2009
I Better Start Practicing
Accuracy is key.
As far as tape measure throwing accuracy goes, this guy is up there. I’m sure there were several spilled coffees, poked-out eyes, and probable electrocutions in the learning curve of “Using A Tape Measure To Do Everything You Could Do By Walking Over There”, but I contend that those sacrifices are worth it.
I smell a new Olympic sport! I’m looking at you, Rio!
Bloomframe
Living in a modest apartment in Brooklyn Heights has its advantages. I believe in living little. Living little is my way of making as small an impact as I can on the environment without living in a yurt and showering in a lake. More on that in the future…
One of the disadvantages of small apartment living is the lack of outdoor space. I can open windows, but that’s about as “outdoors” as it gets in my building.
There are problems with traditional balconies. First, most apartment buildings with balconies are not that attractive. Most balcony buildings in New York look like a cereal box with a skin disorder. They are grand structures with all these little bumps all over them. Second, those balconies become a catch-all for stuff. Sometimes good stuff (like plants, trees, and café tables) and sometimes bad stuff (think old barbecue grills, last season’s bicycle, and Rubbermaid crates used for extra storage). Then, there’s the whole maintenance thing. There are constant back-and-forths between co-op boards and tenants. Who is responsible for cleaning balconies? It’s technically living space, so it should be the owner. But, it’s technically the exterior of the building, so it should be the co-op management company.
Enter the Bloomframe. It’s basically a window that folds out of the wall and becomes a balcony. This is just plain brilliant. The balcony will not become a catch-all, because the only way to close the window eliminates the balcony. The interior is inside, the exterior is outside. You can have an outdoor space when you need it, and fold it up when you don’t. The exterior of the building will be alive, constantly transforming into a different shape as residents open and close balconies over the course of the day.
I can see some issues with efficiency, notably the giant hole in the side of your climate controlled space every time you open the balcony, but that’s nothing a sliding glass door mounted inside the Bloomframe can’t handle.
Priority is a four letter word
I’ve been thinking a lot about priorities lately. Turns out, there’s really no way to prioritize things. It’s just not possible. The same week I start pondering my personal paradox of priorities, I read over on another site an article from my favorite life-commentator, Merlin Mann.
Luckily, I happen to agree with every point he makes, and I also happen to be pretty lazy/busy right now, so instead of posting my thoughts, I’m just going to link to his. Enjoy the read, and check out the other articles on 43Folders. It’s good stuff. Oh, and listen to You Look Nice Today. (iTunes Link)
Mud Rooms, Red Letters, and Real Priorities | 43 Folders | Merlin Mann
By the way, if you like to post things on your website that you find interesting that were really on someone else’s website, don’t copy and paste. That’s just being a douche. Some sites (not this one, but some) rely on clicks and ads to survive. If you copy and paste, even if you give them credit, you are stealing money from the other guy’s pocket. If you want to give someone credit, do it like me, with a link. That way, you, dear reader, need to actually go to 43folders.com and read the story. And that way, you, dear reader, will get the full experience of reading that story the way it was meant to be read, on the other guy’s site, with the other guy’s graphics, and with the other guys ads. That’s America.
Were you at the Inauguration?
If you were one of the almost 2 million in the crowd, there’s a good chance you can pick yourself out of this photo
The whole story is in his blog, but long story short, photographer David Bergman clamped a camera to the rail, took 200+ high resolution pictures and let some cool Mac software take over.
Using the Gigapan software, a Macbook pro chugged along for six hours to come up with the near 1500 megapixel image. The image is currently on David’s blog as well as the lead image on the Gigapan site, where you can zoom and pan from a vista of humanity, all the way to Yo-Yo Ma taking a picture with my favorite little phone.