Apr 012011
 

Wow — I am enthused about the possibilities in this. Using a special material that is designed to melt at 140 F, these stainless steel “Joulies” absorb excess heat from fresh coffee, cooling it down to the perfect drinking temperature more quickly.

As someone who drinks his coffee dead black, I’ve often complained about how coffee can be served way too hot — presumably so that it is still hot enough to comfortably drink when people add double creams to it.

But the Joulies are for more than just cooling your coffee — because they absorb a lot of heat, they can also re-release that heat as your coffee begins to get too cold. In effect, they buffer your coffee, keeping it near the optimal drinking temperature for an estimated three times longer.

That’s awesome.

The two engineers who came up with Joulies have been making them by hand, but they want to ramp up production. So head on over to Kickstarter and pledge!

According to Boing Boing, the inventors seem confident that they can deliver a first batch of orders within 12-16 weeks.

This is one of those things that makes me with I had a coffee shop. Would be an easy add-on to sell at the counter.

Mar 292011
 

Why yes, I would like to post this seven-foot-tall chart along my wall, and mark in pencil when I finally was taller than Yoda, or R2-D2, or even Leia.

And that’s what one self-proclaimed “Geeky Dad” did for his daughter, who is about to turn one, and is therefore probably a little taller than the tribbles that litter the bottom of the chart

Says Geeky Dad:

My daughter is turning one soon, and  I decided we needed a growth chart as awesome as she is.  After a bit of tinkering in Pages, and a bunch of hemming and hawing, this is the result.  As a friend pointed out, all that’s missing is Batman.

If you enjoyed this chart, and would like to make a donation, we’ve set up a Paypal account that feeds into our daughter’s college fund.

You can download a full-size PDF from Scribd, here.

Mar 252011
 

Further proof that everything in the world is better with a cat.

See more about how it can work at Corentin. For example, they suggest flipping it around, so the staircase is against the wall, where it would become like a hidden passageway for your cat, mystifying guests who will wonder what kind of cat can shimmy up behind a bookcase to get on top.

(via tdw)

Mar 172011
 

For reasons I won’t get into now, I’m currently in the middle of a six-month-no-beer attempt. July 1 can’t come soon enough.

But I’m still enjoying plenty of glasses of wine, and I don’t mind a tipple of harder stuff, either. So, in the absence of green beer (my heart, it does grow fonder) I was happy to get emailed a list of five Irish-themed cocktails that I can drink on St. Patrick’s Day. Thank-you Esquire. Here’s one of my faves:

The Emerald

  • 2 ounces whisk(e)y
  • 1 ounce Italian vermouth
  • 1 dash orange bitters

Glass Type: cocktail glass

Stir well with cracked ice, then strain into a chilled cocktail glass. We recommend using Irish whiskey.

One of the only mixed drinks with which we’ll repeatedly toast the Emerald Isle is the Emerald. There’s not much imagination in it, sure, its logic being, “If you mix rye, which they drink in New York, with vermouth, you get a Manhattan; therefore, Irish whiskey and vermouth must be an Emerald.” But it’s delightfully smooth and mellow. And if the reasoning’s a little screwy, at least the only thing green about the drink is its title.

In fact, the Emerald presents rather an ethical dilemma: Like the original Manhattan, it contains a dash of — oops! — orange bitters. But maybe that’s just to remind the sons of Erin that they shouldn’t rest until the Saxon yoke is lifted from their fair and blooming isle and all true blood, bone, and beauty can flourish in an air of tranquil peace and liberty. Or maybe someone just wasn’t thinking. In either case, if your principles won’t allow you to cross your lips with orange, you can leave the bitters out for an Angelo-and-Mike, or switch to Angostura bitters for a Blarney Stone. Or you can leave them in, but down your potion with a lusty, “To our enemies — may they be drinking bog water while we’re drinking whiskey! May their obituaries be written in weasel’s piss! May they shit sideways! May the hairs on their asses turn to drumsticks and beat them down to hell!” That’s what we do, anyway.

Now that’s a toast!

