Showing posts with label 学习工业设计。. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 学习工业设计。. Show all posts

Tuesday, 9 September 2014

Monash University - Innovation in China

Monash Univeristy graduates deliver innovation in China.


Designed in China - Monash University

Master of Industrial Design students from the Southeast University-Monash University Joint Graduate School (Suzhou) are currently exhibiting innovative prototypes of autonomous delivery robots and drones at the Suzhou campus. The exhibition of twenty nine graduate projects also includes C-Breeze a cloud based window air filtering and monitoring system, iBay-B an autonomous baby stroller and GEEN an interior screen and air filtering concept. 'The working prototypes and smart phone apps are outstanding outcomes from our double masters program with SouthEast University' said Ian Wong Program Director - Master of Industrial Design Monash Univeristy. "The design research conducted in China by the students focussed on innovation and new concepts designed in China.

The Master of Industrial Design is one of five programs currently offered at the Southeast Univeristy-Monash Univeristy Joint Graduate School (Suzhou).



Designed in China - C-Breeze innovative Window Air Purifier designed by Master of Industrial Design student Baoling Yang Snow.


Master of Industrial Design Graduate Exhibition - Suzhou China Sept 2014
iBay-B autonomous baby stroller designed by Ivy - Wenqian Sun


Designed in China - GEEN air purifying screens designed by Master of Industrial Design student Yunfei Long.


Designed in China - Drone delivery system designed by Master of Industrial Design student Zeming Hu Jack.




Dr Ethan Wang, Professor Xue Chenqu, Ian Wong, Andrew Wong, and Dr Wang Haiyan at the Master of Industrial Design Graduate Exhibition Suzhou China.

More MID Exhibition posts here.


Friday, 4 July 2014

Industrial Design in China - Design Education Forum

Southeast University recently hosted the Exchange and Experts Forum of Design Education in Nanjing China.


Industrial Design in China
Southeast University  - Exchange and Experts Forum of Design Education in Nanjing China.


Professor Liu Guanzhong and Ian Wong


Keynote lecture by Ian Wong Monash University Australia.

Saturday, 28 June 2014

Industrial Design in China - Monash University

The latest digital design laboratory for industrial design in China was on display this week as the Southeast University-Monash University Joint Graduate School (Suzhou) graduated its first students with double masters degrees. The President of Southeast Univerisity Professor Hong Li and the Vice Chancellor and President of Monash University Professor Ed Byrne visited the Digital Design Laboratory of the Master of Industrial Design program at the Southeast University-Monash University Joint Graduate School (Suzhou) during celebrations


Program Director Ian Wong shares the work of master of industrial design student Baoling Yang with Professor Ed Byrne Vice Chancellor of Monash University and Professor Hong Yi President of Southeast University and Ian Pyman Deputy Chancellor Monash University.

The Digital Design Laboratory features 30 Wacom Cintiq 22HD drawing tablets with a dual screen monitor setup for enhanced teaching and learning. Students print computer models direct to 3D printers from the lab.


Master of Industrial Design - Digital Design Lab - Suzhou China




Sunday, 30 March 2014

Thursday, 5 December 2013

Phillip Zmood - Patac China




Patac automotive design staff celebrated together with Phillip Zmood in Shanghai.

Phillip Zmood - Southeast University-Monash University Joint Graduate School (Suzhou)

Design Institute of Australia Hall of Fame designer Phillip Zmood visited the Southeast University-Monash University Joint Graduate School (Suzhou).


Phillip Zmood with Master of Industrial Design Program Director Ian Wong at the Southeast University-Monash University Joint Graduate School (Suzhou).


Designer Phillip Zmood shares his experience with Master of Industrial Design students at the Southeast University-Monash University Joint Graduate School (Suzhou).


Australian industrial designer Phillip Zmood shares his experience with Master of Industrial Design students at the Southeast University-Monash University Joint Graduate School (Suzhou).


Phillip Zmood with Master of Industrial Design students at the Southeast University-Monash University Joint Graduate School (Suzhou).


