A Key Hole for the Drunk!

Had a bit too much to drink and can't get your key into the key hold? Well now you don't have to worry about getting into your home and risk sleeping outside!

Had a bit too much to drink and can't get your key into the key hold? Well now you don't have to worry about getting into your home and risk sleeping outside!


I was recently reminded of this really awesome video of BMW's GINA concept car. Design should push things and ideas beyond what we have been used to doing. As Christ says: Think flexible, act flexible, and context over dogma.
Thanks Michelle!
Unibody “Brick” (2008)
The unibody MacBook Pro was the most obvious clue to the looks of the iPad. The case of the MacBook Pro, like the iPad, is hewn from a solid block of aluminum, which has several benefits. First, it is stiff. Stiff enough to hold a glass screen in place without it flexing, hence the nickname “brick” which seemed to leak from Apple and was picked up by the rumor blogs.
It is also rather good at dissipating heat (from, say, a fanless computer) and it is light. And because it doesn’t require an internal frame, the unibody can fit in a lot more battery (more about that below).
Core Animation (2007)
When Steve Jobs demoed Core Animation at the Worldwide Developers Conference in 2007, we wondered what on Earth it was for. Jobs sold it as bringing “very high production values” to Mac applications, and demonstrated an app which showed a whirling wall of video thumbnails. It was flashy, sure, but pointless on a desktop machine. Put it on a multitouch device, with its requirements for animated user interface elements, and it becomes essential.
The Big Glass Screen (2008)
This also debuted on the unibody MacBook Pro, and although the iPhone got a glass screen first, this was the real test to see if it would work on a bigger device. Aside from complaints about its glossiness, people were also worried about cracking the screen. What happened was the reverse: The all-in-one glass and aluminum block is surprisingly tough.
That wide, black bezel, too, is a match for the one on the iPad. In fact, if you ripped the keyboard off a MacBook Pro, you’d be left with something very much like an iPad. The design has been there all along. Spooky.
Glass Multitouch Trackpad (2008)
Another MacBook Pro feature, the glass multitouch trackpad, was the first time we saw multitouch for more than than just two fingers. Now you could swipe with three or even four fingers at once, opening up a whole new class of gestures. The fact that the pad is glass is also important, as — despite being silver — it is pretty much a small version of the iPad’s screen. Many-fingered control is essential to the iPad, and is what really sets it apart from the iPhone and iPod Touch.
Snow Leopard (2009)
When Apple announced Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, the big feature was “no new features.” While that could be taken as proof that the OS X team was working flat-out on the iPad, it’s also a little disingenuous. Under the hood, there were a lot of iPad-related changes.
For one, Snow Leopard was tiny compared to its predecessor, taking up roughly half the disk space. That’s also handy for a memory-limited handheld device, right? And if you think Apple hasn’t been working on iPhone OS multitasking for a long time, think again.
If you log out in Snow Leopard, you’ll notice how fast it closes. That’s because if an application has no open files to save, the OS pretty much chops its legs out from under it. In Mac terms, it is pretty close to a “force quit.” This is also what gets you back to the home screen so fast on the iPhone and iPad: One aspect of iPhone OS 4 multitasking is that apps need to be ready for shutdown at any moment.
Nonremovable Battery (2008)
The biggest surprise from the iPad is the battery life, which in many reviewers’ tests is even better than the promised 10 hours. This isn’t a magical new kind of technology, merely a combo of a really big battery and some clever power management. IPods and iPhones have had non-user replaceable batteries since forever, but the first Mac to get one was the MacBook Air. People screamed, except those who bought it and loved it.
The Air’s initial battery life wasn’t great, but it needed a battery that could be bent to better fill the crannies of its thin interior. As Apple got better at it, battery life started to creep up until we saw the iPad’s astonishing independence from wall-warts. The new MacBook Pro even manages to go 10 hours on a single charge.
Elements that make up an iPad should not come as a surprise to many of us as many bits were developed and tested right in front of us, but in different products.
A USD$300 Headphones designed for the iPhone. Check out this hidden jack for interchanging your cables. ie a cable that has an iPhone Mic and for a cable without and probably longer.
I'm tempted, but I need the money for food!

George Nelson, Edward Wormley, Eero Saarinen, Harry Bertoia, Charles Eames and Jens Risom Playboy Magazine, July 1961.
I need to start wearing a suit at work.
Awesome viral video marketing campaign of Samsung's H205 digital camcorder.
It subtly sells that the camcorder is so damn good it captures the flying shuriken card in motion, assuming the H205 used to film the Master.

Paper Wood is an ecologically sensitive material that is made from colorful recycled paper sandwiched by birch and lime wood. It’s unlike anything out there, states the company, in that its visual attractiveness negates the need for any coating or finishes.
"We're starting to see the beginning of a new world order," says James P. Andrew, a senior partner at Boston Consulting Group and head of its global innovation practice. "The developed world's hammerlock on innovation leadership is starting to break a little bit."
HTC is typical of Asia's ascendancy. Founded in 1997 as a contract manufacturer, the company has long been the world's top maker of mobile handsets using Microsoft's (MSFT) Windows Mobile operating system. It produced unbranded devices that bear the logos of such wireless giants as Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint Nextel (S), and Japan's NTT DoCoMo (DCM).
As it became more sophisticated, HTC built the first phone powered by Google's Android operating system, for T-Mobile, in 2008. It followed up with the Nexus One for Google, which was launched in January. Today, HTC is making and selling its own line of smartphones around the world, and roughly a quarter of the company's 8,000-person workforce hold engineering-related jobs. HTC Chief Executive Peter Chou "looks at what's possible and then puts [in] the resources," says Paul E. Jacobs, CEO of Qualcomm (QCOM), a mobile-phone chipmaker and HTC partner. "He's willing to take the risk." Says Chou: "Innovation is not a one-time job—innovation is a journey."
Asia's rise to dominance. Indeed it is a new world order. Be afraid, very afraid. ;)