Viaddress Reviews

Beanbag Cellphone Chair – Viaddress

9 out of 10 cell phones says “ooh, comfy”

Cellphones (and PDA:s for that matter) work hard these days. Why not take this opportunity to show your little device that you do care. A 5,5″ nylon shell beanbag chair with styrofoam beads ought to do it.

“Scientifically proven to be the most comfortable cellphone chair on the market. Ergonomically designed to eliminate pressure points that can bruise or cause extremities to go numb, this beanbag chair rests your cellphone in the most neutral position possible.”

Jawbone Prime: Style In Your Ear on Viaddress.com

There’s only so much you can do to avoid looking like this guy when using a Bluetooth headset, but Jawbone’s effort is among the best we’ve seen so far. The third generation headset, dubbed Jawbone Prime, makes several improvements on an already-winning formula. Improved NoiseAssassin technology can withstand 6-9dB more background noise, and Wind Reduction takes the best combined audio signal from two sources. Advanced Voice Activity Detector works better than before, putting out back-up noise reduction when the detector loses contact with your face. Other features include 4.5 hours of talk time and 8 hours of standby, a weight of .022 pounds and on-the-fly switching between eight Bluetooth devices. For $129.99, the Jawbone Prime comes in three colors, but a limited edition will follow with a greater assortment

Viaddress.com – The TwistTogether Lamp

Stylish and sculptural lamp

Here’s the TwistTogether Lamp, designed by Glide Inc.. Each box comes with four pieces which you can connect and rearrange however you want.

Want a bigger lamp? Just buy more pieces and connect them.

Lumens.com: TwistTogether Lamp by Glide Inc. ($120.00)

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Calendar Cube by Masami Design review by Viaddress

Unfold, reverse and fold again

You haven’t forgotten to get a calendar for 2008 yet, have you? Here’s Masami Takahashi’s excellent Calendar Cube to help you keep track of the upcoming 365 days.

The first six months are printed on the white side and when July 1st comes up you unfold the cube, turn it inside out and fold it again to have July to December shown in reversed colors. Magic, I tell you.

It’s made in clear plastic (paper probably wouldn’t endure the full year) and besides the regular print there’s transparent Braille writing on it too.

The Calendar Cube’s costs 2,940 Yen, that’s about $26.00