Rip up Your Gadgets, Create New Sounds at Bent Fest 2009

Drbleep

Looking for that perfect sound? You can literally get an instrument to bend to your creative will.

Bent Festival, a hardware hacking festival, is showing music-loving geeks how to do just that this week in New York City. The event revolves around the art of tearing apart electronic gadgets and bending their circuits to create new musical instruments. In addition to teaching D.I.Y. workshops on circuit bending, Bent is hosting a series of art installations and music concerts featuring various bent-circuit artists.

Circuit bending may sound intimidating, but the event is designed for anyone, said Mike Rosenthal, managing director of The Tank, a nonprofit theater that puts on the event.

"We get people off the street who have never had anything to do with electronic music before, and within a few minutes kids as young as 5 or 6 are ripping apart their toys and creating amazing new musical instruments," Rosenthal said in a previous Wired interview.

The event starts today and ends April 18. Individual night tickets are $10; a three-night ticket costs $25. For a full schedule, visit the Bent Festival page

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(Thanks, Jenn!)

Photo courtesy of The Tank

All Sound Finally Working on Wind Hackintosh

Hackintosh5

The MSI Wind flavored Hackintosh has come one step closer to working like a real Mac — without the build quality and the price-tag, of course.

The biggest problem with getting OS X to run on third party hardware is drivers — the exact same trouble you have with a Windows machine, in fact. There’s a reason that Macs “just work” — it’s because Apple controls hardware and software and so can make sure everything plays nice.

So far, drivers have been found, hacked or written for most of the Wind hardware. The webcam works, Wi-Fi works, as does ethernet. You can even tweak the function keys to act as they do on the Mac, controlling volume and iTunes directly.

The last hurdle has been sound. The mic, both built in and the line-in jack, have remained resolutely dead, and the only way to get the sound out of anywhere except the tinny internal speakers was with a clunky workaround.

Now, the VoodooProjects team has released a version of its driver that makes everything work. The speakers even switch off automatically when you plug in the headphones. Or, to be strictly accurate, it should make everything work. I gat nothing, but my system is pretty highly hacked so anything could be interfering. Others over at the MSI Wind forums have had more luck and report a clean bill of health. If you have a Wind hackintosh, trying this can’t hurt — just remember to back up the original AppleHDA.kext in case things go wrong. Full instructions are included in the forum post. Good luck!

UPDATE: After more tinkering, I have the headphone jack working, complete with auto switching when I plug it in. I deleted the Azalia kernel extensions from the extensions folder and rebooted. If you don’t understand what I just said, you shouldn’t be digging around in that folder. The mic jack and built-in mic are still dead, although at least they now show up in the "input" section of the Sound System Preference.

Update: VoodooHDA 0.2.2 beta posted [MSI Wind Forums]

VoodooHDA 0.2.2 [VoodooProjects Forum]

Project page [Google Code]

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Modder Turns Computer Into Awesome WALL-E Bot

Walle

Cut from metal sheets, this computer case modded into a WALL-E robot (above) is one of the most bad ass gadget mods we’ve ever seen. A Russian hobbyist spent 18 days cutting and detailing each part of the lovable Pixar hero; he photographs the entire process step-by-step.

Perhaps one day we’ll see a Mac modded into an Eve?

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Photo: Casemods.ru

Steam-Powered iPod Charger

Take a look at the video and consider that this might, depending upon where you live, be the way that your iPod gets charged. Sure, you might not be hooking the USB port directly to a steam-powered turbine, but down at your local power station, the folks may be using a somewhat larger turbine to provide your electricity.

The engine is a Jensen #75, from the family business Jensen Steam Engines, and the maker TWDunbar hooked this up to technic Lego via a rubber-band to generate electricity. The power then goes through a small circuit to turn it into a smooth, USB-friendly 5v DC.

It’s incredibly impractical, especially as this model of engine runs on purpose-made dry-fuel tablets. That doesn’t mean that it isn’t amazing, though, and you could make your own — if you want to spend $206 plus the cost of Lego and circuitry on an iPod charger, that is.

