very good.
Shaina Greenlaw: I think one that doesn't have lots of superfluous functions. Like I've got one at home that has well, apart from the obvious, channels, channel up, channel down, volume,
Sheila Collins: Yeah.
Shaina Greenlaw: you know, subtitles, mute, there's a lotta buttons that I've got no idea what they do, like.
Sheila Collins: Well, that's a really good point, because I think
Regena Miniard: Okay.
Sheila Collins: one of the things that being somewhat computer literate, we tend to um go to menus and then make choices, you know, so if it's like an uh volume button, you know, you can go in and say mute or or volume. We don't need to have like the l the numbers if we also have uh
Shaina Greenlaw: Mm.
Sheila Collins: uh channel up channel down.
Regena Miniard: Mm.
Sheila Collins: Mm.
Regena Miniard: Okay.
Sheila Collins: We can make it smart like an iPod, you know, make everything menus.
Shaina Greenlaw: Ooh, closing the meeting.
Regena Miniard: Yeah. Um
Shaina Greenlaw: That was quick.
Regena Miniard: I know this sounds like it was very quick, but the I think that's the industrial design
Helen Valle: Mm.
Regena Miniard: is the first one, that's Kate,
Helen Valle: Mm-hmm.
Regena Miniard: for the working design. And user, that's you S Steph, for the technical functions design, and for marketing the user requirements specification. I think there's going to be a lot of we have to help each other and work through this as a group, and I think we all, you know, we like our kitty-cat and our rat and our fish, but I think we all have to like each other um to get this done. says, we're gonna get individual instructions, but uh I don't think they allowed a lot of extra time, so I think a little bit of less of this and more at do will set us in good stead. Do you all agree?
Shaina Greenlaw: Mm-hmm.
Helen Valle: Mm-hmm.
Regena Miniard: Alright. Um then I don't see any reason to prolong it and f we should finish this meeting at ni right now and go into other things. Alright, so this is the end of the first meeting.
Sheila Collins: Okay.
Helen Valle: 'Kay.
Regena Miniard: Thank you all. | Regena Miniard opened the meeting by stating the agenda and then introduced the upcoming project to the team members. The team members then participated in an exercise in which they each drew their favorite animal and discussed why they liked the particular animal. Regena Miniard briefed the team on the production and selling costs of the remote they are to create. Regena Miniard also briefed the team on the profit aim and discussed how many remotes must be sold in order to reach the profit aim of 50 million Euro. The team then discussed their experiences using remote controls and what features in terms of functionality and appearance to consider in making the remote. | 2 | amisum | train |
Leigh Badger: Uh it fell off. One, two, three, four, yeah, we're ready. Okay. Welcome to this second meeting. Um it's now quarter after twelve and we're given forty minutes um for this meeting. This is a meeting on functional design. Um and I wanna welcome you all and thank you all for doing some research in between. Um I did took the minutes from the first meeting and I'll show them to you in a moment. Um I know each of you have a presentation and in thinking about the forty minutes, I thought it would take only like three minutes for the previous minutes, um each of you having about seven minutes or maybe a little more, maybe a little less for your pre presentations and a little discussion, because there's I happen to have been told there were some new project requirements and we have to make some uh decision on what functions it will have. Okay? Is this
Dorothy Dubray: Yes.
Leigh Badger: ap
Carly Clark: Oops.
Leigh Badger: everybody agree with this?
Betty Rodriguez: Yes.
Leigh Badger: Okay. Um and after the meeting there'll be things to be done and as you can see it says we get to get lunch, um and then some more individual work and then putting minutes away and individual actions. Um but uh now for the minutes of the first meeting. And go to that one. Um as you can see it was this earlier today. Um Kate, Steph, Sarah and myself in our four capacities were present. I opened the meeting, the product was developed uh and reviewed, and we talked about the financial end of it. Um and it had some implications, um the four million sales target and new ideas of not too many buttons, bright colours and some of the influence of the Japanese. And we closed early so you could then proceed with your research and getting your reports together for tod this meeting Anybody have any questions on those minutes? Are they complete, did they discuss everything that we covered last time? 'Kay.
Carly Clark: Uh I think
Leigh Badger: Did I miss
Carly Clark: so,
Leigh Badger: something?
Carly Clark: we we we about the the individual roles that we each had as well.
Betty Rodriguez: Mm-hmm.
Leigh Badger: Yeah. I'm afraid I incorporated that when I said who was present, but
Carly Clark: Okay.
Leigh Badger: yes, we did, and we did a little bit of uh team building of uh of making the pictures, but I didn't think those were appropriate to the minutes necessarily. So um as a group I think we've are they're accepting the minutes.
Betty Rodriguez: Okay,
Leigh Badger: And
Betty Rodriguez: I
Leigh Badger: uh
Betty Rodriguez: the.
Leigh Badger: okay.
Betty Rodriguez: Is that what we're supposed to say?
Leigh Badger: Yeah.
Dorothy Dubray: Yeah, I do.
Leigh Badger: Good. Um, then we'll move to the three presentations. Okay?
Betty Rodriguez: Okay.
Leigh Badger: Okay. Mm we need to move this. Who wants to go f first? That's as far as it goes.
Dorothy Dubray: Uh not really to touch those. Oh it doesn't have any on, does it? That's fine.
Betty Rodriguez: Excellent, thank
Carly Clark: Oy,
Betty Rodriguez: you.
Carly Clark: big loop under the table.
Leigh Badger: She said we didn't need to screw it in.
Betty Rodriguez: Okay. Okay, that looks good.
Leigh Badger: It's doing its thing. There we are.
Betty Rodriguez: Alright. Thank you very much. Um. One of the the biggest issues I found about um from last meeting was the fact that we need to sell four million of these um remote controls and I think that this is an opportunity really take Real Reaction in the direction of of similar of handheld tools that have been by of us and to kind of bring the control into the si realm as an accessible um useful electronic device, as opposed to something that is lost in the couch and what have you. So um my main goal here is to re-envision the remote control in in this context and to think about menu functionality and current technology and the fact that it could be interactive with other tools. Um some of the research uh in the market has shown that people really are not happy with remote controls as they are now, and um that means we do need to make some decisions about what what keys or or buttons on the on the remote control to perhaps keep and and what ones to discard. And if we devote some energy into this, I think the um recent productions of Real Reaction, the I go everywhere power and the high definition D_V_D_ players although it makes immediate sense to have our remote control interact with these, I think we can also use this as a platform to make it interact with other tools. And um in fact I think the high definition D_V_D_ players and all of this will come along in the uh will only benefit from the positive feedback from our well designed tool. So again, most uh users really dislike the current look and feel of remote controls. Um fifty percent I think of all these uh numbers the most important is fifty percent of user say they only use ten percent of the buttons. And eighty percent of users, and if we think about this there are a lot of uh television, D_V_D_, stereo remote control users out there, eighty percent would spend more money on a remote control that looks fancy.
Carly Clark: Could can I ask where these figures come from, is this market
Betty Rodriguez: Um
Carly Clark: research
Betty Rodriguez: it
Carly Clark: we've
Betty Rodriguez: was market research and there were a hundred people in the room, so eighty out of a hundred said they would spend more money.
Leigh Badger: Now
Carly Clark: Mm-hmm.
Leigh Badger: in between, as Leigh Badger, they sent Betty Rodriguez an email from the powers that be
Betty Rodriguez: Mm-hmm.
Leigh Badger: um that teletext is outdated um and the internet is coming in as important, but that they want this remote control to only be for T_V_ um with incorporating the corporate image, colour and slogan.
Betty Rodriguez: Mm-hmm. Well I think we can I I think we can really focus on this remote and and again bring the Real Reaction um brand in in and and get some positive marketing for our other tools, even if we directly don't um advertise for the I go everywhere line.
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: So an interesting um element was the would you pay more for speech recognition question. So these market research uh
Leigh Badger: Hmm.
Betty Rodriguez: uh questionnaires looked into your your uh concern about technology and s specifically wanted to find out information about speech recognition.
