Preview

Summary

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
425 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Summary
Summary of
Margolin, Victor. “The Experience of Products.” The Politics of the Artificial. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2002.

In the reading “The Experience of Products” (2002), Margolin characterized product’s nature and the user experience. The author indicates the term product milie recognises that products are part of social context of engagement and interaction with people as users, frequently defined by interaction with a range of different products and management of “product webs”(46). The chapter acknowledged the importance that the designer’s understanding of the product users, users experience,product value and product cycle are crucial to product design.The reading inspires the reader to think more than what we can see on the surface of a product and its environment.

Product milieu aggregates material and immaterial products that fill the life world. Each day we are in numerous situations with products, and the situations result in experiences of varying satisfaction. The common cycle a product go through is development, acquisition and use, disfunction or disposal at the end. Due to the growing of environmental concern, ecodesign and sustainable design has become the new trend, their strategies are minimizing waste, use less energy and reducing the amount of material we relegate to landfills. Manufacturers and designers are trying to extend product cycles to allow products to remain longer periods of time. One way of product longevity is to reuse, american automobiles made in the 1930 and 1940 still on the roads throughout cuba is an example.

Users can access product’s services through the product interface. It can be work out rely on prior cultural knowledge or special learning. For example, we formed cultural knowledge from using typewriter before the keyboard exist.

Author pointed the technological innovation obliges users to interact with inhospitable systems of service delivery or product access. The shift from human



Bibliography: Margolin, Victor. “The Experience of Products.” The Politics of the Artificial. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2002.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    Interactive products are used widely in everyday life; from visiting a website, ordering online products,…

    • 9150 Words
    • 60 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Author for the Washington Post, Joel Achenbach, in his columns, addresses issues from the secret to happiness to Artificial Intelligence. He addresses these issues in a manner of different ways, like expert testimony, analysis, and other rhetorical devices. Achenbach’s purpose as a writer is to inform the audience of the consequences of one’s actions, as mentioned in his article, “Researchers create a Computer Program that learns the way humans do,” when he states, “The breakthrough comes during a period of great excitement in the A.I. community, but also some anxiety about whether there are sufficient safeguards to ensure that machine intelligence doesn't somehow run away from its human creators.” He adopts a consistent tone throughout his columns, one of a casual, yet explanatory voice.…

    • 546 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Richard Louv's 2008 essay, "Last Child in the Woods," argues natural advertisement against artificial advertisement. He expressively describes his views on artificial advertisement by relating to advertisement in his childhood. He lists how artificial advertisement takes away the allure of natural advertisement. Louv states these points through his tone changes of being satirical, to forthright, to nostalgic.…

    • 398 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Juhuu

    • 934 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The author, Neil Boorman, describes how he is obsessed with brands. He speculates that from birth we are being bombarded with advertising messages, which make us identify ourselves with particular brands. This can have negative consequences because we may believe that wearing the right brands will make us happy or accepted within a group. In an attempt to liberate him‐self from the brands, Boorman is going to burn every branded thing in his possession. This, he believes, will enable him to find real happiness, to find his authentic – unbranded ‐ self .…

    • 934 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In “The Technology of Simplicity”, the narrator has developed an appreciation for simplicity, and contempt for materialism in modern society. Through years of meditative hours of hunting the narrator gains clarity on how to savour moments. The narrator exemplified this when he describes the long tedious time in the forest saying, “I felt a contentment so deep that it seemed I was absorbed in a timeless dream.” His appreciation manifests into distaste for consumerism. He believes appreciation is lost stating, “the very rate at which consumption proceeds virtually negates the possibility of attentiveness and mindfulness.” He witnesses this lack of mindfulness as his children open presents on Christmas. Although the children are intrigued by the beauty of the wrapping paper and ribbons, they are hastily shown to forgo the packaging in favour of what was inside. Once they opened their presents and began to play they where quickly bombarded with another gift, leaving no time to appreciate and enjoy each object. The narrator, observing the Christmas mourning festivities, denounces “life in the consumer society [as] the moment of newness, the adrenaline rush of discovery”, and lack of attentiveness. Throughout the story it is evident the narrators dislike for consumerist society stems from the rate of consumption and lack of appreciation associated with it.…

    • 551 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Dangers of Mass-Production in “The Scarecrow” Technology advancements have made the production of goods easier as illustrated in the Chipotle advertisement “The Scarecrow.” The ability to mass-produce items quickly does not however mean that these goods are of a high quality. In “The Work of Art in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility,” Walter Benjamin presents the idea that mass-producing artwork reduces aesthetic autonomy. In a society that can reprint and recreate original works of art quickly, “the whole sphere of authenticity” (1053) embedded within each piece of art is lost.…

