We all know the trouble with working on a computer while trying to eat. Do you take a bite and then type? Do you oscillate between two minutes working and two minutes eating? And how exactly are you supposed to wipe your fingers so frequently? If these questions have been plaguing you, then it could be time to try out this Rube Goldberg “Lunch Feeder.” It may take forever to set up, but at least it won’t get crumbs in your keyboard. (j/k: it probably will.)
The Rube Goldberg Lunch Feeder, which comes via Laughing Squid, is the obscenely circuitous brainchild of Joseph Herscher, the R.G. machine master who first went viral all the way back in 2008. Since then, Herscher has been a nonstop machine of making Rube Goldberg machines. It’s a vicious cycle, but dang it, it’s an entertaining one.
The way Herscher’s contraptions execute the simplest of mundane tasks is not only a testament to the idea of the Rube Goldberg machine, but also a nice analog parallel to Simone Giertz’s ultra-crappy machines that feed you soup and wash your hair.
Finally, on an unrelated side note that needs to be uttered thanks to its massive TIL value, did you know that in the UK, Rube Goldberg machines are known as Heath Robinson Devices? Herscher notes on his home page that they were named after the UK’s own cartoonist who (independently of Goldberg) also drew eccentric machines. It’s a small world rolling down a long plastic track that leads to a fire that ignites a rocket that rings your doorbell after all.
How to be more productive at work. pic.twitter.com/7lFkygTnnN
â Joseph’s Machines (@josephsmachines) October 2, 2018
Images: YouTube/Joseph’s Machines