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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Addresses modern reality in a convincing and fun way
A "Spime" may or may not eventually exist in the real world of the near future. A Spime is an object plus it's RFID or wireless ID that tracks the object during it full lifecycle.

What Sterling is trying to do is close the loop on manufacture and design in the modern age. No wait, scratch that: He's really saying that closing the loop via a Spime or something...
Published on December 10, 2005 by Gordon E. Anderson

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars viridian excess
I was disappointed in the book. I'm really more interested in the offshoring footprint and age discrimination footprint
of purchases I make, than the carbon or sustainability footprint. I do applaud Sterling for cautioning about the surveillance
potential of "spimes" or trackable objects in general. I'll be interested in seeing which government uses...
Published 10 months ago by Charlene J Soreff


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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Addresses modern reality in a convincing and fun way, December 10, 2005
This review is from: Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets) (Paperback)
A "Spime" may or may not eventually exist in the real world of the near future. A Spime is an object plus it's RFID or wireless ID that tracks the object during it full lifecycle.

What Sterling is trying to do is close the loop on manufacture and design in the modern age. No wait, scratch that: He's really saying that closing the loop via a Spime or something like it will be inevitable.

What do I mean by "closing the loop"? In the book Sterling makes the convincing case that the full impact of industrial output and design is not currently accounted for in the cost and design of objects made and sold. Rather, we "export" a lot of the impact into the future in the form of industrial waste and so on.

Spimes will allow intelligence and statistics about the full impact and lifecycle of objects to be fedback into future capitalism and industry. In fact, Sterling argues that, for future designers and manufacturers, the data representation of an object is potentially far more valuable than the sale price or the object itself. And as crazy as that sounds, in some industries (most notably credit cards) that's already true.

And the strength of this book lays not in the eventual reality of Spimes or the industrial environment Sterling envisions, but in the fact that Sterling attempts to sketch out something akin to a solution to current social & envionmental problems that actually makes sense in the current economic climate of the world. It's a good try, at least.

In terms of the layout, typography and design of the book, it is a hell of a lot of fun. There's plenty of pithy, epigrammatic phrases sprnkled thoughout the book, but over against a backdrop that is large convincing. It's a cute little book that you will definitely spend some time thinking about.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars important work for more than just designers..., June 4, 2006
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This review is from: Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets) (Paperback)
...or perhaps it's just that "design" is an extremely broad category. Sterling presents a futurity that is at once realistic and utopian, frightening and hopeful.

This book would be useful for not just anyone designing anything, but anyone concerned with the future, how to achieve real sustainability, or how all that geeky stuff (you occasionally read about in the Wired you pick up at the airport) will really effect you.

I agree with another reviewer that the actual print design of the book is a hindrance, which is ironic; my distaste for it was only made worse by having already heard Sterling brag on it during a talk. But even with this beef, I have to give it a full five stars based on the content alone.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars SPIMES = Wired, May 30, 2006
This review is from: Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets) (Paperback)
In `Shaping Things' Sterling shifts gears from fiction writer to activist. This concise book was written to inspire designers to visualize radical scenarios connecting information technology and sustainability. Sterling suggests new connections between the virtual world and the physical world that will have you rethinking many of your assumptions about how we relate to products. If you design artifacts, machines, gizmos or products, then read this book!
SPIMES = Wired.
Post-Industrial = Tired.
Industrial = Expired.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars thinking outside of the box, May 11, 2006
By 
Alex Tolley (Los Gatos, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets) (Paperback)
This slim book, readable in a few short hours is, IMO, a very thoughtfull view of the issues facing design in a post modern world, with some insightful guideposts about designing in this world. I think it is way ahead of the curve in the area, discussing issues that I never see in any amount of design magazines and books that populate the shelves of bookstores. This is not a book about the form of things - the typical fetishist approach of most books about design - but the information that is wrapped around stuff as it makes its way through its cycly of production, use and discard.

Sterling writes clearly and concisely on the future and design of informational products, something he calls SPIMES, which contain information on time, place and state.

His ideas are thought provoking. I have already recommended this book to some designer friends - I hope they pick up a copy and read it.

