• I found this U.S. AQUA water can in an antique shop in Poulsbo, Washington. On the side it talks about how it’s “IMPERVIOUS TO NUCLEAR FALLOUT” and cheap insurance. This convinced me that I had to buy it.

    Then it sat on my desk for a month and a half. Besides providing life sustaining water in case of political destabilization due to the Nuclear Armageddon that we all know is coming in the near future, it also makes an awesome paper weight.

    I haven’t been able to find anything about U.S. Aqua or it’s fallout impervious canned water on the internets, (other than some long dead eBay links that won’t even show the seller or the specific auction even) so this is my original content contribution. Heres the complete text from the side of the can. Below that you’ll find a gallery with a bunch more images of said water can.

    U.S.
    AQUA

    PURE DRINKING WATER

    CONTENTS 12 FLUID OZ.

    This can contains water pumper from our own well and immediately processed under scientific methods resulting in a highly pure drinking water. Under ordinary storage conditions, this water will keep for years.
    IMPERVIOUS TO NUCLEAR FALLOUT. But, in case of fallout, wipe can and can opener before opening can.
    This water is processed under provisions in permit issued to Teasdale Packing Company by California State Board of Health and meets the requirements as set forth in the U.S. Public Service Drinking Water Standards.
    Recommended for convenience in emergency uses. It is cheap insurance to have a supply on hand.

    PACKED BY
    TEASDALE PACKING CO.
    SAN JOSE,
    CALIF.

    C32

    Continue reading →: U.S. AQUA PURE DRINKING WATER
  • Remember how easy it is to screen capture on a Mac?

    Cmd + Shift + 3

    to take a picture of your Entire active screen.

    While

    cmd + Shift + 4

    gives you some crosshairs that allow you to select what you want to copy.

    Only problem is, the files are always saved as .png files. This is annoying if you want them in another format like .jpg. Normally you’d have to open your image editor of choice and then re-save it.

    Turns out there is an easier way though!

    All you have to do is run this Terminal Command

    defaults write com.apple.screencapture type jpg

    then restart your computer. Now every time you take a screenshot it will be in .jpg format.

    If you want your screenshots in other formats like gif, png, or even pdf just change it in the terminal.

    Via TUAW

    Continue reading →: Mac Tip: Change Screen Capture Format With Terminal
  • Burn After Reading Poster

    I saw “Burn After Reading” at the theater last night. I thought it was great. If you liked the trailer you may like it. If you thought the trailer was lame you have a much higher chance of liking it, or at least that was my case.

    Go see it. It’s funny. You’ll laugh. Or you’ll stare uncomfortably at the screen.

    Also the “PC or Mac” line cracked me up.

    Update: Found the CIA Man song by the Fugs, that you hear at the end credits, on Amazon MP3.

    Continue reading →: Burn After Reading Was Great
  • I know there is a song that would go perfect with this shirt. I’ve heard it before but for the life of me I can’t remember how it goes. Anywho, the shirts pretty nifty and it is offered in both male & female variations. So that’s a plus if your Speedo matches your girlfriends bikini.

    Source Via Tcritic

    Continue reading →: Spiffy Looking Fragile Heart T-Shirt
  • How To: Bulk Rename File Extensions With Terminal/Shell

    Lets say you have a bunch of .jpg files that you know are actually .rar files.

    What would be the simplest way to rename them all?

    First you’d navigate to the directory that contains the .jpg files with the “cd” command

    For brevity lets assume the only .jpg files in this directory are .jpg files that you want to change

    All you have to do is run this command

    mv *.jpg *.rar

    And all the .jpg files will have been renamed to .rar

    If you want to learn more about the “mv” command just type in

    man mv

    Continue reading →: Mac and Linux Tip: Bulk Rename File Extensions With Terminal and/or Shell

I’m Erik

Artsy on the weekends. Accountant on the weekdays