Click to download a PDF- Leaflet
for prospective clients



The book of Dott 2007


Order "In the bubble"


my Doors of Perception blog


The Doors of Perception website


In book publishing, and the theatre, "shouts" are the enthusiastic quotations that appear on a book's cover, or on billboards outside the venue. Read (or not) the following “shouts” in the same spirit.....

Times of India
(Headline: "Designers can transform assets into eco-friendly services...")
timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Scientific American
(Headline: Does speed really make our life better?) "Should our society be examining new paths to development that do not force our lives to run faster and faster?"
sciam.com/article_thackara

Metropolis
(Headline: John Thackara’s Network of New Thinking) "John Thackara has spent the past decade championing smart design"
metropolismag.com/cda/story.php

Business Week
(Headline: Cutting Edge Designers). "John Thackara, working at the intersection of business, technology, sustainability, and design, looks at daily life as a design opportunity...."  businessweek.com/0703_thackara

Fast Company
“a business provocateur….”
fastcompany.com/magazine/36/ifaqs.html

Wired
“a design luminary….”
wired.com/culture/lifestyle/news

San Francisco Chronicle
"a visionary voice for the wired era"
sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi

Computer World
"...a technology visionary"
computerworld.com/managementtopics/story

Observer (UK)
(Headline: Politics of the drawing board) "....designing flows and connections'
observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story

Blueprint (UK)
""who'd have thought we'd start 2008 with the most important figures in British design getting steamed up over vegetables?" January 2008, Page 13 (editorial)

Wall Street Journal "has established a global reputation as a cutting edge design expert"

Financial Times "fascinating...best practice as the smartest way to beat the competition" (lead review of Winners! )

Le Monde (France) "insights on innovation that contributes to Europe's new identity"

Economic Times of India "brilliant insights into the internet and sustainability"

IN THE BLOGOSPHERE

“… top dog in the space of flows”
RHIZOME (USA)   
heise.de/english/inhalt/kon

“resets the bottom line for design intelligence.”
KLOOIJ (NETHERLANDS)   
klooj.net

"always provocative and intelligent..."
CORE77 (USA)    
core77.com

ASPEN PODCAST
aspendesignsummit.org/podcast_thackara

KCRW Los Angeles
(Headline: Only in LA! A 'Green' Gas Station and Trash-as-Animals) Frances Anderton talks to design world leaders about the latest in products, fashion, graphics, architecture and more, in Los Angeles and beyond.
kcrw.com/people/thackara_john

Smart City Radio "a brilliant lecture on the post-spectacular city...."
smartcityradio.blogspot.com/smartcityradio_archive

REVIEWS OF I N   T H E   B U B B L E


"I eagerly devoured every last page of John Thackara's lofty, captivating book."
-- Bruce Sterling, author of The Hacker Crackdown and Tomorrow Now: Envisioning the Next Fifty Years

"Design with a conscience: that's the take-home message of this important, provocative book. John Thackara, long a major force in design, now takes on an even more important challenge: making the world safe for future inhabitants. We need, he says, to design from the edge, to learn from the world, and to stop designing for, but instead design with. If everyone heeded his prescriptions, the world would indeed be a better place. Required reading -- required behavior."
-- Don Norman, Nielsen Norman Group, author of Emotional Design

"Thackara's deeply informed book presents a breathtaking new map of the design landscape. With not a whisper of evangelistic zeal, In the Bubble offers an engaging narrative as well as design principles that speak to sustainability, joy, and quality of life in increasingly complex times."
-- Brenda Laurel, author of Utopian Entrepreneur, chair of the Graduate Media Design Program at Art Center College of Design

"Whatever you are designing, you will want to keep this book next to you. When you are wondering what to design, you will want to pick it up and browse through it again, to remind you of all the new possibilities for design. When you worry if your design is good enough, you will want to check through the passages that you have marked, to be sure that you have provided for all the complexities that count. When you have an 'Aha!' and are confident that your design is great, you will want to check that you have matched the attributes of 'Flow.' When you have an idle moment, you will want to read through the notes, which are a good book about design in themselves."
-- Bill Moggridge, Cofounder, IDEO

"If there is one pervasive criticism of global capitalism that cuts across all ideologies, it is this: goods have become more important and are treated better than people. We are producing higher quality computers than children. John Thackara's brilliant book about quotidian design describes design innovation driven by social fiction instead of science fiction. This is design focused on what Fernand Braudel called 'everyday life': the demands and pleasures of caring for others, raising children, meaningful work, and journeying. These inspired and innovative technologies return people to the heart of the world and help them create a fulfilling life."
-- Paul Hawken, Natural Capital Institute, author of The Ecology of Commerce

"We all envy John Thackara's digestive system. He is able to take in the most disparate events, locations, trends, and apparent minutiae and deliver back a synthesis of the way the world moves for the use of designers and of those who use design as a powerful life-forming tool. And to help us swallow what might otherwise be too abstract a meal, he serves it to us with parables that make the book not only an enriching but also a fun read."
-- Paola Antonelli, Curator of Architecture and Design, The Museum of Modern Art

"One of Thackara's powerful concepts is that of the macroscope: instead of a microscope, which allows us to see tiny things, we need instruments to see distributed, long-term phenomena that pass unnoticed amidst the nonstop distractions of a modern go-go culture. In the Bubble is just such a macroscope, a deeply reflective meditation on the underlying changes in the structure of globalized society, and a revelation about what designers can do to make that shifting structure more robust and sustainable."
-- J. C. Herz, author of Joystick Nation

“The future is created at the intersection of business, technology, design, and culture. In the Bubble is an insightful and delightful explanation of this nexus and of how each force affects the others. Designers often miss a great deal in their educations about the real people who will use and inhabit their work. Thackara astutely illuminates a lot of what designers don’t know they’re missing.”
--Nathan Shedroff, author of Experience Design

“‘To do things differently, we need to perceive things differently,’ John Thackara writes. I agree! In the Bubble is the first strong, thoroughly documented statement on the importance of the local and the embedded in our fluid, hyper-connected world. A fundamental contribution to a new design culture.”
--Ezio Manzini, Milan Polytechnic, author of The Material of Invention and Sustainable Everyday

Fast Company
(Headline: Best Books of 2005)
"As much as we're living in the age of a design renaissance, we're also awash in a lot of bad design. A compelling manifesto against the "schlock of the new" and a passionate argument for more simple, but powerful design"
blog.fastcompany.com/fast_companys_best_books