Hello Team Mosaico! We are happy to present to you the three design ideas we have developed as a solution to your problem.
Let us know what you think.
We hope to hear from you soon 🥰
3 Design Proposals – Team Sailor Moon x Team Mosaico
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Hi there 🙂 We took a look through the ideas you posted on our blog, and we have some feedback! Some of your suggestions seemed interesting, but we feel like they don’t really tackle the problem. When writing the briefing, our main focus was ensuring the elderly still have their autonomy, and in our perception the options you developed don’t quite reach that goal. They mostly revolved around playing pre-defined songs/playlists, which takes away the freedom and autonomy of choosing what they’re gonna listen to. We’re not against the solution requiring outside help or something like that, but we’d like to keep it to a minimum and do it in a way that ensures the elderly can listen to what they want and when they want.
Also, we’d like you to take into consideration the socioeconomical factor. In Brazil, at least, most elderly people don’t have that much honestly, as they rely on social security payments. So, as interesting as the jukebox idea is, we feel like buying the device and the different music cards it requires wouldn’t be viable.
So, taking that into account, feel free to think of other options or rethink the ones you have from a new perspective. If you choose to rethink your current ones, we feel like the Smart Radio is the one with the most potential!
Best regards,
Mosaico team 😀
Hi guys!
I’m Zeynep Duru from Team 11 (De’significant); I was looking at other groups’ designs too and I really loved how your ideas make music feel warm, simple, and enjoyable again for elderly users.
Hi there! I’m Giulia from team 19. I think Emotional Touch is a really thoughtful concept — simplifying digital communication down to four big buttons is a great way to reduce anxiety and make emotional connection immediate and intuitive for older users. The idea of caregivers customizing the remote through a simple app to send voice messages or set up video calls feels very meaningful, because it keeps tech powerful but not overwhelming. It’s a design that respects both usability and emotional closeness in a gentle, human-centered way. For more context on designing intuitive, big-button interfaces for seniors, this study is really helpful: larger button sizes and clear icons significantly improve usability. For further information: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8872557/