> In the end he put together a haggard-looking stripped-down version of something we can buy for the price of a sandwich. It only took him nine months, several trips across country lines, and a many moments of lateral thinking.
He did plug it in once, but because he wasn't able to make insulation for the wires, the toaster started melting itself about 5 seconds in. Thwaites considers it a partial success.
Sometimes it's equally surprising to me that some people have so much time on their hands to pursue things like this...
After sleeping and working, most people have several hours a day left over.
Time into which they have to fit eating, cooking, cleaning, showering, laundry, shopping, commuting, exercising, childrearing, family, professional development, dating, socialising, home maintenance, personal paperwork, pursuing hobbies, and relaxing.
You can have a lot of time for one of those - if you're willing to prioritise it over all the others.
Or he worked tirelessly on this for 9 months, and had no free time for anything else. But many things came of it for him, and it had an impact (it’s still being quoted now.)
Ted Talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ODzO7Lz_pw