Blow Table Lamp by Studio Italia Design

blow-lamp

I came across this Blow Table Lamp from Studio Italia Design, and was immediately mesmerized by its powerful imagery – like a forlorn lamp trapped within a glass house.

The more interesting part is the control for the direction of the lamp – a magnet is outside the clear globe. Move it around the globe, and the lamp inside would turn and follow accordingly, giving rise to an engaging and innovative experience while maneuvering the lamp. I can even almost imagine the lamp becoming “happier” if you moved the magnet further down the globe, causing it to “look up” – heh, it’s funny that a lamp can elicit so much (irrelevant?) imagination from me.

Technical details: Low voltage lamp with metal ware finish in chrome and diffuser in brushed aluminum; outer clear crystal globe; H41cm, maximum diameter 24cm. The painful price: $1363

Find it here!

What should I get?

whatshouldiget

I came across a rather interesting site called “What Should I Get?“ (note site is now no longer available). What it basically does is – give you a single recommendation in a particular product category. For example, you’re in the market looking for a pair of earphones. But just which one? This site simply states that the one to get is the Sony MDR-EX51LP (with a picture accompanying that recommendation).

In their own words,

We are not a shopping search engine. They return too many results to sift through and deal with. We are not a product comparison page. They take too long to navigate through and interpreting the results is too difficult.

We are not a review site. There are tons of them out there. They take a really long time to sift through and read. Reviews are often outdated and go into much more detail than you care about. Sometimes the product comparison charts are so big they don’t fit on the screen!

We do one thing and we do it well. We just tell you what to get.

Products are really a dime a dozen nowadays. Too many of them, in fact. If you want to buy a cellphone, there’s at least 50 choices from a single manufacturer alone. As a industrial designer who dabbles with consumer products day in and out, I’m already finding it difficult to keep up with the developments of new technologies, models, etc. Like they say, review site sometimes give too much, and makes it even harder to make a decision.

In a way, this site reminds me of Google. When every review site out there aims to feature more comprehensive reviews, indexing more products, this site realizes that when people surf review sites, they are likely to want to make a purchase. The site attempts to maintain a simple path, cut through the cheese and bring them straight to the purchase (they link to the Amazon purchase site directly from their recommendation – and earn clickthrough commission – although they are not endorsed by any manufacturers/brands).

I think a site like this has great potential. While Yahoo! overwhelemed users with features and information, Google undercut Yahoo! by removing all the clutter and leading the user straight to the one thing it does best – search.

I am, however, rather peeved with the way it tries to manipulate users into clicking the Google Adsense ads, which masquerades as content proper. Sure, a site needs bandwidth, and those cost money. Deceiving the users into clicking ads may give some easy income, but it definitely does not project the honest, sincere and neutral image that this site should have.

BC Hydro Bicycle-powered Billboard

This is a rather unusual concept that aims to pedal home the point – LED lights use a lot less energy than conventional light sources. For 120 hours, the ad agency had volunteers pedaling around the clock on the bicycle to keep the 1500  LED lights glowing.

A Christmas campaign by BC Hydro – which interestingly, is an power/utility company. Maybe I’d write more on the apparent hypocrisy of companies who advocate the opposite of their products next time (e.g. Big Tobacco funding Quit-Smoking centers) etc.

 

Interesting Christmas Card

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Every year, the premature baby unit at Edith Cavell hospital sends cards to the other departments as well as to ex-patients. This year, they sent this card in mid-October. When you open it you see the message:

It’s a little premature, but Happy Christmas.

If I were them, I’d probably use the word “early” instead of premature. Premature has just too many un-Christmas like connotations (what were you thinking?).

 

Flybook VM

flybook_vm

This is quite an interesting innovation for a laptop – having an extendable screen that helps lift the screen to a more proper viewing and reading height. It’s also considerably more expensive (USD2878+) than the typical laptops – I guess the hinge and mechanism is worth paying for if you’re constantly getting neck strains from peering at your typical laptop screens.

What does intrigue me is the size of this thing. From the pictures, I was thinking that this laptop might be a 15 or 17 inch model – and this feature would make it ideal for a portable, flexible workstation – having the portability of the laptop while incorporating the desktop power. A closer look at the specs reveals that it is only a 12.1″ screen – a small portable that doesn’t measure up as a proper desktop replacement (not to mention it’s either measly specs, like the 30GB hard disk drive).

If you’re still interested it does not appear to be available any longer!

Error Messages

overstock-404-error

When something screws up, a good reaction or even, a dash of good humor often helps to salvage the situation. This was the 404 error for Overstock.com. While having bad server is not a goal to aim for, having a good reaction in such contingencies would definitely alleviate and even, leave a good impression on the visitor.

 

Stokke Xplory Strollers

050641-04 Xplory.indd

We all loathe having to request for a baby seat at the restaurant, wring your precious tot out from his stroller, pacifying his scream as you attempt to fold/stow your stroller. Well, I think Stokke had came up with a well-thought solution encapsulating most of these needs – from lying down, to sitting down (facing either front or back), to being a high seat at the table – by having a central spine structure that can house the various components – the adjustable baby seat, wheels, handles etc.

Stokke Xplory

Before the Music Dies


Following hot on the heels of the Dove commercial showing the before-and-after of a model (through make-up, Photoshop touch ups, etc), some people have exposed some of the techniques used to create and market a pop star.

You don’t need musical talents to pen songs – someone can take care of that. Can’t sing, or tone deaf? Sound engineers will fix that. Just someone (probably armed with market research on what the market wants, and loads of cash) who’s willing to make you a star, and you are on your way. Packaged, artificial and hollow.