DIY footswitch for Ableton Live frees up your hands, makes you dangerous onstage

When Ableton forum member AlexMC came across plans for a no-fuss, no-muss USB foot controller for the company’s world-renowned music app, he liked what he saw — but not so much that he couldn’t make a few changes his own self. By adding a sturdy wooden case, a 30 degree pitch to the top of the thing, some extra buttons, and some razzle-dazzle (that’ll cost you extra) he now has a device that sports twenty buttons and a bank switch (making for forty unique outputs total), useful for things like play / record on individual tracks, stop / fade, and of course, everybody’s favorite — tap tempo. The best part? He built this bad boy for ten bucks! The excruciating step-by-step plans and photos (including circuit diagrams and all that jazz) are yours when you hit the read link below — and you’ll be mashing up Katy Perry and the Cure live on stage, while jamming along on your keytar, in no time. But please, don’t mash-up Katy Perry and the Cure.
[Via Make]

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DIY footswitch for Ableton Live frees up your hands, makes you dangerous onstage originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Apr 2009 13:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DIY Wall-E Case Mod

Wall-E_Case_Mod.png

UPDATE: The links to the Russian site aren’t working; sorry! Hopefully the site will come back up.

This, hands down, is one of the most involved–and amazing–case mods I’ve ever seen. Originally posted on casemods.ru, few details about the project are available to those who don’t read Russian. (Google Translator to the rescue!)

Completely hand-built in just 18 days, this amazing mod began when a man named Valeri watched Wall-E, Disney and Pixar’s 2008 animated hit:

I was impressed by the
image of a small, very lonely robot who is struggling alone with a
whole army of fellow that I decided to make a computer corpus of my
favorite hero.

So he headed to the machine shop and got to work. There, he cut, milled, drilled, and filed every piece of the lovable little robot out of metal, paying remarkable attention to even the tiniest of details. The resulting 19 pages of in-process photographs show the truly astounding craftsmanship that went into creating the final piece.

Perhaps for his next project, an external-drive Eva is in order?

Intelligent cat door utilizes Twitter, RFID masterfully

What goes well with a communication-enabled water dish? Why, a Twitter / RFID-enabled kitty door, of course! The so-called Tweeting Cat Door is undoubtedly the most hilarious, insightful and useful DIY contraption we’ve ever seen to wed RFID, social networking and computer programming. Essentially, this homegrown cat door was crafted to only open when Gus or Penny walks up with their super special RFID tags; once they approach, a mounted camera snaps a picture and uploads it (along with a quip) to Twitter. Don’t deny it — your feline is steaming with envy from the corner of your desk right now.

[Via Switched]

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Intelligent cat door utilizes Twitter, RFID masterfully originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Apr 2009 00:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wall-E case mod is chock full of adorableness, win

Just look into those cute, bubbly eyes and tell us that you’d still rather keep your plain-jane tower if offered this instead. We know, you can’t. While we’ve seen a number of Wall-E mods over the months, we’ve never seen anything close to this in terms of sheer incredibleness. So far as we can tell, this robotic PC even opens up his own optical drive, and he can also send out love letters to one “Eeeevvvaaaaa” without human intervention. A thing of beauty, no?

[Thanks, Doug]

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Wall-E case mod is chock full of adorableness, win originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Apr 2009 23:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: HY Research’s Beagle Board-based MID

This next item is a homebrew MID loosely based on the funky and fresh Nokia N800. Sure, until Mr. HY Research gets a battery installed, the “mobile” part of this internet device will rely on an extension cord… but that said, this is one fun little project. Based on the ARM Cortex A8-based Beagle board, it features a 4.3-inch (480 x 272) display, Bluetooth, support for OpenGL ES 2.0, S-Video and HDMI outputs, USB, SD / MMC, RS-232, and audio in / out connections. As controls go, this thing sports not only a touchscreen, but a five position joystick, three position slider, and plenty of buttons as well. Not bad, not bad at all. The company is on the lookout for “consulting and designs of custom expansion boards,” so if you’re in the mood to do some business, hit that read link. If you’re really just a fan (aren’t we all?) there is an action packed video of the thing in action, after the break.

