Red Time 1
I’ve finally finished designing and making my first 24 hour clock. At the top of the clock is a full sun representing noon and at the bottom is a group of stars representing midnight. It is framed in chrome. I call it Sonipa Red Time. It’s real and it works!
Like a regular clock, the small hand shows you the hour and the large hand shows the minute. Only instead of only having 12 hours there are 24 displayed (left side is AM, right side is PM). You no longer have to be confined to seeing half of your day… You can click on the images to view a larger version.

craig 11:58 pm on April 15th Permalink | Log in to Reply
holy cow thats awesome! i love everything about it…especially that it will confuse the crap out of little kids that are trying to learn to read the ‘normal’ clock.
David Mulhern 4:18 am on April 16th Permalink | Log in to Reply
Yeah, I would recommend putting it in classrooms in elementary schools to begin with .. teachers will love something like this ..
Dave Allen 1:58 pm on April 16th Permalink | Log in to Reply
WOW! the chrome looks so real. Lightwave is awesome.
Rohn 5:41 pm on April 16th Permalink | Log in to Reply
That is sweet! I want one… but I want one with PM and AM added… it takes too much thought to remember which is which.
Dave Allen 9:48 pm on April 16th Permalink | Log in to Reply
no but really. You should patent your design Dave. Where did you get the movement? I want a wrist watch like this.
David Mulhern 8:09 am on April 17th Permalink | Log in to Reply
Hey dave! I go my movement from a clock store in Wisconsin. It’s a converted military time movement. Converted in the sense that it had to be modified to use regular hands …. Modified in the sense that I jammed a screwdriver in it.
deep oral 10:15 pm on January 31st Permalink | Log in to Reply
Since one of the ideas is to split strings not into words, but hopefully into phrases more semantically informative than the words they are made of, doing that better should mean better suggestions, and avoiding what essentially are word n-tuples should make for smaller data and slightly faster querying.