Ugly Duckling Lamp Makes Swan-Necked Lights from Junk

Take some PVC pipe and connectors, an stack of old soda bottles and a few bits from the shelves of the hardware store electrical department and what do you have? That’s right: The Ugly Duckling Lamp, a DIY light-stand that transcends its cast-off componentry to make a beautiful swan-necked fixture.

The lights, conceived by Hong Kong-based designer Kamric To, are even more ingenious one you get up close. The shades, for example, are chopped-down PET bottles (painted or not), but with the lids perforated to slip over the lightbulb-holder, the “shade” itself can screw on and off, exactly like the threaded locking-ring on a store-bought fixture. My favorite part, though, is the power-switch (of course). Tucked into a T-section on the end of the lamp’s base, the power-switch is held snugly in one side of the T, while the power-cable trails from the other. Neat.

This looks like the ultimate student project, giving you Ikea-like results at even lower prices (although if you don’t visit the Swedish superstore, you’ll miss out on the cheap hotdogs and meatballs, themselves essential student fare).

Kamric To Ugly Duckling [Design Boom]

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Lego Pens Done Write

Derek Seiple, maker of the $1,300 Lego chess set, is back. This time he has turned his considerable brickmanship to the low-tech pen, making these round-barreled biros from cylindrical Legos.

Available in either multicolored stripes or a single color, the chunky pens also come with a little plastic cap to cover the nib, although it looks to be about as safe and effective as those tip-covering prophylactics nobody uses anymore. Sure, you could put together your own, but why bother when Derek has already done the hard work of separating out all the round pieces?

One tip: don’t chew on these pens as enthusiastically as you would a regular pen. Not unless you’re with a friend who is happy to perform the Heimlich Maneuver when a plastic brick dislocates itself from the pen-end, gets sucked down toward your gullet and lodges in your throat. $13.

Lego Pen product page [Etsy via Bits and Pieces Thanks, Derek!]

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Hand-Sharpened Pencils, Just $15

David Reese, or Artisanal Pencil Sharpening in New York, New York, will send you a brand new, hand-sharpened pencil for $12. Inside the box you’ll also find the shavings, bagged and tagged for posterity, along with a “signed and dated certificate authenticating that it is now a dangerous object.”

Dumb? Expensive? Elitist? Maybe, but the one thing it isn’t is a joke. David protests this point perhaps a little too much on the APS site, but if anyone knows a joke, it’s him: Reese used to be a political cartoonist.

You can send your own blunt and chewed-off stick to be freshened up, but if you’re going to spend $15, why not get a new pencil? David prefers a #2 pencil, and will whittle it to a fine-point with either a box cutter or – more recently – a fancy German-made “single-blade hand-sharpener.”

Could you do this yourself? Sure. And you probably should hand-sharpen your pencils with a knife, the way a real artist would. A mechanical sharpener may give a nice conical point, but the thin tip will break in seconds. Better to get a nice thick lead held in a chunky, hand-carved piece of wood: it’ll last a lot longer.

David’s pencils are probably best given as gifts, and if you’re feeling really flush, you can opt for the $50 package which includes the 12½ x 18-inch “Man Vs. Machine” print seen above. Awesome.

Hand Sharpened Pencils [Artisanal Pencil Sharpening via the Guardian]

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How Microsoft Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Open Kinect

While Apple plays cat-and-mouse games with iPhone jailbreakers, Microsoft is playing a far friendlier game with Xbox Kinect hackers.

Two Microsoft employees went on the radio Friday and said nobody was going to get in trouble for making open source drivers for Xbox Kinect. In fact, they said, Microsoft was “inspired” by how fans and hobbyists were adapting its camera.

Ira Flatow interviewed Microsoft’s Shannon Loftis and Alex Kipman, along with NYU prof Katherine Isbister, about the technology behind Kinect along for NPR’s Science Friday. A listener asked on Twitter about the Adafruit-led effort to reverse-engineer and create open source drivers for the device. That led to this exchange:

Ms. Loftis: As an experienced creator, I’m very excited to see that people are so inspired that it was less than a week after the Kinect came out before they had started creating and thinking about what they could do.

Flatow: So no one is going to get in trouble?

Mr. Kipman: Nope. Absolutely not.

Ms. Loftis: No.

Flatow: You heard it right from the mouth of Microsoft.

This is a reversal for Microsoft. Just two weeks, ago, a Microsoft representative told CNET that “Microsoft does not condone the modification of its products” and that the company would “work closely with law enforcement and product-safety groups to keep Kinect tamper-resistant.”

