My EDC kit and tech bags
- zero cool
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My EDC kit and tech bags
This is also available on my website with much bigger images: https://stuxnode.com/edc.htm
For some context up front, depending on the day I either drive my car, take the bicycle, or am away on work trips, often several days on end. I'll mention this here to help the following weirdness make some more sense.
The EDC Messenger bag
On the occasions I'm taking the car to work, into town etc. I bring this one with me. It's a Crumpler "The Sophisticator" messenger from 2006. It's by far the stoutest messenger bag I've ever laid my hands on. It's almost silly how sturdy it is, which is a good thing. Being from the mid 2000s, it has ample room for the laptop of your choice, or, heck, any of the three modern laptops you could easily fit in the compartment. It's insanely roomy. There are also more pockets and compartments than you can remember even exist. I spent a lot of time on this setup, literally weighing the different bits to optimize the weight of it all. Not to make it as light as possible really, but to be able to pack more things for a given weight. With some quirky twists of course, as you can see by the CD player, the MP3 CD folder and decades old digital camera.
In the bag are things I realistically feel like I would need day-to-day, without any unused "nice-to-have" clutter. A lot of which I stripped out when weight-optimizing it. I pulled nearly 800gr of mostly pointless stuff out of the pile I started with.
What's in that small bag down to the right? Dryer lint.
The Megalopolis
No, really, the backpack is literally called Megalopolis, by the Swedish manufacturer Boblbee. Mine is from 2001, but it was designed and released in the late 90s. Becoming a pretty big style icon in the dot-com tech boom of the early 2000s, which in itself is pretty spectacular, since they were all made in a little village with less than 500 inhabitants at the time.
They are still being made too! With the design largely unchanged more than 25 years later, with all the spare parts and accessories cross-compatible. Talk about a timeless design. This is what I bring with me when I grab the bicycle. Apart from being a smashing backpack, it's also designed as a spine protector, and that funny bend at the bottom is a lumbar support. (But also a space where you can strap pouches and other things)
So it's quite good from a safety standpoint as well. It's a 25 liter hardshell backpack with a built in organizer with different compartments, including one for a laptop... In a backpack, from the late 90s! Insane. Loose bits are stored in the organizer. Speaking of laptops, that's where my 2011 Macbook Air goes. Other gubbins include a 500GB USB-C SSD, USB-C charger for the laptop, and the cable to go in between. I also snuck in a USB ethernet adapter and a tiny flashlight.
The backpack is otherwise kept mostly empty, since it'll just be pointless weight, and I'm regularly picking up packages and moving stuff around. so it's primarily used for cargo space, and to be able to toss in whatever gadgets I might feel the need for that day.
The Travel backpack
This one really isn't too exciting, to me at least. It's a modern Osprey backpack with a built in carrier system. Meaning it has a rigid metal frame and the back is a stretched mesh to form an air gap between the bag and your back. It's super nice for when it's warm out. This is the one I'm bringing with me on work trips. It has room for two laptops, where I'm usually carrying the trashpicked Thinkpad T15 and the Macbook Air. There's a Peak Design Tech Pouch (seriously fucking wonderful thing) with all sorts of cable adapters, cables, storage devices, A 4G modem with ethernet, 5-port network switch, etc. In other pockets you'll also find a chonky AF powerbank for charging the laptops, my phones, and so on. Charger, more cables and a pair of SONY wired/Bluetooth headphones.
For some context up front, depending on the day I either drive my car, take the bicycle, or am away on work trips, often several days on end. I'll mention this here to help the following weirdness make some more sense.
The EDC Messenger bag
On the occasions I'm taking the car to work, into town etc. I bring this one with me. It's a Crumpler "The Sophisticator" messenger from 2006. It's by far the stoutest messenger bag I've ever laid my hands on. It's almost silly how sturdy it is, which is a good thing. Being from the mid 2000s, it has ample room for the laptop of your choice, or, heck, any of the three modern laptops you could easily fit in the compartment. It's insanely roomy. There are also more pockets and compartments than you can remember even exist. I spent a lot of time on this setup, literally weighing the different bits to optimize the weight of it all. Not to make it as light as possible really, but to be able to pack more things for a given weight. With some quirky twists of course, as you can see by the CD player, the MP3 CD folder and decades old digital camera.
In the bag are things I realistically feel like I would need day-to-day, without any unused "nice-to-have" clutter. A lot of which I stripped out when weight-optimizing it. I pulled nearly 800gr of mostly pointless stuff out of the pile I started with.
What's in that small bag down to the right? Dryer lint.
The Megalopolis
No, really, the backpack is literally called Megalopolis, by the Swedish manufacturer Boblbee. Mine is from 2001, but it was designed and released in the late 90s. Becoming a pretty big style icon in the dot-com tech boom of the early 2000s, which in itself is pretty spectacular, since they were all made in a little village with less than 500 inhabitants at the time.
