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  • Member Journal – November 2, 2020

    Be sure to vote.

    This week: heating the outdoors; fast WiFi; baseball caps; bailouts.

    Also, November? *Dang*.

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  • First Look: Mystery Ranch 3 Way Expandable Briefcase

    This has the potential to be the best work shoulder bag I have tested.

    Unusual Note: When I wrote about ‘Get Home Bags’ I mentioned some bag options for those who take public transportation. Specifically, I mentioned the Mystery Ranch 3 Way Briefcase as a likely good hybrid bag. It seemed like a good option, and I decided to get one to try — but COVID is lasting longer than anticipated so here is a First Look at the bag.

    The Mystery Ranch 3 Way Expandable Briefcase is the first bag which has actually threatened my Filson Original Briefcase for a place in my daily carry — and may overtake it. I feared this bag would be too large at first, but in the testing I have managed with it, it’s been really nicely sized, while not being overly organized it has still fantastic organization if you want/need it.

    In short: this bag is probably going to be the one I carry to work most days, but see my next note on that.

    Notes on Testing

    So far, I have only tested this bag around my home, as I have not yet been back to the office. So I am not ready to claim any winners on this, but I do suspect not much will change.

    I’ve done three main types of tests:

    1. Carry the bag around in the mornings while I head into my home office. (I put on the bag in shoulder strap mode, and go get my coffee and snacks. Walk into my office and close the doors, turn on the lights. It’s a stupid and shitty test.)
    2. I rucked the bag in backpack mode with 20lbs in it. I did this once, I felt super silly doing it, but you are welcome.
    3. I keep all my stuff for work in the bag, and every morning I pull it out and set it up, and every evening I stow it back in the bag. This simulates what I would do if I were headed to the office, and is really the best testing I can do right now.

    Where I am not sure I feel confident in:

    • How well do things stay protected?
    • Does it allow me to squeeze through tight areas?
    • How does it handle dirt?
    • Can it handle unexpected things well?

    Use

    I am going to start with use, since this is a first look, I will bullet point it:

    • The FidLock closure on the front of the bag is amazing. Just grab that tab and you can pull open the entire section, but it also stays securely closed. And if you drop the flap back down, it tends to latch itself nine times out of ten — and that’s pretty great.
    • The bag stands up on it’s own, even in compressed state. It has been a while since I had a briefcase that did this well, and it is fantastic.
    • I cut off all the zipper pulls that came on it (the metal tabs) and used the same rope which came with the bag so that there is no jingles. This is much better. In a couple places I did slightly different pulls. The ones that come on the bag are too noisy and just no.
    • The front of the bag is the most distinctive place and you may love or hate the look of it. But you will for sure love the way it works. It is fast to get at your stuff.
    • The handles are not good. They are not padded and are a little too far apart. I can’t imagine how much worse they are when the bag is expanded and stuffed with gear. If you like to carry by handles, these are low ranked ones.
    • The laptop compartment is one of my favorites. Not only is it well padded, but it can hold more than just a laptop. It has a couple of nice pockets in addition to the laptop sleeve. I can easily store my MacBook Pro 13” and iPad Pro in the Smart Keyboard Folio in the pocket without issue.
    • The backpack straps actually work decently well. They are easy enough to deploy, and the bags wears decently comfortably when in backpack mode. I wouldn’t want to carry a bunch of weight this way for long periods of time, but I also wouldn’t look at this mode as a mode of last resort. I would use it whenever I thought I might need both hands. It only takes under a minute to setup.

    Overall: this bag is fantastic to use.

    Size and Layout

    Make no mistake, this is a large bag for a shoulder bag to carry everywhere. That it expands, means it can get very big.

    The front section is an admin area with an open top pouch, pen slots, and a zippered mesh pouch. Generally basic stuff. But the zipped pouch is turned so that if you are wearing the bag like a backpack, it is oriented as you expect it to be. But if you are using it while sitting it on a desk, that pocket is oddly oriented to get at. Lastly, this area of the bag has plenty of extra room for quickly stashing stuff. I imagine that is great when you travel and you need a place to stash the stuff in your pockets.

    Moving back one section is what I would call the extras area. This is the weirdest spot of the entire bag. This part has generally three areas. The panel against the laptop compartment has three open top pockets, and a large velcro loop area (which I couldn’t figure out what to do with, so I bought and elastic loop pen holder on Amazon, and put my flashlight and chapstick there). The open top pockets are fine, nothing great. Would have been nice if they had some type of elastic to hold stuff more firmly.

    Then there is just an open crumb collector area which holds folders and notebooks fine. Next is a divider/large single pouch. This has decent room on it, but also is the part of the bag that expands. So it can go from good room, or comical room. The expansion adds about 1.5”-2” of space here and can easily make this a spot for extended stay items like a change of clothes. It’s interesting, but also not in the way if you never want to use it.

