my bag of holding

A few months ago, Rands in Repose had a great post about a bag of holding: the necessities of his laptop bag.  This post resonates for me strongly, since I feel like I’m always in search of a great bag.

Like Rands, I settled on two bags.  I have my everyday get-to-work bag, which is currently an Eco Portile Grande by Zaum.  I love that it’s cherry red, since I’m bored with plain black bags.  It’s a messenger bag, and it’s pretty minimal.  It has room for my laptop, iPad, iPhone, a small bag of cables, my wallet, and not much else.  This is perfect for just getting back and forth to the office: it’s light, it’s comfortable to carry, and it holds the necessities.

However, it doesn’t work as a travel bag because it doesn’t zip closed, so I’m not comfortable just stuffing it under a seat or in the overhead.  Things will fall out, and I’ll either lose something or have to dig around for that pen that fell out.  It takes a few too many motions to get my laptop out of the bag for security screening.  Also, if I pick up anything, it probably won’t fit very well into my messenger bag.  Overall, it’s just not a good bag when I’m travelling.

My travel bag is a backpack.  It’s currently the VMworld 2011 backpack, which is quite well-made for conference swag.  I settled on a backpack for travelling because it makes getting around an airport a lot easier.  It’s also got the right number of pockets, and in the right locations, which is necessary for finding that one thing (wallet, phone, pen, whatever) very quickly.  It’s big enough to hold a lot, even a day or two of clothing, but still be carry-on size and still fit under my seat.  I also like that it’s VMware-branded, since it gives me an extra little boost of credibility when I’m conducting research.  If I’m talking to someone who was at VMworld (or who wanted to go but couldn’t), my backpack starts off the conversation, which functions as an icebreaker.

But this isn’t a daily bag.  It’s so big that it’s overkill for my daily needs (which is mostly just iPad+iPhone+wallet), and I don’t need all of that space.  Plus, I have to admit that I like that my daily bag is more stylish than the VMworld backpack.  The VMworld backpack wins lots of points on practicality, but it’s not winning any style awards.

So: two bags, each for their own purpose.  I can switch between them at a moment’s notice, which makes life that much better.

5 thoughts on “my bag of holding”

    1. It’s small enough, I can just slide it into a pocket.

      (You know, I’ve never actually seen Dr Who, but I know enough people who watch it religiously that I pick up a surprisingly number of references!)

      1. The question was a bit unfair. My wife once wished for three things: a bag of holding, a sonic screw driver and a magic wand. Thing is, she doesn’t believe that she’s a geek.

  1. I’ve ended up with three bags:

    – small “portrait” sized bag which can hold an iPad or a MacBook Air (11″) and some cables comfortably. It has the unfortunate feature of not wanting to actually stay on my shoulder. Basically only if I need to take the MacBook Air (or iPad) with a few cables with me in a car.

    – backpack holds the iPad, the Air, all known cables (you never know when an HDMI cable might come in handy), sufficient space for A4 paper to stay unfolded and undamaged, a convenient front pocket that can hold my travel document wallet. It’s also very comfortable. Only downside is fitting more than a days casual clothes in there isn’t fun. I rarely take clothing in to carry on though.

    – a bag bag, that will hold a few days clothing but not feel stupid for only one days worth. I don’t know what you call this category of bag.

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