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if i may offer my opinion, that looks like an oscillator. if so, it must generate some sort of signal. it's not a speaker, as i see no input, nor a diaphragm. hm, the world is so full of... beautiful things : )
~ scooch on over closer dear and i will nibble on your ear ~
I know, with 100% certainty, what the object is, but I'm going to refrain from answering since I don't want to take a turn. I'd offer a hint, but I'm not sure I could give one that hasn't already been given without outrightly giving away the answer.
Some people just don't understand that the "best" way isn't always the right way.
Not everyone plays games to win; some people just want to have fun.
That doesn't mean that winning isn't fun, and I personally find it very rewarding.
It simply means that there's more to a game than winning.
Some antiques are so rare and strange that they are classed as "what's-its" by collectors. Sometimes they are also so interesting they can sell for high prices.
This year two different auction houses offered "Victorian glass parlor fountains," items that were "what's its" to most collectors. A few years ago, only 12 examples were known.
Researchers have discovered that the fountains were patented by Joseph Storer in 1871. A metal stand holds a basin at the top, and underneath it a pair of glass globes attached to a hollow metal rod could swing back and forth. Water was put in the upper basin and forced down into the globes and a series of tubes, then up again as an 8-inch water spout or fountain. The globes moved up and down and the guests were delighted with the unusual centerpiece. The fountains, about 20 inches high, were held in a frame made by James Tufts of Boston, a silver-plate manufacturer. The invention was called a "perpetual fountain" or "automatic fountain." A fancy ruby glass fountain with etched designs sold originally for $50, very expensive for a Victorian table decoration.
Call me a simpleton but I still don't get how does the thingie exactly work. And its function was... erm... to look at it?
I couldn't guess it in millennia.
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