Archive for November, 2007

steampunk ipod skin shows off player’s innards
Ever wanted to know what the insides of your iPod really looked like? Afraid to bash it open with a hammer? Artist Colin Thompson created this clever iPod skin which lets you visualize the guts of Apple’s media player as a retro-modern mechanical device…

Ever wanted to know what the insides of your iPod really looked like? Afraid to bash it open with a hammer? Artist Colin Thompson created this clever iPod skin which lets you visualize the guts of Apple’s media player as a retro-modern mechanical device.

Colin Thompson’s Steampunk iPod Skin

Thompson’s $14.95 Gelaskins Steampunk vinyl skin features an alernative take on the high-tech inner-workings of your schmancy new iPod, and replaces them with gears, springs and levers. lilyalil

The way my old 3G iPod used to act up all the time, I’m actually wondering if that’s what it really did look like on the inside. Actually, I think mine was powered by a tiny hamster in a wheel.

[via Boing Boing]

, decal, gears, ipod, skin, steampunk


Source: feeds.feedburner.com

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Lighter that needs no gas to run
Every smoker knows that lighters are limited by their gas charge. And when it runs out of gas you must throw your lighter away, or recharge it. If you smoke a lot, you will find it annoying to throw money away on lighters. What about a lighter that doesn’t need gas at all?
Source: www.gadgets-reviews.com

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Seiko Epson produces hi-res E-Ink display
Epson Seiko has developed a new E-Ink display applied with their own proprietary TFT design and come out with a 6.7″ e-paper terminal panel with a maximum resolution of 1,200 x 1,600 pixels. The display has a contrast ratio of 8 to 1, 43% reflectivity and a redrawing time of 0.7s. It measures only 3mm […]

Epson Seiko has developed a new E-Ink display applied with their own proprietary TFT design and come out with a 6.7″ e-paper terminal panel with a maximum resolution of 1,200 x 1,600 pixels. The display has a contrast ratio of 8 to 1, 43% reflectivity and a redrawing time of 0.7s. It measures only 3mm thick, weighs 57 grams and powered by one CR1220 button cell battery (1′400 screen redraws). No words on pricing and availability.

[via Ubergizmo]

Tags: E-ink, display

Source: www.2dayblog.com

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solid gold remote control costs more than a lexus
God only knows why anybody would need a remote control made of pure gold, but there must be some market for this thing, or else they wouldn’t be making them…

God only knows why anybody would need a remote control made of pure gold, but there must be some market for this thing, or else they wouldn’t be making them.

Lantic Solid Gold Remote

Created by Denmark’s Lantic Systems, the gold remote is designed for operating home media and automation systems including video, audio, internet, CCTV, alarm, lights, curtains, air-conditioning and even navigation systems. Oh yeah, I guess I didn’t mention that when I said ‘home’, I meant ‘yacht’.

Assuming that you’ve got a yacht (or maybe a fleet of yachts), this $55,000 gold remote will look great alongside your solid gold anchor.

[via Earthtimes via Ubergizmo]

boat, expensive, gold, metal, remote, yacht


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Hard Disk Drive Eraser - No Computer Needed
If you are worried about your privacy and data safety, you probably know about methods of data disposal. If important file was deleted using standard functions of Windows Explorer it can be restored easily. It happens because it was deleted only logically, but physically it is on your data storage media, just with the “deleted” mark.
Source: www.gadgets-reviews.com

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2day’s How-To: Make a Speaker
Here’s a video from “TheSecretTheSource” is going to teach you how to make a speaker. That’s awesome, it’s functional. Maybe you can try it out and show it off to your friends. Video after the jump. Tags: how-to, speaker

Here’s a video from “TheSecretTheSource” is going to teach you how to make a speaker. That’s awesome, it’s functional. Maybe you can try it out and show it off to your friends. Video after the jump.



Tags: how-to, speaker

Source: www.2dayblog.com

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What Will Scientists Do With the World’s Smallest Microwave? - Inventor Spot
Scientists have constructed a “micro microwave,” a long, narrow device measuring 4 mm long by 7 micrometers wide (the width of a red blood cell). Considered to be the smallest microwave ever, the technology will likely be used for medical “lab-on-a-chip” devices. Micro microwave:: The gold traces on the glass circle are microwave transmission lines. The […]

Scientists have constructed a “micro microwave,” a long, narrow device measuring 4 mm long by 7 micrometers wide (the width of a red blood cell). Considered to be the smallest microwave ever, the technology will likely be used for medical “lab-on-a-chip” devices.

