This year, the Philadelphia Eagles and the Kansas City Chiefs face off at my home stadium– Arizona’s State Farm Stadium. What needs to be considered when designing NFL stadiums? And what design principles can we learn?
This year, the Philadelphia Eagles and the Kansas City Chiefs face off at my home stadium– Arizona’s State Farm Stadium. What needs to be considered when designing NFL stadiums? And what design principles can we learn?
On January 24th, 2023 we asked ChatGPT to be a guest author of the BYU Design Review. This week we discuss the experiment and how ChatGPT performed. If you’ve somehow missed hearing about ChatGPT, here is another chance to learn about a new technology that might become a part of our everyday lives.
Product development involves a lot of work. Making sense of what needs to be done and in what order, and how one bit of work on the team relates to another is a major challenge. This article describes three ways product development activities relate to each other. Understanding these relationships helps teams establish effective sequencing and timing for the work they do.
ChatGPT is taking over the world!… Or is it? Here is the first article on the BYU Design Review written entirely by an artificial intelligence. No edits were made by a human of any kind. What do you think? Impressive or Over-hyped?
Have you been asked to make a prototype, or feel like you should be doing more prototyping, but you’re not quite sure why, or not quite sure how to get the most out of prototyping? This article presents 4 reasons designers make prototypes. Understanding these reasons and mapping them onto your project will unlock the power of prototypes and speed up your development efforts.
It sounded like I was trying to find sources for plagiarizing answers. But I was genuinely concerned—if the internet is just some depository of mediocre thinking, where on earth was I supposed to go to find good ideas? She looked startled that I asked the question, but one millisecond later she gave me an answer that changed my life…
As we wrap up the end of another calendar year, we wanted to draw attention to some articles that may have slipped under your radar.
Check out our most popular articles from 2022!
My particular legal field, real estate, requires me to work with engineers frequently. But let me be absolutely frank with you. When I am arranging settlement meetings, I will do all I can to avoid inviting engineers. I do love you guys. But these meetings are about compromise, and engineers struggle with that. Why?
If you’re shopping for a designer or an engineer, this article is for you. If you are a designer or an engineer, this article is also for you.
I’ve come to learn is that the prototyping stage can (and should) belong at the very beginning of the design process. This article will focus on the role that early prototyping – specifically paper prototyping – can play in developing strong designs.
I hope to show in a Ratatouille fashion that “anyone can [create]” given practice and the right environment.
I learned the hard way that carving a jack-o-lantern takes dedication and planning. I’ve learned a few more lessons from pumpkin carving since then and, in the spirit of Halloween, I’ll share those with you today.
Visual thinking skills enables good sketching. Good sketching facilitates rapid design iteration. Good design emerges from significant iteration. Based on this logic, visual thinking skills are foundational to good design.
We challenged dozens of BYU engineering students to design LEGO Architecture-style models of BYU buildings; here you’ll see some of the many outstanding designs that were created. If you’re a current BYU student, an alumnus, or have ever visited the BYU campus, we hope these designs bring back great memories.
Truly, California has beautiful weather, lots of people, and some unique ideas. Some of these ideas have flopped, but others are very intriguing and should be spread around. I find myself respecting their efforts to try new ideas and become early adopters on many things that other states should consider embracing as well.
Engineers, scientists, and designers all gather data and then try to make sense of it later. We have equations and models to help us simulate this data. But we also have a problem – these tools were designed for numerical data, and not all data is solely quantitative. Affinity mapping is an abductive reasoning process that enables people to make sense of large amounts of subjective, qualitative, or observational data.
The advent of the automobile presented an interesting design problem for Glacier National Park: how could visitors travel easily to and from each attraction in the park? This road would need to cut through these sharp, rocky mountains through an easy route made for the everyday automobile.
We’re celebrating the BDR’s third birthday this month! We want to introduce this year’s BDR team, and we’ve asked everyone to share some thoughts or advice for this upcoming school year. Best of luck with your studies, projects, and everything in between!
Attending conferences can be nerve racking and exhausting, but they are also exciting and inspiring. When I started my PhD, I thought I would be able to go to many conferences, but a pandemic had other plans. I found myself only attending one in-person conference during my program. With only one chance at an in person conference, I knew I needed to make the most of it.