At 90, She’s Designing Tech For Aging Boomers

Article by Laura Sydell, Digital Culture Correspondent for NPR , all tech considered. For the full article, click over to NPR.

 

 

 

Barbara Beskind, 90, is a designer at IDEO who works with engineers on products that improve the quality of life for older people. Nicolas Zurcher/Courtesy of IDEO

In Silicon Valley’s youth-obsessed culture, 40-year-olds get plastic surgery to fit in. But IDEO, the firm that famously developed the first mouse for Apple, has a 90-year-old designer on staff.

Barbara Beskind says her age is an advantage.

“Everybody who ages is going to be their own problem-solver,” she says. And designers are problem-solvers. Beskind speaks while sitting on a couch at the open office space of IDEO in San Francisco. She commutes to the office once a week from a community for older adults where falling is a problem.

“People where I live fall a lot,” she says, adding, “For a friend of mine, I tried to design air bags of graded sizes that would be activated at a lurch of 15 degrees.” She is stumped on how to find the right power source for her air bags.

 

Beskind says she started designing when she was 8 years old — toys, of course.

“Well, in the Depression, if you can’t buy toys, you make ’em, ” she says. Beskind’s first design was for a hobbyhorse. “I was determined I was going to have one, and so I made it with old tires. I learned a lot about gravity, ’cause I fell off so many times.”

When it was time for college, Beskind told her counselor she wanted to be an inventor. That required an engineering degree. In those days, women couldn’t get into those departments. So she studied home economics and later enlisted in the Army and became an occupational therapist.

After 44 years, she retired as a major and then went into private practice. From those years, she has six patents on inflatable devices that help children with balance issues.

Beskind tried to retire again. Two years ago she was watching 60 Minutes and saw David Kelley, the founder of IDEO, talking about how important it was to have a diverse staff on a design team. He emphasized how important it was to bring different perspectives to a project.

Beskind says the interview made her think she wanted to work at IDEO. “Oh, that sounds like that’s for me,” she remembers thinking. “And besides that, I was living in Silicon Valley. What could be better?”

Beskind wrote to the firm and she heard back within days. It turns out that interest in designing products for older adults is growing as baby boomers age.

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Read more about how Beskind is influencing designs to consider older generations. Click here for the full article on NPR’s all tech considered.

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