Tuesday, September 27, 2011

'Social Bomb' Covertly Cuts Off Twitter, Facebook

The really most appropriate thing about a idea pattern is that you do not have to notify how it works. It's similar to being a child again, where a span of toilet paper tubes turn a telescope, or an upturned traffic cone becomes the greatest - and thus most appropriate - ice-cream enclosure ever .

So you won't endeavor to look inside the black box that is Hugo Eccles' Social Bomb, a "covert device, expected to turn off technologies invisibly and without consent." The idea is that you twist a timer on its tip and it will someway turn off any amicable networking in a 30m (90 foot) radius. Think of it as a TV-Be-Gone, usually for Twitter, Facebook and e-mail.

Eccles' pattern is segment of the Slow Tech muster at this year's London Design Festival, curated by Wallpaper editor-at-large Henrietta Thompson. The idea at the back Slow Tech is not just disconnection, but using technology in reduction overt ways. The Social Bomb might force your friends to attend watchfully to your tedious anecdotes, but other designs use technology for good, not evil.

Samuel Wilkinson's Biome , for example, is a Tamagotchi-like terrarium, a real-life bottle of flowering plants that you nourish using a related phone app. And Kiwi Pom's Flip is an out-of-date flip-board that will manifestation incoming Tweets and appointments in clackety cosmetic characters.

I sojourn rather unconvinced. Downtime is important, if usually to take a rest, but technology can complement actual life, too. My iPad became a invalid lump of potion and cosmetic on a new legal holiday to Tunisia, interjection to no connectivity, anywhere. Contrast that with a formerly eighth month with swift 3G access: We were able to try the nooks and crannies of towns, the pieces of a nation that can never be found just by erratic the streets.

Plus, Instagram is similar to the most appropriate eighth month print apparatus ever. Just sayin'.

Slow Tech [Protein. Thanks, Henrietta!]

See Also:

Why Gizmodo is Cool: Giz Pranksters Turn Off TVs at CES

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