Large Deluxe Messenger [2001-0235] – $119.95 : Green Guru Gear

Description

This is mobile storage at its best. You can’t find a more unique, colorful and dependable bag. Our Large Deluxe Messenger is designed to fit larger books and computers and it organizes personal items like cell phones, mp3 players, and pens with room to spare. This bag is 98% reclaimed and recycled material.

Function

Each bag is assembled in the USA with the highest quality materials and workmanship. Only 69 nylon thread is used to guarantee the strongest stitching. Unified seams with bound edges are used for the strongest possible construction.

Specs

Dimensions: 18” x 12” x 6”

Weight: 2.2 lbs

Materials

Reclaimed Vinyl Billboard Exterior

Reclaimed Bike Inner Tube Base

100% PETE Body Construction

60% PETE Aerospace Mesh Back Pad

Method

Made in USA, Colorado

Sustainable Design and Manufacture

Made from Reclaimed Materials

Made with Recyclable Materials

via Large Deluxe Messenger [2001-0235] – $119.95 : Green Guru Gear.

Price Is Rights midcentury modern tech – Boing Boing

Price Is Rights midcentury modern tech – Boing Boing .

#dusa, #tcgcon, #emos and other modern conference paradigms | The Center for Sustainable Practice in the Arts

#DUSA, #TCGCON, #EMOS AND OTHER MODERN CONFERENCE PARADIGMS

from Ian Garrett| June 6, 2009 | Print | Email

I think the most stand out thing at the arts service conferences is the buzz around twitter. I allowed for an hour of twitter twitter in my class back in March and I find it all pretty funny. As the target of most contemporary advertising and inventive marketing, and typically an early adopter, I find the fervor more entertaining than anything else. It’s like when I tried to explain the answering machine to my grandmother. 

The feeling I’ve been getting is that the twittachment is somewhat caused by a messianic appeal of a way to reach youth. Somewhere though, the phrase “content is king” got left out. It’s all about the medium and nothing about the message, so that when the medium is the message all you’re saying by using twitter is that you know about twitter. Whether you say something in 140 characters sent out into the ether for all of your casual followers, or you send them a postcard, it doesn’t mean anything unless it means something. 

That is to say, I’m missing the discussion about modeling and alternative revenue streams. It all just sounds like new ways to market the same old thing… like gillette adding a blade to its vibrating razor. The revolutionary thought would be, and I think even going backwards to my idea of “ancient technology” is revolutionary at times, would be to sell an old school straight razor. Between the retro and hardcore cachés and durability in light of disposable disdain, it would be meaningful if not successful. And, when it seems the arts are about losing money for culture, at least as long as we’re attached to our 501c3 stati, that might be successful. 

So Theater, Dance, non-profit arts presenters, I ask you: what is your message? Is it that you know how to use a computer and have internet access that you can stick interns on to try and build youthful cache? Or, is it something worth twittering about?

via #dusa, #tcgcon, #emos and other modern conference paradigms | The Center for Sustainable Practice in the Arts.