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Well, let me tell you, I know all about kinetic sand, and I like it. It's a very cool substance. I don't think there's anything else quite like it. And the time keeps clicking down every time I look at my... Okay, here, car is moving now. There we go. There's ten minutes now, Bill, and my ride will be here. Kinetic sand is very cool. My niece has taught me all about it in their younger years. And the feeling of it, it's like, it's a very peculiar substance. Um, slime is another one. Any grandkids towards wanting to make slime, or Josh, you know, they make the slime with that borax and the dish detergent and stuff like that, and it turns into this really slimy substance that kids just love to play with. You can, like, pull it all out of the container at once and, you know, make things with it. I love slime, thanks to kinetic sand. Um... Lots of cool stuff to play with these days when you're a kid. We used to like to get outside and build forts when I was a kid. And I always wanted radios. I always wanted, like, tech-type toys. Even when I was a kid, you know, I had that little Computron thing, that little speaking spell. You know, the Computron was a step up from that. It had, like, a keyboard and a screen. It kind of looked more like a computer. You could put little cards in it and it would play different word games and stuff and teach you how to read, all that kind of stuff. Love those things. But I like radios, you know, transistor radios. And when I got a little older, then I had an amplifier in my bedroom and it had crappy speakers, so I wanted a little better speakers on that thing. You know, um... Yeah, lots of cool things you could buy. You know, lots of cool toys. I love technology. I mean, I've always have. Ever since I was a little kid, you know, my mom wasn't too pleased at how tech-enthusiastic I was. You know, especially after I destroyed a watch that belonged to her that cost a couple hundred bucks. I pried the back off it, pulled out all the little innards and stuff like that. I was at least respectful enough to sweep all the tiny little pieces together in a little pile. That's how mom found her watch on the back deck. Just a little pile of springs and dials and gears. That was me back in the day. I'd take anything apart. Never knew how to get any of it back together, but I wanted to take everything apart. Find out how it worked. KN4LBF. D, it's up to you.
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