    • 645 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    T.H. Breen,The Marketplace of Revolution: How Consumer Products Shaped American Independence, Kindle Edition (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004), Location 265…

    • 2177 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    All throughout mankind’s time here, nature has been our source of life. Over time, the things nature has to offer has only increased, yet society’s ability to acknowledge such has only decreased. In his piece, Richard Louv opens with direct quotations from various sources about advertisement and nature. Throughout this text Louv uses an anecdote, rhetorical questions, logos, pathos and a generous amount of sarcasm to uphold his argument on how society has separated itself from nature with technology.…

    • 541 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    With numerous products being advertised daily, it is qutie easy to get caught up in being interested in them. While some products seem reliable, others seem “too good to be true,” or in other words, a complete lie. In this case “The Onion publishes a mock article that is satirizing how products are marketed to consumers. As ridiculous, and absurd, as this process maybe, it doesn't stray far from typical marketing rituals. This article discusses the magnasoles company/products using the advantages and “powers” of the insoles, the price, and consumer quotes to advertize and sell their product. Each strategy is humorous and pathetic, and that is what The Onion is expressing.…

    • 405 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    We go wrong, Walker believes, not when we express ourselves through our possessions, but when we allow our possessions to take precedence. It’s all too easy for people, under the influence of the siren songs of marketing (or murketing), to drift into a situation in which they use commodities “not to reflect who they are, but to construct who they are. Not to reflect a self, but to build a self.” No object, of course, is meaningful enough to fulfill that role, and an endless cycle of chasing after glittering but ultimately…

    • 357 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Today’s users are demonstrating a fantastic desire for new services and products. It has created possibilities for users, marketing providers and companies too eventually approve or disapprove latest ideas. For users to help and view their behaviors in making correct decisions, thorough research is required to support different roles and thoughts for product development.…

    • 2171 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Marxism And Consumerism

    • 263 Words
    • 2 Pages

    After the examination of the many facets of capitalism and consumerism, it became apparent that the modernistic capitalistic system is just another form of social control. Consumers, unintentionally are conditioned to reproduce their social standings. By purchasing a product's symbolic value, they signal their wealth and class. Advertisers and marketeers combine the subconscious meaning behind products with tactics to trap consumers into the buy, use, discard cycle of planned obsolescence. These tactics distract the public with constantly changing styles and models that break down, or they tire of, just in time for the next fleeting trend. Consequently, this system creates a wasteful, disposable culture. Since products are only designed…

    • 263 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    My Botes

    • 429 Words
    • 2 Pages

    When reading over my interpretative essay the purpose I was trying to get across was to show that the Macintosh Ad stein interpreted was the mark of a new era. I did this by describing what I thought Stein did to get her purpose across, by her word choice and by the format in which she wrote her article. I picked out the words I thought were the most meaningful in describing what she wanted to get across. “Re-enchantment can be defined as a revolutionary term to describe new technologies. Valorization helps to describe the purpose that Stein wants to get across. In the article these two terms to me help explain how important this ad was to technology and how it helped evolve mass media today. (991142919)” These two words to me stuck out the most because they not only described what Stein was trying to get across but it also summed up how the ad was supposed to make you think and feel after having watched it.…

    • 429 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ghosts with Sh!t jobs

    • 437 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The narrative follows a couple who majored in robotics, a digital janitor, a human spam-bot, and two silk-collecting brothers. The couple who majored in robotics work as baby assemblers in Canada for the rich Asian families overseas. I found this aspect of the film interesting because something as essential as a baby is fabricated and made a commodity, not unlike the current relationship between North America and Asian countries and the fabrication of essentials like clothing, vehicles, and food. The director draws attention to the current situation in Asia through the contrast of the real world and Morrison’s fabricated world. The digital janitor draws attention to the mass censorship of media and the control that governments have over their country’s access to information. This janitor enters the digital past-world through a virtual reality interface and blocks out any advertisements or sensitive information that his Asian superiors would not like shown to the public. Here Morrison touches on aspects of today’s society like the privatization of information, centralizing control, and the actions that our governments take to ensure that protection of information and reinforce control. I found that the human spam-bot, (employed by a Nigerian “spam cartel”) was the ultimate representation of a pop-up or advertisement that we today are…

    • 437 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Three Levels of a Product

    • 276 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Consumers often think that a product is simply the physical item that he or she buys. In order to actively explore the nature of a product further, let’s consider it as three different products - the CORE product, the ACTUAL product, and finally the AUGMENTED product. This concept is known as the Three Levels of a Product.…

    • 276 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays