That really is a cool little gadget! I'm surprised that they are not marketing it for household use. I can think of lots of uses for it, but I wonder how easy it would be to clean.
Silly Rabbit: I wish the article provided more information, but it seems as though this is a brand new discovery. We'll get more details as it becomes more well known.
I got to thinking later that I could see this being very helpful in schools...cafeteria spills,science labs, kindergarten... and in hospitals for there odd forms of yuck. I imagine it would be a custodians dream machine. Things would still need to be sanitized, but most of the battle would be won. What a marvel.
7 comments:
That really is a cool little gadget!
I'm surprised that they are not marketing it for household use. I can think of lots of uses for it, but I wonder how easy it would be to clean.
I think there's a bit of ick factor going on there, at least for me.
Silly Rabbit: I wish the article provided more information, but it seems as though this is a brand new discovery. We'll get more details as it becomes more well known.
I want one! I would be playing with that thing all day long testing it on everything I could get my hands on.
Brooke: I'm curious about the composition of the actual scooper... how does the catsup/mustard mess not stick to its surface?
I'm thinking of the possibilities of this device in an open-research way.
Leticia: Me too. I have tons of questions about its composition.
I got to thinking later that I could see this being very helpful in schools...cafeteria spills,science labs, kindergarten... and in hospitals for there odd forms of yuck. I imagine it would be a custodians dream machine. Things would still need to be sanitized, but most of the battle would be won.
What a marvel.
Post a Comment