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Betty Rodriguez: Now the early adopters, those of us who grew up with technology and uh luck lucky for us have the uh cash to to pay for it, the young age group without the mortgages and responsibilities, ninety one percent of them would pay more for speech recognition in a remote control. Very interesting, I I leave this up to the group to decide if we wanna use this uh if and you know, the
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: the designers, but ninety one percent, fifteen
Leigh Badger: Is that a
Betty Rodriguez: to
Leigh Badger: large
Betty Rodriguez: twenty
Leigh Badger: enough
Betty Rodriguez: five
Leigh Badger: target market to target it?
Betty Rodriguez: Well, I I I think especially in terms of growth, I think this would be a very smart group to target. I mean s three quarters of the next age group, twenty five to thirty five are interested, and uh with the technologies improving, if we can get these uh
Leigh Badger: In real numbers, does
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah.
Leigh Badger: the ninety one percent and the seventy six percent translate to ex
Betty Rodriguez: To
Leigh Badger: in excess of the four million?
Betty Rodriguez: Um yes.
Leigh Badger: Or eight million.
Betty Rodriguez: Yes. But would you pay more and does it work and is it approachable and and did I know that it was
Leigh Badger: Hmm.
Betty Rodriguez: it was an that's a that's a very good question.
Leigh Badger: Yeah.
Betty Rodriguez: I
Carly Clark: Um
Betty Rodriguez: don't know if speech recognition should be um should be included, but
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: I think it's an interesting I think that maybe shows more about uh being open to technology.
Dorothy Dubray: Uh it definitely
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Dorothy Dubray: needs uh
Betty Rodriguez: Shall
Dorothy Dubray: a
Betty Rodriguez: I go
Dorothy Dubray: lot
Betty Rodriguez: back?
Dorothy Dubray: more research on like how much more it would be and
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah, yeah.
Dorothy Dubray: any, you know, existing examples, and what reactions to them have been,
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah.
Dorothy Dubray: and
Carly Clark: How d I'm
Dorothy Dubray: that sort
Carly Clark: wondering
Dorothy Dubray: of thing.
Carly Clark: how how ou how our target price compares with the the typical price of these things. I expect an Industrial Designer should know that, but if we're aiming to to build this thing for twelve Euros fifty that a lot or a little
Betty Rodriguez: Exactly. I mean I I I uh did not receive any information on that, but I think the competition, sussing out what other people are doing and what's in the pipeline is very very important, because um there is a question about do you want an L_C_D_ screen and and that wasn't responded to, but uh some of the larger remotes do have screens where you can navigate, you know, so it turns into something uh perhaps you all have seen uh the Osbournes where Ozzy Osbourne is is attempting to manage his super entertainment system with something that looks like a uh a small tray. You know, it's I a and I
Carly Clark: Sh
Betty Rodriguez: think,
Carly Clark: surely
Betty Rodriguez: you know
Carly Clark: he's in the wrong age group. He must be w one of a s small population.
Betty Rodriguez: No, no, you
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: Kate, you're exactly right there. But I think the key is to get the early adopters, people who are familiar with technology and and uh they'll be
Leigh Badger: But we're not looking at whether they're early adopters
Betty Rodriguez: Uh,
Leigh Badger: on that
Betty Rodriguez: mm.
Leigh Badger: screen, that's looking
Betty Rodriguez: Exactly.
Leigh Badger: at age groups.
Betty Rodriguez: I yes,
Leigh Badger: Leap. Hmm.
Betty Rodriguez: you know, um
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: so
Leigh Badger: Okay, you had the other power channel.
Betty Rodriguez: I think the most important thing is an attractive streamlined remote control and to be extraordinarily reductionist, power, channel, volume and everything else is is uh up to the designers. And this is this is also supported by the market research.
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Betty Rodriguez: Thank you. That's my contribution.
Leigh Badger: Alright. And we'll turn to the next presentation.
Leigh Badger: I think she said we don't need to screw it in, just stick it in. And then press, what? F F_N_ and F_ eight. Next to the control button on the bottom, and then F_ eight at the top.
Dorothy Dubray: Yeah, press
Leigh Badger: And
Dorothy Dubray: them.
Leigh Badger: then w be patient.
Dorothy Dubray: Yeah, here we go.
Leigh Badger: Tada.
Carly Clark: And if you want it to go into slide show mode, it's that little button there.
Dorothy Dubray: Can I not just uh do each one in order?
Carly Clark: I you can if you like, it it that that just sets it up to do a p a p
Leigh Badger: There
Dorothy Dubray: That?
Leigh Badger: we are.
Carly Clark: no that one, that one there.
Leigh Badger: Yay.
Dorothy Dubray: That?
Carly Clark: Left, left a bit, left a bit,
Dorothy Dubray: That?
Carly Clark: that one, yep. click when you wanna go on.
Dorothy Dubray: Right, technical design. Uh well I think first off, basically I do agree with what Sarah has defined as as uh your personal preferences,yeah. I think we need uh a more streamlined volume with no extraneous functions. So my method was to look at the existing remotes and what functions they have. And what we all need to discuss is whether we want these functions uh pretty much the same as what existing remotes have. If we can build on this with the speech recognition, that's not something I'd thought about at all, but it's also something we can discuss.
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Dorothy Dubray: Um and and I presume we can miss out the functions really to to a video or D_V_D_ remote control, if this is only gonna be a, you
Leigh Badger: T_V_
Dorothy Dubray: know, satellite,
Leigh Badger: only.
Dorothy Dubray: cable, T_V_ remote control. So these are two models of existing remote controls. Uh the one on the left
Leigh Badger: Ugh.
Dorothy Dubray: seems to be a fairly uh standard universal remote control. It has fast-forward, stop, play, all relating to movies. It also has seems to have channel up and channel down, which is which is more what you'd expect from a, you know, like a Sky or cable remote control
Leigh Badger: Hmm.
Dorothy Dubray: where you've got hundreds of channels instead of a merely terrestrial one. Uh but I think we should be looking more along the lines of the one on the right, which has it also has play, stop and pause and everything, I don't think we need them at all. I think we just need channel selection, volume up, volume down and I think an an enter function where you can access it's not like teletext, but along the same lines, access things on the screen. Uh not related to the internet one that you mentioned, because that'd be far outside our budget and what we want this to do.
Leigh Badger: Mm. And
Dorothy Dubray: So
Leigh Badger: exceed
Dorothy Dubray: it
Leigh Badger: the requirements they're expecting
Dorothy Dubray: really exceed
Leigh Badger: of
Dorothy Dubray: the
Leigh Badger: us.
Dorothy Dubray: requirements, 'cause the requirements really are just want to be able to change channels and functions, which is more a text on the screen thing than uh
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Dorothy Dubray: than actual buttons o I was thinking something some smooth, sleek, little remote control with
Leigh Badger: Alright.
Dorothy Dubray: big user-friendly buttons and uh a menu that you can access. Uh but then I do think we need to discuss the speech um recognition possibility.
Leigh Badger: Okay. Any uh thing else you wanna
Dorothy Dubray: No.
Leigh Badger: add? Okay.
Dorothy Dubray: But we could go back to the pictures of the uh, what're they called? The pictures of the remote controls and possibly discuss what we think about them,
Betty Rodriguez: Or if
Dorothy Dubray: but maybe should hear what Kate has to say
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah.
Dorothy Dubray: first.
Leigh Badger: Yeah. Let's hear what Kate has to say.
Dorothy Dubray: Okay
Betty Rodriguez: Maybe
Dorothy Dubray: then.
Betty Rodriguez: afterwards we could do a uh whiteboard with that your the one on the right as a as a basis.
Leigh Badger: Hmm.
Betty Rodriguez: Whiteboard session.
Leigh Badger: I think the white that one on the right is, as well as less cluttered,
Betty Rodriguez: Mm-hmm.
