Rob Beschizza
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Hidden Art's Butterfly Lamp lives up to the store's name, sketching the topography of an unlit alien world in lines of printed, electroluminescent phosphors.
Shop [Hidden Art]
Xeni Jardin
Boing Boing Video, Offworld, and Boing Boing Gadgets have been on the scene at the Global Game Jam in various cities around the world, and we'll be bringing you some fun post-Jam documentary LOLs next week. For now, check out this meta Flickr photoset, which contains lots of sleepy developers, half-consumed energy drinks, and funny things people think up when they're hyperconnected and under-slept -- international dance-offs, for example.
Above, Boing Boing Video colleague Jolon Bankey is also organizing the Global Game Jam Costa Rica, and this is the live stream for CR. Pura Vida, guys!
Update: Here's the link for their liveblogging -- fun stuff afoot.
Below, Jolon writes:
Hey Xeni! We're at the site of the Global Game Jam in Costa Rica, and all the teams are going strong! We have a few casualties curled up in a corner behind me, but for the most part people haven't slept, or did so for 15 minutes sitting in front of their chairs before jerking awake and getting back to rocking their virtual world in the short time left.Previously on Boing Boing:With only 27 short sleepless hours ahead of them, everyone is surprisingly energized. We have had continuous communication with the other locations around the world via webcams and projectors everywhere, which has been a lot of fun. There have been Macarena dance-offs between Costa Rica and the rest of the world, we lost a contest with Brazil, but Scotland gave us a 10 for our efforts.
We polished off some giant tubs of Gallo Pinto and huevos revueltos earlier, and now people are just trying to push through with an unending stream of Sobe Adrenalin Rush (*cough* sponsors Thank you Sobe!)
-jgb 12.04.29 pm Saturday January 31st, 2009
Offices of Schematic, Costa Rica
PLaza Roble, Escazu, Costa Rica
Xeni Jardin
Boing Boing reader Joe Sabia says he's created the first ever interactive photo hunt on YouTube. "There are 30 levels to the game, recapping all the big nominees for the oscars. 64 videos in all. i made use of youtube's annotations... thought you would enjoy." The subject matter may or may not be something that interests you, but I loved this clever and effective use of a mass-market web service feature (annotations) for a purpose other than the one for which that feature was originally developed.
Rob Beschizza
In 1972 a crack unix programming unit was sent to prison by a military court for a hack they didn't commit. These men promptly escaped from a maximum security stockade to the Berkeley underground. Today, still wanted by the government, they survive as soldiers of fortune. [via YouTube]
Rob Beschizza
Pew pew pew, I say.
Made all from wood or mostly wood unless otherwise noted it has a neat look and feel, almost like an old world toy. It comes complete as shown with plenty of fine details and a place from which to hang. ... This creation is about 3 1/2" (inches) or so long with gold and silver metallic finish dish and non metallic purple body. Comes with metal hanging hardware / findings.
Only twelve bucks, too!
Sonic Dish Blaster Retro Ray Gun Wood Pendant Ornament Science Fiction Dangle [Etsy]
John Brownlee
Courtesy of Brandon West via the BBG Faucet, the most bitching thing you'll see all day: what starts as a firework fight between two dudes dressed only in their underpants quickly becomes a vertical backflip on a Big Wheel plastic toy trike.
Xeni Jardin
Global Game Jam is under way. A live stream from the Costa Rica team is above, more about the event here and in this previous Boing Boing blog post. Boing Boing Video, Boing Boing Gadgets, and Offworld will be popping up in various cities, give us a shout in the comments if you'd like to give us a shout-out from your location, and send us a video! We'll reach out with upload info.
(Thanks, Ustream, Jolon Bankey, and Global Game Jam Costa Rica crew!)
John Brownlee
Jud Turner's the same gruesome metal worker who was responsible for the Skeleton Bicycle we posted the other day, but I like his black iron cogwork trilobyte more: it looks like something that would scurry out of the irradiated wreckage of an industrial holocaust, abiogenetically spawned from the broken and burnt gears and blades of metal of a self-destroyed civilization.
Jud Turner [Artist's Site via io9]
John Brownlee
A variation of Last Man Standing played with kittens on a Roomba. All these kittens are just champs: none seems particularly dispirited to lose the game. Teeth-gratingly irritating LOL Cat captions in the comments, if you please, my droogies.
[via POETV]
Rob Beschizza
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The increasing speed and menace of an invading alien fleet. Evasive maneuvers behind scant shreds of pixel-shield. That primal and pagan bassline march -- now on your wrist!
Ah, but no: it's just an unplayable animation that begins when you push a button. Adds John: "They need to make one that actually PLAYS space invaders."
Brandon is planning to to buy one all the same: "I am perfectly happy with it being sexy and unplayable."
Product Page (Japanese) [Ebten via Gamovr]
Rob Beschizza

Here are $43 wallets made from old cassette tapes.
Casette Wallet [Design Boom]
John Brownlee
This web design sketchbook — which gives brainstorming web designers sheaths of blank Firefox web browsers and advertisement windows — looks rather swish, but you'd think it'd just be a lot more affordable to print off a bunch of these on your printer than pay for a bound notebook of them.
Web Design Sketchbook [Paraniv via Cool Hunting]
Rob Beschizza
A top-secret project developed by a tiny ejector seat company, the Zumba Phone cracks one of the holy grails of artificial intelligence: perfectly accurate voice recognition. It also becomes "instantly useless to anyone else" when you lose it, according to designer Dean McEvoy.
Unfortunately, the BBC elected to run this promotional story without including standard elements such as demonstrating that it even exists as a functioning product: the reporter simply waves around a model and describes the magic!
Engadget commenter CooperFBI did a little research, and found that Mr. McEvoy is apparently a party promoter by night.
You know, if the story here was "local business has cute high-tech product, employs 40" it'd be great: small western businesses source blank gear from big Chinese factories all the time. But here we have wild product claims echoed as news by credulous reporters under a very respectable masthead.
They're mass-producing a cutting-edge handset from a light-industrial warehouse in Hereford, but no-one's allowed to see it? Oh, beeb.
Here's the logo:

Zumba phone report [BBC via Engadget]
Rob Beschizza
A visitor to a quarry in Uganda notes a versatile type of hammer, hand-made from old mechanical parts, used by workers engaged in a truly gruelling job.
The “hammers” are an ingenious marriage of a stick and an engine gear. The one on the right has been worn down. Just think of how many swings it takes to wear down an engine gear by slamming it against stone. It’s a repetitive, depressing way to earn a meal.
Project Diaspora Visits the Women of Kireka [via Afrigadget]
John Brownlee
I was really struck by this little thought experiment over at the Pajama Guy blog in a post about Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics:
Back in the 40s and 50s, I suppose people were noticing so many mechanical problems being solved, while computing as we understand it was in a primitive stage. It would have been great if someone sat down the top sf writers in 1950 and asked them in what order will these three events happen? 1) The invention of a machine that can walk around your house picking up after you. 2) A spaceship that takes us to the moon and back. 3) A small machine that can beat you at chess.
I don't really know what their answers would be, but I suppose that's the point. I wish someone had had the foresight to ask that question at some early con.
It's a slow news day, so let's see if we can't put together a similar question to ask sci-fi writers now in the comments... one that, fifty years from now, would really juxtapose the actual path of future technology with our own subconscious expectations of which way that path will wind.
Me Robot [Pajama Guy]
John Brownlee
Steve Jobs hosts the MacIntosh Dating Game back in 1983, and three software CEOs awkwardly shamble out to try to seduce: Fred Gibbons of Software Publishing Corporation, Mitch Kapor of Lotus and a young Bill Gates, who announces to riotous applause that in 1984, Microsoft will generate half its revenues from Macintosh software. Then Jobs begins asking all three CEOs very pointed questions of all three gents about their favorite place to make whoopie.
Exquisitely lame.
Rob Beschizza
Sixteen Birds is an installation of 16 fabric robots designed to resemble simple brush drawings. Designed by Chico MacMurtrie of Amorphic Robot Works, they're on display in Pittsburgh's Wood Street Gallery until April
As viewers enter the room, the tapered, joined cone-shapes gradually inflate with air, lengthen and take form, eventually reaching out with a graceful wingspan, robust with life. The Birds then begin their stationary journey with a slow, elegant flapping motion, all 16 in a randomly generated sequence. The pneumatic mechanism that animates the work creates a constant, rhythmic breathing sound.
Here's how they made them. I went to check these out the other evening, but arrived too early: they were just re-inflating them!
John Brownlee
The Prodigy service was my first exposure to the online world, and for many years, I lived a thriving online life on their web forums discussing horror movies and science fiction books with fellow proto-Internet nerds. Watching this vintage ad, I get a bit nostalgic for those days, before emoticons went anthropomorphic and a sarcastic or teasing remark was softened by a <s> or a <g>.
But that's not to say this isn't vintage late 80s awfulness. The two businessmen's conversation is particularly interesting: "I'm making money, I'm making money... with THIS finger," one enthusiastically says, and waggles. The camera cuts away as his colleague leans in for a sniff.
John Brownlee
It's pretty much inevitable that Dell's going to jump in the smartphone game, and while a couple years back, that would have conjured visions of Axim X5-like monstrosities, Dell's been paying attention to attractive design lately. A Dell smartphone is no longer a concept to make design-minded gadget buyers blanche than blecch.
According to the Wall Street Journal, we might be close to seeing that phone soon. They claim that Dell has had a group of engineers working on a smartphone phones for more than a year (let's hope there's some designers working with them) and that they've built two prototypes: one using Windows Mobile, the other using Android. The two prototypes are also structurally different: one is a slider, the other a touchscreen.
Of course, Dell is always fiddling with prototypes, so this alone implies nothing. But the Wall Street Journal seems confident that the Dell smartphone development team has spent a good chunk of the last year meeting with phone component and software.
So let's see it, Dell: a nice Android smartphone that takes its design cues from the Adamo, not the Inspiron or the Optiplex.
Dell's smartphone [WSJ]
John Brownlee
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I don't think much of the idea of wrapping all my books in custom jackets, and I'm deeply distrustful of anyone who would meticulously arrange their bookshelves as a reading lover, but that all said: these pixel art dust jackets do make a neat little effect, at least to see once or twice.
Books Help to Create Icons [Icoeye via Geeksugar]
John Brownlee
This awesome old chart color codes and diagrams in one madly chromatic sunrise all the known frequencies (at the time) of the electromagnet spectrum,including everything from the range of the human eye to gamma rays to the transparency of quartz., I've been looking at this thing for an hour, and I still can't believe how much information is packed in here. This is science geek chart porn.
The Electromagnetic Spectrum [Copper Alliance via Crunchgear]
John Brownlee
Samsung has just crammed a few more gigs of capacity into DDR3 memory modules. Their new 4 gigabit DDR3 DRAM PC memory chip not only consumes 40% less power than its older offerings, but make DIMM modules of up to 32 gigabytes possible, and we should start seeing modules of 16GB for servers and 8GB for desktops and laptops later this year.
Samsung Touts Highest Density Memory Chip [Information Week]
Brandon Boyer
Today on Offworld, we didn't see much better than this: 2D Boy co-founder and World of Goo maker Kyle Gabler (right) channeling... Tyra Banks? and giving his top 7 tips for indie devs about to make their first rapidly developed game, in his keynote for the inaugural Global Game Jam.
Elsewhere, we heard about a new version of EA and Steven Spielberg's Wii title Boom Blox and prepared for the release of an updated version of iPhone tower defense hit Fieldrunners, and dug through the huge number of winners of JayIsGames' best of 2008 games list.
We also danced to all of the things that Left 4 Dead's Francis hates (most of all, Ayn Rand), saw BAFTA announced an award for Pong/Atari head Nolan Bushnell, and saw Ico creator Fumito Ueda look back at the development of PS2 cult classic Shadow of the Colossus.
Finally, we saw a brilliant looking new PSP game that will give players 30 seconds at a time to fulfill their RPG quests, and, because I could, watched a fantastic new retro-pixel music video for Offworld favorite band Deerhoof.
John Brownlee
This "sustainable wallet" is made of Tyvek, which is the same thing FedEx and Priority Mail make their nigh-unrippable packages out of. Sure, it's just an envelope repackaged as a wallet, but I like the pitch.
[via Treehugger]
Joel Johnson

