h a l f b a k e r yWhy not imagine it in a way that works?
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.
|
I have to give the credit for this one to a co-worker. She
gets
sick of me saying "I'll be ready in 5" (while on the 'bakery)
and
then taking ten minutes or more.
To remedy this common affliction, she proposed a small
timer that the person waiting can clip onto the waitee.
The waiting
person keys in a pin then sets an amount of
time
before clipping it to the person who has given the excuse.
When the time expires, the device vibrates to remind the
waitee.
At this point the waitee should get going. If they don't, the
device will transmit a small electric shock to the waitee
every
minute. The shocks will get progressively more unpleasant
as
time passes. To turn the device off, the pin has to be keyed
in by the person who is waiting. When removed before
deactivation it lets out an ear splitting siren noise.
A remote controlled variant could be purchased by parents
to
enforce curfews when their children promise to be home
by
midnight...
[link]
|
|
Overkill. Timers are extraordinarily widely Baked. Why do the slightly tardy deserve such harsh punishment? Why should this idea not be [marked-for-deletion] ? |
|
|
read the idea, doc, and give her a little more credit. The idea isn't for a simple timer, but more concerned with removing the control of the timer from the timee - if that's baked, I havn't seen it.. |
|
|
Technically, very simple to do. One of those rundown kitchen timers - with a PIN number - attached to one of those electric-shock dog fence collars. Or you could build the whole interface into the remote control. |
|
|
I suspect that this product would be subject of a certian amount of "consumer resistance" from potential wearers but I'll croissant it in the hope that someone builds a version for zapping misbehaving kids. |
|
|
Thanks for the backup yama. Actually I'm coming to the
conclusion that a (possibly milder) version of this could be
really useful. I have at least one friend who is chronically
late, it's not that unusual a problem. |
|
|
No doubt my co-worker will be surprised that there isn't a
pile of croissants on this one, maybe she'll stop hassling
me for a while. I didn't add it into the original idea, but
she suggested that every halfbaker have one of these
devices *implanted*. She's a cruel cruel girl. |
|
|
Peter, come now. I really doubt that timers which deliver progressively more intense electric shocks are baked. |
|
|
And since you're marking this for deletion, the onus is on you to provide a reason. |
|
|
I actually like this idea. Even though I'd be on the buzzed not the buzzing end of it. But only if there could be a corresponding device to clue in the Type A people who profit from the skills, & talents of Type B people [guess which one I am :)] but have the arrogance to demand people mirror their strengths but do little to do the same in reverse and minimize their weaknesses but don't offer the same privilege to their lesser brothers and sisters. |
|
|
I often think they can't even clearly conceptualize what our strengths and their weaknesses are or if they do then what the repercussions of this self-serving, unethical behavior is. How about a b.s. buzzer, an arrogance buzzer, a dishonest motive buzzer, a short-sighted solution buzzer, a self-serving "solution" buzzer ... to go along with the worthy things like a time buzzer, a organization buzzer, a just-the-minimum-facts buzzer, a wimping out buzzer, a righteous indignation buzzer ... |
|
| |