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Man Accidentally Kills Wife During Botched Satellite TV Install

Man Shoots Wife During Botched Satellite TV Install

You know those annoying pro-cable commercials that always talk about how awful or expensive it is to install a satellite dish, and how comparatively easy, cheap, and dependable cable is? Yeah, well, they don't have anything on this story out of Sedalia, Missouri, where a husband has admitted to shooting his wife during the install of a home satellite TV system.

Amazingly the husband, Ronald Long, was trying to use a .22-caliber pistol to shoot a hole through the wall in the couple's home to enable them to run a wire through to the television. His first shot was apparently unsuccessful in penetrating the wall and his second shot somehow hit his wife in the chest, 34-year-old Patsy Long. She was pronounced dead on Saturday night.

Ronald could now be charged with manslaughter, though prosecutors haven't confirmed whether that is their intention. It also remains to be seen whether the cable companies will start filming new ads about these new potential dangers of satellite dish installation, but we wouldn't put it past them.

In related news, and just in general, we'd like to know this: When will gadgets stop killing people!?

From KHQA

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Say Goodbye to Dirty Dishes

Say Goodbye to Dirty Dishes

Some people believe Hell is a kitchen sink and a never-ending pile of dirty dishes, and for those people salvation lies at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts. That's where grad student Leonardo Bonanni has developed the DishMaker, a machine that creates dishware on demand, and will someday be able to recycle dirty dishes into the raw material needed to make new ones.

The machine is the latest development in a movement to bring rapid prototyping into the American home. In recent months, we've seen a machine that can print and bind any book in less than 15 minutes. We've also seen advances in affordable 3-D printers, which will someday be able to fabricate objects -- such as a toothbrush – much in the same way today's printers fabricate documents.

Bonanni's machine can create acrylic dishes, bowls and cups as the user needs them. What's different about the DishMaker is that it will someday be able to recycle dirty dishes into new ones. Not only would this eliminate a dreaded household chore, but it would also eliminate the need for most of your cabinets.

Yes, paper plates have afforded us this same convenience for many years now, and yes, if the DishMaker ever comes to market you can bet it'll cost an arm and a leg. But, sometimes you just need to ask yourself, W.W.A.G.D.? ("What Would Al Gore Do?")

From Gizmag

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