Friday, January 22, 2010

If we are not in your Boardroom...

...keep quiet, and put in a few of these.

The best move you can make for any Boardroom which isn't regularly swept for bugs... "Get down, and Boogie."

Improv Electronics has re-invented the old "Magic Slate."

Their version, called Boogie Board, is a pressure-sensitive tablet. It uses a watch battery for power, and only when the erase button is pushed. The secret is a Reflex LCD which doesn't need any power to keep the written secrets on the screen. The watch battery will last for 50,000 erases; cost $29.97. (more)  
(Pssst... The Apple iPad will cost a whole lot more and provide less security.)

Limited Time Offer...
Use Murray Associates to clear your Boardroom on a quarterly basis this year and we'll supply a Boogie to Board members - FREE. We are always fun, and get the job done.

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Did You Know?
• In the early 1920s, R.A. Watkins, the owner of a small printing plant in Illinois, was approached by a man who wanted to sell him the rights to a homemade device made of waxed cardboard and tissue, on which messages could be printed and then easily erased by lifting up the tissue. Watkins wanted to sleep on it, and told the man to return the next day. In the middle of the night, Watkins's phone rang and it was the man calling from jail. The man said that if Watkins would bail him out, he could have the device. Watkins agreed and went on to acquire a U.S. patent and rights, as well as the international rights for the device, which he called MAGIC SLATE. (via DrToy.com)

• (April, 1987) American journalists meeting with Soviet dissidents in Russia have occasionally used Magic Slates as a way of communicating. And last week, even the U.S. government bought the idea. In fact, Rep. Dan Mica (D-Fla.) and Rep. Olympia J. Snowe (R-Maine) received special instructions from the State Department to take the 99-cent toys with them on their recent inspection tour of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. "An aide ran out to the local Toys 'R Us store and picked up a dozen," said John Gersuk, Mica's press secretary.

Now, not only has the child's toy put an unexpected kink in the multibillion dollar world of espionage, but it also has the $12-billion toy industry taking notice. (more)