Stap Man Stapler

Stap Man Stapler (Image behavior Panik-Design)
By fear Liszewski

At what disc does ‘inspired by’ meliorate ‘blatantly ripped off’? Because there’s rattling no denying where the methodicalness for this Stap Man machine came from. Of code we every participate that Pac Man didn’t roam his labyrinth stapling the infant counterbalance sheets on TPS reports aforementioned this doppleganger module pay his chronicle doing, but there’s no denying there’s a discernment more than foregather ‘inspiration’ with this assets design. Still, for most $26 in your garner of black or white, I poverty digit on my desk!

[ Stap Man Stapler ] VIA [ Nerd Approved ]

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Alastair Gibson

Carbon Fiber Fish Sculptures (Images courtesy CarbonArt45)
By Andrew Liszewski

These fish sculptures made from carbon fiber Formula One racing parts might seem a little odd at first, but when you consider that Alastair Gibson, the artist who created them, was the lead mechanic for the Benetton F1 team for 4 years, and later served as the race team chief mechanic for BAR Honda for another another 10, you can kind of understand where he drew his inspiration.

The parts used in his creations are from actual F1 cars (like the snazzy exhaust pipes on the back of the ‘Racing Mako’) and each one is documented so you can trace back where each fin, tooth or gill actually came from. Unfortunately these pieces aren’t available for sale, but Alastair is “undertaking a number of private commissions” according to his website, so all is not lost if you really wanted one of these hanging over your fireplace.

[ CarbonArt45 - Fish Sculptures ] VIA [ PistonHeads ]

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Warp Zone Socks

Warp Zone Socks (Image courtesy AshiDashi)
By Andrew Liszewski

Normally I’d scoff at the notion of paying $11.99 for a single pair of socks, but how can anyone who’s ever spent any amount of time trying to rescue the Princess not want a pair of these Warp Zone socks? They’re not an officially-licensed Nintendo product of course, but the random coin box pattern on the foot and the green warp pipe design on the leg makes it pretty clear where they got their inspiration from. You can order a pair from AshiDashi, but be aware they only come in men’s 8-13 sizes.

[ Warp Zone Socks ] VIA [ ALBOTAS ]

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I Asked Joel Johnson For A Guest Post And Here It Is

joel-johnsonBy David Ponce… and Joel Johnson

[ It wouldn't be a stretch to say that Joel Johnson was the inspiration and the seed of life behind OhGizmo! This site would not exist were it not for his influence on me, simple as that. He was the sole, slightly masochist editor of Gizmodo back in 2004. He has enjoyed a stellar writing career at places like BoingBoing Gadgets (where he currently works), Playboy (I think I read that somewhere) and countless others. After meeting him at CES this year, I figured I'd try my luck and ask him to guest post here, on OG. Worse that could happens was... nothing. Below is what came out. -Ed. ]

I’ve known David Ponce since he started OhGizmo!, but I didn’t have the pleasure of meeting him and the rest of the team until this year’s CES. They’re good eggs.

David asked me if I’d have time to write a column here at OhG!, which would be great…but I don’t. (I sort of run my own gadget site, which shall remain linkless.) But I started thinking about the sort of thing I would write about on OhGizmo! that I wouldn’t write on my own site, and it didn’t take long before I knew exactly what to say.

So here goes.

I really like OhGizmo!. Always have. I’ve seen dozens of gadget sites come and go. Very few have both the tenacity to do the work of proper curation and dedicate themselves to trying to write good, interesting summaries every single day. But the OhGizmo! team puts in the effort every single day and remains one of the few gadget sites that I go to every single day. In fact, it’s difficult for me to not link them more than once or twice a day, but then people might find out that all I really do is let other people find the good stuff and then reblog it with a candy shell of obnoxiousness.

It’s hard to run a little business like OhGizmo! right now. Something about the economy or something—I’m no money science mechanic, but I think maybe we need to check the country’s oil or something? I don’t know. But the point is: It’s not any easier for the little companies like OhGizmo! than it is the great big media organizations that are crashing into each other like old trees in the rain forest.

Well, actually, it sort of is. Because while media big and small are struggling, boutique sites like OhGizmo! rely more directly on the interaction and patronage of real fans, people who make a connection with the writers and come back every day to see what’s been uncovered today. And that means you readers can make a real difference to David and the rest of the team by telling your friends and coworkers about OhGizmo!. Send them a link to an OhG! story. Change their homepage to OhGizmo! and then blame it on a virus. (Don’t do this.) Hell, just send David and Evan and the Liszewski clan a note saying you appreciate their work.

