Toys that are as Flexible as your Creativity

UPDATE: less than 72 hours left on their campaign!

There’s nothing more flexible and expansive than a child’s creativity. Over the years, education chisels away at it, making the thought process more “within the box”. If you think about it, most toys end up doing the same thing, encouraging kids to think in a linear way, helping them spark interest in a traditional profession (think about the Easy-Bake oven, or Hot Wheels), rather than expand their creative boundaries.

The Bokah was designed to do the latter. Think of it as 3D tools to let a child’s imagination run wild. Designed to be like Jenga meets Lego meets Meccano, the Bokah is as free spirited as the child itself, allowing kids to make whatever their hearts desire, while even allowing their creations to be robust yet flexible! Think of it as the evolution of traditional building blocks. While you can build pretty much anything with traditional blocks, they have their set of constraints… the Bokah eliminates those constraints, allowing you to make anything (rigid or flexible), no matter how abstract!

What makes Bokah so universal is its flexibility. What makes Bokah so flexible is the Bendy. The Bendy is an elastic component that ties two Bokah blocks together. Fitting into the blocks like a ball and socket joint, the Bendy allows the Bokah blocks to rotate, swivel, fold, and even fasten to each other at pretty much any angle rather than a direct fit. This further leads to one being able to make walking human figurines, or galloping horses, or even aliens, because who truly knows what kids are capable of, right?

The Bokah comes in an aptly named Explorer kit, for kids as well as adults. With 4 sized wooden Bokah blocks and a handful of Bendies to unite them, the blocks help kids not just make toys, but make toys that expand their understanding of physics and the boundaries of creation. It’s perfect for adults too, who want to go back to being their young, carefree, creative selves!

Designer: Vinh Phamdo

BUY NOW: $30.00 $42.00

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When a Bendy connects two Bokahs, a special joint is created. These special joints bring your creations to life. Unlike traditional building blocks, Bokah’s interlocking joint mechanism lets you create rotating and moving parts.

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BUY NOW: $30.00 $42.00

Bose’s palm-sized speaker packs punch!

It’s small yet powerful. A lot like Napoleon. Or Ant-Man…

Bose’s Soundlink Micro is the smallest standalone speaker created by the company. However, the size is a matter of convenience, it isn’t a limitation, because it boasts of Bose’s signature sound quality even with its small footprint, including a heavy bass that Bose says is unmatched by any speaker its size.

The small Soundlink Micro is Bose’s answer to people who want to take great audio with them outdoors. Its rugged design withstands scratches and cracks while the rubberized outer cover provides a good grip. The speaker comes with a strap at the back too, allowing you to fasten it to your bag, or your bike so you can listen to music hands-free. Even underwater! (Because obviously the Micro is waterproof…)

For people craving stereo audio, you can even pair two Soundlink Micros together for great latency free audio for up to 6 hours on a single charge. Did I also mention it was waterproof?

Designer: Bose

BUY NOW

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No, stack them the other way…

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You’ve got vessels that stack inside one another like Joseph Joseph’s set of Nesting Bowls for convenient, space-saving storage, and you have the exact opposite, the Folding Tableware by FangCun Design that instead of stacking inside one another, pile up to become a sculptural piece that captivates one’s attention with its flowing continuous lines, only to be beautifully punctuated by the color gradation of the bowls that have their own jade-like charm.

Yes, these bowls can stack within one another (saving space as a result), but that’s not what you’re going to do, because it isn’t as hypnotic and alluring as stacking them the other way around, now is it?!

Designer: Buyi Zhou (FangCun Design)

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Have your cake and divide it too

There are three things that can destroy friendships. Monopoly, the Draw Four card in Uno, and an unequal slice of cake, pie, or pizza. Now I don’t know about the first two, but there’s a rather nifty way of avoiding the third scenario. Klipy’s Cake Divider. This handy little gadget allows you to set the angle for cutting the cake/pie/pizza based on the number of slices you need. It comes with a base that fits right into the center of the food item you want to divide, and the two arms of the Klipy act as guides for the knife, allowing you to cut perfectly even slices for yourself and your friends… because no one likes a greedy hog!

Designer: Klipy Design

BUY NOW

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Contemporary Japanese Fishing Cabin by Masato Sekiya

Masato Sekiya revisite le chalet de pêche traditionnel japonais. L’architecte a imaginé une maison contemporaine perchée sur une falaise dans un petit village de la ville de Nara, Tenkawa. Vue d’un certain angle, la maison donne l’impression de flotter dans les airs, juste au-dessus de la rivière Ten. Le couple, pour qui le projet Cliff House a été réalisé, a choisi ce lieu pour pratiquer un genre de pêche appelé « ayu ». Entouré du mont Ōmine, le chalet offre un paysage tout simplement époustouflant sur la forêt et les eaux majestueuses de la rivière.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 









 