Steam 1 [YouTube]

Product page [Jensen]

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.

Ben Heck Goes Back to the 1980s with Commodore 64 Laptop

Hecken64

Ben Heck (aka Benjamin J Heckendorn aka The Hackendorn) has topped himself, again, and we don’t mean that in the suicidal sense. His latest project is a Commodore 64 laptop.

After endless procrastination, Ben finally got started and completed the project in an astonishingly short week and a half. Inside the rather slick and beautifully retro box is an original C64 motherboard, a Gamecube power supply and a piece of hardware called a 1541-III, which tricks the C64 into seeing an SD card as a floppy drive.

You really need to check the video (below) to see the machine in action (despite the SD cards, the game load times are still tortuously long). The clip reminds us of something else, too — how the hell did we ever manage to use those awful Atari joysticks? I hated them the first time round, before my teenage years brought on incurable RSI.

Commodore 64 Original Hardware Laptop [Ben Heck]

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WiiSpray: Virtual Indoor Graffiti


This is what happens when Nintendo meets the street. Wiispray is a simple mixture of a Wii and Flash — simply shake until the virtual ball has done its mixing and start spraying some electronic graffiti.

Details are thin, but we know that the WiiSpray 2nd edition is a remix of the original 2007 project by Martin Lihs and Frank Matuse of the Bauhaus Universität in Weimar. It looks like the Wiimote itself has a modified control so you can exhaust your finger by pressing down the top of a virtual spray-can, but the coolest part, at least from this chair, is the virtual stencil for making your own instant Banksies. This looks like fantastic fun.

WiiSpray Teaser of Final Presentation [Wiispray via  ]

Ingenious Cord-Winder Fashioned From Business Card

1hdc_cardhack_clogger

Design blog Core77 put out a call for Business Card Hacks in its monthly "1 Hour Design Challenge". Only a few days later and back came this amazing piece of origami geekery, a simple earbud winder, complete with pocket in which to tuck the bud parts themselves. The whole thing is held together by the wound headphone cord.

Finally, another use for business cards! Up until now, the only thing they could be used for was to temporarily fix a wobbly restaurant table — the business card is almost the perfect tool for this. Of course, winding any kind of electrical cord is a bad idea, causing broken internal wires and fraying. That won’t stop the neat-freaks obsessively wrapping cables, though. With this hack, at least they can save the cash on pre-made winders and use it to buy some replacement ‘buds.

‘Inside Job’ Free iPhone Earbud Winder [Core77]

Business Card Submission Forum [Core77]

Power Glove granted infinitely more power, bluetooth, and accelerometer in honor of 20th birthday

This year marks the 20th anniversary of the Nintendo PowerGlove, and yes, birthday cakes are in order. To celebrate, game designer Matt Mechtley has augmented it with Bluetooth and accelerometer chips for a more modern take on the hand peripheral — think of it as a more assimilated version of the Wiimote-embedded glove we covered in 2006. If you’re interested in following in his footsteps, instructions are available at Instructables and in the video form after the break — jump to 10:50 if you want to see it in action both with a test program and a brief glimpse at virtual boxing.

Read – Product page
Read – Instructables How-to

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Raid the Kitchen to Build a DIY Ring Flash

Diyringflash

A ring flash can be a very useful piece of kit. The light is flat and even, and beloved of fashion and portrait photographers alike. The problem is that, like all photographic equipment, they cost a fortune. Even an adapter, essentially a light-bending tube with no electronics, will cost around $300.

So, why not make your own? That’s what Manzin of the Digital Photography School forums did, and the result is above. Essentially free (if you raid the kitchen), the adapter is made of two plastic bowls, one big and one small. The gap between them is filled with aluminum foil and the flash is fired in from the side. You won’t get the efficiency of a dedicated adapter — that foil will eat some of the light — but for a quick and dirty projects it’s perfect. Just make sure you don’t use mom’s favorite Tupperware.

How to Make a DIY Ring Flash [Digital Photography School]

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