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Digital Clock Without Electricity or Moving Parts

NerdMachine writes "Throw away those slide rules and embrace the digital age. The Digital Sundial is a 10 year old invention on display in Sundial Park (Genk, Belgium), Deutsches Museum (Munich Germany), Kölnisches Stadtmuseum (Cologne, Germany), and Martha's Vineyard, USA. You need to pivot it to adjust daylight savings time. If you can't visit one of these, Digital Sundials International can sell you one for US$12,000+, or you can buy a pocket version for under US$100 for that special nerd in your life."

3 of 269 comments (clear)

  1. Re:No Electricity? by silicon-pyro · · Score: 4, Informative

    RTFA. From the product info:

    Sunlight is cast through two cleverly designed masks in the shape of numbers that show the current time of day

    Its a cool idea.

  2. The Equation of Time by apikoros · · Score: 5, Informative

    Although the clock is set to read in 5 or 10 minute intervals, depending on the time of year it could still be up to 16 minutes fast or slow compared to your watch or clock because of the Equation of time. Our sense of time is so conditioned by our dependence on the mechanical/digital that solar time is now percieved to be "wrong".

  3. Better information by fredistheking · · Score: 4, Informative