And, as a bonus, clothing made with carbon nanotubes will be electrically and thermally conductive. You can weave your computer, cell phone, satellite links, radio stations, and your sunblock, right into your shorts.
…cell phones, the microwaves arent good…when you put the cell in the ear, they falling down directly to your head (bad for the tension), when you put in the trousers affect directly the sperm quantity, when you put in the shirt socket, the heart is there…cause of that, the Japanese now are simplifying your phones…
And, as a bonus, clothing made with carbon nanotubes will be electrically and thermally conductive. You can weave your computer, cell phone, satellite links, radio stations, and your sunblock, right into your shorts.
Basically it would be good if all that could be put together into a small enough package so that those who need it to live can stick it where the sun doesn’t shine and I don’t have to, on a drive to some place or another, see half the people standing by their vehicles and piles of beach equipment doing that salute to commerce, the cell phone ear jam. I too have read that too much time with such equipment can literally rot the head, but then I also have long felt that those who seek such endless exposure are using the equipment to fill a void which is already there. I believe it was Jim Harrison who once wrote something to the effect that the best thing people can do to make their lives run more smoothly is to toss the cellphones under the wheels of trucks. I might not have that right down to the word, but I got the meaning spot on.
“Time ain’t for saving”, said Mr. Buffett (Jimmy, not Warren - and I bet there is no contest which Buffett would be more fun at a party although I once read they are distantly related; at this point I assume the only thing they have in common is more money than they know what to do with). Funny how some technological applications work - the more computerized a lot of businesses get the more paper they generate, in direct contrast to the myth of the “paperless office”. Same with all the instant communication tools…yes, they work instantly and keep one in constant contact but they either increase the workload or inhibit completion of nearly anything. We used to have the technology to put a man on the moon but that was almost 35 years ago and now we have to reinvent it and it will take a decade. My fins are behind the seat of the truck and dead dinosaurs will have me in the water in 30 minutes, boldly rolling through space…