May 15th, 2012
David Stairs

Motorcycles are the primary means of personal transportation in Bangalore. Every intersection is clogged with dozens of bikes and scooters impatiently waiting to break away when the light turns green, and when it does… off they roar like a swarm of angry hornets!

Autorickshaw stop, Yelahanka
When I stop to consider public transit, I have to remark the local bus system, which is frequent and cheap. My son and I spent a couple days figuring out how to use the buses and they are about 1/10th as expensive as formal taxis. But the buses are crowded and hot. They are also indirect, with many transfers necessary. For a more direct connection Bangaloreans depend upon something else, the three-wheeled autorickshaw.

For starters, all Bangalore rickshaw drivers, looking professional in their characteristic khaki uniforms, are required to post a pictured operator’s license in plain sight of passengers. Secondly, all autos have a meter. It is usually used at the driver’s discretion. A metered ride is usually more affordable than a set fare. Recently the base fare was increased to 20 rupees, the highest rate in India, but at about 40¢US, still a very reasonable amount.

We’d been warned to be careful when taking “autos.” Sometimes the drivers could be unscrupulous, we were told, make certain of an agreed upon fare. It’s easy. Most drivers use their meters. In one vehicle we even found a fare conversion scale, to help us with current base fare conversions after a fare increase. But haggling is expected. Like anything, it helps if all parties understand the terms, but I’ve found there is an amazing variety among drivers. While an autorickshaw will take you direct from point to point, the drivers sometimes get lost. Add to this the fact that drivers are often primarily knowledgeable of their own neighborhood, and do not always speak English very well, and you can get really waylaid.

Listing of all current fare increase equivalences from 17 to 100 rupees
Rickshaws are very effective in heavy traffic, especially in the hands of drivers as aggressive as New York cabbies. Small enough to often fit three across a city street, like all tri-vehicles they are very maneuverable, turn on a dime, weave through traffic, and are easy to park. Most of them have what is known as a “limphome” capability, enough in reserve to make it to a service station when you’re running on fumes, although I’ve been with drivers who ran out of gas.

Rickshaw ballet: drivers pushing their jitneys into a fueling station

Rickshaws will fit three average, or four very skinny passengers. Their top speed seems to be about 35mph, depending on the size of the motor. The most common locally produced brand is Bajaj, their main competition is the Italian original, the Piaggio Apé. Richshaws have small 2 or 4-stroke engines and the old ones can be extremely dirty. So dirty, in fact, that the City of Bangalore instituted new restrictions on gasoline-powered rickshaws. All new vehicles, which are painted green and yellow instead of black and yellow, are required to run on either cng or lpg. Bajaj complies nicely by offering about seven models to choose from. This should go some way toward easing the city’s increasing smog problems.

Canopy embroidering
Rickshaws are constructed of light gauge sheet steel and remind me of nothing so much as a high-speed golf cart. This is good for fuel efficiency. Although equipped with night illumination, some seem to be free of windshield wipers. The canvas canopy can be fancy or plain, and is sometimes embroidered, but as the vehicle is open on both sides, in a deluge the passengers definitely get wet. And the canopy superstructure is flimsy; it would not protect in the event of a rollover.

If you’re allergic to dust or diesel, a rickshaw won’t be your first choice. Because they are open on the sides and low to the ground, it’s sometimes necessary to hold one’s breath in heavy truck or bus traffic. But if you enjoy the color of a jitney ride through the lively chaos of Indian traffic, the autorickshaw is your ticket.

A Piaggio as a goods wagon
Indians don’t strictly reserve taxi rickshaws for passengers. I’ve seen them carrying freight many times, and Piaggio markets a series of autos that are strictly used for goods. Like their larger African cousin, the 16-passenger minivan, or mutatu, rickshaws are everywhere and are the workhorses of the local streets. But because of their availability and openness, rickshaws are even more flexible than minivans, although they also have a higher fare than their African cousins.

A Bajaj pressed into service
Bangalore is in the process of expanding its Metro, an elevated lightrail system, to a growing number of areas of the city. In the meantime, at ground level the most efficient way to get around is to stand in the street and wait for one of the 10,000 ricks to pull over.

David Stairs is the founding editor of Design-Altruism-Project
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May 8th, 2012
David Stairs
“The search for form demands an investigation into values and qualities that Indians hold important to a good life.”
—Charles and Ray Eames, The India Report, 1958

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May 1st, 2012
An Xiao Mina
In "The Texting Culture of the Philippines," a recent article for Design Observer, I explored some of the design strategies centered around mobile phone culture in the Philippines. It’s a well-known fact to anyone who’s visited the country–with upwards of 600 text messages per month per user in 2010, the Philippines is the world leader in mobile messaging. The second, the United States, comes in at a comparatively paltry 420 messages per user in the same time period.
It’s hard to overestimate just how pervasive the mobile phone is in Philippine culture, so much so that it’s embedded into daily life. To expand a bit more on that article, I thought I would share a few more photos of some of the design strategies that have evolved around this culture.

