Shonzilla, a pattern-seeking animal

Life is a game of patterns and chance, and those who play well will win.

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Mon Feb 16

“Fed up with seeing friends getting clipped by cars, the designers at Altitude combined two things we love — bikes and lasers — to create an instant bike lane and make nighttime cycling a whole lot safer.
Their bike-mounted gadget, called LightLane, beams two bright red lines and the universal symbol for cyclist on the pavement, neatly delineating a bike lane to remind motorists to yield a little space. It should make everyone feel a little more comfort on the road.”


Read more about interesting and potentially life-saving bike gadget over at: LightLane’s Lasers Make an Instant Bike Lane | Autopia from Wired.com.

[via Wired Autopia and mel-o Tumblr]

Fed up with seeing friends getting clipped by cars, the designers at Altitude combined two things we love — bikes and lasers — to create an instant bike lane and make nighttime cycling a whole lot safer.

Their bike-mounted gadget, called LightLane, beams two bright red lines and the universal symbol for cyclist on the pavement, neatly delineating a bike lane to remind motorists to yield a little space. It should make everyone feel a little more comfort on the road.

Read more about interesting and potentially life-saving bike gadget over at: LightLane’s Lasers Make an Instant Bike Lane | Autopia from Wired.com. [via Wired Autopia and mel-o Tumblr]
Thu Dec 11

I wonder if this song is secretly sung in big companies around the world now… if not, it should.

It can be a nice way to sing in the rain, I guess :-) or as a Spanish would say “a mal tiempo buena cara” or “when the going gets rough, the rough get going”.

BTW, this song is the final project for a class called “Innovation & Implementation in Complex Organizations,” offered by the Hasso Platner Institute of Design at Stanford University.

The song is titled “Innovation at Stanford” and it is a tribute to Gordon MacKenzie’s “Orbiting the Giant Hairball”. [via Moosh2001]