Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Review Feedback: Design input from Modo

Review with Kirsten Muenchinger:    
  1. consider screen visually showing when chemo process is over
  2. highlight deliniation between the two sides of the cart (user, expert)
  3. Materiality: Rubberized Paints (soft touch paint - good in hospital setting but problematic because of lint sticking to material)
  4. Continue to showcase strong link to Livestrong as a branding identity
  5. Cancer is not contagiout, consider how this effects need to limit germs/ infection
  6. IV bags - go to "wound and astomy care" at Riverbend Hospital (it is a speicialized section of the hospital) - might get IV bag to work with 
  7. Mc.Master OR Granger - online caterloges
  8. joint/hindge disscussion - finger the joints, dowell thru, cover with soft material, racket ball
Review with Arthur Woo:
  1. IV is gravity feed. Higher the IV to get the correct flow and pressure into viens
  2. the moving arm will cost at least $100
  3. NEED validation: do tests with people, simulations
  4. Get rid of arm altogether - DOCK
  5. Could use chip that doesnt allow i Pad to get outside of 3 ft from unit
  6. "Planes of workflow" - 2 sided interface
  7. Design for 2 IV bags (at least) - 1 saline, 1 Chemo
  8. Find out how much goes into on session of Chemo
  9. Make height adjustible - knob on the side ( average nurse is 5.4)
  10. Materality Disscussion: steel=support, Silicone (dust, strong and resistant to heat and chemicals), TPE or "tradename" (soft touch knobs, grips)
  11. silicone and TPE are expensive
  12. soft touch - should only be used where the product is being handles. Where are people going to touch this?
  13. IV tube management - simple hook that is wraps around (pocket)
  14. simple, pair down (like bike frame), form follows function (especially in medical setting)
Review with Goo:
  1. 24" 26" diameter - typical chair base
  2. 20" good size, no bigger
  3. 20" 22" optimal for IV poll (modo dimensions)
  4. Nurse with come to cart carrying 2 large bags, chart 
  5. don't need to worry about charging, i pad will last thru day ( just figure out how its charged)
  6. one word main statment - modo does this (methophers are powerful)
  7. TELL A STORY - Bob comes to Chemo twice a week, avid reader, forgets book, upset because has to sit for two hours. Then given i Pad
  8. Focus on the story - this sells the product
  9. arm could swing all the way around
  10. FID chip - can't use away from cart
  11. nurses spend 45 min looking for carts every day
  12. Take armstrong bike visually apart (Al or carbon fiber, mimic the frame, build design language, handle bars)
  13. consider sub-branding (make up own name) 
  14. L shape top design
  15. What are the majority of Chemo patients doing? sitting? laying?
  16. How easy is cart to take into bathroom?
  17. Base looks like butterfly - not too relevant, design should be tied to something
  18. Base defines what cart looks like - horseshoe base looks femine
  19. Design language: light (like bike frame), simple
  20. Don't need power - just how to charge
REVIEW Photos:
 

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