This Conversation with Google's head of Industrial Design Reminds me of the Missed Potential of Project Ara

This Conversation with Google’s head of Industrial Design Reminds me of the Missed Potential of Project Ara

The Chat with Google’s Design Guru: A Nostalgic Trip Down Project Ara Lane

Project Ara. Have you ever wondered about the tech products that didn’t quite make it? Those ambitious projects filled with promise that somehow ended up on the cutting room floor? Well, Project Ara is the poster child for such intrigue, and a recent chat I had with Google’s head of industrial design really stirred the pot on what could have been.

What Was Project Ara Again?

Ah, Project Ara. Remember that? It was Google’s attempt at creating a modular smartphone where you could swap out components like camera, battery, or even the display as you wish. Imagine upgrading your phone’s camera without buying a new device or replacing a cracked screen in few simple steps. Sounds like a dream, right?

The idea was rooted in sustainability and individual customization, potentially changing our buy-and-throw-away culture. Yet despite its potential, Project Ara didn’t see the light of day, and the project was shelved back in 2016. But why?

A Chat With a Design Whiz

Fast forward to my coffee meeting with Google’s head of industrial design – let’s call him Bob. As we sipped our egregiously overpriced lattes, Bob shared that creating a universally modular device posed massive challenges. Compatibility, performance, aesthetics – each component had to play nice with one another, and as it turns out, that’s about as easy as teaching a cat to fetch.

Bob explained, Imagine trying to design not just one phone, but infinite phones, because every user could potentially configure their device uniquely. The technology, simple in concept, was complex in execution. Every module not only had to work flawlessly on its own but also integrate perfectly with other components, no matter the combination or the wear and tear of daily life.

Read Check Out Google’s AR Animals Before They Disappear Forever

The Missteps and Missed Opportunities

But it wasn’t just technical hurdles. Marketing, consumer education, and scale played huge roles. How do you convince people to invest in a potentially more expensive, albeit versatile, device? Even in our chat, Bob seemed to echo this sentiment, noting, The market wasn’t quite ready to assemble their phones like LEGO bricks, even if we technologically could make it happen.

Retail aside, Project Ara had the potential to shake up our entire relationship with technology. In today’s world of yearly – sometimes half-yearly – phone releases, a modular approach could have ushered in an era of sustainable tech. Imagine keeping your device for years, upgrading it piece by piece, reducing electronic waste, and easing the constant drain on earth’s resources.

Ara’s Legacy in Today’s Tech

While it didn’t hit production lines, Project Ara’s DNA is palpable. Its spirit lives on in the fairphone and even the framework laptop, albeit less modular than Ara proposed. These devices embrace repairability and sustainability, echoing Ara’s foundational vision. While our chat moved on to other topics, like the upcoming trends in consumer electronics, part of me still mourns what Ara could have been – an emblem of what happens when innovation runs just a little too wild for its time.

So, let’s pose a question, shall we? Are we as consumers ready to rethink how we use and dispose of technology? Maybe, just maybe, it’s time to consider what we’re missing each time we trade the old for the new without a second thought. What say you?

 

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