Bluetooth keyboard mod resurrects Morse code, offers a helping click to disabled (video)

Morse code may have been pushed aside in the pursuit of higher-tech cryptography, but the old dits and dahs of yore are now finding a repurposed life helping the disabled. Modding outfit Zunkworks has cobbled together an Arduino hack that pairs a Bluetooth-based, dots and dashes approach with wallet-friendly parts. Using the keyboard’s two inbuilt push-buttons, users’ clicks are decoded by the integrated Arduino and then transmitted via Bluetooth to a nearby computer. And thanks to the mod’s HID profile support, you can also enjoy this access solution on smartphones and tablets — useful for those who can “send code at 25-50 words per minute.” Yeah, that’s definitely not us. Still, we applaud the group’s efforts to make 21st century tech accessible to the handicapped and geek alike. Jump past the break for a video demo of this on / off hackjob.

Continue reading Bluetooth keyboard mod resurrects Morse code, offers a helping click to disabled (video)

Bluetooth keyboard mod resurrects Morse code, offers a helping click to disabled (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 20:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Hack a Day  |  sourceZunkworks  | Email this | Comments

Mini Space Invaders arcade cabinet big on nostalgia, small in size

Always wanted an 80’s arcade cabinet for your living room, but the square footage in your studio apartment won’t cooperate with your gaming plans? Well, a master mini craftsman has created a seven-inch replica of Space Invaders that can fit on your desktop, coffee table, or bedside stand. It was cobbled together using the guts of a Game Boy Advance, some lilliputian controls, and a custom cabinet coated in shrunken decals that’s made of medium density fiberboard. Best of all, thanks to those Nintendo internals, there’s an entire arcade’s worth of games at your tiny fingertips. Between this and its diminutive Donkey Kong cousin, perhaps mini arcade cabinets are the future of gaming. Video of the little gem in action is after the break.

Continue reading Mini Space Invaders arcade cabinet big on nostalgia, small in size

Mini Space Invaders arcade cabinet big on nostalgia, small in size originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 11 Jul 2011 17:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Oh Gizmo  |  sourcevcoleiro1 [YouTube]  | Email this | Comments

Game Gear mod has five-inch screen, rechargable batteries, two pounds worth of memories

Are Nintendo and Sony’s portable gaming offerings not doing anything for you? Yearn for the days of Hedgehog-based adventure? You’re not alone — though, unless you’re as crafty as “lovablechevy,” you’re going to have to settle for whatever you can find on eBay or in a dusty shoebox under a bed at your parents’ house. The modder resurrected a Game Gear with a custom case created using the beloved Sega portable, a Master Gear converter, a screen from a PS One, and assorted other bits and pieces. The franken-portable can play Game Gear and Master System titles, has a rechargeable battery, and weighs a hefty two-plus pounds. Video after the break and lots more jealousy-inducing images in the Source link below.

Continue reading Game Gear mod has five-inch screen, rechargable batteries, two pounds worth of memories

Game Gear mod has five-inch screen, rechargable batteries, two pounds worth of memories originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Jun 2011 23:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceBen Heck  | Email this | Comments

Samsung Courts Modders With Free Smartphones

CyanogenMod developers received free Samsung Galaxy S II phones, the successors to its highly successful Galaxy S (pictured above). Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

There’s no sure-fire way to silence software modders, so you might as well work with them. That seems to be the idea Samsung had with a group of phone hackers.

Four members of the CyanogenMod software team on Monday received Galaxy S II smartphones in the mail, direct from the company at no charge.

“All four of us involved in the porting process for the first Galaxy S received a new phone,” CyanogenMod team member Kolja Dummann told Wired.com in an interview. “After the [Galaxy S II] launched in Europe, we just asked about getting some of those phones. Samsung agreed.”

The phones came with one simple directive — get CyanogenMod working on the phone.

Essentially, CyanogenMod replaces the stock operating system on your Android phone with a customized build, letting you make tweaks and adjustments that you wouldn’t have otherwise been able to before. Customizations range from changing visual details — like slapping a sleek new uniform skins onto the user interface — to under-the-hood boosts like overclocking the phone’s CPU.

It’s uncommon for a device manufacturer to hand phones over to a community of developers like CyanogenMod. Companies like Motorola and HTC are known to ship devices with locked bootloaders, essentially restricting a user’s ability to customize his or her phone. While frustrating to budding modders, locking the phone down also prohibits a number of headaches on the carriers’ end — like the phone returns that come from users screwing up their devices in attempts to modify them.

“I’ve never heard of vendors giving phones to CyanogenMod or other community developers,” Dummann said. The CyanogenMod development team typically relies on donations from the developer community at large, or purchasing the devices themselves.

Samsung’s gesture is one of many recent manufacturer moves to court the developer community. Last week, HTC announced it would no longer ship smartphones with locked bootloaders. Motorola has also flirted with the idea of future unlocked device releases, though the developer community remains skeptical.

Phone makers on other platforms are starting to follow suit as well. Earlier this year, Microsoft reportedly met with a group of Windows Phone 7 hackers to see how the company could better support “homebrew” apps (or third-party applications that don’t require Microsoft’s approval).

Of course, hackers and phone modification junkies make up a small contingent of total phone purchases on the market. Cyanogen’s estimated user base floats somewhere in the 500,000 range. According to Android product management director Hugo Barra, the company has activated over 100 million Android devices since the platform’s launch. So catering to the modding community isn’t a straightforward play for marketshare by the manufacturers.

It will help, however, to silence the vocal minority of users upset with receiving locked down phones. After Motorola’s Atrix was released with a locked bootloader, modders started an online campaign against the company’s locked-down policy, often bombarding Moto’s Facebook page with less-than-flattering comments.

If nothing else, Samsung’s actions may bolster support from the developer community who in turn can influence others to buy the company’s phones.

Samsung did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The plan seems to be working on at least one of the developers who received a free phone.

“You will not hear me bad-mouth Samsung again,” CyanogenMod team member Atinm tweeted on Monday.


Samsung Courts Modder Community With Free Smartphones

CyanogenMod developers received free Samsung Galaxy S II phones, the successors to its highly successful Galaxy S (pictured above). Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

In an attempt to woo its Android developer base, Samsung recently shipped a number of its smartphones to members of a highly popular phone modification group.

On Monday, four members of the CyanogenMod software team received Galaxy S II smartphones in the mail, direct from the company at no charge.

“All four of us involved in the porting process for the first Galaxy S received a new phone,” CyanogenMod team member Kolja Dummann told Wired.com in an interview. “After the [Galaxy S II] launched in Europe, we just asked about getting some of those phones. Samsung agreed.”

The phones came with one simple directive — get CyanogenMod working on the phone.

Essentially, CyanogenMod replaces the stock operating system on your Android phone with a customized build, letting you make tweaks and adjustments that you wouldn’t have otherwise been able to before. Customizations range from changing visual details — like slapping a sleek new uniform skins onto the user interface — to under-the-hood boosts like overclocking the phone’s CPU.

It’s uncommon for a device manufacturer to hand phones over to a community of developers like CyanogenMod. Companies like Motorola and HTC are known to ship devices with locked bootloaders, essentially restricting a user’s ability to customize his or her phone. While frustrating to budding modders, locking the phone down also prohibits a number of headaches on the carriers’ end — like the phone returns that come from users screwing up their devices in attempts to modify them.

“I’ve never heard of vendors giving phones to CyanogenMod or other community developers,” Dummann said. The CyanogenMod development team typically relies on donations from the developer community at large, or purchasing the devices themselves.

Samsung’s gesture is one of many recent manufacturer moves to court the developer community. Last week, HTC announced it would no longer ship smartphones with locked bootloaders. Motorola has also flirted with the idea of future unlocked device releases, though the developer community remains skeptical.

Of course, hackers and phone modification junkies make up a small contingent of total phone purchases on the market. Cyanogen’s estimated user base floats somewhere in the 500,000 range. According to Android product management director Hugo Barra, the company has activated over 100 million Android devices since the platform’s launch. So catering to the modding community isn’t a straightforward play for marketshare by the manufacturers.

It will help, however, to silence the vocal minority of users upset with receiving locked down phones. After Motorola’s Atrix was released with a locked bootloader, modders started an online campaign against the company’s locked-down policy, often bombarding Moto’s Facebook page with less-than-flattering comments.

If nothing else, Samsung’s actions may bolster support from the developer community who in turn can influence others to buy the company’s phones.

Samsung did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The plan seems to be working on at least one of the developers who received a free phone.

“You will not hear me bad-mouth Samsung again,” CyanogenMod team member Atinm tweeted on Monday.


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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Dutchman integrates a 4.5GHz water-cooled rig into his d3sk

Cooler Master’s 2011 Case Mod Competition looks to be the gift that keeps on giving. After serving up a Tron lightcycle and an architectural marvel, it’s now playing host to a mod that redefines the idea of an all-in-one PC. Peter from the Netherlands has managed to fit a pretty bombastic set of components — 4.5GHz Core i7-980X, two ASUS GeForce GTX 580 graphics cards in SLI, over 12TB of storage with an SSD boot disk, and two PSUs providing 1,500W of power in total — together with a water-cooling setup and the inevitable glowing lights inside one enclosure, which just so happens to also serve as his desk. The three-piece monitor setup is also a custom arrangement, with a 27-inch U2711 IPS panel being flanked by two 17-inchers. Admittedly, this isn’t the first water-cooled and over-powered desk we’ve laid eyes on, but that shouldn’t prevent you from giving the links below a bash and checking out the amazingly neat design of Peter’s l3p d3sk.

Continue reading Dutchman integrates a 4.5GHz water-cooled rig into his d3sk

Dutchman integrates a 4.5GHz water-cooled rig into his d3sk originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 May 2011 08:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Modders Make Android Work the Way You Want

In one of many tweaks to the Android interface, a customized boot screen features scrolling lines of code. Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

CyanogenMod is one of the biggest hacks to ever hit the Android mobile platform.

It’s got an estimated 500,000 users. Many Android programmers use it as a starting point for their own coding projects. And according to the project’s founder, a number of Google employees have it installed on their Android devices.

Essentially, CyanogenMod is a tricked-out version of the software you’re already running on your Android phone.

Every Android-powered device comes running a version of the operating system, from 1.5 (Cupcake) all the way up to 3.1 (Honeycomb).

CyanogenMod replaces that stock OS with a custom build, letting you make adjustments to your phone that the official version prevents. It opens the door to more sophisticated custom wallpaper, changing the graphic that appears when the phone boots up, or more significantly, tethering your laptop to your phone’s data connection. With CyanogenMod installed, you can even overclock your phone’s CPU, so you can wring every last drop of processing power from it.

“You can customize the hell out of it,” says Steve Kondik, founder of the CyanogenMod project.

How a Hack Got its Start

Of course, it all began with a phone.

Debuting in 2007 as the flagship device for Google’s Android mobile platform, HTC’s G1 smartphone was the alternative to Apple’s immensely popular iPhone.

The G1 — also known as the HTC Dream — could be easily rooted, which meant giving you superuser access to the phone’s naughty bits. Essentially, it made customizing your G1 as easy as pie.

Steve Kondik had been waiting for a phone like the G1 for a long time.

“I had followed a few other Linux-based phones before,” says Kondik, citing offerings from Motorola and Nokia, “but they never had the sort of momentum that a company like Google could bring.”

And Google’s philosophy fit with what Kondik, a software developer working for a mobile content delivery company in Pittsburgh, was looking for: a more “open” platform for coders coming from a background in open source code, like Linux. Android, after all, is built on the Linux kernel.

‘You can customize the hell out of it.’

After each version of Android was made available for download to the public, Google pushed all of the code to an online repository called Kernel.org, free for all to poke, prod and play around with. Developers could take any and all of that code and modify it to their heart’s desire.

Which is exactly what Kondik proceeded to do. “I had been using desktop Linux for ages,” he says, “and I just tried using some of those concepts to tweak the code. I had no idea what I actually wanted to do with the phone.”

After finishing his first version of CyanogenMod, Kondik posted the file to XDA forums, a popular message board in the Android modding community. “All of a sudden, my single-page thread is one hundred pages long,” Kondik says.

Cyanogen Comes of Age

CyanogenMod was a hit. It racked up downloads from community members, each expressing how they liked the amount of control they finally had over their phones.

“As a mobile enthusiast, I like the ability to make changes to the way that my operating system runs,” says Chris Soyars, who works on CyanogenMod.

In essence, CyanogenMod’s popularity can be attributed to the very thing that draws so many to the Android platform: openness, flexibility, control. The Google-led Open Handset Alliance — a coalition of 80 carriers, manufacturers and tech companies all backing the Android platform — espouses these principles, as seen in the Open Source Project mission statement: “We wanted to make sure that there would always be an open platform available for carriers, OEMs and developers to use to make their innovative ideas a reality.”

Apple, on the other hand, fought aggressively to outlaw the practice of jailbreaking its phones, which is akin to rooting an Android device. The U.S. Copyright Office ultimately granted a three-year DMCA exemption for rooting phones, so iPhone users are free to jailbreak their devices without any legal repercussions for the time being. They don’t, however, have access to the operating system’s underlying source code to the same extent Android users do.

While Apple’s controlling, “walled garden” approach has obviously worked well for the company — the company has sold 100 million iPhones as of March of this year — Android has become the alternative solution for geeks and hackers who want more control over their devices.

For many, CyanogenMod is the key to unlocking that control.


PC modding takes an architectural twist with Frank Lloyd Wright-inspired Usonian

We admit, we’re pretty jaded when it comes to PC casemods, having seen everything from the inscrutable Edelweiss to Russian Ark of the Covenant-like monstrosities. Jeffrey Stephenson, though, charmed us with his wood-carved Level Eleven case, and now he’s back with Usonian, inspired by the work of famed Fallingwater architect Frank Lloyd Wright. Split-level cantilevered roofs made of teak, mahogany highlights, all that Cherokee Red and Covered Wagon coloring – it’s enough to make an architecture nerd swoon. Beneath all that fine styling it sports an Intel Core i7-875K on a Gigabyte Mini-ITX motherboard, with 8GB system memory. There’s a 256GB SSD along with a 2TB hard drive, so it’s not just built for looks; Wright, after all, emphasized utility over pointless fashion. Still, it’s very pretty to look at. More pics in the source link and after the break.

Continue reading PC modding takes an architectural twist with Frank Lloyd Wright-inspired Usonian

PC modding takes an architectural twist with Frank Lloyd Wright-inspired Usonian originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 May 2011 09:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink LanOC  |  sourceJeffrey Stephenson  | Email this | Comments

World’s smallest Donkey Kong cabinet delivers authentic arcade experience for tiny fingers (video)

Tiny Donkey Kong Cab

This, friends, is a work of art. Above is a stunning, fully-functional recreation of the original Donkey Kong arcade cabinet — and it’s only 8.25 inches tall. The accomplished modder Bender posted his handiwork on the Build Your Own Arcade Controls Forum and it’s sure to wow even the most cynical of folks. At the heart of this build is a hacked up GamePark GP2X Wiz running MAME, but it’s the attention to detail, including the printed vinyl decals and light-up marquee, that really pull this (supposedly world’s smallest) 1/8 scale project together. Check out the gallery below and the pair of lengthy demo videos after the break. En garde Mr. Heck!

[Thanks, Brian]

Continue reading World’s smallest Donkey Kong cabinet delivers authentic arcade experience for tiny fingers (video)

World’s smallest Donkey Kong cabinet delivers authentic arcade experience for tiny fingers (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 May 2011 15:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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