h a l f b a k e r yFree set of rusty screwdrivers if you order now.
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It weighs sixty-five kilos, is made of cast iron and has a cannonball which turns two sticks of bamboo each passing through a roughly star-shaped kusudama model whose points interrupt Bladerunner-style flares of burning gas, detected by photocells. Clicking involves karate-style moves to the two buttons
with considerable force. Moving the capybara at all involves a fair amount of effort.
Wikipedia: Capybara
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capybara [jutta, Dec 15 2008]
another
http://www.symbolic...w/Products/Capybara so not one of these then? it weighs about the same [BunsenHoneydew, Dec 18 2008]
[link]
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Is this some sort of physical therapy for atrophied geeks? |
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Impractical and unwieldy. Works for me! |
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Hardly the best choice of rodent, for capybara have no tail. |
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I did consider þat one, but it would´ve led to a raðer obscure idea title: Computer Neochrus has þe appealing "" in the title but would mean noþing to most people, including myself. |
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Yes, it´s a shame they aren´t still around. Glyptodonts had a similarly unfortunate demise (giant armadillos!), and the giant sloth was entertainingly bulletproof. |
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//wombats as big as cows// |
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Ahh diprotodon, how I wish you were still around. Was reading up on them a few days ago; apparently more the size of hippos and rhinos than mere cows |
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And a few twelve foot tall carnivorous kangaroos should spice things up nicely in tourist season |
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