Saturday, February 28, 2009

Cigarette Phones

Good news to all smoker, here's the Cigarette King 3838 mobile phone, a phone that comes in a shape of a cigarette box. There’s a casing at the back that can hold 7 sticks of cigarettes. It comes with a 1.3-megapixel-camera, micro SD slot and support playback for MP3 so as MP4. It also includes gold in color lighter in the package.





Camel Cigarettes Telephone

Similar to the Cigarette King 3838, this one is from Custom Phones. It is the Camel Cigarette Telephone, a corded phone with dial buttons under the slider.
Marlbara Cigarette King 3838

Now available in Marlbara version. It's similar to the Marlboro cigarette pack. The functions is pretty much the same as Cigarette King 3838, hold up 7 sticks cigarette, micro SD slot and support playback for MP3 and MP4. But camera has been reduced to 0.8-megapixel instead of 1.3-megapixel and this one comes without lighter.










Friday, February 27, 2009

World's Smallest Monkeys

If you're looking for cute furry animals then you'll be in for a treat over at Dark Roasted Blend, who this week have collated a spread of some of the not-so-well-known primates of the planet.

The "Aww" inducing list includes the titchy thumb-sized pygmy marmoset monkey, named after the French word marmouset, which means shrimp, or dwarf, "They range in length from 5 to 6 inches not including the tail, which is an amazing 6 to 8 inches," say DRB. There are 18 recorded species of marmoset and, unlike other monkeys they have claws rather than nails, tactile hairs on their wrists and lack wisdom teeth, making them slightly more primitive than other monkeys.
Pygmy marmosets are found in the rainforests of Brazil, Ecuador, Peru and Columbia. They live in the upper canopy of the forest, no doubt to steer clear of bigger, heavier predators, and survive on an omnivorous diet of fruit, leaves, insects, small reptiles and their favorite nibble, tree sap. Specialized incisors enable the marmoset to gnaw through even the toughest tree bark, allowing easy access to their favorite gummy fluid.


Living in groups of two to six, usually consisting of a breeding pair plus their offspring, marmoset families are fiercely territorial often defending an area of up to 100 acres – that's a lot of rainforest for the midget mammals. Don't expect to see them in the wild though; they're nippy little blighters and move like lighting through the trees, so you'll have to make do with these sweet pics instead.