That prompted electronics hobby-supply company Adafruit to increase its bounty for open source drivers from $1,000 to $3,000 and add a $2,000 donation to the Electronic Frontier Foundation, just in case Microsoft decided to start suing the pants off of everybody, after all.

Why the turnaround? Clearly, somebody realized that amateur programmers using the Kinect for cool, creative projects was great advertising for Microsoft, while marching in with jackboots and cease-and-desist orders wasn’t. But it also gave Microsoft the ability to clarify precisely how the Kinect had and hadn’t been “hacked.”

As Kipman notes in the NPR interview, “Kinect was not actually hacked,” at least in the sense that an insecure website, database or transmission might be hacked:

Hacking would mean that someone got to our algorithms that sit on the side of the Xbox and was able to actually use them, which hasn’t happened. Or it means that you put a device between the sensor and the Xbox for means of cheating, which also has not happened. That’s what we call hacking, and that’s why we have put a ton of work and effort to make sure it doesn’t actually occur.

According to Kipman, the USB output that transmits the color, depth, motion and audio detected by the Kinect was left open “by design.” That’s an artful way to say that Microsoft’s security concerns were — and are — elsewhere: Hackers tampering with the cameras to intercept the stream to spy on users, going up the stack to the console or network.

If Kinect is seen as a fun, versatile device for both casual gamers and serious hobbyists, that’s great for Microsoft. If Kinect’s whole-room camera, robust facial-recognition software, and portal for video and audio chat are seen as insecure, it’s a nightmare.

That’s why Microsoft came out with a hard-line initial response. Once the company saw how the open source drivers were being used, and what they could and couldn’t do, it was easier to officially soften its stance.

Photo credit: Yakpimp/Creative Commons

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You Will Never Lose with the Jenga Pistol

I’m a terrible Jenga player. It’s not that I’m bad at it – quite the contrary: I usually win – it’s that I’m a really, really annoying opponent. Which is why I’m so impressed by this Jenga pistol, a spring-loaded gun which will smack the wooden blocks so hard the pile left behind won’t even notice that they’ve gone.

Usually I line up a pencil and give it a whack with something heavy (a hammer is good, but a shoe will do) to achieve a similar effect. But not even I can come close to the awesome power of Matthias Wandel’s gun, which is so powerful and precise that it can shoot a single central block from the tower so fast that the entire stack above just drops nonchalantly down.

The rubber-band powered gun fires a pin into the blocks when you trip the trigger, transferring a whole lot of momentum into the little piece of wood. It’s like jerking a tablecloth off the table, only instead of creating a perfect, cloth-free table-setting, you send a dangerously sharp-edged wooden brick towards the faces and eyes of bystanders.

Matthias is currently on a simplified version three, which does away with the rubber-band retaining pulley of earlier versions. Full instructions are available for $6. I’m looking forward to adding to my Jenga arsenal. Sure, it might be cheating, but you’re looking at the person who once played short putts by lying down and cueing up the wrong end of the club, pool-style. It was surprisingly effective, until I got thrown out of the game.

Jenga pistol, version 3 [Matthias Wandel via Oh Gizmo]

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Control a 3-D–Mapping Robot With Gestures? Just Add Kinect

Philipp Robbel, a student at MIT’s Personal Robotics Group, has used a hacked Xbox Kinect camera and an iRobot Create kit to make a Roomba-esque KinectBot that can recognize human beings and respond to their gestural commands.

In an interview with SingularityHub, Robbel discussed how KinectBot grew out of his research in robots that could locate trapped or missing people in a disaster. The Kinect’s ability to map terrain in 3-D and to recognize and respond to human gestures could eventually be teamed up with aerial drones and rapid-response teams to launch rescue operations.

This video shows how KinectBot was assembled and what it can do.

Bear in mind, this is just what Robbel calls a “weekend hacking project.” Imagine what Microsoft’s Robotics team — who’ve had a lot longer to play with the tech behind Kinect than the rest of us — might be cooking up in their labs.

Still a $150 off-the-shelf sensor like Kinect opens up the option box for everybody. Add the right mix of boops and beeps, a computer-hacking interface, jet packs and the ability to serve drinks and fix starships, and we’re just a few iterations away from a full-fledged R2-D2 unit. We’re living in the future.

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Hacker Builds Floating Jedi-Training Remote Droid

Scofflaw YouTuber and opportunistic hardware hacker Troopertrent has made his own gravity-defying spaceball. To be precise, he made a floating replica of the Jedi Training Remote from Star Wars, the one that fires laser bolts for Luke to intercept when first aboard the Millennium Falcon.

