Friday, June 30, 2006

PRODUCT: Best Coffee Mug Ever!

Since my post about coffee last Friday morning, I thought I'd mention a related item I'm excited about. I've found the best travel coffee mug and it's less than $20.00. Check out the Contigo Extreme Silver Insulated Mug!

Isn't it beautiful?

Not only does it keep my java hot, it succeeds where so many of my other mugs have failed: it seals shut in every single opening, and refuses to to leak. Okay, I suppose I could probably drop it or smash it and it would spill. But for everyday commuting, I can hang it off my messenger bag with the built-in carabiner handle and the sip-top lid stays shut. The hole you drink out of is closed with a locking rubber gasket that is better than anything I've seen on far more expensive mugs, and it's easy to use with one hand. Even fits in the cup holder in my car.

I got mine at Target, and it's available online. I'm thinking I'll have to go buy another while they're still around, 'cause if I ever lose this one I'm gonna be very, very sad...

Thursday, June 29, 2006

I'm a Winner!

Thanks, InBubbleWrap! I just won my first book from them, and it arrived yesterday. Look how cool this is:


It's like a combination of two of my most favorite things: books and breakfast cereal! Except of course, there is no cereal...

I'm not afraid to admit that I'm still new to the books of Seth Godin, but I'm certainly familiar with his website(s). I was really attracted to the idea of this book's packaging, so I was happy to win and get a chance to add it to my collection. If you haven't signed up with InBubbleWrap yet, check them out. It's a great resource for discovering new ideas, and winning free books!

Also, check out the Lockjaw Radio podcast, which is where I first heard about this. Great semi-regular discussions of all things marketing, branding, and good livin'!

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

PRODUCT: Sticky Notes for Real Life

KnockKnock is a store that I've been browsing through for many years online, and they're always coming up with cool new stuff. I'm a fan of their wrapping paper and greeting cards. Their sense of design and sense of humor always seem to agree with my own.

I got a chuckle out of the new sticky notes they've come up with that feel like they were custom made for my life. I'm tempted to buy a lot of these for those days when I remember something I was supposed to do a long time ago and am ashamed to admit. But the possibilities for mischief here are also very appealing...

Monday, June 26, 2006

Staying Net Neutral

I'm late to this, but if you haven't seen Rocketboom's post from last Friday then definitely check it out. Best, most simple argument for keeping the Internet free of greedy tiered service schemes.

Rocketboom links to these sites for more info, and I'm all about spreading the word:

Network Neutrality at Wikipedia
Save the Internet
It's Our Net
Message from Google C.E.O. Eric Schmidt

Do your part! Every little bit helps - nobody even reads my blog but me, but I'm still gonna post this. I bet you can find someplace to post this too...

Sunday, June 25, 2006

IDEA: More 3D in the Future?

Okay, so recently I came across some homemade 3D images that were created out of footage shot from a CNN helicopter circling over the WTC on 9/11:




While it's kind of unfortunate that the images are of a sad subject, the technique is intriguing. The creator used near-consecutive frames as the camera moved horizontally to recreate L-eye and R-eye views, and the effect is realistic. He even posted versions that can be seen in 3D without the glasses (crossing your eyes blends the separate images into a floating 3D image). You might have seen this linked to in other blogs, and they deserve viewing because they are interesting and compelling in their own way.

But they got me thinking...

I mean, now that there is such an overwhelming amount of video footage on the internet, how many more of these could be made once more people learn about the idea? How about someone developing instructions for all of us to find scenes in our our own old home video footage to turn into 3D?

A simple search will find you several different websites that show how to make 3D images with your digital still camera using basic editing software and often with careful planning of how you shoot your image. But wouldn't it be great to go back to old videos of your children, or maybe even B&W home movies your grandparents took, and find a scene that can be brought into 3D?

And as the tools become more powerful in the coming years, who's to say we couldn't see a day when I find that brief shot that pans across the family posing in front of the Grand Canyon, I render the clip into a 3D still image, and send that to a 3D printer that 5 mintues later spits out a small sculpture for my desk of me and the kids at the Grand Canyon. In full color. Because framed photos are so 2008.

Oh, and let me email you the file so you can print one for your desk, too.

Anybody gonna make that happen soon? Let me know...