Mar 162011
 

As a huge segment of the market heads towards cheaper and cheaper wood-look laminate flooring, I am filled with want at the look of these naturally curved wood floors. They’re designed by Bolefloor, a Dutch firm, which uses computer scanning to cut wood as close as possible to its edge, rather than in an artificially straight line.

They say this minimizes wastes, which is prima facie true, except that I’m pretty sure the wood industry is good about repurposing waste — all that chipboard furniture doesn’t come from nowhere.

What I do know is that it looks amazing. It’s difficult to link to specific sections of the Bolefloor website, but there’s not too many places to poke around. Basically, it’s a brand-new product, with dealers to be announced in April, and you’re likely to have to measure your room verrrrry carefully before ordering.

Prices aren’t announced (I suspect they’ll be as individualized as the floors) but they do say “not considerably more than today’s fine wood flooring.” Which is still on the high side. But possibly worth it. It sure looks nice.

At the moment, they offer only solid oak, at 21 mm widths, though they are preparing to offer a 13 mm product. They are tongue-and-groove, and the only thing I don’t like about them is that they recommend gluing them down.

(via BoingBoing)

Mar 122011
 

I have a problem. The problem is that my mom’s birthday is precisely one week before Christmas. And, my sister’s birthday is a week before that.

So while all of you are fretting about getting your Christmas shopping done, I still have two birthdays to shop for! Sometimes, it can be frustrating trying to buy great birthday presents AND great Christmas presents for them, especially when I have to fight the mall crowds, but mostly I muddle through.

The real issue comes later, when I go to wrap the presents, and all I have is Christmas paper.

My mother drilled it into me from a very early age that Christmas paper was absolutely verboten for a birthday present (although, I’m not sure why — I often had Hallowe’en themed presents and for my Oct. 18 birthday) so I’m careful to make sure that birthday presents are wrapped in birthday or neutral paper.

Now, if the wrapping paper you see above ever gets made and sold as a real product (it’s currently just a design idea), my problem will be solved forever. You see, although the gift above says “Merry Christmas” the genius of this wrapping paper is that it is a word search — and it contains words for just about anything you can imagine:

(Designed by Fabio Milito, via the Dieline)

Mar 042011
 

The first half of this clip is a Pabst Blue Ribbon television ad from 1976. The second clip appears to just be unrelated rocketbelt video with unrelated-to-that-even audio from “To Tell The Truth.” I like the non sequitur.

Also: I miss stubbies. But I had no idea that American beer used to come in a stubby!

(via Coudal)

Mar 022011
 

I’m sorry, but I will try to type through all the drool on my keyboard. FastCo Design has a post up on this gorgeous Scrabble board:

A-1 Scrabble, a concept by Andrew Capener, who graduated from BYU last year, has pieces that eschew Scrabble’s standard News Gothic-y look altogether in favor of a big medley of typefaces. So while you’re spelling out “highjack” (28 points, FTW!), you can really nerd things up by relishing in the visual alchemy of a Helvetica “C” alongside a Courier New “z” — all on a stately walnut board that comes in a beautifully minimal birch box. Or you can buy the game with a single typeface, then snap up extra pieces in different typefaces, through Scrabble’s website, whenever you feel like something new. Capener tells us his motivation was simple: “I set out to… create a scrabble set that a designer would dream of.”

There are many more pictures up at FastCo. Bee-yooo-tee-full.

(via @lindseywiebe)

Mar 012011
 

Dear Mr. Fillion,

I have a proposal that you may like. But first, some flattery:

Whether it’s Firefly, Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog, or your newest show, Castle, I find you consistently one of the most magnetic presences on screen. Frankly, it’s gotten to the point that I will watch something specifically and only because you are in it.

Castle is one of the few shows that my girlfriend and I watch on TV, rather than downloading, partly because we can’t wait to watch it, and partly because we know that downloads aren’t counted as viewership.

I get the sense through your characters, your Twitter feed and your Wikipedia page that you’re the type of fellow who appreciates both good deeds and senses of humour. My proposal combines both of these:

Please buy my office a coffee maker.

