These are actually licensed products, not made by The LEGO Company itself. I've actually already spotted one of the less brickish BIONICLE digital cameras (just a fairly normal looking low-end digicam with a BIONICLE character painted on the front).
@MarianHamjam: They had a Logitech webcam built into a LEGO-fied housing. The image quality wasn't even good enough to term "crap", and the stop-motion aspect came entirely from the software on your computer. But yes, in a way, they did.
There already is an official LEGO camera. Or, well, an official LEGO webcam. It kinda sucks, it can no more be disassembled than this one, and it's been out of production for nearly a decade, but all the studs do have the LEGO logo formed onto them. They've also done dial-faced alarm clocks, picture frames, furniture, and various kitchenware. Oh, and then there are the minifig keychains (which are articulated, but do not separate into their standard legs/torso/head/hair components), and they even sell a few select pre-glued sculptures.
@framitz: SoCal was really a bad place to put a LEGOLAND theme park. At least one that's not indoors. The first park was built in Billund, Denmark (~56°N), then they built one in Windsor, England (~51°N). And then they built one in Carlsbad, California (~33°N). That's within spitting distance of the tropics, and the only color of ABS that is 100% UV-resistant is black, because it's colored with pure carbon. Every other color fades in sunlight, and even though they coat all of the models in UV-resistant sealer, it's not enough to counteract the solar pounding those bricks take. Also, it _really_ doesn't help that it's close enough to a bunch of high-end parks that most tourists will pick Disney/Sea World/Knott's Berry Farm/Universal Studios/etc. over LEGOLAND, but it's far enough from every other park that it's not a convenient second-stop park. You really have to make a point of going there. They've just opened an indoor mini-park-thing in Chicago, where the (indoor) displays will keep their colors a lot longer, it's a much more convenient destination for tourists, and it doesn't have the nations largest selection of theme-park competition sitting a few hours away.
And as long as you don't leave your LEGO bricks outside, they'll stay nice and shiny like the ones in Chicago.
@s0crates82: Well, I've only been there during the winter, and at that time the traffic is pretty light all day long. And during the summer, it has to be a pretty brutal place to hang out in general, regardless of how busy it is.
@SportBilly: The plural of "Lego" is actually "LEGO bricks" or some other comparable usage that does not involve treating the word "LEGO" like a noun. Or not writing it in all-caps. And if you _really_ want to get into it, first use on the page should be written as "LEGO(R) bricks".
06/11/09
06/11/09
http://www.ehow.com/how_4548570_use-lego-studios-movie-maker.html
06/11/09
They had a Logitech webcam built into a LEGO-fied housing. The image quality wasn't even good enough to term "crap", and the stop-motion aspect came entirely from the software on your computer. But yes, in a way, they did.
06/11/09
06/11/09
But Spongebob gave use the first true bubble helmet! For that alone, I actually bought one Spongebob set.
01/13/09
01/13/09
Their theme park was so NASTY and run down it was disgusting.
01/13/09
SoCal was really a bad place to put a LEGOLAND theme park. At least one that's not indoors. The first park was built in Billund, Denmark (~56°N), then they built one in Windsor, England (~51°N). And then they built one in Carlsbad, California (~33°N). That's within spitting distance of the tropics, and the only color of ABS that is 100% UV-resistant is black, because it's colored with pure carbon. Every other color fades in sunlight, and even though they coat all of the models in UV-resistant sealer, it's not enough to counteract the solar pounding those bricks take. Also, it _really_ doesn't help that it's close enough to a bunch of high-end parks that most tourists will pick Disney/Sea World/Knott's Berry Farm/Universal Studios/etc. over LEGOLAND, but it's far enough from every other park that it's not a convenient second-stop park. You really have to make a point of going there. They've just opened an indoor mini-park-thing in Chicago, where the (indoor) displays will keep their colors a lot longer, it's a much more convenient destination for tourists, and it doesn't have the nations largest selection of theme-park competition sitting a few hours away.
And as long as you don't leave your LEGO bricks outside, they'll stay nice and shiny like the ones in Chicago.
01/13/09
01/14/09
Well, I've only been there during the winter, and at that time the traffic is pretty light all day long. And during the summer, it has to be a pretty brutal place to hang out in general, regardless of how busy it is.
01/13/09
01/13/09
01/13/09
Wasn't she just featured here yesterday?
01/13/09
Melt them down and try again.
01/13/09
01/13/09
01/13/09
The plural of "Lego" is actually "LEGO bricks" or some other comparable usage that does not involve treating the word "LEGO" like a noun. Or not writing it in all-caps. And if you _really_ want to get into it, first use on the page should be written as "LEGO(R) bricks".
01/13/09
01/13/09