Behold!
My interaction critique about clocks.
Monday, March 15, 2010
Monday, March 8, 2010
Favorite thing of the Moment

How do you like my modern art? Pretty cool, right? What if I told you that this is a picture of me playing solitaire for 34 minutes?
A couple days ago, I was reading one of my favorite blogs and it talked about IOGraphica an awesome program that tracks your mouse paths and makes them into png files. Clearly I had to give it a shot. The dots are mouse pauses and the lines follow wherever I move the mouse. An inconspicuous program stays open while I use my computer and makes awesome art while I do the most mundane of tasks.
What I really like about this program is that it is a totally new way to quantify computer use. Instead of "how much work did I get done today?", I can now ask "how pretty was my art today?". Even better is that more work on my computer makes better art!
Also, I can find trends in what I do. Below are some other pictures of me using my computer. Check out my favorite places on the screen. What do you think they correspond to?



My 5.3 Hour Magnum Opus
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Something to buy when I'm at least rich and possibly famous

Do not adjust your eyes. The solid looking floor is really turning into a pool. It's useless, it's overpriced, it's WONDERFUL! I mean how often do you look at your indoor pool and just wish that you could also use that room for costume balls and dinner parties? Check it out at www.hydrofloors.be .
Jokes aside, I will probably never be able to afford this, but am very happy someone thought about it. Aside from the obvious uses, this could also be used with families that have small children who shouldn't wonder into the pool. I must assume, however, that in homes grand enough to have this, there must be nanny's too. I do wonder if the floor is slippery when it comes back up.
Anyhow, just had to share.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Wal-Mart Cutting Brands, Opening Itself Up to IP LawEt suit?

I think there will be a huge IP backlash from this. Most of the brands that are being given the boot are commodity brands. Commodity brands have the hardest time differentiating themselves from other brands due to the common nature of the products they make. They will have patented and trademarked anything and everything they can that makes them stand out. Wal-Mart makes it's own versions of many of the successful commodity products that have differentiated themselves with minute details. The commodity brands are going to lose A LOT of money while Wal-Mart sells their products and they get no money because they are not even on the shelves.
The way these store brand generics usually work is that the company who makes the original product doesn't make a fuss when the big stores (CVS, Target, Wal-Mart) copy their products because they do not want the stores to take their brands off the shelves. This is a scare tactic, but it works, and brands don't complain. Now Wal-Mart is removing the brand names from the shelves and keeping the Wal-Mart brand products, leaving the brand names with no incentive not to sue for IP infringement. This isn't just one brand, but a lot of brands. I'm sure there's some form of Captain Planet type of team that could combine powers to be bigger than Wal-Mart in a courtroom. This could get interesting.
Monday, February 8, 2010
Pajama Jeans? Really?

I have to hand it to the creators of these. They saw an white space in the market. One look at peopleofwalmart.com and many of the students we know (freshman class at 8am anyone?) shows that women are in fact wearing their pajama pants out of the house, happily denying fashion trends for the sake of comfort. Looking at these pajama jeans creates a sort of head smacking "why didn't I think of that" moment, which is a sure sign of success. Of course people who already wear their pajama pants out side of the house would be super excited about these. There's also a market for people who want to be comfortable at home but don't like dressing down to do it. There are hundreds more reasons to wear these. So complete Kudos to the probably soon to be rich creators.
I understand people might want the pajamajean, but I'm still not too happy they exist. They kinda show a new height of laziness for America. We might officially be too lazy to get dressed. Not really, but this is scarily close. I guess when it comes down to it, while personal style is super important, I think the way a person presents themselves is very important. Wearing these might bridge the gap between "I was too busy to dress up today" and "I don't want to dress nicely".
These remind me of the snuggie in many ways. The main similarity to me is that both...just...aren't...necessary. They are things that people might want, but provide no actual benefit other than fitting 1 need that people could very easily not have addressed.
That said, while posting I started thinking how nice these might be on my next international flight...
I'm still scared of them.
Monday, February 1, 2010
Poach Pod: Eggstrodinairy?

