
Shoot Your Alarm Clock
Posted by bensto in Clock on 06 3rd, 2008
By our calculations, approximately 5 out of 7 days of the week start off with a rude awakening. Some awful noise pulls you out of your slumber and, if you’re anything like us, you are more than ready to shoot whatever is making that terrible sound. Well, now you can.
read comments (0)Cassette Face Wacth
Posted by bensto in Watch on 05 29th, 2008
Product with rubber wrist strap, although watch is shock resistant do not take unnecessary risks by wearing it whilst carrying out rough work, place watch on wrist after using body and hair sprays- not before.
I absolutely dig the spinning chronological reels of this Casette Face watch. It just needs a small cache for MP3s to be absolutely perfect, though I’d settle for a transformation into Laserbeak.
Refrigerator Timer
Posted by bensto in HOME APPLIANCES on 04 3rd, 2008
Do you know how long that salsa you’re about to eat has been moldering in your fridge for? The few days ago Refrigerator Timer helps you to answer these types of low-tech perplexing questions in the high-tech straightforward method you are accustomed to. Simply stick this button-sized timer onto any newly-opened food based item you would like monitor. Push the button, and the LCD display starts counting down the number of days it’s been sitting. It’s a simple but genius concept. Two timers come in a pack so you’ll be sure to have enough to monitor all the amateur science experiments in your fridge.
Simply TIX Led Clock
Posted by bensto in Umbrella on 03 22nd, 2008
Patterns can be found everywhere in life. In our DNA, in cloud formations, during a chess game, in your code, in your deviant behaviors, and even in your bottle of Bawls. Patterns give us clues. Clues give us information. Information makes the world a happier place (not necessarily a safer happier place though). In the case of the Tix clock, the patterns can give you the time.
Millions of patterns are possible with the futuristic-looking Tix clock, yet the clock is extremely simple to read once you grasp the basic concept. The four seperate fields act like the four digits of a digital clock. The value of each digit is simply the number of illuminated squares in each field. So any given time of the day may have thousands of different ways of displaying the time. The clocks in the image are displaying the time 12:34. It’s that easy! Of course your friends are just going to take a look at your Tix clock and think it’s just modern LED art. Dullards.

