Archive for the ‘Random Stuff’ Category

Awesome Watch

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010
Tokyo Flash have always had an ability to produce watches that are a perfect equilibrium between design & geek. The Tokyo Flash Cross Town Traffic is no exception.  I personally am not a watch-wearer, but am often tempted by shiny time keepers that I think will make my chubby arm look a little more appealing. Even more appealing is the fact that people will actually have to ask you if they want to know the time. Imagine that. You are on the bus or tube and someone ACTUALLY engages in conversation. If you’re lucky, maybe you’ll get eye contact. Whatever. It is the year 2010 after all, and most people use their mobile phones as a watch. Anyway – onto the specs -

“Navigating Traffic will become your forte once you’ve mastered the rules of the road. Take a look at the maps below and trust your instincts. Hours 1-12 are the city streets in blue, 5 minute intervals are shown along the subway line in orange and single minutes 1-4 are the highway out of town in green. After touching the button, lights showing the current time will flash for a seven seconds to direct you.”

1

  • Displays the time
  • Stainless steel case & strap
  • USB rechargeable: connect to your computer with cable provided
  • LED animation option (can be turned off)
  • Clasp: simple fold over clasp with push button
  • Minimum wrist size: 130 mm (approx.)
  • Maximum wrist size: 200 mm (approx.)
  • Case dimensions: 33 mm x 48 mm x 9 mm
  • Weight: 164 grams
  • Water resistance: 3ATM
  • Battery: LIR2032 rechargeable & replaceable watch battery
  • Japanese and English instructions
  • One year manufacturer’s warranty

2

Found via Geekologie
Product Site

Motorized Couch???

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

I still believe that for Google to fully achieve their dreams of world domination, they are going to have to invent a battery powered “Google Car”. Yup. You heard me, I predicted it first. Anyway, crystal ball aside, I had a big, fat chuckle when I found this post about two BYU students who invented a “Motorized Couch”. This so called “chick-pulling” wagon puts Segways to shame. Who wants to stand up anyway?

Unfortunately, like all things schweet, it has been banned from the campus grounds. One has to wonder why the powers of learning institutions are always hell bent on banning stuff. When I was a brace-faced junior, side partings were all the rage (don’t laugh, I happened to love having curtain-esque hair covering my eyes), so they immediately banned long fringes, and then when too much gel was all the rage, they banned hair product. Short hair, long hair, gel, wax….. I really hope that pudding bowl haircuts become Jedward-like popular so they can finally ban them too.

Anyway, check out the video below, get inspired, and build one. I am looking forward to someone pulling up outside IWOOT towers offering to give me a ride home. Double points if it’s a lazy boy. Found on Geekologie



Jenna Woot is an Assassin!

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Well, kind of… Our very own Jenna Woot has entered Streetwars and I managed to quiz her on what looks to be an awesome next few weeks. This is what she had to say about it -

“Isn’t it every girls dream to don a mack, grow a moustache and live a life of espionage?

Next Sunday StreetWars, a 3 week 24/7 London wide water gun ‘assassination’ tournament, hits London.

The mission is simple: Under the cover of darkness you are required attend the meeting point and pick up a manila envelope containing details of your target. You must track down your target and, with any water based weapon, give them the soaking of a lifetime.

To make it slightly more of a challenge you must also avoid being drenched by the assailant who will be hunting you. Once you have reduced your target to a sopping mess his target then becomes your next mission. Safe points include your workplace, public transport and bars.

The last (dry) man standing is victorious.

What could be more fun? Needless to say I signed up in seconds.

Being an Iwooter certainly has its perks. I’ve been kitted out with two of the highly sought after AK47 Aqua Fire guns for one. The fact that I can turn up to work dressed like a tree and was not sent home is also a bonus.”

Live action updates -most likely coffee fuelled and from bushes- to follow… To see the Street Wars Video click here

jenna13

jenna21


Someone's Written a Vuvuzela Concerto

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

More Vuvuzela news now, and it seems that some bright spark has come up with a Vuvuzela Concerto. Unsurprisingly, it’s one long note.

Of course, that’s a very funny joke (I laughed for approximately 34 seconds), but has the anonymous composer not realised that the blueprint for such pieces had been formed many years ago? The righteous minimalism of Steve Reich, the looping cell compositions of Terry Riley, even the repetitive drone masterclass of avant-garde noise-mongers Sunn 0)))? No? Oh well. Here’s the concerto anyway:

NNNNNNRRRRRRGGGGGGHHHHHHH...

Good, innit?

I, for one, am hoping that the inevitable performance of this maverick work at this afternoon’s England/Slovenia match will drown out the shockingly inane brass parps of the England supporter’s band. Why do they think playing the theme from The Great Escape is remotely related to winning a football match? Anyway, good on The Guardian for spotting it, and let’s hope it goes our way this afternoon…

Underwater IWOOT

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

The vast oceans are, and always will be, a domain of mystery for mankind. All those miles of barely-charted territory that house nature’s darkest secrets, stretching below the surface as deep as man’s desire to conquer it and claim it as his own. Putney Swimming Pool, however, is probably a little more manageable.

