Awesome Stuff: The Light Non-Switch
from the flip-on-flip-off dept
This week, we're taking a look at a gloriously simple piece of technology: the Lightbox, a wireless light switch with no switch at all.
The Good
One of the definitions of "elegance" in interactive design is the ratio of depth to complexity. This is easily understood in the world of video game design, where there's a constant goal of providing a huge amount of gameplay depth to be explored without bogging the player down in endless complicated controls and options — but the same notion can be applied to something as simple as a light switch. You've normally got a ratio of one simple function to one moving part, but the Lightbox has uncovered a new level of elegance by having no moving parts at all. It appears as nothing more than a decorative piece of wood that would fit nicely in most homes, but it's quietly paired with receivers attached to your outlets, so you can control your lights by merely turning the block on its end. Even just watching it in the video feels satisfying. In a world full of robust but complicated devices for controlling your home, often revolving around touch-screens and LED indicators and smartphone apps, there's something appealing about the simple, elegant solution that the Lightbox provides.
The Bad
The Lightbox isn't going to change anyone's life, but that would be asking a little much. Ultimately, it's a decor item more than anything else, which justifies (but doesn't entirely take the edge off of) the somewhat high price of $60 and up. But, were the Lightbox a block of cheap plastic or even a less-pretty hunk of wood, then it wouldn't be very appealing at all, so it's not like there needs to be a cheap alternative — and indeed, retaining the quality of material and design as they move into the manufacturing phase is one of the key challenges these creators face and discuss on the Kickstarter page.
The Elegant
The Lightbox isn't a "smart home" fixture, but it fits into an overlapping category and provides some real inspiration for the ongoing evolution of home automation and interactivity. As we start adding wireless communication to more and more items in the home, and as that becomes a more competitive space, it's good to look out for ways of flipping the emerging design standards on their head, and the Lightbox is an example of just that. In the fully-networked smart-home that many people envision but few completely achieve, do we really want a touchscreen on the toaster and every flower pot glowing with blue indicator LEDs? That's not elegant design — it adds depth, but only at the cost of increased complexity. Instead, let's take some inspiration from the Lightbox, and think about ways to hide a home's interactivity and automation within simple objects and actions that are pleasing on aesthetic and tactile levels — like the basic, satisfying action of turning a wooden block on its end.
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Filed Under: awesome stuff, design
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'hallway light'
kitchen light
on one side and on another side
dining room light
kitchen light
On another. How many different ways do you plan to control the lights in any single room? Six should be plenty.
Or maybe little pictures of which light is being lit next to the letters (for kitchen light there could be a spoon and fork and knife next to each other ... though how would you separate that from dining room light ... the designers could think of something).
Perhaps a block switch, like the above, with a few buttons on it. Each button can be an on/off radio button that, when you press it it can move inwards and outwards. Inwards = on, outwards = off. So you can have, say, four radio buttons that control four lights. If three are on and the block is flipped one way it can turn those three lights on. If it's flipped another way it will turn them off.
I was thinking this might be good for my grandma ... assuming she doesn't lose it ;). The lights should have a manual override in case the block is lost.
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While I agree that it's a kind of neat idea, this seems like just needlessly complicating something that has worked fine for about a century now.
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Response to: Rekrul on Oct 17th, 2015 @ 3:13pm
Mine would hide it under the couch, when he wasn't flipping all the lights on and off while running away with the block of wood with big sister in full pursuit.
Finally it would get put "away" by an exasperated adult and we'd forget where "away" was.
Switches are still required by the building code, so this is basically clutter.
Not a fan, sorry!
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Re: Response to: Rekrul on Oct 17th, 2015 @ 3:13pm
Then again, a bowl full of nice stones, an empty milo tin, and a plastic bottle with some dried pasta in it also make for fun toys for our toddler...
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new or just inflared packaging as art?
The remote is in a wood block.
Does it have a timer function? No.
Can I overide it? No.
so it does less for 3x the cost? Yes.
So why would I buy this?
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The idea might be elegant, but the implementation isn't. It's a block of wood. How much thought does it take? Aha! It's not the block of wood, not really.
I think the whole point isn't a block of wood to turn on the lights. The point (to me, anyway) is simply that somewhere out there, are people who still think, who still invent, who still realize their dreams.
It's a lot more than just a block of wood.
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This is brilliant
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The boingboingification continues. What a gorgeous hunk of wood. Too bad it isn't also 3D-printed. How can you be truly innovative without extruded polymers?
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Shut up and take my money
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