The Acorn A7000+ portable mod is what your MacBook looks like in an alternate universe

Aside from its attempted rebirth as a laptop manufacturer back in 2006, we haven’t heard all that much from Acorn Computers in the past, oh, two decades or so. And if you’re not a UK native, there’s a pretty good chance that you didn’t hear all that much about the “British Apple” before then either. But while the company’s more official attempt to go portable was nothing to write home about, its late-period A7000+ desktop has now seen a successful second life at the hands of a British modder as the A7KP. The Acorn’s innards have been stuffed into a five pound (relatively) portable setup, featuring a 10.4-inch LCD, 4GB of flash memory, and a battery that offers up three hours of RISC OS-based fun. It’s enough to make you wonder how you ever played Lemmings on anything else.

The Acorn A7000+ portable mod is what your MacBook looks like in an alternate universe originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Jun 2011 03:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Technabob  |  sourceSam’s Modifications  | Email this | Comments

Sputnik 0667 PC mod: perfect for your early 1900s living room

Do ya hate that slick, aluminum unibody design that you just shelled out a thousand plus smackers for? Looking for something that just screams alt-tech, not high-tech? Then please, feast your steampunky eyes on this beauty of a PC mod that’ll fit perfectly alongside your Memaw’s china closet. Crafted by Swedish art student Love Hulten, this wood-grained cabinet of wonders takes its design cues from “the 20th century and old hi-fi.” Hiding under that well-varnished hood is a Gigabyte GA-H55N-USB3 Mini-ITX motherboard with a 3.2GHz Core i3 500 processor, 4GB of RAM, a 500GB HDD and a GeForce GTX 460 GPU and a log-fire power supply. Love’s hybrid commode is up for sale, but you’ll have to contact the artist himself to get pricing. Check the sources below for a few more shots, as well as a bit of inspiration from the last millennium.

Sputnik 0667 PC mod: perfect for your early 1900s living room originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Jun 2011 13:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Geeky Gadgets  |  sourceSweClockers, Love Hulten  | Email this | Comments

Rotobot mice: the best use of typewriter keys since the typewriter

These fully-functional wireless Rotobot mice from designer Aaron Ristau will make you look seriously cultivated when people drop by your apartment. In our eyes, that means they officially join the esteemed ranks of typewriter-themed Works of Art, but unfortunately it also means they cost $180 — which might be hard to stomach when you realize that each one is just a non-ergonomically modded $25 Logitech M305. Hey-ho, everybody needs at least one peripheral to be their geeky equivalent to good cutlery. And no, that CSR Elite in the cupboard doesn’t count.

Rotobot mice: the best use of typewriter keys since the typewriter originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Jun 2011 17:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gizmodo  |  sourceAaron Ristau  | Email this | Comments

Datamancer Steampunk Laptop now available for anachronistic pre-order

Datamancer Steampunk Laptop

We really hope you’ve haven’t grown tired of Steampunk over the years. Over-saturated? Passé? Perhaps, but there’s still something undeniably alluring about the blend of Victorian-era mechanics and modern technology. That’s why, even three years after we first caught a glimpse of it, we’re pretty psyched to hear that Datamancer’s Steampunk Laptop is actually being made available for purchase. Detailed specs haven’t been offered, we only know that it will feature “cutting-edge internal components,” but we can tell you there are a bevy of customization options. You can choose everything from the wood stain color, to keyboard fonts, to etched brass lids or clockwork gears like the original design (except these will tick and turn). You can pre-order one now (at the source link) for $5,500 — a healthy discount over the estimated price once production on these one-of-a-kind machines kicks in to gear ($7,500+). Now we just have to decide between food and rent, or a work of PC art.

Datamancer Steampunk Laptop now available for anachronistic pre-order originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Jun 2011 17:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink CrunchGear  |  sourceDatamancer  | Email this | Comments

Content Aware Image Resizing is the Future!

This article was written on August 23, 2007 by CyberNet.

Content Aware Image Scaling

We all resize images quite frequently, but more times than not the result is not what we want. Either the image doesn’t scale correctly, or we are forced to crop off content that we would otherwise want to have. A solution for this problem might be just around the corner.

Content aware image resizing will more than likely be a common occurrence in the future. It uses a seam carving technique to eliminate the less important portions of an image, thereby leaving only what people want to see. The two images above are a good example of how this works. The one on the left is the original, and it shows two red lines indicating the next two "seams" that have been marked to be stretched or removed. The image on the right is the result: wider than the original, but only half the height. It was most of the water that was removed, which is exactly what most people would want to happen.

The creators of the system, Ariel Shamir and Shai Avidan, have thought a lot of things through, and they left me drooling. If there is a portion of the image that is marked to be removed, you can reverse that action and tell the software to preserve that area (useful for preserving faces). If there is a portion that you want removed first, you can do that as well which makes removing people out of images easier than ever!

Go ahead and watch this video to see what I’m talking about. The end is one of the most exciting parts, and I’m sure you’ll be wanting to get your hands on this after you see it:

As of right now this is a research project that will hopefully get released. There’s no download available, and it’s hard to say how good this really is without having tried it myself. After all, different images are going to give you different results. It would be interesting, however, to see browsers implement this sort of thing when scaling images to fit on the screen.