Dorothy Dubray: Definitely less cluttered and I mean but still it's Sorry
Leigh Badger: It's
Dorothy Dubray: I
Leigh Badger: there
Dorothy Dubray: was just
Leigh Badger: but
Dorothy Dubray: I'll
Leigh Badger: it's
Dorothy Dubray: just uh resume something else I was gonna say. The the style of these is terrible.
Leigh Badger: Yeah.
Dorothy Dubray: I I I really think we need to uh not only possibly even materials, like the type of plastic used, but everything including size and shape of buttons, positioning of buttons, the actual shape of the hand-held device, colours,
Betty Rodriguez: The ergonomics,
Dorothy Dubray: just
Betty Rodriguez: the way it fits
Leigh Badger: Hmm.
Dorothy Dubray: every
Betty Rodriguez: in your
Dorothy Dubray: e yeah, everything to do with this has to be
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah.
Dorothy Dubray: revolutionised. But So that's that for now.
Carly Clark: Cheers.
Carly Clark: Mm, I haven't actually got a display on
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Carly Clark: my screen. Still, I'll do without that. Okay um, now I wanna bring us down to earth again I'm afraid and talk about the actual practicalities of how the thing needs to work. Um oh and this is the methodology I used in preparing for this meeting. Um basically I've been doing a little bit of web-based research, and if I had a design team, I would've been discussing my ideas with 'em. But the the net result is that I've come up with a first cut for the working design that I'd like to discuss with you. So, let's go back to what the basic function of a remote control is. It's for sending a message, um typically um via infrared. And the the basic components we've got to build in for our twelve Euros fifty are um an energy source, the user interface and which will um in incorporate um an integrated circuit that actually composes the message um based on what the which buttons the user presses, we turn that into a message, um and then we need a sending mechanism to send it to the receiver. Now I would have hoped I think that's my only slide actually, yeah. I would have have hoped to um do you a pretty PowerPoint slide of um my first cut design, but unfortunately the technology defeated Betty Rodriguez, so if you'll bear with Betty Rodriguez I'll do it on the whiteboard. So we want an energy source which is there. And we've got to think about what that might be. Uh
Leigh Badger: Hmm-mm.
Carly Clark: we obviously don't want wires on this thing. Uh typically it would be a battery, but I'm open to suggestions. Um and then we have the the user interface. Oops. And the main components in there are the
Carly Clark: the th the chip that actually has the intelligence of the machine that translates button presses into a message, which it then transfers to some sending mechanism, which encodes it
Carly Clark: and sends the message to the receiver. So those are the basic things that we've got to get in for our twelve Euros fifty. Thank you.
Leigh Badger: Hmm. Okay. Right. But those things as long as we can get those components, the block, that that rectangle for the user interface, is where the user comes in of what what does it look like? What do the buttons look like? Uh what does it feel like? That's where the user interface is really coming into its own.
Carly Clark: Mm-hmm.
Leigh Badger: The technical end is what's actually gonna be in there, but also it has to be easy enough to change or repair if something goes wrong. For example the battery energy source or um what if the chip, for whatever reason, breaks down after a certain amount of time, do you just replace it? Um is there any um because it may be in the same area with several other user interfaces, like for D_V_D_s, movies, whatever.
Leigh Badger: frequency or something?
Carly Clark: Well I may be wrong here, but I'd been thinking of this device as being a a cheap mass-produced device. We're trying to sell four million of 'em,
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Carly Clark: um that's that's, you know, that's almost one in every tenth household or whatever it is. Um and I hadn't thought of it as being a reparable thing, you just if it goes
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Carly Clark: wrong you chuck it out, and that's why I'm a bit concerned. I like the idea of speech recognition, that's a great idea, but I'm not convinced we can put it into this box for the price that we need gonna need to hit.
Betty Rodriguez: Do
Dorothy Dubray: Whoop.
Betty Rodriguez: we have
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Betty Rodriguez: um ki some idea of how much it would cost to create a device that has these basic elements? Because then
Dorothy Dubray: Isn't that your job?
Betty Rodriguez: No,
Leigh Badger: Oh.
Betty Rodriguez: the chip composer
Dorothy Dubray: Oh right.
Betty Rodriguez: marketing. Oh no, the chip composer sender.
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Carly Clark: Um,
Betty Rodriguez: I I don't believe I know, um.
Carly Clark: I'm I'm
Leigh Badger: What
Carly Clark: I'm
Leigh Badger: they cost.
Carly Clark: hoping that my personal coach is gonna give Betty Rodriguez some advice on that, if you're
Betty Rodriguez: Okay.
Carly Clark: asking Betty Rodriguez, but
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Betty Rodriguez: Be because then we would ha ha figure out how much we had to play with
Dorothy Dubray: Yeah.
Betty Rodriguez: in terms
Carly Clark: Yeah.
Betty Rodriguez: of
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: user interface and this look and feel idea.
Dorothy Dubray: It does it does seem as if we're just to do something really simple and mass-produced,
Betty Rodriguez: Mm-hmm.
Dorothy Dubray: the which is pretty much the same as these existing models, just maybe
Betty Rodriguez: Inspired?
Dorothy Dubray: a little bit more inspired,
Betty Rodriguez: Mm.
Dorothy Dubray: but basically just the same. Although what what uh suddenly came into my head is, you know how they always take two A_A_ batteries which which is really not very efficient at all. Could it be possible to have uh, you know, like a rechargeable internal battery, like,
Betty Rodriguez: Mm-hmm.
Dorothy Dubray: well, like an M_P_ three player does? With that you could jus or a mobile phone or whatever.
Betty Rodriguez: Mm-hmm.
Dorothy Dubray: You could you know, you just plug into a power source for a couple of hours, and then it's recharged for ages and ages and ages, and you don't have to worry with replacing A_A_ batteries,
Betty Rodriguez: Well that has
Dorothy Dubray: which
Betty Rodriguez: another
Dorothy Dubray: are
Betty Rodriguez: element, which is if every time you're done using the remote you put it on a charger, then
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: you then it has
Dorothy Dubray: You'd
Betty Rodriguez: a place.
Dorothy Dubray: never need uh batteries would y uh yeah.
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah, but it also has a place, so
Dorothy Dubray: And it's not stuck down the back of
Betty Rodriguez: exactly.
Dorothy Dubray: the sofa.
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Dorothy Dubray: But then again I d I don't know if this is within our price range or not.
Betty Rodriguez: That's a really good idea.
Carly Clark: Well I uh think that's a very interesting idea, but um I'm not a very good industrial designer and I don't know much about what these things cost. I'll do some research for the next meeting.
Betty Rodriguez: Well
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Betty Rodriguez: it's better than my idea about solar, probably.
Leigh Badger: Uh yeah.
Carly Clark: Well solar may not be so good when you're watching T_V_
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah,
Carly Clark: in the night,
Betty Rodriguez: yeah.
Carly Clark: but
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Dorothy Dubray: Well
Betty Rodriguez: Depen
Dorothy Dubray: it is just so
Leigh Badger: It
Dorothy Dubray: annoying
Leigh Badger: would have to sor
Dorothy Dubray: how
Leigh Badger: store up the energy
Betty Rodriguez: Mm. Yeah.
Carly Clark: Yeah, I guess.
Leigh Badger: and then use it. Solar can do
Carly Clark: We may
Leigh Badger: that.
Carly Clark: be talking quite heavy then.
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah.
Leigh Badger: M yeah, that would be too heavy and it'd cost too much.
Carly Clark: Mm-hmm.
Dorothy Dubray: No, but just a rechargeable internal battery would probably I mean it might cost more to at first to develop and to
Betty Rodriguez: Mm-hmm
Dorothy Dubray: install, but for long-term use it'll be so much more convenient and economic than fiddling around trying to replace chunky A_A_ batteries and
Betty Rodriguez: Mm-hmm.
Dorothy Dubray: not having any in your kitchen drawer and
Carly Clark: So
Dorothy Dubray: you
Carly Clark: do you
Dorothy Dubray: know
Carly Clark: think
Dorothy Dubray: f
Carly Clark: we might make that a selling point if it was something that we found we could afford to develop?
