Justin Ferrell of Stanford d. School gives a workshop to the Hack/Hackers community in Dublin at a workshop hosted in The Irish Times
Жүктеу.....
Пікірлер: 134
@hk004 жыл бұрын
Wow.... I took 5-week course on Coursera and this 34 min video is hands down way better than 10 hours investment in coursera course :)
@khalilmatar8474
3 жыл бұрын
I suggest emeritus.com for DT by MIT
@PeterBlanchard5 жыл бұрын
Justin Ferrell is fantastic at presenting this material. I also love the perspective shift of using verbs rather than nouns to define needs. Very powerful way to expand the realm of possible solutions.
@BhamBhamBhole6 жыл бұрын
I am a relatively new designer. This was just the kind of information I needed. The concepts taught seemed practical and applicable. Thank you, Justin.
@lloydarobert1125 Жыл бұрын
I'm teaching a course in Contextual Ideation, and while creating the course content I thought I'd rummage through KZread for new ideas. 'Design thinking' has taken a few turns since '13, but Justin's easy way with the delivery was admirable! The definition of 'need' was brilliant!
@pinkichoudhury83066 жыл бұрын
One of the best lectures I've heard on design thinking
@TheSaibala10 күн бұрын
this addresses another "need" - to get started on design thinking as soon as possible - instead of doing a long course and dropping out in between
@WagPPinto5 жыл бұрын
Amazing crash course!!! It's really nice see a new way to design, develop and deploy products (DDD).
@77Justcruising7 жыл бұрын
This is amazing. I particularly like the quote think of verb, not nouns when trying to come up with solutions.
@cmichael7241
7 жыл бұрын
Ramon Padilla same here. I also liked the context of verbs correlating to opportunities and nouns to solutions. if someone says they want a ladder, really what they're looking to do is reach higher. a ladder might be one such solution, but starting from the verb enables further innovation e.g. bionic arm, elevator shelves etc
@satinderpuri1952
3 жыл бұрын
🙏
@majdshams77305 жыл бұрын
This is awesome. Thank you for sharing this very useful session.
@seevideo252 жыл бұрын
Wow... loved the Flair & Focus part....great to listen to this lecture, truly inspiring.
@santoshr3513 жыл бұрын
Amazing.. I liked the way he explained the process. Thanks for sharing.
@IdowuAkinde Жыл бұрын
Awesome material for introducing people to the rudiments of design and innovation. Thank you, Justin!
@DharmendraRaiMindMap8 жыл бұрын
simple AND powerful !
@joyosayande88823 жыл бұрын
fantastic lesson!! especially for those with no knowledge in design thinking. Well done!
@olutolavivian223 жыл бұрын
Amazing and insightful.. I love his sense of humor👌
@JobvanGlabbeek9 жыл бұрын
Great video to watch, thanks!
@SankarIyer_RR33 жыл бұрын
it is a great presentation and thank you for sharing this. The step by step process of design workshop is very clear to understand . Hope we can get more static video captures than dynamic ones :)
@nguyenhuuletruong Жыл бұрын
Thank Sir for the value sharing. I have begun learning about Design Thinking and found this. It's easy to understand.
@suneelkumarjain45528 жыл бұрын
Its very creative session... design thinking start when you start feeling what other people is feeling without any judgment.
@seharjabeen6 жыл бұрын
very helpful in understanding design thinking. thank you very much for sharing.
@princeita77373 жыл бұрын
Wow! Such an amazing introduction to design thinking!
@mariellapastori83556 жыл бұрын
Best Design Thinking explanation ever.Extremenly well explained - great!
@ppmmbb9992 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this amazing workshop.
@TaydenCody5 ай бұрын
This was a very insightful video that dug deep into my brain about so many different things. I’m about to start my undergrad and take a class similar to this. Very much needed and a good watch thank you to who ever this professor is.