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April 24th, 2012
David Stairs

Febin standing by a pile of rope
I just returned from a week in Kerala. On Monday morning April 2nd I was passing through Alleppey when I noticed a coir mill, or rope-making factory. Remembering that this was a rope-making region, I asked our driver Febin if we could stop at a mill. We pulled over at the next one, and took a step out of time. In an open-air steel-roofed structure a dozen people were engaged in the traditional weaving of rope and rope byproducts.
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April 18th, 2012
David Stairs
“Indeed, staying silent on explicit religious topics while oozing a Jesus-y pheromone has allowed Invisible Children to tap an entire spectrum of Christian charities, philanthropists, and celebrities, from the most liberal to the most conservative.”
—Josh Kron, “Mission From God: The Upstart Christian Sect Driving Invisible Children and Changing Africa,” The Atlantic, April 10 2012

In 2010 one of my students involved with an on-campus chapter of Invisible Children asked me if I’d make an informal presentation to her group about my experiences in Africa. Since I’d made such presentations many times, and since enlightening people about Africa is always a good thing, I accepted.
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April 11th, 2012
David Stairs
“May in Ayemenem is a hot, brooding month. The days are long and humid. The river shrinks and black crows gorge on bright mangoes in still, dustgreen trees. Red bananas ripen. Jackfruits burst. Dissolute bluebottles hum vacuously in the fruity air. Then they stun themselves against clear windowpanes and die, fatly baffled in the sun.
The nights are clear but suffused with sloth and sullen expectation.”
—Arundhati Roy, The God of Small Things

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April 4th, 2012
David Stairs

Gone, but not forgotten (image courtesy of Deepa Mohan)
Although the idea of reincarnation may have arisen independently in several places, India is justly famous as the land that most fully embraced the concept. All of the major Indian religious traditions embrace some form of the idea. In Hinduism, the cycle of transmigration and rebirth, known as samsara, is governed by karma, or the actions that influence cause and effect. How one behaves in this life will have influence on the next. Whether reincarnation actually exists has been the subject of not only religious belief and philosophical speculation, but also of scientific investigation, although to date, it has never been proven.
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March 27th, 2012
David Stairs
I thought I knew trucks. After all, growing up in America, land of monster 56′ long behemoths, every boy wants to be a truck driver at some point. I vividly remember a trip along Interstate 80, the most intense truck route in the U.S., when there were so many trucks and seemingly only trucks all around me in my little 1971 BMW 2002 that I began to wonder if I was on the wrong road.

Flatbeds loaded with railway wheels
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March 19th, 2012
Sumandro
“Commons are forms of direct access to social wealth; access that is not mediated by competitive market relations.”
- Massimo De Angelis, The New Commons in Practice: Strategy, Process and Alternatives, Development, 2005, 48(2), 48-52

Men gathering cattle fodder, Yelahanka
In the interview with The Ugly Indian published previously here, the explanation of the messy situation of Bangalore’s garbage management system rests on issues of ownership, incentive design and systemic conflicts. TUI and Suketu Mehta tell us that Indians are not ‘altruistic’ when it comes to looking after spaces not ‘owned’ by them. This opinion (about the ‘dirty Indians’) has not changed much since colonial times when British administrators and travelers complained endlessly about the shabby state of Indian public spheres. V.S. Naipaul continues the anxiety as he writes: “Indians defecate everywhere. They defecate, mostly beside the railway tracks. But they also defecate on the hills; they defecate on the river banks; they defecate on the streets; they never look for cover.” In TUI’s own strategy, fighting public urination comes right along with fighting public littering.
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March 15th, 2012
Victor Margolin

Two articles of significance appeared in my morning papers recently, one in The New York Times, a lengthy obituary for the courageous publisher Barney Rosset, and the other in the Business section of the Chicago Tribune, describing how Amazon has yanked 5,000 titles that belong to the Independent Publishers Group from its e-book library. The implications of the two articles and what they mean for freedom of speech in the United States are vast.
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March 11th, 2012
David Stairs
I thought it was malaria.
I had all the symptoms: headache, chills, fatigue, fever, sweats, dry cough. My first three weeks in country I’d been living near a swamp, and the incubation period seemed right. No matter that Bangalore is not in a malarious zone, my son was alarmed. We’d lived in Africa a number of years and never had malaria, but I’ve seen many friends suffer its curse.

