Thursday, April 26, 2007

Shopgoodwill.com: buy weird crap from the kinds of people that will NEVER use the internet

Tonight, I realized that I now buy nearly everything online. In fact, I really only have IRL shopping experiences at thrift stores, Asian/Mexican bazaars here in the Mission District, or Walgreens (the place that bleeds me dry when I purchase something I need urgently enough not to buy it online). It's impossible to replace the ambience of the bazaars with a website, and Walgreens is necessary for stated reasons, so I decided to look for online thrift stores.

After a quick Google search, I stumbled upon this site, Shopgoodwill.com, and I thought to myself "uh oh... this could be a pretty important find." I made a mental note to blog about it if it were, indeed, a pretty important find. And here we are.

It didn't take me long to find the Men's Clothing section, and I wasn't disappointed to find this:

Mens XL Disco Shirt DESCRIPTION: This shirt needs cleaning.

Then, in the Women's Clothing section, this:
Fake Fur Vest

However, the clothing selection here suffers from the same thing as Goodwill's brick and mortar incarnations: the inverse bell curve. See the following graphs:




As you can see, at Goodwill, more people fit into the 'WTF' size range or the ~0 size than anything else (the second graph). Because of this polarized populace, there are remarkably low numbers of size 'M' people at Goodwill, considering that this is the size most represented in the population as a whole (the first graph). And, I assume as a result of this, the number of size 'M' garments is also dangerously low. This inverse bell curve, I found, applies to both the selection and the people at Shopgoodwill.com.

I left the clothing section behind, happy with what I found there.

At first, the weirdness of the crap I was digging through felt like an adventuresome treasure hunt and yielded hilarious results, like any reasonably good day at the real thrift store. This is a ringing endorsement -- I had found a new hobby! However, as my search went on, the item selection deviated increasingly from the norm:

Newspaper Clip in frame from 1936
Two Old Hand Saws
Oil Painting of a Girl on a Beach
Case of 500 - 3"x2"x2" Boxes

This is brilliant! I'm finding more and more bizarre crap -- the kind that is definitely not available for purchase on other websites, because the people selling this crap aren't the kinds of people that use the internet in the first place. These products are provided by people dumping their junk off at several federated Goodwill locations nationwide -- and many of these people aren't advanced enough as netizens to become sellers on sites like eBay and Craigslist. But Shopgoodwill.com lowers the barrier to entry for the internet economy, if only in this weird little niche. Some Goodwill dumpers are people moving house (or, hopefully, moving trailer) with a need to offload a ton of junk quickly. Others are donating the contents of the storage shed of a recently deceased uncle -- perhaps one with oil paintings? Most are probably thrift store community members who have no idea that there's even an online component of the system that sells their bizarre crap.

This bizarre crap is mixed with another kind of crap -- the kind that, while it may be available on eBay from time-to-time, I would never find because it's not like I perform constant searches for items like these -- these are the kinds of products that I don't know I want til I see them.

And for that kind of impulsive and weird consumer, vintage and thrift stores have long been a haven. Shopgoodwill.com is a kickass extension to that.

If you find weird junk at the site, post it in the comments!

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Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Development of bionic ankles at MIT

I was barreling down the court on a 1v1 runout, and the score was tied 10-10, playing to 11. Admittedly, the house rules state that a team must win by two, so it wasn't the most important play of the game -- but I still deemed it sufficiently important to risk injury on what would've been a truly dazzling trip to the "hole". Instead, I planted my inner left foot right on the defender's toe, rolled my ankle with all my might, and crashed to the ground with a flurry of profane objections.

And to think, this all could've been avoided if I had a bionic ankle!

Scientists from MIT filed a United States Patent Application in February for just that: a bionic foot and ankle system.

I wanted to read the whole thing to find the interesting parts from an engineering perspective. However, in a monotonous gauntlet of back-references, subsections, and a shameless abuse of the word "said", the patent attorneys dismantled my mind with boredom, as seems to be their forté. So, instead of including a list of highlights here, I'll just post a link: US Patent Application filing.

If that reading's a bit too dry for you, check out the post at New Scientist Tech.

Engadget commenter 'KYDS3K' probably put it best:
"built-in safety feature that prevents foot rotation beyond a specified angle"

why? that would be AWESOME!!! you could do some amazing kung-fu with a 360-degree rotating foot!!!
I can't help but agree.

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Monday, April 2, 2007

Two new Best on Repeat tracks released - "Lance Briggs" and "Fatty (The Dark Side)"

I just released two tracks off Best On Repeat's upcoming 2007 album, Upon Further Reflection, which is being recorded now.

Check them out:

Discuss in the comments section!

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