Tap Boards are brilliant little chalkboards inside wooden taphandles, making it simple to mark what beneficent liquid will flow from the spout below. They were made with the homebrewer (and pro-am homedrinker) in mind, designed as they were by the fellow who runs Kegerators.com*, but they'd be great for any busy bar that changes its selection often.
There's a whole site for the Tapboards, but if you want to actually just buy them, they're currently at an introductory price of $22 a pop plus shipping.
* Remind me to start hitting him up for review units.
Joel Johnson

Muji, the austere Japanese lifestyles retailer, something like Ikea meets American Apparel, purportedly sells trays of six Egg Masturbation Aids. Unwrap the Cadbury-like foil, douse the ridged inside with the included lubricant, and scramble. Update: Oops. Turns out it's not Muji, but Tenga. Too bad!
I'd have chalked them up to a clever photoshop were it not for this video [embedded below] of one being prepared for use. (It's safe for work, but weird.)
Fascinating. Wouldn't it be wonderful if the shells were compostable? And perhaps I'm strange, but I would feel far less creepy putting my waist whisk into one of these than into a Fleshlight.
Muji also sells socks.
[via The Frisky!]
Joel Johnson

It's not yet Valentine's Day, but our friend Renzo just created this Oscar Reutersvärd-inspired heart and we thought it might be good to share it with you now, the better for you to incorporate it into the pulsing center of your homemade card or cake. If you use it to make something clever for your sweetheart, let me know!
Some suggested companion phrases to seed your imagination: "My love knows no bounds"; "Our love is infinite"; "Intertwined forever".
Alternately: "Our love is an illusion"; "My love for you is impossible in reality"; "This is how you make my cremasters feel".
(Thanks, Renzo; Thanks, Kokogiak!)
John Brownlee
The Triceratopter is a 1977 sculpture by artist Patricia Renick subtitled "Hope for the Obsolescence of War" but I secretly hope its how the triceratops left the planet before the meteors hit, "So long and thanks for all the fish" style.
Triceratopter: If Only Evolution Had Worked Out Differently [Gizmodo]
John Brownlee
Finally. Sanity reigns in the House of Representatives:
Two days after the Senate unanimously approved a four-month delay of the digital television transition, the House of Representatives did not pass the same proposal on Wednesday, “leaving the current Feb. 17 deadline intact for now,” the Associated Press reports.“The 258-168 vote failed to clear the two-thirds threshold needed for passage in a victory for GOP members,” according to the A.P.
The legislation’s failure means that the nation’s television stations will have to switch from analog to digital broadcasting by Feb. 17, unless Congress takes other steps to delay the transition.
Fuck yes. There's simply no way to get everyone caught up to speed, and something absurd like four-fifths of Americans have cable anyway, making a digital converter box unnecessary. Just flip the switch and let the laggers sort it out.
House Defeats Bill to Delay Digital TV Switch [TV Decoder]
John Brownlee
Hey, so whatever happened to iPhone push notifications? Weren't we supposed to have them by now?
Dan Moren theorizes on some reasons why Apple conveniently forgot about it. This one has the ring of truth to it though, given the MobileMe debacle:
It seems plausible that, having learned from that experience, Apple wasn’t sufficiently confident in launching yet another online service, especially one that might have been more complicated than the company first anticipated. One developer I talked to opined that Apple might not have thought the whole idea through, given the issues of scale that the system might encounter in the real world.
iPhone push notifications: dead and buried, or waiting in the wings? [Macworld]
John Brownlee
According to Mac Rumors, developers have started to notice a new iPhone popping up in their server logs: 2,1.
Apple uses these models numbers to distinguish between different hardware models. The original iPhone carries the model number of "iPhone 1,1" while the 3G iPhone is labeled "iPhone 1,2". These numbers do not change for simple storage increases and instead represent functionally different devices. Similarly, the iPod Touch was originally introduced as the "iPod 1,1" and the most recent hardware revision was labeled "iPod2,1". The 2,1 iPod Touch added a speaker, volume controls, microphone support and a much faster processor than the 1st generation model. This new model number can be found in the USBDeviceConfiguration.plist in an unencrypted firmware.
Not that I doubt Apple's working on a new iPhone, but wouldn't they be smart enough not to browse on it on external sites while reporting itself as one?
Next Generation iPhone Model Revealed in Firmware [Mac Rumors]
John Brownlee

These kites can do the Kessel Run in less than twelve parsecs. $40 bucks each.
3D Star Wars Starfighter Kites [Think Geek]
Rob Beschizza

Technology was once about big things, but smallness rules the day: we are the gear that gets us through it. Augmented and assisted by the gizmos we buy, break and make, we're taking tech culture out of the tubes. How to spot a species? Look inside the gadget bag!
Joel Johnson
Strange days are upon us. Outlander—a movie about a humanoid alien who crashes lands in Scandinavia, meets up with some Vikings, and then has to explain to them that he sort of brought a monster along on his ship—actually looks kind of awesome. (Then again, so did Pathfinder, and that ended up being dreadful...I mean more dreadful than is within operating spec of a Viking movie.)
The official Outlander FAQ is hosted on a Wing Commander fan site, which may be because Chris Roberts, the creator of the original Wing Commander videogames (and the laughably bad movie adaptation which pitted plucky teen space-submarine pilots against angry cat people dipped in molasses), is a producer. There's a literalness to the answers that could imply a disturbing lack of self-awareness from a person working on a movie about space vikings, but the trailer itself actually gives the impression that the movie will be a heartwarming tale of barbarians who finally learn the true meaning of lase.
And this:
Extra tidbit: Kainan's Alien language is in reality Old-Norse, a dead language that is the precursor to modern Icelandic, Norwegian and Swedish. The production brought in some professors from the region and one of the few people that can actually speak the language to translate the dialogue and to teach the actors to speak it.It's exactly the sort of attention to detail I'd expect in a movie made by "One of the producers from the Lord of the Rings." (See? It's like they set up all the trappings of a B-movie disappointment, then actually produced an interesting movie. Tricky!)
Outlander is in very limited distribution right now in theaters. I wouldn't really expect to catch this one until it's out on DVD.
John Brownlee
You only need to take one look at Gadget Lab's Charlie Sorrel to know he is a hopeless slave to the nicotine industry. It's not simply his brown, carcinogen-smeared teeth, nor is it the tar dyed blade of both palms, which could easily be another brown encrustation. It's the stench, the visible smell waves oscillating off of him, the way his yellow eyes rheumily run when he's gone five minutes without scratching the itch of the tobacco beetles crawling under his skin. Kissing him, Rob tells me, is like kissing a porn theater ashtray.
Charlie wants help. He wants to quit. He'll never make it, but right now, he's deluding himself that he can through the use of various gadgets like the NJOY fake cigarette, and the iPhone, which wouldn't even begin to fit in his prim, purse-like mouth. For a lesser addict, though, Charlie's suggested gadgets might be helpful in quitting a one to two pack a day habit. Too bad Charlie's urethra alone smokes four.
Gadget Labber quits smoking [Gadget Lab]
John Brownlee
Spotted in Ekaterinburg, Russia: a keyboard layout of concrete stepping stones. Doubtlessly all the strange Cyrillic characters have been rubbed off by the skipping feet of vodka-swigging hooligans.
Spotted: Literal Keyboard Stepping Stones [Geeksugar]
Rob Beschizza
The challenge: Would happen to this dead Circuit City following the chain's liquidation? We received a ton of fine entries (past the jump!), but we like these two the most! Winners email rob at boing boing net with your addresses for the loot.
Winner: BJacques' remedy for depression:

Winner: Anonymous builds us a new office:
Joel Johnson

From Japanese mag Axis' collection of Apple concept devices, kindly scanned by zacislost. [via ★]
Joel Johnson

The LeapFrog "Tag Junior" is a plastic frog that sits atop proprietary children's books and reads the story aloud, punctuated by sound effects and music. It is relatively inexpensive at $35, but each of the books cost about $11 a pop.
John Brownlee
The Unbreakable of cellular phones, the LG Renoir: freezed at sub-zero temperatures for 12 hours, thrown against the floor, jumped upon, spun-dry for fifteen minutes, drowned in wine, run over by a Ford Focus... and still working fine.
LG Renoir Crash Test [Mobile.mail.ru via Engadget]
John Brownlee
A great clock by Tenerifean artist of Gonzalo Álvarez. It looks something like the center timepiece of a steampunk Swiss Family Robinson.
Gonzalo Álvarez [Artist's Site via Steampunk Workshop]
Joel Johnson
Dean Takahashi's interview with Nvidia head honcho Jen-Hsun Huang offers a glimpse into what to expect from low-powered internet-enabled devices of the future. Nvidia's new "Ion" platform, which weds an Intel Atom processor to an Nvidia graphic chip, probably doesn't make Intel very happy—they'd rather be selling the GPU, too—but Huang knows that Intel might still be too big to throw their weight around to prevent Ion from getting to market.
Some highlights that indicate Huang has his head screwed on straight:
Q: Is there a place for a $250, full-keyboard device that uses ARM processors?I tend to shy from business stories, especially executive interviews, but this one's a keeper. I actually feel like I have a good vision of the Nvidia roadmap for the next couple of years now.
A: I think there is, but I think the price is less than $199. It has a full keyboard, it’s thin and it runs for a long time on batteries. It has a one-watt microprocessor. I believe this whole segment will have versions like the iPod Touch, the Sony PlayStation Portable and the Nintendo DS. I believe mobile internet devices will access the internet and come in a lot of different form factors, like phones, notepads and game player....
Q: There is only one proof point for that. It’s the iPhone. From one company. Why will these devices succeed across the board?
A: There is the Google Android. The Palm Pre. A few points makes a line....
Q: You don’t think it will be one chip?
A: I don’t think so. Intel has slipped its schedule on its (code-named) Havendale single-chip chip set. The problem is that CPUs and GPUs are both progressing. You can’t catch up on both with just one that tries to do both. And why not try to do it at the low end? AMD’s problem is that they are putting the high-end CPU with the high-end GPU. Who’s going to buy that?Q: Microsoft, for the Xbox 720?
A: That’s cold. (laughs). That’s cold.
Rob Beschizza
Engadget's Nilay Patel posts an exhaustive and excellent analysis of the patents surrounding the iPhone's user interface. It's the perfect antidote to this weekend's relentless mainstream media hype about the "brewing" legal between Palm and Apple.
Joel Johnson

