
How to Make Unlimited Cell Calls Using Google Voice: useful and money saving directions showing how to dial for free using a variety of carriers in conjunction with Google Voice.
Twitter Follow Me Knee High Socks: Looking for more followers? This might help (caught our eyes, didn't it?).
FORM 2 Vibrator: Yves Béhar is the founder of the San Francisco and New York design studio, fuseproject. He can also now claim designing one of the most unique looking sexual aid devices. Rabbit or tooth, you decide.
The Litl Webbook: like a netbook, but more useful and portable. Folds over backwards 178-degree so you can use it like an easel or picture frame. And the little laptop-like device is OS-free!




a vibrator??? stay classy unplggd.
view emptyapartment's profile
I wholeheartedly agree with emptyapartment on this one!
view genkiliz's profile
As far as these things go, it is a nice looking vibrator.
view Mlle Kate's profile
What's wrong with featuring a vibrator? No, really, I can't imagine what people are objecting to here, unless it's the topic of sex in general. If the topic of the blog is nifty new technology, then a new type of vibrator seems an appropriate subject for a post. And if the technology promotes health and pleasure--as vibrators do--all the better.
view STH's profile
"follow me" ... a venerable tradition indeed! The famous whores of ancient Corinth had it carved on the soles of their sandals, so they left the invitation in the dust as they walked.
view ladymantle's profile
OS free? I'm sure it has an OS. How else would it operate? (That sounds weird to say.)
I mean, it needs some kind of system so that it can do the functions that it's built for. This might be some kind of proprietary system that isn't adapted from Windows or Linux or whatever already exists, but it would still be an OS.
view wunami's profile
emptyapartment & genkiliz : as noted by STH, Unplggd is about design and technology, both which play prominently with the FORM 2 Vibrator designed by Yves Béhar. The design seems far from being offensive or explicit in any way, and it's hard for me to think that it somehow degrades a sense of "class" amongst either readers and possible users, especially since the designer made the effort to shape it in an innocuous and aesthetic form.
view gregory's profile