What attributes are important to you?
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LTT backpack. It does what they say it does - holds a metric ton of stuff, fits under an airplane seat, comfortable even when loaded. Bought it to use for work, and I can fit all my work gear for trips as well as clothes.
Ditto. I’ve had mine for over a year now with daily use and it’s been great. Good room for tools, and a dedicated outside pocket for glasses. Inner pocket keeps water bottle in place. Organized device storage that holds 2 laptops, an iPad, Steam Deck, Kindle and travel router. The fact that it fits the exact dimensions under most airplane seats has been clutch for travel.
I had to make a warranty claim this week when some of the zipper teeth separated from the bag for some reason. For all the hubbub around the “trust me bro” warranty, support responded within 2 hours and is sending a completely new bag as a replacement. Top notch support.
I really liked the look of this and the organization, but it was not long after spending a good bit on the Oakley Kitchen Sink, so I didn’t get it. For me, straight up capacity (with some protection) is a meaningful deciding factor, and it’s big and holds a lot, and has a decent number of options on the outside for storage.
I still do kind of want the LTT bag, though.
Fjällräven Konten 17 liter backpack for 16 inch laptop computer.
Good:
- Minimalist appearance.
- Quickly and easily adjustable shoulder straps with detachable chest strap.
- Soft, padded shoulder straps and back wall.
- Semi-hard exterior, same shape empty or full.
- When empty, stands upright for loading groceries that can’t be tilted.
- Hatch stays open without holding.
- Carry handle on top. Always vertical.
- Zippered pocket inside. (Should have more.)
- Many pockets of various sizes inside. Three pen pockets high up in the safest corner.
- Two stretchy pockets outside.
- Retroreflector for traffic safety.
Bad:
- Discontinued - no idea why.
- Not raintight, but close.
- Mediocre ventilation --> sweaty back.
- Outside pockets not stretchy enough for a 0.5 liter bottle.
I have a maxpedition Kodiak gearslinger
I’m not in love with the military styling, that used to be more my thing, but not so much these days.
I initially got it for when I was more involved as a scout leader. The key selling points for me were that it’s pretty rugged, and I could swing it around to easily pull paperwork, first aid kits, etc. out without needing to take it off or find somewhere to put it down to rifle through it. It has a water bottle holder and provisions for a hydration bladder should I need even more water, a laptop pocket for when I needed that, and a decent selection of various sized pockets that I think do a good job of keeping your stuff organized and accessible. It worked well for it’s intended purpose, wouldn’t be something I’d recommend for a hiking backpack, but if you need something to lug around some notebooks, and a laptop, some small tools, and such while working outside it’s a pretty good bag.
It’s overkill for what I need it for these days, all I bring with me to work everyday is
- my work headset
- a little pouch with some pens and such
- a notebook
- a small personal first aid kit
- whatever book I’m currently reading
- my water bottle
- sometimes my switch
- a phone charger
My phone, wallet, keys, and usually a pocket knife get carried on my person, and that’s all I have with me 99% of the time when I’m not at work.
And that’s really it. Lots of empty space in my bag, and having that extra space kind of leads to me frequently throwing some junk into it and not bothering to clean it out. I think I still have a birthday card from my coworkers in there from last summer.
35l pack from local company that makes hiking bags and boat bags.
It is pretty much bomb proof, beafy zippers, quality fabric… Some of my friends have bags from this company for 20 years.
Company-provided backpack since it’s quite lightweight and nicer than whatever else I have.
Also it’s fun trying to spot others with the same one in the wild.
Ukoala bag. Visited their booth at a con and liked them well enough that both my wife and I bought one. She wears hers over her shoulder, and I keep mine on my hip.
At work I frequently need access to an assortment of things like little scraps of paper, pens, pencils, Sharpies, knives, gloves, and a little Bluetooth keyboard. I can keep all of those neatly organized in my bag and I keep on my feet moving around all day without any problems. 9/10, would recommend.
Any that fit in my locker, can hold all of my homework, and has enough room for my vest/jacket/street clothes.
It might sound like a no brainer, but a few times I’ve had an issue with one of each. Sometimes they rip because the books are heavy or are too small to neatly hold non-uniform clothes (or uniform clothes when not at school) or don’t fit in the locker when they’re any bigger than that.
I’ve had the same nomatic travel pack for like 5 years now. It’s just perfect for travel and commuting. Water proof, 20L but can expand to 30L, laptop and tablet sleeve, it doesnt fall over when I set it down, it has two collapsible water bottle holders, I can latch it onto my carry on, and I think it looks cool. My wife got one too after not liking her Timbuktu
I’ve been using an old Timbuk2 for years now. Lots of space and I find messenger bags comfy.
I use a Kriega messenger bag. It’s got a wide strap with a quick way to adjust the length, so it’s easy to make sure it’s secure and comfortable. Waterproof and tough enough for use on the motorcycle but not so bulky that it looks out of place in the office.
No bag, just a Scottevest jacket with 26 pockets. Had it for a decade. It even fits a water bottle and a laptop(!) without the being visible.
Only reason I’m not buying more/new is because they only come in black and don’t have any reflective seams or anything - bad for winter use.