iPhone 3g battery life

To all you complainers bitching about the iPhone 3g battery life, all I can say is boom–motherfucking–time. After using the phone for about a day and a half, I was trying my damndest to drain the rest of the battery. By the end of the night, I had Sandy watching youtube videos with 50% brightness and it didn’t die until it tallied a total of eight hours and eleven minutes of usage.

The only legitimate complaint is how shitty 3g coverage is with this phone.

Jul 17, 2008 categories: Internet, Tech tags:



Skull Watch

Skull by An Alchemist watch…a Rolex reproduction with the old school plastic band. Thanks Kiya.

Jul 9, 2008 categories: Cool Shit, Fashion tags:



Self Edge x Sidney Lo WAYWT Exhibition

Self Edge puts up their new Flat Head window display, featuring my What Are You Wearing Today? exhibition from New York. Displayed are two mannequins, before and after, with the infamous stool and mountain bike, a brick wall, and the exhibit video looping 24/7 for passerbyers to check out.

Jul 2, 2008 categories: Cool Shit, Fashion, Photography, San Francisco tags:



OS X music video

A really cool run-down of OS X’s features while going to the tune of ‘Again and Again’ by The Bird and The Bee.

May 14, 2008 categories: Cool Shit, Internet tags:



Keirin’s ‘Beginner’s Line’

Keirin’s introduction to Kissena track racing is absolutely bonkers. Games and interactive tutorials as well. It would help if you can read Japanese, though.

Thanks Mikey for the crazy link.

Apr 29, 2008 categories: Cool Shit, Internet tags:



Iranian 57’s

A gift I received over half a year ago from my favorite Iranian. It’s got a quirky little packaging but apparently it’s from the Iranian Tobacco Company, one of the most well-known tobacco companies there. They run a huge selection of popular cigarettes including this pack of 57’s.

They’re like a quarter the size of a regular American pack of cigarettes. It’s a shame they don’t have those graphic images to deter smoking like the way it’s packaged in Asia.

Apr 27, 2008 categories: Cool Shit tags:



You’re walking all wrong

I’ve always had a penchant for shoes as a soley aesthetic and nonfunctional article of clothing. It was less about the technology and more about my awkwardness with my flat feet. Though I tried my best to stay in shoes rather than walking barefoot, I’ve gotten used to the specific pains that come with walking in uncomfortable shoes after years of sticking it out with pair after pair of pretty but altogether useless sneakers. New York Magazine has a great feature on the debate between footwear and going barefoot, comparing the alternatives and risks for each side.

“Natural gait is biomechanically impossible for any shoe-wearing person,” wrote Dr. William A. Rossi in a 1999 article in Podiatry Management. “It took 4 million years to develop our unique human foot and our consequent distinctive form of gait, a remarkable feat of bioengineering. Yet, in only a few thousand years, and with one carelessly designed instrument, our shoes, we have warped the pure anatomical form of human gait, obstructing its engineering efficiency, afflicting it with strains and stresses and denying it its natural grace of form and ease of movement head to foot.” In other words: Feet good. Shoes bad.

So I’m torn between whether my symptoms are a result of bearing with ergonomically inferior shoes for far too long, or just having flat feet being the cause of not fitting into the mold of your typical shoe.

Here’s another example: If you wear high heels for a long time, your tendons shorten—and then it’s only comfortable for you to wear high heels. One saleswoman I spoke to at a running-shoe store described how, each summer, the store is flooded with young women complaining of a painful tingling in the soles of their feet—what she calls “flip-flop-itis,” which is the result of women’s suddenly switching from heeled winter boots to summer flip-flops. This is the shoe paradox: We’ve come to believe that shoes, not bare feet, are natural and comfortable, when in fact wearing shoes simply creates the need for wearing shoes.

Having gotten accustomed to wearing shoes while living in New York, I get more of a phantom-itis with being bare foot. Since reading this article a few days ago, I’ve been actively trying to re-enable the equilibrium in my own feet through slower and more intentional steps.

Barefoot walking is, in its mechanics, very similar to barefoot running. The idea is to eliminate the hard-heel strike and employ something closer to a mid-strike: landing softly on the heel but rolling immediately through the outside of your foot, then across the ball and pushing off with the toes, with a kind of figure-eight movement though the foot.

It actually feels really weird to let your own feet roll through each step and use the toes to grasp onto the floor. My only problem is the numbness I get from just reading the actual article; I feel as though I’m in a constant state of sore for all the years of being ignorant to my inability to walk.

Apr 26, 2008 categories: Internet, Science tags:



Flipping a sphere outside-in

Watch The Geometry Center’s 21 minute video breaking down the science behind flipping a sphere inside-out without bending it sharply.

Apr 18, 2008 categories: Cool Shit tags:



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