UHREN
Habitual
Sin verificar
Lo siento pero no he encontrado una foto mayor de este prodigio .
The Showa Retro Heisei Pop Analog Wrist Watch
This is a cool watch. It looks like an old school telephone on a G-Shock body but it's actually neither.
The creators at Maywa Electronics call it the Showa retro, Heisei pop analog* style. Back in the day of the rotary dial phone, there was a number people frequently dial to get the precise-to-the-millisecond time--117. There's a robot lady who says, continuously: "The time is now 8:34 and 15 seconds...peep peep peep." So this watch emulates that by requiring users to "dial" 117 on the rotary dial to get a robotic woman's voice to tell you the time. Plus, you gotta be a diligent dialer--if you fuck up, you'll get a "This longer is not in service" message. It can annoy the hell out of you or make you smile with nostalgia.
*In the Japanese calendar system, Showa is the last emperor's reign, which lasted from 1926 to 1989. Heisei is the current period, which started immediately after that. Awesome.
The Showa Retro Heisei Pop Analog Wrist Watch
This is a cool watch. It looks like an old school telephone on a G-Shock body but it's actually neither.
The creators at Maywa Electronics call it the Showa retro, Heisei pop analog* style. Back in the day of the rotary dial phone, there was a number people frequently dial to get the precise-to-the-millisecond time--117. There's a robot lady who says, continuously: "The time is now 8:34 and 15 seconds...peep peep peep." So this watch emulates that by requiring users to "dial" 117 on the rotary dial to get a robotic woman's voice to tell you the time. Plus, you gotta be a diligent dialer--if you fuck up, you'll get a "This longer is not in service" message. It can annoy the hell out of you or make you smile with nostalgia.
*In the Japanese calendar system, Showa is the last emperor's reign, which lasted from 1926 to 1989. Heisei is the current period, which started immediately after that. Awesome.