Betty Rodriguez: Definitely, 'cause I'm thinking
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: in terms of um uh the loss and breakage of um remotes, how much of that is is to do with it not really having a uh a home, a um
Dorothy Dubray: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: a nest,
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Dorothy Dubray: Sort
Betty Rodriguez: a
Dorothy Dubray: of have
Betty Rodriguez: place
Dorothy Dubray: its little
Betty Rodriguez: to live,
Dorothy Dubray: dock that you
Betty Rodriguez: exactly.
Dorothy Dubray: could put
Leigh Badger: Yeah.
Dorothy Dubray: it
Betty Rodriguez: So
Dorothy Dubray: in.
Betty Rodriguez: if you can dock it, um you know, you could s argue
Leigh Badger: And
Betty Rodriguez: that
Leigh Badger: the dock
Betty Rodriguez: this
Leigh Badger: could
Betty Rodriguez: is
Leigh Badger: look very fancy
Betty Rodriguez: Exactly.
Leigh Badger: and that could be your inspiration
Dorothy Dubray: Still
Leigh Badger: of having
Dorothy Dubray: I
Leigh Badger: it
Dorothy Dubray: don't
Leigh Badger: looking
Dorothy Dubray: know if
Leigh Badger: decent.
Dorothy Dubray: it's quite within our price range.
Betty Rodriguez: Mm.
Leigh Badger: Hmm.
Betty Rodriguez: 'Cause you are talking about another component, like another piece of
Dorothy Dubray: Yeah.
Betty Rodriguez: hardware.
Leigh Badger: Yeah.
Betty Rodriguez: Mm.
Leigh Badger: Okay. Are we agreed as to what our target group is though? Pretty much, so
Betty Rodriguez: Well
Leigh Badger: that
Betty Rodriguez: I
Leigh Badger: we'd be
Betty Rodriguez: I
Leigh Badger: looking
Betty Rodriguez: brought up
Leigh Badger: for the
Betty Rodriguez: some
Leigh Badger: younger end.
Betty Rodriguez: exactly, but I think you raised some good questions about are there enough of these people out there, or are they
Carly Clark: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: making purchasing decisions? You know,
Carly Clark: Yeah,
Betty Rodriguez: these
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: are
Carly Clark: I was
Betty Rodriguez: the
Carly Clark: wondering that, because I ag I agree that there there're people with uh how can I put it, more money than sense and who
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah,
Carly Clark: are liable
Leigh Badger: I
Carly Clark: to
Betty Rodriguez: exactly.
Carly Clark: buy something
Leigh Badger: I
Carly Clark: new,
Leigh Badger: s usually
Carly Clark: but
Leigh Badger: put more money than brains.
Betty Rodriguez: Oh oh oh I'll make a note of that, Kate. Good, good
Carly Clark: Bu
Betty Rodriguez: comment.
Carly Clark: but what I was gonna say was, although they they may be buying um, you know, personal music devices and all that, are they necessarily buying T_V_ remote controls? Because they probably live in a household that has a T_V_ if they're
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah.
Carly Clark: at the lower end of the age range, I don't
Dorothy Dubray: Yeah.
Carly Clark: know.
Betty Rodriguez: It might be good to know um uh who, you know, who's actually buying televisions and are we in a uh uh s region where people have more than one television in
Carly Clark: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: a home?
Carly Clark: I think we've got a big hill to climb here, haven't we?
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah.
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah.
Leigh Badger: Yeah. Or do we s make sure that it goes to the man through the manufacturer? We sell to the manufacturer
Carly Clark: Right,
Leigh Badger: as
Carly Clark: good point.
Leigh Badger: the
Carly Clark: Yeah, yeah
Leigh Badger: remote
Carly Clark: okay,
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah.
Dorothy Dubray: Yeah.
Carly Clark: yeah.
Leigh Badger: that goes with it.
Carly Clark: Yeah.
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah.
Carly Clark: Yeah, good point.
Leigh Badger: What would be a more efficient way of doing it?
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah, and and some of our D_V_D_ players incidentally have them, because we have the relationship with our own department, but moreover we need to
Leigh Badger: Mm-hmm.
Betty Rodriguez: to go for the the manufacturers.
Leigh Badger: Okay. Right.
Dorothy Dubray: We're not gonna get any resolutions by the end of the day, are we?
Leigh Badger: Probably
Betty Rodriguez: Mm.
Leigh Badger: not. Um the other thing that we're supposed to do is make decision on our functions. Our functions, we've so far decided, I think, that power, channel, volume make it attractive. Um it has to have an enter key and of course the number keys. It has to have big user-friendly buttons and sh n definitely we wanna be inspired that the current styles are just plain awful.
Dorothy Dubray: Yeah.
Betty Rodriguez: Do we need um let Betty Rodriguez
Leigh Badger: Is that agreeable
Betty Rodriguez: Br
Leigh Badger: to everyone?
Betty Rodriguez: actually,
Carly Clark: Mm-hmm.
Betty Rodriguez: um the enter key I have a chart here that I didn't include.
Leigh Badger: Mm-hmm.
Betty Rodriguez: Um
Carly Clark: Do you want the gizmo?
Betty Rodriguez: yeah, which might
Leigh Badger: Throw some light on
Betty Rodriguez: Th
Leigh Badger: that.
Betty Rodriguez: yeah, th those are felt like had a lot of charts.
Leigh Badger: Um actually we're, you know, we are almost a half hour out of the forty minutes, so we have to get close to
Betty Rodriguez: Okay,
Leigh Badger: finishing.
Betty Rodriguez: I I my only comment is I think maybe um we could somehow include an enter key in like a power key if power
Leigh Badger: Ah.
Betty Rodriguez: power was enter
Leigh Badger: Mm-hmm.
Betty Rodriguez: and pow that was my only just
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Betty Rodriguez: really in terms of streamlining. Um
Leigh Badger: Enter, power as a s oh um a sum simultaneous key.
Betty Rodriguez: Exactly. Again, you know,
Leigh Badger: Is
Betty Rodriguez: thinking
Leigh Badger: that okay
Betty Rodriguez: of menus
Leigh Badger: with you?
Betty Rodriguez: or
Dorothy Dubray: Sorry, I was miles
Leigh Badger: Would that
Carly Clark: H
Dorothy Dubray: away.
Carly Clark: how does
Dorothy Dubray: I
Carly Clark: that
Dorothy Dubray: was
Carly Clark: work?
Dorothy Dubray: re I was
Carly Clark: How
Dorothy Dubray: reading the chart to be honest.
Leigh Badger: uh-huh.
Carly Clark: so so how does that work, how do you avoid switching the thing off when you actually wanna press enter?
Betty Rodriguez: Um well if you're pressing enter, the the thing would already be on, and so maybe um when you press power, initially it turns it on, press power again and use that as an enter um so you
Leigh Badger: Then
Betty Rodriguez: press
Leigh Badger: you'd have to
Betty Rodriguez: power
Leigh Badger: have an off te
Betty Rodriguez: after
Leigh Badger: off key.
Betty Rodriguez: you've um well I was thinking maybe you to turn it off you'd have to press power twice
Carly Clark: Okay,
Betty Rodriguez: in succession,
Carly Clark: yep, mm-hmm.
Betty Rodriguez: and maybe
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: power follows something like a channel up channel down power, and then that would make that choice.
Carly Clark: It's not getting a bit complicated? Could
Betty Rodriguez: Well
Carly Clark: granny do this, or are we just not aiming at granny?
Betty Rodriguez: Or y yeah. Or something that has a a turning dial, where at the far end is
Dorothy Dubray: Who's got
Betty Rodriguez: on
Dorothy Dubray: an iPod
Betty Rodriguez: or off.
Dorothy Dubray: then?
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah, I don't
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: um I wish. Anyway, uh that was the only comment about um
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Betty Rodriguez: some of the the decisions people have made, what's most important. It's definitely
Leigh Badger: Mm.
