JohnnyricoMC
JohnnyricoMC
JohnnyricoMC

VOTE: SMB

They probably don't want to give it away to the competition. It's not like the weiner and stamp factories you see in How It's Made, this is an industry where secrecy is still important.

They probably don't want to give it away to the competition. It's not like the weiner and stamp factories you see in How It's Made, this is an industry where secrecy is still important.

They probably don't want to give it away to the competition. It's not like the weiner and stamp factories you see in How It's Made, this is an industry where secrecy is still important.

They probably don't want to give it away to the competition. It's not like the weiner and stamp factories you see in How It's Made, this is an industry where secrecy is still important.

They probably don't want to give it away to the competition. It's not like the weiner and stamp factories you see in How It's Made, this is an industry where secrecy is still important.

They probably don't want to give it away to the competition. It's not like the weiner and stamp factories you see in How It's Made, this is an industry where secrecy is still important.

They probably don't want to give it away to the competition. It's not like the weiner and stamp factories you see in How It's Made, this is an industry where secrecy is still important.

Sssssh, don't let the muggles notice it!

Then again, if you want to record audiovisual content and have such high quality requirements the built-in hardware doesn't cut it, wouldn't it make more sense to invest in a dedicated video camera with microphone input, lens hood, headphone input and perhaps even a viewfinder rather than a smartphone?

There's also no real way of knowing just how many persons are actually protesting. It's Schrodinger's cat in a titanium box that has been welded shut: just like you don't know if the cat is dead or alive, you just can't tell if there are just around a hundred persons protesting or a hundred thousand. Which also brings

Eh, they're used in older tv-remotes and garage door remotes, devices which aren't meant to be on all the time. If I were to think of such a system, I probably would have gone with a breaker switch instead.

I did reply to the others once I saw their posts, but it just sprung to mind so I had to bring up the picture :-/

Obligatory pic :) Glad I'm not the only one who instantly thought of the mighty 2.

The headline picture made me think of Thunderbird 2.

I think the author of that list doesn't fully grasp what a "gift" means. Why the hell give kids a €600 phone for Christmas anyway? Make 'em save for it and do chores around the house, that teaches them the true value of money.

What's wrong with WW1-solutions?

Strange they don't use those anymore. Yes it's dated in our time of voip and in-flight wifi, but plain old telephone service will probably still be around for more than a decade :s