All work and no play makes for a dull workplace. So
says Bosch Rexroth, whose “Creative Diversions” area
looks at the fun side of engineering (boschrexroth-
us.com/diversions).
Here’s the latest Top 10 list offering: Creative office
engineering. Many of us spend 40+ hr a week working
our fingers to the bones in an office somewhere
and we need some way to release our creative energy,
right? See below how hardworking
people found ways to
show their creative side ... all
with their job in mind.
10 - Get Some Fresh Air While
You Work
9 - Here’s Hoping
Trash Pick-Up Day is Today
8 - Happy Hour has Never Been Easier
7 - Sale on Aisle 12. Aluminum Foil
6 - Why Not Garden at Work?
5 - Fore!
4 - Would You Like Butter on That?
3 - Dude! He Got a Dell
2 - Anyone Got a Pen to Leave a
Note?
And the Number 1 Most Creative
Office ...
1 - Think of All the Time You
Could Save!
News at 11
Check your T-shirt
Created in 2004, T-post, a wearable
magazine, rewires the way
people get the latest news. The difference between
T-post and other news media is that every
six weeks you receive a new t-shirt based on a
current news item instead of a magazine. Designers
are chosen to design their interpretation of a
news story, which is then combined with the actual
news and printed on the inside of the t-shirt.
“Because the news is printed inside the shirt, the
subscriber is left with an opportunity to interpret
and communicate the meaning behind the shirt. It
really becomes the subscriber’s interpretation of the
story, which is even more interesting to hear about I
think,” says T-Post Editor-in-Chief, Peter Lundgren.
What started out as an experiment is now delivered
to over 50 countries. For more information,
visit www.t-post.se
Kruzin’ the
streets
The Fourth Annual Chi-Town STA-BIL Kruze &
Car Show is taking place on May 31 In Chicago.
The event, a collaboration between Car Show and
Ronald McDonald House Charities of Chicagoland
and Northwest Indiana, last
year raised $30,000 in donations.
The Chi-Town STABIL
Kruze is Chicago’s largest
outdoor classic car cruise
and exhibition. Immediately
following the cruise is the Car
Show (from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.)
featuring pre-1988 registered
cars along Chicago’s lakefront in the Soldier Field
South Lot. Also featured this year will be the Ford
Mustang all Mustangs are welcome. One-half of
the car-show registration fees and 100% of any spectator
donations will be given to the charity.
Go to chitownkruze.com or call (847) 997-8624
for more information or to register your car.
Blog bytes
Go to community.machinedesign.com and check out:
Vicki Burt Talking medical
* Podcasts about engineering: I’ve been casually searching
for engineering podcasts for the last three months. I
haven’t had a lot of luck. Search for engineering on iTunes,
and you get lots of podcasts about computer programming
and information technology. Don’t even think about finding
anything relevant on a search for technology.
I’ve managed to find a few science, technology, and
engineering-related podcasts. Podcasts, by the way, are
audio files that you can play on your computer or your
mp3 device, like an iPod. What distinguishes them from
plain audio files is that they are associated with RSS feeds.
So if you subscribe to a podcast feed, anytime a new
podcast is published the RSS feed notifies, say iTunes,
or Odeo.com. When you open iTunes, it automatically
downloads the new podcast. I listen to podcasts on the
bus and while I’m jogging.
Have you found any technical podcasts? What would
make you listen to an engineering podcast? The latest
news? Tutorial information? Feature stories read aloud
by a sultry voice? I’d like to know what you think.
Lee Teschler
From the editor’s desk
* Cool helicopter crash video: Ouch! At least no one was hurt. http://view.break.com/244666
* Innovative packaging in Japan: If
you’ve never been to Japan or designed
a product marketed there,
you might not know how obsessed
the Japanese are with packaging.
The article, “Japan: Japan leads the
way in packaging innovation”(www.them.net/Press_Releases/article-
Japan_Packaging_Innovations.
html), is interesting from that
standpoint. I didn’t know, for example,
that flexographic printing
isn’t considered up to snuff for
Japanese packaging.
The writer, Michael Fitzpatrick, turned to Neil Kozarsky, president
of T.H.E.M. (Technical Help
in Engineering & Marketing) to
find out why Japanese packaging
remains in the forefront of innovation
and successful consumer
relationships.