From the people who sold you the "Exploded iPhone" schematic t-shirt comes this off-white remix, the "iSteamPhone", in which the iPhone is reimagined as some sort of anachronistic da Vinci invention.
$26 for the shirt; $16 for a poster, with shipping. (They're $20 and $10 if you can somehow make them materialize at your corner matter maker.)
Rob Beschizza
Pitched as a way to lock up USB drives, there's no reason this lock wouldn't work on anything USB at all, be it humping dogs or high-end studio gear. Slip it onto the plug, roll the numbers, and voila: no USB for them.
Though no deterrent to a committed scoundrel, especially one who knows the dark art of splicing, it should do very well in the Teenage USB Diary segment. Note: useless but amusing on items where the USB cable is plugged in at both ends.
Combination Lock USB Thumb Key Solution [Akihabara News]
Rob Beschizza
Arrange these magnets just so, and they float in thin air. Forty bucks from Scientifics Online!
Use your knowledge of magnetism and your scientific skills to arrange the magnets on a thin sheet of sheet metal so that alternating poles create a strong magnetic field gradient.This gradient centers the pyrolytic graphite material of the magnets for levitation. Pyrolytic graphite is 10,000X more diamagnetic than most common diamagnetic materials like water, and these thin slices are extremely light and can be made to levitate.
Diamagnetic levitation kit [Scientifics online via RGS]
Rob Beschizza
Antrepo Design imagines a world where things still come on 3.5" floppy disks. For reference, Adobe's CS4 Master Edition would arrive on about 6,400 of them.
You could, of course, stash an awful lot of flash in the form factor. I wonder if anyone's invented a magnetic panel that could "fake" output the way one of those MP3-player-to-cassette-deck adapters do? But then you still have the speed limitations of the drives and their controllers. WELL IT WORKED IN THE MAGIC WORLD IN MY HEAD.
A poster of the concept is available at the high high price of $100.
Set of 4 posters [Anterepo shop via Technabob]
Xeni Jardin

From 5:00pm Friday January 30th through 5:00 pm Sunday, February 1, over a thousand college students, faculty and industry members will join together for a 48 hour game building marathon popularly known as a Game Jam. Participants will be given the details of the game design theme, constraints and mechanics allowed when the clock hits 5:00 p.m. in their local time zone. As the time zones change, so will those constraints, to mitigate any advantage global location might give one team over the other. While individual and regional Game Jams have been held wherever gamers congregate in the last few years, never has there been one of such size and scope as the Global Game Jam (GGJ).A number of us from Boing Boing, Offworld, Gadgets and Boing Boing Video plan to be present in various locations, and we'll be producing Boing Boing Video episodes from the madness. Are you attending? We'd love to hear from you in the comments if so![Keynote Speaker] Kyle Gabler (...) indie Developer of the popular game “World of Goo,” said, “The next big transformation in gaming won't come from a large game studio with million dollar teams and marketing budgets, it will come from some kid in their bedroom with a few pieces of free software and a never ending supply of caffeine and motivation. I can't wait to see the scraggly, brilliantly hacked together beginnings of some of the next great games crawl out of these 48 hours.”
Here is an overview on how it works. Snip:
The theme and constraints for participants in the Global Game Jam will be announced at 5:00PM on Friday, January 30, 2009 in your time zone. Each local jam is allowed to manage things the way the see fit, but we hope that everyone will follow our recommendations so we share a common experience and everyone is working from a level playing field. Please show up to the jam on time. Below is a typical set-up for a game jam, each jam will vary, please check with each jam to see their schedule. Do not come to the Jam with a team. Everyone will have some time to think and pitch an idea. Collaborate with new friends or peers you admire.* Here's information about all the locations.
(Thanks, Jolon and Global Game Jam Costa Rica crew!)
John Brownlee
Emtec is largely just a supplier of laptop peripherals, but they are jumping into the Netbook game with the Gdium.
Interestingly, it doesn't contain a built-in hard drive, which probably explains its slim, attractive looks: instead, it runs from a 16GB removable USB thumbdrive, which I'm guessing will allow you to boot your netbook's OS and files from your desktop or laptop, if you so choose.
With such a weird configuration, don't expect this to run XP: it's using a flavor of Linux called Madriva, and will ship with Open Office, Firefox, Thunderbird, Pidgin and a blog editor.
The sole product shot certainly looks attractively svelte, and I like -- in theory -- the ability to load my netbook's OS on another computer without a hitch. But that all adds up to a package that's going to be too confusing for most consumers... expect to stop hearing about this one quick.
The GDIUM should cost $400 when it is released, which is pricy for a netbook effectively without a hard drive, and come in black, white or pink.
John Brownlee

Image: fortybillion
We asked for your sticker-slathered laptops, and we got a slew of them. Analysis: most of you guys use Macs, and you sure do like your Obama stickers. After the jump, a small gallery of some of our many favorites.
Don't forget to add your own stickered or laser etched laptop to the Boing Boing Gadgets Flickr pool, tagged "bbglaptopart."
John Brownlee

A simple but gorgeous idea by designer sherwood Forlee: die-cut pads of paper, the corners of which can be easily folded over to staplelessly stick them together. I wish someone would actually start selling pads like this.
A little bit of college ruled genius [Yanko Design]
John Brownlee
A common way for computer manufacturers to keep the price down on netbooks is by only providing a three cell battery over a six cell, then releasing the six cell as an aftermarket accessory. Since netbooks are, to me, entirely about being long-lasting writing and browsing machines, shipping a three cell battery is basically all it takes for me to lose interest in a netbook forever.
HP has just started selling the 6-cell battery for their HP Mini 1000, and it's pretty much case-in-point for why this practice annoys me. They are selling it for $153.90, which is almost half of the netbook's $350 starting price.
If you can get away with a 3-cell battery on your netbook, that's great, but for people like me, that makes the cheapest HP Mini 1000 a $500 proposition... and if you're going to be spending that much on a netbook, the Samsung NC10 is still best-of-class, and ships
with a 6 cell battery standard for $50 less.
HP Mini 1000 6 Cell Battery Now Available [Portable Monkey]
John Brownlee
I love this articulating bedside lamp with built-in alarm clock designed by Avery Holleman, although it really does look more like a desk lamp. Either way, a great space-saving design, and I like the idea that I can turn off my alarm by just swatting the articulated arm to shatter against the wall, tetherball-style. I usually have to pick it up and dramatically hurl it against the wall.
Timelight Alarm Clock [Coroflot]
John Brownlee
The notoriously chromatically-sensitive Rob Galbraith has written up a review of the screens of three top-of-their-class laptops: the unibody MacBook Pro, the Lenovo W700 and the Dell Mini 9.
But it's his thoughts on the Mini 9 that are most interesting: not only does he think it has a better screen than the MacBook Pro, but he's made the machine a standard part of his photographer's bag.
To have a computer this capable, that is also small enough and light enough to slip into pretty much any camera bag, it has been a workflow-altering experience. Thanks in part to the Mini 9, I've personally switched to using the Think Tank Photo Streetwalker Pro for light duty gear carrying. As you can see in the photo below, the diminutive Dell slips easily into this compact, narrow photo backpack and leaves plenty of room for a carry-about camera kit (the Mini 9 is on the left side of the bag in the photo on the right).Our infatuation with the Mini 9 extends to its 8.9 inch (diagonal), 1024 x 600 pixel, LED-backlit display. For a computer that starts at about US$300 in the U.S. right now, we had modest expectations. As it turns out, the display profiles well, neutrals are reasonably neutral with minimal colour shifting in whites, grays or blacks and overall colour accuracy is very good for a laptop. Overall hue accuracy, in fact, is better than the late-2008 MacBook Pro 15 inch.
Ultimately, he describes the Mini 9 as a "budget gem" for amateur photographers. I wonder if we'll see this become a whole new class of netbook in the coming months or years: the photographer or video professional's netbook. That would certainly differentiate these machines from each other.
A look at the evolving laptop display [Rob Galbraith]
John Brownlee
After losing my little Sony Cybershot at CES and mourning the absence of a Smile Shutter in my life to pick up my friend's most accidentally contorted rictuses, I decided I would buy myself a Canon G10 in the hopes that it would bridge me from retarded point-and-shoot territory into the world of DSLRs.
What I've learned so far has been laughable, but I'm pleased with myself: I no longer have to smugly nod when people talk about ISO or aperture to mask my ignorance. I actually know how to manually focus a digicam now, which is leading to some more interesting photographs. And, biggest lesson of all: I've learned using the flash on a camera almost always results in photographs that just suck.
This guide to DIY Lighting Hacks for digital photographers is good fodder, then. Granted, it's mostly aimed at the DSLR crowd, but stuff like the DIY flash diffuser and party bouncer card is still stuff I could fit into my Canon G10. And if you're a more advanced photographer than me — and it's almost impossible to imagine that you aren't — there's sure to be at least a few tips here that will save you a couple bills in equipment costs.
DIY Lighting Hacks for Digital Photographers [Digital Photography School via Crunchgear]
John Brownlee
A failure as a product, Sega is repackaging their Body Trainer / FiTrainer MP3 player and heart monitor as the "Love Trainer."
Inept as a lover? Wrap a strange cyborg headset around your ears while a GLaDOS-like gynoid voice leads you through the carnal act with helpful advice like: "At the beep, make love much harder." Look, lady, I'm already trying here... shut up!
The video's just perfect, implying a gag: from the t-shirt wearing schlub with erectile dysfunction as main protagonist to the hilariously unhelpful Love Trainer "instruction" to the occasional, staccato-flashes of a single erect nipple (NSFW, FYI). But you can actually order the Love Trainer from the site, so maybe it's not an elaborate joke. Maybe it's just hilariously stupid.
Love Trainer [Official Site via Engadget]
John Brownlee
This fantastic movie camera with a rifle stock was apparently made for a Vietnam War reporter, and one can only wonder why: while it perhaps makes sense as a stabilizer, you'd think it would behoove the embededded film journalist to not look like he's packing when the Viet Cong suddenly pop up from their sub-cthonic burrows.
Either way, it is absolutely gorgeous. It's up for sale on eBAy right now for about $1,318. As the lyrical maestros over at Born Rich explain: "No doubt, the gun is a notion synonymous to death, but a movie camera in the shape of a gun is really a pleasing idea." It sure is, you guys. Nuff said!
Paillard Bolex H9 Mi Gun outfit [eBay via Born Rich]
John Brownlee
To be fair, Segways do this a lot less often than I would love them to.
John Brownlee
It's easy to forget, but all USB thumb drives are not created equal. There's a difference between the plastic cheapies tech companies are constantly ennuggeting and then crapping their press releases into and, say, a Super Talent 200x... and even amongst the big boys, different file systems get wildly different results.
Kristofer Brozio took nine of the best USB flash drives around and put them in a head-to-head performance test. Overall, the OCZ and Super Talent drives come out ahead. This may all seem pretty useless: you usually don't need a flash drive to do more than transfer a document or two between colleagues. But as someone who has been installing a good chunk of OSes on his Asus 1000HA netbook lately (more to come!), this has me looking to pick up a Super Talent.
USB Flash Drive Comparison [Test Freaks via Engadget]
John Brownlee
I don't know why it surprised me, but one of the best things about upgrading to a new unibody MacBook Pro was finding a new version of iPhoto installed on the machine. Oh, sure, I knew I could have technically upgraded iPhoto at any time: it's part of the iLife package. But I guess it just never occurred to me that Apple would spend time improving it, so I was delighted to discover how much better the new iPhoto kept untagged photos organized. I promised to keep my eye on future upgrades.
A month later, another update to iPhoto comes down the pipe, this time with facial recognition technology, which automatically searches your photos for faces, asks you to identify each one once and then easily bring up any past or future photos that feature a certain visage, no matter how dollsome or hideous.
It sounded pretty neat, but this is even better: it also works on felines. I imagine a great project here: drag in every LOLCat photo on the Internet and finally compile a definitive "Who's Who" off quasi-illiterate, cheeseburger loving doofus cats.
iPhoto's Faces recognizes cats [Maclife]
John Brownlee

