h a l f b a k e r yNot just a think tank. An entire army of think.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
GPS enabled bottles turn the ocean into a giant liquid file cabinet. Place your message/information in the bottle, toss it in the ocean and then retrieve the bottle from wherever it might be when you need it.
Batteries to operate the electronics charges from wave action
As referenced below...
http://www.nzherald...1&objectid=10847495 [normzone, Jan 21 2013]
[link]
|
|
I was about to say that this wasn't your best idea...
then I read your other Ideas! |
|
|
(OK, for those of simple minds; I was laughing when I
wrote this, and I hoped vfrackis enjoys it.) |
|
|
Better than storing vital data in a cloud. |
|
|
Yes, Miss Jones: File it under "C". |
|
|
[+] just for [Ling's] anno if nothing else. Could the bottles be mobile so you could send for them? |
|
|
I was imagining something more exotic like mermaid secretaries filing messages in seaweed folders... |
|
|
aren't messages in bottles intended to travel between tosser and retriever? how would you ensure your message was protected? |
|
|
you couldn't ensure message security unless you had
a specialized bottle |
|
|
also i thought Shit Mufflers was brilliant BP |
|
|
//aren't messages in bottles intended to travel
between tosser and retriever?// That would be
pointless. Dogs can't open bottles. |
|
|
[-] Cause:
- There's too much trash in the ocean already.
- With the currents there's no telling how far the bottle would be.
- Some sea creature might consider the bottle to be food. Sharks are known to eat pretty much of anything. License plates and other strange objects have been found in the stomachs of sharks. |
|
|
^ "Dangit ! that's the third file clerk we've gone through this month, stupid shark." [+] |
|
|
A message dropped overboard in a bottle in the Indian
Ocean in 1936 washed up on a beach in New Zealand last
week. |
|
|
Those database call lag times are a killer. |
|
| |