Micro microwave:: The gold traces on the glass circle are microwave transmission lines. The 1.25 cm wide polymer block over the transmission line in the center houses a miniature chamber in which a pinhead-sized drop of fluid is heated. (NIST)

Researchers from the National Institute of Standards of Technology (NIST) and George Mason University have recently demonstrated that the tiny microwave can heat a drop of liquid about the size of the head of a pin. The team has also integrated the microwave with a microfluidic channel to control the temperature of fluid in amounts less than a nanoliter (a billionth of a liter).

To build the device, a thin-film microwave transmission line was embedded between a glass substrate and a polymer block, as seen in the photo. The microwave chamber was cut out of the polymer block, where fluid is heated.

In operation, electromagnetic fields in the chamber heat the fluid by being absorbed by a selected portion of the micro channel, while the surrounding area that doesn’t absorb microwaves is left unheated.

The scientists look forward to several applications using the tiny microwave, such as heating and amplifying tiny DNA samples for forensic investigations, and breaking cells open to release their contents for analysis. The ability to precisely control the temperature of tiny volumes of fluid will also make it useful for future lab-on-a-chip devices that perform complex chemical analyses on tiny samples. In the future, the researchers hope to design a microwave heater that can cycle temperatures for further applications.

The results are published in the Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering.

via: the National Institute of Standards and Technology

Lisa Zyga
Science Blogger
InventorSpot.com

This article was written by Lisa Zyga, science blogger for InventorSpot.com and reprinted with their permission. If you are interested in the latest inventions, innovations and interesting ideas from around the world, make sure to check out InventorSpot.com.

Source: hackedgadgets.com

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soviet tv pc casemod: from russia with wood
Whooda thunk that a 40+ year-old Soviet television set would make for one of the most gorgeous computer designs I’ve seen in a very long time? This amazing transformation started with a 1961 Soviet REKORD tv set and turned it into a modern Windows PC…

Whooda thunk that a 40+ year-old Soviet television set would make for one of the most gorgeous computer designs I’ve seen in a very long time?

Soviet TV Casemod

This amazing transformation started with a 1961 Soviet REKORD tv set and turned it into a modern Windows PC. A team of talented casemodders recently built a complete computer system into the antique wooden TV case. The design kind of makes me think of what the original Macintosh might have looked like if it was made out of wood instead of plastic.

Soviet TV Casemod

The system is fully self-contained, with the computer, monitor, subwoofer and speakers built into the case, and a wireless mouse and keyboard for controlling the PC.

Soviet TV Casemod

There are plenty of nifty details in the design, including motion-sensitive LEDs which imitate the flickering of an old television. Old style toggle switches turn the system on and off, and the LCD monitor is switched by pushing on the metal REKORD logo on the front of the set. Very nice.

[DarkRoastedBlend via GizmoWatch]

casemod, lcd, pc, recycle, soviet, wood


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Lighter that needs no gas to run
Every smoker knows that lighters are limited by their gas charge. And when it runs out of gas you must throw your lighter away, or recharge it. If you smoke a lot, you will find it annoying to throw money away on lighters. What about a lighter that doesn’t need gas at all?
Source: www.gadgets-reviews.com

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JVC DIY Speaker Set
JVC-Victor has released a DIY speaker set called the SX-WD1KT Wood Cone Speaker Kit. Everything thing will come in pieces so you will need to fix them up by yourself. Parts include solid cherry cabinets, 8.5cm wood cone speakers, damping material, and bass ports. The JVC SX-WD1KT Wood Cone Speaker Kit is available for $369. [via […]

JVC-Victor has released a DIY speaker set called the SX-WD1KT Wood Cone Speaker Kit. Everything thing will come in pieces so you will need to fix them up by yourself. Parts include solid cherry cabinets, 8.5cm wood cone speakers, damping material, and bass ports. The JVC SX-WD1KT Wood Cone Speaker Kit is available for $369.

[via Uncrate]

Tags: speaker, JVC, SX-WD1KT, Wood Cone Speaker

Source: www.2dayblog.com

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