Fantastic video! Great content, music, shots, pacing... very well-made. I noticed the gray progress bar at the bottom. I can't help but address it from a functional design standpoint, given the focus of the video. If someone is interested in skimming to use as little time as possible, they will probably hover their cursor and can already see the progress through individual chapters, making the gray bar redundant. Speaking as someone who planned to watch the whole video, I found it more distracting than helpful. It took the focus off the video itself and made me think about what I have to do after it's over, which isn't what I'm looking for. I can't fault you for trying something new!
I agree. although clever and clean, i found it to pull me out of the video. Mostly it's redundant as the timeline already exists on youtube. Not worth your extra effort to do this.
I thought it was very clever too. Though once I noticed it, it started distracting me also - not visually, but just in knowing it's there. I know time management is important on this channel but I enjoy getting lost in a video sometimes - which is easy to do on Titch's channel 🙂
Loved the video! Regarding the “half full bag of chips” i think it’s done this way to work as an airbag to protect the chips from breaking! Not sure it is true but make sense tho. Keep up with the amazing work :)
This videos is also well designed. - Honest : Exactly talks about what it was intended for. - Timeless : Contents in this video are useful forever. - Aesthetic : Right off from background music to the visuals. - Minimal : Straight to the point without any clutter - Useful : I can easily understand the points I also love how you integrated the sponsor at the end of the video
Innovative, useful, aesthetic, understandable, unobtrusive, honest, long lasting, thorough down to last detail, sustainable, as little design as possible
Watching this is 2024, and I STILL have my macbook pro from 2014 as well!! I have to use all cloud-based, but still works well. I have not lost a dime for the heafty pricepoint. Thank you, love all your videos!
Can you do a video for newborns and how you keep things minimalist for parents-to-be. im pretty much a minimalist and have been trying to find a good video out there for baby products that are of good quality and without unnecessary clutter in their design.
Wow! Did you know that your video is linked as reference within a Meta (Facebook) UI/UX course on Coursera? I'm already a subscriber so I was pleasantly surprised to get linked here!
Excellent video Daniel. Will defo have to watch many times again for future projects👍 Hat-tip on the nod to old MBP users. Still rocking that Late2013 daily 🤟🏼
I teach freshmen. I nag my students to (actively, purposefully) design the space. Many get it and try/practice. Some just reason out that it is minimalist that's why nothing's there but an empty square box. Irks me.
I had 10 years Dell inspiron 1420. My father got it second-hand from my uncle in 2009 (or 2010, I forgot). It still work well till 2019. Sadly, in 2020 a lot of application don't support windows 7.
Great video! The examples and with the sense they've been communicated as adjacents to the aspects of "Good Design", helped create relatability without fail. Thank you for this! 😁
Nice! So glad I've subscribed to this channel. I learn so many useful tips and pick up some of your wise insights that can surely come in handy during my studies in architecture school.
Great video and very nice way of distilling these principles -- thanks for creating this. It really helps to understand the influences on Jony Ive and others who have shaped our experience of tech especially. But the focus on design as a guiding principle for simplicity/essentialism in lifestyle is also compelling. Very nice job on this -- again, thanks!
This is awesome Daniel! Although I was already familiar with the 10 principles, your explanation, examples and take on each principle were super interesting and made the video worth the watch! Looking forward to the next design focused video 🙂
Can you do a video on flooring recommendations that are functional cheap. My parents switched out carpeting for vinyl flooring in my apartment but now my neighbor downstairs constantly complains about the noise
If you haven't read it, Don Norman's 'The Design of Everyday Things' was the book that introduced these ideas to me as well. It alone made me want to pursue design haha
Hello Daniel, really you're such an inspiration for me. I'm starting a new channel soon. And I'm still lack on my script while I'm so impressed with yours. Short and full of info. Would please make a video how you script?
Hey there ! I initially had subscribed to your channel - an year ago, I guess - but unsubscribed because it was all looking a little to minimalism preaching kind. But, you seemed to have changed your narrative, so thanks for coming back. I’m sincerely sorry if I’m sounding rude, apologies. Awesome video, keep it up
Appreciated this video. Got me thinking which is always fun: Are Apple innovators or do they simply take recent technologies and do them better than those first to market? The sleek aluminium design of your old MacBook Pro arguably has an enduring timeless aesthetic. The same can not be said for the models that came after with poor keyboards and no SD slot. The endless cycle of obsolescence and upgrades of phones and most electronic devices is also hardly sustainable. Our old landline lasted decades. Will they ever build a smart phone or smart watch to last? Although some of the dumb phones, for those who want to escape social media, may be built to last. Finally, perhaps the essence of good design is functionality, durability, and being aesthetically pleasing. With some of the other principles being derivatives of these. Thanks DT.
