If brevity is the soul of wit, simplicity is the soul of design. John Maeda uses the concept of simplicity to get at the nature of human thought and perception while drawing out tangible applications for business, technology, and life in general. The Laws of Simplicity is thoroughly optimistic, entertaining, and erudite, just as you would expect from Maeda. It is also the most compelling one hundred pages of design writing I have read this year. -- Rob Forbes, Founder, Design Within Reach Our lives and our businesses are faster and broader than ever. As such, they are also more complex and difficult to manage, for both customers and managers. Therefore, achieving simplicity in both our products and our organizations will be crucial for securing market share. No one has seen this more clearly than John Maeda, the Master of Simplicity. The Laws of Simplicity is a clear and incisive guide for making simplicity the paramount feature of our products; it's also a road map for constructing a more meaningful world. -- Andrea Ragnetti, Board of Management, Royal Philips Electronics I planned to skim/sample John Maeda's book, then decide to endorse it -- or not. I quickly found myself mesmerized -- and thence the only issue was deciding what were the strongest words I could muster in support of The Laws of Simplicity. The book is important; and Maeda has made an absurdly complex subject -- simplicity -- approachable and usable. Bravo! I hope the people who design the products I'll acquire in the next ten years take this book to heart. -- Tom Peters
An internationally recognized leader at the intersection of design and technology, John Maeda is Executive Vice President/Chief Experience Officer at Publicis Sapient. He was the 16th President of the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD). He is the author of Design by Numbers, The Laws of Simplicity, and Redesigning Leadership, all published by The MIT Press.
Abstract recommends this book particularly to marketing people,
product designers and technical writers.
*GetAbstract*
FINALLY, a book about simplicity that is not too academic to
read.... At the book's heart is the Shinto belief in animism, the
spirit in all objects. Nicholas Negroponte, one of Maeda's mentors,
once told him to become a lightbulb, not a laser beam. This he has
done; all this and more.
*The LA Times*
John Maeda's new book, The Laws of Simplicity, is simply terrific.
It's exactly 100 pages, the illustrations are brilliant and the 10
Laws of Simplicity (plus Three Keys) are a canon to design one's
entire life, much less specific products, services or business
models. The subtitle is: Design, Technology, Business, Life.
*BusinessWeek's blog "NussbaumOnDesign"*
Keep it simple, Stupid' is an old piece of advice, so much so that
it's often abbreviated as the 'KISS principle.' But it's advice
that's often ignored, and MIT Professor John Maeda aims to change
that.... Designers and marketers will find Maeda's book both
interesting and useful....
*New York Post*
Maeda's Laws and Keys have an obvious practical application in
everyday running of a busy life (and desktop); they also have the
potential to translate into a productive methodology for any craft
or design practice.... A very humble, enlightened and caring human,
John's written a little bible.
*Crafts Magazine*
Maeda's upbeat explanations usefully break down the power of
less-fewer features, fewer buttons and fewer distractions-while
providing practical strategies for harnessing that power....
Emphasizing the delicate balance-work involved in simplifying the
complex, Maeda admits the process isn't easy, and that his ten laws
don't necessarily provide all the answers-in numerous places, he
directs readers to the web site where his theories continue to
develop. Despite that, this slim book feels complete in itself; not
only will it stimulate ideas, it will keep readers thumbing back
for a second and third look at Maeda's deceptively simple
advice.
*Publishers Weekly*
Technology and life seem to be getting more complicated, yet two
great success stories, Google and the iPod, both provide the
antidote of simplicity. In The Laws of Simplicity, John Maeda uses
humble prose to provide an accessible guide, business and life,
observing the principle: 'Simplicity equals sanity.'
*The Observer*
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