I'd imagine you would get some pretty horrible distortion in the picture. That has to be why we haven't done it yet.
84 0 Replythat and we can't yet get below EU's accepted limit of hawking radiation
41 0 ReplyLol .... gets up to move the black hole around to find the perfect angle
10 0 Reply
Surely you'll get terrible chromatic aberration. That's got to be the only reason it's never been made commercially available.
56 0 ReplyThe optical machanics of this make zero sense. A spherical lense's focal points lie in a straight line so the only undistorted image you can get from this is with the black hole between you and the tv
5 0 Reply
If you're really attached to that bed and TV placement you could also just use mirrors? Idk seems easier
50 0 ReplyOr a chair?
12 0 ReplyI have personally never owned a chair and at this point I'm afraid to.
12 0 Reply
Gonna have to be binoculars too
8 0 ReplyOr a curved mirror for built-in zoom!
9 0 Reply
Black hole that only bends light... interesting concept. I'd gravitate to calling this unholy.
36 0 ReplyThe only remedy is attending mass more often.
20 0 ReplyI always see those events on the horizon, but I dare not go to the Holy Ghost or how that one is called.
4 0 Reply
You could also use a mirror. And then a set of binoculars, so it doesn't look so small.
30 0 ReplyTwo mirrors if you don't want your screen flipped.
4 0 Reply
Plus you would get way more sleep. The downside is you will age faster than the population.
18 0 ReplyIt's time dilation. Meaning it makes stuff take longer.
5 0 Reply
Just lay down the other way with your feet to the head board silly. 🪿
12 0 ReplyGet a long swing out arm for the TV. Swing it 90 degrees. [LikeThis] (https://a.co/d/htnnZWA)
10 0 ReplyThere way is simpler
1 0 Reply
Sleep on the couch. That bed is for guests only.
9 0 ReplyHave you thought about spinning the bed by 180 degrees, OP?
5 0 ReplyTwitter/X:
5 0 ReplyUse a projector
3 0 Reply