• Apple’s Industrial Design

    by  • 11 June 2011 • All, Apple, Technology • 2 Comments

    apple-industrial-design

    This post is based on something that draw quite a lot attention on the Reddit community. The user, or Redditor actualy named Eternalinferno posted the picture you see above. And as you can quite imagine a stream of comments and up/downvotes started… that’s Reddit!

    One of the comments bellow the picture drew even MORE attention than the original post itself! It came from a Redditor named sphynxster and You can read it bellow:

    I used to work for Apple and interfaced with every division in the company, and I know EXACTLY why this happened. It has nothing to do with trying to get customers to buy more replacement adapters, but rather with the hierarchy of power at Apple.

    But before I go into this, let me explain the engineering of a power cable. If you look at a power adapter cable for any non-Apple product, you’ll notice some plastic “rings” where the plug transitions to the cable. These rings are called a strain relief. The purpose of a strain relief is to prevent the cable from bending at a severe angle if you bend the cable at the base. The strain relief allows the cable to have a nice, gentle curvature if you tweak the cable instead of bending at a severe 90 degree angle. This gentle curvature prevents the cable from being broken through repeated use.

    Now let’s look at the hierarchy of power at Apple. As with any company, Apple consists of many divisions (Sales, Marketing, Customer Service, etc.) THE most powerful division at Apple is Industrial Design. For those of you unfamiliar with the term industrial design, this is the division that makes the decisions about the overall look and feel of Apple’s products. And when I say “the most powerful”, I mean that their decisions trump the decisions of any other division at Apple, including Engineering and Customer Service.

    Now it just so happens that the Industrial Design department HATES how a strain relief looks on a power adapter. They would much prefer to have a nice clean transition between the cable and the plug. Aesthetically, this does look nicer, but from an engineering point of view, it’s pretty much committing reliability suicide. Because there is no strain relief, the cables fail at a very high rate because they get bent at very harsh angles. I’m sure that the Engineering division gave every reason in the world why a strain relief should be on an adapter cable, and Customer Service said how bad the customer experience would be if tons of adapters failed, but if industrial design doesn’t like a strain relief, guess what, it gets removed.

    …interesting thoughts on Apple don’t you think?

    • http://www.tsimpountiii.gr Zach Stefanakis

      Μπορεί να διαφωνώ κάθετα στο ότι δίνουν προτεραιότητα στο design από ότι στην ποιότητα κατασκευής αλλά θαυμάζω την ‘πειθαρχεία’ με την οποία λειτουργούν οι τομείς αυτής της εταιρίας. Άλλωστε για ένα καλώδιο πρόκειται δεν κάναν ποτέ κάτι τέτοιο με άλλα κομμάτια απ’όσο ξέρω τουλάχιστον

      • http://www.tsimpountiii.gr Nikos Chatzigeorgiadis

        ναι αλλά πόσο μπορείς να το ξέρεις? ακόμα και αυτός που το πόσταρε αυτό από πάνω δεν σου λέει κανείς ότι είναι ντε και καλά έγκυρο!