I have lived by these principles before I knew they existed. Why? Here's a principle of my own: Good principles should make common sense. And these principles make common sense. I am not (currently) and iPhone user, but I used to tell my student when teaching software design that the iPhone totally revolutionized the mobile phone industry when it first came out. How? The iPhone was intuitive even though no one had ever seen a mobile device quite like it before. It had NO BUTTONS AND NO INSTUCTIONS!!! That was bold! Besides being extremely functional and intuitive, it was sleek and very beautiful; more so than just about every mobile phone in the market at the time. I can go on, but I will stop now because we all see the point: follow these principles and odds are your product, whatever it might be, will be a success. That is not debatable.
1:04 So Apple didn’t innovate on its design but just adapted and perfected what came before? 2:07 I disagree with this part, a product may be slightly less effective than a pure efficiency version at whatever task it was designed for, but if it still looks good that doesn’t make it bad design. After all, a concrete rectangular prism that is well insulated is much better at housing someone in a cold area than a beautifully designed log cabin.
Excellent video thankyou, your macbook looks in peak condition for an item about seven years old you must have really taken xare of it, and i take my hat ofc to ypu keeping it and not renewing , an item tried and tested, i still have nnot owned one as yet but do have a smartphone , i see new ones but whats the poing mine still serves me wrell!
Love this video, but the thin bar on the bottom is distracting, and to another viewer I was watching it with, stressful. It doesn’t seem to add useful value. It’s fine for ad segments (see Alex, the French engineer/home cook), but for segments we want to watch, being constantly reminded of how much time is left removes focus from the video.
These are all great principles BUT there are other alternatives to minimalism than 'a sea of clutter'. And simplicity is always welcome, but behind the neat form of your iPhone is a vast and complicated system of techie clutter somewhere necessary for it to work at all. Not very honest, actually.
While I love the design of Apple products I find that the most recent units, both Mac and iPhone, dependability is questionable. My M1 Mac Mini died after owning it for only 4 months, which forced me to go out and purchase a PC, since Apple couldn't get me into a store for a 'Genius' appointment for over a week and a replacement. My iPhone 12 mini also had trouble connecting to Bluetooth and Apple Play in my car. Apple sent me in for a replacement, which I was denied one after consulting with Tech Support 4 times. I was advised that the iPhone wasn't the problem and that my new car, my Apple watch and my wireless ear buds were all to blame over the iPhone. Needless to say, I no longer own any Apple products as they have become the sure sign of bargain basement reliability even though their products exterior design looks flawless. I miss the old Apple products that were once dependable and worth the money.
"So If something.... doesn't solve a problem or improve a solution, you could say that there isn't much reason for it existing." If people are the same way, then perhaps the purpose of existing is to innovative? Dude WT🤯
I was with you until principle 7. Minimalism is the new trend. Go back a decade it was something else and so on and so on. Maybe it's because you are fully emersed in one that you don't think you are in one. But it wouldn't really take me 5 minutes to find 5 other videos saying something along the lines of less is more in a muted color home.
“Good design is honest “ totally the opposite of 1950-60s Cadillacs that tried to be jets….as opposed to a 1960s Mercedes’, which is basically the same the design…and now Cadillac is trying to copy them
Never heard of these principles before, very interesting. Principles 1 and 7 seem to be at odds with each other a little. I'd say that the success of the iPod was less to do with the design of it and more to do with how easy it made it to manage a music library and to buy music. The same for the smartphone; it's the applications that make the smartphone a must-have, not its design. I agree with you that removing things like sd card slots from laptops makes them less useful and so is a bad design choice.
Apple is not as innovative as most people think. What Apple is very good at is taking products pioneered by other companies, like MP3 players or smartphones, then refining these and mainstreaming them.
It's a shame Apple is abandoning these principles with their latest computers. For a well-designed device to be long-lasting and environmentally friendly it should be repairable. Apple's obsession with thinness has resulted in a new generation of computers that will need entire logic board replacements (expensive financially and environmentally) for what would have previously been a simple repair that many users could have done themselves.
An example of an often overlooked, but _perfect_ design:
The paperclip.
It's only perfect until a strong wind comes
Indeed! However, in design principles textbooks, it is often the first cited example.
Redirected from Meta Front-end Development Certification; particular: Principles of UX/UI Design.
Thank you for the amazing content.
The crisps bags filled half way are actually good design. If they were fully filled, the crisps would all crack while in shipping or in handling.