[Via SlashGear]

Continue reading Video: HY Research’s Beagle Board-based MID

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Video: HY Research’s Beagle Board-based MID originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Apr 2009 22:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DoubleTwist nets $5 million in funding, debuts Windows version

Don’t let anyone tell you otherwise — money’s out there if your idea is good enough. Hot on the heels of Fusion-io’s grabbing of Series B funding comes this: news that doubleTwist has just acquired a solid $5 million to push forward on its all encompassing media venture. If you’ll recall, the project is being headed up by the notorious DVD Jon and DRM expert Monique Farantzos. In essence, the idea is to create a multi-platform media browser that can take media from just about anywhere and place it just about anywhere else, all without forcing you to figure out messy calculations like encoding and native resolutions. In related news, doubleTwist now shows screenshots and a video (after the break) of a Windows version, which is available today for download.

Read – DoubleTwist website
Read – Funding

Continue reading DoubleTwist nets $5 million in funding, debuts Windows version

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DoubleTwist nets $5 million in funding, debuts Windows version originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 08 Apr 2009 16:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Team Building 101: How to Build a Shooting Range in the Office

Targetrange3

Need to boost morale in the office? Forget punching bags, ping-pong tables and Beer Fridays. Consider building a shooting range with $35 worth of materials.

Mana Energy Potion shows you how to do just that with a step-by-step tutorial including photos. To make a long story short, the process involves screwing carpet onto a board, which is hung from a clothesline zip-tied to the office ceiling.

From thereon you can pin up paper targets — maybe even printouts of your wonderful CEO — and take aim with your airsoft (compressed air) pellet guns.

Check out a video of the shooting range in action below the jump.

(Thanks, Jon!)

Photo: Mana Energy Potion

Dealzmodo Hack: Don’t Give Up On Your Symbian Phone

Symbian is the planet’s most popular smartphone OS—everywhere except the US, that is. It’s also arguably the most boring. In this last, most urgent installment of the cellphone revitalization series, we alleviate your Symbian shame.

Symbian’s dominance isn’t evident here in the US, as it’s driven by smartphones—like Nokia’s N series or Sony Ericsson’s P Series—that don’t really have much of a market/mindshare outside of Europe. We’ve even gone so far as to declare it too marginal to include in our smartphone OS guide.

But there are still plenty of UIQ and S60 phones around, and they all suffer from the same sense of staleness—a stagnation that’s obvious, whether it’s because of Symbian’s global popularity and fragmented nature or despite it. So what do you do to shake the feeling that you’re toting a last-gen device? Try this:

Get a new browser
Oddly enough, lots of Symbian phones actually ship with not-so-bad browsers, like S60’s, which is based on WebKit just like Mobile Safari and Mobile Chrome. Unfortunately, most of these phones also ship without touchscreens, and depend on a clunky d-pad navigation system. This makes panning around fully-rendered pages a bit of a pain—a problem not helped by the browser’s often slow performance. Luckily, there are plenty of alternatives.

Opera Mobile/Mini: Opera has made an appearance in every last one of my smartphone revival stories, and with good reason. Each version offers its own advantage for Symbian: Opera Mobile brings fast-ish full-page rendering with inertial scrolling—only really a boon if you’re lucky enough to have a touchscreen handset like the XpressMusic 5900. The newer 9.5 beta, complete with Google Gears support, can be had for UIQ phones, but S60 handsets will have to settle for 8.65. Opera Mini, a Java app, will work on virtually any phone. It’s not the prettiest browser, but server-side data compression and clever formatting tricks make it a good fit for smaller-screened Symbian hardware. Bolt is another Java-based browser in the same lightweight, data-conscious vein, and it matches Opera’s app feature for feature. You know, six of one…

Skyfire: This surprising little browser takes the Opera Mini/Bolt rationale a little further, running everything through server-side compression, including Flash video. What does that mean, in a word? Hulu. Unfortunately support is limited to Nokia N and E series phones.

Work On Your Communication Skills
Out of the box, most Symbian phones take you as far as emailing. With a few downloads, though, you’ll be privy to the same range of messaging capabilities as your smug iPhone and BlackBerry-toting friends, and then some.