They are still being made too! With the design largely unchanged more than 25 years later, with all the spare parts and accessories cross-compatible. Talk about a timeless design. This is what I bring with me when I grab the bicycle. Apart from being a smashing backpack, it's also designed as a spine protector, and that funny bend at the bottom is a lumbar support. (But also a space where you can strap pouches and other things)
So it's quite good from a safety standpoint as well. It's a 25 liter hardshell backpack with a built in organizer with different compartments, including one for a laptop... In a backpack, from the late 90s! Insane. Loose bits are stored in the organizer. Speaking of laptops, that's where my 2011 Macbook Air goes. Other gubbins include a 500GB USB-C SSD, USB-C charger for the laptop, and the cable to go in between. I also snuck in a USB ethernet adapter and a tiny flashlight.
The backpack is otherwise kept mostly empty, since it'll just be pointless weight, and I'm regularly picking up packages and moving stuff around. so it's primarily used for cargo space, and to be able to toss in whatever gadgets I might feel the need for that day.
The Travel backpack
This one really isn't too exciting, to me at least. It's a modern Osprey backpack with a built in carrier system. Meaning it has a rigid metal frame and the back is a stretched mesh to form an air gap between the bag and your back. It's super nice for when it's warm out. This is the one I'm bringing with me on work trips. It has room for two laptops, where I'm usually carrying the trashpicked Thinkpad T15 and the Macbook Air. There's a Peak Design Tech Pouch (seriously fucking wonderful thing) with all sorts of cable adapters, cables, storage devices, A 4G modem with ethernet, 5-port network switch, etc. In other pockets you'll also find a chonky AF powerbank for charging the laptops, my phones, and so on. Charger, more cables and a pair of SONY wired/Bluetooth headphones.
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Re: My EDC kit and tech bags
I wish I could keep as much order in my things... Looks really great! And that small bag, good that you explained that mystery upfront
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Also known as StoickiDoomer - gopher://tilde.institute:70/1/~stoickidoomer/
There is always just one more thing.
There is always just one more thing.
- zero cool
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Re: My EDC kit and tech bags
Hehe, it's some of the few things I can keep track of!
lol, those USB sticks should really be rewritten or decomissioned. I made them a couple of years ago and have used I think once, at one point. I've gone the opposite approach with the messenger bag, where I keep a bunch of ISOs on the laptop and can write a bootable stick if needed sometime.
lol, those USB sticks should really be rewritten or decomissioned. I made them a couple of years ago and have used I think once, at one point. I've gone the opposite approach with the messenger bag, where I keep a bunch of ISOs on the laptop and can write a bootable stick if needed sometime.
Re: My EDC kit and tech bags
Wow, you are super organised!
I'm afraid I am much more chaotic
I'm afraid I am much more chaotic
- zero cool
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Re: My EDC kit and tech bags
Hehe! The slight OCD has that effect it seems. I'm not a big fan of carrying around an unorganized mess. But each to their own!
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Re: My EDC kit and tech bags
Coincidentally, some time ago I had bought a bunch of cheap pendrives, to make an USB key-chain and wrote there ISOs/IMGs to not tire of writing one USB sticks with different OSes again and again when I grt "testing OS fever".
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Also known as StoickiDoomer - gopher://tilde.institute:70/1/~stoickidoomer/
There is always just one more thing.
There is always just one more thing.
- zero cool
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Re: My EDC kit and tech bags
Hehe, it's interesting how different use cases and ways to do things pave the way for very different approaches to things
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Re: My EDC kit and tech bags
I haven't been around here in a while, and now that I've come back this is the first thread I see. That's some truly fantastic gear you have there!! I'm appropriately jealous of pretty much all of it
Do you run these Macbooks on a modern OS or their original ones?
Do you run these Macbooks on a modern OS or their original ones?
- zero cool
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Re: My EDC kit and tech bags
Haha, thanks man! And welcome back! Long time no see.
They're running the latest supported OS they can natively run. I don't really feel like stabbing in the latest OS X version on such old hardware, and installing something else just turn them into "another laptop". But pretty much all software I want to use still installs and runs perfectly, so it's very usable!
They're running the latest supported OS they can natively run. I don't really feel like stabbing in the latest OS X version on such old hardware, and installing something else just turn them into "another laptop". But pretty much all software I want to use still installs and runs perfectly, so it's very usable!
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Re: My EDC kit and tech bags
Yeah it's been a while
But this "living in 2004" project of yours is right up my street, I think I'll have to take some inspiration from it
About the laptop OSs, that makes sense. Running them with the latest macos is probably not a great experience anyway.
But this "living in 2004" project of yours is right up my street, I think I'll have to take some inspiration from it
About the laptop OSs, that makes sense. Running them with the latest macos is probably not a great experience anyway.