Yeah, this youtuber is ignorant. Instantly closed the video after that nonsense. Can't believe coursera linked this.
Fantastic video! Great content, music, shots, pacing... very well-made.
I noticed the gray progress bar at the bottom. I can't help but address it from a functional design standpoint, given the focus of the video. If someone is interested in skimming to use as little time as possible, they will probably hover their cursor and can already see the progress through individual chapters, making the gray bar redundant. Speaking as someone who planned to watch the whole video, I found it more distracting than helpful. It took the focus off the video itself and made me think about what I have to do after it's over, which isn't what I'm looking for. I can't fault you for trying something new!
Thanks Wesley. Appreciate the feedback!
I agree. although clever and clean, i found it to pull me out of the video. Mostly it's redundant as the timeline already exists on youtube. Not worth your extra effort to do this.
same, also found it distracting, as if the video wants me to stop it
I thought it was very clever too. Though once I noticed it, it started distracting me also - not visually, but just in knowing it's there. I know time management is important on this channel but I enjoy getting lost in a video sometimes - which is easy to do on Titch's channel 🙂
I think its useful in corporate presentation videos, where audience cant skip a chapter but would be interested to see when is the next one coming…
Always a big fan of Dieter Rams' work, great to see your take on his 10 commandments!👍
Ayyyy, thanks CK! Glad you enjoyed it 🙌🏼
Love seeing you two!
Great video. I absolutely love the thin line at the bottom of each chapter. What a clever example of good design.
"Any beauty from its design is derived from its utility." Beautifully put Daniel
I loved the way you've placed the timer at the bottom for every timestamp and that goes perfectly well with what you say at 4:19.
Man the effort and detail-oriented focus here in this video is outstanding! I really believe it's your best one so far!
Loved the video! Regarding the “half full bag of chips” i think it’s done this way to work as an airbag to protect the chips from breaking! Not sure it is true but make sense tho. Keep up with the amazing work :)
This videos is also well designed.
- Honest : Exactly talks about what it was intended for.
- Timeless : Contents in this video are useful forever.
- Aesthetic : Right off from background music to the visuals.
- Minimal : Straight to the point without any clutter
- Useful : I can easily understand the points
I also love how you integrated the sponsor at the end of the video
Your comment is a nice summary and also quite meta!
@@eduardoalvarez2497 Haha.. thanks mate :)
Thanks for the video. Awesome work as usual.
dude, the progress bar for each section is wonderful. ::chef's kiss::
Innovative, useful, aesthetic, understandable, unobtrusive, honest, long lasting, thorough down to last detail, sustainable, as little design as possible
The line at the bottom is a new trick in your videos? Love it.
Was waiting for your video for quiet a while, thanks for uploading :)
those principles seem so obvious that it is very strange that so few companies make products that follow even half of them
Watching this is 2024, and I STILL have my macbook pro from 2014 as well!! I have to use all cloud-based, but still works well. I have not lost a dime for the heafty pricepoint. Thank you, love all your videos!
Can you do a video for newborns and how you keep things minimalist for parents-to-be. im pretty much a minimalist and have been trying to find a good video out there for baby products that are of good quality and without unnecessary clutter in their design.
Very informative, as always!🙌🏻 I thought good design is only pleasing to the eye! Now I know that there’s so much more in line!✨
Great material, Dieter Ram is inspiring and makes you think. Thanks for making this!
REALLY REALLY THANK YOU FOR THIS!! BADLY NEED IT FOR MY ESSAY WAHHHH
Wow! Did you know that your video is linked as reference within a Meta (Facebook) UI/UX course on Coursera? I'm already a subscriber so I was pleasantly surprised to get linked here!
your phone's wallpaper is soo clean, i liked it! thanks for the inspiration
Excellent video Daniel. Will defo have to watch many times again for future projects👍
Hat-tip on the nod to old MBP users. Still rocking that Late2013 daily 🤟🏼
Thank you for this useful video😇
I teach freshmen. I nag my students to (actively, purposefully) design the space. Many get it and try/practice. Some just reason out that it is minimalist that's why nothing's there but an empty square box. Irks me.
Redirected to this content from the META FRONTEND COURSE. Great video. learned a lot
Lovely video, Daniel! Thanks for sharing!
I'm here 👋 from Meta UX Design Course
great video content.
noticed the little gray line on the bottom. it made me super anxious throughout the whole video... found it quite distracting.
Thanks for the feedback!
Man, this is such crispy content! Keep it up mate! 🤙🏻
I had 10 years Dell inspiron 1420. My father got it second-hand from my uncle in 2009 (or 2010, I forgot). It still work well till 2019. Sadly, in 2020 a lot of application don't support windows 7.
