Urban Sprinting – Balls of Steel


This guy gets his thrill by outrunning security guards – he would take an item from a shop, makes sure that it gets noticed, and then it’s all.. RUN!! to shake off the often-not-as-fast guards. It reminds me of games like Need for Speed: Most Wanted. In that game, you shake off legions of police car chase – though the more police on your tail, the higher your street cred. This guy seems to be going for some similar action too.

And of course, there are also times where he’d get busted (check out 2:00)

Yunessun Spa

yunnesun-spa-resort

From the top:

Coffee Spa
A very unique spa where you can only experience at Yunessun! The spa contains real coffee made with hot spring water. It has been said that coffee is an effective treatment from the recovery of fatigue, and also adds beauty to the skin. The aroma of the coffee will also perk up your senses.

Green Tea Spa
A unique spa containing real green. The huge tea pot is 2m tall and is very remarkable. The tea is from the foot of the Tanzawa and Hakone mountains, known for a suitable climate for growing tea plants. The green tea grown in this area is rich in aroma and contains Catechin, a powerful anti-oxidant fighting tumors as well as enhancing the immune system. Also, good for the skin.

Wine Spa
A unique spa containing real red wine. The huge wine bottle is 3.6m tall and is very remarkable. Bathing in wine is a rejuvenation treatment for the body, and it has been said that the Queen of Egypt, Cleopatra loved to bath in wine. There are regular performances of pouring real wine into the spa a few times a day.

Coffee, tea, or me? Or perhaps sake? The Yunessun Spa Resort provides all sort of liquid goodness for you to dip in – and you thought your Dead Sea soak was exquisite. This resort offers all sorts of normal water to relax in too – Turkish baths, Roman baths, sauna, you name it and they have it. One more of those “it could only be in Japan”.

Advertising Shock Tactics

pleasedontspeed

where-is-your-child

In the advertising world, the key issue is always to create impressions. Ad campaigns are measured based on impressions – can the user recall it (especially after being exposed to hundreds of advertisements a day), what are their impressions of it (favorable?), etc. And so marketers and advertisers had to stretch their imaginations to create ads that last, that stick. Sometimes it involves shock tactics, like the two above.

Personally I think those have gone too far. While the cause is worthy, and the technical execution great, it just left distaste in my mind. For me, if you want to give people a surprise (especially when you’re on their property – like on their cars), it’d better be a pleasant one. Some time back in Singapore, some creative advertising agencies placed stickers that look like sratches on car doors too – advertising for a car grooming company – as some of the comments reflected: advertising should be creative, but it must also go down well with the potential client.

What do you think?

Lasse Gjertsen – Piano Drum Amateur


Edison said, genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration. Lasse Gjertsen from Norway, decided that he’d like to (at least seem to be able to) play the piano and the drums. The normal person’s way to do it through Edison’s motto would be: to learn the instruments and practice like there’s no tomorrow. Lasse decided that he’d pay his perspiration dues in another way – massively timeline-editing clips of him playing the instruments. No matter how music-dumb you are, you can definitely hit just one note.  And if you edit the clips of various notes together, voila, you get music!

Global Most Valuable Brands

brand-values

Here is the world’s most valuable brands for 2006 according to a study done by BusinessWeek. I have sorted and presented them according to the relative magnitude of their brand value – the area of each circle represents the worth of the brand within.

Once put on a chart like this, it is very easy to notice the relative (and rapidly diminishing) worth of brands down the list. Some of the brands that I grew up with, or are very familiar with, are hardly visible when compared to behemoths like Coca-Cola and Microsoft.

While brands are intangible, their worth are far from trivial. Little circles may not show them clearly, but the worth of the top ten brands (almost $400 billion) would eclipse the Gross Domestic Product (PPP) of the world’s 80 poorest countries ($350billion). Or perhaps another way to illustrate it – if we place the country’s GDP within the brand-chart, Kuwait’s entire economy would sit just about where GE is now; meanwhile, Iceland would be as difficult to spot as UPS; and Brunei can snuggle comfortably with MTV (bottom left corner, smallest circle).

And I thought they were just some silly marques.

Here is the list for 2012.

Greg Kennedy – Juggling in a Cone


Juggling – well someone throws stuff up the air, catches them again, and again, and again. Most of the time it’s the same old same old: the variations are usually either in the props used (clubs, balls, knifes, etc.), as the spectators become more awed as the number of props increase. But there’s little surprise. So how do you break out of this mold?

