Even Wackier USB Devices

Feb 18, 2007 

Even Wackier USB Devices 

Plug it in! You won't believe what we found when we went looking for more of 
the craziest USB devices on the market. 

Erin Biba, PC World 

Friday, February 16, 2007 04:00 PM PST 

Boy, you sure loved our 
round-up 
of 15 wacky USB gadgets. So much so that it got us thinking--could there be 
more insanity to check up on out there in USB-land? Hah! Silly question. There
are tons more USB-based gadgets out there that serve useful, and not-so-useful, 
purposes. Here's a look at 15 more way-out gadgets powered by that ever-so-handy
jack, the USB. 

Desk-Top Distractions 

If your office is a circus already, then you'll appreciate this little 
circus cannon 
. It comes with three foam shooters that will fly up to 20 feet into the 
included net. You'll have to provide your own clown to dance along to the 
prerecorded
circus music, but that won't be too difficult in your office, will it? 

Your computer crashed, again. Your boss is yelling at you to meet that 
deadline, and your car won't start. Don't you just feel like blowing up the 
world?
Well, now you can. Just break out the 
Armageddon Hub 
, flip the two switches, turn the key, open the plastic cover, and push the red 
"ultimate destruction" button. Okay, nothing will actually happen (except
some loud honking noises), but the Armageddon Hub actually does serve a useful 
purpose--it doubles as a four-port USB hub. And it's useful for taunting
people with the occasional: "If you don't leave me alone, I'm going to blow up 
the world." 

Can't grow anything under those humming fluorescent bulbs that illuminate your 
desk? Plug this little 
flower fan 
--complete with its own flowerpot--into your USB port and watch it spin. It'll 
add some inorganic color, it'll cool you off if the air conditioning isn't
working, and the fan actually packs quite a punch--the manufacturers recommend 
putting some sticky tack underneath so it doesn't blow itself over. Whoosh!


Into time-wasting at work? Then you'll love this compact light show. The 
plasma ball 
glows pink, with the occasional flash of blue lightning that will respond to 
your touch. It doesn't release any static electricity, though, so no fuzzy
buzzes tingle your fingers when you press it. 

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,129049-pg,1/article.html

Vikas Kapoor,
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