    The last part is the laptop compartment, which I mentioned above. This entire compartment is padded except for the top closure — which should be fine but does add risk when in backpack mode. The laptop sleeve inside the padded section is also padded and suspended. There’s two unpadded but large open top pockets as well. This means that if you carry more than one device, like a laptop and iPad, you are good to go without needing the squeeze them in one too small area. I love this section.

    Not So Great

    There are three things I don’t love about this bag:

    1. The shoulder strap kind of sucks. It’s not smooth, it has no shoulder pad and it just feels like an after thought. Luckily this is easily replaced, and likely something I will replace.
    2. This bag comes in different materials, and you might not notice that right off the bat. Because the color choice you make is what determines the material. The base, classic, material is 500D Cordura, which is excellent when Mystery Ranch does it. They also shipped Waxed Canvas, I would avoid that as it takes away on all areas for this bag. Then there is the model I got, the grey. It looks amazing, but it is 1000D Cordura, aka GORUCK Cordura, and it is very abrasive. So while I love the color, I would not get this color again strictly because of the material used for it. Stick with the 500D, black or coyote.
    3. The back panel is a full panel of whatever material your bag is made out of. I would have loved for Mystery Ranch to use their classic mesh here. This bag won’t be passing itself off as something fancy anywhere, so at least make that panel better. Mesh would have made it sit nice against your body and clothes, especially in backpack mode.

    Those are the only gotchas I am seeing.

    Overall

    Generally: way better than I thought it would be. I wish I would have went with black so I could get that 500D material instead, but the grey does look nice and the zippers blend nicely. The entire bag is low key and highly functional. It will probably be a part of my rotation for years to come.

    So yes, recommended.

    Get one from Mystery Ranch.

  • Rucking All I Know + Gear

    I think you should start rucking, so let me tell you all about it.


    Rucking is an all-weather type of activity. This is a Rucker 1.0 in Wolf Grey.

    I love Rucking. Put on a heavy backpack, walk outside for a while. Call it a workout. And it is a fantastic workout, a fantastic way to clear your mind, and the only workout which has stuck for me. I’ve been doing it for a little over three years now, and I wanted to share with you what I have learned along the way.

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  • First Look: Tom Bihn Shadow Guide V2 33 Backpack

    A new version of one of my favorite backpacks.

    Two years ago I reviewed the first Shadow Guide from Tom Bihn, and it quickly became my favorite Tom Bihn bag of all time. But the original was a limited run, and only has come back in stock once, further, while great it was a bag that had some flaws in it.

    Now, Tom Bihn brings the Shadow Guide V2 33 Backpack (affiliate link) and it is full of changes — all of which make this a substantially better bag. I have only had it for a little over a week, so this is more of a first look/impression than a review of the bag. But, I like what I see so far.

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  • Member Journal — 10/26/20

    I bring you from a section talking about iPads and how the trackpad has an has not changed the device, and end you on pasta sauce. Buckle up.

    This week: iPad use, trackpad versus finger; should you even buy a laptop; looking at Fast Company’s top iPad tips; notes on a bunch of site updates; save up to buy something big, or buy the cheaper version as often as needed; pasta sauce.

    Anyways…

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  • Mystery Ranch Front

    This is the best daypack you can get.

    In Texas heat, it feels near constant that my kids want a drink of water when we are out on walks — yet the kids won’t carry their own water. So my typical setup of a Bullet Ruck, or the Field Bag means I am constantly diving in and out of the bag to grab water for them. Fast forward to my testing of the Mystery Ranch 2 Day Assault and I found the water bottle pockets on that bag made my life easier, even though I typically loathe such pockets during more general use. With the 2 Day Assault being too large, I looked at what else I might get which was smaller, but with water bottle pockets.

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  • The GORUCK GR1 8+ Years Later

    I’ll keep this short, I just want to convince you that no better backpack exists.

    On December 24th, 2012 I wrote my first review/post of the The GORUCK GR1. I still have that GR1, which I believe I actually bought at the end of 2011 — but the timing doesn’t make sense and I cannot find a purchase email for it. Oh well, lost to history.

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  • Updated Post: Better Video Calling Setups

    I updated this post/guide today to account for my lighting change from a ring light to a large soft light.

    I updated this post/guide today to account for my lighting change from a ring light to a large soft light.

  • Member Journal — 10/19/20

    This week I talk a lot about a lot, but I make the greatest revelation yet: smart speakers are the ultimate bathroom device.

    This week: a HomePod mini in every bathroom, for sanitary reasons. There’s other stuff too, but does anyone read these little preview sections?

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  • Chicago Carbon Fiber Combs

    I combed through all the combs online and this one came out ahead. It seems a to be at least a hair better than the rest.