Bandais' limited edition speaker has an automated diorama of Tokyo's Ginza district circa 1955 on the top. I don't care how it sounds, I just want to march my little rubber Godzilla monster all over the top while making roaring noises with my mouth.
1955 Speaker [Bandai via Akihabara News via Gizmodo]
John Brownlee
Apple has been unambiguous about the fact that they aren't just going to plunge into the netbook market. If they ever do release a netbook, expect them to go the Sony route of denying they are releasing a netbook at all, which at this year's CES came so much across like the most fabulous guy at the George curling up his nose in disgust and shouting "I'm not gay... call me metrosexual!" at the top of his lungs. The term netbook implies cheapness, and Apple's not going to go that route.
But here's someone's optimistic imagining of what a MacBook netbook could look like. Like the Vaio P, it would have a full size keyboard, with a surprisingly wide screen. Unlike the Vaio P, though, the MacBook Mini would feature a fold down leaf for a full track pad... no clitoral nub! All with MacBook Air thickness.
I like this design quite a bit.
MacBook mini [Wired]
Brandon Boyer
Today on Offworld, we saw a number of fantastic fan created work: from the latest in Olly Moss's Penguin Classics-inspired cover art, this time the pure essence of Valve's Half-Life, to an amazing Photoshop-meets-MadWorld faux magazine ad for Sega's upcoming hyperviolent Wii game.
We also heard news of two new Wii channels we hope make it to the states soon: an enhanced Wii Fit channel that connects users directly to health professionals and an extension of the photo-printing service that lets you print business cards featuring your Mii.
Elsewhere we again went behind the music of cult RPG Mother 3 and its classical influences, heard that we'd be playing more remade Banjo Kazooie on Xbox Live Arcade in April, downloaded new free indie game soundtracks from our new favorite net-label, considered buying a new Sam & Max resin statue, and best of all, saw that classic EA strategy/board game Archon is officially heading to the iPhone.
John Brownlee
Forgive the distance of the picture — the surly, leather-clad man working on the tiny Asus notebook looked like he could hit me so hard my whole family would die, and I didn't want him to know I was snapping him — but I think this, right here, is the image marketing problem netbook manufacturers have: put a bulky man in front of an Eee and it immediately makes him look like a Lenny-like manchild.
John Brownlee
Almost 140 years after Christopher Sholes solved the typebar jamming problem in alphabetically organized typewriters by creating the QWERTY alignment comes the Fast Finger Keyboard, which will prove maddeningly unusable to all but Luddite grannies and time-traveling Gutenburgians. $27.95, comes in whore red.
Fast Finger Keyboards [Official Site]
Joel Johnson
PopSci got their hands on the Samsung Show, an upcoming phone with a built-in pico projector that will be released in Korea this year.
I'm completely enamored of pico projectors, despite knowing that it'll be years before they'll emit enough lumens to really show a nice display during the day. But as a fun little adjunct to a phone, a little trick to impress your friends? Totally into it.
(Fast forward to 5 minutes or so to see him using the projector.)
Joel Johnson

The latest example of "beautiful spindly things that will never be built", the "ThisWay" bike by designer Torkel Dohmers, is imagined to be built of flax fiber and carbon fiber with a clip-on battery charged by rooftop solar panel for assisted recumbent cycling.
Had it not first caught my eye as wooden (it is not) and then intrigued me by color choice (it's a very ranch-style '60s shade) I probably would not have linked to it. Caramel might look good on plastic.
You know what vehicle some Scandinavian design needs to reimagine in sinuous simulation? The Big Wheel. I'd ride a modern version of that around town.
Joel Johnson
Gearlog takes a look at "Device Stage", a new feature of Windows 7 that adds a series of XML-based indices that try to unify the interaction of using devices that may have lots of different functionality. Which is a jerky way of saying that it'll make it easier to see what your magic-do-all printer is doing in one menu, while at the same time allowing the vendors to integrate ominous menu items like "Buy Ink" into your Windows 7 context menu.
Color me deeply suspicious.
John Brownlee
It's testament to the moon-eyed insanity of Kim Jong Il's regime that I didn't realize this was from the Onion until about a minute in. I think my favorite line is: "The plan is perfect. We have already succeeded."
John Brownlee
Luke Hutchisonw as able to make a hack to the Android kernel and browser and enable usable multitouch support on the T-Mobile G1. Since Apple claims to have patented multitouch colon-deep the wazoo, I wonder if this user's hack makes T-Mobile liable. Clearly the hardware is capable of it, which might imply — to Apple — a patent violation, and give reason for a lawsuit. I doubt it, but it's neat to imagine: the Hot Coffee lawsuit of the gadget world.
Get Multi-Touch Zooming Support on your T-Mobile G1 [Luke Hutch]
John Brownlee
Oh, you know no one's going to buy one of MyRacer's cute little Lisse S10 MP3 players over an iPod Shuffle... but christ, isn't that pixel-art OLED display just gorgeous? Too bad it's unlikely to ever come out over here.
John Brownlee
Crunchgear and BBG are basically J.O. buds in the vortex-fantasy of professional gadget blogging, but I'm not sure I understand their argument that netbooks should forego other improvements in favor of screen resolution.
Not that higher resolution is a bad thing: it's part of what makes the Vaio P so gorgeous. But this argument doesn't make a lick of sense:
Why don’t I buy a regular notebook, you ask? I arrange letters into words for a living. I could do this with a DX2/66. All I need is a cheap, light, portable computer for word processing that lets me see most or all of the three or four paragraphs I’m cobbling together. My life is almost entirely “in the cloud” so don’t need a big hard drive, a fancy OS, or lots of RAM — just a decent screen.
The word processing experience is not significantly improved by higher resolutions. It's part of why I'm totally fine with netbooks current resolutions: I agree, netbooks are primarily writing machines. It would be nice to see them amped up for better browsing, but most of my time in my netbook is spent in DarkRoom anyway.
Opinion: Netbook makers should stop adding fluff and focus on screen resolution [Crunchgear]
John Brownlee

For the next time you're at Oktoberfest, the beer tab corset. I'm something of an alcoholic, and I date a bartender, so I think this is incredibly sexy.
The Art of Can Tabistry [Blog]
Joel Johnson
After we noticed the Voice Box FX pedal from Electro-Harmonix, I noticed that they were based in Long Island City, just a short train ride away from my place in Brooklyn. Since I'm getting ready to move to Oregon—Hello, Eugene!—I figured I ought to get up there and check out one of the last family-owned music gear companies in America.
Turns out that EHX also manufacturers a huge percentage of the world's vacuum tubes in its factory in Russia, which are then sent back to New York for testing and pairing before being sold to vintage and high-end audio fans, as well as manufacturers like McIntosh.
I had a really good time checking out the factory floor to see the hand-made vacuum tube testing machines, as well as talking to the engineers that sit around all day and try to figure out how to get the ideas for new FX processors out of their crazy boss's head and into working hardware.
And thankfully for you, Derek and Wes edited out all the footage where I was wanking around with FX boxes, looking mournfully at the camera and whining that "Hey, this box doesn't make me sound as good as it does when people with talent use it. What gives?"
Flash video embed above, click "full" icon inside the player to view it large. You can download the MP4 here. Our YouTube channel is here, you can subscribe to our daily video podcast on iTunes here.
Rob Beschizza
Thirty bucks in Japan, the Sound Accel Pedal issues engine noise at three levels, depending on how hard you push it.
Product Page [Nodaya via CrunchGear]
Rob Beschizza
Panasonic's new Lumix DMC-FT1 camera is a waterproof, rugged machine with a 12 megapixel 1/2.33-inch sensor, 28-128mm Leica lens with 4.6x optical zoom, and the ability to record 720p high-def video, albeit in a highly-compressed version of the AVCHD format. It can cope with 5 ft drops and submersion in up to 3 meters of water.
What I like about it is the look of solidity, and the bright metallic colors. Check out the blue:

Not cornflower. It also comes in green, according to the leaked PDF. But again, it is an unpleasant one: olive drab.
Also announced were various spec bumps across the existing lineup.
Source [Focus Numerique via 1001 Noisy Cameras via Engadget]
Rob Beschizza
Researchers at the University of Tokyo have created paint larded with aluminum-iron oxide, which block electromagnetic waves.
This is nothing new though, as RF-blocking paints have been available for a number of years now. Indeed, EM-SEC Technologies successfully tested its own RF-blocking paint back in March 2007 to shield wireless devices and other electronic equipment within a building.But what the New Scientist is reporting is that existing technologies are becoming increasingly obsolete as companies are now using new, higher frequencies to send data. For example, the best wave absorbers commercially available today are only effective up to around 50GHz.
It'll be cheap, according to the scientists, as they collaborating with a real paint company to make the stuff in the first place: about $14 a kilo.
Rob Beschizza

Hidden Art's Jeeves and Wooster lamps, inspired by P.G. Wodehouse's novels, are jolly good. They are also jolly expensive: £450.
Jeeves Wooster (pair price) [Hidden Art via Selectism and Coolhunting]
Rob Beschizza
Sony's much-rumored and oft-denied PlayStation Portable followup will have a touchscreen and an "interface comparable to that of the iPhone," according to IGN.
I have no idea where the mockup comes from, but it's definitely just a mockup!
Rob Beschizza
Did you pre-order one of Sony's thin new notebooks? It's on it way to you about now: customers are receiving shipping notification in their mailboxes. [Crunchgear]
Weighing 1.4 pounds and having a near-full size keyboard, the Vaio P is smaller than a netbook but packs features rarely found on them, such as GPS, a high-def display and big SSD options.
Brandon Boyer

Our day on Offworld started out deep inside gaming's roots, with a look back at a text-only MUD version of Pac-Man, and then, even more gloriously, got news of Champion of Guitars, a brilliant working text adventure version of Guitar Hero, after the parody mock-up we featured earlier in the month.
We also had a whack at Hack-Boy, a single serve site that helps you hack Fallout 3's computers, saw that Metal Gear strategy card-game spinoff Ac!d was coming to mobile phones, browsed through the finalists of the Independent Games Festival's 2009 Mobile competition, and heard news that a downloadable version of Tetris Attack was coming to DS.
Finally, we heard one -- very likely drunk -- Japanese man give us a hilarious play-by-play of Game Boy's Super Mario Land, got sucked into repeatedly watching hypnotic homebrew VJ kits produced for the PS2 and Game Boy Advance, and, best of all, played Legend of Princess (see above), a souped-up raucous sidescrolling arcade version of Legend of Zelda by Noitu Love creator Konjak.
Joel Johnson

One of my favorite chiptune* musicians, Tettix, has released a new album for download. (I used one of his tracks as the background music to my LEGO Millennium Falcon time-lapse video.) It's called "Rites", and it's ambitious. He explains:
I'm hoping this album will be a bit of a surprise to most of you, it's unlike anything I've done before. The entire album is a remodeling of Igor Stravinsky's "The Rite of Spring" - a ballet that caused riots at its 1913 debut because of a brazen use of dissonance and polyrythms. It was a symphony that changed the very definition of music and I hope I've done it at least some justice. If you're unfamiliar with the original, I highly recommend you check it out (there's full videos on Youtube of the symphony).The artwork for the album was done by a close friend, Kymia Nawabi. There's a link to her work on the album page, I swear you won't regret clicking it. There are also four wallpapers of the artwork available to download on the album page!
* Or at least chiptunes-inspired; I think he uses Reason, not gaming hardware, and this particular album isn't very chippy at all.
Joel Johnson

