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-9
1.
Midge 2 year s ago
lol this cr#p. #4 still gonna microwave tuna at my desk.
#11 a gpa tracker for walmart? that just shows how incompetent workers are and once you arrive at the shelf you'll see the item is no longer available. Happens at mine too often
       
4
2.
Pamela 2 year s ago
Midge, so sad that no one in your life ever loved you and you need to come here and troll
       
-4
3.
Dilly 2 year s ago
Pamela,

S|he’s right tho.
       
8
4.
Elaine 2 year s ago
#4 come on, most USB ports cannot supply the power necessary to heat items much. If they could, it would kill the battery in no time.
       
1
5.
Roz 2 year s ago
Elaine,
Seriously. I want to see the magnetron that runs on 5 volts at about 1 amp, and when I see it I want get one to replace my energy-sucking kitchen microwave. This thing might be able to manage inductive heating, but at 5 volts even that would require you to start heating your food about 15 -20 minutes before you planned on eating it.
       
2
6.
Monna 2 year s ago
#6 yeah, how could that possibly go wrong?
       
2
7.
Napoleon 2 year s ago
Monna,

I can think of at least two ways, possibly more.
       
6
8.
Kim 2 year s ago
#1
Cool idea but I'm guessing cold weather would kill it so it could only be in places that don't get cold so my town will never have them. I'm kinda curious about getting a smaller one for in my house though, as a conversation piece.
       
1
9.
Dan 2 year s ago
#3 These have been around for ages...
       
12
10.
Andrea 2 year s ago
#15 yeah, it's kinda cool because no energy and much space and stuff, but that's how things were kept cold since thousands of years. Not so much futuristic
       
10
11.
Trannie 2 year s ago
Andrea,
In regular houses it's called a cellar.
       
2
12.
Dicy 2 year s ago
#5 - Only backward countries still use Fahrenheit. Thats Liberia, Myanmar and the USA. All the other 192 countries are modern.
       
-1
13.
Rena 2 year s ago
Dicy,Follow the crowd? You would have made a good little Nazi.
       
-1
14.
Dilly 2 year s ago
Dicy
Fahrenheit is superior to Celsius.
       
0
15.
Waldo 1 year ago
Dilly,

to heat 1 liter of water 1 degree Celsius you need 1 kilocalorie.
1 liter is a cube of 10x10x10 centimeter. it weighs 1 kilogram.

now do those conversions using pounds, liquid ounces, Fahrenheit, inches and Joules.

what is easier to remember?
       
0
16.
Waldo 1 year ago
Waldo,

oh: 0 degrees celsius= water freezing; 100 celsius = water boiling
       
1
17.
Dortha 2 year s ago
#6 Whirlpool had that feature in the late 1960s.
       
0
18.
Frank 2 year s ago
#2 A silly gimmick that fades after a few weeks and adds toxic chemicals to your local environment.
       
3
19.
Frank 2 year s ago
#5 Most Europeans take speaking 2 or more languages for granted. Present them with a 2nd system of measurements and they lose their minds.
       
1
20.
Frank 2 year s ago
#11 Practical.
       
-2
21.
Frank 2 year s ago
#12 Maintain your elevators properly and you don't need that stuff.
       
2
22.
Roz 2 year s ago
Frank,
Because maintaining your elevators protects you from terrorists who take down the local grid, right?
       
0
23.
Temperance 1 year ago
Frank,

An earthquake trapping people in an elevator counts as a malfunction that no maintenance can prevent.
       
4
24.
Frank 2 year s ago
#15 Root cellars have been around for a few millennia.
       
0
25.
Mort 2 year s ago
Frank, thanks for your wisdom captain obvious
       
0
26.
Rilly 2 year s ago
#1 Glad to see we're finally admitting that CO2 is plant food and not a pollutant.
       
1
27.
Roz 2 year s ago
Rilly,
Water is essential, too, but too much of it will kill your plants, you, and just about anything else that needs it in the right amount at the right time.
       
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