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T3 Pocket Radio
Rams's 1958 radio for Braun — a white rectangle with a speaker grille, a tuning dial, and a volume control — the canonical demonstration that <em>less, but better</em> is an ethics rather than a style.
The T3 was one of Rams's earliest fully articulated designs at Braun, produced in 1958 and celebrated ever since as the founding artifact of modern product minimalism. Its form was revolutionary not because it was spare but because its sparseness was earned — every element that remained served the function of listening, and every element that had been removed was demonstrably unnecessary. The T3 did not imitate furniture, as contemporary radios did with their wooden cabinets and Baroque ornament. It declared itself as a radio, honestly and without pretension. Jony Ive has publicly credited the T3 as the direct inspiration for the first iPod, making it one of the most consequential product designs of the twentieth century.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The T3 was designed in response to a specific problem Rams had observed: the radio of the 1950s was dishonest. It pretended to be furniture. Its wooden cabinet, ornamental dials, and chrome trim were designed to disguise
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