Hard drives quit their day job to pursue new life as a speaker system

We know what you’re thinking, why would you ever turn two decent hard disk drives into tinny speakers when it’s much more logical to use them as storage and buying cheap speakers instead… but if you’re the kind of mad scientist who likes to see doohickeys function outside their intended use, or have friends who’d be really impressed or amused, you might want to consider recreating this classy speaker set complete with transparent glass case and the requisite blue lights. All the instructions lie beyond the read link, and if you’re not quite convinced, we think the video after the break is likely to change your opinion for the better.

[Via Hack a Day]

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Hard drives quit their day job to pursue new life as a speaker system originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Sep 2009 10:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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magicJack gets hacked into a magicNetbook

magicJack may still be sorting out its own fairly ambitious cellular plans, but it looks like some folks are taking it upon themselves to put the cheap phone call-making device to some exciting new uses — like this crafty modder who crammed his trusty “MJ” (as those in the know call it) into his Eee PC 1000HE netbook. That mod apparently took a full day of tweaking to get working just right, but it does indeed seem to work as promised, and will let you make dirt cheap phone calls simply by plugging any old phone directly into your netbook (via a headphone jack). Unfortunately, there’s no step-by-step how-to just yet, but you can check out some pics of the process at the link below and do your best to follow along.

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magicJack gets hacked into a magicNetbook originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Sep 2009 00:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Battle of the homebrew LEGO iPhone docks

You know, a beanbag might be good for the occasional portable movie viewer, but if you’re cubicle bound and liable to look to your iPod touch or iPhone for news and entertainment on a regular basis, you’re going to want something with legs. Here we have a couple prime examples of devices fashioned from good ol’ fashioned LEGO brand building blocks that do the trick with the style befitting one of America’s favorite childhood choking hazards. Itching to get in on the action? Hit the read link — but not before peeping the video after the break.

Read – LEGO iPhone/iPod Touch Rotating Dock
Read – iStand

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Battle of the homebrew LEGO iPhone docks originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Sep 2009 12:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Original Game Boy repurposed as external hard drive

Okay, so maybe this here mod isn’t nearly as extreme as shoving an entire PC into the case of a classic Game Boy, but it’s still pretty fantastic in its own right. Completed at some point during the dog days of summer, the 80GB Game Boy had its innards stripped and replaced with parts that enable a 2.5-inch 80GB SATA HDD to operate beautifully as a standard USB hard drive. The display you see here is (unfortunately) an illusion, as it’s simply a professional-looking still insert that merely gives the impression of it paying Game Boy titles while offloading spreadsheets. Now, if someone could figure out how to make it pull double duty…

[Via technabob]

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Original Game Boy repurposed as external hard drive originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 12 Sep 2009 14:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Extreme, Custom and Pimped-Out Kegerators

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There’s something about a giant gadget that dispenses cold beer that inspires people to extremes. Here at Wired.com we have been busy pimping out our own fridge-turned-kegerator, Beer Robot, and we wanted to pay tribute to the most extreme, tricked-out and awesome kegerators we’ve come across. Here are some of our favorites.

The Octane 120

Who knew mixing beer and videogames was such a good idea? Apparently a lot of people did, because there are no fewer than three different companies offering combination kegerator/arcades online, and at least one home-made one is in the works. Even our own Beer Robot has Space Invaders on one side.

Dream Arcade’s Octane 120, pictured above, takes top prize in this category for many reasons, but it could be a winner based solely on the fact that it has an “in dash beer tap.” Just in case the tap directly behind you isn’t close enough, you’ve got one right next to the steering wheel. You don’t even have to take your eyes off the road to refill your beer, let alone stand up.

It has a high-output DLP projector, a 120 inch projector screen and comes with your choice of Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 or a gaming PC. Dream Arcades owner Mike Ware told Wired.com that the company is adding a removable arcade control panel and 200 classic arcade games, including Pac-man and Centipede.

The seat is adjustable, the steering wheel and shifter are leather-wrapped, the pedals have variable resistance, it can hold a full-size keg or two five-gallon kegs and, of course, there is a conveniently located drink holder directly below the dashboard tap so you can refill mid-game.

