The Maharishi Spring/Summer collection just landed at DPMHI’s site. Some great collaborations with guest artists like Futura and XL records. The 2007 season debuts with a new MHI house camouflage, the MHI 90 splinter– this one is inspired from 70’s trial Swedish military issue patterns available in both woodland and urban colorways. As usual this collection will likely go very, very fast. Damn, that Hardy Blechman bloke sure is good!

A promising update for those in pursuit of the perfect mix: Amanda Demme, the musical master behind the Garden State, Mean Girls, and Blow soundtracks just released “His and Hers,” an awesome compilation of everything from The Sounds to Luna to Ryan Adams. I have no idea how her and her current musical partner George Augusto manage to make such seamless mixes; it’s so hard to make a CD of different artists sound like they belong together, and exceptionally hard to make that same mix endlessly attractive (I can still listen to the Garden State soundtrack without getting bored, wish I could say that for half of the other CD’s I’ve listened to recently). You can listen to a sampling of each song at the His and Hers webpage and buy the mix on Amazon. I should also mention that this is volume one of who knows how many… maybe number two will be out in time for my roadtrip to Coachella…

Our trendy-spotting pals over at PSFK are having a conference Tuesday, March 6th at Regal Cinemas Union Square, NYC. It’ll be a morning of trends and ideas and an afternoon of new marketing inspiration. Speakers like Sascha Lewis from Flavorpill, Mike Byrne of Anomaly and Peter Rojas of Engadget will bless the audience with their ninja-like know how. Discounted early bird tickets are on sale for a few more days for $300, pop by the event page for more info. If I were free, I’d be at this event– more on where I’m going soon– Full flyer after the jump.

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It started with voice recognition and most recently, multiple sensor touch displays on the iPhone showed us how to quickly and intuitively zoom in and out of an image. No matter what the R&D grant money produces, a vast majority of the world still relies on the simple mouse and more specifically mouse click. What would happen, however, if we moved the click from the equation? We see glimpses of this in the Mouse Gestures Firefox plugin but it too relies on a click of some sort. While the click only takes milliseconds to accomplish, it’s effects are wider felt. Each time you click, you stop moving your mouse. There’s not clicking “en-route” and because of this, you are losing time. What if you could navigate web pages, vote in polls, and otherwise carry on your day to day routine without ever having to click? Flipping pages could be as easy as moving to the corner and “pulling” to the left. Researchers at DONTCLICK.IT, based in Germany have been exploring this very topic and have come up with a wonderful demonstration site. Aside from being entirely clickless (careful, they keep statistics on how many clicks you perform, accidental or otherwise), DONTCLICK.IT has a wonderful history of the click, tracking it back to the PARC and Apple days. There is also a whimsical product page for a spike lined cover you can place over your mouse buttons to train yourself to stop clicking. Complete with feedback forms (use (SHIFT+) TAB) to switch between the fields), statistics, surveys, and proof of concepts on overcoming replacing the click with just mouse gestures, DONTCLICK.IT is at worst a satisfying time waster and at best, a sneak peak into a world beyond tomorrow. -Thanks Charles





Zeitgiest Toys
Zimoun Sound Sculptures
Common Projects Duffle
Buddy Carr x Antonio Carusone
Flashback: Retro Design
Black Noise: Awesome Music Video
Papercraft Self Portrait
The Reverb Solar Powered iPod Dock
Outlier Clothing
Blockhead: The Music Scene