Photo Hack: iPhone as Softbox

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What can’t the iPhone do? This latest hack, by the always excellent Strobist, presses the iPhone into service as a fill light for low-light shooting. You just fire up your flashlight app of choice and dangle the phone just out of frame: Instant, accented fill.

It turns out that the iPhone’s screen gives out light very close to daylight balance, and for lighting noobs it has the advantage over flash in that you can see just what effect you’re going to get before you trip the shutter. The Strobist also points us to a purpose made solution from Rosco called the LightPad, essentially a bright, flat LED panel designed for soft video lighting but also ideal for still shooting.

It’s not just for the amateur, either. Apparently Micheal Mann used a bunch of old laptop screen backlights to light the car interiors in the movie Collateral. These were velcroed to the walls and ceiling, taking up virtually no space, and the exterior street lighting was left to take care of itself. This is Hollywood using low-budget, indie techniques.

If any of you have tried any similar hacks, post the photos in the Gadget Lab Flickr pool and link in the comments.

Is That a Soft Box in Your Pocket or Are You Just Happy to See Me? [Strobist]
Photo: Strobist/Flickr

Neuros adds Wiimote support to the LINK

The Neuros LINK set-top was already plenty interesting when it was just a $300 riff on a storageless HTPC capable of full-screen Hulu and YouTube playback, but now that the company’s gone and added experimental Wiimote support, we might just be smitten. It’ll take some work to hook Ninty’s stick to your LINK, but once you do content is just an arm-flail away. Video after the break.

[Thanks, Joe]

Continue reading Neuros adds Wiimote support to the LINK

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Neuros adds Wiimote support to the LINK originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Jan 2009 07:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gadget Lab Video: USB Thumb Drive Hacking Disaster

Take the internals of old USB thumb drive, ask IT to dig out an obsolete floppy disk, throw in a pair of scissors and combine. What do you get? If you do it properly, you’ll have an easy to make novelty USB stick. If you follow the instructions in our how-to video, things might not go so well.

Palm Pre Android port already in progress

The Palm Pre won’t be out for several months yet, but that isn’t stopping a few clever hackers from working out how to boot Android onto the pebble-shaped slider. As it turns out, efforts to port Android to the OMAP 3 processor used in the Pre have been underway since July of last year, so tailoring the build to the Pre shouldn’t be too hard — the difficult parts will be gaining serial access to the bootloader to enable switching between OS’s and cramming both systems plus whatever apps and media you might have into the Pre’s fixed 8GB of storage, since there’s no microSD expansion. All problems we’re eager to see tackled just as soon as the Pre launches — doesn’t seem like it can happen soon enough, does it?

[Thanks, Chris]

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Palm Pre Android port already in progress originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Jan 2009 14:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dealzmodo Hack: Revitalize Your Windows Mobile Phone

For the legions of helpless Windows Mobile users, the Pre is just the latest in an endless, corrosive barrage of ego-draining next-gen phones. But living with Windows Mobile doesn’t have to be so bad.

Work rules, lame carriers, prohibitive contracts—whatever the reason you’re shacked up with a WinMo phone, you’ve been through the same experience. You toil with the layers of menus, hidden device settings, poor browsing and crashy, inconsistent performance. Surrounded by fancy, shiny phones with even fancier, shinier OSes, you’re even getting a bit jealous, and feel like you have a genuinely last-gen device. Well, as Windows Mobile enthusiasts (who are out there in droves) will tell you, it’s not that terrible. With the right apps you can get quite a lot of utility and—yes—enjoyment out of your aging phone.

For God’s sake, get a new browser
Internet Explorer Mobile, even in its latest incarnation, has rarely been described as “good.” In fact, it’s pretty much the complete opposite. No worries though—Windows Mobile, through third parties, has the broadest and most versatile collection of browsers of any of its competitors.

Opera Mini/Mobile: A Java-based browser, Opera Mini is a free download that will immediately give your phone a new lease on life. Fancy this: Now, with your phone, you can visit actual websites, rendered to a reasonable degree of accuracy! OH MY GOD!

There’s also Opera Mobile, a native app with a few more advanced features, which has recently shifted its emphasis to a relatively narrow set of touchscreen devices (mostly from HTC and Samsung), on which it performs as a reasonable counterpart to Safari Mobile or Chrome Mobile. It’s free when it’s in beta, but will cost you for long term use.