There's a lot of generally wonderful sci-fi-tinged work in this gallery of 54 "mind-blowing digital paintings", but I'm especially partial to this piece from Artgerm reimagining the Battle of the Planets cast Thunderbirds as a coterie of Storm Shadowesque ninja.
It's this sort of stuff that makes me afraid to ever start giving substantial attention to Deviant Art; I'm worried I'd lose too many hours delving.
Update: Can you tell that I've never seen Thunderbirds nor Battle of the Planets before? (Title fixed.)
Joel Johnson
I'm just as interested in the stuff we make with our gadgets as I am them gadgets themselves, especially when they give us a look at something in a way we'd never have noticed before. Such as! Francis Vachon's time-lapse sequence of his 9-month-old son Charles-Edward playing in his room, squirming around from toy to toy like a little monkey larva.
John Brownlee

I just bought a Plasma TV from Sears. I declined to buy the $300/3 yr protection plan because of the price. Sears called me at home a few days later. The sales lady asked my why I chose a Plasma TV instead of an LCD. I thought this odd, but just answered the truth - there was a deal on this TV. She then told me a personal anecdote about her friend who repairs Plasma TVs who told her that Plasma TV's needed to be recharged every 5 years for a cost of $500 or so. She then tried to sell me the protection plan that would cover this service (the same one I declined before, which would expire before the 5 year recharging date anyway). I declined, ended our call, then got on the internet and discovered rather quickly that this is a myth about plasma tvs that lots of salespeople are propagating.I am certain that there are people buying these protection plans to cover their plasma tv's future "recharging" which they will discover never happens.
lolwhut?
Sears Calls Several Days After Purchase To Upsell Unnecessary Protection Plan With Lies [Consumerist]
John Brownlee

[netbooktextexpanderscript]1.6GHz Atom processor, 160GB hard disk, 1GB RAM, 10.2-inch (1,024x600) display, and Windows XP Home Edition.[/netbooktextexpanderscript]
And thus my post would usually write itself. But hold on a minute, lazy blogger! Mouse's latest netbook, the LB-5100W, comes with a built-in DVD burner.
God help you, Mouse Computer, if you make me edit my Text Expander netbook script. I am a lazy, lazy blogger.
This Netbook has an onboard DVD burner [Crave]
John Brownlee

There's an absolutely fascinating biopsy over at On the Dash in which President Obama, as a horological entity, is split up the gullet, his innermost cogwork guts examined for hidden tourbillions.
Watch nuts (and I mean it oh-so-lingeringly, oh-so-affectionately) have poured through the stock photo archives, watching for the telltale piece on Obama's left wrist for each shot. I find their obsession remarkable and laudable.
I think there's something interesting in microcosm here about Obama's great strength as a public figure, a leader: his ability somehow to be an identifiable, sympathetic fellow man to so many disparate groups.
My admiration for Obama is not knee-jerk liberal worship — I like him quite a bit, but I found his campaign promises depressingly nebulous, his campaign irritatingly messianic and his most slavish campaign followers fervent to the point of idiocy — but this admiration is largely inspired by Obama's ability to get as introverted, as obsessed with the minute mechanical mannerisms of time as amateur horology enthusiasts to embrace him in their arms and ask, "What watch are you wearing?"
Or, for that matter, smartphone obsessives to wonder about his Blackberry? Who ever cared what watch Bush wore? What phone he used?
This quality of spiritual identifiable-ness won't make Obama a good president by itself. I have no idea if he will be, in fact, and would not care to speculate on it... although he couldn't possibly be worse than Bush. But this sympathic quality of Obama's does make him an exemplary politician, not in the weasely sense, but as a representative of humans. It's not why I worship him — I don't — but it's why I like him. And it's certainly nice to like a president again.
Barack Obama's TAG-Huer [On The Dash]
Joel Johnson

While perusing the gorgeous "HAL Project" web site, full of simulations, screensavers, animated desktops, and audio samples from the seminal 2001: A Space Odyssey—for my money, Orson Welles' finest film*—I had a flash of duh: Are the original LEGO Space minifigs in red, blue, and yellow because of 2001? (I've asked LEGO, but that might be a hard one for them to track down.) [via ★]
* It's a tie between 2001 and Porky's.
Update: So I'm an idiot. Apparently red and blue Space minifigs didn't come out until far after the original ones in '79. LEGO told me:
I have asked several product developers to find an explanation. It had of course no connection to the Hal project 2001, the yellow and white space minifigures are developed in 1979 and the red and blue ones are developed in 1987.
I think the only explanation may be it is our primary colours.
John Brownlee
A rather sloppy but effective hack that allows you to video conference while maintaining eye-to-contact through a homemade cardboard reverse periscope mounted on the screen.
This comes from a German, which makes sense: as a race, the Germans value direct eye-contact so much that you literally can not have a beer without clinking glasses and staring each and every single person in the room in the eye for superstitious fear of "seven years of bad sex."
I think this superstition should be revised to only be seven years of bad sex between the two people who fail to look one another in the eye during a toast: I'm willing to sacrifice seven years of quality sex with the uggos if it'll get my beer down my craw faster.
Here's Looking At You, Kid [Datenform via MAKE
John Brownlee
This is a simple run down of the benefits of OLED over LCD and Plasma that ran on the Science Channel... I'm guessing sometime ago, since the creator of OLED, Kodak's Steven Van Slyke, describes the era of "42 inch OLEDs" as being five years away, and there are already comfortable prototypes at that dimension.
That all said, it's still a good overview of OLED aimed at the layman, and does a fine job of explaining how the technology works and how the energy crisis of the 70's lead to the high-def flatscreens of the double oughts.
[via Treehugger]
John Brownlee
A little over twenty five years ago, a young, bow-tied Steve Jobs took the stage and introduced the first Macintosh computer to a hooting crowd.
A couple things strike me about the video: first, how Apple loved, even back then, to emphasize the dimensions of computers by showing what other containers they can fit in. There's shades of the MacBook Air's famous manilla envelope advertisement in Jobs' assertion that "everything you're about to see on screen was generated on the computer inside this bag."
Second: this audience was full of absolute dorks. Notice the level of applause when the pseudo-3D chess engine comes on. You'd think Jobs just announced a self-lubricating blowjob port.
[via Techcrunch]
John Brownlee
A lot went wrong for Blackberry when they rushed their touchscreen Storm handset to market. Despite selling 500,000 units in its first month of release, it shipped with an operating system that held together less like a mature operating system and more like an unstable element created in an atom smasher, existing for a mere microsecond before detonating into an atomic explosion. RIM released patches, but the damage was done, and the Storm's sales have plummeted... it is now very definitely known amongst most consumers as an iPhone also ran.
So has RIM learned their lesson? Not a lick of it. According to RIM's co-CEO Jim Balsillie, buggy smartphone OSes are "the new reality" because companies will rush to release the phones "by the skin of their teeth" both while the handsets are still relevant and before big sales days like "Black Friday."
Sorry, Jim, but that dog don't hunt. This is only the "new reality" of capitalist incompetence and greed, which is the same as the old reality. There's a perfectly viable secondary strategy available, which both Apple and Palm have followed with success: work in secret on a phone and an operating system that are excellent in and of themselves, without being compared to the competition. Design them both together; the limbic system to the body. Then work on them while they are done, and then release when you're damn sure you got it right. The world needs less Blackberry Storms and more Pres.
John Brownlee
This sepulchral Bio-Cycle was made by metalworker Jud Turner. There's some questions on how a gothic bicyclist would actually ride this thing: I suggest digging your thumbs into the empty eye sockets while straddling the coccyx.
Jud Turner [Artist's Site via Gizmodo]
John Brownlee
The latest beta of Windows 7 supposedly contains this scary little screen hinting at numerous packages of Microsoft's upcoming OS. There are fewer variations to confuse consumers than Windows Vista, let alone Rob's doomsaying parody... but come on, Microsoft. This is still four more flavors of Windows 7 than you should be selling.
Joel Johnson

Chewk's LEGO hardsuit is pretty bodacious by itself, but the manic Marine minifig takes it to another level.
(There is an entire LEGO hardsuit Flickr pool if you're into this sort of thing.)
Rob Beschizza

According to Alibaba, the site that hooks importers up with people who make mountains of technological crap, this is the Android G2. Phandroid's thought? "Hmmmm… that definitely doesn’t look like the leaked Pics from Gizmodo last week."
Check out its gallery of phones calling themselves the G2. [Phandroid]
Rob Beschizza
Delightful, but that is the incorrect shade of green. Green must be decisive: think British Racing Green or Lime Green. What the hell is that? Sage? Asparagus?
John Brownlee

These tiny retro arcade machine recreations do come with the optional accessory of a shady looking drug pusher madly fingering a tiny Liliputian straight razor in his pocket between his meth-addled snorts, but that's not really what's so nifty about them: it's the fact that these miniature Pac-Man and Galaga machines are specifically designed to be placed in any pygmy arcade a model train enthusiast might dementedly want to install into his locomotive diorama.
They are only $7.50 each, which is cheap enough to consider as retrogaming knick-knacks for your desk.
JC Studios Inc [Official Site via technabob]
John Brownlee

I absolutely love the visual parallel between this image and the scene in Westworld in which Yul Brynner's cowboy robot removes his facial hatch, exposing the analog circuitry beneath, but no: it's just an absolutely bizarre hands-free camera designed by illustrator Matt Bernier in order to film POV clips of him executing his work.
Brush Care [Comic Tool via Hack A Day]
Rob Beschizza
When they were called UMPCs or HPCs and ran Windows, they were worthy of grand marketing campaigns. But now pocket PCs are called MIDs and run Linux instead, Microsoft says the whole concept is bad. From BusinessWeek:
“I’m not sure there’s a third category of device” between a cell phone and a netbook, says Andy Lees, a senior vice-president in Microsoft’s mobile communications business. “The thing that distinguishes a phone is it goes in your pocket or purse. If you have a six-inch screen, that’s no-man’s land.”
The irony won't be lost on anyone who has watched Microsoft's decade-worth of attempts to sell these overpriced, underpowered toys. Perhaps they're simply wising up, you may think -- but it would be an odd time to, given that handheld PCs are finally starting to sell due to the combination of better hardware and slimmer software tailored to the form.
For Intel, whose Atom chips lie at the heart of these devices, increased MID sales would be doubly pleasing: they don't cannibalize laptop sales the way netbooks do.
The ties that once bound it to Microsoft seem thin indeed:
Intel is stocking up on staff skilled in the operating system that will run the devices. One of the world's most experienced Linux programmers, Alan Cox, will join Intel from Red Hat (RHT) in March and work on projects including Moblin. "They were more than happy to have him there," says Paul Cormier, an executive vice-president at Red Hat. At the beginning of January, Intel brought on board Peter Anvin, another key Linux developer.Intel is also paying special attention to MIDs' software to try to ensure users find the devices compelling. The devices will feature new capabilities like touchscreens that recognize users' gestures and a graphical user interface that employs 3D and translucent icons.
Intel Readies Push into Mobile Internet Devices [businessWeek]
John Brownlee
I love the smell of heated plastic in the morning. It smells like sys admin.
Ethernet Cable Soldier [Fresh99 via Oh Gizmo!]
John Brownlee

