Tag Archive: expensive


volcano, watch There are lots of companies out there that make beautiful watches, such as this Romain Jerome Volcano Watch.  The problem with them is that no matter how expensive they are, how exclusive they are are, or how Swiss they are, they all function pretty much the same way. They also fundamentally look the same, minute hand, hour hand, or digital.

They were made this way for a reason…so that no matter where you are, you can look at a clock or watch and know what time it is. This is true for just about everywhere…except Japan.

That’s right, the country with some of the weirdest sh*t, makes these awesome art pieces that double as every geeks fantasy.  There is a company named TokyoFlash that creates such pieces.  They range from the mild, like the Nekura line that look pretty much like regular watches, to the extreme such as the Kisai line that includes “Changing Lanes“, which is a watch that you need to follow the lines that cross over each other.

Kisai changing lanes

I wanted one of these watches for years but couldn’t bring myself to cut into my food budget to actually get one.   I checked the sites weekly to see what the newest insanity was that they were going to create next.  Well it is Father’s Day weekend here in the US and my wonderful wife, who has been going through her own medical issues and recovery, bought me a TokyoFlash watch!  The R75 to be exact, tells time in binary along with it’s own twisted “normal” time.  Plus, it is black with blue LEDs which adds a cool and sophisticated touch to give the TAG Heuer, Rolex, and Citizen watches a run for their money.

So, if your significant other is an Uber-Geek and you have no idea what to buy them, check out something that will stimulate them visually as well as mentally. I mean, who doesn’t want to take 5 minutes to figure out what time it is – especially during those long a$$ boring meetings?

pc-6_5638

Valerie Beetle, a man from the southern Ukraine handcarved this PC case. It is wood and looks freakin’ sick!  He completely carved this entire case out of wood by himself.  This case is cool for two reasons, for me anyways.  One, It is handmade out of wood.  Something I could never do, I have the patience of a ADHD 12 year old on speed.  Two, it is so dark, evil, and forboding that I absolutly flipped out when I saw it.  Talk about the ultimate in Gothic hardware.  I need to track this guy down, he must build me one…with more skulls.

old school computer

I remember having most of this stuff…minus the modem and printers.  I learned how to program in BASIC on the ATARI 2600 with a tape drive to store all the data.  Those were the days, 6 pages of code to make some stupid looking pixel gorilla walk across the screen.  I built my first computer out of an 8086 with a 2400 baud modem.  BBS all the way!!!!  Here is the caption with this picture.

Home computer

(Tribune archive photo)

The cost of setting up a home computer in 1983 was, from left: printer $499, cassette recorder $59, central processing unit $1,000, modem $149 and graphics printer $995.
So the grand total for all of those parts is…$2,702.  Mind you this is for a system where you manually had to boot the damn thing…lol.  There was no BIOS chips back then with memory on them.  Fun stuff.  Check out the jump to see a bunch of other old systems and technology from the hay-day of computers.

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