Nice to see a reaction like thislinkLego executives recently discovered that adult fans of the iconic plastic bricks had hacked one of the company's new development tools for digital designers, they did a surprising thing: They cheered.
Unlike executives at so many corporations, who would be loathe to let their customers anywhere near the inner workings of their software tools, the Lego honchos saw an opportunity to lean on the collective thinking of an Internet community to improve their own product while bolstering relations with committed customers.
All it took was being open-minded enough to see that their biggest fans weren't trying to rip them off; they were trying to improve Lego's products in a way that, just maybe, the company's own designers hadn't thought of.
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"I was a little concerned at the beginning because I know there are companies that don't respond favorably to this kind of thing," said Dan Malec, a software engineer from Stow, Mass. Malec is an active member of the adult Lego community, a group of passionate Lego aficionados who build models far more elaborate and sophisticated than the kids' versions most people are used to seeing.
To one toy-industry observer, Lego's positive reaction to the hack is more than unusual.
"I can't think of another instance in toys where it's been basically 'Do whatever you want,'" said Anita Frazier, an entertainment industry analyst at The NPD Group. "If it doesn't ultimately hurt the intellectual property, and (the users) aren't modifying the trademark or the core property at all, (Lego is) looking at it as it doesn't hurt."
Last month, Lego launched Lego Factory, a service through which users can create their own unique and customized Lego models--a cat, the Statue of Liberty, a tree or whatever else users choose.
Once the designs are created and uploaded through Lego Factory, the company manufactures the bricks necessary for the model and ships them to users so they can assemble their models. Customers can also buy the bricks necessary to build from other people's designs, which are posted on the site.
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At its core, Lego Factory is powered by Lego Digital Designer, a free, downloadable, 3D modeling program that lets users choose from digital collections of bricks to compose their own unique models. The software lets users build whatever they can imagine, so long as they have the 3D modeling skills to design their creation.
But initially, Lego Factory didn't exactly curl the toes of some of Lego's more hard-core and tech-savvy fans.
The problem, according to several members of the Lego modeling community, is that the digital collections--or palettes, as they're called--of bricks users had to choose from in Lego Digital Designer often contained far more pieces than buyers really needed. At the same time, they were missing a few others that were integral to the creations. Thus, users would frequently and wastefully have to buy several palettes in order to gather all the specific bricks they needed. And that, they say, made designing and buying models too costly.
"Several hundred bricks are associated with" certain palettes, said Malec. "If you want just to use only two of those bricks, you're still going to have to (buy all of them), and you don't know how many of those extra bricks are coming."
So not only could it be inefficient, it could be downright untidy.
However, the adult Lego community knew that each palette--when delivered--was actually made up of several physical bags of bricks. With that in mind, Malec and a few other Lego users wondered if they could find a way to cut down on the size of the palettes they could choose from. The idea, he said, was that by reducing the number of bricks in a palette, builders would be able to purchase smaller numbers and thus cut their overall costs.
According to Larry Pieniazek, an IBM software architect and an avid Lego user, Malec and others realized that by coordinating their efforts, community members could keep track of the actual bags of bricks Lego provides in its stock sets--and the specific pieces contained in each bag. With that, they could compile a database that lists which bags must be purchased in order to collect specific bricks.
Malec explained that he and a few others were able to modify the actual digital files that list the palettes users would see in Lego Digital Designer so that they were broken down
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Genius is always allowed some leeway, once the hammer has been pried from its hands and the blood has been cleaned up.
To improve is to change; to be perfect is to change often.
Genius is always allowed some leeway, once the hammer has been pried from its hands and the blood has been cleaned up.
To improve is to change; to be perfect is to change often.
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