The Electree: finally, a bonsai tree that uses solar power to charge your gadgets

So you’re tres green chic with your solar-charging jacket, and that Ralph Lauren backpack keeps your gadgets energized even off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard. But what about stylish photovoltaics for your home, dear earth-friendly aesthete? We humbly submit the Electree, by French designer Vivian Muller. Shaped like a bonsai tree, each of its 27 leaves is a solar panel that helps charge a 13,500mAh battery. A concealed USB connector and A/C outlet will feed your gadgets while minimizing unsightly wires, and rotatable branches let you customize the look. Muller’s looking for 400 presales to make the Electree a reality: for early birds, the price is €269 (about $370). If this sounds like the sort of thing you’d put on your windowsill, hit the source link to commence with the purchasing.

Continue reading The Electree: finally, a bonsai tree that uses solar power to charge your gadgets

The Electree: finally, a bonsai tree that uses solar power to charge your gadgets originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Sep 2011 09:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceVivien Muller, Ulule  | Email this | Comments

Jack Eisenmann’s DUO Adept: a homebrew 8-bit computer built by a high-schooler (video)

We’ve seen some impressive case mods and some wildly inventive DIY projects, but rarely have we seen a homemade, 8-bit computer housed in what looks like a Tupperware container. Meet the DUO Adept: a project begun last summer by programmer, hardware hacker, and recent high-school graduate Jack Eisenmann. Lovingly crafted from a television, an old keyboard, 100 chips (not a single one more), and lots of wire, the system has 64K of memory and outputs a 240 × 208 black and white image. Eisenmann designed his own operating system and even wrote several games, including the Donkey Kong-esque “Get Muffin.” Hit the source link for a gallery (including circuit diagrams!) and see the video below for a demonstration, complete with 8-bit era music.

Continue reading Jack Eisenmann’s DUO Adept: a homebrew 8-bit computer built by a high-schooler (video)

Jack Eisenmann’s DUO Adept: a homebrew 8-bit computer built by a high-schooler (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Jun 2011 06:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Yahoo! News  |  sourceJack Eisenmann  | Email this | Comments

AI competition pits Ms. Pac-Man against ghosts in the Manichean struggle of our time (video)

While the world breathlessly awaits the Pac-Man reality TV show, the University of Essex held a programming competition starring that other yellow chomper. The Ms. Pac-Man vs. Ghost Team contest pitted 13 competitors from nine different countries against one another, to see who could create the most elusive Ms. Pac-Man or the wiliest ghost gang. The participants coded routines for the titular hero or Blinky, Pinky, Inky, and Sue, with organizers then running the programs against one another on the Java-based playing field. The highest single-game score went to Atif, who racked up 69240 points versus DarkRodry’s ghosts, while ghost team Legacy2TheReckoning held RandomMsPacMan to a mere 410 points. Another competition will take place in August, so limber up your coding fingers, Pac-Maniacs. In the meantime, strap on your headgear and cheer on your round yellow hero in the video below.

Continue reading AI competition pits Ms. Pac-Man against ghosts in the Manichean struggle of our time (video)

AI competition pits Ms. Pac-Man against ghosts in the Manichean struggle of our time (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Jun 2011 19:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink CNET  |  sourceMs. Pac-Man versus Ghost Team  | Email this | Comments

Visualized: Growing up in arcades

If you’re anything like us — and you are — you can get quite nostalgic (and often downright teary-eyed) when contemplating your geek past. That’s why we know you’ll just love our latest favorite Flickr pool, Growing Up In Arcades: 1979-1989. We’d like to stay and chat, but there are well over a hundred pictures featuring stonewashed denim, cheesy mustaches, and coin-op console games that we are dying to check out. Feel like joining us? Hit the source link.

[Photo credit: Daves Portfolio]

Visualized: Growing up in arcades originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 15:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Dangerous Minds  |  sourceFlickr  | Email this | Comments

Painting with fire, thanks to a cybernetic glove (video)

Fire: the most primal element. “It’s a living thing,” Robert De Niro once said, “It breathes, it eats, and it hates. The only way to beat it is to think like it.” Unless you’re an artist – then you rig up a series of tubes, pump in some kerosene, and connect it to a Power Glove-like control device. Next thing you know, you’re “fire painting,” making that hateful beast dance and strut for your amusement. “Its burning can be handled by subtle movements of the sensory data glove for tactile formulation of the fiery image,” the artist explains, “Thus, the image can be manipulated, yet it constantly escapes control.” To know what it’s like to summon flame with a flick of your wrist – while sporting a creepy smiley-face welding mask, no less – see the video above.

