h a l f b a k e r yIt's the thought that counts.
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Mobiles anchored at the base instead of the top, with little glass or lucite bubbles at the ends of the arms. Those antique glass floats they sell in the quainter coastal regions would probably be ideal, if a bit big for the average household fishtank.
(Inspired, of course, by UB's idea of the same
name.)
Upside-Down Mobile
http://www.halfbake...pside-Down_20Mobile And outside the tank, for the silverfish. [FarmerJohn, Sep 23 2002]
[link]
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So in effect - 'Fishtank Blimps'? |
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what makes the mobile move? the fish swimming? then they stop still, rapt with attention and the thing stops. fish lose concentration. "why did I stop swimming?" fish starts to swim again. cycle repeats, again and again, incessantly = result = stark staring mad fish. this is cruel and I expect better from you Curry. |
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Um, po, the mobile will respond to the water currents the way a regular mobile responds to air currents. I don't think the fish will pay much attention. It's certainly no crueler than sticking the fish in the tank in the first place. |
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Inject a little microchip tag transceiver thingy into the fish in question. Then set up some sensors around the tank to triangulate his position. Mount tank on robot and tie the fish's swimming direction to the robot's directional input. Also, the 'bot should have a passive lead mode, so you can take your fish for a walk. |
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RS: you sure you're in the right idea? |
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