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The stylish, anthracite black timepiece is the size of a grapefruit and has oval LCD screens on opposite sides. Displaying hours, minutes and seconds in block digits, the orb has the remarkable ability of turning itself 180 degrees when it gets to a palindrome time that also reads the same upside down
(05:11:50 is one but not 02:00:50 or 12:33:21).
This means that at these moments the sphere is free to roll to the left or right (turning both its LCDs upside down) or forward or backward (turning its rear LCD forward and upside down) without losing a second. By easily programming the size of your coffee table or shelf and the clock starting position, you are assured that itll never roll off an edge.
Youll be staying up late to catch each of its 48 rotations per day and wondering which direction itll roll next.
palindrome numbers
http://www.geocitie...eyh/palindromes.htm [FarmerJohn, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 21 2004]
[link]
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does it matter that 05:11:50 upside down is no longer a number? |
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This clock uses LCD block digits where for example a "5" looks like an "S" with straight lines and appears the same upside down. |
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...this is a clock, right? |
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To the left is a clock - above you, I don't know. |
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oh hell boobles(s) shell oil |
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Australians of course need the umop ap|sdn version. |
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Not boobles [fry], boobies (.)(.)
Tee Hee |
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Why can't it be called a Palinilap? |
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