Automotive designer Phillip Zmood shares his experience as design director of General Motors Holden with Master of Industrial Design students at the Southeast University-Monash University Joint Graduate School (Suzhou).





Wednesday, 4 December 2013

Professor Cai Jun - Tsinghua University Industrial Design


Professor Cai Jun Tsinghua University and Ian Wong Monash University


Professor Cai Jun Tsinghua University, Dr Ethan Wang Monash University 
and Professor Mark Armstrong Monash University.



Monday, 2 December 2013

Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium - Shenzen 2013

The Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium was held in Shenzen China December 1st and 2nd 2013.

Professor Mark Armstrong and Phillip Zmood represented Australia conducting workshops and participating in panel discussions over the two day design management symposium.


Professor Mark Armstrong comments during panel discussion at the Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium.

Keynote presenters were:
Paul Gardien 
Vice President of Philips Design
Jeffrey Swystun 
Global Branding & Marketing Executive | DDB Worldwide | Interbrand | Price Waterhouse
Simon Bolton
Associate Dean for Research and Enterprise, Birmingham Institute of Art and Design 
Matt Mayfield
Assistant Dean, Academics at IIT Institute of Design
Ning XIAO
Assistant to Head of Research Institute, Chief Officer of Planning, GAC Engineering
Jikun LIU
Associate Professor, Academy of Arts & Design, Tsinghua University


Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium 2013 Opening Ceremony


Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium 2013



Keynote speaker Paul Gardien Vice President of Philips Design presents at the Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium 2013


Keynote Ning XIAO Assistant to Head of Research Institute, Chief Officer of Planning, GAC Engineering presents at the Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium 2013


Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium 2013 panel.
L-R: Professor Cai Jun, Ning XIAO, Matt Mayfield, Paul Gardien, Jeffrey Swystun, Professor Mark Armstrong.


Phillip Zmood introduces the Australian innovation the 'ute' to Chinese designers.


Phillip Zmood Qilin concept car project Patac China.




Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium - Phillip Zmood workshop. 


Professor Mark Armstrong shares the Monash University bionic eye project Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium Workshop in Shenzen China.


Professor Mark Armstrong delivers Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium Workshop in Shenzen China.


Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium 2013
L-R: Professor Mark Armstrong, Dr Ethan Wang, Professor Cai Jun,  Simon Bolton, Ian Wong, Jeffrey Swystun, Matt Mayfield, Phillip Zmood, Paul Gardien,  and Mr Wang.


QUT students at the Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium 2013

Friday, 15 November 2013

3rd Tsinghua Summit Conference on Design Promotion - China

The 3rd Tsinghua Summit Conference on Design Promotion will be held in China November 16th-17th.


The 3rd Tsinghua Summit Conference on Design Promotion

Wednesday, 13 November 2013

Mark Armstrong - Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium

Professor Mark Armstrong from Monash University will present a workshop at the Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium 2013 in Shenzen on December 2nd.


Professor Mark Armstrong


“Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium” was initiated by Tsinghua University in 2002. It is a platform for collaboration and exchange in the theories and practices on knowledge development of innovation and design management. After the “2009 D2B Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium” in Beijing, the event has gone biennial. The “2011 Tsinghua-DMI International Design Management Symposium, Hong Kong” was organized by Tsinghua University and has attracted over 300 participants from 18 countries and 55 universities and organizations. This series has become one of the most significant and established international events of the field.


Tuesday, 12 November 2013

Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium 2013 - Shenzen

The Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium 2013 will be held in Shenzen December 1st and 2nd 2013.



Design-Driven Business Innovation 

The Chinese government has recently announced the building of a national innovation system to strengthen the indigenous capacity in order to enhance competitiveness, and to speed up the transformation of China into an innovative country. The system has substantive parts on new forms of industrial development, which calls for closer industry-university-academy sector collaboration for economic development. Recently, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology has published “Management Measures for State-Level Industrial Design Center Identification (Trial Version)” as a policy document. Industrial design is advocated as a key strategy to build the Chinese national innovation system at various levels. Since the 2000s, capacity in design-driven business innovation is regarded as a kind of core competence by business enterprises.