Betty Rodriguez: channel, volume, power.
Dorothy Dubray: Yeah, things like screen settings and audio settings, I would generally do them on the actual television
Betty Rodriguez: Exactly.
Dorothy Dubray: itself, like here you have a you know, a little flap th with a little control panel on
Betty Rodriguez: Exactly.
Dorothy Dubray: the actual box itself. I I wouldn't know how to do it using a remote control,
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah.
Dorothy Dubray: so um I would say that they are definitely less relevant.
Betty Rodriguez: Okay,
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Betty Rodriguez: well. Thanks for looking at that.
Leigh Badger: So I guess easy to use is the other thing
Betty Rodriguez: Mm-hmm.
Leigh Badger: that we want 'em to be able to do.
Betty Rodriguez: We don't wanna
Leigh Badger: As
Betty Rodriguez: outsmart
Leigh Badger: you said, you know, don't make it too hard for the granny. I just joined that set last
Betty Rodriguez: Hmm.
Leigh Badger: week. Um
Betty Rodriguez: Congratulations.
Carly Clark: Mm.
Leigh Badger: first grandchild arrived.
Carly Clark: Uh.
Leigh Badger: Um so are we agreed then of those things? And
Betty Rodriguez: D
Leigh Badger: let's go back to agenda and hook Betty Rodriguez up. Mm. This oughta be fun. It probably won't go the first time, it'll probably be like a g mess. Come on. Uh it lost it off here.
Betty Rodriguez: Oh you're fine.
Leigh Badger: Uh
Betty Rodriguez: It's fine.
Leigh Badger: No, it was up there, but I couldn't see it down here.
Leigh Badger: Mm. This time it should be both. There we go.
Carly Clark: How do you do that? How do you make it do both?
Leigh Badger: Um you have to keep doing the financi the the F_N_ and F_ eight to
Carly Clark: Ah okay,
Leigh Badger: five
Carly Clark: it
Leigh Badger: minutes
Carly Clark: toggles
Leigh Badger: to
Carly Clark: through,
Leigh Badger: finish, thank
Carly Clark: yeah.
Leigh Badger: you a lot for telling Betty Rodriguez.
Betty Rodriguez: I think
Leigh Badger: Um
Betty Rodriguez: you have to cycle through.
Leigh Badger: right,
Carly Clark: Yeah.
Leigh Badger: we're ready to close. Um will be completed q questionnaire, um then we'll have some time for individual work to continue our research um and I'll put some minutes of this meeting together. Um your individual assignments are for um Kate to do the components, for you, Steph, to do the user interface and for you the trend-watching. Um and each of us will get help from our coach. Are we agreed to get ourselves together and then have lunch?
Dorothy Dubray: Yes.
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Carly Clark: Sounds good.
Leigh Badger: Then that's the end of this meeting. And I hope that's good enough for her to tell her that's the end. Okay?
Carly Clark: Okay.
Dorothy Dubray: We didn't come to any sort of decision on the functions though.
Leigh Badger: Well I think I went over the functions and wrote them down
Dorothy Dubray: Alright,
Leigh Badger: and
Dorothy Dubray: well
Leigh Badger: marked
Dorothy Dubray: that's fine
Leigh Badger: them.
Dorothy Dubray: then.
Leigh Badger: Um that's what I went over
Betty Rodriguez: Okay.
Leigh Badger: and nobody was objecting to them.
Betty Rodriguez: Um and you'd mentioned I I was just gonna say, could you reiterate the new project requirements, because
Leigh Badger: Okay.
Betty Rodriguez: it they were it has to be for a T_V_, just to keep myself
Leigh Badger: Um the teletext is outdated,
Carly Clark: So we're still in meeting, aren't we?
Betty Rodriguez: Yeah,
Leigh Badger: the
Betty Rodriguez: I think
Leigh Badger: internet
Betty Rodriguez: I've
Leigh Badger: is important, it's only to be for a T_V_ and it must include the corporate image, colour and slogan
Betty Rodriguez: Okay.
Leigh Badger: um which I think is more in the user
Dorothy Dubray: Mm.
Leigh Badger: uh range, with Steph.
Dorothy Dubray: Sorry, what what actually are these is that the yellow and black?
Leigh Badger: It doesn't tell Betty Rodriguez.
Betty Rodriguez: Mm.
Dorothy Dubray: From their I'll just use it from their website.
Leigh Badger: Mm-hmm. Okay?
Dorothy Dubray: Okay.
Carly Clark: Okay.
Betty Rodriguez: Right. Thank you. | Leigh Badger opened the meeting and went over the minutes of the previous meeting. Betty Rodriguez discussed user preferences in terms of remote controls and the increasing interest among younger consumers in speech recognition. Betty Rodriguez also discussed a user target group for the remote and addressed the issue of whether the target group would result in sufficient sales of the remote. Dorothy Dubray presented two existing remote controls on the market, which the team later evaluated, and discussed what features in terms of appearance and functionality the remote the team is creating should include. Carly Clark discussed the interior workings of a remote and addressed the issue of what happens when remotes no longer operate. The team also discussed options for energy sources, such as solar power and rechargeable internal batteries. Th team then discussed their user target group, marketing ideas such as selling the remote to television manufacturers, and what functions the remote would feature. | 2 | amisum | train |
Jada Gilbert: Okay uh Agnes, you
Delia Samuels: Yep.
Jada Gilbert: can help Audra Dean for the
Delia Samuels: Sure.
Jada Gilbert: when okay. Okay, welcome back. I hope uh you have a fresh head and a fresh time. How t now the meeting actually we gathering here to discuss about the functional design meeting. Okay, and uh we'll issue some information from uh all of you. And it's in the, I think uh, in the sharing folder. And uh I will invite uh the Christine and the Ed and uh Agnes to discuss about on the various subjects. So can you go to the next slide? Yeah uh the agenda of the meeting is opening. Then uh I'm going to talk about uh the project management, what I'm going to do, and uh, of course, I'm doing the project management and secretary both, okay, to take the minutes of the meeting. And there are three presentations. One is uh new project requirements. And the second one about uh decision on remote control functions. And uh finally we are closing. Uh and the meeting time will be uh forty minutes, so you have to be very quick. And I have come up with the management come with the new proposal, okay, and I have to discuss a few points on this. Uh both says new insights in the aim of your project. Uh the one is uh the teletext becomes uh outmoded, okay because if uh because of the computer systems and the new technology. So we don't need to consider really about the teletext all in our new project design. And the second one is about uh the remote control. Should be used only for the T_V_. That's what our uh management says. And the third point, it's very very important to establish our uh marketing or uh corporate image, okay, with this new project or new product. Okay. So I will invite uh Agnes, can you go to the third slide?
Delia Samuels: No, this is the third.
Jada Gilbert: Okay, So, I'll invite uh Christine to discuss about uh the functional design.
Charolette Hight: 'Kay, do you wanna
Delia Samuels: Sure.
Charolette Hight: open the
Delia Samuels: Um. You're participant s
Charolette Hight: I'm number.
Delia Samuels: Two?
Charolette Hight: That's it.
Delia Samuels: Do you want the mouse, or do you want Audra Dean to
Charolette Hight: I'll do the notes. Yeah, thanks. So um well I I figured uh we should um identify some user requirements, and from my experience, I wanna uh, and from research I did, uh the the device has to turn the television on and off the first time you press on the big button, you can't uh can't have like uh waffling on this point, you know. Really have It needs to be able y y have to be able to find it. Because one of the biggest problems with remote controls is finding them. So uh, I also, since we have to establish our corporate image on the basis of this new product, thought we better look at things that are popular and um ex go beyond those, and, as I said in the first meeting, um and then uh we might wanna talk eventually about the materials that are appropriate to use in uh in the construction, especially in the the uh the outside of the product so that it gives the appearance, and it is reliable, and so forth. I did a little history on uh the the uh remote controls and when they were invented and so forth, so, I guess this guy Zenith uh created the Flashmatic, which I kinda like the idea, 'cause it made Audra Dean think of um um maybe the remote control made a big flash when uh you turn the T_V_ on and off, that might be interesting. And um so it was highly directional flash light that uh you could turn the picture on and off, and the sound on and off, and change channels c so I think um those are still requirements we have today, uh
Delia Samuels: Mm-hmm.
