heh, you dont need an invisibility cloak for that.
ive dressed up in really bright clothes, painted my skin purple, and wore a pink wig, strolled into a crackdealers house while doing a wierd kind of dance thing, stole a bunch of money and danced out, all the guy did was watch me like he was trippin :P
MastaChronic Reviewed by MastaChronic on . Scientists create invisibility cloak that bends microwaves A team of British and U.S. scientists has demonstrated the first working "invisibility cloak," although donā??t expect it to appear in the Halloween costumes aisle just yet. The team, led by Professor Sir John Pendry of Imperial College in London, built the prototype at Duke University in North Carolina and reported its findings Thursday in Science Express, the advance online publication of the journal Science. Little more than 12 centimetres across, the small device can redirect Rating: 5