Showing posts with label weird products. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weird products. Show all posts

Monday, August 1, 2011

Link roundup

1. "However, the volatile situation in Syria means that activists' methods to get documentation off the streets and onto social media are rapidly changing. Unconfirmed reports claim pen phones and small camera phones are being smuggled into Syria by anti-government expatriates and both the Saudi Arabian and American governments."

2. Fascinating article about pirates. When I read about the Barbary pirates in Neal Stephenson's Quicksilver, I thought he was greatly exaggerating their exploits. But no:
Initially, the corsairs used galleys, which were fast and easily maneuverable, but the problem of supplying their rowing crews and soldiers, which could total some 184 men, limited their range. But European renegade sailors, such as John Ward, “without any doubt the greatest scoundrel that ever sailed from England,” as a courtier put it, and Danseker the Dutchman, known as the “Divil Captain,” were on hand to supply the expertise needed for a shift to sailing ships.

They could now raid along the British and the Irish Channels — they would even reach as far north as Iceland. Throughout the century, their raids caused havoc in coastal communities, with sailors and fishermen refusing to go to sea. In the Mediterranean, whole stretches of coast in Spain and Italy were deserted.
3. Useless, but a magical idea - - it looks like a camera, but when you press the shutter it doesn't take a picture. Instead, it pulls off from the net a random photo taken by someone else at that exact moment. Via these sites.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Running shoes designed for menstruating women



Asics' GEL-Kayano 16 came out last year and were designed to accommodate menstruating runners:
When oestrogen is high, and a woman is at her most fertile, the arch drops. Later in the month, when she is menstruating, levels of the hormone are low but her arch is raised.
Via.

*Previously: Nikes designed for Native Americans.

Friday, July 1, 2011

The Writing Ball



"The Malling-Hansen writing ball was the world's first commercially produced typewriter, and it was sold world wide." Via these sites.

*Previously: Fringe's Selectric 251.