According to Lenovo, the torch design took ten months and was the product of more than 30 engineers and design specialists. The end result, called "The Cloud of Promise," incorporates elements of both modern design and traditional Chinese culture. It's modeled off the design of a scroll--remember, China is the birthplace of paper as we know it--and is decorated with red lacquer and cloud motifs derived from Chinese art traditions. Lenovo's representatives stressed that like its PCs, the Olympic torch has been designed with both aesthetics and functionality in mind. The streamlined, 28-inch-long torch is a light load, weighing only 2.2 pounds. The company is touting it as the most technologically-advanced Olympic torch yet.
Keeping in tradition with the Olympic Games since 1936, the torch will be lit in Olympia, Greece. The 2008 version will then travel through 20 countries beginning in March, followed by Taiwan, Macao, and Hong Kong before reaching China.
Lenovo has planned to incorporate its Olympic sponsorship and torch design connections into its marketing and publicity campaigns, and hinted at the press conference that it's possible that the "Cloud of Promise" design may be used in a PC design sometime in the near future.
Despite the fact that it was designed by a high-tech company, the torch will still be lit by plain old fire. A question at the press conference inquired, "Are there any semiconductors inside?" and was met with some good-natured laughter.
PC manufacturer Lenovo was asked to design the 2008 Olympic Torch and this is what they came up with. It's too bad they didn't try anything a little more creative. One of these days when they ask me to design the Olympic Torch I'm going to hand them a live pig on a stick and go: "Masterpiece!"
SourceHigh-tech:LEGO Millenium Falcon: Revenge of the brick
Health:VideoGame Therapy for Kids with ADHD
Video: Strenger song Leonard Cohen
No comments:
Post a Comment