Charolette Hight: fifty years later. And uh it was really a pioneering innovation, but it was uh sensitive to the sun, so that uh it would get would start off by the you'd get it would easily cause um problems. So, uh I in addition to uh looking at the um uh the functional requir so all these devices are examples of where uh mm they represent examples that are available today which I think the one in the middle is r
Audra Dean: Fantastic.
Charolette Hight: um really uh something to keep in mind. It'd be easy to find. And um it would uh y you'd you could throw it at things if if the T_V_ didn't turn on and off, you could use it for something else. And since I'm not really um Industrial Designer, I didn't really know what to do with this slide. But um I just took some different uh schematics and I put them into this, and I guess this is what a slide might look like if you were drawing a circuit board. I don't know why um we were asked to do this. So, uh personal preferences, um I think we could uh I I'm really thinking outside the box here, and I think that we should consider perhaps having an an an a a size uh a remote control that changes in size depending on the user preference. So something that's very very flexible and inflatable and then you could shrink it. I think um it could either be you could go either one extreme, be very colourful, or you could make it clear, and um kind of blend in with things, so you didn't have to um uh have a problem with the th the decoration of the of the user's home. Um I think uh it needs to be waterproof, because uh sometimes they fall into cups and, you know, it might be out by the swimming pool or something like that. Um if you uh mi one of one of my requirements was about needs t to tell you when it's done its job or not, because half the time, I keep pushing on the remote control, and I don't know if it's actually understood my message, so I think it should give you some sort of an oral cue. And uh, course I never wanna replace the battery. So, that's those are my f preferences, and that's my presentation.
Jada Gilbert: Yeah, let Audra Dean uh interrupt you uh if you can add other facility, other feature, like uh unbreakable.
Charolette Hight: Yes.
Jada Gilbert: Okay, because uh especially today, you know, you have the family and the kids, okay, and the kids throw it and they they play with their remotes
Charolette Hight: Run over
Jada Gilbert: and.
Charolette Hight: it with a car.
Jada Gilbert: Yes. Okay, so if you can add the feature, okay, for your uh fabric whatever in your outline design okay, with unbreakable, okay, I think that will give a lot of advantage for our product,
Charolette Hight: Good
Jada Gilbert: if I'm
Charolette Hight: idea.
Jada Gilbert: not wrong.
Charolette Hight: Good idea, I'll I'll uh um
Jada Gilbert: Maybe you can uh add it in that.
Charolette Hight: Yes, very good.
Jada Gilbert: Okay, uh thank you Christine, and uh uh any questions or uh clarifications, or any discussion on the functional design?
Delia Samuels: Do you have any preconceived ideas in terms of materials? 'Cause, for example, in the unbreakable thing, doing something plastic would be harder, whereas
Charolette Hight: Hmm.
Delia Samuels: having something like, I dunno, steel or titanium
Charolette Hight: Titanium.
Delia Samuels: isn't really
Charolette Hight: Titanium
Audra Dean: Titanium.
Charolette Hight: would be
Delia Samuels: economically viable.
Charolette Hight: be heavy, too, wouldn't
Delia Samuels: Yeah.
Charolette Hight: it? No, I haven't really um I wanted feedback, I think we need to rate rank these,
Delia Samuels: Yeah.
Charolette Hight: but we'll see what your uh personal
Delia Samuels: Sure,
Charolette Hight: preferences
Delia Samuels: yeah.
Charolette Hight: are and your
Delia Samuels: No, I
Charolette Hight: thoughts.
Delia Samuels: just that you had any sort of
Charolette Hight: I like titanium. It's light.
Delia Samuels: Yeah.
Audra Dean: Expensive.
Charolette Hight: Uh yeah
Delia Samuels: The
Charolette Hight: but
Delia Samuels: marketing comes
Charolette Hight: uh who
Delia Samuels: out.
Charolette Hight: who said who said
Jada Gilbert: Yes.
Charolette Hight: we were, you know, nobody told Audra Dean how mu what our financial objective is, so um
Jada Gilbert: Yeah
Charolette Hight: It'd
Jada Gilbert: so
Charolette Hight: be hard to inflate something ou made out
Jada Gilbert: Yeah
Charolette Hight: of titanium
Jada Gilbert: the the
Charolette Hight: though.
Jada Gilbert: I'm sorry because uh the last meeting we supposed to discuss about the financial thing. Uh let Audra Dean go quickly, maybe if I can go back. I know the project plan and the budget. So I can close this, not sure. Was in uh
Jada Gilbert: S This.
Jada Gilbert: So let Audra Dean see where is this file.
Delia Samuels: That's Christine's.
Jada Gilbert: This is Christine.
Delia Samuels: And that's mine,
Jada Gilbert: That's
Delia Samuels: I think.
Jada Gilbert: yours, okay. Saving.
Delia Samuels: In modified.
Audra Dean: I don't know, I think verbally
Jada Gilbert: Okay,
Audra Dean: we
Jada Gilbert: uh
Audra Dean: can
Jada Gilbert: I will I
Audra Dean: we
Jada Gilbert: will
Audra Dean: can
Jada Gilbert: send
Audra Dean: pretty
Jada Gilbert: you
Audra Dean: much
Jada Gilbert: a mail,
Audra Dean: sell.
Jada Gilbert: okay? The project may be the the project aim, okay. At the end of the day, the company uh wants to make at least uh the fifty million Euro. Okay, and uh of course the price will be very reasonable on the the sales side. Okay, that maybe Eddie will talk to you about uh how much uh the price and uh what's uh how much its cost for the manufacturing and how much it's going to be we sell in the market. Okay. Then uh you can come back with your feedback. And I I have one maybe the suggestion or opinion. This remote control, okay, it can be for like universal, to use for any T_V_. Okay, and it will be slim, okay, and uh
Charolette Hight: Not fat?
Jada Gilbert: Not fat.
Charolette Hight: Not fat, huh.
Jada Gilbert: Okay.
Charolette Hight: Might be hard to find, though.
Jada Gilbert: Yep.
Audra Dean: Hmm.
Jada Gilbert: But let's try it, okay,
Charolette Hight: Oh,
Jada Gilbert: with
Charolette Hight: okay.
Jada Gilbert: the different uh the designs, okay, the functional designs. Okay? So any other questions?
Audra Dean: Uh from her side, I don't think uh there's too many more questions.
Jada Gilbert: Okay.
Audra Dean: If you can
Jada Gilbert: Thank
Audra Dean: come
Jada Gilbert: you
Audra Dean: to
Jada Gilbert: Christine
Audra Dean: the
Jada Gilbert: for uh time being, so then uh Ed, so
Audra Dean: Okay,
Jada Gilbert: can you
Audra Dean: from
Jada Gilbert: tell
Audra Dean: the
Jada Gilbert: about
Audra Dean: marketing yeah, from the marketing side, just to to give an idea what the management is looking for, I was looking for a a remote control to
Delia Samuels: S
Audra Dean: have a
Delia Samuels: 'scuse
Audra Dean: s
Delia Samuels: Audra Dean for one sec.
Audra Dean: I have a sales price of twenty-five Euro with, a production price of uh twelve and a half Euro. For what uh I think from what we're trying to find, we're tr we're looking for, I don't think that price is exactly in the market. Okay?
Jada Gilbert: Mm-hmm.
Audra Dean: I'll explain myself here now in the sense that uh in a in the recent surveys, uh from the ages fr from fifteen to thirty-five, eighty percent are willing to spend more money for something as fancy as trendy. Twenty-five Euros, uh that's that's a preson reasonable price. That's a market price right now. Now if we're gonna take a risk,
Jada Gilbert: Yep.
