Finally, a crazy gimmicky alarm clock that I desperately need. The $26 Danger Bomb Clock brings a little excitement to the endless drudgery of your morning routine by getting your heart pumping. When the alarm goes off, you have to "defuse" the alarm by figuring out which of the three wires to pull. If you pick the wrong one—boom.
Okay, it doesn't actually explode if you get it wrong. Actually, I have no idea what does happen, given that the entire product page is written in Japanese. I assume it keeps beeping. Maybe it beeps louder? Maybe it stabs you, I don't know. But I do know that this will be great training for my plans to join the local bomb squad. Which seems to get a lot of business these days. Zing!
[via Gizmodo]
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Google translation:
1. Because this commodity becomes the reservation obtaining commodity, it becomes the delivery after the manufacturer selling. In addition, there are also times when the sale discontinuance occurs modification of the payment date with the substantial postponement of sale time and modification of price specification, depending upon when.
2. sevens - in case of the eleventh store receipt, you cannot receive in the same day as general shop front sale target date.
If “which line is cut, it can stop explosion, it is… where is?!” In the movie and the television, it should cut which line in order to stop the delayed ignition bomb, the scene which is perplexed is fixed turn. Funny the parody which reproduces this tension scene, represents the delayed ignition bomb it is the alarm clock.
As for the switch which stops the blast pronunciation of the alarm clock, either one among 3 these cords/codes which imitate wiring one. Unless the cord/code which is decided during the time when you set is pulled out, extreme blast pronunciation echoes.
If among 3 these cords/codes, which cord/code is pulled out, whether you stop everyday it sets to random. Every morning, it becomes the circumstance which becomes tense!
Posted by: Rodney Sigmon | February 8, 2007 9:24 AM
Clears it up, doesn't it? :)
Posted by: Dan Moren
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February 8, 2007 9:29 AM