@mikedariano6 жыл бұрын
Some notes, quotes, and timestamps. kzread.info/dash/bejne/jGibo9eggqrWlbw.html Washington Post experience before Stanford. A portrait of your neighbor. Share it. Felt like; "bad" "fun". Do this exercise because only half of all adults don't feel like they are creative. "We tend to equate creative ability with artistic ability." "What we are really teaching is the ability to show unfinished work." Take on problems that don't have a clear answer. 6:00 d School is multidisciplinary and "you're sharing your expertise with people very different than you and you're finding the innovative ideas in the space between your expertise." Not outcomes so much as internal ability. Everyone has creativity inside them. Always real projects. Talk to real people. Hands on, experiential learning. "Innovation is not an event. Innovation is a human centered process." 8:15 Empathize > define > ideate > prototype > test. Activity. Need some paper. Unlock creative potential. Focusing and flaring. This works well when you separate the parts. Rather than brainstorm (flare) and choose (focus); only build up the ideas. "The first rule of brainstorming is to defer all judgment." 10:00 Sketches to warm up; 'baby, door, house, innovation.' Drawing isn't about quality but communication - does someone else understand the idea you want to communicate. A and B partners in group. 12:00 The ideal wallet. Uses this: static1.squarespace.com/static/57c6b79629687fde090a0fdd/t/58992ddd46c3c4da5df52911/1486433757845/Participant-Worksheet.pdf It's a false start to dive right in. But what if we use a longer process, this process: Empathize > define > ideate > prototype > test. A interviews B about their wallet. This isn't like journalism, this is understanding. Round One is explicit reasons, Round Two is about emotion. "The way to do this is to be like a child and ask 'Why?'" Five whys. These interviews (empathize) have been the flare part, gathering information. The next part (define) will be about focusing the information. 16:00 "I want you to think of needs as verbs instead of nouns. Nouns are more solutions but needs will generate solutions you wouldn't come to otherwise." JF references Jobs, and Ford quotes. Ford could have asked about needs; like go faster. Needs are opportunities not solutions. Rather than design for the middle talk to individuals. Focus on individuals. OXO peeler. His wife had arthritis. OXO good grips. An extreme user. "When you're working on a new product or service you should figure out who the extreme users are in your case. Hardcore users and people who never do." Back to wallet ideas and a point of view statement. 22:30 1. NAME needs a way to NAME's NEED. Unexpectedly in their world INSIGHT. Articulate the problem statement. Write your POV. A good problem statement is short, specific and sexy (SSS). Ideate, a Silicon Valley way to say Brainstorm 25:45 A high energy activity. "The best way to get a good idea is to get a lot of ideas." Linus Pauling Rules from d school; defer judgment, go for volume, one conversation at a time, be visual, headline, build on the ideas of others, stay on topic, encourage wild ideas. Then share with partner to get feedback on the idea. This is gold for the designer. 29:00 Now take a minute to think about idea as a product or service. What does it look like? Now, a bias toward action. Rapid prototyping to fail early so it doesn't cost you very much. Now onto the testing phase, another chance to get more feedback not to sell what you created. 33:00
@hamandvaid
6 жыл бұрын
Beautiful notes! Thank you. :)
@elkipchumba
Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@louisdossou2236
28 күн бұрын
Thanks
@vipinpaul74495 жыл бұрын
Its Simply Awesome Session..Lot of information.!!!
@ashokpremrao4103 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic workshop - so much knowledge in 35 mins.. wisdom in every sentence ,20.03 onwards the ride is so satisfying ..
@patrec7638 Жыл бұрын
Uploaded almost 10 years ago and still feels not just relevant, but timeless advice for all people looking to solve problems in today's world. It still crushes me to see that people in the C-Suite ignore the contributions of creative thinking people, who create intuitive solutions for the business, not just pretty pictures.
@CharlesLijt9 жыл бұрын
Very good lecture, truly inspiring.
@elaviaengg Жыл бұрын
I was browsing around and stepped in to this class room. Wow Justin, you are such a force to motivate a full class with calm and joy. I loved every second of this class. I am 80 yeras old and shall delve further finding your classes if there are any. Thank you, YOU ARE AN AWESOME TEACHER.
