How Should I Wear My New Droid?

PIX 11 News recently issued Motorola Droid PDAs to its reporters in order to further improve our newsgathering and news reporting capabilities. But how should I wear this thing? I'd appreciate your help to know for sure.
The Droid is a capable newsgathering tool. Among other impressive functions, it allows a person to stream live video out. In other words, in a pinch, I could do a liveshot from any location in the world from which I can pick up a cellphone signal.
So it's clear that having this device is helpful. What's not clear is how to sport one.
Here's the situation: I already have a company-issued Blackberry (I use its Nextel push-to-talk feature to stay in touch with liveshot crews I work with). That Bberry sits in my right pocket. Alongside it is my personal cellphone, a basic Samsung flip phone, so my right pocket is stuffed already. What do I do with my Droid, then? Wear it in its holster? Put it in the left pocket? Or in the right pocket where all of the other devices are now?
Check out these three photos above (in order of left pocket, holster and right pocket) and let me know what looks best. I am no fashionplate. In fact, I'd describe my style as geeky chic, to be kind. At the same time, I don't want to look like an electronics pack mule. Your comments -- your aid, really -- may help prevent me from making a total fashion faux pas as I go about doing my work trying to bring you the news and information you need.
One last note: the photographer who took these pictures feels that I look good no matter how I wear my electronic devices. That photographer is my wife. No matter what you think, even if you slam all of my looks, I can't wait to hear your opinion.
Written by James Ford
Happy Jettisoning: JetBlue Offers Refunds to the Newly Unemployed
JetBlue, the airline everyone loved to love up until that whole trapped-on-a-plane-for-nine-hours fiasco is trying once again to get in the good graces of honest, hard-working Americans. With the economy in the dumps and fewer people taking to the skies, the enterprising minds at the airline are now offering refunds to anyone who loses their job. Call it an insurance policy of sorts for belt-tighteners who are thinking of foregoing that spring trip to Cancun, lest they lose their employment.

As always, there's some fine print to read and some hoops to jump through (Faxing an notarized form? What is this, 1990?). For the most part, though, it seems like the airline is making a genuine effort to coax jittery citizens to get on with their lives, come Madoff or Stanford.
The only clause that makes us a bit nervous:
If request for refund is not approved JetBlue will still cancel the flight(s), charge a $100 cancellation fee and place any remaining amount in a voucher/credit shell, valid toward future air-only transportation on JetBlue for up to one year
If you're newly out of work and want to recoup the cost of an upcoming trip, just make sure you definitely want to cancel your tickets and are willing to part with $100 if they don't find your hoop-jumping up to snuff.
Spring Cleaning Project #39: Hack Your VCR Into a Toaster
In the immortal words of the late, great Mitch Hedberg, "Hey Frampton! Do you like toast, too? As do I. It is warm and crispy and the perfect place for jelly to lay."
Who doesn't love toast? Thanks to the crafty folks at Instructables, you can now make delicious golden brown toast with your VCR (for all the kids: VCR) using these step-by-step instructions.
Now, if only someone would figure out how to convert a discman into a waffle iron, I can be rid of even more archaic junk cluttering up my apartment and have a complete breakfast to boot.
