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All Just just about JewelryMarking Time
by:
M J Plaster
?Time is an equal chance employer. Each human being has exactly the same number of hours and minutes every day. Rich folk can't buy more hours. Scientists can't invent new minutes. And you can't save time to spend it on another day. Even as so, time is surprisingly fair and forgiving. No matter how more time you've wasted in the past, you still have an entire tomorrow."
~Denis Waitely
If time were nothing more than an incidental commodity, it's doubtful that the following phrases would-be clutter our everyday speech:
A stitch in time…
Lost time…
Found time…
Time is money.
Compress time…
Time stood still.
The time of my life…
The sands of time…
Real-time…
Killing time…
As time goes by…
Father time…
Time is on our side.
Time worked against her.
Time is the greatest leveler in the universe. He or she who uses time sagely wins. Unfortunately, galore have no grasp of time: they're always late, annoying the daylights out of the punctual—at best. It's absorbing that those with no conception or appreciation of time seem to get the leftover goods time and again. Yet, they ne'er
seem to do the connection. Several even as refuse to wear a watch! (I don't like jewelry—whine, whine, whine!)
From Wherefrom
We Came
The heavenly bodies—the stars, the sun and the moon—served as our 1st watches, and they predate the sundial, the 1st major advance in timekeeping, by eons. The watch's primary function remains to support track of time. Modern watches originated as functional, portable, mechanical, clocks. Nineteenth century watches were often carried in the pocket, and enclosed
a protective cover, similar to the cover on a woman's compact. Often, they were attached to the article of clothing by a chain. Wristwatches entered the marketplace in the late Nineteenth century as a woman's fashion accessory, and credit goes to Jacques cartier for popularizing the wrist watch with the animal skin
band.
The 1st mechanical wristwatches required instructions winding. During the 1950s, Hamilton Watch Institution introduced the 1st battery-powered watch, which required no winding. The 1st digital watch appeared in the 1970s, but digital watches still have not replaced analog watches due, in part, to a wildly booming marketing campaign by Swatch. Toward the end of the Twentieth century, a pool of Swiss watchmakers and global graphical designers resurrected the analog watch as a throwaway fashion accessory, and introduced their 1st wild designs in 1983. It's the design stupid! Swatches flew off the shelves and they remain true to their innovational concept—cheap, fun, bold, Swiss—analog.
Along the way, watches evolved into star
operated, kinetic battery-powered (self-winding), li powered, digital, light-emitting diode (LED), liquid crystal display (LDC), and waterproof. Today's men's watches habitually
include a calendar, and galore women's watches besides include a calendar. But why finish there? You can find a watch to suit your every need. Today's watches contain calculators, digital cameras, cell phones, and games. There have been some attempts to create a computer watch, but to date, only one has ready-made it to market, the Ruputer, by Seiko, and it didn't last. At the time, it established unmarketable, but stay tuned…
Whether you want high-tech practicality
or you prefer to concentrate on the aesthetics of your timepiece, watches are still just about marking time, that precious, finite trade goods about which our everyday lives revolve.
Just just about the author:
M J Plaster is a booming author who provides information on buying online for watches, watch bands, and pocket watches. M J Plaster has been a commercial freelance writer for about two decades, most recently specializing in house and garden, the low-carb lifestyle, investing, and thing
that defines la dolce vita.
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