@VaaniJain_thepinkgirl
Жыл бұрын
Hey Adil, What motivates to do more and learn more at 80?
@prashantjain88055 жыл бұрын
Good to see such a nice workshop .
@prachalitha835 жыл бұрын
Amazing workshop!!!
@gestaoti4u5084 жыл бұрын
I loved it! Congratulations!
@valeriaparamidani22904 жыл бұрын
Linus Pauling got 2 Nobel prize, but was not the only one. Marie Curie got Nobel Prize on 1903 and 1911. :)
@samudralavenkatajagannadha3949
2 жыл бұрын
Yes, Linus Pauling got Nobel's for Chemistry and Peace;Mary Curie for Physics and Chemistry. Both are immensely talented!
@towficaakter2516 жыл бұрын
This is amazing.
@AndikaAmriR Жыл бұрын
this is amazing, really makes me understand about design thinking
@andreasbott47537 ай бұрын
Great video, thank you for the inspirational content!
@dattapriyankaibs8 жыл бұрын
fantastic Workshop for laymans like me who dont know much about this concept of "Design Thinking"
@princerathi42633 жыл бұрын
Incredible 👌
@AdolfoUsierPhotographer5 жыл бұрын
amazing stuff 🎯
@ariaagile Жыл бұрын
it's awesome and simple to understand!
@stephencovrig8373 Жыл бұрын
super awesome!
@Journeybacktoself6 жыл бұрын
Thanks Ryan
@rambo40142 жыл бұрын
Justin Ferrll ..you rock!!!
@ignacioguzman11385 ай бұрын
The guy is brilliant!!!!
@sirisaksirisak6981 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic.
@animelover5093 Жыл бұрын
KZread suggest to me , luckily its being shared to me , so i can also follow along , learn by doing.
@jeanstevens25454 жыл бұрын
This is a great introduction to design thinking. A very engaging video.
@baltiulchannel47424 жыл бұрын
Amazing
@julianoczkowski71515 жыл бұрын
Brilliant
@isaaccilo87482 жыл бұрын
Thanks, helped a lot
@abhyunnati8589 Жыл бұрын
Extraordinary
@mikeleuluai97889 жыл бұрын
What an awesome lecture...one of the best ive seen. the pdf link is awesome too. thanks so much :) :) :)
@rajatmahajan84
8 жыл бұрын
what pdf link?
@rajatmahajan84
8 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@nathalied8569
4 жыл бұрын
@@rajatmahajan84 is it possible de have pdf link ?
@Timaz88
4 жыл бұрын
May I get above-mentioned PDF link as well, please?
@yoolars5 жыл бұрын
great video
@pawankumarchauhan13322 жыл бұрын
Thanks sir
@aleksandraaleksgasic4 жыл бұрын
little correction at 26:15 "one of two people to be awarded Nobel Prizes in different fields, the other being Marie Curie"
@zanovetalo
4 жыл бұрын
I like you comment, because I also think about Marie immediately :) But, it is interesting www.bbvaopenmind.com/en/science/leading-figures/the-magnificent-four-who-received-the-nobel-prize-twice/ LINUS PAULING is the only person twice decorated with a Nobel Prize not shared with anyone else. And Justin said that he is only INDIVIDUAL laureate that receive Nobel price twice.
@aleksandraaleksgasic
4 жыл бұрын
Nenad Markovic Nenad Markovic Yes, Bardeen and Sanger also won twice, in the same category. Curie and Pauling won the prize in two different categories. Remarkable people :)
@abassagbaye2038 Жыл бұрын
Yes
@shubhamsingla70482 жыл бұрын
Apart from Speaker, the cameraman also did a great job :D
@Timaz884 жыл бұрын
Hello everyone! By any chance, does anyone have the presentation that Justin was sharing on the screen, as I might use some of those slides to explain Design Thinking to my colleagues? Thanks
@joyosayande8882
3 жыл бұрын
Hi. was wondering if you were able to get the slides, i would like a copy too
@etienneayuk1727 Жыл бұрын
Superb
@PariiiHoooorApsaraaa9 жыл бұрын
creativity session
@adolfousiermarketstars67653 жыл бұрын
cool 👏🏻👏🏻🔝
@kenyipng46183 жыл бұрын
hello Justin, your crash course is impressive! do you offer similar online course? if so, please let me know, i am interested. please let me know.
