This Remote Control Pizza Box Plane Practically Delivers Itself

This Remote Control Pizza Box Plane Practically Delivers Itself

There’s only so much you can do with an empty pizza box besides throw it away, or let it clutter up the floor of your filthy hovel. There is on other option though: you can turn it into a remote controlled plane.

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DIY Infinity Mirror: to Infinty, and Beyond

We all want our own personal interdimensional portal, but you can’t find real ones just anywhere. And even if you do, you might get trapped in another dimension. So this one is much safer. This infinity mirror has a series of Arduino controlled LEDs that can change their color.
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It looks pretty amazing. I bet real-world portals don’t look this cool. They probably don’t look like anything. I would ask someone who has seen one, but they are all gone. Never to be seen again. They should have just made one of these. So shiny and pretty.

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If you want to learn how to make one for yourself, check out the instructables page by the mirror’s creator, Ben Finio.

[via Obvious Winner]

Hermit House Ought To Appeal To DIY Fans

Hermit House Ought To Appeal To DIY FansDutch duo Daniel Venneman and Mark van der Net have managed to cobble together what can be described as an open source home kit which would definitely appeal to DIY enthusiasts. Basically, if you are pretty good with your hands and some tools, you are able to construct as well as customize your very own micro house. The Hermit House is said to come with a special zigzag floor plan that has the intention of creating a multi-purpose interior complete with a spacious feel, never mind the extremely cramped 14 square meter (150 sq. ft.) footprint.

The Hermit House has many practical applications, where you can choose to use it as a studio or a guesthouse. Lighting should not be an issue, as the Hermit House would come with large floor-to-ceiling glass windows that will open out onto an outdoor deck. Not only that, the Hermit House will also boast of a single open interior space that can be personally customized according to your whim and fancy.

Designers Daniel Venneman and Mark van der Net shared, “The Hermit House was developed as a university project and was the first house we realized. We came to the folded shape in our search for an easy and cheap way to construct DIY using standard sized plywood.”

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    Safety Piercer, For All Your DIY Body Piercing Needs

    Safety Piercer, For All Your DIY Body Piercing NeedsThe Safety Piercer features a titanium-plated medical stainless steel spike mounted in a lightweight, spring-action case. These miniature masochism machines are designed so solo body piercers can perform the operation(s) one-handed, presumably while looking in the mirror. What could possibly go wrong?

    Berlin Boombox Now Available: Paper Power!

    This isn’t the first time that we’ve seen the Berlin Boombox. The device turned up on Kickstarter about a year ago when it was seeking funding for production. We lost track of the device after the Kickstarter campaign and it has now turned up again, and this time you can buy it outright.

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    The DIY Berlin Boombox is a cardboard papercraft kit that requires you to fold and stuff tabs into slots. Other than the cardboard shell for the boombox, it also comes with speakers and other hardware required to make the audio work.

    Berlin Boombox

    The Berlin Boombox has a pair of small speakers that slot into the little cardboard slots inside the cardboard shell, a volume knob, and a battery pack that holds three AA batteries. Once built, you simply connect your audio device to the speakers using the 3.5 mm plug. This would probably be the perfect ghetto blaster to go with your 80s music collection and giant sheet of cardboard for breakdancing.

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    The Berlin Boombox is available from Bitemyapple.com for $79.99(USD).

    Dash Robotics Reveals A DIY High-Speed Running Robot Kit, Which Hobbyists Can Own For Just $65

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    Dash Robotics is using crowdfunding to help build its first hobbyist robot for home robotics enthusiast, with the aim of providing advanced tech for very little money thanks to a unique combination of materials, design and manufacturing. Dash’s first robo is a smartphone-controlled, insect-like running robot, which can be shipped in a flat pack as a 2D kit, and then folded out “origami” style and assembled by consumers at home.

    The Dash is designed by a team of Berkeley PhD students, including Nick Kohut, Paul Birkmeyer, Andrew Gillies and Kevin Peterson, who worked together in the Millisystems Lab on robots using small legs. The team worked out a revolutionary way to manufacture new prototypes quickly and cheaply, in order to help with experimentation, and were surprised to find that people witnessing them in action had a “strong, visceral reaction” (you can see if you feel the same when you view the video below) and wanted to know if they were for sale, Kohut explained in an interview.

    “Dash is very engaging, we’ve seen boys and girls play with him for hours before being pulled away by their parents,” Kohut said, discussing not only the product’s appeal but also why he and his co-founders think it’s needed. “Dash is also dramatically low cost. ‘Low cost’ robotics today means about $150, but we’re pricing Dash at $65 [for an unassembled unit], less than half that. This is possible because of our unique flat manufacturing process, which allows us to build Dash out of affordable materials, and our animal-inspired design, which means we don’t have to compromise on performance at that price point.”

