Crap Gadgets
We wanted a monkey butler and bought one off eBay. Imagine our surprise when we found it was just an ordinary monkey with rabies. Worse: It had no butler training at all. Tell us about your duff technology purchases.
Thanks to Moonbadger for the suggestion
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 12:51)
We wanted a monkey butler and bought one off eBay. Imagine our surprise when we found it was just an ordinary monkey with rabies. Worse: It had no butler training at all. Tell us about your duff technology purchases.
Thanks to Moonbadger for the suggestion
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 12:51)
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As if...
in anticipation of this QOTW I've just purchased a "Sound Asleep" pillow for my fella who likes to listen to music as he's drifting off.
Could be good, could be shite... There's only one way to find out...
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 14:35, 16 replies)
in anticipation of this QOTW I've just purchased a "Sound Asleep" pillow for my fella who likes to listen to music as he's drifting off.
Could be good, could be shite... There's only one way to find out...
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 14:35, 16 replies)
send it back...
I'll let you have the one I bought my Mum who, being moderately deaf (not totally mutton but needs help), can't hear it fucking playing....
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 14:37, closed)
I'll let you have the one I bought my Mum who, being moderately deaf (not totally mutton but needs help), can't hear it fucking playing....
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 14:37, closed)
Thanks for the offer!
Have you had a go with it yourself? Does it work well for peeps with normal hearing?
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 14:53, closed)
Have you had a go with it yourself? Does it work well for peeps with normal hearing?
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 14:53, closed)
That's pretty much what we have now...
Having the music on through our DAB is fine if it's just me and him in the house but if we have guests we don't really want to disturb them.
Supposedly the pillow allows just the person using it to hear the music. As you're sleeping right on top of the speaker you can keep it low volume so as not to disturb anyone else.
www.soundasleeppillow.co.uk/product/Sound_Asleep_Original_Speaker_Pillow_266888GE
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 14:58, closed)
Having the music on through our DAB is fine if it's just me and him in the house but if we have guests we don't really want to disturb them.
Supposedly the pillow allows just the person using it to hear the music. As you're sleeping right on top of the speaker you can keep it low volume so as not to disturb anyone else.
www.soundasleeppillow.co.uk/product/Sound_Asleep_Original_Speaker_Pillow_266888GE
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 14:58, closed)
My other half has one
and it works just fine - if the volume is low I can't even hear it from my side of the bed.
( , Mon 3 Oct 2011, 19:02, closed)
and it works just fine - if the volume is low I can't even hear it from my side of the bed.
( , Mon 3 Oct 2011, 19:02, closed)
1. Don't tell him you've changed the pillow
2. Find an mp3 of Ride of the Valkyries
3. Set the alarm for 4am
4. When he bolts up, he can no longer hear the song, right?
5. Profit
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 15:15, closed)
2. Find an mp3 of Ride of the Valkyries
3. Set the alarm for 4am
4. When he bolts up, he can no longer hear the song, right?
5. Profit
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 15:15, closed)
Christ, I think I preferred last week's 'show us what an ignorant reactionary wanker you are'.
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 22:36, closed)
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 22:36, closed)
Wobbly lines
About 35 years ago, I used to listen to Radio Luxembourg of a night using a so-called pillow speaker that plugged into the earphone socket of my not-so-portable Roberts multi-band radio.
The speaker was a plastic disc about 3" in diameter that you slid under your pillow, setting the radio volume low enough so that only you could hear it.
The disadvantage was if you caught the wire with your arm when turning over in bed and yanked the plug out of the radio: the bedroom was filled with a tinny blast of Kid Jensen's transatlantic tones, or whatever popular beat combo was in the hit parade at the time.
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 20:55, closed)
About 35 years ago, I used to listen to Radio Luxembourg of a night using a so-called pillow speaker that plugged into the earphone socket of my not-so-portable Roberts multi-band radio.
The speaker was a plastic disc about 3" in diameter that you slid under your pillow, setting the radio volume low enough so that only you could hear it.
The disadvantage was if you caught the wire with your arm when turning over in bed and yanked the plug out of the radio: the bedroom was filled with a tinny blast of Kid Jensen's transatlantic tones, or whatever popular beat combo was in the hit parade at the time.
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 20:55, closed)
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