Both browsers Opera Mini routes content through Opera’s servers for optimization and compression, which can occasionally break formatting. Update: Opera Mobile runs independently of Opera’s servers, though there is noticeable compression performed—presumably locally—on some images.

Skyfire: This upstart company has produced a phenomenal browser, dedicated to bringing a full desktop browsing experience to Windows Mobile phones. This powerhouse app is now available to the public, and lives up to most of its claims.

Skyfire routes web content through its servers like Opera Mini does, but with a greater emphasis on exact page reproduction. For the end user, that means fully optimized streaming Flash video, which will allow you to watch everything from Hulu to Megaporn—all automatically transcoded into a lower, EDGE or 3G-appropriate bitrate. Skyfire works wonderfully on most WinMo phones, touchscreen or not, but its version for VGA-resolution phones needs better visuals.

TorchMobile Iris: This is another browser that claims to bring the “desktop experience” to your phone, and for the most part it does, assuming your phone has a touchscreen. It got its start on the LG Dare, where it performed relatively well. In short, this WebKit-based browser render quite well, but it’s not terribly fast and the navigation paradigm isn’t the most intuitive of the lot. But! It’s free and it’s not Mobile IE, and for this I am grateful.

Give your old phone a new look
This is where Windows Mobile feels the most out of date; its interface is a classic example of design by committee, only this time the committee was made up primarily of the visionaries responsible for Windows Bob, Windows ME, Windows Vista and possibly the Pontiac Aztec. The solution? Skin it.

PointUI: About a year ago, our own Jason Chen raved about PointUI, and not much has changed—it’s still fantastic. This layer, not unlike those designed by HTC, Samsung and Sony to mask WinMo, will provide pretty, finger-friendly navigation to a touchscreen Windows Mobile phone. It looks like the project is on temporary hiatus, but the app is still available here.

SPB Mobile Shell: This one isn’t free ($30, actually) but does provide a fairly complete conversion. It reaches deeper into layers of the interface than PointUI does, is a bit more friendly for QWERTY-based phones and offers a load of user skins.

ThrottleLauncher: HTC’s TouchFlo 3D is a wonderful Windows Mobile shell, but unfortunately can be difficult to port due to its 3D acceleration requirement. ThrottleLauncher is a TF3D replacement, which works on most Windows Mobile touchscreen phones. It looks like TF3D, and offers skins to look like Android, iPhone OS and others. There are a fair number of bugs present, but they’re tolerable.

Fill out your app list:
Most of those things that modern smartphones have—the swank maps, the messaging services, the productivity apps—you can have too. They may not be as polished, but they work very, very well.

Google Apps: Aside from plethora of mobile web apps offered by Google, there are a few native ones as well. Google Maps is a must-download, and provides almost all of the functionality of its iPhone/G1 brother, including GPS integration. Google Mail provides a nice, speedy interface for your Gmail account, offering relief from Windows Mobile’s occasionally frustrating mail app, and allowing for relatively easy switching between accounts.

Skype: Here’s an area where Windows Mobile generally trumps all others OSes—voice over IP. The native Skype app is lovely, functioning well over Wi-Fi and cellular data connections, provided your carrier allows the latter.

Palringo: Palringo is a multiprotocol IM app, which enables messaging on many networks at once in a single program. AIM, MSN, Yahoo, ICQ—they’re all there. Like any decent IM app it works with the WinMo notification system and runs in the background, so you can be constantly apprised of your new messages, just like those smug BlackBerry users. In fact, I think it’s fair to say that in the area of messaging, Windows Mobile shines. Similar, also good: Fring.

TCPMP Media Player: Its development has been discontinued, but the app is perfectly usable as is. What is it? It’s a barebones media player that’ll handle almost any codec, audio or video, that you throw at it. In other words, you can encode video for mobile consumption however you like, something that can’t be said of most other OSes (cough*Apple*cough).

Pocket Scrobbler: An unofficial client for the fantastic Last.fm internet radio/social network service, this app will handily stream endless, personally catered internet radio over a cellular data connection or Wi-Fi. Windows Mobile actually has a distinct advantage with this type of programs: the ability to run apps in the background!