    The Dash is available in alpha form (runs straight, doesn’t do much else) unassembled for $40, in beta form (navigable, more extensible) for $65, and fully assembled by the founders themselves as a complete unit for $100. Kohut says that it’s also highly hackable, and Arduino compatible, so that home hobbyists are limited mostly by their imagination in terms of what else they can make Dash do. The robot as designed can run at over 5 feet per second, and will run for over a mile on a single battery charge.

    For Dash Robotics, this insectoid runner is just the beginning. Kohut says that they plan to expand their core product offerings in the future, as well as offer up a variety of accessories.

    “In our past lives as PhD researchers, we’ve added wings, tails, and even gecko feet to these robots,” he said. “It would be really cool to see a “Gecko Dash” kit that can climb walls. Additionally, enabling these robots to talk to each other would open up all kinds of possibilities. You could have them race or battle and keep score, or cooperate to complete a mission, guided by your smartphone.”

    Long-term, Kohut sees possibilities extending beyond the hobbyist sphere. The size, lightweight construction, all-terrain capabilities and cost of the current Dash would all be assets for use in search-and-rescue operations, he says. You can imagine sending in swarms up thousands of Dash robots into a collapsed building with CO2 sensors to located survivors, for instance. Minefield clearing is another use case that comes to mind.

    Dash Robotics sees itself as part of a movement, which includes Adafruit and others, to inspire and grow the worldwide community of makers. The new crowdfunding platform Dash is using to launch the project, Dragon Innovation, is another player in that movement, with a Kickstarter-style platform aimed specifically at backing makers and their projects. Dash is also looking for traditional Angel investment to get to the mass production stage, and has been part of The Foundry @ CITRIS, a hardware accelerator operating out of UC Berkeley.

    Dash Robotics’s DIY robots controlled by smartphones, look like insects (video)

    DNP Dash Robotics

    What could kids find more fun (and parents find more affordable) than fancy toy robots? Toy robots they build themselves that scurry around like horrifyingly gigantic insects. That’s what a startup called Dash Robotics hopes to offer if it reaches its $64,000 goal on new crowdfunding site, Dragon Innovation. Each Dash kit contains a flat panel made out of a plastic-and-cardboard material with precut parts you’ll have to piece together like Legos. Those parts will enclose an electronic component that lets you control the six-legged robot with either an iOS or an Android app, although the company can’t guarantee the latter. Prototypes will be available to the first 1,000 backers who pledge at least $65, but everyone else might be able to get their own later — Dash Robotics hopes to release its kits commercially and to keep them priced below $70.

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    Source: Dash Robotics, Dragon Innovation

    Make Your Own LED Shoes That Light Up When You Walk

    Look. Your adult self is pretty much a failure to your 8-year-old childhood self. You don’t buy toys for yourself anymore. You don’t remember the last time you gorged out in the candy aisle. You try to eat healthy. You talk about things like politics and the economy and lumbar support. You basically lost everything you enjoyed doing as a child. So do yourself a favor and remember the good times by creating your own LED shoes that light up when you walk.

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    Bigshot DIY Camera Kit: Build & Learn & Point & Shoot

    A couple of years ago we looked at a couple of film cameras that you had to assemble before you could use them. The Bigshot camera is just like those cameras, except it’s digital and has a companion website that includes a lot of related information. The idea is to introduce people of all ages not just to photography but to technology in general.

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    The Bigshot digital camera kit comes with all of the parts and tools you need to build and process your photos, including a screwdriver, a micro-USB to USB cable and a pair of 3D glasses. That’s right, once you’ve put it together you can use the camera to take 3D images as well as panoramic shots to go with the normal mode. The camera has an internal battery that you recharge using the cable, but it also has a dynamo and a hand crank so you can power it yourself. It also has a free software for processing and sharing images.

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    But as I said earlier, the kit is only half of the Bigshot’s appeal. Its website has dozens of pages of helpful and easy to understand articles related to the camera. There are pages explaining the science behind the parts, an assembly guide and more. The articles make it a lot easier and fun to learn while you assemble and use the camera.

    You can order the Bigshot camera from its official website for $89 (USD). I wish Ben Heck or some other modder would release a similar kit for a gaming device.

    [via NOTCOT]

    Forget 3D Printing: These Hacked Household Gadgets Are Cool New Tools

    Forget 3D Printing: These Hacked Household Gadgets Are Cool New Tools

    The maker movement is nigh, bringing with it an interesting tension between hands-on craft techniques and tech-heavy production. RCA-graduate David Steiner decided to put aside the 3D printer and step out of the studio to see what he could make using gadgets found in his own home—from a hand-mixer to the microwave.

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