Great video! The examples and with the sense they've been communicated as adjacents to the aspects of "Good Design", helped create relatability without fail. Thank you for this! 😁
As a civil engineer aspect every design is critical to understand 😂
Nice! So glad I've subscribed to this channel. I learn so many useful tips and pick up some of your wise insights that can surely come in handy during my studies in architecture school.
I thought good design was black, white, maybe grey, and overall minimalist 😂
That's right 😂
Congrats on the new phone! Is that the 12 or 12 mini?😊
Mini! 😊
thank you for helping me in my assignment
Great video, mate 👍🏼
I'm a huge fan of Dieter Rams. I was heavily influenced by him and always try to follow his principles.
Great video and very nice way of distilling these principles -- thanks for creating this. It really helps to understand the influences on Jony Ive and others who have shaped our experience of tech especially. But the focus on design as a guiding principle for simplicity/essentialism in lifestyle is also compelling. Very nice job on this -- again, thanks!
I learn something new today. Thanks, Titch! 👍🏻
This is awesome Daniel! Although I was already familiar with the 10 principles, your explanation, examples and take on each principle were super interesting and made the video worth the watch! Looking forward to the next design focused video 🙂
Can you do a video on flooring recommendations that are functional cheap. My parents switched out carpeting for vinyl flooring in my apartment but now my neighbor downstairs constantly complains about the noise
Valeu!
Thanks so much Guilherme! I'm so glad you enjoyed it
Dieter Rams + Daniel Titchener = ❤️
If you haven't read it, Don Norman's 'The Design of Everyday Things' was the book that introduced these ideas to me as well. It alone made me want to pursue design haha
Shout out Dieter
do you have a recommendation for a good hot water flask?
Hello Daniel, really you're such an inspiration for me. I'm starting a new channel soon. And I'm still lack on my script while I'm so impressed with yours. Short and full of info. Would please make a video how you script?
Will really appreciate if you can help me doing so. A Lil subscriber from Malaysia. 🇲🇾
your video was designed based on Dieter Rams's rules too! :))
I really enjoyed watching it.
Please share a link to that grid wallpaper you use Daniel :)
Daniel got a new phone :) lovely video
I can't agree more with the reference to the macbook pro.
Hey man, Coursera features you.
You have a new sub now.😉
maybe is only me but the progress bar distracted me :'(
Would you consider the Tesla Cybertruck good design?
Form follows Funktion
Hey there ! I initially had subscribed to your channel - an year ago, I guess - but unsubscribed because it was all looking a little to minimalism preaching kind. But, you seemed to have changed your narrative, so thanks for coming back. I’m sincerely sorry if I’m sounding rude, apologies. Awesome video, keep it up
Really good video
Who else is here from Meta iOS course?
Me
Me😊
Here
From UX/UI course
From Meta Frontend Developer
Principle 7 - the first thing which sprung to my mind was Lamy 2000
Who came here from the "Evaluating design" lecture in UX/UI fundamentals course
Its been 3 weeks since ur last upload. Hope all is well daniel!
Finally upgraded your iPhone! :)
Did you go for the iphone 12 or 12 mini? :)
@@sanjgadhvi3987 It was a regrettable but necessary purchase. I went for the mini!
@@DanielTitchener I am going to go for the same I want a smaller phone. I see it as just a tool now.
This progress bar on each section of the video?? 🤤
Good design, dare i say
Pyramid of Giza is the first thing comes to my mind when someone says good design.
Appreciated this video. Got me thinking which is always fun: Are Apple innovators or do they simply take recent technologies and do them better than those first to market? The sleek aluminium design of your old MacBook Pro arguably has an enduring timeless aesthetic. The same can not be said for the models that came after with poor keyboards and no SD slot. The endless cycle of obsolescence and upgrades of phones and most electronic devices is also hardly sustainable. Our old landline lasted decades. Will they ever build a smart phone or smart watch to last? Although some of the dumb phones, for those who want to escape social media, may be built to last. Finally, perhaps the essence of good design is functionality, durability, and being aesthetically pleasing. With some of the other principles being derivatives of these. Thanks DT.
Coursera brought me here
I have lived by these principles before I knew they existed. Why? Here's a principle of my own: Good principles should make common sense. And these principles make common sense.
