The most unlikely school bag

(carryology.com)

129 points | by surprisetalk 4 days ago

16 comments

  • 1-more 17 hours ago
    One term in high school I put a laptop bag strap on a hanging file box and used that as a bag for a semester. It made me nuts that teachers hand you stuff you need to hold on to that has no holes in it, but you're supposed to store it in a 3 ring binder. Everything you are supposed to bring with you to class is the shape of a rectangle, but a backpack is a blob that lets your stuff fall to the bottom. Best grades I ever got. Ended up hurting my back so I went back to a backpack. I got a lot of "why don't you just…" questions for a day or two and then it was chill.

    This bag shape seems far superior for the purposes of carrying paper hither and thither than any other bag shape I've seen.

    • EvanAnderson 16 hours ago
      Rectangular prism-based storage FTW.

      I carried a briefcase for my last three years of high school (in the early 90s in rural Ohio). After the jokes subsided it became "just a thing" and, wow, was it nice. I ended up being able to get by w/o using a locker (beyond stowing my coat in the cooler months). Being able to lock it was a treat, too.

      I assume it would never fly today because "security".

    • MisterTea 17 hours ago
      > It made me nuts that teachers hand you stuff you need to hold on to that has no holes in it, but you're supposed to store it in a 3 ring binder.

      That is why pocket folders exist.

      • natebc 4 hours ago
        Right? The classic Trapper Keeper!
    • jerlam 16 hours ago
      I was super cool for a week when other students saw I had a three-hole punch that fit into a three ring binder.
  • gorpy7 18 hours ago
    this was written with at least the help of ai- it’s still a good article and idk if i’m the only one who can tell or we’re beyond the point of needing or wanting or caring to point it out. idk
    • ottobonn 10 hours ago
      I was trying to ignore the classic tells of LLM writing, but I still find them irksome when reading an otherwise informative article. There is just too much fluff in the language
      • MichaelZuo 50 minutes ago
        Yeah it’s seriously shady to not disclose it at the beginning of the piece.
    • 1970-01-01 15 hours ago
      It's also an ad. Also dk if I’m the only one who can tell or we’re beyond the point of needing or wanting or caring to point it out.
      • King-Aaron 12 hours ago
        > The thinking was straightforward: if every child wears essentially the same bag, you can’t read household wealth

        These bags are like $400-800 lol

        • bombcar 10 hours ago
          I'd love to see a Saddleback Leather take on these.
          • rustyhancock 5 hours ago
            Yes I'd happily buy one if it's quality matched the price and I'm sure in Japan it often does.

            I have done some simple leather crafts, and I think the design clearly is suitable for building with rivets and full grain leather, if they do use that today then it'll be a spectacular product.

    • j2kun 18 hours ago
      It drags on a bit and is rather verbose, which is what made me notice it was AI-assisted.
      • mc3301 14 hours ago
        My favorite part is a bland photo every two sentences.
        • userbinator 10 hours ago
          Possibly AI-generated too? I can't tell.
    • fouc 3 hours ago
      >That’s not an accident; it was the point.
    • croisillon 15 hours ago
      oh but we discussed this already https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47447800
    • amouat 7 hours ago
      I stopped reading in anger at "That’s not an accident; it was the point."

      It's pretty disrespectful imo -- it feels like the reader's time is worth less than the author's.

    • croisillon 18 hours ago
      full slop indeed but at least the japanese emperor cited really existed
  • LeoPanthera 12 hours ago
    You can watch this NHK World video about the bags. Not made by AI. https://youtu.be/nHcgol5i7gs
  • protocolture 13 hours ago
    >That’s not an accident; it was the point.

    Article SmeLLMs

    • peddling-brink 12 hours ago
      I enjoyed it despite this.
      • protocolture 12 hours ago
        I found it broke me out of my "purchase this for my son immediately" fugue state the article had me in.
    • nxobject 13 hours ago
      [flagged]
  • aanet 18 hours ago
    It looks gorgeous. I would love to have one, and I'm not even close to primary school age :D

    I loved the making-of video: https://youtu.be/lSochjb6ovI

  • eb0la 7 hours ago
    Before reading the article I was surprised to find them similar to old german Sout backpacks. They are really sturdy and durable: your kid needs just one of them for all primary school (grundschule). They are explensive (not so much considering 3-6 years of continuous abuse by kids), but when the kid gets tired of it, some people put them on sale. I have one that I know was resold at least 2 times and it still in perfect shape... Great for airport travel, btw.
  • qsera 11 hours ago
    That is nothing. This is what my friends used to carry to school in the early 90s

    https://5.imimg.com/data5/SELLER/Default/2024/9/451658081/PU...