Highly recommended.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Techno-futuristic ruminations on "spimes" and sustainability, August 30, 2007
This review is from: Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets) (Paperback)
Type a few words into Google and you can find a sushi restaurant, a movie theater, concert tickets or a new car. But if you misplace your car keys in your house, you still have to search the old-fashioned way: room by room, cushion by cushion, coat pocket by coat pocket. If Bruce Sterling is correct, though, one day you'll Google your keys. And your shoes. And your dog. This is the nascent "Internet of things" made possible by technology, including such items as radio frequency ID tags and traceable product life cycle management. That is where technology is going: to the interactive "spime," Sterling's term for objects that will arrive with data attached. In this visually arresting novella-sized essay, Sterling riffs on a number of scenarios, from customized-to-order cell phones to products that "know" how much carbon their construction required. His aphoristic prose seems at times like madness, but there's method in it: Sterling urges designers to make beautifully sustainable products rather than more proto-trash. We believe his book could reform your ideas about design and provide a stock of carbon-neutral insights you can deliver to your colleagues over a recyclable cup filled with shade-grown coffee.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Setting the agenda.., December 15, 2006
By 
mvk "mvk" (The Netherlands) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets) (Paperback)
If you're looking for a book on sustainable design, the intertwining of the informational and the material, and RFID, look no further.

Sterling's account is more than a book for designers. Though some angles tend to originate from design-related topics, the implications and responsibilities pertaining to design cannot belong to a community of designers per se.

That's a pretty self-evident idea of course, but allow me to elucidate.

When Sterling argues that "we need a designed metahistory", this pertains to the idea that the information that is related to objects / spimes / shaping things needs to be designed. Given the fact that more and more objects are tagged, and thereby enrolled in a global information architecture, this implies that 'design' has the ability to influence the way we relate to object-data.

And this is by no means a scenario that is sci-fi: take the EPCglobal architecture as an example. Sterling is perfectly aware of this.

For me, the book provided a framework in which many more things can be deployed.. But I suppose the book's effects will depend on the mindset of the reader. The capacity of the book to create new concepts and new levels of thought is obviously there. To me, the ability of a written work to do this is what makes a book great.
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars frightening yet worth the read, March 6, 2006
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This review is from: Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets) (Paperback)
It's a really frightening thought that all of the "revolutions" have led to some greater ability of the few to exploit the many, but Bruce sums up the next revolution about right. While his terms for coming technologies may not ever be adopted by the mainstream they are informative to readers - specifically spimes - and while I'm not afraid of the future, I'd be a bit concerned if I wasn't at least aware of the scenario Sterling presents in Shaping Things.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Techno-rediculism, May 14, 2011
This review is from: Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets) (Paperback)
I originally sought this book after watching a Sterling video online talking about things and their roles in our lives. All very interesting stuff I'd never thought about before.

I found the book hoping it would be more of these thoughts in depth and better argued. Wow was I wrong. The initial portion draws you in, classifying items and production methods of the present and past. The classification of Artifacts, Machines, Products and Gizmos I found interesting and the "Line of No Return" is an interesting framework in which to examine society.

But then the other 3/4 of the book is techno-absurdism. A mind-dump of musings about what could be in a world where every object were tracked in a digital environment and all that could mean. I understand he's a science fiction author, but it seems completely disconnected from even the most remote thought of practicality or realism in a human world. It is verbose, self-congratulating, and written in a language that seems designed to impress and sound weighty while being mostly devoid of real content.

Don't buy it. Borrow it, rent it, and read the first 20 or so pages. Then move on. If you want a better read about things, read the always classic, The Design of Everyday Things.
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3.0 out of 5 stars viridian excess, March 26, 2011
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets) (Paperback)
I was disappointed in the book. I'm really more interested in the offshoring footprint and age discrimination footprint
of purchases I make, than the carbon or sustainability footprint. I do applaud Sterling for cautioning about the surveillance
potential of "spimes" or trackable objects in general. I'll be interested in seeing which government uses electronic tracking
to systematically kill its opponents and dissidents. It will also be interesting to see who ultimately benefits from data mining
the information trails that trackable objects generate. I doubt that the bulk of the benefit will accrue to the public!
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5.0 out of 5 stars A tool, in a way..., July 19, 2007
By 
John Kinsella (San Francisco, CA USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets) (Paperback)
This is such a short read, and such a good read - it really is a tool, more of a reminder. The way some people put a model of their dream car on their desk, to remind them their goal, this book should be kept around, read once or twice a year to remind oneself to put purpose, intelligence, and diligence into what you create. I think I'll start giving copies of this to new employees...
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Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets)
Shaping Things (Mediaworks Pamphlets) by Bruce Sterling (Paperback - October 7, 2005)
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