In my hungover pursuit for omelettes and smoothies at Dell's CES press release, I was a bit confused about the Adamo. It was true that they displayed an absolutely gorgeous prototype of an ultra-thin luxury laptop, held aloft by the thin, sinewy forearm of an ebony goddess. But the way Dell's guys were talking, it sounded like it wasn't a specific machine, so to speak, but an entire line of luxury laptops: Inspirons for oil shieks.
It seems the answer is both: the prototype held up will be the first of an expanding Adamo line of luxury laptops by Dell. And without the bleary-eyed occular effect of too many Casino Royale rum-and-cokes, it is even more beautiful than I had first thought. This looks significantly better than the MacBook Air, in my opinion. Shame it's a PC... and a PC without announced specs or battery life estimates at that.
Dell Grants Exclusive Photo Shoot of New Adamo Line of Luxury Notebooks [Bub.blicio.us]
John Brownlee
Technogeeks must congratulate themselves in life. No matter how deft a chmodding, the only accolades you can expect to get from the outside world will be delivered in a currency of indian burns and purple nurples, "nerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrd." The logic-based acrobatics of the mind will never socially compare with the pec bouncing and upside-down push-ups of our simian, testosterone-drunk peers. We must reward ourselves.
To the rescue, Global Nerdy, who are releasing a series of Geek Merit Badges for $3.99 each. The first is the Octocat, which rewards Open Source Contribution. No word on future merit badges, but I'm hoping at least one will be for Home Trephining.
Nerd Merit Badges [Official Site via MAKE]
Brandon Boyer
Today on Offworld we saw a pair of pairs of retro-game inspired footwear, possibly the reigning champ of game-cakes, as these are ones you can actually play, explored the possibility that Taito may be returning to the DS for more retro-futuristic Space Invaders love, and saw more of Sega's upcoming Wii title that parodies retro gaming's finest.
We also held a brief service for the death of legendary design house The Designers Republic, best known in the games sphere for their work defining the visual identity of the Wipeout series, saw fantastic new media from Fez creators Polytron on the opening of their new website, and saw the first and likely only set of lesbian artificial intelligence erotica we'll ever see, with a forbidden romance between Portal's GlaDOS and System Shock's Shodan.
Finally, we saw one man's attempt to bring The Wrestler's Randy 'The Ram' Robinson forward from his on-screen 8-bit roots to full next-gen glory, and settled on a game for this weekend's community play: the open beta of London indie Beatnik Games' Plain Sight, a raucous and light-hearted robot arena battle that takes the best bits of Mario Galaxy's spherical worlds and combines it with brutal aerial acrobatics.
John Brownlee
It's been a good, long while since anyone has written a gadget blog post about a desktop phone, short of being in the crimson hue and classic shape of the 1966 Batphone. Still, Verizon's Hub/One looks impressive: a widgeted phone that hooks up to your DSL line and allows you to do casual browsing, email and info grabbing through an attractive and wide touchscreen. Remote management of your apps and widgets is a touted feature, allowing you to change a calendar appointment from the office, or remotely delete an incriminating voicemail from a lover before the wife gets home.
Anyway, it looks good, if you can still get a throbber from a phone that sits on your desk and never moves... a paralyzed smartphone. Verizon's claiming it'll be $199 with a $35 a month fee, which makes that analogy particularly apt.
Verizon makes the Hub official [Crunchgear]
Rob Beschizza
Guest reviewer Dean Putney takes the AccuNAS AN2L for a trip around the platters.
The AccuNAS AN2L puts you on easy street for working with a network storage solution. With very little setup, and all of the controls in a neat web interface, you gain a lot of control over all of the device's features very quickly. Compared to the work I've been doing setting up a web server, the AN2L provided a lot of the services I'm working on with just a fraction of the effort.
Joel Johnson
i-Hacked offers this handy tip for the next time you find yourself rummaging in the bowels of a Addco roadside sign:
Should it will ask you for a password. Try “DOTS”, the default password.In all likelihood, the crew will not have changed it. However if they did, never fear. Hold “Control” and “Shift” and while holding, enter “DIPY”. This will reset the sign and reset the password to “DOTS” in the process. You’re in!
John Brownlee
Excuse the quality, but surreptitiously snapped on my iPhone while sneaking out of her apartment at dawn, the sticker-slathered backside of a PowerBook G4 belonging to a sassy Jersey Girl bartender I'm seeing. If you can tell the quality of a woman by the mad chromatic zoo of glittery Japanese chan characters she sticks on her laptop cover, I think I might have found something of a keeper. This, right here, was my day brightener.
I know, I know. The mad cap plastering of brightly colored stickers on an Apple notebook as if it was a teenage girl's Trapper Keeper might be looked upon by some as a profane desecration of Apple's clean, pure design, but I don't find myself in that camp at all. I have always liked slapping stickers on my laptops, making them dynamic, brightly-colored, multi-layered expressions of self... or, at least, any parts of self they make a sticker for. That Apple's laptops are so imminently uncustomizable and that its customers can be so cultishly slavish to Cupertino design makes it all the more important to do something, anything to differentiate my Mac from all the others out there.
What about you? Maybe you have just slapped some stickers on your laptop, or maybe you've fractally laser etched a design in, or maybe you've graffitied your chassis. If so, we'd love to see your laptop art. Just add a photograph of your laptop to the Boing Boing Gadgets Flickr pool, tag it "bbglaptopart" and we'll pick out some of our favorites to show off.
Boing Boing Gadgets Flickr Group [Label laptop art "bbglaptopart"]
John Brownlee

Oh, Mimobots. You're so good at what you do. Hydrocephalia + geek reference + 1GB USB flash drives = $30. This coneheaded C3P0 Mimobot had me at hello.
Mimobot C3P0 [Mimoco via technabob]
John Brownlee
There was a little confusion yesterday about Tim Cook's remarks about pursuing lawsuits against competitors who rip off Apple's IP.
Based on the question being responded to, it seemed pretty obvious Apple was specifically warning Palm about their upcoming multi-touch capable Pre smartphone, but others have speculated that he was simply addressing the Chinese knock-off market (good luck suing those guys, Tim).
Either way, Palm seems to be pretty sure Cook was talking about them, and have released a rather swaggering statement through spokesperson Lynn Fox in return: bring it on.
Palm has a long history of innovation that is reflected in our products and robust patent portfolio (31 pages of patents in Google Patent Search), and we have long been recognized for our fundamental patents in the mobile space. If faced with legal action, we are confident that we have the tools necessary to defend ourselves.”
Miss Fox then picked up the chair she was sitting on, walked across the room and smashed it across the back of Tim Cook's head. Steve Wilkos rushed to the stage to establish order, but it was already too late. From the crowd, stunned silence, one shrill "Oh no she didn't!" and then the sudden protrusion of an ocean off wildly rotating fists, accompanied by the insistent, jackal-like chant: "PALM PRE! PALM PRE! PALM PRE!"
Palm to Apple: Bring It [All Things D]
John Brownlee

For some reason, incremental revisions of easily overlooked kitchen tech always gets me gobsmacked with admiration. The latest evolution: the common ice cube tray, now fitted with bright green tabs allowing for the easy expulsion of individual crystalline cubes ... without taking out the contents of the entire tray in a frigid freezer conglomeration of geometric shapes which must be broken apart by a hammer before their dispersal into whiskey sours.
Quicksnap: A Better Ice Block Tray [Gizmag via Oh Gizmo]
Rob Beschizza

The organic cellular design encoded in nature remains a popular theme in futuristic design. Oobject's gallery of buildings, chairs and inexplicable thingies suggests two things: firstly, that our childrens' spaces will have lots of links, bubbles and compartments.
And secondly, we'll all need maid service.
Joel Johnson

A small company that laser-etches tech and nerd gear has this sage advice:
WARNING : DO NOT LASER ENGRAVE MOLESKINES WITHOUT THE PROPER FILTRATION SYSTEM. BURNING THEM CREATES HIGHLY TOXIC GASES INCLUDING PHOSGENE AND CHLORINE GAS. THE HYDROCHLORIC ACID PRODUCED WILL CORRODE EVERYTHING IT CONTACTS.Turns out hitting a PVC cover with a laser isn't such a great idea.
Instead of hitting the covers themselves, Engrave Your Tech now offers these undyed leather Moleskine covers that, when engraved by laser, emit only the mouth-watering smell of seared beef.
I go back and forth on Moleskine and other paper notebooks—wonderful for jotting ideas, but I have poor discipline in reencoding the ideas to something permanent and indexable by computer—but if I can come up with a clever custom design these might just be enough to lure me back, despite the $60 price.
Rob Beschizza
Tom Chick's collection of in-game gadgets warps spacetime, turns marble into moss, opens portals, controls minds, and gets you out of a combat pickle.
10 videogame gadgets we wish we had [Fidgit]
John Brownlee

This is such a great idea, it's irritating that these 2GB USB flash drive glasses aren't actually wearable: they're being advertised as book marks.
Joel Johnson

We salute the reintroduction of pastels in rack-mounted synthesizers, as heralded by the Marc Marc TD Cross Generator. Yours today, starting at $25,000. [via George Cochrane]
Rob Beschizza

Among the many clever ideas at Dialog5's "Universal Connections" gallery of gadget art is this useful one. It must be manufactured!
Universal connections [Dialog5 via Design You Trust via Unplggd via Gizmodo]
Update:
– Joel
Joel Johnson
⌦ GPS – Refurbished Tom Tom ONE (3rd Edition) for $80, shipped. New ones go for $30-$40 more. [Dealoco]
⌦ Heart Rate Watch – Reebok Precision Trainer XT Heart Rate Monitor Watch with Chest Strap for $30, shipped. Water resistant, comes with optional whisky-level meter. [Dealhack]
⌦ LED Badget – Programmable Scrolling Red LED Name Tag for $12, shipped. [Dealnews]
⌦ Cheap Monitor – While Dell raised prices on most of their monitors, the 19-inch LCD flat panel dropped to $130, shipped, down $50. [Dealnews]
⌦ "Cocksucker" – The complete Deadwood on DVD for $65, shipped. About half off. [Slickdeals]
⌦ Game Pad Keyboard – Today's Woot is the Wolfking Warrior Game Pad Keyboard for $21, shipped.
Photo: Jeanine Anderson
John Brownlee
Jolicloud looks gorgeous: a clean, crisp, stripped-down and iPhone-like OS specifically designed for netbooks by Tariq Krim.
This really is the sort of OS I want to see on netbooks: beautifully designed, crisp, clean and with a bare minimum of frills... just big program launching buttons and easy-to-install app packages.
Jolicloud isn't out yet, but I can't wait to give it a spin.
Jolicloud [Official Site via Crunchgear]
Rob Beschizza
This heavily customized Sony Xperia X1 was spotted in the execrable TV remake of Knight Rider. I love the font (Eurostile Condensed/Next, or clone thereof), and I love the idea of "CALL IGNORED" as a standard system message. [Gizmodo]
John Brownlee