Enter the Poach Pod. With this, one can supposedly cook perfect poached eggs any time. This classy invention falls under the category of gift. At about 10 dollars for the set, I have passed it up in the past (ironically, probably wasting more than 10 dollars worth of eggs in the process). Be that as it may, my mom thought it was cool, so she surprised me with a set of them.
Theoretically, with these two silicone cups I can poach eggs with ease and leave all of my egg failures in the past.
Initial Thoughts

The instructions seem easy enough. Pretty much boil water an add the cups with eggs in them. I can do that, right?
Poaching

Getting the eggs in the cups was trickier than I thought it would be, but I think it's only because of my personal egg habit. I normally break the eggshell on the side of my frying pan. In this situation, I was pretty far away from my pot of water, and couldn't do that. I also didn't want to get any egg in the water by messing up the crack. I tried whacking the eggs with a knife to break them like I've seen people do. As you can see, I had one success and one failure. The yoke on the left was DOA due to some jagged edges made by my failure to use the knife properly. I figured it would cook anyhow and left it.
Also, the cups are not very stable when putting the eggs in. I did the first one too fast and almost spilled egg all over my counter.
In any case, they were ready to be cooked.

Into the water the eggs went. They looked like lily pads! I put the lid on and cooked them for 4 minutes as specified by the directions. On removing the lid...something had gone wrong. The cups had water in them and there was egg all around the pan, quite like my other failed attempts at poaching. The egg with the intact yolk had submerged itself. It looked like an exceptional poached egg though. The other egg didn't look good at all.
I had fun trying to tip the cups in the pot to get all the water out, while not spilling the egg. Anyhow...

Result: 1 Perfectly Poached Egg!

Critiques
- Shape of the cups: The cups are unstable when putting the eggs in and the three handles make it hard to pick up without tipping. Also, I can't figure out what the holes are for in the cup. Maybe one can tie to top together?
- Type of Pot: I think next time I'll use a deeper pot or a convex lid. The lid may have pushed them down. It's also possible that I was doing too hard of a boil, and that's why it happened.
- Taste: The egg tastes a little like the silicone cup.
- Cracked yolk=fail?
Final Review
Nifty, but not strictly necessary. Great if a lot of eggs need to be poached at once.
Friday, January 29, 2010
My New Challenge

One of the smartest things that has ever been told to me was that it doesn't matter how cool or novel an organization system is. If it doesn't fit you, it's useless to you. I struggle to come to terms with that almost every day.
Now, for as long as I've been dating my boyfriend, his method of clothing organization has been what we might call...lazy. The important dress items got hung up promptly, but clean laundry tended to sit in a seemingly endless number of laundry baskets randomly littered around the the apartment. He didn't even have a dresser.
This was all well and good until we started living together and his room became my room. Thinking it would solve the problem, I made sure he finally got a dresser and closet space when we moved in. Six months into this whole cohabitation thing, the picture below is the after he cleaned picture (There's also one hamper in the foyer and one in our dining room), and his drawers are filled with the things he never wears.
So, being the enlightened designer I am attempting to be, I realized that what we have here is a user centered design problem. Clearly, traditional organization methods fall flat in this situation. Unfortunately, similar to the welders using Miller welders, he is perfectly happy with the system, and I want the change. So, I have started a side project to figure out how to solve this problem so we are both happy. My first step was to figure out why he does this even though he really does like a clean house (cognitive dissidence?). So I asked him about it.
Driving Factors of Current System for him:
- Laziness upon coming back home with clean laundry. He doesn't want spend the time putting things in drawers.
- Portability of wardrobe allows him to move his wardrobe out of the room so he can get dressed for work without waking me up.
- Multiple hampers let him have "in" and "out" hampers so to speak which can adapt. A hamper can have clean clothes one day, and then change into a dirty clothes hamper with limited modification.
- The laundry baskets are see-through. He can see all of the items and know what to choose.
So far my initial solution that he just put all of his hampers into the extra bedroom and give me his drawer space wasn't well received. I think I'll have to work a little bit harder.
Let me know if you guys have any insights, and I'll let you know when I make the next step!
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