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nanox iPod Nano Strap

I don’t know if you’d really want to spend as much on an iPod Nano strap as you do the device itself  but if you’re after the full poor man’s HD3 Slyde experience (yeah, not really ..) then check out the nanox kit.

Designed by Noriaki Miyata for emonster and available on Amazon, the $125 housing comes in the same colours as the Nano (seven of them).  It’s made from anodized aluminium so should stand up to a fair bit of use.

The strap is 2mm thin and made from 100% silicone. You also get an anti-glare sheet for the nano display.

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Punkt AC 01 Limited Edition Alarm Clock For Japanese Tsunami Victims

British designer Jasper Morrison has created a 500 piece limited edition of the Punkt AC 01 alarm clock in aid of Japanese tsunami victims.

Priced at $246 (the tsunami struck at 02:46) all profits will go towards helping to rebuild the coastal fishing village of Maeami.

The red and white design represents the Japanese flag, and behind the simple facade you get a backlight, alarm and snooze function.

Find out more right here.

[thanks to @hodinkee for the tip off]

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Electro-labels

This is interesting.

If I’m reading this correctly the labels can be updated on the fly using an optional kit.

I wonder how many units / how many times you updated the labels it would take before this was cheaper than label printing, at current costs?

I guess over time the per unit price will inevitably come down.

At some point I’m sure we’ll see high-quality animated labels that are cheap and able to scroll through information.

Imagine a window full of those all moving at the same time!

Here’s the full story:

[Press Release] Electro-labels are digital screens which operate without any energy supply (no batteries or mains power) and are used to display product descriptions (brand, components, technical information, price). An updating system allows you to change the content indefinitely with just a few clicks.

Labels for product displays pose a challenge for brands and luxury retailers all over the world, raising issues such languages, printing lead-times, price, content and shipping. Retailers also need to consider what logo to display, where and how, not forgetting the high cost of these labels with relatively short lifespans.
In some cases, products are sold before the labels even arrive as a result of long production and shipping lead-times. Limited editions are more problematic in this respect than basic collections.

The electro-label system allows each brand, retailer or store to be independent. They can produce and update their own labels and those of the brands they represent regardless of language or country. A framework can be specified directly by the brands (logo at the top left, font, text size).

The digital screens are protected against UV rays and can be used in extreme conditions.

The application of an electric field causes a change of state in microcapsules containing positive (white) and negative charges (black). Following this change, they remain in this new state indefinitely.

This system also offers financial benefits. A digital label will cost around 150 Swiss francs. The management system (additional cost) is suitable for use all over the world via an interface and is available in all languages (Chinese, Japanese, Russian, etc.).

This means that the cost of the labels will be amortised very quickly while shipping costs, often more expensive than the actual labels, will no longer apply.

The lifespan of an electro-label is 5 years of around-the-clock operation.

Scheduled launch date: April 2012, in a limited run of 1,000 units.

This entire production run has already been reserved by our existing brand customers.

A preview video is available on the website www.dietlin.ch

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Eco Clock

Here’s an interesting concept, courtesy of Yanko Design and designer Bor-Ru Huang.

Made to ensure you suck every last piece of juice out of your batteries you can fill each slot with a ‘used’ AA and the clock can tell you when the battery really is dead.

Press a button and those marked ‘red’ are dead!

It’s obviously not that much different than using one battery at a time, but I guess at least you have somewhere to store your old batteries: each one giving a final contribution the cause!

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OriginTimes Bugatti Veyron Watch Winder

Bugatti Veyron watch winder.  Let me say that again:  Bugatti .. Veyron .. watch winder.  Holy crap!

The pictures tell the story, but this $70,000 slice of pure mental houses sixteen (V16 see) individual winders – each controllable via the central touch-screen panel.  The winders illuminate in different colours depending on their current status.

I’ll leave you with the images, but I’m sure this will be adorning some rich Sheik’s palace before you can say ‘one thousand horsepower’.

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USB Watch Concept

A quick eBay search reveals a ton of USB watches. Problem is, most of them are terrible cheap junk.

Good to see then this new concept from designers Yoon-jin Gon, Yoon-tae Myoung & Kim Sung Hun via Yanko Design.

Ten minutes charge gives these babies enough power for a weeks watch duty and a quick press of a button reveals the amount of free space remaining.

Good job!

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Kit-Cat Clocks Celebrates 80th Anniversary In Rose Parade

Ooh, I think I really want a Kit-Cat Clock now :-)

Kit-Cat Clocks have been around since 1932 and are an iconic slice of ‘Americana’.

To celebrate the forthcoming 80th Anniversary, Kit-Cat are releasing a time limited special Rose Float clock, and will be taking part in the 2012 ‘Tournament of Roses’ parade.

A collector’s item, the Rose Float Clock will only be manufactured for one year.

The Rose Float Kit-Cat Clock is 15.5 in. high, 4 in. wide and 2.5 in. deep.

Kit-Cat Clocks can be found in Macy’s Herald Square, the Smithsonian Catalog and in specialty shops, novelty shops and gift shops worldwide.

The Rose Float Kit-Cat Clock will retail at a price of $59.99

Here’s what they have to say about their place in the parade, with some images of the float under construction:

[Press Release] In celebration of the company’s 80th anniversary, Kit-Cat® Clocks will roll down Colorado Boulevard in the 2012 Tournament of Roses® Parade® with an attention-getting entry alive with activity – skateboarders zipping on and off the float, a couple dancing to tunes from a jukebox and eight riders from eight to 80 years old, representing the children, parents, grandparents and great grandparents who have owned and loved a Kit-Cat Clock during the eight decades since the founding of the California Clock Company in 1932.

Aptly named, “Timeless Fun for Everyone,” the 55 ft. long parade entry will be a nostalgic look back at history. Adorning the float will be a 24 ft. high black and white Kit-Cat Clock, with its contagious smile, rolling eyes and swinging tail one of the most recognizable icons in home décor, as well as other flower bedecked images that bring back memories of good times — a chocolate malt from a 40’s soda fountain and a jukebox from the ‘50’s.

“We’re celebrating 80 years since our founding by looking back at how we’ve been part of Americana, continually producing new products that make people smile,” Woody Young, CEO, Kit-Cat Clocks, said. “Everything we do has to be fun.”

Every rider on the float has a story to tell. The skateboarders competed for a chance to be in America’s New Year Celebration®. The stationary riders all sent a personal story of how they came to own a Kit-Cat Clock.

The biggest design challenge for Fiesta Floats was to create a ramp that would allow skateboarders to hop on one side of the float, maneuver up and around a curve or two and then off the float again on the other side, all within the 18 ft. width of the float. The solution was a big S curve, turned on its side.

“We looked at how NASCAR tracks curve and bank,” explains Tim Estes, CEO, Fiesta Floats. “The route across the float had to be exciting for the spectators, but not too dangerous for the skate boarders.”

To handle the task, the athletes will be using a FIZZ board. The FIZZ board has reengineered the 70s banana boards, small, fast, and very agile skateboards that are only about a foot and a half long.

Kit-Cat’s float will also illustrate the company’s California roots. Headquarters for The California Clock Company, home of Kit-Cat Clocks is in Ontario, Calif. The company hires local workers and manufacturers all the parts for its iconic clock line in Southern California. As much as possible, flowers and seeds used to decorate the float will be grown in California, one of the richest agricultural states. Floral icons on the float include several palm trees and birds of paradise plants.

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Human Time Project

Here’s something for watch enthusiasts to get behind: The Human Time Project.

The basic idea behind this charity effort is a simple one:  for every watch you buy they will donate the same model watch to Doctors and healthcare workers in developing countries in Central, South America, African Congo region and Asia.

The watches are only $95, for which you’ll get a good looking 46mm quartz piece with 50m water resistance and a ‘Nato’ style strap.

The technical specifications are kind of moot though, this looks like a great way to treat yourself whilst helping those in far greater need.

Click here for more details.

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Buben & Zorweg Titan

There seems to be a bit of a trend at the minute to make the humble watch winder into much more of a beasty.

This one from Buben & Zorweg – the appropriately named ‘Titan’ – is one such example.

Aside from winding capacity for 36 watches this is also a safe, a cigar humidor and an iPod dock.  Actually, make that last feature a ‘HiFi system with Bluetooth & MP3 docking station’.

There’s an automatic door opening function with extending interior and LED lighting with fading technology.

And in case you were still thinking ‘so what’, it also weighs 650Kgs!

Features include: European security standard VdS IV, a patented, weight-reducing safe wall construction with RELASTAN, PAXOS compact high-security locking system which is connectable to the home alarm system.

But for those of you who are never satisfied with this off-the-shelf nonsense you can of course request further customisations.

A coffee maker perhaps?  Or robot arms? …

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T.T. Trunks Travel Watch Trunk

Something a little different now – and very cool it is too.

If you really must travel with some of your watch collection, T.T. Trunks have released this fantastic travel ‘trunk’ with integrated watch winders.

Based in Paris, over 200 hours of workmanship goes into crafting each trunk, including hand-cutting, nailing & hand-finishing each piece.

If money really is no object, T.T. Trunks also offer a made-to-measure service for private clients and several luxury hotels such as the Hotel George V in Paris, Burj Al Arab in Dubai and the Emirates Palace in Abu Dhabi.

If you have to ask the price, you can’t afford one ($$$!).

In T.T. Trunks own words:

[Press Release] The Travel Watch Trunk opens up on three programmable “swiss-kubik” winders (to wind automatic watches and preserve their energy).

Behind those winders, a storage space has been imagined so that you could slip your belongings such as your wallet or coin purse, key holders, passport or any other item you may bear in your pockets.

In the lower part, the first drawer is a storage casket where three watches can be arranged separately and laid down flat. Detachable and leather lined boundaries protect but also emphasize each watch.

The second drawer has been made especially for cufflinks or any other tiny object, while the third one shelter eight removable watch rolls.

The whole, as a T.T.TRUNKS creation, is customized. Owners can choose between several materials and colors (more than 300 references).

Dimensions: Height: 423 mm x width: 434 mm x depth: 265 mm

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