Microsoft's festival of future
By Kim Peterson
Seattle Times technology reporter
Microsoft researchers have put a new twist on telling time, creating a digital wall clock with hands for each member of the family.
Instead of numbers, the hands point to places — work, school, home — and can track a person's location to show where he or she is at any time. Not good for teenagers, perhaps, but something parents might find interesting.
Don't expect to buy the clock in stores anytime soon. That invention, and hundreds of others, were on display yesterday at Microsoft's annual science fair of the most futuristic ideas from the company's research division.
Ohhh, this is what we refer to as a Weasley clock. The concept was introduced to us in the second book, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. Obviously J.K. Rowling had invented the clock herself by describing the concept and appearance of it. Just because she didn't actually make one doesn't mean she should be denied the rights to the concept. In fact, we do get to see what it looks like in the movie.
The people-tracking clock is an idea out of Microsoft's research laboratories in Cambridge, England. Technology in cellphones these days can easily track a person's location, and that information could be sent to the clock to be seen by those at home.
AN IDEA OUT OF MICROSOFT'S RESEARCH LAB IN ENGLAND?
Did the "employee" happen to be J.K. Rowling? I doubt it, she was the one who came up with the idea. Not Microsoft! Obviously they researched J.K. Rowling's books to get this "idea" and then claimed it as theirs!
I hope J.K. Rowling sue the pants off them!
To read the full story, click here.
To view the picture of the rip-off Weasley clock, click here.