When Photography Meets Impressionism with Erik Madigan Heck

Erik Madigan Heck ou l’art de peindre avec une caméra. Le jeune artiste prend les photos à la manière des peintres impressionnistes. Son art peut être décrit comme étant à la fois futuriste et intemporel. Dans son travail, le photographe avant-gardiste explore les intersections entre mode, peinture et portrait classique. Heck ne compte plus les collaborations prestigieuses avec les plus grands magazines tels que le New York Times, le Harper’s Bazaar ou le Vanity Fair. Il a notamment photographié de grandes célébrités comme Tilda Swinton, Dakota Fanning, Roger Federer, Kylie Jenner, Kendrick Lamar ou Adèle.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 










Soft and Obscure Photographies by Maya Beano

Quand elle n’est pas dans son laboratoire à Cambridge, la scientifique Maya Beano aime vagabonder dans des contrées sombres et idylliques pour réaliser des clichés d’une rare poésie. Équipée de son appareil argentique, elle se focalise sur le contre-jour, les couleurs et immortalise tout ce que la nature peut offrir.










Your Smartphone's Voice Assistant Will Obey Ultrasonic Commands You Can't Hear, Sent by Hackers

A research team from Princeton University, and a separate research team at China’s Zhejiang University, have both come to the same unnerving conclusion: It’s possible to hack into voice-assistant-equipped devices, like a smartphone, a digital home assistant and even a car, by using ultrasonic commands that the human ear can’t detect—but that Siri, Alexa and Google Now can, and which they’ll obey.

“We show that the [attacker can] play well-designed inaudible ultrasounds to cause the microphone to record normal voice commands, and thus control the victim [sic] device inconspicuously,” reads the Princeton research paper. “We demonstrate via end-to-end real-world experiments that our inaudible voice commands can attack an Android phone and an Amazon Echo device with high success rates at a range of 2-3 meters.”

The team from Zhejiang University, too, discovered [PDF] that if they transmitted voice commands above the 20kHz human threshold of hearing, from a distance of under two meters they were able to succesfully manipulate “popular speech recognition systems, including Siri, Google Now, Samsung S Voice, Huawei HiVoice, Cortana and Alexa. [We also succeeded in] manipulating the navigation system in an Audi automobile.”

The ZU team calls their method DolphinAttack, and here’s what it looks like in action:

To illustrate, we show that DolphinAttack can achieve the following sneaky attacks purely by a sequence of inaudible voice commands:

(1) Visiting a malicious website. The device can open a malicious website, which can launch a drive-by-download attack or exploit a device with 0-day vulnerabilities.

(2) Spying. An adversary can make the victim device initiate outgoing video/phone calls, therefore getting access to the image/sound of device surroundings.

(3) Injecting fake information. An adversary may instruct the victim [sic] device to send fake text messages and emails, to publish fake online posts, to add fake events to a calendar, etc.

(4) Denial of service. An adversary may inject commands to turn on the airplane mode, disconnecting all wireless communications.

(5) Concealing attacks. The screen display and voice feedback may expose the attacks. The adversary may decrease the odds by dimming the screen and lowering the volume.

The are two, very obvious fixes. The first is that manufacturers of digital assistants ought release patches that have the microphones ignore or filter out ultrasonic frequencies. This is feasible but rather boring.

The second potential fix, which we endorse, is for manufacturers to acquire and distribute, free of charge to consumers, Egyptian fruit bats.

We could carry these bats around with us, always keeping them near our smartphones, and they’d be specially trained to shriek and flap their wings to draw your attention anytime an ultrasonic voice command came in. 

[Image by Zoharby – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0]

It might seem inconvenient to carry a bat around, but look, if it’s either live with the bat or deal with a bricked phone, which are you going to choose? 

Plus they’re pretty cute.

Awwww!  [Image by DawsonCC BY-SA 2.5]

Ford Disguises Man as Car Seat to See How People React to Driverless Cars

Back in August, transportation reporter Adam Tuss recorded this unintentionally hilarious video in Virginia:

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Here’s me trying to talk to a man in a car seat costume @nbcwashington pic.twitter.com/e5humOM7uS

— Adam Tuss (@AdamTuss) August 7, 2017

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Tuss had come across an apparently autonomous Ford Transit, but saw the man’s hands sticking out of the “seat” when he approached the car.

Now Ford has revealed just what the heck was going on. They were conducting an experiment in collaboration with Virginia Tech’s Transportation Institute to see how pedestrians react to autonomous vehicles, without having to worry about the hassles/paperwork of actual autonomy:

It does raise an interesting question, of how autonomous vehicles can signal intent to replace those unspoken eye-contact interactions that occasionally occur between motorist and pedestrians. It will be fun to see the dynamic signage design experimentation each manufacturer will engage in. Ultimately, though, I imagine the government will mandate some kind of standard, as they did with third brake lights.

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