The conventional considerations on function, construction, form and package of a tangible product are no longer adequate for design innovation. With increasing affluence, China markets will imply the need to discover consumer desires and to exploit new demands. These would mean integration of business strategy with brand, product, service, user experience and communications and other new technologies. Design management has been recognized as a competitive strategy to accomplish such objectives. It is about creation of customer values and enhancement of the whole value chain for an organization. The development of design management is imperative to the building of the China’s national innovation system.

“Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium” was initiated by Tsinghua University in 2002. It is a platform for collaboration and exchange in the theories and practices on knowledge development of innovation and design management. After the “2009 D2B Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium” in Beijing, the event has gone biennial. The “2011 Tsinghua-DMI International Design Management Symposium, Hong Kong” was organized by Tsinghua University and has attracted over 300 participants from 18 countries and 55 universities and organizations. This series has become one of the most significant and established international events of the field.

“2013 Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium, Shenzhen” will be held from 1-2 December, 2013. Amid economic reform in China and many other nations around the world, the City of Shenzhen has been the forefront of new industrial and knowledge development. Shenzhen embraces some of the best enterprises from China and from all over the world. The “2013 Tsinghua International Design Management Symposium, Shenzhen” will have special meaning to many who are concerned with innovation, design management and related realms. It will help entrepreneurs, R&D managers, creative cultural industry managers, researchers, educators and others to build their knowledge-base and put them into practice. The Symposium will invite internationally renowned experts to present and talk about their latest work. These will be supported by a series of workshops on business development models, strategies, and professional methods. To facilitate international exchange, academic papers will be presented in both English and Chinese.

Organisers wish to provide a common platform for various talents and stakeholders to create a meaningful dialogue with the local governments to strengthen and enhance policies on industrial and economic development. This will mean new opportunities in entrepreneurship, education, research and professional development. In brief, only by expanding and elevating capabilities along all fronts in innovation and design management, will new values be captured.

[Text provided by organisers]

Thursday, 31 October 2013

Monash University China - Andrew Robb Minister for Trade & Investment


Andrew Robb Minister for Trade and Investment discusses the Cyum smart spoon project with Monash University Master of Industrial Design student Zhang Xing - Cindy in China. 


Guan Rui - Angela designer of the Blood Pod


The Hon Andrew Robb Minister for Trade and Investment - Monash University China



Tuesday, 19 February 2013

Samsung Smart PC - Bernie Walsh demo

The latest developments in tablet technology for industrial design were on show at a demonstration by MADA Monash Art Design and Architecture lecturer Bernie Walsh to key Victorian industry professionals. The use of the Samsung Smart PC and Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 tablets will feature in the delivery of the Master of Industrial Design program due to commence on March 4th in Suzhou China.

MADA Monash Art Design and Architecture lecturer Bernie Walsh demonstrates the Samsung Smart PC and Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet to industrial design industry professionals.

Program Director Ian Wong was particularly keen to seek feedback from industry leaders on the potential of the new devices for the practice of industrial design. "The Master of Industrial Design program units have been developed to provide students with the latest industry practice and technology, and the feedback today was very valuable' said Ian Wong 'Digital freehand sketching in meetings is for the first time enabled with the combination of portability and pen technology in these new devices'




Bernie Walsh sketch demo on the Samsung Smart PC tablet.


Samsung Smart PC 700T1C-A02


Samsung Smart PC 700T1C-A02

The program based in Suzhou China will also feature engagement with Victorian industry through the application of tools like Skype, Facebook, Twitter and Facetime. Facetime was used to allow industry professionals unable to attend the forum in person to join in from their studios across Melbourne. 'Industrial design programs have always engaged directly with the profession and tools like facetime will allow studios across Victoria to work directly with students in Suzhou' said Ian Wong.

The latest 3D printing technology, wikis, blogs and Wacom Cintiq tablets as well as applications like QQ will also feature in the delivery of the new program.

MADA Master of Industrial Design program staff Bernie Walsh, Dr Ethan Wang and Program Director Ian Wong.

The Master of Industrial Design program is offered at the Southeast University - Monash Univeristy Joint Graduate School (Suzhou).

Full course details on SEU website here. http://yzb.seu.edu.cn/s/352/t/1754/09/b2/info68018.htm

Students interested in the Master of Industrial Design (Double Masters) delivered in Suzhou should contact ian.wong@monash.edu



工業設計

http://monashuniversity.cn


学习工业设计。



Thursday, 24 January 2013

Dr Ethan Wang - Monash University

Dr Ethan Wang arrived this week in Melbourne to take up his position as lecturer in the Department of Design at MADA Monash Art Design and Architecture. Dr Wang will conduct research and teach into the Master of Industrial Design program in Suzhou China at the Southeast University - Monash University Joint Graduate School (Suzhou).


Dr Ethan Wang

Thursday, 6 December 2012

GM CHINA - Advanced Design Centre

GM China recently opened Phase II of the GM China Technical Centre and Advanced Design Centre in Shanghai.

During my recent visit I met with design executives from GM China and PATAC and in July I had the opportunity to visit the Technical Centre as part of the PACE Global Forum held in Shanghai.


Participants in the opening of Phase II of the GM China Advanced Technical Center in Shanghai (from left: Wulin Gaowa, Design Director of the GM China Advanced Design Center; Liu Zhengyi, Vice Governor of Shanghai Pudong New Area; Bob Socia, GM China President and Chief Country Operations Officer of China, India and ASEAN; Jon Lauckner, GM Chief Technology Officer, Vice President of Global Research & Development, and President of GM Ventures; and Dave Leone, GM Executive Chief Engineer


GM China Technical Centre and Advanced Design Centre in Shanghai


L-R: Designers Ian Wong, Wulin Gaowa, and Brigid O'Kane

SHANGHAI – General Motors China hosted its second annual “Tech Day” event in conjunction with the opening of the second phase of the GM China Advanced Technical Center.

With the theme of "Ignite! The Spark of Innovation," Tech Day showcased the automaker’s technology achievements and the key role China is playing in the company’s vehicle development initiatives globally.

“The completion of the ATC is an important milestone for GM in China,” said Bob Socia, president, GM China, and Chief Country Operations Officer, China, India and ASEAN. “It gives us the most comprehensive automotive technical center in our largest market. The center will serve not just China but also GM’s operations around the world.”

Up to 250 engineers, designers and researchers will work in advanced vehicle design, powertrain and vehicle engineering, telematics and R&D at the center. Their work is expected to impact product differentiation and competitiveness, especially in fuel economy, and accelerate GM’s introduction of innovative technologies in China.

Taking the Next Step in the Journey to Sustainable Urban Mobility

GM showed a life-size clay model of the EN-V 2.0, which is based on the EN-V concept introduced at Expo 2010 in Shanghai. The original EN-V, short for Electric Networked-Vehicle, was a two-seat electric vehicle designed to alleviate traffic congestion, parking availability and air quality issues for tomorrow’s cities. The concept embodies the company’s vision for sustainable urban mobility, combining electrification and connectivity. A sketch of the EN-V 2.0 concept was shown earlier this year at the Beijing auto show.  

“EN-V 2.0 is being developed and will be tested first right here in China,” said Socia. “This is a further testament to the important role that China is playing in GM’s product development strategy.”

The EN-V 2.0 project is part of GM’s overall vehicle electrification strategy in China. GM currently offers the Buick LaCrosse with eAssist, Cadillac Escalade Hybrid and Chevrolet Volt. Last week, Shanghai GM’s Sail SPRINGO EV made its debut at Auto Guangzhou 2012. It is the first electric vehicle developed by a joint venture in China and will go on sale next year, initially in Shanghai.

