The designers of the CST-01 call it the "thinnest watch in the world." It's often tricky to trade in absolutes, but anyone who handled a prototype on the CES show floor this week would be hard-pressed to prove them wrong. Dave Vondle and Jerry O'Leary, who call their Chicago-based company Central Standard Timing, say the watch's paper-thin battery charges in 10 minutes and powers the device for a month before it needs to be plugged in again. The watch display is rendered in E Ink, commonly used in e-readers. Photo courtesy of Central Standard Timing.  Search “목돈만들기비트몬+【bitmon-world.com】+fxgame회원가입비트몬+고치다+fx추천+fx투자리딩+코인fx+bitmon추천+아리빗수수료+파워볼사이트+종잣돈비트몬” from Innovations from the 2014 International CES Part One

Search “목돈만들기비트몬+【bitmon-world.com】+fxgame회원가입비트몬+고치다+fx추천+fx투자리딩+코인fx+bitmon추천+아리빗수수료+파워볼사이트+종잣돈비트몬”

The designers of the CST-01 call it the "thinnest watch in the world." It's often tricky to trade in absolutes, but anyone who handled a prototype on the CES show floor this week would be hard-pressed to prove them wrong. Dave Vondle and Jerry O'Leary, who call their Chicago-based company Central Standard Timing, say the watch's paper-thin battery charges in 10 minutes and powers the device for a month before it needs to be plugged in again. The watch display is rendered in E Ink, commonly used in e-readers. Photo courtesy of Central Standard Timing.