Nostalgia isn’t what it used to be…

The BBC has a nice slideshow of travel posters from what is often called “yesteryear”. However they call it “How the art of enticing UK holidaymakers has changed”. I think it’s a play on “art”.

In my November lecture on war posters I warn against looking at images like this from a nostalgic point of view and instead try to consider what they tell us about time and the people.

Looking at these I get the distinct impression that holidays were still the preserve of the well-off. The deputy editor of Coast magazine, Alex Reece, is quoted as saying the images convey “the romance and modernity associated with the destinations of the time” and that’s certainly true.

But that in turn tells us a lot about the status of holidays in the pre-War years. Leisure time was not the thing it is now – ordinary working people in those days would have looked at the UK’s current statutory 28 days’ holidays (that’s 5.6 working weeks) with shock and not a little envy.

Many of these places were not “romantic” or “modern” but working sea towns and ports. The people who lived there had a hard relationship with the ocean and the advent of holiday makers would have had much the same effect as it did on the villages of Spain and Portugal after the package tour became affordable, and as we’re seeing in new tourist destinations in Europe and further afield. It’s not like Filey and Torquay only came in to being for people to take a holiday.

For me these posters present other stories. Scarborough and Filey were two seaside towns nearest York, where I grew up. (About an hour’s drive, which as a child felt like forever of course!)

Filey was where we went on school trips, it being a sleepy retirement destination, and Scarborough was its more daring neighbour. Like Blackpool but without the rides. Whitby was where you went if you were after some scenery and decent fish and chips. And Robin Hood’s Bay was where you went if you were being “up market” and didn’t mind the knackering hills.

The images in these posters don’t reflect my own memories – naturally enough since they’re from a different era. However the gap between the two does show how quickly the growth of leisure time changed the resorts and how the subsequent arrival of cheap foreign travel changed them again. I have strong memories of visiting some of these places when they were decidedly down at heel.

It’s always worth reminding yourself, when you look at images like this, to look beyond the style, and the nostalgia, and ask basic questions about the time and the people, and the stories they tell – or often, don’t tell.

Dundee-based technology improves patient care

BBC News reports on research in Dundee:

Researchers in Dundee will use the latest computer technology to improve hospital care for disabled patients.
They are developing an electronic system to record details such as when someone should be turned in bed or when they should eat and how often.
Audio and video will be used to give medical staff demonstrations of how the patient likes those tasks to be done.
The aim is to ensure those with communication difficulties get the best treatment possible.

It is thought the system could help patients with conditions such as cerebral palsy, Parkinson’s Disease or learning difficulties.
The hope is that the patient, their family or carers would be able to add the details in from home or their day care centre ahead of hospital admission.

Researchers in the computing, nursing, health and social sciences departments of Dundee University will work on the project over the next three years.
NHS Tayside and Capability Scotland are also involved.

Researcher Suzanne Prior said: ‘A consequence of poor patient-hospital staff communication is that the patient’s family often take on the majority of caring in hospital, performing all care apart from the actual dispensing of drugs, which can be very stressful for all concerned.

‘For example, in a recent study, parents of adults with severe disability reported spending day and night in hospital with their son or daughter because of a concern for safe nursing practice, such as feeding and turning.
‘The software will be easy to use and the information readily accessible to those who need it.
‘This will hopefully alleviate some of the burden on family members when a patient with communication problems is in hospital and allow them to be more involved in the medical decisions surrounding their care.’

Karen Graham, Capability’s service manager, said: ‘We have had concerns when our service users are admitted into hospital that staff don’t know how to support them.
‘For example, when one service user, Miss D, was admitted recently to have a procedure done, the porter who came to support her referred to her as ‘it’ which is not acceptable.
‘Then a nurse contacted our service to ask when someone was coming to feed her. When the team leader reiterated that Miss D was in their care now, she responded that ‘they did not have time to feed her’.
‘She was then directed to Miss D’s comprehensive eating and drinking plan which would support her.’

Deaf people lobby MPs over phones

Interesting article from the BBC on attempts by deaf people to lobby MPs over phones:

Deaf campaigners fighting for equal access to the telephone are lobbying MPs at a reception in Parliament.
Consortium group TAG said deaf people were being held back in their jobs and lives because phone technology was no longer easily available or affordable.
Chairman Ruth Myers said it was vital services keep pace with technology.
Deaf people can communicate using phone systems which either turn speech into text and vice versa or use sign language interpreters via video link.
Another system called captioned telephony, which uses speech recognition technology to convert an operator’s voice into text, closed in December for funding reasons.
Ms Myers said: ‘No-one can participate fully in today’s fast-moving society without easy and affordable access to the telephone.