Yes please, I’ll take one of those … if it weren’t for the $6,000 price tag. I’d be more likely to own an actual car that costs this much. Not surprisingly, Dream Arcades does not sell a lot of these. “This is mainly a high-end toy for CEOs, actors and such,” Ware wrote in an e-mail to Wired.com. If you aren’t one of those, perhaps the standup arcade he plans to offer for $2,600 in time for Christmas is more your style.

Photo: Dream Arcade


GPS Hackers Blaze Own Trails With Crowdsourced Maps

garmin-osm

Last month, when Zack Ajmal was planning a vacation to Italy, he set out to find the first thing that a traveler would need in a foreign land: a map. But digital maps of Rome and Venice for his Garmin GPS device cost almost $100. So instead, Ajmal turned to OpenStreetMap, a community-driven maps database.

“It worked out pretty well,” the Atlanta-based engineer says. “I found Open MTB, which had outdoor hiking and cycling maps with not just roads information, but also trails, short cuts and little known routes.”

Ajmal is among roughly half a million users who are eschewing proprietary maps information from GPS companies and instead going with crowdsourced versions, which they then load onto their GPS devices and smartphones.

The key to these map hacks is OpenStreetMap. Founded in 2004, OSM is to maps what Wikipedia is to encyclopedias. The site offers maps that can be edited, customized and loaded on to devices for free. Want to go whitewater rafting but need to know where the rapids are? There’s a map for that. Or to know all the interesting points along the river Nile? There’s a map for that. And it’s all based on the OpenStreetMap data.

“The value is that it is richer map with more up-to-date information because anyone can fix things,” says Steve Coast,  founder of OpenStreetMap. “Users get access to the underlying data and not just a picture of the maps.”

Consumer map data is currently a duopoly split between two mapping providers: Nokia’s Navteq and TomTom’s Tele Atlas. The two provide the mapping data that powers almost all commercial map applications and devices. But maps from these providers are extremely restrictive in how they can be used. Want a map of the best hiking trails in the country or a walking tour of Rome? Traditional GPS services can’t offer that. For adventurous geeks that calls for a DIY fix.

“OSM maps are a little new on the scene,” says Rich Owings, who runs the GPStracklog.com website and is the author of the book GPS Mapping. “Most people in the U.S. were not using them until recently, but now there are iPhone apps based on it.”

Getting OpenStreetMap is easier on some devices than others. In Garmin systems, it’s as simple as taking one of the available maps and dropping it into a folder on the device.

DIY Map Hacking

Contribute: A beginners guide to mapping in OpenStreetMap

Get it for Garmin: A guide to getting OpenStreetMap on your Garmin GPS system. Includes instruction on downloading existing maps and creating your own.

OpenStreetMap Project for TomTom: TomTom’s proprietary file format makes it difficult to get open maps on the device. But a wiki suggests a fix for OpenStreetMap and TomTom.

Other OpenStreetMap projects: A complete list of OSM projects by country and special projects like mapping the Nile are available.

“It’s really hard to mess up your GPS doing this,” says Owings. “And if you have questions you can always ask the community to help you out.” Owings says he loaded maps of Ecuador on his Garmin unit in about 30 minutes. “It’s not as clean of a map as one you can get from the Garmin store but they are pretty wonderful and have very good coverage.”

For TomTom systems, getting OpenStreetMap can be a more difficult process. TomTom uses a proprietary mapping format, says Coast. That means a tricky process of converting OpenStreetMap into a TomTom-compatible format.

OpenStreetMap has also been used to create iPhone apps such as MotionX, which is targeted at hikers, skiers and bikers; B.iCycle, a cyclometer that shows burned calories, trip distance and trails; and ATM@UK, which shows all ATM locations in Great Britain.

The OpenStreetMap project is a cartographer’s dream come true, says Randal Hale, who has a GIS consulting business. Hale has created custom maps for a few clients using OpenStreetMap and has put OSM-generated maps on his Garmin unit.