@ksjupikm Жыл бұрын
Was there no phone covers with space for cards in 2013? 😲
@surbhimgupta3 жыл бұрын
Can we find the ppt somewhere please :)
@krystaljinluma8 жыл бұрын
The audience are very different from each other and have different needs and preference, if only focusing on one group wouldn't that make it a niche product?
@hillfortherstudios2757
2 жыл бұрын
In the technical use of the word I believe you would be correct.
@danieltoo20083 жыл бұрын
How could I particularly in next program? I was VP BDay frog design.
@trpclasses41632 жыл бұрын
great
@ahmetburakcebeci93084 жыл бұрын
hello from Turkey
@antoniomarraffa Жыл бұрын
are there slides available
@u2163 жыл бұрын
Justin is amazing! But I am jealous of his thick hair. LoL. I am nearly bald.
@surbhimgupta3 жыл бұрын
Stanford booklet of this workshop dschool.stanford.edu/s/9wuqfxx68fy8xu67khdiliueusae4i
@legok60374 жыл бұрын
17:00 Needs as verbs
@anjaliagrawal26667 ай бұрын
can somebody please give me a brief about this video?
Excellent! Thank you very much. This lecture is still a classic 9 years later. I'll use these slides and projects with my class.
@petersteelenator2 жыл бұрын
One swell of a bootcamp !!
@happytohelpclasses90222 жыл бұрын
Nice
@kayaeki2 жыл бұрын
5:32 important bookmark for myself
@AgileWithAmy Жыл бұрын
fanstastic
@designeryathish83112 жыл бұрын
17:23 foucs on verbs [needs]
@side547236 жыл бұрын
Helpfuuuul
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
T amo demais essa foto maravilhosa te amo e os dias e te mando mensagem e os dias e te mando msg
@Execution_matters3 жыл бұрын
The wifi password wasn't working for me
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
Fé e fé é só chamar atenção e os momentos bons sonhos e os momentos são os dias e te mando msg e te falo ok bjs te respondido antes das pedras e te mando msg ok obrigada pela informação sobre os momentos são os momentos bons e felizes juntos juntos e os momentos são os momentos são Paulo e você
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
C e os momentos são os momentos bons sonhos e os momentos são os momentos bons e felizes e os momentos são os momentos bons sonhos e os dias e os dias das férias é só chamar atenção e te falo se ela quiser vir aqui e depois das pedras aqui fora te esperando
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
C e os momentos são os dias e te mando mensagem e os dias e os dias das pedras aqui tô aqui esperando é só chamar lá pegar os dias das pedras e os dias das pedras aqui tô aqui fora
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
C e os momentos bons e bons sonhos e os momentos são os momentos bons e bons sonhos se cuida viu é é só r viu e os dias e te
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
G vi e nem se for só r viu e os momentos bons sonhos e os momentos são os momentos bons e felizes juntos e sempre foi corrido e te falo se é é só r é só r viu se Deus quiser ir lá fora esperando aqui terça feira se Deus quiser vir
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
G vi e os momentos são os dias e te falo ok bjs fica tranquilo então r viu e os momentos bons sonhos e bons sonhos se cuida viu se cuida viu se cuida e se cuida e se cuida e se der certo é só chamar atenção e os dias e te falo
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
G vi e nem se for só r é é é só chamar atenção e os momentos bons sonhos e bons momentos juntos juntos e sempre felicidades sempre e os dias das férias é só r viu é é só r viu e te mando
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
V se é verdade e os momentos é só chamar lá e te mando mensagem e os dias e te mando msg ok obrigada pelo carinho se quiser ir comigo te amo tanto e os momentos bons e felizes juntos e sempre foi essa semana passada e te mando mensagem ok bjs te mandar
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
G vi agora só r viu e os momentos bons e felizes e os momentos bons é e os dias e te mando msg ok ok obrigada é é só r viu e os momentos
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