So, when we needed to shoot some new aquatic products, we decided to leave Cousteau-esque Oceanography to the big boys and dress JimboWoot up in a suit instead. And then chuck him in, obviously. If you want to show him some appreciation, then pop over to the main site and have a look at the Waterproof Notebook. In the meantime, though, have a look at our Putney underwater adventure…

Limbering up...

"Take a deep breath..."

"Pub?"

Toto Toilets – Does Anyone Else Find This Weird?

Friday, May 28th, 2010

You might not be au fait with current trends in the rapidly advancing world of toilet innovation, but it seems that a minor revolution is taking place. This week, the first Toto Toilets are going on sale in the UK. Previously available (and monstrously successful) in Asia and the US, they’re basically the Rolls Royce of, err, going to the loo. As this video ably explains, the technology is pretty impressive:

But come on – it’s just a toilet, right? I mean (and I don’t want to go into too much detail here), going to the toilet is a pretty straight-forward process. Cleanliness is certainly an issue, but this is just nuts. Is it really worth paying over £2000 for a bog that gets the bowl a little bit cleaner than squirting some bleach around the rim? And who needs to be able to immediately flush the toilet again after you’ve flushed it once? Actually, don’t answer that… Also, what a self-important video! It’s a toilet, not a time machine. Although that’s an avenue worth exploring.

There are advantages to a nice toilet, yes, but as soon as you put another novelty item in the bathroom the wow-factor immediately disappears. We’re thinking, of course, of the Glow In The Dark Loo Roll here. Click here to learn more about the bogs anyway.

So – would you pay over £2000 for one of these bathroom behemoths?

Milk Goes First?

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

After some borderline-psychotic posting on our Facebook wall regarding the thorny issue of how one makes a perfect cup of tea, we thought it would be a good idea to compile an office-wide list of how IWOOT does tea.

On a personal note, compiling this list has made me realise that I am the only person in the office who makes tea in the way I do. Am I a visionary or just plain deluded?

So here we go – here are all the varying methods in which us Wooters make our brew:

Cass, HR: I have fruit tea, so I don’t count. But it’s hot water, teabag and then just leave it in.

James, Creative: tea bag, sugar, hot water, stew, milk.

Dan, Creative: tea bag, milk, hot water, thrash with spoon, remove bag. No sugar. Ever.

Kate, Marketing: tea bag – water – sugar. Milk is horrible and should be banned.

Dino, Creative: Bag, hot water, wait for tea to brew, take tea bag out, sugar, then milk whilst stirring.

Tim-Yee, Commercial: Bag, water, brew, milk, squeeze teabag.

Chris, Customer Services: Kettle boils. While that’s happening, tea bag goes in cup. Pour water into cup (the floor is frowned upon). Stir and squeeze bag with tea spoon. Remove bag. Add sugar/honey. Add milk. Stir. Begin biscuit dipping.

Sasha, Customer Services: 2 sugars, then the bag, then the water, then the milk. I think it tastes better like this & you get a good builder strength! Mmmmm… If you put the milk in 1st, it just doesn’t work out right. Even if you only put in a bit of milk, it still tastes like nan tea!

Wanessa, Finance: Bag, sugar, hot water and milk last.

Tim, Creative Director: Tea bag and sugar (v imp that sugar goes in before water). Boiling water – not boiled two mins ago, but boiling. Leave in cup/mug for min three-four minutes (Earl Grey), or one minute (Builders). Ensure no spoon in cup whilst stewing. Remove and squeeze out bag. Add touch of milk and stir. Leave to get cold on desk and get nasty shock when you remember to drink it.

Delicious.

Chelsey, Customer Services: First grab a mug. Add a tea bag and 3 sugars. Add some hot water. Add a bit of milk (I like mine milky so a lil’ bit more than the norm). Stir with a teaspoon and then leave the tea bag in (I like a stronger taster and plus I’m too lazy to fuss about getting it out). Enjoy it with a Kit Kat.

Damn you – now off to raid the tuck shop and make a cuppa!!

Maria, IT: Tea bag, sugar, water, milk. Having said that I always used to put the milk in 1st! But I’ve been told that the liquid has to be boiling to get a proper brew.

Ben, Commercial: Two teabags in to accommodate my oversized mug, hot water on the top, stir a bit then let it stand for a few minutes, squeeze and remove teabags to release all tea goodness, milk, sugar, stir. If it’s not made in that order I’m quite simply not drinking it.

Jose, IT: 1 – tea bag. 2 – water. 3 – milk. 4 – sugar.

Sagar, IT: Tea. Hot water. Brew. Milk. The milk cools the water too soon and thereby slows down the entire brewing process if you add it before brewing is complete.

