designapalooza’s posterous

2.97 IAP 2009 
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The Light-Up Electric Guitar

The Fretlight FG-421sells for around 500 bucks. This guitar is pretty sweet. Software provides pre-recorded lessons for beginners, as well as downloads for songs for the more experienced player. The frets light up as you are supposed to play them, making it simple and easy to learn a new song. Not only that, but once you have the hang of it, it is still a pretty decent sounding electric guitar.

As a self-taught guitar player myself, I can say that I really would have benefited from one of these. While they are a little more expensive than their non-light up counterparts, the benefit of a simple and easy way to work through the nuts and bolts would be worth the extra money. Not to mention what one might save in lesson costs.

My current method to learn songs involves finding free user-submitted tabs on the web, which are inevitably missing parts, missing details, or downright wrong. I would not mind shelling out a little money (think iTunes) for the convenience and accuracy of learning a song at my own pace, and knowing I sound exactly like Hendrix while I'm doing it.

A good idea, a good device, and a good model for repeat earnings after the sale.

-Gavin

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Super Comfortable Sports Chair

Things amazing about the chair's design,
 
1. It's leather
2. It can recline backwards, depending on the person's weight
3. It rotates
4. It's stationary
5. Arm rests
6. Made from very light materials
7. Easy to clean
 
Overall, is a very good design, and I would recommend others to get it.

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Designed for Designers

By Heraclio Hernandez

The Gateway Tablet PC is a great tool for designers, I own one of the great devices.  Unfortunately this design friendly tool has a design flaw of its own.  The screen pivots on one central mechanism at the the base of the screen.  This mechanism enables the screen to assume a more comfortable writing position. The problem that occurs with the mounting mechanism is that the hinges tend to loosen up over time and the screen becomes wobbly. When the screen becomes wobbly enough it then becomes hard to position properly and the plastic casing that holds the screen starts to open up a little.  The other inherent flaw is that when the screen is in the writing position it prevents air flow across the keyboard, which results in the unit to get hotter.  If the person using the computer is using it to takes not on their lap, it quickly heats up and becomes uncomfortable.  I bought one of the first models on the market and I wonder what has been done to prevent these inconveniences.

   
Click here to download:
Designed_for_Designers.zip (3967 KB)

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Pop Top Soup Cans - The Death of the Can Opener

The pop tab addition to soup cans (and other cans) is, in my mind, quite a handy addition. Although soda cans have had these for years, it apparently took designers a few years to catch on and add it food cans as well. Last night a friend of mine tried to open a can of chili with my swiss army knife, and was lucky to not lose a finger. The jagged leftovers were quite sharp, and the process took quite a while. A can opener solves this problem, but you need to have one - requiring two tools to perform one task, something the tab eliminates. Sometimes I think the simplest design upgrades are the hardest to find when looking at traditional activities that have been ingrained into instinct over long periods of time. If it ain't broke, that doesn't necessarily mean that there isn't room for improvement.

Advantages:
Don't need the sometimes hard to find can opener
Edges are a little less sharp then can opener-opened cans (say that 5 times fast)

Disadvantages:
Requires a little more material?

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Backpack

As a Boy Scout and frequent camper, I have a backpack (not a bookbag, but a hiking backpack) that I absolutely love.  I’ve taken it on many camping and backpacking trips, used it when I biked to Target to carry my purchases back, and frequently take it when traveling back and forth to MIT.  It is very easy to walk with and take on the T to get to the airport, and it’s very easy to spot on the checked baggage carousel.

 

This backpack is huge.  I’ve never had a problem fitting all of my stuff into it.  There is a sleeve for a water bladder (CamelBak), a compartment in the bottom for a sleeping bag, and a bunch of pockets on the sides.  The top even detaches and transforms into a fanny pack (which is a nice feature, but I don’t recall ever actually using it).  Near the waist strap, there is a sleeve for a water bottle that is angled forward so I can easily get my Nalgene in and out without having to take my pack off.  The only thing I would want to add would be someplace on the side to easily fit my shoes into.