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.

DIY Magsafe Connector for Any Notebook

Magsafehack

Ask anyone with kids what is the best part of the MacBook range and they’ll tell you the Magsafe connector. Not only is it easy to pop in – the magnet snaps the plug right into place – but marauding rugrats can shoot by, trip on the wire and the computer stays safely, and smugly, sat on the desk.

It’s not a new idea – deep fat fryers have been using the same tech for a while – but it hasn’t yet appeared on other notebooks. Now, with some help from Instructables, you can roll your own for around $30:

It’s effective, cool-looking, and breaks away cleanly when kicked.

We’d certainly disagree with the second point: it’s anything but cool -looking, but a Magsafe is so practical we don’t care. This would be an especially good mod for a netbook, a computer that is often used in unpredictable situations. The hack here, by Breath, was forced upon a Thinkpad.

The gist is that you add washers to the collar of the power plug and then glue on magnets, which then become the ground connection. Then, a washer is stuck to the outside of the socket on the computer and connected to the internal ground.

Next, you extend the pin inside the plug with a spring loaded aluminum tube so that it will contact the internal pin. That’s it. Fugly but quick, easy and cheap. I’d try this on my MSI Wind if I wasn’t planning on selling that piece of junk.

ThinkSafe: A Magnetic Power Connector for Thinkpads [Instructables via MSI Wind Forums]





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PSP-3000 finally screams ‘Hello World,’ homebrew to assuredly follow

The notoriously-difficult PSP-3000 model (also known as PSP Brite) has finally been hacked, this time without the need for a downgrader tool. MaTiAz’s “The Sparta!!!” exploit was allegedly discovered after overwriting the player’s name in a GripShift save file with “this is spartaaaaa…” — with 57 a’s tacked onto the end — and is now available for download along with a new SDK. It’s said to work with PSP firmware versions 1.52 through the current 5.02. The Hello World proof of concept video is after the break. Welcome to the homebrew community, Brite: we’ve been expecting you.

[Via DCEmu]

Continue reading PSP-3000 finally screams ‘Hello World,’ homebrew to assuredly follow

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PSP-3000 finally screams ‘Hello World,’ homebrew to assuredly follow originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 05 Jan 2009 22:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dealzmodo Hack: Outfit Your Camera Like a Pro (Hobo)

Whether your camera is brand new or an aging holdover, you want to accessorize it, but you don’t want to pay. By now, you know the Dealzmodo Hack drill: Paying is for suckers.

For decades, photographers have engineered little tricks to get the most out of their cameras, and most of them have carried just fine over the digital divide. Here are a few, with some newer additions collected by our friends at Lifehacker.

Build your own stabilizer out of string
Shooting long exposures without something to prop your camera on is a pain in the ass, not to mention a blurry mess. So is carrying a tripod. This video shows how to build a pretty effective foot-looping camera stabilizer out of some string, a bolt and a washer. The results are surprisingly good.

Build your own L-bracket, for serious stability, vertical mounting
If you’re doing portrait photography, or have a dumpy old tripod that can’t accommodate vertically oriented cameras, you can build a sturdy L-bracket for about $30. It’s a bit more involved than the piece-o-string stabilizer, but it’s also a lot better, and much cheaper than something you’d pick up at Wolf.

The “David Pogue Special”: Use a lamp as a tripod
To round out the camera-steadying tools, here’s what I call the David Pogue Special, and it’s great: Many lampshade mounts share a diameter and thread size with the tripod mount screw on the bottom of your camcorder, point-and-shoot or DSLR, providing quick and dirty stabilization in a bind.

Scrounge up household flash diffusers
Shooting with flash indoors is often necessary, but can wash out your subjects, making them look sheet-white, greasy and demon-eyed. With a diffuser, the light is softened and the photos are dramatically improved. Commercial flash hoods and diffusers cost money, but aren’t much more effective than what you can make yourself. A coffee filter held in front of a flash, a translucent film canister with a notch cut into it, a simple piece of A4 paper or even a piece of matte Scotch tape over the flash lens will measurably improve your drunk party photography.

