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February 10, 2005 -- 9:12 PM
posted by Par
SmartWater has been designed to protect household property and motor vehicles. Each bottle of SmartWater solution contains a unique forensic code, which is assigned to a household or vehicle.
An additional feature of SmartWater Instant is the inclusion tiny micro-dot particles which enable Police to quickly identify the true owner of the property.
Basically, the idea is to tag your stuff with SmartWater. Then, if it's stolen, the police can identify it as yours. Can you spot the minor problem?
February 10, 2005 -- 5:54 PM
posted by Al
Well something interesting to listen to as you waste what is left of this day.
Kyukon-Yellow Monkeys
They use to be my favourite Jap rock band. That is until they decided to stop being a band and went into hiatus. Well that's the music industry for you.
February 10, 2005 -- 5:18 PM
posted by carls junior
ok loser faces i'm home from jasper! i kinda won 250 dollars but i still love you all very much even tho i'm way to rich! y'all wrote way too much shit while i was gone so i'm assuming that you're all fine...it's so good to be home!!!
p.s. our bus was licensed like bars are licensed...we drank on the charter
February 10, 2005 -- 2:28 PM
posted by Beck
Hey Par I can't check my credit cards, it just seems to be picture.
Maybe I should try IE...
February 10, 2005 -- 11:58 AM
posted by nobody knows my face
Yeah... that kozydan artwork looks rad.
February 09, 2005 -- 8:16 PM
posted by eric
February 09, 2005 -- 6:46 PM
posted by eric
CLOCK IT!!
This is weirdly lovely. The Last Clock is a software timepiece, with three rings composed of a video taken from a live feed. The outer ring is the second ring; the middle one is the minutes, and the innermost the hours. The clock is thus, as the creators explain, "a record of its own history." More:
As the hands rotate around the face of the clock they leave a trace of what has been happening in front of the camera. Once Last has been running for 12 hours, you end up with an easy-to read mandala of archived time.
That clock above was composed of images from a building in Taichung, Taiwan. Not terribly practical, but, like the Clock of the Long Now, a neat way refiguring how we think about time and our relationship to it.
http://www.lastclock.co.uk/
http://www.collisiondetection.net/mt/archives/001115.html#001115
from collisiondetection