Sources: Hackszine, Digg, OhGizmo!, and Ghacks

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Newest Kinect hack: a grocery cart that loyally follows disabled shoppers (video)

Microsoft’s Kinect is the gift that keeps on giving for hackers, spawning everything from glasses-free teleconferencing to Tesla coil manipulation to uh, well, Android dance parties. But Luis de Matos’s wi-Go project is one of the most socially conscious we’ve seen: it adds a laptop and (despite its name) a Kinect to a shopping cart, enabling the cart to follow a wheelchair user. Improving on the B.O.S.S. bot we saw a half-decade ago, the wi-Go could allow anyone — including the disabled or elderly — to shop independently, regardless of physical capability. De Matos doesn’t offer many technical details, but see the video above for a before-and-after demonstration.

Newest Kinect hack: a grocery cart that loyally follows disabled shoppers (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 05 Jun 2011 02:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Kinect Hacks  |  sourceLuis de Matos (Vimeo)  | Email this | Comments

DIY iPad music breakout gives pro-grade stage presence, mixes circuitry with art (video)

If you’re thinking this iPad audio breakout dock looks remarkably good considering its DIY origins, then you should know it wasn’t put together by any old screwball with a soldering iron. Nope, this was made by Qubais “Reed” Ghazala, a very particular old screwball who’s been blurring the lines between circuitry, music and art since the Summer of Love (that’s 1967 on a normal calendar). His latest invention is all about getting pro-grade sound connections into and out of an iPad 2 — much like an Alesis dock or Akai SynthStation, but with that special “I made this” charm and minimal price tag. Key ingredients include a Macally aluminium iPad stand and a 30-pin PodBreakout board. Hit the video after the break to get further instructions and hear Ghazala’s “bottomless well of chance music” — both come at your own risk.

Continue reading DIY iPad music breakout gives pro-grade stage presence, mixes circuitry with art (video)

DIY iPad music breakout gives pro-grade stage presence, mixes circuitry with art (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 May 2011 11:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Create Digital Music  |  sourceqrghazala (YouTube)  | Email this | Comments

Thermaltake Level 10 GT modded to the high heavens, shows off spacious interior (hands-on)

We’ll readily admit that Thermaltake’s Level 10 GT case isn’t for everyone. Its exeskeleton-emulating protrusions don’t exactly blend in well with living room decors, and the company seems to like it that way. Computex 2011 has been the victim host to a whole bevy of customized Level 10 GTs, which exhibit a love for all colors in the rainbow and a fascination with the humble LED light. Underneath the aesthetic excesses, however, you’ll find a practical and very roomy case that’ll happily serve as the fashion-challenged home to your next super rig. 200mm fans spin almost inaudibly, individual hard drive enclosures make hot-swapping storage a doddle, and as you’ll see in the gallery below, all the mods feature retractable headphone hangers. What will they think of next?

Thermaltake Level 10 GT modded to the high heavens, shows off spacious interior (hands-on) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 31 May 2011 07:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CNC mill and Sixaxis controller make beautiful DIY music together (video)

CNC controlled by Sixaxis

Have you ever thought to yourself, “my CNC mill is pretty cool, but I really want to make it more awesomer”? Well, first, “awesomer” totally isn’t word, and second, have we got a hack for you! A reader wrote in to the DIY hub Adafruit to show off his CNC being operated by a PS3 Sixaxis controller — mimicking features found on high-end machines that allow you to trigger jobs from a distance and manually control the mill. Best of all, it’s a pretty simple mod that uses a program called QtsixA to map the gamepad as a keyboard and mouse, allowing you to interact with a Linux box running EMC2, which is used for controlling the mill, lathe, plasma torch, or a number of other fun and dangerous tools. Check out the video after the break.

Continue reading CNC mill and Sixaxis controller make beautiful DIY music together (video)

CNC mill and Sixaxis controller make beautiful DIY music together (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 May 2011 21:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Adafruit  |  sourcedammitdarrell (YouTube)  | Email this | Comments

Modder turns candy canisters into gaming console, retro Pong paddles (video)

This is the second time this week we’ve covered a modder getting an old-school game to run with the help of some unexpected hardware. And arguably, it’s the simpler of the two tales. A fellow named John Graham-Cumming fashioned a game console out of little more than a pair of metal canisters, an Arduino Pro board, and a potentiometer — all so he could play Pong on his TV. The rig (cutely dubbed the Cansole) actually consists of two controllers, with the secondary one housing just a potentiometer. The first has one, too, but also houses the Arduino Pro, along with a battery, A/V controls, and a button for selecting and firing in the game. Et voilà! 1970s arcade-style tennis for two. For a 90-second nostalgia break, head on past the break to see these vintage-looking paddles in action.

Continue reading Modder turns candy canisters into gaming console, retro Pong paddles (video)

Modder turns candy canisters into gaming console, retro Pong paddles (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 May 2011 17:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink CrunchGear  |  sourceJohn Graham-Cumming  | Email this | Comments