The answer by Greg Kennedy was simple – make a mold and put yourself in it! He ‘juggles’ inside an transparent, inverted cone in the video above. In other routines, he also juggles with other geometrical shapes – perhaps inspired by his background as a professional engineer. He’d really need to spice up his performance with some cool music though. Right now, it’s just monotonous, hypnotic sound from the rolling of the balls that sounds more like someone blowing directly into the microphone.

Blue Orb Texter

blueorb-texter

With game control and typing right under your thumbs at all times, the Texter™ is for anyone who needs to enter text while playing their videogames or simply wants to chat online. It’s for online gamers who need to message with their buddies and enemies. It’s great for Xbox Live Chat. It’s perfect for entering cheat codes. Use the Texter™ anywhere you would normally use a USB keyboard or an on-screen keyboard.

If your life revolves around gaming consoles like the PlayStation and Xbox, and you use them for typing games (?!), you can consider getting this plug-in: Blueorb Texter.

Its mannerism is the SMS equivalent for gaming controllers. Alphabets and numbers are assigned colors, based on sectors of the circle around the joysticks. In the example above, to scream “WOOT” at others in Xbox online, you’d have to execute the super combo: L-Up R-Right, L-Left R-down, L-Left R-down, L-Right R-RightDiagonal.

While it may sound too complicated to be useful, there may just be the day where someone would set a world record twirling their joysticks spelling “The razor-toothed piranhas of the genera Serrasalmus and Pygocentrus are the most ferocious freshwater fish in the world. In reality they seldom attack a human.” (official text of World Speediest SMS) in 40 seconds flat.

Or less.

OrbiTouch now has the Keyless Keyboard and Mouse

Art Hotel Berlin

ArtHotelBerlin

What is this? You might guess that it’s perhaps an illustration from a children’s book. Well as fake as it looks, it’s a real picture of a real hotel room – the only reason it’s so comical looking is: an artist had hand-drawn thin black lines around the edges of walls, cupboards, corners etc, so it looks really fake.

This is just one room out of the many interestingly decorated rooms in Art Hotel Berlin. They invited a different artist for each of their rooms, resulting in about 50 unique interior. This one shown above is one of the better ones in my opinion: there are many others which still couldn’t shake off the look of a typical hotel room – they were just adorned by some installation or display art pieces.

Coroflot Salary Survey

coroflot-salary-survey

Are you a god in design, and command (salary) like a king? Check out Coroflot.

Pictured above is the average pay of designers from each country adjusted for purchasing power parity using the Big Mac Index. Meaning, if you’re a designer in Hong Kong, you could really purchase a lot of twoallbeefpattiesspecialsaucelettucecheesepicklesonionsonasesameseedbun with your monthly dough. If you’re in Spain, maybe tapas would be a better choice…

A di Alessi – Fall Collection

pot-and-pan-morisson-alessi

Alessi, one of the icons in product design, may remind you simply of extremely over-priced lemon squeezers. This year, however, they’ve decided to re-categorize their products into three branches – the Alessi main collection , ‘A di Alessi’ (Italian for from Alessi), which are designs that are priced at a lower price bracket , and ‘Officina Alessi’ which houses the more experimental, innovative and limited edition pieces.

Alessi’s decision to launch the ‘democratic, accessible products’ under the ‘A di Alessi’ marque spurred me into thinking – why? Alessi had enjoyed the status of being one of the most prominent “designer products” especially to the non-designers, and they have been able to capitalize on that for many years, leading to a perception where designer products are generally fun, whimsical, sometimes useless, etc.

That status, however, is being eroded. With introduction of players like Target and IKEA, mass-produced and very cheap products have shown their potential to be well-designed (or at least look good). In that way, Alessi was invaded on its home turf. The average person would likely not be able to distinguish plastic products from IKEA and Alessi – except that Alessi probably priced it 10 times higher. And that’s where Alessi’s relevance to the mass consumers may diminish and eventually erode its own brand base.

The pot above is by Jasper Morrison, heading off this year’s inaugural launch of A di Alessi. However, I have come to associate these design styles with brands like IKEA more than Alessi. While Alessi may gain some market share in the cheaper, mass-design products, I think it may eventually fare worse in terms of loss brand equity.

Really, what does Alessi still mean to you?