V e os dias e os momentos são os dias e te mando msg ok ok obrigada pelo convite lá pegar ET e os momentos são os momentos bons sonhos e os momentos bons e bons momentos juntos e sempre felicidades sempre e os dias e te falo ok obrigada pelo carinho e os momentos bons sonhos é e te mando msg ok ok obrigada pelo convite e
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
V se é só chamar atenção e os dias das férias e os momentos são os momentos bons sonhos se realizem e os momentos são os momentos bons sonhos e os dias e te mando msg ok ok ok
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
G vi e nem vi agora só r viu e os dias e te mando mensagem ok obrigada pelo convite lá pegar os dias e os dias e te mando msg ok bjs fica tranquilo então é só r viu e os momentos bons sonhos se realizem sempre e os dias e te
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
F xi tô aqui esperando é só chamar atenção e te mando mensagem e os dias e te mando mensagem ok obrigada pela informação estou aqui fora esperando ela chegar lá te falo se ela for w
@karanvyas624 Жыл бұрын
In a nutshell...
@kavitak686711 ай бұрын
Baby door n house
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
G vi e nem se for só r é só chamar atenção e te falo ok bjs te mandar msg ok ok obrigada pela informação sobre os momentos são os ET r e os dias e te mando msg
@marciamarquene57535 ай бұрын
V se for w se é é só chamar atenção e te falo ok obrigada pela informação sobre esse vídeo maravilhoso d ER r viu se Deus quiser vir buscar f xi w r e te mando mensagem ok obrigada pelo carinho se quiser vir
Пікірлер: 134
Wow.... I took 5-week course on Coursera and this 34 min video is hands down way better than 10 hours investment in coursera course :)
@khalilmatar8474
3 жыл бұрын
I suggest emeritus.com for DT by MIT
Justin Ferrell is fantastic at presenting this material. I also love the perspective shift of using verbs rather than nouns to define needs. Very powerful way to expand the realm of possible solutions.
I am a relatively new designer. This was just the kind of information I needed. The concepts taught seemed practical and applicable. Thank you, Justin.
I'm teaching a course in Contextual Ideation, and while creating the course content I thought I'd rummage through KZread for new ideas. 'Design thinking' has taken a few turns since '13, but Justin's easy way with the delivery was admirable! The definition of 'need' was brilliant!
One of the best lectures I've heard on design thinking
this addresses another "need" - to get started on design thinking as soon as possible - instead of doing a long course and dropping out in between
Amazing crash course!!! It's really nice see a new way to design, develop and deploy products (DDD).
This is amazing. I particularly like the quote think of verb, not nouns when trying to come up with solutions.
@cmichael7241
7 жыл бұрын
Ramon Padilla same here. I also liked the context of verbs correlating to opportunities and nouns to solutions. if someone says they want a ladder, really what they're looking to do is reach higher. a ladder might be one such solution, but starting from the verb enables further innovation e.g. bionic arm, elevator shelves etc
@satinderpuri1952
3 жыл бұрын
🙏
This is awesome. Thank you for sharing this very useful session.
Wow... loved the Flair & Focus part....great to listen to this lecture, truly inspiring.
Amazing.. I liked the way he explained the process. Thanks for sharing.
Awesome material for introducing people to the rudiments of design and innovation. Thank you, Justin!
simple AND powerful !
fantastic lesson!! especially for those with no knowledge in design thinking. Well done!
Amazing and insightful.. I love his sense of humor👌
Great video to watch, thanks!
it is a great presentation and thank you for sharing this. The step by step process of design workshop is very clear to understand . Hope we can get more static video captures than dynamic ones :)
Thank Sir for the value sharing. I have begun learning about Design Thinking and found this. It's easy to understand.
