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Designers Hank Beyer and Alex Sizemore have created a series of Macs encased in locally-sourced materials, including honeycomb, coal, and ice, to "question the implications of globalization" and "consider how unconventional materials can change product relationships" (via Fast Company).

Hank-Beyer-Alex-Sizemore-Honey-Mac.jpg


The design project is titled "For the Rest of Us," which is a play on Apple's marketing tagline for the original Macintosh: "Introducing Macintosh, the computer for the rest of us."



Photographed with similar backdrops and framing as the original Macintosh ads, Beyer and Sizemore's Macs, which are effectively non-functional sculptures, seek to challenge Apple's industrial design aesthetics by reimagining them with thought-provoking materials.

Hank-Beyer-Alex-Sizemore-Coal-Mac.jpg


Beyer and Sizemore chose a wide range of locally-sourced materials from the American midwest, including coal, ice, peat, lard, honeycomb, sandstone, and clay, for the series of designs. The machine made of limestone is almost practical, and intends to render the color of Apple's "Snow White" original Macintosh design in a natural material.

Hank-Beyer-Alex-Sizemore-Stone-Mac.jpg


Others, such as the dirt, ice, or honeycomb-encased Macs, are much more extraordinary and surrealist.

Hank-Beyer-Alex-Sizemore-Ice-Mac.jpg


The entire project began several years ago, and aims to present "an alternate reality." Yet the series of designs are also "future-forward," as companies seek out more sustainable manufacturing processes and materials.

We don't want people to view our project and feel resentment toward globalization, to feel that we want to replace industry or to consider new materials only for commercial merit. We want people to question the implications of globalization, and consider how unconventional materials can change product relationships.

Hank-Beyer-Alex-Sizemore-Concrete-Mac.jpg


After displaying the project in International Festival of Design at the Villa Noailles in Hyères, France, Beyer and Sizemore have now released a "For the Rest of Us" hand-bound linen hardcover book, investigating the "processes, people, history, politics, and values of each regional material source," and how different materials could be used to create a desktop computer.

Article Link: Design Project Envisions Macs Made of Honeycomb, Coal, Ice and Other Unusual Materials
 
“Unique” is absolute - something is either unique or it isn’t. You can’t have degrees of uniqueness.
What if you have just 1 or 2 uniquely weird characters from a cast of 10 in your movie? What about if half of your techno track uses really unique elements but the other half is pretty normal? I could go on.
 
We don't want people to view our project and feel resentment toward globalization, to feel that we want to replace industry or to consider new materials only for commercial merit. We want people to question the implications of globalization, and consider how unconventional materials can change product relationships.
But, it just makes the conventional materials look all the more practical? And what’s it got to do with globalisation? You can make plastic and find aluminium pretty much anywhere.
 
It's an art piece. It's a strange thing for MacRumors to report on and I imagine this comment section is going to be an absolute disaster, judging by previous similar threads, but I think it's quite a nice idea and a good way to get people to engage with technology and manufacturing processes etc.
Art and commentary are great, but this is MacRumors not Abduzeedo.
 
What if you have just 1 or 2 uniquely weird characters from a cast of 10 in your movie? What about if half of your techno track uses really unique elements but the other half is pretty normal? I could go on.
If you have any unique constituent parts then you are, necessarily, unique.
 
  • Disagree
Reactions: hmmfe
Present those as whimsical "art for art's sake" and they'd be entertaining fun.

Call them a "design project" and wrap it all in pretentious language and nonsensical green virtue signalling, and expect mockery.

Like: why did they miss out the Mac made from bull... er... bovine by-products? (don't knock it - mix it up with some clay and straw and it's a widely-used construction material, and a lot greener than concrete...)

Or: I see Apple TV+ are planning a re-make of The Flintstones...
 
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