Yes, I am serious. But that’s only half the proposal. If you buy my office a coffee maker, I will, in turn, help you buy something that you care about. Read on.

I work in the newsroom at the Brandon Sun, which is located in the near-windowless basement of an old farm implement dealership. We’re currently in the process of selling our building to the city, which plans to tear it down. They’re sending people in white spacesuits to conduct environmental assessments because of asbestos fears.

Although I love the job, that’s just depressing.

One of the only things we had to keep us going was coffee. Here is our office coffee maker:

You will note that it looks forlorn. We have it perched on an upturned basket because otherwise the desk is too low. There’s a flyer underneath because we tend to spill. Hey, we’re human.

This picture was taken Tuesday. The clock has a futuristic blue glow, the red light indicates that the coffee maker is “ON” — but it doesn’t actually make coffee.

This is what happened Tuesday afternoon: I filled it up with water, like normal. I filled the basket up with coffee grounds, like normal. I hit the button to start the process, like normal.

Nothing happened. Not normal.

I fiddled with switches, unplugged it and plugged it back in. I recruited a co-worker to give it a womanly touch. Nothing fixed it. All the lights and buttons work — the coffee does not appear.

Immediately, I posted to my Facebook: “HORROR! The office coffee machine is broken!”

It was a terrible blow.

Down the hall in the office lunchroom, there is automated coffee vending machine. It is imposingly formidible, and it has been in the same location, with the same look (and possibly the same prices) since I first worked for this newspaper as a young delivery boy:

It’s just 60 cents for a cup of “individually ground and brewed” coffee. Note how they assiduously avoid the word “fresh” while still implying that.

Also, the machine taunts us by flashing a message that it is “Temporarily out of service.”

Faced with a crisis, my brain sometimes works at Serenity-speed. I shanghaied a workmate’s kettle, boiled some water, and poured it slowly over the grounds in the coffee maker’s basket to create a cloudy brown brew that resembled coffee.

This took about half an hour, did not make me happy, and is not a sustainable long-term solution.

That’s when I thought of you, Mr. Fillion. I remembered what your character Richard Castle did for the hardworking folks of the 12th Precinct when he learned of their coffee troubles — he bought them a brand-new, top-of-the-line espresso maker.

Now, I note that Castle still brings takeout coffee to Beckett (though, one of my quibbles with the show is that the cups often appear to be weightless and empty) and I note that, even with a fancy espresso maker, the detectives and Castle still sometimes pour drip coffee.

That is all we need here, at the Brandon Sun.

Of course, I’m aware that Richard Castle is a fictional character, a ruggedly handsome and famous author who is not to be confused with the ruggedly handsome and famous actor who plays the role.

I’m not looking for a handout. After all, you don’t know me, why would you just give me money?

So let me sweeten the pot. And in true Internet fashion, I’ll try to make it sound like a scam:

Nathan Fillion, if you buy my office a coffee maker, I will send you back double the amount of money you spent.

Initially, I figured that I would double what you spent, and pledge it to helping you buy back the rights to Firefly.

Then I saw that you had tweeted not to send money to that cause. I was briefly perplexed. But then I decided I had an even better idea: I’ll donate the money to your literacy charity, Kids Need To Read.

I don’t just work in the newspaper business (a reading and writing industry), I also helped found a literary festival in my hometown that is dedicated to aiding literacy where we can.

I am serious in this proposal. Buy my office a coffee maker, and I will ensure that double the amount gets donated to your charity.

Of course, if Firefly comes back, too, that’d be pretty swell.

So how about it? Email me at ghamilton@brandonsun.com. Ot tweet me @gramiq.

Yours,

Grant Hamilton

PS. I cross-posted this on my work blog, and I tweeted it out, to help this get traction.

PPS. I said that the weightless coffeecups was one of my quibbles with the show Castle. My other was the conceit, on the last episode, that Castle and Becket could freeze to death in a couple of hours in “one degree below freezing” temperatures. You’re an Edmonton boy, Nathan, you should know better.

