Mark Hurst recently posted a quick musing on the beneficial use of deception in product design. While most deception in design is detrimental, done for the cynical purposes of marketing by pumping up a product's image rather than its reality, these cases demonstrate that it can be used for good purposes as well. Read the whole post, because I don't want to steal his thunder; I will, however, say that my favorite item is the placement of a fake bus stop outside the Alzheimer's ward of a nursing home. If patients escape, they're likely to try to catch a bus - and they're easier to find at a fake bus stop that won't take them anywhere!
Product design use and usability, designs new and old, inspired and unspired. The little things that matter.
Deception in design, by design...
Mark Hurst recently posted a quick musing on the beneficial use of deception in product design. While most deception in design is detrimental, done for the cynical purposes of marketing by pumping up a product's image rather than its reality, these cases demonstrate that it can be used for good purposes as well. Read the whole post, because I don't want to steal his thunder; I will, however, say that my favorite item is the placement of a fake bus stop outside the Alzheimer's ward of a nursing home. If patients escape, they're likely to try to catch a bus - and they're easier to find at a fake bus stop that won't take them anywhere!
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