Richard, MD: First select teapot… breakfast or afternoon. Boil water and put a couple of inches of boiling water in the pot to warm it. Drain teapot. Add one spoon of tea per person and “one spoonful for the pot”. Pour in boiling water and stir round briskly for a couple of seconds. Let stand for 3-5 minutes. If breakfast tea, pour through strainer to ¾ fill cup. Add milk/sugar to taste. North of Watford, milk goes in before the tea for some reason I don’t understand.
With herbal or Earl Grey, pour tea through strainer and add lemon/sugar as required.

Alternatively, add one or two tea bags to mug; pour in boiling water, stir and drain tea bags and remove them. Add milk/sugar to taste.

Perhaps the most interesting aspect of this distraction from real work is how very seriously everyone seems to take their tea. But whose way is the right way? The consensus seems to be that the tea bag pretty much always should go in first, followed by hot water. But I disagree.

I love ‘Nan tea’, and apparently haphazardly foul up my cuppa by putting the milk in on top of the bag and then the hot water. The taste, though! The malty, thick, even goodness of a cup of tea that doesn’t have the same look as an open pot of floor varnish! Because this is MY blog post, I’m holding my position and am totally advocating the milk-then-hot-water strategy. As a result, I could well be unemployed by this evening.

Do tell us your thoughts/methods, and we’ll see if there’s anyone out there that shares my tea-making ineptitude genius.

Realistic Movie Robots

Monday, May 10th, 2010

Reading this news story over at the BBC makes for quite a panicky Monday morning’s reading, that’s for sure. In essence, it says that robot technology, such as it is at the moment, could potentially be very dangerous to humans if we were to allow machines to help us around the house. Some German science people conducted some experiments designed to test ‘safety limits’ on a robot arm only to discover that, unsurprisingly, it could still inflict serious injury when equipped with knives and other stabbing weapons.

Now, the article doesn’t really go into enough detail at this point. They’ve said that the victims of this controlled robot arm attack were a silicone lump, a dead pig and, rather alarmingly, the arm of a human volunteer. We assume they were already long-gone…

Still, all this combined with having watched the rather rubbish ‘I, Robot’ on Friday night makes me wonder exactly what robots will be like in the future. Furthermore, it made me wonder which films have successfully (more than ‘I, Robot’, anyway) made convincing attempts at depicting what the logical extrapolation of a robot arm cutting through a dead pig would be. One thing’s for sure – while the plot of ‘I, Robot’ is entertaining enough, having a zillion poorly rendered robots jump onto Will Smith’s moving car from 50 feet away and run alongside it in an attempt to kill him while he coolly shouts things like “now I’m maaaad!” certainly isn’t. God I hate ‘I, Robot’…

Anyway, off the top of my head, I’ve come up with the following better examples of realistic robots that might chop your arm off in years to come:

Replicant Roy Batty in Blade Runner:

ED-209 in Robocop (minus the blood… and the hilarious final line: “Someone wanna call a paramedic?”):

And finally, the great Woody Allen gets some tailoring advice:

What other examples can you find?

Ash use Stylophone Beatboxes

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Being the discerning supporter of independent music that I am (so long as you gloss over the Girls Aloud and Beyonce sections of my iPod), I popped along to London’s Rough Trade East record shop for International Record Store Day on Saturday. Essentially an event that celebrates the independent record shops across the world, establishments across the world held free concerts, bands released one-day-only records and basically encouraged us to enjoy the experience of being surrounded by fusty blokes with vinyl sleeves jammed under their arms.

Rough Trade East played host to several enjoyable artists, but my ears began to tremble when Ash started using our very own Stylophone Beatboxes. With my crappy trusty phone in my pocket, I captured what I could for evidence:

Well done chaps. Truly, the music sounds better with Stylophone Beatboxes. Get hold of your very own here, and listen to Ash here.

stybea

April Fool's Day worked for us…

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

If you’re one of our email subscribers, you may have noticed that we monkeyed around a bit with our products on April Fool’s Day. Of course, this was meant purely in jest and we were horrified to learn that some people took it seriously. So, to those who rang in, emailed, left comments or otherwise inquired about the intricate features of the Pad-Dock iPhone to Tablet Converter: it was a childish joke. We’re sorry.

Except this is REALLY funny:

“Dear in charge person,

I’m **** ** of **** *** in Korea.
I guess you have the sales right of the Pad-Dock.
Is it right, If so, please reply.
If not, please forward this mail to your supplier.

We are looking for the good idea product for Korea market.
I just see the news about the Pad-Dock and got impressed about it.
It is really good product and want to buy item for iphone users.

My colleagues and I have been in electronic field more than 15 years for each member.
And we set up the company 6 months ago for the iphone accessory and idea product.
Now we have on/off line sales channel in Korea.
I’d like to promote your product in Korea market.

If you don’t have any distributor in Korea, please inform me for the Pad-Dock.
Price : For sample, MOQ for initial order, 500pcs, 1,000pcs.

If you have any qty rule, pls let me know.
Payment condition
Delivery lead time
Hope to get your favorable reply soon.

Best regards,

*** **”

Again, we’re sorry. Kind-of.