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."
That's not a digital clock in any sense of the word.
What high school did you graduate from? Obviously they weren't doing their job.
From dictionary.reference.com:
digital
1. Of, relating to, or resembling a digit, especially a finger.
2. Operated or done with the fingers: a digital switch.
3. Having digits.
4. Expressed in numerical form, especially for use by a computer.
5. Computer Science. Of or relating to a device that can read, write, or store information that is represented in numerical form. See Usage Note at virtual.
6. Using or giving a reading in digits: a digital clock.
Please see #6, and then go think about why you don't know the definitions of common words. It also seems that you can't be bothered to look them up.
Are you sure you are 'intelligent' by any sense of that word?
(Sorry, I couldn't resist...)
"Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.