“The new iPhone is currently the standout object on my desk, this thing that looks like a mere black rectangle from across the room but starts to look like something very different at the range it’s meant to be used at. Holding it, you understand at once why Apple has physical stores; while you can watch iPhone commercials or see print campaigns about its features, when you first hold this exquisitely-crafted object you have a different experience entirely, one that cannot be adequately conveyed in two dimensions,” hipstomp reports. “Having seen countless photos of the device in advance, I was still surprised by the real thing when I popped it out of the box and touched it.”
MacDailyNews Take: iPhone 4 is like a finely-crafted watch. You can see and feel the care than went into it when you hold it.
hipstomp continues, “‘A big part of the experience of a physical object has to do with the materials,'” says Jonathan Ive, Apple’s Senior Vice President of Design, during a brief chat with Core77. ‘[At Apple] we experiment with and explore materials, processing them, learning about the inherent properties of the material–and the process of transforming it from raw material to finished product; for example, understanding exactly how the processes of machining it or grinding it affect it. That understanding, that preoccupation with the materials and processes, is [very] essential to the way we work.'”
Much more in the full article – recommended – here.
[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Tim B.” for the heads up.]