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March 7th, 2012
David Stairs
“Indians do not have the same civic sense as, say, Scandinavians. The boundary of the space you keep clean is marked at the end of the space you call your own.”
—from Maximum City by Suketu Mehta

The Commons are a topic of concern to contemporary Indians. Whether talking about road safety or land usage, the pressures of exploding population upon available resources stand front and foremost in discussions of continuing Indian success. Growth has its costs, not least the waste products of hordes of people.
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February 28th, 2012
David Stairs

Anantapura Road
Demarcating property lines, that most European activity, has taken over the world. When I was a child in the ’50s, the adjoining backyards of my neighborhood were open. I remember running with my friends through the neighborhood like wild horses, viewing the world from an interior point of view unimaginable from the street.
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February 22nd, 2012
Victor Margolin

Two of the major trends that have driven product design in the past twenty years are connectivity and sustainability. The desire to be in frequent if not constant communication with others has spawned a variety of devices from cell phones to almost lighter-than-air tablets and laptops. We seem to be heading toward a state of ubiquitous communication, known in the trade as ‘ubicomp,’ where it is possible to immerse oneself in a constant flow of communication, although one impulse behind the rapid-fire advancement in communication devices is from companies that want to turn them into platforms for product sales. Mobile phones are increasingly becoming platforms for thousands of digital applications or ‘apps.’ At the same time tablets such as the iPad and laptops have become razor thin and highly portable. This trend towards greater connectivity will continue as we head towards new devices that will shrink in size while they expand in services. The question is what all the tech companies will do when devices become as good as we need them to be, something that could happen in the next few years.
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February 16th, 2012
David Stairs

Cement trucks parked along Doddaballapur Road
Every environment has its signature building material. In Africa, rammed earth and thatch were, for centuries, the default until they gave way to bricks and mortar. I’ve always thought of North America as the wood construction capital of the universe, due to its wealth of forests. The trees of Michigan fueled westward expansion in the 19th century, and built many a balloon frame home.
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February 7th, 2012
David Stairs
Editor’s Note: With this posting we launch our Indian Journal category of D-A-P

India.
For over thirty years, ever since seeing Satyajit Ray’s Apu Trilogy in the 70′s, I’ve dreamed of being here. As is often the case, I made it elsewhere first, to Africa, which was a good buffer. Uganda has many of the same characteristics but a whole lot fewer people to contend with. I’ve owned a car in Africa, where the driving is risky, but nothing in the world remotely compares to the chaos that is Indian roads.
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January 30th, 2012
An Xiao Mina
They’re a colorful, familiar sight all across the Philippines. Converted from old US army vehicles and personally decorated by the drivers, jeepneys have been transformed into viable public transportation vehicles. They zip through dense traffic much more easily than a bus but they can still fit at least a dozen people. In the provinces, passengers even ride on top, and they can get on and off at any point along the driver’s route.

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January 8th, 2012
David Stairs

I’ve been writing about altruism at this blog for so long it all begins to blend together. My inaugural essay spoke about the biological/memetic basis for altruism. The year before I had published an essay at Design Issues that was a prelude to D-A-P. Finally, along comes a book that corroborates some of the things I’ve been saying.
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December 7th, 2011
Ed. note— This interview of Daniel Drennan was conducted by Nabil Chehade at American University of Beirut, where Mr. Drennan has been teaching.

Series of four posters for the Return to Palestine March, May 15, 2011. Artist: Jamaa Al-Yad
NC: Have you been involved in any projects that lean directly towards more political issues in Lebanon and or the Arab world? If so, what are some examples?
DD: A few years ago we founded an artists’ collective, Jamaa Al-Yad. Our aim is to “empower and activate voice”; we have been working so far on a variety of projects that mostly address issues concerning Palestine, though we are starting to branch out a bit. For example, we created a variety of posters to commemorate historic events (the “nakba,” the “naksa”); the Right of Return Conference held in Beirut; Israeli Apartheid Week and BDS efforts; the Right of Return March to Palestine; etc. We’ve participated in events that engage people in terms of cultural expression and their environment, and most recently we curated an exhibition of Palestinian posters in conjunction with ESCWA for the commemoration of the International Day of Solidarity With Palestine held at UNESCO Palace in Beirut. So we see ourselves in a bigger picture than just creating political artworks.
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November 6th, 2011

We’re pleased to observe that our friends at Terrestrial Design in Pretoria, South Africa recently won an award from the South African Bureau of Standards (SABS), that country’s design oversight body, for their safe Arivi paraffin stove. A 2009 INDEX Award finalist, the Arivi addresses a much needed improvement in stove efficiency and safety for people living in township areas. Congratulations to Anya, Tasos, and the whole gang at Tessertrial, and keep up the good work!
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