In aviation, we call this position the 'brace position' for flight attendants. Assuming a brace position means strategically positioning parts of the body such as the head and arms, by flexing, bending, and leaning forward to help reduce any potential impacts that may occur.
Delta's new Delta One suites will feature a flat bed expanded by more than three inches, a custom cushion designed to act like an in-air mattress, and a new cubby for shoe storage, enhancing passenger comfort on long-haul flights.
Taking pills or supplements daily is a fact of life for a growing number of people, yet the objects designed for that routine communicate apology. bovii was built to sit on a restaurant table without anyone feeling the need to explain it, a standard that immediately separates it from the category it nominally belongs to.
So another word about tickets. They did finally announce single-game tickets were going on sale, but only for games though June. It's not enough to keep season plans limited to those requiring fans to buy more tickets than they can use, feeding the secondary markets which the Mets also get a cut of, but "make-your-own-plan" fans like me who've reliably occupied seats for decades,
Many organisations don't need as much floor space or as many desks, given that many staff now do a mix of hybrid work from home and the office. But on days when more staff are required to be in, office spaces can feel noticeably busier and noisier. Despite so much focus on getting workers back into offices, there has been far less focus on the impacts of returning to open-plan workspaces.
Originally conceived by designer Niels Diffrient over twenty years ago, the Diffrient Lounge is not just for relaxation, it also happens to be a great spot to work in. Ok, so you might not think of a lounge chair as something you would use in your work from home setup, but with its integrated work surface and ergonomic design, you won't want to work anywhere else.
In contemporary interiors shaped by speed, productivity, and constant stimulation, seating has largely become passive. It is designed to hold the body while the mind drifts elsewhere. OSOLO challenges this condition. It is not a chair in the conventional sense, but a mindful seating platform, a ritual object that reconsiders how we sit, gather, and occupy space. OSOLO emerges at the meeting point of two ancient cultures: Japanese stillness and Turkish hospitality.