Awesome tote bag is awesome

 Posted by on 25 February 2011  Modern Life
Feb 252011
 

I very much like this “Get Awesome” tote bag, which you could use instead of plastic for all your grocery shopping, say. But I’m not sure I can justify buying it.

Pros:

  • Unique design emphasizes positivity, rather than advertising a store.
  • Organic cotton made in the USA rather than random cloth shipped from overseas sweatshop
  • Non-toxic ink is washer/dryer safe

Cons:

  • Light colour will get dirty/dusty easily
  • $20, plus shipping, is substantially more than 99-cent reusable bags at grocery store

Hmmmmmmm. That’s more pros than cons! It’s available here!

Feb 232011
 

Wanna decorate your home with vintage posters from classic concerts? Have no fear, Baltimore’s Globe Posters is on Etsy selling reprints of some of their coolest designs — using original artwork and on classic cardstock.

This Led Zeppelin poster, as an example, is just $27, and it’s 22″ x 30″ so you’re going to get some serious room anchoring from it.

Niiiiiiiice.

A water tower with a face

 Posted by on 20 February 2011  Modern Life
Feb 202011
 

About half a block from my house, there is a fairly good-sized park. Unusually for this prairie town, this park features a number of hills and a pleasing variety of trees and walking paths. I live close to the south-east end of the park, abutting the north end is nursing home (once the local jail), a community centre with skating rink, and ye olde community water tower, which is perched way up on a big hill, to boot, serving as the neighbourhood’s toboggan central, as well as a local landmark.

Between the community centre and the park, I forgot to add, is a community swimming pool. There’s also some lawn bowling greens along the west side. (Ah, heck, I Google Mapped it for ya’ll.)

All in all, this is a pretty good little park. It’s even where I first attempted to sabre a bottle of champagne. And, as I’ve wandered through it, I’ve often wondered how bes to stage an event there. You know how some people dream of opening a coffeeshop? Or a bookstore?

Well, I’ve long dreamt of putting on a three-day music festival. Sigh. I know.

But this park would be great for it! (No camping.)

So every time I stroll through, a part of me is also in “festival director” mode, thinking about which natural amphitheatre would be best for stage set-up, where the backstage area might go, how to set up gates and concessions, etc., etc.

But once I saw the video embedded above, the next time I walked through the park, I had a revelation — my three-day music festival needed some kind of public art component!

And why not set up a digital projector on top of the pool house, to display video or animation on the face of the water tower?!

Here, for example, is a Google Street View look at the Brandon water tower, as seen from near the swimming pool. You can see how well it would work.

Of course, now I’m thinking I can scale back my ambitions a little. For example, maybe I should just drop the idea of a three-day music festival, and focus on the water-tower projection as an art project.

In fact, I think I will. Hmmm. Achievable ambitions. This is unusual for me.

—-

Aside: The video above is a really cool project done by Minneapolis ad agency Carmichael Lynch and conceived/executed by Brock Davis, one of their employees, who says:

Projection … was the most economical medium and ideal for keeping the historic tower in it’s natural state. This tower, which we’ve named Rusty, faces the new Target Field Stadium, which just opened and is the new home of the Minnesota Twins. Several other projection ideas are in the works, but this simple face has been the clear favorite so far as it brings to life the physical structure itself allowing it to complete the overall look of the character. Currently, we’re working to have Rusty react in realtime to the games in the stadium, so that If the team wins, he can cheer and if they lose, he cries.

I love that companies still assign employees to interesting projects like this.

Feb 182011
 

I love this — not only is this a real, actual product (not a computer rendering), it’s a one-of-a-kind handmade sculpture and you can follow along with its creation in a detailed photo gallery!

Jason Freeney, also known as Moist Production, made this, and he generously documented how he did it in a Facebook photo album. It doesn’t look like it would be terribly difficult to replicate, and might make a super craft if you were feeling like tackling a weekend project.

The, um, guts of the brain is the drilled out, um, skeleton of a real Rubik’s Cube, and the brain folds were sculpted out of clay. Yes, it still functions as a Rubik’s Cube.

Well done!

(via BB)