Filson has topped up it’s outlet section for bags, adding a bunch of great ones:
Plenty more, some odd colors, great prices.
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A good chance to get a good bag for less $.
Filson has topped up it’s outlet section for bags, adding a bunch of great ones:
Plenty more, some odd colors, great prices.

What’s old is new.
GORUCK has a 21L and 26L GR1 Throwback, which essentially undoes the majority of the GR1 changes over the years and takes the bag back to somewhere around 2011 or so. Most notably (I think) is changed the strap mount back to the original method.
Pretty cool.

A rare office and travel backpack which is quite good.
Note: this item was provided for review.
I have a hierarchy I keep in my head for the overall difficulty for making different types of backpacks, from easiest to hardest, the categories are: military, hiking, hunting, travel, edc, office. Every time a company tries to tackle an office backpack, they run the risk of making something completely absurd, ugly, and generally useless. To couple that then with travel, well that’s asking for criticism.
So when Pioneer Carry asked if I wanted to test out their Savant Pack — which is for office and travel — I had a very low bar of expectation for this pack. It’s not often a company does this well.
With the Savant Pack, Pioneer Carry has a gem on their hands, being led by the materials, and followed by the smart simplicity of the bag. This is good stuff.

A dive into blue light glasses, but really a lot of chat about the corporate world and why a couple big companies are embarrassing themselves.

No need to beat around the bush on this one (but it’s durable enough you could): this is the best winter jacket you can own.
There’s no Filson product more iconic to their brand than their Mackinaw Wool Cruiser an item Filson patented in 1914. One of the bigger regrets I have was a trip to Filson back in 2013 or so. I went to the old Filson flagship in Seattle (4th Ave) to get a Filson wool jacket with my first large bonus. I walked out with a lovely charcoal ‘Wool Weekender’ made in Mackinaw wool, which I wore for years (until I lost weight and it was too large), but I always had this thought that I should have bought the Mackinaw Wool Cruiser instead.
Thankfully, this was rectified recently, and now that I can once again wear heavy wool jackets we need to talk about this icon. Because there’s a damned good reason Filson has been making this for so long: it’s beyond good.
I knew what the material would be like, but I had no idea it would be this good to wear throughout the winter and even in snow.

Amber and Amethyst? Wow.
The Mini-Freek is a great knife to begin with, but this special edition ($300) gives you an Ultem handle, Amethyst coated blade, and CPM-M4 steel.
Oh my.

Some of my new favorite watch straps, all very well done for exceptional prices.
Note: These straps were provided for review.
As you might suspect, I am exceedingly picky with watch straps. I don’t even want to take a guess at how much money I’ve spent on watch straps only to later sell them for pennies on the dollar, or tossed in the garbage. I have found a couple of companies who make outstanding watch straps, and I have left my buying to only those. So when RSM reached out to offer some straps for review, I was worried.
I loathe getting a review sample that I hate and watch straps are hard to gauge from website descriptions alone, but the email was very friendly and it seemed like it was from someone who really got watches. And they offered that if I told them my favorite watches, they would pick the straps for me. I was game, a few weeks later a bunch of straps showed up, and a few hours after that I realized that this is yet another strap maker who gets it.

Who would have thought that an M class processor can’t quite handle Apple Notes.
The title of this sequence of posts from MJ Tsai is a spot on description of the iPad. It would be easy to blame the lack of Steve Jobs, but the iPad software was even more shit under Jobs than it is now.
The honest truth is that Apple is saying Yes far too much these days to appease the stock market or the US President. Anyways, fun threading of comments to read.

Great use of materials too.
This looks really good, and at $65, it’s priced right.
Unfortunately it’s sold out already, but the link is hidden on their page so posting this so you can sign up for a restock notification. I managed to get an order in, can’t wait to try it out.

Bluefin + Framework wouldn’t be my first choice for a primary machine, but it’s certainly my second.

I finally got the jacket I wanted, but I guess we should talk about my packing list spreadsheet mania.
A day late, but anyways: talking about how I pack in 2025; and recapping some new gear.

I’m sorry, but no, the Padded Briefcase is merely good and overly huge.
Over on A Continuous Lean, Michael Lewis writes:
The Filson 258 padded computer bag (pictured above) is one of the best items the brand has ever made.
He is, of course, wrong.
Before I dive further into his wrongness, we need to first add a couple of points to clarify:
Ok, back to Lewis being wrong. His article is a paid member article so I am going to quote only two more sections to respect that paywall, but if you do read the entire thing, he’s got some good thoughts from others in there as well:
These bags aren’t on my radar just because they are discontinued; they have caught my attention because they are the perfect travel bag.
…
Filson’s Original Briefcase is much more famous than this padded briefcase, but if you have a computer, chargers, and other items, the Original Briefcase is just too small to be anything more than a daily city bag. I frequently carry a computer, headphones, and a camera, so I need the extra space the 258 allows. It fits perfectly under the seat of a plane, on top of your suitcase, and upright in the seat next to you in the car.
These seem to capture his main points about the bag in question. So before we move on any further, we need to understand where I am coming from. Which is that the Padded Breifcase is really nice, but it’s unwieldy and ugly, whereas the Filson 24hr Briefcase is better looking, and much more manageable. And I would argue you can fit most of what you need in the 24hr, and anything you cannot fit — well frankly you are carrying too much. But there’s more, and before we get to that we need to see what we are talking about, luckily I have a lot of images for you I shall now share.