“With the professional mapping software, I have to purchase a license to use their version, which is expensive and I can’t use the data for analysis,” says Hale. “With OpenStreetMap, I download it, make cartographic edits and hopefully I have made it better for the next user.”

Meanwhile, traditional navigation companies are also reaching out to users for help on data. For instance, Nokia kicked off a pilot project at the University of California at Berkeley to collect traffic information through GPS-enabled cellphones. Users could download the software for free and use it to check on road conditions on their phones. At the same time, the software would report data about its users’ positions to a central database, enabling the researchers to assemble traffic data in real time. Google has also said it will add nationwide real-time traffic data to its maps by collecting anonymous location data from Google Maps users.

Still, community-created maps and navigation information remains a small niche, appealing only to “GPS techies” who are willing to take risks, says Owings. “There’s not a lot of public awareness because many people don’t even know they can do this with their Garmin or cellphone,” he says.

But if you are planning to go to Berlin later this year, take a look at the OpenStreetMap site. Germany is expected to become the first country in the site’s database to be fully mapped by contributors.

See Also:

Photo: Garmin GPS showing an OSM cycle map (Pete Reed/Flickr)


MacCores iTab Mini mod gives us a taste of the future

Given that September 9 is unlikely to finally reveal the fabled Apple tablet, this might be the nearest thing we have to it for a while yet — and it has one other advantage: it’s real. The iTab Mini is a mod project of the “more time and energy than sense” variety (our favorite kind) that melds together a 12.1-inch resistive touchscreen display with the remnants of an old PowerBook and a decidedly modern Core 2 Duo 2.16GHz, 2GB RAM, 160GB HDD spec. The outcome is, in a word, stunning. You can find a full run-through of the build at the read link.

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MacCores iTab Mini mod gives us a taste of the future originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Aug 2009 06:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DIY Eyewriter brings the joy of art, vandalism to those with ALS

You know, there are a slew of devices out there that’ll let you indulge in some graffiti action without sullying your hands (or breaking the law). Indeed, we’ve seen real time 3D paintings in galleries and something called the Wiispray, and now we have Eyewriter. An ongoing effort by a group of graffiti artists from around the world, this open source project has designed and built a low-cost eye-tracking system to enable people like Tony Quam (a.k.a. TEMPTONE), who is paralyzed, to create artwork moving only his eyes. But that ain’t all — the group also designed a “mobile broadcast unit,” which is essentially a low-powered, networked bicycle capable of projecting the business onto the side of a building (or street sign, or train). The kids responsible for this heartwarming example of “eye vandalism” promise that how-to materials, software, and the like will all be available soon, but in the meantime check a video of the thing in action after the break.

[Via Jailbreak]

Continue reading DIY Eyewriter brings the joy of art, vandalism to those with ALS

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DIY Eyewriter brings the joy of art, vandalism to those with ALS originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Aug 2009 13:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DIY cameraphone macro lens requires one old DVD player, zero tech savvy

You know, we wish we could say that there was more to this DIY cameraphone macro hack than tearing the lens out of an old DVD player and duct taping it over that of the cameraphone — but there really isn’t. And you know what? That’s OK. Some of the best mods are simple — so long as they work. And this one seems to work quite well, at least judging by the “before and after” shots after the break. And if you hit the read link, there’s even more where those came from. Now, if you’ll excuse us, we have an old optical disc drive to smash open.

[Via Make]

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DIY cameraphone macro lens requires one old DVD player, zero tech savvy originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Aug 2009 18:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TRKBRD surface touchpad puts your weekend DIY project to shame, probably

It may not seem like much from this video, but Malmö University graduate student Rob Nero has assembled himself a surface-based touchpad using all Arduino products and “simple Algebra.” Dubbed TRKBRD, the device uses hyper-fast flashing LEDs and IR sensors to calculate the XY coordinates of the shadow, and subsequently the finger itself. We haven’t seen it hooked up to a computer just yet, but we hope there’s more to come. Videos of the successful trial run and some preliminary testing and wiring after the break.

[Via Make: Online]

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TRKBRD surface touchpad puts your weekend DIY project to shame, probably originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 23 Aug 2009 15:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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