h a l f b a k e r yNaturally, seismology provides the answer.
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every winter, millions of simple tasks are made needlessly difficult trying to wear thick gloves.
solution place small magnet in thumb and fore finger
place small magnet on zipper
now when you want to zip up and down your coat, it can be accomplished without cold fingers.
same goes for keys.
*warning*
don't try it on your credit card.
Magnet in finger
http://www.wired.co.../news/2006/06/71087 skips the middle man [metarinka, Feb 18 2010]
[link]
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What if things are not pickuppablewithamagnet? |
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How about a glove with one sticky finger instead? There
could be a motorized sticky-tape reel which continuously but
slowly draws fresh sticky-tape (sticky-side up) over the digit. |
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Actually, I suspect that prosthetic hands would benefit more
from this kind of jiggery-pokery than cold ones. |
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I suppose you could do it with a sticky reel similar to those ones used to de-lint clothing... but if you have magnets your halfway there to a perpetual motion machine. |
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this wasn't meant to be a catch all, but zippers and gloved hands are natural born enemies and often find each other in the same environment. |
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Actually,if it's that cold, why not lick your finger and then
touch the object you wish to up-pick? |
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Why not simply lick the object? |
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Why not implant magnets into your fingertips? |
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magnet in finger is baked |
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This is a good idea, and I disagree about it being baked. The
linked web page mentions small machine parts, not zippers,
and with good reason: zipper tags are frequently nonferrous:
[metarinka]'s idea involves a change to the design of both
mitten *and* zipper. Also, the link is for gloves, not mittens,
and I believe the distinction is relevant: as [metarinka]
points out ("natural enemies"), the mitten-zipper problem is
distinguished by its greater commonness in everyday life
from other cases where hand coverings impair dexterity. |
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