Its very creative session... design thinking start when you start feeling what other people is feeling without any judgment.
very helpful in understanding design thinking. thank you very much for sharing.
Wow! Such an amazing introduction to design thinking!
Best Design Thinking explanation ever.Extremenly well explained - great!
Thank you for sharing this amazing workshop.
This was a very insightful video that dug deep into my brain about so many different things. I’m about to start my undergrad and take a class similar to this. Very much needed and a good watch thank you to who ever this professor is.
Some notes, quotes, and timestamps. kzread.info/dash/bejne/jGibo9eggqrWlbw.html Washington Post experience before Stanford. A portrait of your neighbor. Share it. Felt like; "bad" "fun". Do this exercise because only half of all adults don't feel like they are creative. "We tend to equate creative ability with artistic ability." "What we are really teaching is the ability to show unfinished work." Take on problems that don't have a clear answer. 6:00 d School is multidisciplinary and "you're sharing your expertise with people very different than you and you're finding the innovative ideas in the space between your expertise." Not outcomes so much as internal ability. Everyone has creativity inside them. Always real projects. Talk to real people. Hands on, experiential learning. "Innovation is not an event. Innovation is a human centered process." 8:15 Empathize > define > ideate > prototype > test. Activity. Need some paper. Unlock creative potential. Focusing and flaring. This works well when you separate the parts. Rather than brainstorm (flare) and choose (focus); only build up the ideas. "The first rule of brainstorming is to defer all judgment." 10:00 Sketches to warm up; 'baby, door, house, innovation.' Drawing isn't about quality but communication - does someone else understand the idea you want to communicate. A and B partners in group. 12:00 The ideal wallet. Uses this: static1.squarespace.com/static/57c6b79629687fde090a0fdd/t/58992ddd46c3c4da5df52911/1486433757845/Participant-Worksheet.pdf It's a false start to dive right in. But what if we use a longer process, this process: Empathize > define > ideate > prototype > test. A interviews B about their wallet. This isn't like journalism, this is understanding. Round One is explicit reasons, Round Two is about emotion. "The way to do this is to be like a child and ask 'Why?'" Five whys. These interviews (empathize) have been the flare part, gathering information. The next part (define) will be about focusing the information. 16:00 "I want you to think of needs as verbs instead of nouns. Nouns are more solutions but needs will generate solutions you wouldn't come to otherwise." JF references Jobs, and Ford quotes. Ford could have asked about needs; like go faster. Needs are opportunities not solutions. Rather than design for the middle talk to individuals. Focus on individuals. OXO peeler. His wife had arthritis. OXO good grips. An extreme user. "When you're working on a new product or service you should figure out who the extreme users are in your case. Hardcore users and people who never do." Back to wallet ideas and a point of view statement. 22:30 1. NAME needs a way to NAME's NEED. Unexpectedly in their world INSIGHT. Articulate the problem statement. Write your POV. A good problem statement is short, specific and sexy (SSS). Ideate, a Silicon Valley way to say Brainstorm 25:45 A high energy activity. "The best way to get a good idea is to get a lot of ideas." Linus Pauling Rules from d school; defer judgment, go for volume, one conversation at a time, be visual, headline, build on the ideas of others, stay on topic, encourage wild ideas. Then share with partner to get feedback on the idea. This is gold for the designer. 29:00 Now take a minute to think about idea as a product or service. What does it look like? Now, a bias toward action. Rapid prototyping to fail early so it doesn't cost you very much. Now onto the testing phase, another chance to get more feedback not to sell what you created. 33:00
@hamandvaid
6 жыл бұрын
Beautiful notes! Thank you. :)
@elkipchumba
Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@louisdossou2236
28 күн бұрын
Thanks
Its Simply Awesome Session..Lot of information.!!!
Fantastic workshop - so much knowledge in 35 mins.. wisdom in every sentence ,20.03 onwards the ride is so satisfying ..
Uploaded almost 10 years ago and still feels not just relevant, but timeless advice for all people looking to solve problems in today's world. It still crushes me to see that people in the C-Suite ignore the contributions of creative thinking people, who create intuitive solutions for the business, not just pretty pictures.
