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New Gadgets, hi tech gizmos, Cool gifts, Latest Technology, Weird and unique Gadget, Buy Online Gadgets shop. | Geekie Gadgets. Hi Tech Spy Gadgets | Shop the Latest Cool New Electronic Gadgets. Brookstone. The Sharper Image. ThinkGeek. Bend Seating. Japan Trend Shop. David Weatherhead's Primary Clocks. Posted by Ray | 9 Aug 2011 | Comments (0) Last week saw the opening of A Product of Geometry, featuring work by David Weatherhead and Sophie Cheung, at Glasgow's GOODD Ltd exhibition space.

The exhibition examines the process of the object; The perception that each object has a purpose and meaning to it, without the user aware of the story that each object is born from. The show will also focus on the work and process of London based product designer David Weatherhead. David's objects have an inherent easily identifiable quality with inspiration and interest points taken from everything from the Bauhaus to a road safety sign to a triangular back reflector on a trailer. Weatherhead has been exploring his interest in "the everyday and the design of objects with a particular gesture and semantic" for clients such as Seletti, DesignMarketo and, of course, GOODD since he completed his MA in Design Products at RCA in 2007. "A Product of Geometry" also includes hanging works by Sophie Cheung.

MXYPLYZYK. Gadgets. Greatgreengadgets.com. Kikkerland Design. MobileWhack.com. Tech Guide for Foodies. Chefs Organize Recipes Digitally. Home cooks have more places than ever to go to find recipes—which in some kitchens has led to a bit of a problem. Whether it's a pile of food-splotched printouts or a cluttered digital desktop, many cooking enthusiasts are swimming in recipes, with no good system for storing them.

Is there a better way to collect and store recipes so they can be easily retrieved later on? Even the pros struggle. Most chefs rely on some combination of digital readers, apps and email—so much the better if the device fits in the back pocket of chef's pants—plus traditional paper notebooks or index cards. They often include a photograph with each recipe. After his $1,200 laptop got "totally fried" in a spill of red wine jus, Joseph Gillard, executive chef at the Napa Valley Grille in Los Angeles, knew he needed a cheaper yet more-reliable way to access his 250 recipes in the kitchen.