The Muji Chronotebook
I love this concept—a sort of open-ended day planner. Rather than constraining you into a certain way of planning your time, Muji’s Chronotebook simply has a small clock graphic in the center of every page, leaving room for the user to develop whatever system they like to organize their day. This product is a great example, in many ways, of the benefits of the “worse is better” school of design—the simpler and more general a product design is, the more free the end user is to evolve their own uses for it, many of which could not be anticipated by the designer (other great examples I like to point to: del.icio.us, Twitter, and the HTTP protocol’s “rule of least power”).
20 Oct 2008 / Reblogged from tmblg with 24 notes
new Chronotebook?
The Muji Chronotebook...concept—a sort of open-ended day
Someone please buy me this planner.
mhm. got it aaand love it. muji notebooks rock.
dang i want one of these…turns out i can only call...NY. i DO have a birthday soon…**hint...
“worse is better” (also at wiki). But perhaps it’s also an example...“don’t” perspective...
I love this…I want one!
Oh shit, this is sold right across the street from me. I can’t really justify an agenda when I’ve got iCal and Things on...
analysis below might be overthinking it a little, but I’ve got to agree with the bigger idea: this, like pretty much...
Can I get one of these? Edit: Yes, I can!