Very good lecture, truly inspiring.
I was browsing around and stepped in to this class room. Wow Justin, you are such a force to motivate a full class with calm and joy. I loved every second of this class. I am 80 yeras old and shall delve further finding your classes if there are any. Thank you, YOU ARE AN AWESOME TEACHER.
@VaaniJain_thepinkgirl
Жыл бұрын
Hey Adil, What motivates to do more and learn more at 80?
Good to see such a nice workshop .
Amazing workshop!!!
I loved it! Congratulations!
Linus Pauling got 2 Nobel prize, but was not the only one. Marie Curie got Nobel Prize on 1903 and 1911. :)
@samudralavenkatajagannadha3949
2 жыл бұрын
Yes, Linus Pauling got Nobel's for Chemistry and Peace;Mary Curie for Physics and Chemistry. Both are immensely talented!
This is amazing.
this is amazing, really makes me understand about design thinking
Great video, thank you for the inspirational content!
fantastic Workshop for laymans like me who dont know much about this concept of "Design Thinking"
Incredible 👌
amazing stuff 🎯
it's awesome and simple to understand!
super awesome!
Thanks Ryan
Justin Ferrll ..you rock!!!
The guy is brilliant!!!!
Fantastic.
KZread suggest to me , luckily its being shared to me , so i can also follow along , learn by doing.
This is a great introduction to design thinking. A very engaging video.
Amazing
Brilliant
Thanks, helped a lot
Extraordinary
What an awesome lecture...one of the best ive seen. the pdf link is awesome too. thanks so much :) :) :)
@rajatmahajan84
8 жыл бұрын
what pdf link?
@rajatmahajan84
8 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@nathalied8569
4 жыл бұрын
@@rajatmahajan84 is it possible de have pdf link ?
@Timaz88
4 жыл бұрын
May I get above-mentioned PDF link as well, please?
great video
Thanks sir
little correction at 26:15 "one of two people to be awarded Nobel Prizes in different fields, the other being Marie Curie"
@zanovetalo
4 жыл бұрын
I like you comment, because I also think about Marie immediately :) But, it is interesting www.bbvaopenmind.com/en/science/leading-figures/the-magnificent-four-who-received-the-nobel-prize-twice/ LINUS PAULING is the only person twice decorated with a Nobel Prize not shared with anyone else. And Justin said that he is only INDIVIDUAL laureate that receive Nobel price twice.
@aleksandraaleksgasic
4 жыл бұрын
Nenad Markovic Nenad Markovic Yes, Bardeen and Sanger also won twice, in the same category. Curie and Pauling won the prize in two different categories. Remarkable people :)
Yes
Apart from Speaker, the cameraman also did a great job :D
Hello everyone! By any chance, does anyone have the presentation that Justin was sharing on the screen, as I might use some of those slides to explain Design Thinking to my colleagues? Thanks
@joyosayande8882
3 жыл бұрын
Hi. was wondering if you were able to get the slides, i would like a copy too
Superb
creativity session
cool 👏🏻👏🏻🔝
hello Justin, your crash course is impressive! do you offer similar online course? if so, please let me know, i am interested. please let me know.
Was there no phone covers with space for cards in 2013? 😲
Can we find the ppt somewhere please :)
The audience are very different from each other and have different needs and preference, if only focusing on one group wouldn't that make it a niche product?
@hillfortherstudios2757
2 жыл бұрын
In the technical use of the word I believe you would be correct.
How could I particularly in next program? I was VP BDay frog design.
great
hello from Turkey
are there slides available
Justin is amazing! But I am jealous of his thick hair. LoL. I am nearly bald.
Stanford booklet of this workshop dschool.stanford.edu/s/9wuqfxx68fy8xu67khdiliueusae4i
17:00 Needs as verbs
can somebody please give me a brief about this video?
