Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 Official Video
Posted in: UncategorizedThe new Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 went on sale in the US yesterday, which features a quad core 1..(Read…)
The new Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 went on sale in the US yesterday, which features a quad core 1..(Read…)
Dancer: Marquese Scott SONG: Need your heart by adventure club (protohype remix) [ Youtube ]..(Read…)
Here are four simple ways to use a cordless drill while cooking. As mixer, a pepper grinder, a chees..(Read…)
L.A.-based industrial designer Igor Chak, who has one of the more fascinating bios I’ve read in a while, has a passion for vintage videogames. You probably remember 16bitghost’s custom furniture videogame shrines, but Chak went in a different direction, allowing the videogames to become the furniture themselves.
Chak’s leather-clad Space-Invader-inspired sofa, which he describes as “an old friend that kept trying to take over Earth but retired and became a couch,” is hand-built in L.A. and ships within two to four weeks of being ordered.
His Donkey Kong shelving might not be sturdy enough to hold an angry ape and rolling barrels of flaming pitch, but it’ll handle whatever you’ve got in your apartment.
The wall is made out of individual sections; each section is made out of durable but light carbon fiber, anodized aluminum pixels that are joined with strong stainless steel rods and toughened glass tops. The special mounts themselves are made out of steel and can support up to 60 lbs.
Check out more of Chak’s work here.
Hot Sauce Water Bottle looks Like Sriracha Sauce Bottle, designed by Gage + DeSoto…(Read…)
Make a myriad of your own musical instruments
Resembling more of a genius child’s wind-up toy than a musical instrument, Travis Feldman’s open source Molecule Synth combines rearrangeable hexagonal pieces to create an unconventional version of the traditional keyboard synthesizer. Each modular node represents an element of the synth—a speaker and amp, a sound generator and a…
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Classic styling in hybrid seaside apparel
High-end beach basics are the provenance of Quit Mad Stop, a menswear label delivering handsewn apparel out of NYC. Their Spring/Summer 2013 line expands the label beyond trunks, windbreakers and totes, bringing in hybrid short-trunks and button-down polos to face variable beachside elements. The tailored fit and fine fabrics…
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As any contemporary lifehacking, less-but-better urbanite knows, it’s tough to reduce your everyday carry past the threshold of the holy trinity: keys, wallet, phone. The adventurous might try (and succeed) in doing without the last item, but realistically, it’s tough to forgo either of the first two personal effects. Designer Anthony Hoang and engineer Nhu Truong, childhood friends from Orange County, CA (not unlike another entrepreneurial effort we’ve seen), hope to reduce these irreducibles down to a single essential object. The Keylet is a card-sized metal money clip with a twist: a hinged key is concealed in two of its corners (the body is roughly as thick as a key between two thin plates of stainless steel… which is more or less exactly what it is).
The credit card form factor has become a sort of gold standard for what is worthy of toting around in one’s pocket, if not in the wallet itself: the Cardsharp knife and the ChargeCard (still available on Kickstarter) are a couple of our favorite examples. Yet the origami-like pocketknife and discreet USB cable are luxuries, for those of us who see fit to carry them alongside credit cards and ID—useful, no doubt, but not essential.
The Keylet is more ambitious, at once a threat to our trusty wallet and favorite keychain: it’s rather more versatile than, say, a card-carrying iPhone case (so to speak), and I, for one, would prefer the flexibility of having my keys+wallet separate from my phone.
Scott Amron’s “Split Ring Key” might be considered to be a precedent, though it has the opposite drawback: where the combination keyring+blank might not offer enough grip area (i.e. torque) for particularly stubborn locks, the blank+wallet might be a bit unwieldy at times (for example, the video shows the Keylet with a car key).
Audi’s “Electric Life” project is part research and part promotion for the A3 e-tron, their compact car with a purely electric motor. Ten “e-pilots” were selected from within the company to receive an e-tron and live with it for a few months, providing video coverage along the way.
Yesterday they released the third episode, and we were excited to see they’d chosen an industrial designer as one of the pilots. And while we expected L.A.-based Jae Min, a 16-year auto design vet and Art Center professor, to spend most of the clip rabidly flogging the car, instead he shares calm insights on the vehicle as well as a bit of design philosophy. We’re also treated to a peek at what he does at Art Center: