Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego? Check Her iPhone Tracker

0iphonetrackerapp01.jpg

In September of last year, a Frenchman named Paul Corbis published an article on his website pointing out that the iPhone does something unexpected: It saves the location of every single cell phone tower it ever pinged off of from the time it was first activated. In other words, it stores a complete record of your whereabouts. The article seems to have gone largely unnoticed by the public.

Now two British developers, Alasdair Allan (Senior Research Fellow at the University of Exeter) and Pete Warden (an ex-Apple software engineer) have released an open-source app called iPhone Tracker. It retrieves the data your iPhone is already automatically storing and displays it, providing a cool if somewhat creepy visualization of where you were at any given time.

(more…)


Pokitt

An RFID-friendly wallet packs essentials into a super-slim design

POKITT-image-1.jpg

For most, comfort and convenience come first when choosing daily accessories. A new solution to Costanza-size wallets, Pokitt is a form-fitting little card holder conceived around the idea of simplicity on-the-go.

Constructed entirely of a soft flexible polymer material and measuring less than 1/2″ thick, Pokitt is just the right size for keeping all of your bare essentials close at hand. But the key design innovation takes its cue from the proliferation of scannable RFID card technology. The ultra-slim Pokitt holds two such “smart cards,” one on each side, enabling the user to properly scan either card without opening the wallet.

Pokitt-image-2.jpg POKITT-image-3.jpg

With banks and major public transportation systems already widely taking advantage of the scannable cards throughout much of Europe and parts of Asia (Pokitt has flawlessly scanned through with London’s Oyster card, Hong Kong’s Octopus card, Brisbane’s Go card and Sydney’s Tcard) and a steadily increasing presence in the U.S., concepts like these stand a chance of reinventing the way we think about wallets.

Brands can get in on the action too by making a customized version through Pokitt’s Promotions channel. The pliable material can be molded in any color combination and can even be branded with company logos.

Pokitt-image-4.jpg

At $25 and available in six colorways, Pokitt makes an affordable choice too. Currently selling through their online store, the Australian based company ships worldwide.


Links for April 21, 2011

These items caught my attention over the past couple weeks, and I wanted to share them with you. They weren’t large enough to stand on their own as full posts, so I gathered them together in a link roundup:

  • The company Electrolux sponsored nine teams at the Domus Academy in Milan to design the kitchen of the future. The concepts are pretty impressive, especially for small space and storage design. Electrolux ReSource.
  • The show Clean House is looking for cluttered homes to be made over for future episodes. The show is filming next season in the greater Los Angeles and New York City areas, and to be considered you must own your home and at least two adults must live in the place. If you want to be on the show, email your name, address, phone number, list of everyone in the house and relationship to them, photos or videos of three rooms in your home that are messy, and a brief explanation for why you want to be on the show to Rose at rosecastingcleanhouse@gmail.com for LA consideration and Amy at assistant@mendenhallmedia.com for NYC consideration. You must submit your email by tomorrow, April 22, 2011.
  • SwissMiss featured a great little product that bands your writing utensils to your favorite notebook, clipboard, or book. The pencil holders are called Clever Hands and they’re made by an artist on Etsy. I think these would be a great organizing tool for students.
  • A website, hysterically named BookshelfPorn, features daily pictures of (usually) organized bookshelves from amazing libraries around the world. After our post earlier this month about keeping clutter off your bookshelf, I thought you all might enjoy seeing these (mostly) amazing solutions.
  • My friend Julie Bestry, a professional organizer based in Chattanooga, Tennessee, recently wrote a post for the Metropolitan Organizing website on how to become a Certified Professional Organizer. If you’ve ever thought about a career as a professional organizer or are already a professional organizer and want to be a CPO, I highly recommend checking out her post.
  • Another professional organizer friend of mine, Allison Carter based in the Atlanta area, has a quick post on uncluttered gift ideas for moms for this upcoming Mother’s Day.
  • Last August, NPR featured a 40-minute segment on Fresh Air exploring “Digital Overload.” It’s a long segment, but it’s interesting as it looks at people’s addiction to multi-tasking.

Like this site? Buy Erin Rooney Doland’s Unclutter Your Life in One Week from Amazon.com today.


Instapak "Reverse Molding" Protective Packaging

0instapakfip.jpg

A company called Sealed Air makes a product called Instapak Foam-in-Place packaging, which provides an interesting and effective way to safely ship packages with irregular shapes. The Instapak comes in flat form and is loaded with two chemicals, separated by a bladder. The user applies pressure to burst the internal seal, then provides agitation, and the resultant chemical reaction forms an expanding foam that “grows” around whatever it is you’re trying to ship. Using two of these, you can essentially reverse-mold the item. Check it out:

(more…)


WVIL Concept Camera

Découverte du projet et du concept d’appareil photo WVIL, imaginé par Artefact Design. Un objet ingénieusement pensé qui présente le futur de la caméra, en lui permettant de changer d’objectifs très facilement et avec une interface pensée pour le partage et la retouche.



wvil-conceptcamera3

wvil-conceptcamera1

Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ – Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

The Creators Project Coachella

Lights and music collide for a fantastic display of digital technology at California’s Coachella festival
soundfury2.jpg

The concept behind The Creators Project is not new—mix the social, the artistic and the scientific. The resulting experiences the initiative produces though, is astounding. Founded by Vice Magazine and Intel, the altruistic enterprise seeks to support the creative community through a series of collaborations that push the boundaries of digital technology. At this year’s Coachella music festival, the team worked with the British multi-disciplinary collective United Visual Artists and Goldenvoice concerts on a 3D Rubik’s Cube-like installation of light and music, unfolding over three days on Coachella’s main stage.

Using bespoke software and LED light projection, UVA have created an immersive experience that will serve as both a platform for performance and as a standalone light and sound sculpture. To top it off, Vice has chosen key bands—Interpol, Animal Collective and Arcade Fire—to program distinct visual identities to coincide with their live performances. For the Arcade Fire show, 2,000 lightweight balls equipped with LED lights and infrared receivers will be released into the crowd. As the balls drop, they’ll be controlled by a series of IR transmitters, altering the LED effects in each ball, and painting various lighting designs across the crowd for an effect that feels like a New Years Eve Balloon drop meets War of The Worlds.

soundfury1.jpg

Through The Studio, a sector of The Creators Project that aims to encourage collaboration between artists, a number of smaller installations will illuminate the festival. Director Jonathan Glazer is working with the band Spiritualized to create a physical manifestation of their best-known song, “Ladies and Gentlemen, We Are Floating in Space,” which will be an arched cathedral of light and sound. Interpol is working with David Lynch, playing with the notion of surveillance, and Black Dice and Animal Collective have collaborated on a video.

soundfury3.jpg

The Creators Project is not only making visuals we actually want to watch, but it’s also adding a whole new dimension to watching live music. We wish Pink Floyd was still around to see this.


Alpinestars

Superslim body armor and mobile airbags from the leaders of state-of-the-art motorcycle gear
alpinestars1.jpg

For over 40 years Alpinestars has been developing state of the art technology for motorcycling and motorsports safety. From the racetrack to the street to the sketchiest off-road terrain, Alpinestars leads the way when it comes to motorcycle apparel and protective technology.

alpinestars2a.jpg alpinestars2b.jpg

The statement, “We believe the best design and research is achieved under extreme conditions,” comes as no surprise, considering Alpinestars products have been through the ringer at the world level, actively protecting top racers in everything from Moto GP to the World Rally Championships. But long before any of their products hit the road, they undergo a laundry list of development and testing.

alpinestars3A.jpg alpinestars3B.jpg

With research and development facilities in Asolo, Italy and Los Angeles, Alpinestars’ in-house testing laboratories allow their designers and technicians to analyze material construction, strength and flexibility across a wide array of parameters. There’s even a prototype testing facility for measuring the durability of products under insane real-life conditions. Wondering whether your pants will fade? They’ve got a machine that can simulate an entire year of sun exposure in just 24 hours. How will those boots wear? The “walkometer” subjects footwear to hundreds of miles of actual steps in all sorts of varying body weight, stride patterns and surfaces. Couple all the scientific data with the experience of thousands of miles of road testing in the gnarliest of conditions, and Alpinestars can guarantee their products maintain the rigorously high standards the company has set for itself.