    I don’t think I have ever put thought into a hair comb before, but I did this time. Couldn’t be happier that I did too.

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  • Member Journal — 10/12/20

    I buy a fanny pack and share the things which I am still too lazy to get done despite lockdown free time on my hands.

    This week: things I am still procrastinating about during COVID; the small wins I did have; purses; my COVID purse; carbonated water is fine; Ulysses 21; my cat.

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  • Colors for Bags, How to Choose

    A definitive guide on selecting appropriate colors of bags.

    What’s color bag should I get if I don’t really want to stand out because of my bag?

    Almost universally I see comments from people on sites talking about the best or right color for bags — especially when the advice is geared towards ‘blending in’ — when people ask any ‘which color’ questions.

    All these people talking about color choices are full of shit.

    For one, and let me be clear on this: it doesn’t matter what color your bag is. That said, here’s how I think of the different color groupings for bags, but ignore me on this and you do you. Because the color of your bag is a statement, and any color bag will blend in when in a large enough populace — because bags simply come in all colors. And people simply don’t care that much about the color of your bag.

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  • Member Journal — 10/5/20

    Let me show you how I can talk about Synology, Letterkenny, and granite cleaner in a singular post.

    This week: some tech stuff I like; buy for winter comfort now; fire pits; thoughts on The James Brand; some TV shows I recommend; and some cleaning stuff I recommend.

    Quite a potpourri this week.

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  • Mystery Ranch 2 Day Assault Pack

    Tantalizingly close to being the best backpack I have tested, just a touch too large for me.

    In the last year or so, Mystery Ranch came out with the 2 Day Assault Pack — a civilian backpack which takes heavy influence from the military packs Mystery Ranch is famous for. The 2-Day doesn’t have the famed Futura Yoke that makes the high end (read: expensive) packs legendary, but it has a spin on the Futura system that Mystery Ranch labels as ‘framed’. The yoke, how tall the straps sit from the top to the bottom, is adjustable with a frame sheet integrated. I’ve been putting the bag through its paces to see if it is going to stick.

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  • Snugpak Jungle Blanket

    A great emergency blanket, and warm night camping blanket.

    I’ve had the Snugpak Jungle Blanket for a year and a half, and while originally an impulse purchase — I’ve grown to become a big fan. I purchased this to keep in my bug out bag (and it’s where I still keep it) because it seemed well suited to a versatile emergency item.

    Over the year and a half, and now owning two of these blankets, I’ve come to appreciate them for what they are and aren’t. Everyone should own one, or perhaps two.

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  • Member Journal — 9/28/20

    This week: keycaps are a luxury we all need right now; killing off echo chambers and useless feeds; you should buy a watch, not an Apple “watch”; an unpopular Multitool thought; best daypack found?; GORUCK I/O Cross Trainer review; and six words for 2020. You must be a member to read the rest of this…

    This week: keycaps are a luxury we all need right now; killing off echo chambers and useless feeds; you should buy a watch, not an Apple “watch”; an unpopular Multitool thought; best daypack found?; GORUCK I/O Cross Trainer review; and six words for 2020.

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  • Drop x Bradford Guardian 3.5 in Nitro-V

    A stellar fixed blade knife for almost anyone’s need, just buy the better steel options.

    Fixed blade knives, for me, are like lighters. I absolutely love having them, playing with them, and even using them — but I don’t really have a ton of need for them. Which is why when I saw Bradford Knives post a good deal in partnership with Drop on the Guardian 3.5 (I have the Guardian 3, 4, and 5) I thought I would give their ‘.5’ series a go. For science.

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  • Member Journal — 9/21/2020

    Widgets are amazing, let me tell you precisely what works great.

    This week: iOS widget tips; best of the year preview; headlamps preview; Multitools preview; review city. Short post this week, because I have no need to waste your time to spike word counts.

    Also: it’s almost the end of September. Wtf.

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  • Lochby Quattro Pen Case

    Does one thing really fucking well.

    Note: Lochby has previously provided me with review samples, however I purchased this one with my own cold cash.

    I’m a pretty big fan of Lochby’s aesthetic and the simple but well planned out gear they sell. Recently they launched a pen case called Quattro. As the name suggests, it is designed to house four pens, nothing else. But I would be remiss to not point out what Lochby states this is for:

    The Quattro fits your favorite four pens for when you’re on the go.

    That they label it as a carrier for your favorite four pens is just perfect. I love that little touch.

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  • Spyderco Ladybug

    Comically tiny, but very useful still. A reluctant knife-owners knife.

    I need to confess to something upfront: when I ordered this knife I thought I was getting something comparable in size to the Mini Bugout I recently reviewed — a Spyderco challenger to that epic knife. But I really didn’t read the specifications there, did I? Turns out this knife is tiny. Like really small. How small, well:

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