"It's something I've come to expect from him at this point," John states bluntly. Sherlock has been stealing his computer and sticking his nose into other parts of his life that he's tried to kept hidden - like what his middle name is or how his romantic life is going.
A shake of his head. "No, not really. I was never going to share it with the whole world but I don't mind showing it to others." He reached into his pocket and pulled out something like a pocketwatch. It does keep time like its supposed to but John touches the face and the clock blinked out to reveal that it sort of acted like a smart phone.
"You can't connect to the network from this world or even look at the posts from the other place but it still has my blog entries written up on it. Doesn't need a charge or to be plugged it. Has some useful features like a flashlight, calculator or alarm clock and the program I used to keep my entries in. I'd appreciate it if you didn't take it apart but otherwise, you can keep it as long as you need." John opened up the notepad where his blog entries were kept before handing it over.
The watch itself is ornate, gold and old-looking - something from the twenties yet brand new at the same time. There aren't many scratches on it so clearly it's not been in John's possession very long. Upon using the device, Conan will find that there are all of the apps he mentioned earlier along with a camera that allows for photographs and video, a touch-screen keypad for typing, it serves as a stopwatch and even has a couple of games on it. Tetris and bowling but doesn't seem a way to get more. There's an e-mail system but should Conan try to get into it an error message pops up saying that it cannot connect to 'compass.net'.
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A shake of his head. "No, not really. I was never going to share it with the whole world but I don't mind showing it to others." He reached into his pocket and pulled out something like a pocketwatch. It does keep time like its supposed to but John touches the face and the clock blinked out to reveal that it sort of acted like a smart phone.
"You can't connect to the network from this world or even look at the posts from the other place but it still has my blog entries written up on it. Doesn't need a charge or to be plugged it. Has some useful features like a flashlight, calculator or alarm clock and the program I used to keep my entries in. I'd appreciate it if you didn't take it apart but otherwise, you can keep it as long as you need." John opened up the notepad where his blog entries were kept before handing it over.
The watch itself is ornate, gold and old-looking - something from the twenties yet brand new at the same time. There aren't many scratches on it so clearly it's not been in John's possession very long. Upon using the device, Conan will find that there are all of the apps he mentioned earlier along with a camera that allows for photographs and video, a touch-screen keypad for typing, it serves as a stopwatch and even has a couple of games on it. Tetris and bowling but doesn't seem a way to get more. There's an e-mail system but should Conan try to get into it an error message pops up saying that it cannot connect to 'compass.net'.