Continue reading here.

alpinestars4a.jpg alpinestars4b.jpg

The focus on technology has led Alpinestars to solve some of motorcycling apparel’s biggest conundrums. One such advancement comes in the form of revolutionized jacket padding that cuts down on typical bulk and discomfort without leaving you unprotected. The solution comes in the form of a premium range of lightweight, slim and pliable protectors called Bio Armor.

Constructed using specially formulated closed-cell foam— engineered with perforations to allow for greater ventilation and weight reduction—Bio Armor protectors offer twice the impact protection with half the thickness. The resulting slimmer profile seamlessly integrates with their jackets in a way that’s much less noticeable than past designs for a better looking jacket with even better protection. All of Alpinestars new jackets for 2011 and going forward boast the latest Bio Armor technology.

alpinestars5a.jpg alpinestars5b.jpg

Another clever innovation from Alpinestars is electronic, wireless, airbag technology. For over 10 years Alpinestars has been researching and developing the technology to create a state-of-the-art, fully functional airbag system that could ultimately be available to riders everywhere. The system, which provides active yet compact airbags inflate using a nitrogen based gas mix and is powered by a battery pack. Currently, the setup incorporates two bags covering the rider’s shoulders and collar bones, with inflation times of less than .05 seconds.

alpinestars6.jpg

To accomplish this, Alpinestars created a modified version of their leather racing suit designed specifically to accomodate the necessary electronics, sensors, inflators, and airbags. The Tech Air Race Suit, as it’s called, has been tested and deployed on MotoGP riders and road riders to fine tune the activation parameters. Developments of this active system led Alpinestars to create a now patented dual charge system which offers the rider two airbag inflations without needing to reset or recharge the system. It’s kind of like an extra life, you can crash once and hop right back on your bike, knowing you’ve got the same level of protection if you go down a second time. After that second crash though, you might as well call it a day.


Photoshop for Tablets Coming

Yesterday Adobe announced their forthcoming Photoshop Touch Software Development Kit, which will be bundled with their Creative Suite 5.5. The PTSDK (unfortunate acronym, those first four letters) will let users go back and forth, Photoshop-wise, between their tablet and main computer. The possibilities are intriguing; using an iPad as a palette window and large trackpad sounds kind of neat, but the idea of being able to manipulate photos by hand, touching them directly, sounds extremely cool.

While we’re waiting for the PTSDK and CS 5.5, feast your eyes on this recent Adobe demo of Photoshop—real Photoshop, not that Express nonsense—on an iPad. Check out the wicked layers trick that happens around 1:06.

(more…)


Athletics Far East Chino

Go from skateboarding to boardrooms in Nike Sportswear’s new articulated-knee pants

NSW-chino-1.jpg

Turning a working-stiff staple into a highly-technical pant, Nike’s new forward-thinking chino reminds us why Nike remains a benchmark for everyday athletic wear. Ever improving on current designs, this latest rendition of Nike Sportswear‘s previously released Selvedge Chino introduces simple but gainful updates like articulated knees, two hidden seam pockets and reflective inseam tape under their Athletics Far East label.

NSW-chino-2.jpg NSW-chino-3.jpg

By subtly pronouncing the knee area with monotone stitching, wearers gain flexibility and a slightly sportier look. But ditching the large taped seam pocket from the previous Selvedge model for two smaller pockets helps keep the appearance more muted.

NSW-chino 6.jpg

A stash pocket hidden along the upper belt line is great for storing a house key, a few dollars or anything else you need to keep on the DL. And when you want to get noticed, rolling up a cuff reveals reflective inseam tape on the interior seams of each leg to increase wearer visibility while bike riding at night.

NSW-chino-4.jpg NSW-chino-5.jpg

As part of the Spring/Summer 2011 AFE collection, the pants will be in short supply. Dropping mid-April, a very limited run will sell exclusively at NSW’s stand-alone 21 Mercer store in NYC for $170.

If you dig these, keep an eye out for our full look at the top chinos for spring later this week.


E-Mote Tv

Un concept insolite de télécommande qui vous permet de choisir les programmes via la pensée. Elle détermine parmi les chaines dont vous disposez celle qui correspond à vos envies, puis transmet l’information au téléviseur. Un capteur temporal et une diffusion par infra-rouge.



visuel-design01

visuel-design04

visuel-design05

Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ – Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook