Modern tech is usually designed in a way that’s distracting at best and infuriating at worst.
But it doesn’t have to be.
The Calm Tech Institute, a consumer advocacy group and research firm, is championing a new industry standard that aims to do away with those unwanted aspects of current tech design in favor of products that “enhance human life without causing stress or distraction.”
CTI is offering a certification program for mindfully designed products, which it calls “calm tech”: basically, tech that blends discreetly into our life, rather than pulling us out of it.
For example: With a bike, you learn to ride it once and never again. But with a lot of software and physical objects, “you have to relearn it. It gets changed… and you can feel your mind wanting the button to be in a certain place. And it’s not,” founder Amber Case told Ars Technica.
This creates a frustrating experience that CTI says detracts from a tool’s purpose and our attention — AKA not “calm.”
Since launching last year, it’s already certified six products, including the Mui Board Gen 2, a wooden smart home hub, and the Daylight Computer, a blue-light-free laptop.
CTI is currently working with neuroscientists to further its research and with companies to get even more gadgets certified, so that maybe — instead of blue lights, loud beeping, and complicated interfaces — we can live in a world of warm lights, soothing sounds, and intuitive button placement.
Until then, we’ll be patiently waiting for a “calm” microwave that doesn’t make retrieving food sound like an emergency — our last nerve would greatly appreciate that.