Sure, you can already explore exotic locales like Detroit, San Francisco, and the dark heart of Florida from your desk but now, in honour of World Forest’s Day, you can wander around in the Amazonian rainforest. You’re welcome.
Thanks to the innovators at Coleman, you’ll never have to sit around a campfire lamenting the lack of freshly baked treats again. The company’s changing the face of outdoor baking forever with a propane-powered portable oven.
An elastic headband and a layer of foam padding is all that most goggles use to ensure they fit. But Scott’s new Off-Grid snow specs actually allow you to tweak the shape of the frame, so they sit comfy on almost any face.
Hammocks aren’t designed with cold weather camping in mind. Even sleeping bags are helpless against the slightest chill. Grand Trunk’s hammock compatible sleeping bag solves this by turning your hammock into a toasty insulated cocoon.
Packing light is the name of the game when you visit the great outdoors. Carrying a big pot to boil water is a challenge. But the awkwardly named Jompy lets you leave that pot at home — it heats water directly from a jug.
Path seems to have bounced back from last month’s privacy kerfuffle quite handily. The app maker announced today that its API will be integrated into Nike’s running apps and accessories, allowing your friends to cheer you on virtually.
It’s not as easy as having a pizza delivered, but this simple kit can turn your backyard kettle grill into the perfect pizza oven so you can free yourself from the shackles of Domino’s and Papa John.
Alan Arnette has an excellent post on Outside detailing the costs of reaching Earth’s highest summit, Mount Everest. I’ve never thought about it before but it totally makes sense that there are a lot of things that go on to make that climb, right? And all those things cost a lot of money! Like $US83,000.
Working as a National Geographic photographer is (thankfully) more than just panther attacks and paraglider crashes. Sometimes you get to explore the underground equivalent of “a previously undiscovered Mount Everest” like photographer Carsten Peter.
Apple’s most recent screen successes have centered around the Retina display. But a new patent suggests that Apple has been working on displays that can react to their surroundings to dynamically improve the viewing experience.