You'll notice that no-one has complained about this since the release of the 1st gen, apart from people that didn't own one. It turned out not to be a problem.
Most replica collectors wouldn't buy a digital rep. We're mainly mechanical collectors.
On top of that, I don't think anyone who buys modern digital does so for the aesthetics. Digital watches are feature-driven, so you'd be as well making your own version and selling it cheaper than making an illegal copy.
Tritium paint. It counts as Weapons of Mass Destruction in the US.
Here in Europe, it's a little easier, but I don't know anywhere that will wholesale Tritium Paint to the public.
I'll be upgrading as soon as they're available in the UK.
It's an evolution not a revolution, but the 3G and GPS are tasty.
90% customer satisfaction speaks volumes.
They may cost $200 from Ofrei, but you can rest assured that in China they're under $80 for the surplus parts we get.
I presume the days of the $125 ETA-powered Datejust are over, but that doesn't mean we're not getting ETAs.
Very much so.
If you're going to India yourself, can you get the cigars duty free before getting on the plane? If you're not, you're risking them getting confiscated or having Indian duty added to them.
Believe me, most of the world would wish you'd stop policing the world too.
The reason you're doing all these things is because you're reliant on all these countries in some way. Whether it's cheap labour, resources, whatever, you're getting something out of the deal.
Oil will eventually run out. Want to start looking for alternatives now or later?
As for nuclear, once we have a walk-away safe reactor with zero waste, I'm all for it. Until then, we're stuck with coal and oil. Maybe we should have started looking for alternatives earlier, eh?
Don't blame it on the Greens. Blame it on an energy-inefficient society with no back-up plans and a [censored]-the-future attitude.
It's a worldwide thing now.
http://www.theonion.com/content/index
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Onion
It started in Madison, Wisconsin in 1988, but became worldwide thanks to this thing called The Interweb.
An old favourite that became a reality: http://www.theonion.com/content/node/33930