You ready your cell phone camera to take a picture. You bring it up to your eye, and the liquid lens spins up. Someone bumps you, and your cell goes flying. It hits the ground and snaps shut violently and, after bouncing once or twice, comes to a slowly spinning stop. You go to make sure it's not damaged. Looks ok. You go to take a picture again. The liquid shorts your phone's backlight. Then it explodes. Turns out motorola put pure potassium rods in the phone because people kept covering those little color patches with tape.
Random scenario. Probably won't happen, but it's a big world. ;) Let's hope the lens units aren't made in China.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
ethana2 @ Jun 12th 2007 8:22PM
You ready your cell phone camera to take a picture. You bring it up to your eye, and the liquid lens spins up. Someone bumps you, and your cell goes flying. It hits the ground and snaps shut violently and, after bouncing once or twice, comes to a slowly spinning stop. You go to make sure it's not damaged. Looks ok. You go to take a picture again. The liquid shorts your phone's backlight. Then it explodes. Turns out motorola put pure potassium rods in the phone because people kept covering those little color patches with tape.
Random scenario. Probably won't happen, but it's a big world. ;)
Let's hope the lens units aren't made in China.