Audra Dean: and push this up a bit, make it more expensive, but give them added things that they don't have now,
Jada Gilbert: Yep.
Audra Dean: then it w it could possibly sell. Obviously the risk is there. Too expensive, they're not gonna buy. But, I think uh there's one other thing interesting two things that are interesting is that uh from the fifteen to thirty-five year-old group, which always spends more money on trendy new things, speech recognition is requested. And we're talking between
Charolette Hight: Speech recognition?.
Audra Dean: seventy-five to ninety percent of this group is willing to pay for speech recognition on a remote.
Jada Gilbert: Mm-hmm.
Audra Dean: Obviously, we can't make a remote into a computer, but maybe simple commands. I dunno, louder, softer, on, off. That might be a possibility, even though it costs more, to be the first on the market to produce this. Thirty-five percent say they're too difficult to use. So we have to figure out a way of making it um more user friendly. Uh fifty percent say they can't find the remote half the time. So maybe one word speech recognition commands, say remote, and there's a beep beep beep, and they can find it through, you know, ten tons of newspapers, magazines, whatever you have at home. But, in the cost that uh the management is looking for, that's not gonna be possible. But if it's trendy, if it's fancy, it's got some colour to it, if it's very easy easy to use, if it's got simple remote speech remote uh control, like I said, louder, softer, change channel, on, off, remote, it goes beep beep, I can find my my remote without spending half a day looking for it and getting all upset 'cause I can't turn the T_V_ on. So we're gonna have to look at it in a in this global idea, with the ideas of the industrial uh design. But, price obviously we have to talk about.
Jada Gilbert: Yep. So what do you think about uh the design? Do you think you can make it or uh
Charolette Hight: D uh I'm sorry?
Jada Gilbert: What do you think about uh the design, uh what he was talking about
Audra Dean: Speech recognition.
Jada Gilbert: of the speech recognition?
Charolette Hight: Well, uh training is always an issue with uh commands.
Jada Gilbert: Mm-hmm.
Charolette Hight: So um might uh we can to spend some time in the training process, uh it could reduce th th uh the overall um cost. Not sure how. But um anyway, um I I think also that uh this might impact the battery life. And um so, maybe what we'll have to do is um add something where you can um recharge it wirelessly so that uh y you know sen send power to it. So uh or maybe uh set it out in the sun and it uh, you know, gets
Delia Samuels: Hmm.
Charolette Hight: uh, from the light, um a a solar cell inside there so that uh you have enough uh juice to do all these fancy things.
Delia Samuels: It seems also like with the speech recognition, yeah, it's a great feature, but if you're watching T_V_, there's a lot of ambient sound, and it's words. It's not just, you know, noises like something hitting. It's actual speech, so then you have to make sure that the speech recognizer is good enough to filter out the T_V_ speech, and the the user's speech. Otherwise, you can say remote.
Charolette Hight: Off.
Delia Samuels: But if someone on the screen is saying the same thing, all of a sudden, you have someone in a movie saying off and your screen dies, because they've triggered the remote control and it's turned off your T_V_. So, I think if we can find a speech recognizer that can handle those types of problems, then yeah, it'd be a really good
Audra Dean: Mm.
Delia Samuels: marketing gimmick. But, I think we seriously need to consider how that would impact the situation.
Charolette Hight: Very good point.
Audra Dean: Because tha w with speech recognition uh th I'm not that good at that idea but th
Delia Samuels: Mm-hmm.
Audra Dean: if it's a one-word recognition, 'cause I know with telephones and cars and things I've
Delia Samuels: Yeah.
Audra Dean: seen in the States, a friend of mine says call Mom, and it calls up Mom.
Delia Samuels: Yeah.
Audra Dean: 'Kay the radio can be on and everything.
Jada Gilbert: Yep.
Audra Dean: Because I think s with speech recognition, if uh the the remote or like the telephone it has a exact word that
Delia Samuels: Mm-hmm.
Audra Dean: it has to hear. I don't think it would come through a sentence in a television. If somebody's speaking on the se the television, they're not gonna stop and say remote, okay.
Delia Samuels: Mm-hmm.
Audra Dean: So I think that uh something could be designed to recognise single word
Delia Samuels: Oh yeah. Yeah.
Audra Dean: Like
Delia Samuels: No, I think
Audra Dean: the t
Delia Samuels: it's
Audra Dean: like
Delia Samuels: a great
Audra Dean: the telephone.
Delia Samuels: idea if we can
Audra Dean: No because
Delia Samuels: design
Audra Dean: I
Delia Samuels: it
Audra Dean: this
Delia Samuels: to
Audra Dean: is this
Delia Samuels: to
Audra Dean: is
Delia Samuels: suit
Audra Dean: years
Delia Samuels: those
Audra Dean: ago
Delia Samuels: requirements.
Audra Dean: in the United States where we're driving down and he said call home, and the telephone called immediately
Delia Samuels: Yeah.
Audra Dean: so well, that's kinda cute.
Jada Gilbert: Well, what I can uh suggest to you, Christine, okay, uh if you need some uh the technical feedback, or some training, okay, about uh this facility, especially for the speech recognition, I can recommend you some companies like uh Intel or I_B_M_, okay, because they're already in this uh speech recognition part, okay. And uh you can maybe have some uh technical backup from them, some kind of a technical tie-up. Okay, and uh if okay, and uh you can uh let Audra Dean know, okay, so what kind of uh the details you require okay, to add this feature in this project. I don't think it's uh the difficult. And uh we need to know how much is the timeframe you need to develop, apart from uh what today.
Charolette Hight: Okay, we'll find that out.
Jada Gilbert: Yep.
Audra Dean: From from your side uh, you're gonna have to go back the management and s
Jada Gilbert: Yes.
Audra Dean: be more s precise. What do they
Jada Gilbert: Yes.
Audra Dean: want? Uh, a risk, take a risk on the market? Something that's gonna cost more, but could very easily s
Jada Gilbert: Yes.
Audra Dean: make a boom in the market?
Jada Gilbert: Yep.
Audra Dean: Because it has to be something totally different, has to be total totally new. Something that nobody has right now.
Jada Gilbert: Yeah
Audra Dean: And it's
Jada Gilbert: but
Audra Dean: gonna cost.
Jada Gilbert: but end of the day, you're the sales guy, so I will come back and sit on your head because uh you are going to give your sales projection, okay. It's
Audra Dean: Mm-hmm.
Jada Gilbert: uh of course it's uh good to uh tell the management how much it's cost us and how much you are going to
Audra Dean: Sure.
Jada Gilbert: benefit,
Audra Dean: Sure.
Jada Gilbert: okay. And uh, so I don't mind to convince, okay, the management to spend some more money on the project, okay, if you can make out of
Audra Dean: Obviously.
Jada Gilbert: the money from this
Audra Dean: If the
Jada Gilbert: project.
Audra Dean: bottom line is positive.
Jada Gilbert: Yes, okay I don't mind to convince the the management,
Audra Dean: Mm.
Jada Gilbert: okay. The management says, okay, so they they don't want certain facilities, which it's already worked, okay, they want something uh new, okay. I think uh like uh speech recognit definitely they will agree, I don't think they'll say no for that, okay. And uh I hope I can convince the management on that, okay. So if you have any uh new ideas, okay, for uh your you can always come up and uh you can tell Audra Dean if you need any uh s special, okay, coordination, okay, between any uh technical companies, which you can uh hide their technology backup, okay, for your uh functional design or technical design, okay, then I am ready to do that. And uh what's your comments about uh
Delia Samuels: Um well, I mean, maybe if I go through my presentation, you can sort of see
Audra Dean: Mm.
Delia Samuels: what the user perspective is, and how it ties into the other two comments.
Jada Gilbert: Yeah, so you are finish, Ed, uh
Audra Dean: Yes.
Jada Gilbert: so I can
Audra Dean: Mm.