This electronic chess board with magnetically moving pieces is the same bog-standard chess machine you could buy back in Radio Shack back in 1989, right down to the monochrome LCD. And actually, it looks like Rob reviewed one last year, describing its method of independent piece locomotion as "loud and grinding."
Still, props to them for advertising the thing with a flamboyant appearance by the Universal's most mincing monster turned Broadway Star... Erik, the Phantom of the Opera.
Phantom Force Chess [Pro Idee]
Rob Beschizza
Castiglione Morelli is the latest designer to toy rudely with our expectations of thermodynamic energy transfer.
Portfolio [Morelli Design via Notcot and CrunchGear]
Rob Beschizza
Comissioned by singer Josh Pyke, this guitar-shaped boat is on sale. From Undercover News:
The extraordinary guitar-shaped boat built for the Josh Pyke video `Make You Happy` is going to be auctioned for charity. Maton guitars created the SS Maton for the video. Josh is seen sailing it around Sydney Harbour the ‘Make You Happy’ clip. Now Josh wants to use the guitar-boat to raise money for Indigenous Literacy Project
It hits eBay on Feb 9. I'll post an update to the news faucet in the sidebar when the time comes: save your pennies!
Josh Pyke To Auction Guitar Boat [Undercover News via Musicradar and Born Rich]
Rob Beschizza

LG's making one that actually exists, but Shirley A. Roberts' design for a wrist-phone has much more sci-fi panache. All it needs is cufflinks!
Emergency Phone [Fubiz via Monster Munch]
Rob Beschizza
A lightweight derivative of Ubuntu Linux, CrunchBang is designed for the limited display resolution (and the hardware profile) of Asus' Eee PC range of netbooks. It's also limited in size, offering a few basic apps like Firefox, but otherwise maintaining a minimal footprint: Just slap it on a flash drive or CD and get cracking. Here's a forum thread about it.
As much as Linux confuses and disappoints mainstream users, projects like this are a much better path than the current trend in netbook software, which is "Put as much RAM in as possible and hope Vista won't suck too badly."
It's also perfectly named for Mike Arrington's tablet netbook thingy, if and when it appears! (And also comes in a standard edition if you want to put it on anything else)
Download [CrunchBang Linux via Lilliputing]
Brandon Boyer

Today on Offworld, we saw Spore expanding with two new PC games as well as onto the Wii and again on the DS, saw Noby Noby Boy get a firm post-Valentine's date, and wondered if Digital Chocolate's excellent one-button mobile game Tower Bloxx might be moving to the iPhone.
On an artier front, we looked into the soul of an Atari 2600 and what we saw was very similar to late artist Jeremy Blake's digital art output, saw the most sinister(ly cute?) art-game to ever spring from Unreal Tournament, and saw fantastic pixel-chic fineries.
One More Go columnist Margaret Robertson also told us about how Nippon Ichi's strategy RPG Disgaea was "a quest for numerical orgasm," vinyl toy designer Touma turned Animal Crossing into razor-toothed evil, a new PC demo for Puzzle Quest sequel Galactrix sucked half our day away, and finally, Persuasive Games' brilliantly scathing TSA social parody game Airport Security moved to the iPhone and ended up even smarter for it.
Joel Johnson
Programmers, musicians, artists, animators, engineers, crafters, graphic designers, gave developers, or even — worst-case — writers. One caveat: While I don't mind if they are writing on a corporate site, I'd prefer bloggers who have retained a human voice.
My aim? I want to stop reading so much news that has already been digested and start reading more about the creation of the things that interest me.
Do you have any suggestions?
Examples: Cable.name; John K.; John Mayer (seriously! I like his blog); Some digital artist with a blog that is too cool for me to know about.
Joel Johnson
Joel Johnson

USA Today has a small gallery of some of the new toys that will be part of the surely epic merchandising effort alongside the upcoming Star Trek reboot. [USA Today]
Rob Beschizza

Dear America,
There is now an Obama Chia Pet.
Best regards,
Boing Boing Gadgets
![]()
Update: Apparently you can get these Chia Obama Handmade Decorative Planteron Amazon for twenty bucks, should you so choose.
Joel Johnson

Boxee, the "social" media center software for Mac OS X, Ubuntu, and Apple TV (with Windows on the way) has added ABC shows to its streaming line-up "just in time for the Lost season premiere". It only works on OS X and Ubuntu at the moment — but it'll be added to the other versions soon enough.
Update: Clarification from the Boxeers:
I wanted to give you a quick update that boxee is available in a public Alpha for Mac and Ubuntu from boxee.tv. (go there, sign up, download immediately)
boxee is available on private Alpha for Windows (go there, sign up, twiddle your thumbs waiting for an invite for a week or two, then download).boxee with ABC is available for the Mac version only at this point due to the Move Networks plug-in they use to deliver content (not available for Linux, and will take some more tweaking for Windows).
Joel Johnson

I can't wait to play with the upcoming LEGO Digital Box, an augmented reality machine that will display a fully assembled 3D model on the top of boxes full of LEGO. It's built by German company Metalo and will be installed in toy stores around the world. [NOTCOT]
John Brownlee

Panasonic has announced the production of the world's first portable Blu-Ray player, featuring an 8.9 inch LCD screen, as well as Internet connectivity for BD Live and other Internet services like Amazon Video-on-Demand, YouTube, Bloomberg, etc. T
The New York Times Gadgetwise blog is going WTF: they argue rightfully that an 8.9 inch screen isn't going to be able to show off Blu-Ray's high-def advantages. That's true, but clearly, they are banking on the fact that Blu-Ray is going to be the de facto DVD standard from now on, and people will still want to watch Blu-Ray movies on the airplane.
Expect to see more Blu-Ray portable players coming out over the next year, short of tehj format's complete implosion before the brunt of streaming video.
Portable Blu-Ray [Gadget Wise]
Xeni Jardin

An internet prankster and hacker known on LJ as tongodeon says,
For the last year or two, a friend and I have been giving our friends Casio F-91w wristwatches. They are cheap, reliable, and a reason why 28 prisoners have been held in extrajudicial detention in Guantanamo. In late October I attended a rally in Reno, NV and gave an F-91w and letter to Barack Obama via a senior staffer on the national campaign team. Today Barack Obama issued an executive order closing Guantanamo. The wire photos don't show him wearing my watch, but I still feel a little vindicated today.Here's his post about the affair, and here's a snip from his letter to President Barack Obama (OMG that feels awesome to blog for the first time):
I've been volunteering for your campaign because of this watch, the Casio model F-91w. These watches cost $7.50 in quantity. They are cheap, waterproof, and reliable. They are common throughout the developing world. And they have been listed by the Department of Defense as a reason for the continued extrajudicial detention of the 28 Guantanamo detainees listed on the following page.In 1995, US intelligence recovered a document in Manila by Ramzi Yousef describing how to use this watch as the timing device for a bomb. Ahmed Ressam, the "millennial bomber" was captured with two Casio F91Ws. As a result, when Pakistani police and the Northern Alliance turned over alleged Taliban members to the military, their ordinary watches were identified as evidence that they were terrorists.
Rob Beschizza

Larry Magid's 1984 review of the 128k Apple Mac, published in the Los Angeles Times, speaks to the enduring mythology of Apple's products--the quality, the simplicity, the high-priced peripherals--and how it came to be.
Apple’s Macintosh, officially introduced last Tuesday, has started a fever in Silicon Valley that’s hard not to catch. ... [it] is as innovative today as the Apple II was in 1977. It’s one of the few computers introduced in the last 18 months that makes no attempt to imitate the IBM PC....
Like the Lisa, it uses a hand-held “mouse” — a small pointing device which enables the user to select programs, and move data from one part of the screen to another. Also like the Lisa, Macintosh uses a black and white display screen whose resolution is so high that it can quickly draw detailed pictures while at the same time display crisp and readable text.
...
The machine’s inability to run MS-DOS could be its salvation or its downfall.
John Biggs at CrunchGear sums it up well: "You really come to understand why Apple got the reputation for being expensive and weird. The printer cost $495 when similar gear cost maybe $250 on a good day. But remember: this thing had a “mouse” and a “GUI” back when most of us were about ten years old."
Larry Magid’s 1984 LA Times review of 128K Mac [PC Answer via CrunchGear]
Photo: Tom Borowski
Joel Johnson
I promise we won't keep linking all this viral Watchmen stuff...unless it keeps being this well made. (Thanks, CGI_Joe!)
Rob Beschizza
Polymythic built an iPod Touch-controlled target range using an Arduino microcontroller board, an ioBridge panel and three servos.
A friend of mine who is something of an avid shooter had mentioned the lack of affordable "action" type targets. After some discussion, we determined it would be fun to build such a contraption for some indoor airsoft practice. The Arduino Diecimilia was a great choice for the "programming side" of things (I have 2 of them, he has one as well).As a shooter, you would want to be up-range from the targets, so having something portable with a web interface was a great solution so nobody would have to be "in the line of fire". The iPod Touch and the ioBridge module I used in another recent project. Of course, why build a custom target enclosure when I could snap one together with my Construx.
Arduino/ioBridge Airsoft Target Range [Nowhere Else] (Thanks, Stagueve!)
Joel Johnson
I was always so jealous of that little girl. I loved Maraschino cherries as a kid.
John Brownlee
Today is already absolutely maggoty with robot insects, so forgive me if I carry the meme, but I find these slow-motion-videos of butterfly ornithopters just hypnotically beautiful, like the ethereal fluttering of cyberpunk faeries.
Joel Johnson
⌦ Point-and-Shoot – Canon PowerShot SD790IS Digital ELPH camera for $114, shipped, plus another $10 from a rebate. About $40 off. [Slickdeals]
⌦ The Wire – The complete series of The Wire on DVD for $82, shipped, or around $30 off. "What the fuck did I do?" [Slickdeals]
⌦ Upscaling DVD Player – Pioneer DV-410V-K 1080p upscaling DVD player for $75, shipped. Plays Divx and SVCD, as well. About $25 off. [Dealhack]
⌦ Free Popcorn – Sample of Orville Redenbacher Natural Gourmet Popping Corn. I think I want to name a son "Orville". That was my great-grandfather's name. [Bargainst]
⌦ Netbook – The snazzy MSI Wind U120 is on the Amazons for $380, which is only about $20 off MSRP, but this is a brand-new model. This was the one I was waiting on, but now I'm waiting on the VAIO P or the Asus with the tablet display. I look forward to the ones that I will be waiting for in lieu of those two next month. [Dealnews]
⌦ Linux Tablet – The Nokia N810 internet tablet is now $220, shipped. That's quite a drop for this very tweak-friendly device. [Dealnews]
⌦ USB Flash Drive – SanDisk Cruzer Titanium 8GB for $18, shipped. Not cheap compared to generics, but cheap for this brand. [Dealnews]
⌦ MIDI Interface – The Tapco Link.MIDI 4x4 is a USB MIDI interface for Mac or PC with three XLR inputs, one XLR output, for $55, shipped. That's about half-off. [Dealnews]
⌦ Bass Pro Sale – Bass Pro is having a sale on nearly everything. (Y'all.) [Dealnews]
⌦ Roomba – Today's Woot is the iRobot Roomba 415 with Bonus Charging Dock and Filter Pack for $145, shipped. Comes with a self-charging base and extra filters for quite a bit less than the newer models.
Photo: djenvert
John Brownlee
I always pictured him as more of a drift racer, myself
darth vader likes to have weekends too… [Kinod via Neatorama]
John Brownlee
This post by Andy Hertzfeld over on Folklore.org about the origins of the 1982 Mac's famous boot beep (complete with downloadable 68000 assembly source code) is delicious fodder for more technical minded Mac fans, but this anecdote will appeal even to the more casual appreciator of Apple's corporate mythos:
Charlie [Kellner] was pleased that he was able to make a significant contribution in his first week on the project. Inspired, he asked if he could take a prototype home over the weekend for testing. The next Monday he came into work very excited."I knew that something wasn't right!", he exclaimed. "The sound is being completely muffled by the case!. But I know how to fix it."
...He drilled a hole about the size of a dime in a strategic place, which caused the measurements to improve dramatically.
He started demoing his modified prototype, showing how the hole improved the sound quality. The difference didn't sound that significant to me, but it definitely was an improvement. He showed it to Terry Oyama, who designed the case, and asked him if he could add the hole.
The next day, Steve Jobs came by in the afternoon and asked to hear Charlie's demo. He listened to the two Macs, and then decreed "There's not enough improvement! There's no way that we're going to put an ugly hole in the case! Just forget about it!"
Charlie was pretty disappointed, and never got very enthusiatic about the Mac after that. A couple of weeks later, he transfered back to the Apple II group, leaving the boot beep as his only legacy.
Very recognizably Steve. Folklore has a lot of great anecdotes up by Andy about early Apple, Mac and Lisa development, including this hilarious one explaining why Apple went with "OK" over "Do It" for their dialog windows: people thought the software was calling them a 'dolt.'
Rob Beschizza
Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh have designed a propulsion system that uses electrical charges to destabilize the surface tension of water. There are no motors or flippers: just the water's own dynamics.
The technique is ideal for small robotic watercraft such as those that monitor water quality, which currently rely on battery-sapping propellers.
Inspired by how beetle larvae move on water, bending their backs rhythmically to exploit surface tension, the experiments used electrodes attached to a 2-centimeter-long boat that created a similar effect. Top speed: 4 millimeters per second.
Creepy But Cool: Baby Beetles... [Techburger]
John Brownlee