Read the rest of the article here

A box of one’s own

Lisa Jardine writes for the BBC about the history of the British concept of “home”:

‘An Englishman’s home is his castle’ was already a familiar platitude by 1700. To have a place of one’s own for shelter, where dependants are protected and their possessions are safe, feels like a fundamental social good. But have we gone too far in our quest for personal space and privacy?

The family as a unit has varied considerably in the course of history, but the bond between those who live under one roof together has always been an important one. Today, a ‘family’ tends to mean the tiny cluster of individuals related by birth – typically, father and mother and one or two small children, but increasingly, one adult and a partner or dependant – who share a residential unit.
Until the 19th Century, however, the word ‘family’ was a synonym for an entire ‘household’, and was used to cover all those who lived together in a dwelling, whether related by birth to the householder, employed in their service, or simply lodged with them. ‘Home’ was the bricks and mortar in which half a dozen or more adults lived their lives, supporting one another by their labour.
When the renowned humanist scholar Erasmus of Rotterdam settled in Basle in the 1520s, for example, his familia or family included a collection of friends, admirers and disciples, all living together in one comfortable, spacious house.

Household-families

Under the watchful eye of Erasmus’s formidable housekeeper Margaret, these young men and boys – pupils, lodgers and colleagues – performed all the household duties their distinguished Master required, preparing his meals, doing the housework, running errands and taking care of his horses.
Paintings of Erasmus like the one by Hans Holbein in the National Gallery in London show a solitary scholar in his study, surrounded by his books. But his was no isolated ivory tower. Even at work in his study on the Latin and Greek classics Erasmus had his famuli – his disciples, collaborators and factotums – around him.

The same young men who staffed his kitchen and stable also worked as copyists transcribing from manuscripts, as scribes writing to his dictation, and as proof-readers and editors for his publications.
Throughout the 17th and 18th Centuries, household-families like these were the standard type of group sharing a single roof. The historian Naomi Tadmor has argued that the family portrayed in Samuel Richardson’s best-selling novel Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded (published in 1740) is typical of the times.
Mr B – the squire who over the course of the novel’s two volumes attempts unsuccessfully to seduce his household servant Pamela, eventually agreeing to marry her – is a bachelor, but nevertheless has a fully-fledged household supporting him and his lifestyle. These he refers to consistently as his family.

City life

As a waiting-maid, Pamela belongs to this community of domestic servants, distant relatives, friends and companions, all living in a single dwelling. She never refers to her ‘poor but honest’ elderly parents, who lived elsewhere, as ‘family’. And the plot turns on the fact that she expects to be kept safe and protected within the household where she lives and works.
As family life moved increasing toward cities in the late-18th and 19th Centuries, houses of the type in which Mr B or Erasmus lived surrounded by dependants – big gabled mansions with plenty of nooks and crannies – continued to be built.

But increasingly domestic structures centred on the housing needs of the growing middle classes. Scaled-down town-houses were put up, many of which still survive today, modified for modern use. These still provided lodgings for dependants and servants under a common roof, but centred on the family life of a group of blood-relations, in a way we can recognise.
Further down the social scale, accommodation was also always shared, but here it was fraught with difficulties. Just as happens today in rapidly urbanised economies, most of the working classes found themselves living in ad hoc ways, in overcrowded accommodation, which entirely lacked the privacy that we all now crave, and could hardly be said to offer the stable communal structures that Erasmus and Richardson wrote about.

War years

Social historian Amanda Vickery has recently explored in detail the way in which, in multiple-occupancy working-class homes in the 18th Century, locked boxes, padlocks and keys to rooms and cupboards were talismans for hard-pressed lodgers, providing them with a remnant of private space and decency, away from the prying eyes of the landlady and their fellow-residents.
In our own times, the drive towards privacy has become paramount. We can see the modern ideal emerging in those wonderfully dated advertisements for domestic appliances from the 1950s and 60s, which show a smiling housewife, immaculately turned out in a many-petticoated dress with a cinched-in waist, pushing her vacuum-cleaner over expanses of carpet, or admiring her shiny new refrigerator.

After the crowded, shared accommodation of the war years – shared washing and cooking facilities, wet laundry on the shared landing and a communal toilet – the domestic dream was resolutely a home with a front door of one’s own. The promise of government to the returning armed forces was that social housing would make that dream a reality – would provide ‘Homes Fit for Heroes’.
That dream is summed up in the so-called Parker Morris Standards, adopted for social housing in the 1960s. They became mandatory for council housing in 1969, and remained in force until 1980.
The Parker Morris Standards laid down the dimensions for typical items of household furniture for which the dwelling designer should allow space, and provided anthropometric data needed to calculate the living space required to use and move around that furniture.

