Who says packaging isn’t important? Try selling that clip for any money! Or, if you’re inspired enough, you can probably buy this clip, and start exchanging it for a house…
Who says packaging isn’t important? Try selling that clip for any money! Or, if you’re inspired enough, you can probably buy this clip, and start exchanging it for a house…
This is the reason I love molded felt. Carry your slain, beheaded enemy around! Let the people at Station Control go panicking over what to do with you! The designer, Yael Mer, says that the design was inspired by “biblical story about Judith and Holofernes and its visual representation from the Renaissance”. Well, whatever! Guaranteed to draw a more than a few stares.
(Mer is from Royal College of Art – more quirky products on her page – like a skirt that inflates into a canoe!)
This one made me chuckle – inside this big, red, and may I suggest – gentle doll with a heart – you can actually hear it beating! One of those things that relights my imagination a little – (which I’d probably then quickly bury/forget as I scuffle to the more mundane everyday tasks).
The computer has evolved and improved a tremendously long way since the green-and-black monochrome era, but your attention span and concentration has not. At least that’s the premise of this interesting software called “WriteRoom” by Hog Bay Software.
For Mac users who enjoy the simplicity of a typewriter, but live in the digital world. WriteRoom is a full-screen, distraction-free writing environment. Unlike the cluttered word processors you’re used to, WriteRoom is just about you and your text. Requires Mac OS X 10.4 or later.
They have basically simplified the interface of the word processor to basically nothing except the text – so you don’t get distracted by your email, instant messaging or what have you. You can even take out parts of text from a Word document, and edit them in WriteRoom instead. When you’re done, you can close it and the program automatically ports it back to the original file.
Ironically, it requires MacOS 10.4 or later to run. But, for all you Dan Brown and Rowling wannabes, maybe shelling $24.95 for what is essentially simply a full-screen notepad is a worthy investment: after all, in the case that you DO sit down AND are able to concentrate because of this little software, AND if your writing is so great, AND if there’s a publisher who thinks the same, AND if your books sell – you may just get your investment returned many times over.
You know what it’s like, shopping for a power strip. A whole bunch of them would lie around, and the decision process goes something like this: decide on the number of ports, and choose the cheapest one that doesn’t look like it’d explode immediately on use. So it’s pretty refreshing to see this Monster “Power to Go” being the focus product re-designing for mobility – it is compact enough to fit in a typical laptop bag. The somewhat over-the-top illustration of product benefit:
If there is one thing more frustrating than checking into a hotel after a long day, searching for AC outlets and then finding just one lone socket at the base of a lamp, it’s the anxiety of not knowing if this will happen tonight! Now with Outlets To Go you will always have enough outlets–consistently, confidently, and very elegantly.
One of the first things to notice is the absence of the clumsy coils of cable: a short, and more importantly, flat cable going around the body, with its flat-profiled plug fitting into one of the ports. One thing that may not be apparent: this power strip actually has SIX outlets – there are three on each sides. I’m naturally led to wonder about its thickness – but (cleverly?) I haven’t come across a side profile of this on its website.
Another issue raises my eyebrow – from its own product feature list: “Outlets to Go will provide safe charging for up to four devices, and prevents overloads with its resettable circuit breaker”. So, why do they have six outlets when you can only safely use four?
This is for those of you who’re into graphics and sneakers – and are in Singapore! Runner’s World is hosting a design competition for the Tiger –
DETAILS
This reminded me of a time when I was in Milan – there was a similar competition by Havaianas – to turn their trademark slippers into works of art. A group of us each took the blank white slippers, while concocting the things we can do to them. In the end, only one of us submitted though – procrastination got the better of us. Which is probably why Rule 3 exists.
A statistically rough ( one sigma) estimate might be 75-100 million servers @ ~350-550 watts each.. Call it Forty Billion Watts or ~ 40 GW. Since silicon logic runs at three volts or so, and an Ampere is some ten to the eighteenth electrons a second, if the average chip runs at a Gigahertz , straightforward calculation reveals that some 50 grams of electrons in motion make up the Internet.
That, and many other interesting calculations, are explored in this quirky, if cynically eloquent written article by Russell Seitz. Like, the average human brains (rated at 20W) has about 6W of computing power at its disposal. Or that on average, a US home still needs four miles of copper wire to connect to the information grid. And that, to power those 50 grams of electrons that powers the Internet, we need 50 million horsepower.
An amusing take on the Internet – it is quite amazing to think that this substance-less (save two ounces) medium create real companies, wealth and growth to nations. While previously, you may have to own tonnes of ores, or a large energy-guzzling mining factory, or vast lands and plantations to create wealth. In this age, all you might need is just 2 horsepower and maybe 10 nano-grams of electrons.
On My Desk has a great collection of table-tops and work studio of designers, artist or creative professionals – some of them look really cool and inspiring – it’s almost like the desk itself is a reason to be a creative professional. And I turn to look at my drab, white, boring, ugly desk… and SIGH.
You may remember a game called the Prince of Persia – it was a pioneer in the style of gaming – where the main character (a prince from Persia, of course!) has to use a series of incredibly acrobatic maneuvers to get around obstacles, dodge traps, and fight enemies to get to his princess.
Well, here’s a clip of Makoto Nagano, a contestant in a Japanese show aptly called Ninja Warrior, or Sasuke in Japanese. A fisherman, Nagano is only the second man to have cleared all 4 stages of this insane obstacle course. R-E-S-P-E-C-T!
We’ve seen these optical illusions a lot – they’re usually drawn because that’s what they are – just illusions in the 2d world, making you think that an impossible structure was created in a 3D space. Now, what about this one? And what if I say there was no Photoshop involved? How can it be done?