 

 

Cody

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Winter Gloves

I was walking to school the other day in snowy boston, and was imagining how unbearable it would be if I did not have gloves on for the winters in Boston. As it is commonly known, hand gloves is a type of garment that covers the
hand; it could accomplish multiple needs and purposes, and can come in various shapes, colors, and materials. For example, gloves can be used for protecting your hands against cold weather, hazardous chemicals, etc. For the purpose of this post I will only focus on winter gloves. Even though winter gloves are amazingly practical for keeping one's hands warm, it makes the user incapable of any activity that necessitates tactility. For example, when walking in the streets in the midst of the winter the process of taking your cell phone and responding to a call is daunting and impractical. A solution to meet this need would be to design and develop very thin-skinned winter gloves with a material composition that provides high insulation and enhances activities that demand tactility.
 
Avid

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High tech graphite loses its protection

BY: HERACLIO HERNANDEZ

Since I was a kid I had a problem with mechanical pencils, but not all mechanical pencils just the nice ones with the caps on the eraser.  The main problem is that the caps fall off all the time.  A consequences of the cap issue is that that the eraser falls off when its in my backpack and the lead breaks.  On top of everything the eraser gets dirty and leaves smudges when I erase. Most of the time the caps usually get permanently lost. So now the nice pen with a cap that I paid extra for is no longer the as nice as it was when I first bought it.  After the eraser falls off once it is never the same again; it wears a little and it falls off easier the next time.  There should be a much better system of protecting the eraser.  An easy flip cover would probably suffice.  The images shows a new blue pencil with the eraser still covered and the other one is what it will eventually look like.

   
Click here to download:
High_tech_graphite_loses_it_pr.zip (3889 KB)

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A Different Use

As far as this product goes, I would not recommend anyone buying it. Simply,
this shower container is an overpriced product sold at the Coop, bought
foolishly about a year and a half ago. With it's triangular shape, it is true
that it provides more room than the competing products, but for a price that I
believe at the time was around $ 8, I think that with some imagination much
cheaper solutions can be thought of.
 
The product in itself has it's functional flaws. The two that come to my head
are the fact that due to the triangular shape, the cuffs do not get enough
suction to the wall due to the product's weight, so that the holder can only be
placed on the floor. Somewhat curious as the product comes with 4 plastic cuffs
to attach it to the wall, which is more than the necessary amount. The second
fault is that, as the square holes only begin 1 inch off the floor in this
holder, a bit of volume of water can accumulate at the bottom of the holder,
releasing once u finish the shower in the dry floor of the bathroom.
 
This product is not completely useless though. If you are like me, then the
shower holder makes a great container for all types of lose chains and coins.
You simply divide the change into dimes, nickels, pennies, and quarters, place
them in zip lock bags, and put them next to one another inside the holder. So
far I've spent a year doing this, and I can say I am quite satisfied.
 
- Jose

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HP Fail (Sorry for Repetition, Wrong picture)

One of the most annoying and perhaps saddest components of the HP laptop
Pavilion is the location of it's heating vents.
 
Situated right under the LCD screen, the heating vents actually successfully
heat up most of the computer in about 10 minutes, making it inadequate to hold
and somewhat of a pain to use. The rubber stands with which it comes actually
fall as the adhesive is melted by the glue, and over time the computer's
capability to heat up gets faster and much more inconvenient.
 
As you can probably tell, this has happened to me. The end result was that the
computer got to such a degree of heat that it ended melting the plastic of the
closing mechanism for the LCD screen. Now, the laptop is very inaccessible, and
it must wear a duct tape "band-aid" at all points.
 
The HP Pavilion design fails, although from my recent laptop purchase, they did
notice the problem and successfully lifted the LCD screen an inch away from the
heating vent, although that is not going to convince me to buy one still.
 
- Jose

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Expo Erasable Marker

White boards have revolutionized temporary writing; in many classrooms,
they have replaced traditional chalkboards, not to mention the endless
hallways, doors, and conference rooms that sport them. And where there
are white boards, the Expo marker reigns.
 
These things are designed quite well; to avoid losing the indispensable
cap, they can be affixed to the marker's reverse end when writing.
Chiseled tips allow different widths to be marked on the surfaces. And,
of course, the ink is nontoxic and erasable.
 
The only design change I would suggest is something that the makers of
the Sharpie permanent marker have already thought of; 'clicky' extension
and withdrawal of the tip, much like ballpoint pens. I believe t is
definitely possible to implement this on Expo markers.
 
- Wei

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