March 23, 2006

wall_vault.jpg Stacks and Stacks is selling a biometric wall safe perfect for the gunslinger who just can't seem to remember pesky combinations. The Wall Vault uses biometric reading, where a simple scan of your fingerprint will open the safe in seconds. The Wall Vault is mainly targeted at gun owners who want quick and easy access to their handguns, but feel free to store secret plans or truth serum antidotes or anything else you would usually find in a wall safe. Criminals should also note that they only need the owner's index finger (severed or otherwise) to open the safe. It's that convenient!

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korean_air_force.jpg In an attempt to strengthen military capability, the South Korean Air Force has started recruiting online gamers. The Air Force has decided to specifically target online gamers because of their skills in dealing with "computer-related things" as well as their "excellent personal hygiene" and "amazing social abilities." Those last two quotes were my own, but we can bet that those added benefits were implied. As soon as next month, five professional "e-Sports" athletes will begin serving as program testers for war-game simulations. It is not known whether or not they will sport name tags like "S |-|4Rk A++aC|<" or ones hosting their actual, less l33t names.

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Does your alarm clock light up your entire room with an unyielding green glow? No? Well, then maybe you should follow the lead set by our friends at Spark Fun Electronics and build a giant 2 x 12ft wall clock. Built from LEDs, this clock sets itself, is accurate to 100ns, and is powered over ethernet. This thing is huge and time consuming, but they have a step-by-step tutorial that should tell you everything you need to know. Since each digit is individually controlled, you could put this to many different uses. How about a countdown clock for when the Olsen twins turn 18? Oh wait, it's not the year 2004 and you're not that really skeevy guy who hangs around parked in a high school parking lot... Hopefully.

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paingone.jpg Pain®Gone is a wonderful panacea with interestingly placed trademarks and the shape of a large ballpoint pen. The PainGone uses "electrical charges produced by crystals to provide prolonged pain relief which is clinically proven to work." For a second there, I thought this was a scam, but we all know that if something has crystals, it has to work. The PainGone supposedly mimics nerve impulses that send a "call for help" message to the brain. The brain, which frequently confuses electric pens for actual nerve cells, immediately sends endorphins to the area. Take a gander at the illnesses the PainGone miraculously cures: back pain, tennis elbow, whiplash, shingles, skeletal pain, lumbago, phantom limb pain, and headache. It is not known whether or not the PainGone cures the ink marks left on your skin when you mistakenly jam a Bic into your forehead.

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noise_camera.jpg In a desperate attempt to find yet another way to fine their citizens, various local governments are considering a new technology that videotapes cars that exceed designated sound levels. Using acoustic detection equipment created for the Australian Navy, Acoustic Research Laboratories has designed a system that will record a 10-second video with audio of cars that have excessively high stereos, exhaust systems, or novelty horns. The microphones and cameras will be pole-mounted in waterproof boxes, and the system will generate 10,000 tickets before filling its hard drive. 10,000 tickets! What's next? Are they going to build a machine that will fine us for littering or stalking our local TV weathermen? I'd like to see them try.

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magic_book.jpg IBM has introduced an audio recorder concept with an interesting folding design and amazingly fresh capabilities. The Magic Block allows you to store "non-stop sound throughout the day," keeping a log of your conversations with taxi drivers about rain and traffic, and storing them for later examination. The Magic Block also features voice-recognition search technology, which will allow you to search through your conversations for specific keywords, voices, and timeframes. Finishing up the list of capabilities is a built-in fingerprint reader, ensuring that only you and the Magic Block will know just how many times you talk about unicorns throughout the day.

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