Skeuomorphic Design
#design #abstraction note/develop🍃
A technology is skeuomorphic when it borrows from what came before it. Originally, a concept from design to describe art that was intentional unnecessary holdovers. This concept took over in technology around the 1980s. The first big proponent was Steve Jobs. The idea was computers would be more intuitive if they looked familiar to users. It made it easier for people to adapt to the interactions.
Today, it's used to describe technology that mimics existing activities or experiences, copying what exists adds functionality.
In the classic film The Apartment, Jack Lemmon’s character, CC Baxter, works in a sea of desks, each equipped with a telephone, rotary typewriter, and a large mechanical calculator. Benedict Evans compares this scene to a spreadsheet, with each person functioning as a cell, the floor as a worksheet, and the building as an Excel file. The links between cells are made through typewriters and an internal mail system, taking days to refresh. However, what ultimately replaced these machines was not a better competitor, but a completely different approach — the computer. The business need remained the same, but the mechanisms changed entirely. Old tools were obsolete. The shift went largely unnoticed, but it revolutionized how work was done.