My Touch Keys
Do you find it rather hard to type with the iPhone’s onscreen keyboard the first time you use it? Well, just like bicycles and their training wheels, we have the My Touch Keys iPhone screen protector that features cut-out QWERTY holes that claim to improve tactile feedback while letting your fingers get used to the relevant on-screen key positions.
Read about it in Ubergizmo
Add comment April 12, 2008
The Tonal Plexus – stand-alone microtonal MIDI keyboard
Have you ever considered what kind of music might be possible if your keyboard had more than just twelve keys per octave? If so, you are not alone. In fact, it’s been one of the most enduring and puzzling questions in all of music history. The Tonal Plexus is not just a product of years of research and development, but is a result of literally hundreds of years of experimentation with musical tuning, keyboard design and research in human pitch perception. The Tonal Plexus provides no fewer than 211 keys per octave, allowing the finest discrete control of tuning expression ever available on a MIDI keyboard.
Read about it in H-Pi Instruments
Add comment April 12, 2008
Tetrad Flat – Tetris Shelves
The Tetrad Flat Shelving is a modular, lightweight shelving solution consisting of 10 separate blocks with wooden sides and colored metal backings. Blocks can be attached to one another, to the wall or left free floating for life-sized, living room game play. And no, the bottom line doesn’t disappear when you make that perfect configuration.
Read about it in Brave Space Design
Add comment April 12, 2008
SpeaQualiser
If you’ve loved the TQ Raver and Chiller shirts, youll love these great new products. Using the same style as the Raver and Chiller T-Shirts we have created these stunning SpeaQualiser Frames.
The functioning animated equaliser turns any music you listen to into an audio-visual lightshow by responding to the rhythms, frequency and beat of your favourite music with classic retro-style flashing, jumping light bars.
Read about it in FlashWear
Add comment April 12, 2008
e-mail goes low tech
Ready for a strange fact we discovered recently? E-mail has been around since before computers. At first, e-mails were written on rocks and thrown at neighbors. CC-ing a rock e-mail could be dangerous for an entire village. Then, e-mails were written on paper and put in weird paper things called envelopes and the postal system delivered them. This was slow. Finally, e-mail as we know it came around. Well, for fun, let’s take a technological step backwards.
Paper E-mail is perhaps the funniest way to pass messages in your office. Why? Because it will confuse the person you send it to.
Read about it in ThinkGeek
Add comment April 12, 2008
