High-rise blocks

Its rules specified that a four person terrace house should have 74.5 square metres of space; kitchens for one or two people should contain 1.7 cubic metres of enclosed storage space; in one, two and three-bedroom dwellings the WC could be in the bathroom, but in four person houses it should have a separate compartment. The Parker Morris Standards for space, privacy and convenience continue to provide the familiar features of what we feel to be a modestly comfortable and convenient family home today.
But since the scramble for home ownership in the 1980s, our demands for personal space and privacy have come to dominate the planning and construction of domestic dwellings, and residential units have got ever smaller.

Now is perhaps the time when we have to begin to ask ourselves whether the units of accommodation which have been constructed – often in glamorous high-rise blocks, with built-in appliances and fabulous views – are really, in the long run, fit for ‘family’ living, however we define that family.
In June of this year, at the launch of the London Festival of Architecture, the Mayor, Boris Johnson deplored the fact that ‘new buildings in London have some of the smallest rooms in Europe’. For new social housing to be provided in London, Johnson announced, ‘we will be re-establishing the space standards first promoted by the visionary planner Sir Parker Morris’.
The chair of the London Assembly’s planning committee Nicky Gavron welcomed Mr Johnson’s pledge, saying: ‘The mayor has been very clear that he thinks our space standards are shameful; that we are building rabbit hutches.’ Others poured scorn on his promise, as an impossible dream – property values, they insisted, made reinstating the old housing standards out of the question.
We may have to wait until house prices have fallen dramatically before we know whether the homes designed for exaggeratedly ‘nuclear’ forms of living, offered by politicians and property speculators in an over-heated property market, were part of an impossible dream of home-ownership for every individual.
Perhaps the drive in Britain towards compact, separate ‘homes’, with ever-tinier floor-plans, crammed together by developers on restricted urban sites, is our housing equivalent of the Dutch tulip craze of the 1630s – our housing South Sea Bubble.
If that bubble bursts, it is intriguing to imagine how these undersized dwellings might be combined and converted into homes for other types of ‘familia’ to suit the changing times, just as has happened so often in the past before.

Bosses told ‘kick out high heels’

BBC News:

Bosses who force employees to wear high heels as part of their work dress should reconsider their policy, the TUC union body has said.
Several ‘big City institutions and upmarket shops’ were the worst offenders, it added, urging them to permit ‘healthy and safe footwear’.
Slip-on shoes and high heels can lead to long-term foot problems, it said, especially with prolonged standing.
Workers should be able to wear footwear appropriate to their job, the TUC said.

Read in full

Nasty surprise for children as Germans plan Kinder egg ban

From The Guardian:

German politicians have been accused of robbing youngsters of one of the small joys of childhood after announcing plans to ban the Kinder Surprise chocolate eggs, on the grounds that they are a safety hazard.

The children’s committee of the German parliament, which is responsible for introducing legislation, fears children might mistake the toys contained in the eggs for food and swallow them. Critics have also said that mixing toys and food is not helpful when trying to teach children the value of good nutrition.

‘Children can’t differentiate between toys and nutritional items,’ said Miriam Gruss, a member of the committee. ‘It is a sad fact, but that means that Kinder Surprise eggs have to go.’

Cornflakes and other products that contain toys are also on the blacklist.

(Read in full….)

Why is public signage failing? – Design Week

Interesting article from Design Week:

The phrase ‘to have lost one’s way’ is often applied to people who have become anxious, confused and vulnerable. Although meant metaphorically, it’s no coincidence that to literally lose one’s way – to become disoriented – also causes tension to rise very quickly. In public spaces, such as hospitals, car parks and stations, this is the last thing users want, yet poorly designed wayfinding systems often compromise safety and may even increase the risks of criminal behaviour.
Blind alleys, dead ends, poor sight lines and disappearing trails all leave people floundering. As the Home Office’s guide to designing out crime says, good street lighting and wayfinding measures, clear sight lines and a minimum of secluded or isolated areas go a long way towards making people and places less vulnerable.

‘In designing spaces we want people to feel safer and be safer, and wayfinding is important in this,’ says Jake Desyllas, director of wayfinding and pedestrian movement specialist Intelligent Space. ‘By moving people around in a certain way, you can increase the number of people who are viewing a space, as well as the potential for people to enter it at any given moment. Even if no one is actually coming in through a doorway, the fact that they might makes a space feel safer than, say, an alleyway which nobody can suddenly enter.’ The need for a calm, safe flow of people is especially important in environments where tension may already be high, such as hospitals.

At Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, for example, the Accident & Emergency department suffered a rise in crime five years ago, especially in violence towards staff. An analysis by Intelligent Space found that incidents were talking place in the treatment rooms – the worst possible place – largely because people entered through the wrong entrance and were then drawn by natural light and activity into a medicallooking area. Poor wayfinding and signage also led to rising stress levels, increasing the likelihood of aggression. Intelligent Space created a new wayfinding system and resited the reception area so that it provides greater ‘natural surveillance’ by staff; the number of incidents subsequently fell by around 80 per cent.