Padded Briefcase next to 25L backpack.




Compared to 24hr








The padded briefcase has some substantial daily use downsides:
The thing to know about carrying this bag for daily use, whether around town or into an office, is that it is unnecessarily large and heavy, and it doesn’t carry all that weight comfortably. It’s the briefcase equivalent of people carrying 30L backpacks around a city.
I will say, that Lewis is not particularly wrong in his love for the Padded Briefcase when you are on a plane because the capacity and layout does lend itself to being a good airplane bag. However, the flying bit of travel, is often not the most crucial part of travel. That is to say, if you optimize for what is best when you are on a plane, then what you select is going to be pretty shit for those times when you are not on the plane.
Think of it like this, if you had a little cube which perfectly fit at your feet under the seat in front of you. Maybe it has little sectional cubbies, and a magnetic lid which is easy to peel open from any one edge, then you have a pretty damned ideal bag when you are on a plane, right? Certainly. However it’s basically unusable outside of the plane — I can’t imagine wanting to carry it.
Now the Padded Briefcase is obviously not that bad, but the same trade offs are in place. Because while it works well on a plane, the moment you step off the plane, then you are right back to the downsides from the last section. And a couple more, which are:
There is only one type of travel where the Padded Briefcase makes sense: one bag travel. It’s large enough for it. But why no one should one bag travel is a topic for another day.

Whew, ok, here we are. It’s not that the Padded Briefcase is bad, it’s that people tend to see space as the end all and be all of bags. The interesting thing with bags, if you test enough of them, is that a properly laid out bag can carry a lot more in a smaller form factor than an improperly laid out bag. This is why people love Tom Bihn bags (in spite of how they look) — because they organize exceptionally well.
The 24hr is 18L, whereas the Padded Briefcase is 22L (the Original is 13L). The average sized “daily” backpack is somewhere around 25L for those curious, and the maximum carry on bag size is around 45L. The thing is, the 24hr Briefcase being 18L instead of 22L is not the entire story.
The real story is that the 24hr briefcase always looks smaller than it actually is, even when fully stuffed. The Padded Briefcase on the other hand always looks larger than it is, even when near empty.
And, I can attest, to the fact that the 24hr Briefcase carries vastly more than people think it will, and is even easier to access. But, let’s bullet point the pros of the 24hr (as compared to the Padded Briefcase):
There’s only a couple of downsides:

As I said, I’ve used most of the Filson bags a person could, and have used them for considerable time. The only shoulder bag I still own from Filson is the 24hr, because it is so clearly the best that I spent my money trying four different colors of the bag to determine the best color. And, I was carrying two iPad Pros with keyboard covers, a Leica Q2, Coffee Mug, Trauma First Aid Kit, and charging gear — not even remotely a small load out. I feel confident I’ve tested the every loving fuck out of these bags.

The 24hr is substantially better than the Padded Briefcase and that’s just that.

Week one of using Linux as my primary OS, and thoughts on moving to private cloud.

A great modern variant of the iconic short cruiser.
Filson released its new Ranger Short Cruiser ($195) which is a variant of their fantastic Tin Cloth Short Lined Cruiser ($350). There’s a few key differences with the Ranger variant, which is a riff that Filson has done similar models of in the past (these tend to be short lived):

It’s warm, it’s heavy, it’s bulky, and it feels like weather armor.
This jacket arrived on a 90°F day which was ripping with humidity on an early Houston summer day. I knew I needed it for my move to Boulder, CO — but putting it on in the air conditioned space I was in, caused me to start feeling sweaty. This jacket would sit in the back of my closet for a few more months until a proper chill enveloped Boulder during the evening hours of Halloween where my unacclimated body would cower under it in 20°F temps.
And nearly every week since then, I’ve worn this jacket for something, and it might be the quirkiest jacket in Filson’s lineup — while at the same time there’s not a lot of jackets like this out there. I love this jacket, even if it is too warm to wear some of the winter days here in Colorado.

Your watch is too big, even the Financial Times thinks so.
Nick Foulkes, writing for The Financial Times:
Since then key moments in dismantling the old sexually segregated silos of watchmaking have included Bad Bunny’s choice of a Patek Ellipse 4931 on crimson strap when he made the cover of GQ in 2022, The Weeknd, who won the red Carpet of Cannes 2023 wearing a gemset Piaget Limelight Gala High Jewellery, and Timothée Chalamet who straps on his 23mm Panthère de Cartier even when doing blokey things like guzzling pizza or taking in a Lakers’ game.
First things first, that headline they are using is total trash click-bait bullshit. There’s no such thing as a ‘real man’ nor ‘girly watches’ so they should pull their heads out of their fucking asses on that one.
Anyways, I clearly agree with this, and it’s why I urge the average guy to wear watches in the 36-39mm size range. With 36mm being the ideal.

We used to care about app design, now we don’t. We’re all worse off for it.

Go get a Radix for a steal, the best technical day hike pack I’ve tested.
Using code PREZDAY25 this collection of bags is currently 25% off. The bags include the newly redesigned In and Out bags, the Rip Ruck, the 2 Day Assault, and my favorite, the Radix line.