Painting with fire, thanks to a cybernetic glove (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Apr 2011 04:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Make  |  sourceSanela Jahic  | Email this | Comments

The World’s Biggest Pac-Man game takes over the internet, your life

It’s officially the weekend, which means you’ve got two choices: one, mimic iTr3vor and toss up a YouTube video of yourself dancing in an Apple Store, or two, blow your own mind with the magic of HTML5. In between hour-long Pica-Pic sessions, we’d recommend killing time in The World’s Biggest Pac-Man game, which can be “played for fun” or linked to your Facebook account for those who savvy statistics. We’d bother telling you more, but we’re fairly sure you’re already firmly occupied with the source link. You’re welcome. Or, we’re sorry.

The World’s Biggest Pac-Man game takes over the internet, your life originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 16 Apr 2011 02:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Tecca  |  sourceThe World’s Biggest Pac-Man  | Email this | Comments

Canada to introduce recyclable, polymer-based ‘plastic cash,’ dragons and PC users rejoice

See that guy right there? His world is ending. Dragons are swallowing his neighbors, snatching his peoples up. Rather than make an effort to hide his kids, hide his wife or hide his husband (too), he’s celebrating uncontrollably. Why? Because his homeland is preparing to make the shift to plastic cash. You heard right — Canada is scheduled to introduce a polymer-based $100 bill in November, and in March of 2012, a recyclable $50 bill will follow. From there, smaller notes will be phased in over the next dozen months or so, providing citizens with legal tender that holds up better to Yellowknife’s winters. Sure, Australia has been doing something similar for over a decade, but have you ever seen a DinoPark Tycoon rise up and use only non-digestible money? Exactly.

Canada to introduce recyclable, polymer-based ‘plastic cash,’ dragons and PC users rejoice originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Apr 2011 10:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceForbes  | Email this | Comments

The Awesome button is…

Ever struggled to find the perfect adjective to articulate your admiration for a given article of awesomeness? Matt Richardson over at Make felt exactly the same way, so he perfected himself an Awesome button, designed specifically to spit out synonyms for his favorite descriptive word. To accomplish the task, he had to gut a Staples “easy” button and arrange a Teensy USB microcontroller inside it, before making the resulting mini-thesaurus compatible with his computer. Don’t worry, full instructions are contained in the video above. Just mash the play button.

The Awesome button is… originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Apr 2011 09:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceMake  | Email this | Comments

Full-on electric drum kit shoved within a pair of jeans, subway musicians celebrate (video)

It’s a natural progression, really. Way back in the heyday that was 2008, we saw a fully-functional keyboard worked into a pair of jeans. Three years later, those characters have morphed into something far more raucous. The University of Hull’s own Aseem Mishra has just nabbed an prized engineering award for his recent musical work — specifically, for integrating eight sensors into an otherwise ordinary set of trousers. For now, the wearer has to connect their legs into a speaker-filled backpack in order to be heard, but he’s working on a wireless version that’ll transmit to far larger sound systems. There’s also hope that version 2.0 will include more sensors for more sounds, and if a manufacturer decides to start shoving these into your local Hot Topic, we’re guessing they’ll be available in a rainbow’s worth of hues. Vid’s below for those who’d fancy having a listen themselves.

Continue reading Full-on electric drum kit shoved within a pair of jeans, subway musicians celebrate (video)

Full-on electric drum kit shoved within a pair of jeans, subway musicians celebrate (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 01 Apr 2011 12:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Switched  |  sourceBBC (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments

Mesmerizing Touch Wood SH-08C ad showcases Japan’s beauty, mankind’s ingenuity (video)

Sharp isn’t apt to sell but 15,000 of its Touch Wood SH-08C handsets, but after watching the ad below, you can bet there will be demand for more. It’s a bit baffling to think of the trouble Drill, Inc. went through in order to assemble the pieces necessary for a wooden ball to trickle down a homegrown marimba, particularly in the midst of Kyushu, Japan’s woodlands. Kenjiro Matsuo was responsible for the creation of the instrument, while Morihiro Harano is being handed credit for the idea itself; in fact, he confirmed to The New York Times that no artificial music was added whatsoever, with only the background levels being adjusted up for effect. You may have never listened to a piece of classical music in your life, but you’re sorely missing out if you ignore Bach’s Cantata 147, “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring.” Or, at least the version in that video below.

Continue reading Mesmerizing Touch Wood SH-08C ad showcases Japan’s beauty, mankind’s ingenuity (video)

Mesmerizing Touch Wood SH-08C ad showcases Japan’s beauty, mankind’s ingenuity (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Mar 2011 13:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Switched  |  sourceYouTube (sakura4250)  | Email this | Comments