Jada Gilbert: uh Okay, I'll uh hand over to Agnes. Just gonna close this. T Uh where are you, here?
Delia Samuels: Mm participant three.
Jada Gilbert: Participant three.
Delia Samuels: Nope, here
Jada Gilbert: Okay, so I'll yep.
Jada Gilbert: Okay.
Delia Samuels: Good. Thanks.
Jada Gilbert: Is it okay? Alri
Delia Samuels: Yeah, and that's fine. Okay. So, basically, the method that we usually use in the user interface design is that we need to look at what people like and what people don't like about existing products. So, in our case, existing remote controls. And then, what the good ideas are, and what the bad ideas are, and why they're bad and good, which isn't always as obvious. We seem to have intuitions about why things are good or things are bad, but when you look, technically, at how it works, sometimes that's not the case. Then we need to decide what functionalities we really want to keep, 'cause that'll feed into both Ed's work and Christine's work. Um and then what the remote control should look like, obviously, once we've got a good idea of what the functionalities are. So, in terms of the functionalities that we need, you obviously need to be able to turn the T_V_ on and off. You need to change channels, both by directly going to a specific channel or by channel surfing. You need to be able to control the volume and then control any menus on the T_V_ to regulate contrast or whatever. So, the problems that people have expressed is that there's too many buttons on remote controls, in general. The buttons it's not clear what they're supposed to do. Um often, you need to know specific button sequences to get certain functionalities done, um which you don't necessarily always remember, especially if it's a functionality that you don't use very often. And that the buttons are too small. So, here we've got two examples where here on the left-hand side, you can see a remote control that has lots and lots of buttons. The buttons, in a lot of cases, are tiny. Um they're hard to see, and okay, they're labelled, but the labels don't necessarily tell you too much. Whereas, on the other side, you have a much simpler remote control that I think basically has the minimum functionalities that are needed. And it sort of looks simpler and just less imposing when you first look at it. So, I would be inclined to go sort of towards this, in terms of design, rather than this. And if there's specific functionalities that require more buttons, then we can figure out how to do it with existing um buttons. So my personal preferences are to keep the number of buttons to a limit, or to a minimum, sorry, make frequently used buttons bigger and more strategically placed, so like the on button being really obvious one, the channel changing and the volume, and to keep the design basically sleek
Jada Gilbert: Click
Delia Samuels: and simple.
Jada Gilbert: mm.
Delia Samuels: Which, I think ties into what Christine and Ed have both said fairly reasonably. Um so, that's pretty much it, an I don't know if you guys have any questions or
Charolette Hight: Oh, it's um, seems very understandable. Clearly your research and uh and ours uh heading in the same direction,
Delia Samuels: Yep.
Charolette Hight: and um uh the only thing that I saw missing from uh your your research that we found was this uh ability to find the doggone thing when you need it.
Delia Samuels: Yes, that's true.
Charolette Hight: So uh,
Delia Samuels: Yeah.
Charolette Hight: you know, but that's okay. That's why we're all here at the table, so that if we think of it and our research indicates certain things and um
Delia Samuels: Yeah.
Charolette Hight: w we it's complementary. I also think that um uh th f the the feel of it is uh, when you hold it, is something that um uh was expressed more in in in in my uh design
Delia Samuels: Mm-hmm.
Charolette Hight: and
Delia Samuels: Yeah.
Charolette Hight: that's logical and normal 'cause those are the parameters that an Industrial Designer's more thinking about, th
Delia Samuels: Yeah.
Charolette Hight: th the look and the feel, and uh,
Delia Samuels: Oh,
Charolette Hight: you're First. Yep. Mm-hmm. Okay, so I don't have any questions. Sounds good.
Jada Gilbert: So for anybody need uh any help, for time being, on this
Delia Samuels: Oh
Jada Gilbert: uh subjects, okay, so please come back to Audra Dean, and uh Christine, maybe I can uh try to help you to get some uh the technical uh the companies to help you for uh make a design uh slim, okay, and to add some features, like we are talking about, the speech recognition and all.
Delia Samuels: Should we maybe make a decision about what features we actually want to
Jada Gilbert: Yeah.
Delia Samuels: include, 'cause we've thrown a lot of features onto the table, but do we actually want to incorporate all of them, or have we missed
Audra Dean: Hmm.
Delia Samuels: anything?
Charolette Hight: Do you wanna go back and look at the closing slide, maybe that would provide some guidance?
Delia Samuels: Sure.
Charolette Hight: Doesn't really tell us.
Jada Gilbert: So not really this
Audra Dean: Individual
Jada Gilbert: one
Audra Dean: actions.
Jada Gilbert: we are talk
Charolette Hight: Well it
Jada Gilbert: ab
Charolette Hight: says individual actions, it says
Jada Gilbert: Yep.
Charolette Hight: user interf so I'm supposed to do the components concept, supposed to work on the
Delia Samuels: Mm-hmm.
Charolette Hight: user interface concept, and you're supposed to keep watching the trends. Um and specific instructions will be sent by our our coach. I
Delia Samuels: I thought
Charolette Hight: think we should do as many features as uh start with all of them right now and eliminate them later in the process, that's my suggestion.
Jada Gilbert: Okay, that will be great. And uh I'll send you the the minutes
Charolette Hight: You can
Jada Gilbert: of
Charolette Hight: object
Jada Gilbert: meet
Charolette Hight: if you want to
Delia Samuels: No, I I'm just thinking in terms of time, like
Audra Dean: She's
Delia Samuels: if
Audra Dean: objecting.
Jada Gilbert: Yeah.
Delia Samuels: Yes, now I'm objecting. No, I mean, I was just thinking is it really practical to start designing something with features that we're just gonna end up throwing away? I mean, it takes a lot of time and effort for everyone to consider different features, um and s if we spend that time and effort on features that we're not gonna use, maybe it's better to spend it on the f thinking more about features that we actually do want, but
Audra Dean: Oh th
Charolette Hight: I think we
Delia Samuels: guess
Charolette Hight: should take
Audra Dean: we s
Charolette Hight: that as
Audra Dean: we
Charolette Hight: an
Audra Dean: still
Charolette Hight: action
Audra Dean: have
Charolette Hight: item for after the meeting, 'cause w
Audra Dean: Yeah.
Charolette Hight: our meeting time has run
Audra Dean: Right.
Charolette Hight: out. Somebody
Delia Samuels: Sure.
Charolette Hight: else has go to use this room, and,
Delia Samuels: Yeah.
Charolette Hight: you know, we can't hang out here and
Delia Samuels: Yeah.
Charolette Hight: talk
Delia Samuels: Sure.
Charolette Hight: about this, so
Jada Gilbert: Okay, what we'll do is now we'll take for lunch break, okay, then uh we can discuss furthermore, okay, with our areas, and uh then we will come back again in the in the next meeting. So thanks for coming and uh I'll send you minutes of meeting, and uh please put your all information in the sharing folder so everybody can share the information. Okay?
Delia Samuels: Okay.
Jada Gilbert: So let's go for lunch then.
Charolette Hight: Thank
Audra Dean: Agreed.
Charolette Hight: you very
Jada Gilbert: Thank
Charolette Hight: much.
Jada Gilbert: you. | Jada Gilbert gave new requirements for the product: the remote will not include a teletext function, will only be used for television, and must show the corporate image. Charolette Hight presented possible components to consider. The group then discussed hard materials to include in the design. Audra Dean presented an initial sales plan and showed that there is a demand for remotes featuring voice recognition and other capabilities; the group discussed how it could be integrated into the functional design. Jada Gilbert offered to help Charolette Hight find companies to provide help in integrating this component. The designers expressed that they needed more information from the board on their expectations for the product. Delia Samuels gave a presentation on product design from the user's perspective and emphasized simplicity in design. She also suggested that the group make a decision on which features to include in the final product design, but the group decided to postpone it. The designers were given their assignments: Audra Dean will present the marketing concept; Delia Samuels, the user interface concept; Charolette Hight, the components concept. | 2 | amisum | train |