  • booleandilemma 18 hours ago
    For me the iconic school bag will always be the JanSport.
    • munificent 15 hours ago
      I bought a black JanSport backpack from my university bookstore in, I think, 1998. It was the first version that had a laptop slot in it because laptop computers were still a rarity then. I got it because my job at an dotcom startup bought me a bright orange iBook. Still one of my favorite laptops.

      That JanSport lasted me 20 years. It outlasted that dotcom started, the entire dotcom bubble, the Great Recession, and three jobs. It took on dozens of flights and road trips. On long hikes in the Smokey mountains, and sleepovers at several girlfriends' apartments. It was an absolute tank.

      What finally gave out was the rubberized coating on the bottom started to get gummy. But, wow, did I get my money's worth with it.

    • mandevil 10 hours ago
      LL Bean for me. Original at first, then the deluxe later as I got more homework. And I used an accordion folder, one slot for each class, for holding handouts etc. in addition to the notebooks and binders.
    • sowbug 18 hours ago
    • MisterTea 17 hours ago
      I was an Eastpak kid. To me, the quality was the same with the added bonus that you were less likely to get robbed for it.
    • iv4122 12 hours ago
      I second this - mine has lasted me 15+ years at this point. Which is not something you can say about a lot of the things on the market today.
  • kmoser 8 hours ago
    > The government has taken the issue seriously enough to study it and to encourage lighter materials, reduced textbook carry, and the use of digital teaching tools. Some manufacturers have responded with more synthetics and lighter reinforcements.

    I guess they're so married to the traditional design that they just refuse to add a frame and waist strap to offload the weight to your hips.

  • rramadass 5 hours ago
    A complete and interesting video of the production process - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pkGeKO87nXk

    Even the packaging of the final product is beautiful!

  • iLoveOncall 6 hours ago
    I would say that school bags that incorporate kevlar to be bulletproof are much more unlikely actually: https://edcwarehouse.co.uk/product/guard-dog-scout-bulletpro... (there are many other brands)

    Funnily enough before opening the article, having heard of the japanese backpacks, I was wondering if it was going to talk about bulletproof ones or japanese ones.

  • worik 18 hours ago
    I want one.

    Gorgeous

  • maxall4 10 hours ago
    Only an LLM could liken a first-grader to a scholar: "In a stratified society where the imperial family sat at the symbolic center, that gesture mattered. The randoseru moved, almost overnight, from battlefield to classroom, from soldier’s kit to scholar’s gear." This is an interesting topic, but this kind of AI writing gets very, very grating. Additionally, though this is somewhat unrelated, I feel like LLMs tend to argue points through gaslighting, rather than actual argumentation; they prefer to stack a bunch of tangential, or parallel, evidence and then assert that it proves their point when, in reality, it does not have any logical coherence—unless, perhaps, one reads it at 2am, in which case it might make sense.
  • jmclnx 18 hours ago
    Interesting read. The title made me think of Catholic School Book Bags that everyone in my city who went to Catholic Schools used. Public school kids (me) just carried the books to school, rain, snow or shine. No school busses back then.

    I could not find a picture, but there were like small army duffel bags, dark green with a yellow fabric strap. You held the strap and slung the bag over your shoulder.

  • reconvene1290 17 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • ideaforge_00 4 days ago
    Every generation accidently recreates the same object with newer materials and better marketing. This is basically the modern equivalent of a satchel, except now it comes with aerospace fabric, limited drops, and a Discord server.
    • AlotOfReading 18 hours ago
      LLM comment? The link is about randoseru, which are not satchels and predate the existence of both discord and powered flight.
      • peddling-brink 12 hours ago
        Definitely LLM, see their other comments. Should be banned.
    • brudgers 2 days ago

        Every generation thinks it invented sex.
          --Robert Heinlein