Car parks are another trouble spot…

(Read the rest online or in the current issue of Design Week)

May I Offer You My Calling Card?

Time to ditch the business card? Harriet Barovick in Time magazine reports on a growing trend to offer old-style calling cards:

In the 1800s, there was a certain logic–and a cool distance–to the formal calling card. Those who were part of, or sought a place among, the social élite would deliver a card with their name engraved on it to someone’s home to request a visit. But now that you can IM, e-mail or text pretty much anyone immediately, the Victorian practice seems laughably outmoded, right? Not so, according to a growing number of enthusiasts reviving the old-fashioned social-networking tool. ‘Is it technology fatigue? A colorful way of branding yourself? We’re not sure,’ says Peter Hopkins of Crane & Co., where sales of the cards have doubled in the past two years. ‘But the demand is clear. They are our fastest-growing item.’

For a flagging stationery industry, calling cards–essentially nonbusiness business cards–have brought a welcome dose of energy. Some are teenier than standard business cards, others much bigger, and many come in bright colors that seem anything but stodgy. Among the buyers: playdate-seeking parents eager for a sane way to exchange contact info, retirees who miss having business cards to hand out (Memphis stationer Baylor Stovall calls them ‘cruise-ship customers’) and itinerant young professionals whose cell phones and e-mail addresses are their most reliable locators. Elaine Milnes, a stay-at-home mom in Grand Rapids, Mich., got fed up with searching for pens on the playground and made a card for herself (title: Caroline’s mom). She now operates a thriving online cardmaking venture, MommyBiz.net Ditto for nonparent Ilene Segal, founder of Baby iDesign, a four-year-old stationer in Manhattan. She thinks her playdate cards have caught on because they’re ‘a nicer way of connecting than plugging someone into your cell.’

For young job-hoppers, a calling card offers not only a sense of permanence but also a chance for self-expression. In June, Mitch Stripling, an emergency planner who recently moved to New York City, printed cards with cell-phone, e-mail and descriptor (‘neo Victorian calling card thingy’) info for his 10-year college reunion in an effort to reconnect with people he knew he wouldn’t have a chance to speak with at length. ‘I wanted to get away from the whole status thing at reunions, so a business logo didn’t feel right,’ says Stripling, whose card was a buzz-generating hit at Williams College. ‘Having my own little logo frees me up. It’s a way to be expressive of me outside of whatever job I happen to be doing at the time.’

Perhaps the biggest reason the cards have delighted jaded 21st century types is that they work. Says Stripling: ‘I can’t say for sure if it was the card or just the effects of a reunion, but I heard from around 30 people from school in the weeks after.’ Some are even planning visits.

Britain from Above – BBC1, 2 and 4

BBC1, BBC2 and BBC4 are broadcasting “Britain From Above” from Sunday 10 August. A short preview clip on the BBC News web site (possibly not available outside the UK) shows examples of everyday life in the UK as you’ve never seen it before: GPS traces of traffic showing what can only be described as a mass migration, shipping lanes in the Straits of Dover, maps of telephone calls made on a working day, and how London taxi drivers begin to use back streets as normal routes become congested.

Looks fascinating. A book accompanying the series is available, and a web site will go live shortly.

"Upskirts" make demands on Japanese cameraphones

C2DCB907-2A71-418F-A7E6-C4EE04B025F1.jpg

An upskirt warning poster in a subway station outside Tokyo. Photo by Jeff Epp.

Cult of Mac reports on some interesting product design requirements in Japan:

The iPhone 3G in Japan has a special feature unique to that country: The camera always makes a conspicuous ‘shutter’ sound when a picture is taken, even when the phone is set to ‘silent’ mode.

The loud shutter sound is supposed to deter voyeurs from taking sneaky pictures up women’s’ skirts — or down their tops.

In Japan, upskirt and downblouse shots have become increasingly popular with the advent of high-resolution camera phones.

As a result, all cell phones sold in Japan make a conspicuous shutter sound, or say the word ‘cheese’ when a snap is taken, according to Nobuyuki Hayashi, a tech reporter based in Tokyo. On almost all new cell phones, the camera shutter sound can not be muted, Hayashi says.

‘Some manufacturers have even put louder shutter sound,’ he reports.

The shutter on the first iPhone sold in Japan could be muted in silent mode; an anomaly that many wondered whether Apple would correct in the iPhone 3G, Hayashi says.

Apple did: The shutter sound cannot be turned off, even in silent mode, Hayashi says.

(Via Cult of Mac.)