Calibrate color temperature with free flooring samples
Shooting a piece of paper, gray notecard or painted wall can give you OK white balance calibration, but this guy has a better idea: snag some free floor laminate samples and built a proper calibration board.

Make flash deflection umbrellas from actual umbrellas
If you really want to go pro-hobo, you can repurpose old umbrellas into flash-directing photography umbrellas. After all, there are always plenty lying around. Here’s how you do it. If you’re feeling lazy, you can even get away with just an old sheet and some tape.

Build still-life photography studio for free(ish)
Ever wonder how that creepy old photographer got such a soft, vivid, dreamy picture of you and your prom date all those years ago? This is how. The project doesn’t call for much more than large pieces of paper and tape—relying on indirect sunlight for the adequate lighting—but the results are impressive. It is just a small-scale testbed though, so you’ll be limited to shooting Lego models, action figures and the like, but what else were you going to shoot anyway?

Snap magazine-style portraits, beautiful macros with a homemade ringlight
Flickr user jedrek has written out a detailed how-to guide for converting your external flash into a ringlighting rig, mostly using kitchen wares. If you’ve never heard of ringlighting, have a look at this. The technique is usually reserved for professional photographers, because real ringflashes are comically expensive. This one costs a few bucks.

Foam-fit an old bag to hold your gear
If you’re packing a DSLR with lenses and accessories, carrying a full-fledged camera bag is usually ideal, but they’re expensive and tend to draw attention to your cargo. With some foam, cardboard and a ratty old military-surplus bag, you can put together a stylish, stealthy and highly-functional camera bag that won’t make you feel like a snap-happy father of four.

Top image of proto-pro-photo-hobo Miroslav Tichy.

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.

WeeP5 makes other Wiimote gun mods cry home to their mamas

If your Wiimote-gun hybrid lacks a little bit of that “I would shut down an airport having this in my carry-on luggage” panache, we suggest you check out WeeP5, a toy MP5 chock-full of motion control. To be honest, we’re most enamored by the setup of the above picture, as the modded armament rests lovingly over the heads of a young couple, against a picture of men in togas, and just under a VHS copy of The Lost World in German — it’s just so beautiful. In case you’re wondering: B button is the trigger, A button is under the foregrip, 1 and 2 are on opposite sides near the front, the D-pad and Wii remote are jutting out of the left side, and the +, -, and home buttons are on the top just above the ammo clip. Hit up the read link for full DIY instructions.

[Via Hack a Day]

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WeeP5 makes other Wiimote gun mods cry home to their mamas originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Dec 2008 19:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CyberNotes: Free RapidShare Premium Accounts

This article was written on July 04, 2006 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Time Saving Tuesday
 

Broadband Internet access is becoming standard in homes around the world. With fast Internet access comes file sharing, and that is where RapidShare comes in. RapidShare lets people upload files to their servers and they will host the files at no cost. This is a great solution but some people get annoyed with the limitations RapidShare places on free accounts. If you do not have a Premium RapidShare account then you will have to wait 30 seconds before you can download each file and you are limited to downloading just 30MB/hour.

So how do you get a Premium RapidShare account? You can purchase it for about $12.60 each month or you can watch for free accounts that they giveaway. They periodically give 2-day Premium accounts out on a first-come first-serve basis. You can prevent these accounts from expiring by uploading files and getting people to download the files.

Rapidshare often posts 10’s of thousands free accounts at a time and let people come and get them. There is plenty of software available if you want to get notified of free accounts being posted or you can constantly check their Free Account site. Here is two different pieces of software that will notify you when to get a free account:

Option #1: RapidShare Free Account Notifier

  • Checks availability of free Premium RapidShare Accounts
  • Manual Check
  • Programmable timer
  • Starts with Windows
  • Runs in system tray
  • Popups balloon/plays sound/opens RS page when there are free accounts
  • Proxy support
  • Extreme fast (uses GZIP)



Option #2: RapidCheck

  • Checks availability of free Premium RapidShare Accounts
  • Manual Check
  • Customizable interval
  • Popups balloon and plays a sound when there are free accounts
  • Proxy support
  • Customizable sounds

As you can see both pieces of software are very similar. It doesn’t really matter which one you choose because they will both get you the same result: a free Premium RapidShare account. It is always nice to have a watchful eye doing the checking for us!

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