Fring: This isn’t your locked down, Wi-Fi tethered iPhone Fring. No, this is the real deal: Multiprotocol IMing, VoIP over 3G and Wi-Fi and most importantly, background processing. Skype is supported, sans video.

Truphone: A dedicated VoIP app that integrates rather seamlessly with your S60 handset, Truphone can save you a pretty penny on international, long-distance and even in-plan calls. By routing calls through Truphone’s network over Wi-Fi or a cell data connection, Truphone can connect you to other users for free, and connect international calls for a few cents a minute. Other perks include voicemail-to-email forwarding and Google Talk support, but discounted calls are the star of the show here.

Agile Messenger: It may lack the VoIP accouterments of the previously mentioned apps, but for straight up instant messaging you really can’t beat it. All the big protocols are here, accessible through the same simple interface. You can send videos and voice messages, but not engage in full conversations—this app is about messaging, and message it does.

And All The Rest
Once you’ve updated your browser and messaging software, you’ve edged much closer to a modern smartphone experience. Now to fill in the blanks:

Google Maps: Google’s superb maps app is as good here as it is anywhere else, with GPS integration, local search and a clean, intuitive interface. Perhaps most importantly, it’s not just for fingers; Google Maps is well-suited to d-pad navigation.

JoikuSpot Lite: It’s tethering+1: Any Wi-Fi-equipped S60 3rd Edition phone can operate as an access point with JoikuSpot. The Lite version is free, and adequate.

Qik: Qik is a cool app that can only be described in ways that sound utterly stupid. Lifecasting? Live vlogging? Either way, with the right phone, Symbian can do it well.

Nokia has some ongoing beta projects to check out, and a few of them are worthwhile. SportsTracker feeds a GPS-tracked record of your run or bike rides to a handy web interface. WidSets is a widget dashboard for a rich variety of web apps. ShareOnline provides basic portals for media uploads, whether it be photo, video or audio content.

And finally, we have Mobbler. A lovely little Last.fm radio client, Mobbler is an iffy addition to this list because Last.fm is cutting off third-party radio support at some point in the near future, so it probably won’t work for long. But it’s good, so use it while you still can.

If what you see so far isn’t overly heartening, hold on: The Ovi App Store for S40 and S60 is on its way, hopefully in May. Symbian’s laissez-faire take on the App Store, it promises a slew of applications and media downloads, installable through a handset client. This could end up two ways: As a consolidated Symbian app aggregator, collecting the above apps and others into an easy interface, or as an attraction for new developers, who’ll be drawn by the large audience and easy publishing features of the store. That latter scenario may be better, but neither is bad.

Dealzmodo Hacks are intended to help you sustain your crippling gadget addiction through tighter times. If you come across any on your own that are particularly useful, send it to our tips line (Subject: Dealzmodo Hack). Check back every other Thursday for free DIY tricks to breathe new life into hardware that you already own.

Video: toddler-safe DIY remote control

No, this isn’t one of the editors at Engadget, although — judging by the way he conducts himself in this hands on video — we’ll probably drop him a line by the time CES 2010 rolls around. This DIY remote control consists of a USB number pad that’s been rehoused in a toddler-safe enclosure and outfitted with some rather large buttons. It looks like it’s just the thing for letting your little guy take control of Teletubbies, or Baby Einstein, or whatever it is the kids are into these days. Have a young one of your own? Hit the read link for the step-by-step instructions and thrilling in-progress photos. Video after the break.

[Via Hack A Day]

Continue reading Video: toddler-safe DIY remote control

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Video: toddler-safe DIY remote control originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Apr 2009 11:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: 128GB SSD slotted into Dell’s Inspiron Mini 9

Considering just how cheap Dell’s Inspiron Mini 9 gets on occasion, there’s practically no doubt that the SSD portion of this mod will run you more than the computer itself. For those wild and wacky DIYers who couldn’t honestly care less, jkkmobile has put together a video (along with a gallery of images) showing exactly how the process works. For what it’s worth, we’re told that the whole ordeal was a simple matter, but you can judge for yourself after jumping past the break and mashing play.

Continue reading Video: 128GB SSD slotted into Dell’s Inspiron Mini 9

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Video: 128GB SSD slotted into Dell’s Inspiron Mini 9 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 06 Apr 2009 20:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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