Reblogged from colourfulmess
“There was an idea to bring together a group of remarkable people, so when we needed them, they could fight the battles that we never could.”
Reblogged from designed-for-life
“The glo Pillow is an alternative to the traditional alarm clock. It was designed with teammate Eoin McNally in response to a brief to create a product which helps to combat the pressures of a “24 hour” lifestyle.
The pillow uses an LED fabric substrate below the surface to wake the user using light. This substrate also functions as a display, showing the time on the pillows surface using the grid of LEDs below.
40 minutes before the pre-set alarm time the pillow begins to glow and gently brings the user out of sleep. This natural waking process helps to set the circadian rhythm or “body clock” and results in more healthy sleep/wake patterns.”
Reblogged from myrandomshots
Reflection #sea #beach #random #Phillippines #landscape #foto #photooftheday #phonephotography #awesome #popular #10likes #nice #miguelbeltran #summer #hot #tent #square #clouds #fish (Taken with instagram)
Reblogged from lateryears
“The Wrist Charger, or as we like to call it, Bracer of Battery Life +2, straps comfortably to your wrist and plugs in to just about any electronic device you like.” - ThinkGeek.com
I need this in my life.
YES
FINALLY
Ok I know what I want for my birthday
BUYING THIS
FUCK GIVE THIS TO ME
My birthday is in September. [cough]
Reblogged from thedailywhat
Heartwarming Tearjerker of the Day: The sheer cliffs at the mouth of Sydney Harbor have long been a popular Australian suicide spot. But they’re about to get a lot more deadly — the local man who is credited with talking at least 160 people out of killing themselves since 1964 died this week.
Window-watcher Don Ritchie, known as the Angel of the Gap, could spot the troubled ones from his home across the street; he’d wander down to the cliff-edge and calmly ask, “Can I help you in some way?” More often then not, he could. He’d chat with them a bit, then invite them back to his place for a cup of tea.
“My ambition has always been to just get them away from the edge, to buy them time, to give them the opportunity to reflect and give them the chance to realize that things might look better the next morning,” Ritchie once said. “You just can’t sit there and watch them. You’ve got to try and save them.”