h a l f b a k e r yIt's the thought that counts.
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.
|
Say for example that your car's just about to clock up 88,888 miles. How could you not want to see the display scroll or tick over to this most auspicious number? Well, you won't get to see it.
It might be that you don't get to see it because someone with access to your car and petty animus to your
person has fitted to your car an OSPSD. Or it might be because some paternalistic figure with doubts about your ability to drive without being distracted by trvia has fitted to your car an OSPSD.
The OSPSD, which sits in your dashboard with its beady computer eye and its electronic brain, watches you watching the road. When your eyes flick down to the dash it freezes your odometer for the duration of your glance, resetting it to the correct figure when you look back up again.
a classic, which should have more positive votes
Odometer_20Serendip...tification_20Device in my opinion [calum, Jan 16 2013]
[link]
|
|
This was originally going to be a secret clock, that you never see tick or move, but which updates when you are not looking at it, such that eventually your notion of time is something that happens only when you are not considering it. Eventually you might resolve that by watching the clock you can stop time itself, but only in an area the size of, say, your kitchen and only for so long as you are on your own. Anyway, this would be an all too technologically challenging way to bugger with someone's reality, so I opted for the OSPSD. |
|
|
What if I look at it in a mirror? |
|
|
Local (Canadian) truck exporter hires a geek
(Vince) to change over digital odometers to read
in mph. not km so he can sell trucks to the US.
Vince programs the odometer to read "America
sucks.... Canada rocks!.(or something) every
100,000km and stay on screen for one full minute.
The words then disappear until next time.
His goal was that the owner would see this event
and tell all his friends. They would think he was
nuts, and there would be no way for him to prove
it. |
|
|
I'm afraid that's happening to my wallet at a lot of gas pumps. |
|
|
I think this has already been installed on my car... I never
get to see the serendipitous kilometrestones I expect, on
the odometer. |
|
|
I think every so often, at random odometer
tickmarks, it should simply read cryptic and ominous
messages, perhaps
'we're coming,'
'help me...'
'don't turn around.'
'never forget this number'
'I hope that bolt was unnecessary' |
|
| |