1. I don’t care whether it is useful, whether I will like it and whether I’ll like my Magic Mouse better. If not then I’ll use it as a paper weight.
But it’s just so damn beautiful!

 Apple - Magic Trackpad - The Multi-Touch trackpad for your desktop.

    I don’t care whether it is useful, whether I will like it and whether I’ll like my Magic Mouse better. If not then I’ll use it as a paper weight.

    But it’s just so damn beautiful!

    Apple - Magic Trackpad - The Multi-Touch trackpad for your desktop.
     
  2. 21:05 17th Jun 2010

    notes: 1627

    reblogged from: mikehudack

    tags: designbridgechinahong kong

    The Flipper bridge, via mikehudack:kevintwohy:jacob:Kottke:

In Hong Kong, cars drive on the left while in the rest of China, they drive on the right. If you’re building a bridge between the two, you’ve got to come up with a clever way to switch lanes without disruption or accident.

    The Flipper bridge, via mikehudack:kevintwohy:jacob:Kottke:

    In Hong Kong, cars drive on the left while in the rest of China, they drive on the right. If you’re building a bridge between the two, you’ve got to come up with a clever way to switch lanes without disruption or accident.

     
  3. image: download

    Microsoft Mobile 7, Sandisk advertisements… is this the start of a pattern? Gone with the fake 3D and light effects and basically anything flashy?

vizualize
    Microsoft Mobile 7, Sandisk advertisements… is this the start of a pattern? Gone with the fake 3D and light effects and basically anything flashy?

    vizualize

     
  4. 14:07 11th Nov 2009

    notes: 15

    reblogged from: mikehudack

    tags: giftsdesignlego

    image: download

    mikehudack:

arigreenberg:


Guggenheim Lego Set
I saw this yesterday at the Guggenheim gift shop.
This is the perfect gift for your architecturally minded son/daughter/niece/nephew/grandson/granddaughter/blogger.
You can buy it for them me here or at the Guggenheim.
=”http://shop.lego.com/product/?p=21004&LangId=2057&ShipTo=US”>here or at the Guggenheim.

Wow.  I want.

Sinterklaas or Santa Claus - this is on my list.

    mikehudack:

    arigreenberg:

    Guggenheim Lego Set

    I saw this yesterday at the Guggenheim gift shop.

    This is the perfect gift for your architecturally minded son/daughter/niece/nephew/grandson/granddaughter/blogger.

    You can buy it for them me here or at the Guggenheim.

    =”http://shop.lego.com/product/?p=21004&LangId=2057&ShipTo=US”>here or at the Guggenheim.

    Wow. I want.

    Sinterklaas or Santa Claus - this is on my list.

     
  5. Amazing idea for a shape-shifting robot: we’re not there yet, but at may be a small step towards the T-1000?

    (via CNET)

     
  6. 20:01 3rd Nov 2009

    notes: 1

    reblogged from: malthe

    tags: designinterface

    Scrolling: up or down

    Some post on iPhone/Magic Mouse confusion prompted me to reconsider scrolling. On the iPhone scrolling happens by pushing the text: when you want to scroll to read what is next on a page, you actually push the page up - in an upward motion.

    Apparently the new Magic Mouse from Apple emulates a scroll wheel - the familiar middle mouse wheel/button introduced by Genius in 1995. Moving your finger up does not move the page up, it moves the scrollbar up - which moves the page down. Therefore on the Magic Mouse to read further the pushing is in an downward motion.

    This is confusing for Apple users, and it also makes me think: should it not be the other way around? Why am I scrolling the scroll bar down? Why am I not pushing the page up?

    What is the scrollbar anyway, other than a handy model of the page, with the full page stretched as a background, and the part you actually see as a button in foreground? Nothing: it is a model, a construct, a way to show how much you can and cannot see.

    However, that does not mean that the scrollbar suddenly is the most important element. The page still is the part that I am looking at. In this way, the scrollbar is actually obstructing my direct interaction with the page.

    It should be changed. When I scroll my mouse down, I want the page to go down: showing me the top part of the page, not the bottom.