Presentation Deck (Not complete) dschool-old.stanford.edu/sandbox/groups/k12/wiki/c739e/attachments/2e9b3/An%20Intro%20to%20Design%20Thinking.pdf?sessionID=8cbdfc6129ceb041dbad2247ffc9d0112fd0ebce
@lonkaufmann4179
2 жыл бұрын
Excellent! Thank you very much. This lecture is still a classic 9 years later. I'll use these slides and projects with my class.
One swell of a bootcamp !!
Nice
5:32 important bookmark for myself
fanstastic
17:23 foucs on verbs [needs]
Helpfuuuul
T amo demais essa foto maravilhosa te amo e os dias e te mando mensagem e os dias e te mando msg
The wifi password wasn't working for me
Fé e fé é só chamar atenção e os momentos bons sonhos e os momentos são os dias e te mando msg e te falo ok bjs te respondido antes das pedras e te mando msg ok obrigada pela informação sobre os momentos são os momentos bons e felizes juntos juntos e os momentos são os momentos são Paulo e você
C e os momentos são os momentos bons sonhos e os momentos são os momentos bons e felizes e os momentos são os momentos bons sonhos e os dias e os dias das férias é só chamar atenção e te falo se ela quiser vir aqui e depois das pedras aqui fora te esperando
C e os momentos são os dias e te mando mensagem e os dias e os dias das pedras aqui tô aqui esperando é só chamar lá pegar os dias das pedras e os dias das pedras aqui tô aqui fora
C e os momentos bons e bons sonhos e os momentos são os momentos bons e bons sonhos se cuida viu é é só r viu e os dias e te
G vi e nem se for só r viu e os momentos bons sonhos e os momentos são os momentos bons e felizes juntos e sempre foi corrido e te falo se é é só r é só r viu se Deus quiser ir lá fora esperando aqui terça feira se Deus quiser vir
G vi e os momentos são os dias e te falo ok bjs fica tranquilo então r viu e os momentos bons sonhos e bons sonhos se cuida viu se cuida viu se cuida e se cuida e se cuida e se der certo é só chamar atenção e os dias e te falo
G vi e nem se for só r é é é só chamar atenção e os momentos bons sonhos e bons momentos juntos juntos e sempre felicidades sempre e os dias das férias é só r viu é é só r viu e te mando
V se é verdade e os momentos é só chamar lá e te mando mensagem e os dias e te mando msg ok obrigada pelo carinho se quiser ir comigo te amo tanto e os momentos bons e felizes juntos e sempre foi essa semana passada e te mando mensagem ok bjs te mandar
G vi agora só r viu e os momentos bons e felizes e os momentos bons é e os dias e te mando msg ok ok obrigada é é só r viu e os momentos
V e os dias e os momentos são os dias e te mando msg ok ok obrigada pelo convite lá pegar ET e os momentos são os momentos bons sonhos e os momentos bons e bons momentos juntos e sempre felicidades sempre e os dias e te falo ok obrigada pelo carinho e os momentos bons sonhos é e te mando msg ok ok obrigada pelo convite e
V se é só chamar atenção e os dias das férias e os momentos são os momentos bons sonhos se realizem e os momentos são os momentos bons sonhos e os dias e te mando msg ok ok ok
G vi e nem vi agora só r viu e os dias e te mando mensagem ok obrigada pelo convite lá pegar os dias e os dias e te mando msg ok bjs fica tranquilo então é só r viu e os momentos bons sonhos se realizem sempre e os dias e te
F xi tô aqui esperando é só chamar atenção e te mando mensagem e os dias e te mando mensagem ok obrigada pela informação estou aqui fora esperando ela chegar lá te falo se ela for w
In a nutshell...
Baby door n house
G vi e nem se for só r é só chamar atenção e te falo ok bjs te mandar msg ok ok obrigada pela informação sobre os momentos são os ET r e os dias e te mando msg
V se for w se é é só chamar atenção e te falo ok obrigada pela informação sobre esse vídeo maravilhoso d ER r viu se Deus quiser vir buscar f xi w r e te mando mensagem ok obrigada pelo carinho se quiser vir