May 2013

  • Milk in Bags?

    Photo credit: The Canadian Design Resource

    Yup. Here in this part of Canada we have been buying our milk in large plastic bags since the early 80s. It either never occurred to me or I’d simply forgotten that this is something unique up here, and many of my friends south of the border have probably never seen such a thing.

    While traditional cardboard cartons are still used for the 250ml/500ml/1L/2L sizes, if your family drinks a reasonable amount of milk (and who doesn’t if you have kids?) the 4L size is definitely the most economical. You’ll pay around $5.50-$6 for a 4L sack that contains three individual 1.33L bags, as compared to around $4.50-$5 for a 2L cardboard carton.

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  • Physical Cards, eCards, and Apple Cards

    Jesse Wojdylo asked an interesting question on Google+ this morning that I really hadn’t given much thought to previously: How do people prefer to send out Mother’s Day cards?

    While the usual question centers around physical cards vs eCards, I actually realized that I’ve been getting the best of both worlds ever since Apple came out with its “Cards” app for iOS a couple of years ago.

    As a technology person, physical cards have not only always seemed a bit “low-tech” for me, but also require me to actually do things in the real world such as going to a store and buying one, and then finding a postage stamp and actually getting it into a mailbox. For somebody who rarely has to deal with sending out physical mail, this is actually a more complicated process than it sounds – there have been times in the past that a card has actually sat on my desk for a week simply waiting for me to go to the post office to buy a stamp.

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  • So, what is the point of Google Glass again?

    Jolie O’Dell, VentureBeat:

    In my moral universe, Google Glass for consumers can only serve to distract us, not truly help us any more, better, or faster than the other tools we already use. For example, you already have Google Maps to guide you around your city with turn-by-turn audio navigation. That tool doesn’t get any better when it’s smack-dab against your eyeball. Neither does your email or your Instagram feed or your Facebook account.

    While Jolie O’Dell’s full article is definitely worth a read as one of the first interesting counterpoints to all of the hype around Google Glass, I felt this one quote was a particularly good point that many in the tech blogosphere have missed in their effort to sing the praises of Google Glass and dream up real-world consumer uses for it. While the potential for practical professional uses are myriad, as a consumer product Google Glass seems like the proverbial solution in desperate search of solving some real-world problem that average people are actually having.

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