Yes, I’m going to dedicate an entire post to this. Limor is one of our favorite hardware hackers, but her site was unfortunately down last week when we picked it for Editor’s Choice. Well, she is back from vacation and has gotten the site back online as promised. Take some time to check out her great projects: the Minty MP3, Mini POV, and my favorite, the x0xb0x.
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Hackaday Links
I managed to round up some project boxes when I was home this weekend: 17 peppermint, 7 wintergreen, 4 cinnamon, 1 liquorice, and 1 clone.
[someguy_08527] was annoyed that I hadn’t posted his tree sap removal hack:
if youve ever had a car that you want to keep nice, im sure some of you have had the unfortunate experience of having tree sap drip on it
Event Coverage: Dorkbot Meetings And Artbots 2005
Continuing on our streak of Friday coverage of cool hackerly events, we would like to say a few words on Dorkbot and Artbots. Dorkbot started as a New York City monthly meeting for robot and homebrew interactive device aficionados. It has now spread to many cities, perhaps even one near you. Guests are invited to speak and afterwards, the hardware hackers mix and mingle to the geekery beat. The collection of projects presented in the past are stored on their site with linkage for you to peruse. We at Hack A Day are a bit sad that neither Paris nor Nebraska hosts a monthly Dorkbot. That said, you are invited to start a new Dorkbot chapter near you if you so desire. The next New York City Dorkbot meeting is on Wednesday, October 5th at 7 pm. Check the listings and/or mailing lists for the city nearest you.
As if Dorkbot’s artsy tech scene wasn’t cool enough, once a year Douglas Repetto also organizes Artbots: The Robot Talent Show. We had a chance to attend Artbots 2003 at the Eyebeam Gallery in NYC. Particularly marking that year was Stijn Slabbinck’s scratchbot which has been covered rather extensively elsewhere. LEMUR – the league of electronic musical urban robots — was also in attendance in 2003. This year’s Artbots was held in Dublin, Ireland and included workshops: a MIDI scrapyard challenge and a 60 minute bot building course.
Some of our favorite artist installations from this year’s Artbots include:
Continue reading “Event Coverage: Dorkbot Meetings And Artbots 2005”
Hackaday Links
Well, it doesn’t look like the PSU meeting happened. Moving on:
Yesterday I was moaning about the price of Cobalt Flux‘s dance mats. [SilentCircuit] says the cheaper mats from LikSang work great. There’s always the really cheap option.
I’ve been avoiding a the Flying Spaghetti Monster links, but I couldn’t help chuckling while playing the new FSM flash game. [via] To bad I’m already a minister for a different religion.
Did anyone pick up an iPod nano yet? Have you started hacking? Here is the iPod nano disassembled.
Every so often someone suggests we adopt the hacker emblem from Conway’s Game of Life. I guess I was always adverse to it since a glider in a 3×3 grid would die in the next timestep.
[lain]’s buddy built a drill powered bike. Includes “automatic” transmission.
External hard drive case from an old tape player. [thanks Gene kaufman]
Another OSx86 install. It discusses compatible hardware you should purchase if you’re building a box from the ground up. There is no way to tell if you’ll need the TPM chip with future OSx86 functionality though. [via]
Hackaday Links
The other day I mentioned that Jason Striegel is a robot. Well, the situation was given a little bit of clarity when a Slashdot commenter said Googling for “sex bots” turns up Jason’s Hack-A-Day article. At one point someone told Jason he was “worse than Eliza”. Funny you should mention that since the second google link is a sex bot built on Eliza and then turned loose on the IRC. Hilarity ensues.
[Hermann] built a laptop ventilador out of cardboard.
[mike forbes] provided some links for hacking the Netgear DG834G here and here.
You can transcode movies and use your CVS camcorder as a cheap video player. [enigma-]
You don’t have to spend a lot of money on your MAME cabinet. [tIM cATCHPOLE]
[Haon] started working on our Wikipedia stub.
[PK]’s better way to add a garage remote to your car.
This Linux DDR machine looks cool till you price the mats. [Incudie] I guess that is the price you pay to avoid getting carpal tunnel doing this. [via]
Also [via Dirk], a good roundup of USB key friendly software.
Don’t worry [smouldering dog] your gift arrived safe and sound.
Over 225 Hack-A-Day readers have added me as a friend; at least 4 are girls. The Folding@Home team has grown too.
HADA01 – Logo Cake
We usually post stuff related to case mods rather than cake mods, but today is an exception. It’s our 01-th anniversary today and to celebrate we decided to bake a Hack-A-Day logo cake! The cake is a vanilla cake with vanilla frosting served on a homebrew circuit board platter. Celebrate our 01 Hack-A-Day style.
For this cake-mod you will need:
vanilla cake
frosting
various knives (spreading knife, box cutter, sharp kitchen knife)
chopstick or other square ended small clean tool
large green circuit board (like our motherboard isa bus extension card found on the street)
clear plastic from a zipper lock bag (to protect your cake eaters from solder lead and to protect your circuit board from cake and frosting)
black foam core board or similar
green lighting (super bright green led’s, green christmas lights, etc.)
Hack-A-Day Anniversary 01 – First Post!
A year ago today, Phillip Torrone posted the first hack of the day: a redbox built from a RadioShack phone dialer. We’ll be celebrating all day and you should be able to find us in the #hackaday channel on Efnet.
Since this about the first post I thought it would be fun to cover “first post!” phenomena on Hack-A-Day. Our audience has gotten huge over the last year, but the behavior of “first post”ers is still silly. Here’s why:
