Apple iPad-Controlled Blimp Crashes Party

Blimp_iPad_Wired.jpg
I suppose if you’re programming a remote control app for something big, you might as well use a gadget that’s bigger than an iPhone to control it.
Wired reports that a digital marketing team by the name of BreakfastNY rigged an iPad tablet to control a homemade 52-inch blimp–which appears to be an overgrown helium balloon–at an after-party.
The team followed Wired’s DIY Drones instructions, used Titanium to write the Web code, compiled it into an iPhone app, and also added a live feed camera (based on OpenFramework) for good measure. 
Two-minute, awesomely geeky video after the jump.

Students accelerate cubicle arms race with PlayStation Eye-tracked, iPhone-guided coilgun (video)

DIY weaponry gets more lethal with each passing year; where once we were content with a simple foam missile launcher, technology has progressed such that our automated turrets now spew screwdriver bits, airsoft and paintballs. As progress forges ahead, two engineering students at the University of Arkansas have added injury to insult with this four-stage DIY coilgun. Using an Arduino microcontroller to actuate the firing mechanism and steer the monstrous wooden frame, they nimbly control the badass kit with an iDevice over WiFi, and line up targets using a repurposed PlayStation Eye webcam. While we’d of course prefer to have our phone SSH into the gun over 3G, we’re not going to argue with success. We’d like to keep our lungs un-perforated, thank you very much. See it in action after the break.

Continue reading Students accelerate cubicle arms race with PlayStation Eye-tracked, iPhone-guided coilgun (video)

Students accelerate cubicle arms race with PlayStation Eye-tracked, iPhone-guided coilgun (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 May 2010 07:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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L5 Remote now shipping, turning your iDevice into universal IR boss

This might be a little later than the promised late February release, but we’ve finally gotten word of the iPhone L5 Remote accessory shipping. You’ll remember that this little infrared dongle, also compatible with the iPod touch and iPad, turns your touchscreen device into a universal remote control, replete with customizable and easily programmable buttons. The L5 costs $50, a tidy 20 bucks cheaper than the i-Got-Control alternative, and can be had now via the company’s website below.

[Thanks, John]

L5 Remote now shipping, turning your iDevice into universal IR boss originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 May 2010 09:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BeetleCam wildlife photography secures stellar snaps in the wilds of Tanzania

We won’t even front — we’ve got a thing for visiting National Parks, and in a way, we’re dangerously envious of these fellows who crafted this here BeetleCam. In short, the device is a wildlife photography robot: a four-wheeled, remote control buggy that holds a DSLR, a couple of flashes and enough torque and battery life to power through African wilds for hours on end. After months of testing, building, rebuilding and rebuilding again, the BeetleCam was packaged up and carried over to Tanzania’s Ruaha and Katavi National Parks. During the fortnight-long excursion, the buggy managed to survive being mauled by a lion (sadly the same can’t be said for the Canon EOS 400D) and get staggeringly close to elephants, African Buffaloes and other untamed fauna. Frankly, this is one of the more amazing homegrown gadgets we’ve seen in quite some time, and we couldn’t encourage you more to hit up that source link for the full spill.

BeetleCam wildlife photography secures stellar snaps in the wilds of Tanzania originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Apr 2010 13:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Robotic Buggy Takes Stunning Photos of African Wildlife

beetlecam_profile

Wildlife photographers will risk life and limb to get the perfect close-up, but a few ingenious hacks can make the process easier.

Shutterbug Will Burrard-Lucas and his brother Matthew rigged up a four-wheel-drive, remote-control buggy called BeetleCam that has a DSLR camera mounted on top. Almost Wall-E like in its appearance, the BeetleCam can click photos of African wildlife from a ground-level perspective.

“We like to get really close to the animals with a wide-angle lens,” Will Burrard-Lucas told Wired.com. “That’s the photo we really enjoy getting.”

Conventional photographers use either a telephoto lens or camera traps — stationary cameras triggered to click when an animal breaks an invisible infra-read beam — to get close-ups of wild animals. But while telephoto lenses zoom in on the animal, they cut out the beautiful landscape, while camera traps require a great degree of patience and more than a fair share of luck.

A remote-controlled buggy with a wide-angle lens could offer a new perspective, says Burrard-Lucas.

“We can find the animals and use BeetleCam to approach it and we wouldn’t have to fear for our lives,” he says.

To build the BeetleCam, the Burrard-Lucas brothers used a Lynxmotion robot chassis and a Hitech 6-channel radio control. They reinforced the chassis and replaced the wheels with bigger, sturdier versions, then added a tripod plate.  Two 7.2 Volts Ni-MH 2800mAh battery pack also from Lynxmotion offers day-longer power to the device. Tweaks ensured that the camera, a Canon EOS 400D, would interface with the same controller used to drive the buggy.

They also put together a split ETTL off-camera flash cord that would allow the camera to control the output of the two flashes on board the BeetleCam. To have the camera take an exposure, they use the remote control to activate a relay switch that tells the camera to fire.

BeetleCam’s biggest challenge has been getting over the uneven terrain in Tanzania’s national parks with a heavy camera, lens and flashes on its back. But the buggy did pretty well, says Burrard-Lucas, capsizing completely only about twice. The duo are always about 50 meters (approximately 165 feet) away in a land rover trying to make sure that the BeetleCam’s view is unobstructed by the grass or flipped over. They have chronicled their adventures with the BeetleCam on their blog.

beetlecam_repairs

Once on the ground, Burrard-Lucas says Beetlecam offered some interesting lessons. Elephants, for instance, turned out to be very tricky to photograph using the buggy because they are wary of unfamiliar objects and have extremely sensitive hearing. But putting the BeetleCam in front of the animals and letting them walk up to it worked well.

Lions were tricker. On the BeetleCam’s second day in the jungle, the device was mauled, smashed and carried off into the bush by a pack.

“We were extremely lucky to retrieve an intact memory card from the mangled Canon 400D body,” says Burrard-Lucas.

The photos from the card survived the wrath of the lions and a few pieces of string and wood later, the BeetleCam was on the ground once more.

This summer, BeetleCam will be back in action in Kenya, says Burrard-Lucas, but with a less expensive camera. “We will use a Canon 500 or 500 D,” says Burrard-Lucas. “We don’t want the camera smashed again.”

Check out some of the photos shot by the BeetleCam:

curious_lioness

african_elephant

curious_buffalo

To see video clips of BeetleCam in action and more of the resulting photographs, check out the BeetleCam project page.

Photos: Burrard-Lucas.com


microRemote DSLR focus controller uses iPhone for visual readouts (video)

Got a first-gen iPhone with nothing to do and nothing to hope for? Don’t throw it out just yet, you might be able to recycle it as an extremely fancy readout display for the Redrock Micro “focus control system.” The microRemote is, fundamentally, a focus ring detached from the DSLR it controls. It can operate all by its lonesome, but the big attraction here is adding an iPhone or iPod touch to provide visual clues to the aspiring focus master. You get aperture, zoom, and some focusing assists on the display, and then make your selection using some familiar twirling action on the knob to the side. Starting at around $1,000 this summer, this setup can hardly be considered an impulse buy, but we’re sure somebody somewhere has a usage scenario that would justify the cash layout. Check out the microRemote on video after the break.

Continue reading microRemote DSLR focus controller uses iPhone for visual readouts (video)

microRemote DSLR focus controller uses iPhone for visual readouts (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 14 Apr 2010 05:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Logitech Harmony 300 eschews LCD screen for universal affordability (video)

Logitech’s Harmony remotes have a well earned reputation that treads the fine line between overkill and power user necessity, and while the 600 series brought the entry price down below the $100 mark, this latest Harmony 300 set is aiming to limbo even lower. Priced at $49.99 in the USA and £29.99 in the UK, the 300 touts a supposedly effortless web-based setup — via a USB hookup to your nearest computer — and compatibility with more than 225,000 devices from more than 5,000 brands. Of course, the lower price comes with some sacrifices, namely the removal of the LCD screen found in the higher models, and the limitation of controlling a maximum of four devices. If neither bothers you too much, expect this universal remote to land in your lap some time in early April. Video after the break.

Continue reading Logitech Harmony 300 eschews LCD screen for universal affordability (video)

Logitech Harmony 300 eschews LCD screen for universal affordability (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 31 Mar 2010 06:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Robovie-mR2’s puppy dog eyes make it the perfect spy

This Robovie isn’t a dexterous grabber, a powerful computer or a walking tank like its Vstone counterparts. No, at first blush, the Robovie-mr2 is just your average designer Japanese cutebot, albeit one with an iPod Touch for a heart, but that’s exactly why this one foot tall bot makes the perfect spycam. No one would suspect it hides 18 servo motors, a miniature CCD camera, speakers and microphone inside its demure, puppy dog exterior (hear it speak Japanese after the break), much less that you can directly control every movement over WiFi. And even should they catch your Robovie eavesdropping, they’d be hard pressed to execute a being with such powerful charm. Hit up the gallery if you don’t believe us — this robot knows just how to beg for its life.

Continue reading Robovie-mR2’s puppy dog eyes make it the perfect spy

Robovie-mR2’s puppy dog eyes make it the perfect spy originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Mar 2010 10:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Gluvi: So Its Come to This

Gluvi.jpgAre you a fist-bumper? Do you instantly strip the cover off the hotel bed when you walk in? Do you think Adrian Monk and Howie Mandel have the right idea? Are you, in short, extremely cautious about germs? Well, here’s a new enabling product to feed your phobias: the Gluvi. This wrapper for remotes prevents contamination from handling a gadget that other people have touched before you. The makers claim it fits 95 percent of hotel cable TV remotes, which sounds like a made-up number, but maybe they really did visit hundreds of hotel rooms to check. They also claim it’s made from “easy grip stylish yoga inspired reflexology material.” Really? Because it looks like it was inspired by Saran Wrap.

The fear-mongering site also suggests that travelers can get herpes from a hotel remote. Perhaps you’d better get the bellboy to slip the Gluvi on for you. Tip him well. This product, which I’m hoping is an early April Fools joke, will be available March 30, for a price not yet named. Until then, consider wearing gloves while changing the channel.

Logitech Harmony 650 remote review

Logitech Harmony 650 remote review

Fewer products are more appropriately named than the Logitech Harmony series of smart remotes. They do wonderful things to take home entertainment systems, comprised of a disparate jumble of mismatched devices, and turn them into peaceful entities that work together for the betterment of your living room — you half expect doves with olive branches in their mouths to fly out of the box when you get one. Alas, there are neither birds nor branches included with the company’s latest entrants to the series, the 600 and 650 announced two weeks ago, but still they offer the best value amongst the current Harmony lineup. Can they broker successful negotiations amongst all your devices? Read on to find out.

Continue reading Logitech Harmony 650 remote review

Logitech Harmony 650 remote review originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 17 Mar 2010 11:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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