MORE INEXPENSIVE HOLIDAY TECHNOLOGY GIFT IDEAS
By the time you read this, your holiday
shopping days are hitting the single digits so consider this my last
column on inexpensive holiday technology gift ideas for the geeks in
your life.
Drive Them Mad with Delight

This first one is for whomever you usually would buy a lump of coal.
Back last April Fools Day, I wrote about an evil little device
called the Annoy-a-tron that looks like a tiny circuit board that's
powered by a watch battery. It's proven to be a very popular gift
item for the practical joker. One secretly hides the device
somewhere in a victim's home or office. The Annoy-a-tron generates a
short (but very annoying, hence the name) beep every few minutes.
Given that the beep is so short in its duration, it's almost
impossible to determine the direction from which the sound is
coming. This makes it very hard to find which is the idea. You can
drive someone mad as they desperately try to find what it is and its
location. As if this wasn't bad enough, ThinkGeek has just
introduced their 2.0 version just in time for the holidays. It
offers an additional four sounds to the original's two. They are an
Instant Message sound, a cricket and the most insidious of all, the
Teen Buzz tone. For those of you not familiar with the Teen Buzz,
it's a frequency so high that only teenagers and younger children
can hear it. The medical explanation is that as we get older, our
hearing range narrows. The recent technological application of this
sound has been a cell phone ring tone so only kids know they've got
a call and not their parents. But it seems like the table has
turned. Parents can now set their Annoy-a-trons to the Teen Buzz
sound and drive their kids over the edge instead. $12.99.
Science
Toys Make Great Gifts
I have always loved really cool science toys. Growing up I had the
chemistry and Erector Set, Slinky, Wheel-O, water rocket and more.
Today's kids have it made with all the technology toys we adults
play with but there are still some new, cool ones out there. Check
out the Fly Stick Van de Graaff Levitation Wand. This
battery-powered wand consists of a small cardboard tube that fits on
a plastic handle with a button. Pushing it endows the cardboard tube
with a static charge. Included are several Mylar shapes including a
butterfly, sphere and hour-glass. When you release a shape near the
tube and touch it for a moment, the shape expands and literally
levitates in mid air. This is not like some kind of floating balloon
but rather a controlled levitation that looks like something a
magician would perform on stage. There's a video on the Think Geek
website that demonstrates this amazing little science toy that any
geek, young and old will love. $26.99.
Be Very Frayed
Finally,
check out what I believe to be one of the coolest flash drives I've
ever seen. A flash drive is a portable memory device that you can
plug into any available USB port and come in a variety of
capacities. I've seen flash drives in the shape and placed inside of
just about anything you can imagine. I've seen them in pens,
lighters, watches, looking like rubber ducks, sushi, can openers, it
goes on and on. But the Hacked And Frayed Spy Flash Drive has got to
be the strangest one yet. Imagine an ordinary USB cable. Now cut off
one of the ends but leave about 4 inches of the cable hanging from
it. Then strip off the outer sheath from the severed end leaving all
of the colored wires exposed. That's what this flash drive looks
like; a severed USB cable! Hidden within the severed plug is a 2
gigabyte flash drive. Just plug the USB end into your laptop and
enjoy the stares from people wondering why there's a severed cable
sticking out of your computer. $29.99.
All of these items are available at
www.thinkgeek.com.
Happy Holidays!
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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