Using Advanced Technology to Build a Future Blueprint

Jon Lauckner, GM Chief Technology Officer, vice president of Global Research & Development, and president of GM Ventures, said the ATC’s R&D team is focusing on battery cells, lightweight materials, manufacturing processes, engines and transmissions, and developing mobile apps for connected urban driving.

GM China already has made significant breakthroughs in the development of lightweight materials such as magnesium alloy to improve the fuel economy of its vehicles. The Micro-foundry and Formability Lab, part of the first phase of the ATC that opened in September 2011, has completed magnesium alloy low-pressure die casting testing, a milestone in lightweight materials research for the automotive industry.

GM has also had success in developing batteries in China for the next generation of electric vehicles. In August, it began fabricating and testing prototype battery cells and complete systems at the ATC.

GM is also making breakthroughs in connected driving and infotainment. For example, a Shanghai OnStar mobile app for the Sail SPRINGO EV will allow drivers to monitor the battery’s charge and remaining available EV range from their smart phones, as well as set the vehicle’s charging schedule remotely. 

The R&D group is working on a number of “proof-of-concept” demonstration mobile apps. One example is a pilot app called “DiDi Weibo” that uses automatic speech and gesture recognition to help drivers connect to Weibo and stay in touch with their friends – all while keeping their hands on the wheel and their eyes on the road.

Engineers and technicians at the ATC will test vehicle subsystems and components under varying conditions in the labs dedicated to Concept Vehicle Integration, Structures and Chassis, Vehicle Assessment and Benchmarking, Electrical, HVAC (Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning), Materials and Fastening, and Powertrain. The labs will allow GM to explore alternative vehicle engineering solutions and to enhance the quality, reliability and durability of components in GM vehicles.

Leading Design with Advanced Technology

The ATC’s new Advanced Design Center includes state-of-the-art tools for designers to explore future mobility solutions and technology integration.

“Our new Advanced Design Center in Shanghai is part of the GM Global Design Center network, which webs from California to Germany to India and Korea and points beyond,” said Wulin Gaowa, design director of the GM China Advanced Design Center. “We are building a team of talented local designers and modelers that will enable us to deliver world-class work for China and other markets.”

For example, milling machines produce clay models in scale using computerized three-dimensional data. Designers use these models to evaluate vehicle proportions, finalize surfaces graphics and line-work, during the design process of refinement and balancing criteria.

The virtual reality room in the Advanced Design Center is an evaluation tool for high-resolution two-dimensional and three-dimensional data. Designers will also use it to evaluate full-size clay models from a distance in natural light in an expansive indoor viewing area.

Wulin and her team will collect and study information on Chinese customer mobility behaviors and needs, coupled with trends in automotive design and other industries in China that may be used by GM on a worldwide basis.

Developing Luxury Models with a Leadership Philosophy

Cadillac plans to add one new model each year to its lineup in China through 2016, starting with the XTS in early 2013. The luxury brand’s models will feature the latest automotive technologies.

“We are incorporating intuitive technologies into our models such as CUE (Cadillac User Experience), which merges intuitive interior design and advanced technology for customized in-vehicle connectivity,” said Dave Leone, executive chief engineer for Performance Luxury Cars.“We are also making the next generation of Cadillacs more fuel efficient and safer by integrating lightweight materials and innovative active safety features. This is critically important to our continued success in China.”

Cadillac is also adapting advanced technologies such as radar, cameras and ultrasonic sensors to help drivers avoid crashes. Safety assistance includes lane departure warnings, forward collision alerts and seats that vibrate to alert drivers of vehicles in their blind spots. The brand is likewise adopting technology that can apply the brakes when the driver is not reacting to an object the car is sensing ahead or behind it.

In addition, Cadillac is road testing a semi-autonomous technology it calls "Super Cruise" that is capable of fully automatic steering, braking and lane-centering in highway driving under certain optimal conditions, Super Cruise is designed to ease the driver's workload in both bumper-to-bumper traffic and on long road trips by relying on a fusion of radar, ultrasonic sensors, cameras and GPS map data. The system could be ready for production vehicles later this decade.