I am not (currently) and iPhone user, but I used to tell my student when teaching software design that the iPhone totally revolutionized the mobile phone industry when it first came out. How? The iPhone was intuitive even though no one had ever seen a mobile device quite like it before. It had NO BUTTONS AND NO INSTUCTIONS!!! That was bold! Besides being extremely functional and intuitive, it was sleek and very beautiful; more so than just about every mobile phone in the market at the time. I can go on, but I will stop now because we all see the point: follow these principles and odds are your product, whatever it might be, will be a success. That is not debatable.
1:04
So Apple didn’t innovate on its design but just adapted and perfected what came before?
2:07
I disagree with this part, a product may be slightly less effective than a pure efficiency version at whatever task it was designed for, but if it still looks good that doesn’t make it bad design. After all, a concrete rectangular prism that is well insulated is much better at housing someone in a cold area than a beautifully designed log cabin.
NOTED
Man those Gore-Tex Nikes shoes are sold out 🥲 Yes
Who else is here after Coursera?
Who else is here from the Meta UX design course!
Excellent video thankyou, your macbook looks in peak condition for an item about seven years old you must have really taken xare of it, and i take my hat ofc to ypu keeping it and not renewing , an item tried and tested, i still have nnot owned one as yet but do have a smartphone , i see new ones but whats the poing mine still serves me wrell!
I was so sure he was going to talk about IKEA XDXD
Love this video, but the thin bar on the bottom is distracting, and to another viewer I was watching it with, stressful. It doesn’t seem to add useful value. It’s fine for ad segments (see Alex, the French engineer/home cook), but for segments we want to watch, being constantly reminded of how much time is left removes focus from the video.
You look tired ... Stay healthy, Daniel!
Man those Gore-Tex Nikes shoes are sold out 🥲
These are all great principles BUT there are other alternatives to minimalism than 'a sea of clutter'. And simplicity is always welcome, but behind the neat form of your iPhone is a vast and complicated system of techie clutter somewhere necessary for it to work at all. Not very honest, actually.
You bought the iPhone 12 mini??
Now I fell less guilty about me spending money on this product🤣🤣🤣
Serious question. What arguments do maximalists use to justify their maximalism?
While I love the design of Apple products I find that the most recent units, both Mac and iPhone, dependability is questionable. My M1 Mac Mini died after owning it for only 4 months, which forced me to go out and purchase a PC, since Apple couldn't get me into a store for a 'Genius' appointment for over a week and a replacement. My iPhone 12 mini also had trouble connecting to Bluetooth and Apple Play in my car. Apple sent me in for a replacement, which I was denied one after consulting with Tech Support 4 times. I was advised that the iPhone wasn't the problem and that my new car, my Apple watch and my wireless ear buds were all to blame over the iPhone. Needless to say, I no longer own any Apple products as they have become the sure sign of bargain basement reliability even though their products exterior design looks flawless. I miss the old Apple products that were once dependable and worth the money.
"So If something.... doesn't solve a problem or improve a solution, you could say that there isn't much reason for it existing."
If people are the same way, then perhaps the purpose of existing is to innovative? Dude WT🤯
Terrible app design is randomly/aggressively asking users to rate the app, disrupting their experience quite rudely.
Mike Shinoda
I have came from coursera is it right video
anyone from coursera?
I was with you until principle 7. Minimalism is the new trend. Go back a decade it was something else and so on and so on. Maybe it's because you are fully emersed in one that you don't think you are in one. But it wouldn't really take me 5 minutes to find 5 other videos saying something along the lines of less is more in a muted color home.
“Good design is honest “ totally the opposite of 1950-60s Cadillacs that tried to be jets….as opposed to a 1960s Mercedes’, which is basically the same the design…and now Cadillac is trying to copy them
The new MacBook Pro’s don’t have sd slots
If it brings value to your life.
On the point of great designs being long lasting….. that could be why iPhones designs have stayed the same for the last little while.
how many of you came from coursera video haha
11. safety
Never heard of these principles before, very interesting. Principles 1 and 7 seem to be at odds with each other a little. I'd say that the success of the iPod was less to do with the design of it and more to do with how easy it made it to manage a music library and to buy music. The same for the smartphone; it's the applications that make the smartphone a must-have, not its design. I agree with you that removing things like sd card slots from laptops makes them less useful and so is a bad design choice.
Apple is not as innovative as most people think. What Apple is very good at is taking products pioneered by other companies, like MP3 players or smartphones, then refining these and mainstreaming them.
It's a shame Apple is abandoning these principles with their latest computers. For a well-designed device to be long-lasting and environmentally friendly it should be repairable. Apple's obsession with thinness has resulted in a new generation of computers that will need entire logic board replacements (expensive financially and environmentally) for what would have previously been a simple repair that many users could have done themselves.