Unless someone suggests anything better then she wants a Ferret!!
A fricking Ferret HELP!!!!
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Unless someone suggests anything better then she wants a Ferret!!
A fricking Ferret HELP!!!!
A pussy :unsure:
I love snakes, best pet ever.
Ferrets arent very cuddly... :unsure:
..mind you can pick em up cheap these days :rolleyes:
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[img]http://www.britishtool.com/images/ferret.jpg' width='200' height='120' border='0' alt='click for full size view'>
mole people :unsure:
You don't want a ferret, apparently they are very good at computer games...Quote:
Originally posted by mrcall1969@24 February 2004 - 23:45
Unless someone suggests anything better then she wants a Ferret!!
A fricking Ferret HELP!!!!
http://washingtonferret.org/pics/owned.jpg
Now she tells me they bite exposed knobs!!
Can anyone think of a better reason not to get one??
Furby??
http://www.virtualpet.com/vp/farm/furby/furbybw.jpg
Quote:
CUDDLY--AND WITH AN ATTITUDE
SMART TOYS DON'T NEED A LOT OF COMPUTER SMARTS. Witness Furby, a garrulous and ingratiating new fuzzball that could be this Christmas' Tickle Me Elmo. Like many other chip-enhanced dolls, Furbies talk, giggle, open and close their eyes, and respond to pokes, tilts, or tickles. But this latest electronic pet is amazingly convincing--in part because, like real pets and some family members, its reactions are a bit out of whack. Furby's inventor, David M. Hampton, planned things that way. In the process, he saved Furby's manufacturer--Tiger Electronics Ltd., a unit of Hasbro Inc.--a bundle in manufacturing costs.
To hold Furby's list price to $30, less than one-third the cost of Microsoft Corp.'s ActiMates Barney doll, Hampton and the Tiger development team used some ingenious shortcuts. Instead of expensive communications circuits--the kind that permit wireless messaging among various computer devices--Furbies exchange crude infrared signals to trigger spontaneous-sounding giggles and goofing sessions. As for processors, the toy's silicon brain is a low-cost Asian variant of the chip that powered the original Apple II.
Furby has trouble doing two things at once, and that's just fine, since carefully crafted software rules give the illusion of complexity. Talking, for example, always takes priority over listening. So Furby sometimes seems a little unresponsive--not unlike some children we all know. Likewise, while the toy is in motion, its sound sensor automatically switches off, which saves battery power and prevents motor noise from confusing the sensor. Furby's 1,000 bits of trainable memory manage a vocabulary of just 200 words. But these words get combined in ways that even the inventor never predicted. The effect compares favorably with a hamster, and beats the heck out of a pet turtle.[/
hehe Furby...that is funny for so many reasons that you will never know :lol: :lol: :lol:
If you ever get caught at this Marc, I know a few of the Prestwick Magistrates. Went to school with them. :lol: :lol:Quote:
Originally posted by mrcall1969@25 February 2004 - 01:06
Now she tells me they bite exposed knobs!!