We little sites live and breathe on traffic, which is a gauche way of saying “We need people to enjoy our work.” So if you like OhGizmo! as much as I do, don’t be shy about spreading it around.

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Magnetic Photo Boards With Photoshop

Photoshop & Illustrator Magnets (Images courtesy meninos)
By Andrew Liszewski

These Magnetic Photo Boards from meninos might not provide much inspiration at your next design meeting, but they come with a set of either Adobe Photoshop or Illustrator palette magnets to at least put you in the right mindset. And even though it just doesn’t feel right to pay for either PS or AI, a 30-inch version of the white board with either set of magnets runs $80, while a 20-inch version is a bit more affordable at $65. And if you’d rather just use them on your fridge, the palette magnets are also sold separately at $25 per application.

[ meninos - Magnetic Photo Boards ] VIA [ Geekologie ]

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HP’s exclusive Mobile Internet Ubuntu skin not so exclusive anymore

Crazy kids and their crazy hacks have extracted all the juicy goodness of HP’s Mini-purposed Mi software for Ubuntu, including the launcher (pictured), the OS skin, and some application skins, and unleashed it for all Ubuntu users with an eye for black and some hacking skills of their own. From what we can tell, it’s not exactly a breeze getting the mod up and running — and most successful folks still cite a few tweaks they’d like to make — but it’s free, so we won’t look a gift theme in the resource files… or something like that. Instructions are in the forum, a bit more inspiration is after the break.

[Via Ars Technica]
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RAmos T10 ikiss PMP looks pretty good, probably stole its outfit


Call us crazy (no really, go on — it’s cool), but we get the feeling that RAmos’ T10 ikiss portable media player got its inspiration from a fresh little BlackBerry called the Storm. For those willing to overlook that fact, you may be interested in knowing that it supports 1080i output and can handle just about every audio and video format known to man. It should arrive soon with 16GB of internal storage for an undisclosed price, but we’ve yet to hear if some sort of “clicky” screen will be included.

[Via PMPToday]

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Graph Paper Napkins Keep Your Doodles To Scale

Graph Paper Napkins (Image courtesy uptoyoutoronto.com)
By Andrew Liszewski

You never know when inspiration is going to strike, and sometimes an unused napkin at dinner provides the perfect place to sketch out your next brilliant idea. But you have to be careful, if your drawings are too crude you could end up with an 18-inch high model of Stonehenge like in Spinal Tap, or even worse, an eyesore like this. But if you keep a stack of these graph paper napkins on hand, not only will you be ready to wipe the barbecue sauce off your fingers, but you’ll also be able to produce super accurate schematic scale drawings wherever you are. A stack of just 12 of these napkins will unfortunately set you back $7 CDN, but at least they’re made from recycled paper.

[ Graph Paper Napkins ] VIA [ Better Living Through Design ]

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John Lennon eerily returns to push OLPC cause


John Lennon may have departed this planet 28 years ago, but that’s not to say he can’t still have an impact. With the assistance of technology and the consent of Yoko Ono, the heralded Beatle has returned in a new OLPC spot. In the ad, the late musician proclaims: “Imagine every child no matter where in the world they were could access a universe of knowledge. They would have a chance to learn, to dream, to achieve anything they want.” If this sounds like just the inspiration you needed to get your donation on, hop on past the break to see the vid in its entirety.

[Via Laptop Mag]


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Scallop Imaging wide-angle security cams look to the sea for inspiration

We’re not too sure what’s up with New England-based institutions and inspiration from the depths, but the two seem to have some kind of intrinsic connection. The latest company to prove such a wacky assertion true is Boston’s own Scallop Imaging, a Tenebraex subsidiary that has developed a “low-cost” security camera that sees 180 degrees of view without fisheye distortion or the lag present in pan-and-tilt alternatives. Additionally, the multi-eyed cam automatically stitches and downsamples images, and can capture a new 7-megapixel still to transmit over Ethernet “every second or two.” It’s small enough to be placed into a light socket-sized hole, and it’s powered by the same Ethernet cable that links it into a building’s surveillance system. Of course, the fun won’t stop there, as the outfit is already looking at automotive applications of the Digital Window, including “distortion-free backup cameras for the rear ends” of vehicles.
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