{"id":322,"date":"2011-11-13T23:03:53","date_gmt":"2011-11-13T23:03:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/notechmagazine.com\/2011\/11\/when-low-tech-goes-ikea.html"},"modified":"2015-10-14T00:15:48","modified_gmt":"2015-10-13T22:15:48","slug":"when-low-tech-goes-ikea","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.notechmagazine.com\/2011\/11\/when-low-tech-goes-ikea.html","title":{"rendered":"When Low-Tech Goes IKEA"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"when<\/a><\/p>\n

What happens when two industrial design students from Sweden end up in Kenya creating a pedal powered machine for small-scale farmers who are often illiterate and speak more than 60 languages? You get a do-it-yourself design that seems to have come out of the IKEA factories – pictoral manuals included.<\/p>\n

“Made in Kenya”, the bachelor project of Niklas Kull and Gabriella Rubin, is a textbook example of low-tech made accessible to everybody, regardless of their native tongue and language skills.<\/p>\n

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