The model, as you can see in the screen-grab above*, is an almost perfect replica of the remote, although a little smaller, and a little less hostile. How is it done? Magnets. Troopertrent took one of those tacky floating-ball executive toys in which a globe is suspended, dangling free in a magnetic field. Taking care not to add too much weight, he grafted on various plastic nodules and nubbins, gave the thing a lick of paint and re-floated it.

As the esteemed tech writer and beloved internet personality Andy Ihnatko put it when he posted this on Twitter, “OK, somebody at Lucasfilm Licensing is DEFinitely getting fired for not thinking of this 1st,” adding a heartfelt “wantwantwant”, something with which I can only agree. So c’mon, Lucasfilm: you let the amazing Tauntaun sleeping bag come to life. Now do it with this amazing floating ball.

Real hovering Star Wars Jedi Lightsaber training remote [YouTube]

*I added the screen-grab as the video contains both Star Wars footage and a Beastie Boys track, and therefore may be pulled any minute.

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Set Perfect White-Balance With Starbucks Coffee-Cup Lid

How do you achieve the correct white-balance for your photos? Do you leave the camera on auto, like me, and fix things up later with RAW processing software if you need to? Or do you use the $70 Expodisc, a painstakingly calibrated piece of white plastic which fits over the lens and smushes together all the light in a scene into one big circle, ready to be processed by your SLR?

If you answer was “$70!? What the hell are you talking about now, Sorrel?” then I have the perfect hack for you. The Emergency Expodisc, a light-measuring device that consists of nothing more than the lid of a Starbucks coffee-cup.

Steve Bennett’s “invention” is simple. Grab an unused lid from any coffee-shop, pop it on the front of the lens, focus to infinity and take a custom white-balance reading. You should now have a setting either perfect for the scene (single light-source) or a good compromise (different sources).

And before the Expodisc folks come running, we know that a plastic coffee-cup lid isn’t going to be a perfect neutral white, but if you’re shooting JPEGs, it sure beats the hell out of the glowing red pictures you get when shooting indoors.

Emergency Expodisc [Steve Bennett / Flickr via DIY Photography]

Real Expodisc [Expo Imaging]

Photo: Steve Bennett


Contest: Make a Toy-Repair Manual and Win a Tool Kit


Instead of buying the kids in your life some cheap plastic junk this holiday, why not make them something awesome?

Better yet, take a classic toy, fix it up, and give it a bad-ass custom paint job. What six-year-old wouldn’t want a working Easy-Bake oven with orange flames and racing stripes? Or a pink, Barbie-themed Tonka truck? Beats the pants off this all-plastic Squinkies Cupcake Surprize Bake Shop that doesn’t actually bake anything.

To help you refurbish those old toys, open-source gadget manual site iFixit is recruiting people to create toy repair manuals. And they’re doing it with a contest. Write a toy-repair manual, and you could win a prize from iFixit.

It’s similar to the teardown contest iFixit and Gadget Lab cosponsored last year. And like last year’s contest, Gadget Lab staff will help judge the winners of this contest.

The contest begins today and runs through December 12.

Ifixit’s goal is to build a useful repair manual for each of 40 classic toys, from the Atari 2600 and Barbie doll to the View-Master and yo-yo. But if you have another toy you’d like to write up, go for it.

The prizes include a few cool tool kits for cracking open and fixing consumer electronics, and they’ll be awarded to the three individuals who contribute the most to the toy repair manual overall.

Here are the rules in summary:

  • Take apart a toy.
  • Post photos of the repair process using iFixit’s guide editor.
  • Add the tag ‘fixatoy’ to your guide.
  • The teardowns will be judged by the entire iFixit staff (during our annual Christmas party), with some help from Gadget Lab staff.
  • Contest ends Sunday, December 11 at 11:59 p.m. Pacific time.

Check these links for more information:

iFixit Toy Repair Manual Contest Announcement

How to write a repair guide on iFixit

Photo courtesy iFixit


Kinect Running on Multiple Platforms, Looking Cool

Spurred on by cash prizes, cool applications and the glory of getting code to work, Xbox Kinect hackers have opened up the camera and have it running on full throttle. Here’s a short list of what’s been done in just one week.

Pretty cool, if you’re into this sort of thing. Me, I’m holding out for someone to beat Matt Cutts’s second challenge to hackers:

What if you move the Kinect around or mount it to something that moves? The Kinect has an accelerometer plus depth sensing plus video. That might be enough to reconstruct the position and pose of the Kinect as you move it around. As a side benefit, you might end up reconstructing a 3D model of your surroundings as a byproduct.

To paraphrase The Social Network, Kinect on a MacBook just isn’t that cool. You know what’s cool?

Kinect on a robot. Controlled by a junior high student. That’s what this is about.

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