Electronics: Kiss

They ditched the touchscreen for a single, satisfying analog knob. Turn right for darker, left for lighter.

Frustrated, the CEO, Sarah, walked into the lab and wrote four letters on the whiteboard: kiss electronics

A single "Start" button. No "Syncing" or "Cloud Uploading" required. They ditched the touchscreen for a single, satisfying

Once there was a small, high-tech startup called , known for creating the most advanced—and most confusing—gadgets on the market. Their latest project was a "Smart Toaster" that required a 50-page manual, a stable Wi-Fi connection, and a firmware update just to brown a slice of sourdough. No "Syncing" or "Cloud Uploading" required

Instead of an LCD screen displaying a progress bar, they made the toaster beep once when it was done.

"Keep It Simple, Stupid," she said, tapping the board. "Leo, people don't want a computer that toasts. They want toast."

The lead engineer, Leo, was a fan of complexity. He loved sensors, sub-menus, and touchscreens. But a week before launch, the prototype crashed because it couldn't decide if the bread was "Wheat" or "Multigrain."