This is simple, but great: the Bookmark Bedside Lamp features one protruding spine over which to splay your half-read book at the end of the night. I only wish it had more protruding bookmarks, splayed in a fan around the perimeter I have half-a-dozen half-read books jostling for attention on my bedside table at any one time.
Bookmark Bedside Lamp for Bookworms [Gizmodiva]
John Brownlee
Asked during yesterday's sales call about Apple's plans to deal with the competitors to the iPhone like Android and the Palm Pre, Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook's voice took on a dangerous edge, like a rusty razor drawn suddenly across a protruding throat.
We approach this business as a software platform business. We are watching the landscape. We like competition as long as they don’t rip off our IP. And if they do, we will go after anyone who does.
Asked if he was specifically talking about Palm and the Pre, Cook began to smash his fist against the table rhythmically, his voice rising into an insane falsetto while his fellow conference call participants laughed with nervous sycophancy:
I don’t want to talk about any specific company. We are ready to suit up and go against anyone. However, we will not stand for having our IP ripped off.
He then closed with a joke about invading Poland, which resulted in riotous laughter and applause.
In all seriousness, what Cook seems to be referring to is the Palm Pre's multitouch screen, which the iPhone has patented up the wazoo... but threatening to sue competitors for daring to come up with their own independent method for tracking two or more fingers across a screen is the very definition of patent evil.
John Brownlee

A chronic pipe smoker constantly belching forth pungent plumes of camel-scented latakia, char and greasy tobacco detritus, the only way my work desk stays clean is by the small armada of battery-powered toy robots who constantly whir away to Humbert's alarm, making sure my workspace does not become a sooty, carcinogenic metaphor for the inside of my lungs.
This, for me, is one of the best things about living in the 21st century... but robot vacuums are nothing new. Check out this awesome Tomy Dustbot from 1985. Not only did it have edge sensors, it even carries around its own dustpan and broom! Fuck you, Roomba!
Tomy Dustbot [The Old Robots]
John Brownlee

While an excellent way to settle big questions like prom dates, gladiatorial combat is a poor way of solving the petty squabbles that crop up during the day. The Inflatable Gladiator Combat Set provides a middle ground: using blow-up instruments and armor, seemingly unsolvable interpersonal problems can be solved not with the deflation of an opponent's skull, but by their Spartacus helmet. Only $16, even.
Inflatable Gladiator Combat [OhGizmo]
John Brownlee
The Diana Cult Camera is a recreation of its famous plastic predecessor. According to the Wikipedia article, "Thee poor quality of the [Diana's] plastic meniscus lens results in generally low contrast, odd color rendition, chromatic aberration, and blurred images." In other words, it takes in real time the sort of lousily ethereal, overfiltered pictures you'd have to spend hours fiddling in PhotoShop to achieve.
The Wikipedia article notes: "The Diana was first produced during the early 1960s in Kowloon, Hong Kong, by the "Great Wall Plastic Factory", and was sold under various labels (often just a different stick-on nametag). Most were given away as novelties or prizes at fairs, carnivals, or other public events." In other words, the Diana is a truly vintage crapgadget. Only £39.99.
Diana Cult Classic [Lazy Bone UK via Coolest Gadgets]
Previously • Lo-Fi "Diana" Camera Reissued as "Diana+"
• Flash for Diana+ vintage film camera
John Brownlee

One of the most adorable small moments of the inauguration was watching the button cute daughter of President Obama happily snap pictures of her Dad. According to the New York Times, that digicam was a $150 EasyShare M893, which looks like a neat camera for a little girl.
But then I started wondering: why did her parents buy her a Kodak? Is it because Kodak is really one of the last American companies still making cameras? And if so, is this what it's like to be a President, where the purchase of even the smallest gift for your child must be, in some respect, a patriotic gesture... a symbol of support for home industry?
I'm overthinking it, I know. I would just hate to think that the kids of a United States president could never open a Voltron or Hello Kitty doll on Christmas morning.
A New Photographer in the White House [New York Times]
John Brownlee
This QuantumGravity Watch by Concord C Lab touts an aerial bi-axial Tourbillon mechanism to allow the free movement of its churning guts, regardless of gravitational pull. Ach so! A more interesting problem: what sort of frickin' Cylon do you need to be to figure out how to strap this thing to your wrist?
BREAKING Concord C Lab QuantumGravity [Watch Luxus via Crunch]
Rob Beschizza
Here's Tim Cook, quoted by Wired's Brian X. Chen:
Apple reinforced its skepticism in netbooks, saying their low-powered CPUs, cramped keyboards and small displays are not enough to satisfy customers..."We've got some ideas, but right now we think the products in theory will not provide the experience to customers that they're happy with," said Tim Cook, Apple's chief operating officer.
It's too easy to assume they're missing the boat because of corporate elitism. But the smarter assumption is that they've got something cooking, and are being customarily sly about it.
The clue? When businessmen talk of imaginary customers, a solution to their imaginary problems is always close at hand.
Apple Still Oblivious to Netbook Opportunity [Wired: Gadget Lab]
Brandon Boyer

Today on Offworld, we saw how Obama (or a reasonable facsimile, at least) unwinds after a long inaugural day with a little retro-gaming, and likely the best piece of cosplay kit we'll see in some time -- a masterfully rebuilt Aperture Science Handheld Portal Device.
We also saw new flashcarts built specifically for Game Boy musicians, the finalists in the Independent Games Festival's student showcase, custom vinyl toys of classic Dig Dug characters, and new God of War and WipEout crossovers coming to LittleBigPlanet.
Finally, we played the latest game in the fantastically complex Grow series, looked back at LucasArts' 300-baud C64 virtual world forerunner Habitat, heard about Flashbang's newest abstract underwater action game Blush, and saw the first hints at a new WiiWare game from Sega that parodies 8-bit gaming's past.
Xeni Jardin
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Today's a Russell Porter double-header on Boing Boing Video. In this episode, our UK-based music correspondent introduces us to minimalist/electro/glitch trio Micachu and the Shapes. 21-year-old songwriter/musician/MC Mica "Micachu" Levi leads the band, with Raisa Khan on keyboards and Marc Pell on drums.
They're destined to win a Grammy for best use of a vacuum cleaner in a melodic noise composition. Well, whatever, maybe not, but I love that they use a "hoover" as a voice modulation accessory on-stage, and they build or mod other instruments from odd origins.
In our Boing Boing video interview, they joke about the vacuum cleaner thing being a gimmick, but it's cheap and punk and I like it. Micachu's debut record is due out in a couple weeks (early February, 2009), and was produced by the acclaimed electronic musician Matthew Herbert.
As is the case with many of the bands Russell introduces us to in these Boing Boing interviews, his timing is prescient. Music critics in the UK are using headlines like "Is Micachu The Next Big Thing?" which probably means: yes. But we wouldn't hear about them in the US otherwise for months.
Here's a snip from the band's Wikipedia entry which delves into the "maker" aspect of their act:
Micachu describes the music she performs with The Shapes as pop, but the term may be misleading, as her music veers away from much of pop's defining characteristics, including obvious choruses, and accessible lyrics, and often makes use of unconventional playing styles and use of noise like bottles breaking or a vacuum cleaner. There is also little or no bass line in much of her music, which is very uncommon in pop music. For these reasons, her music has been widely described as experimental, and difficult to categorize.Inspired by experimental composer Harry Partch, Micachu uses unorthodox instruments which are sometimes customised or even homemade. These included a modified guitar played with a hammer action called a 'chu' and a bowed instrument fashioned from a CD rack. She also uses improvised instruments, such as glass bottles or a vacuum cleaner.
Here's more about Harry Partch, (June 24, 1901 – September 3, 1974), the pioneering American electronic musical instrument maker and composer Micachu cites as an influence. At left, an image of his "cloud chamber bowls," described here as "sections of 12-gallon Pyrex carboys, suspended from a redwood frame on ropes... difficult-to-find and impossible-to-tune glass gongs played very carefully by a percussionist who risks the anguish of splintered disaster." Partch obtained the original bowls at the Radiation Laboratory of the University of California, Berkeley, where they'd been used as cloud-chambers to trace the paths of sub-atomic particles.Björk is said to be a fan of Micachu and the Shapes:
[O]ne of her mix tapes brought her to the attention of the east-London grime scene. But ask her about Bjork calling her up after a gig and she scrunches her face. "Yeah, that was nuts. We spoke but she didn't call me up. It's not like she had my number or anything. "But I spotted her dancing and I kind of stopped for a second."Below, a promotional video about the band from their label, Accidental Records.
* Boing Boing Video Archives
* Previous posts with Russell Porter music interviews
* Russell's Porter Report website.

Joel Johnson
Joel Johnson

Above: A sink full of starch packing peanuts soaking in hot water.
Below: The results, 24 hours later.

Conclusion: These packing peanuts are made of plastic.
Joel Johnson

This low-slung table, created from a woven tablecloth petrified with sort of resin, may not be a retail product, but it could always get work as a set piece in an Aqua Net commercial.
If I were to try to build one, what sort of resin should I use? [Pink Wolf via Freshome]
Joel Johnson

These advertisements for LEGO from agency DDB aren't real, in as far as they certainly weren't commissioned by the brickmaker, but we can still love them. [via Animal]


Joel Johnson
T-Mobile's UK commercial takes Improv Everywhere techniques to a ridiculous level inside the Liverpool Street Station.
Joel Johnson
deglove
Verb • to deglove (third-person singular simple present degloves, present participle degloving, simple past and past participle degloved)
"to peel back the skin from part of the body as if removing a glove, especially as the result of an accident" – Wikitionary
After Evan Reynolds' arm was degloved from the forearm in a car accident, he received an i-Linb, a $50k bionic arm controlled by muscle tension. [via Crunchgear]
Previously • Video: DEKA's Luke bionic arm
• Fluidhand is the future of prosthetic arms
John Brownlee

I continue to wrestle with adorning my skin with ink. It is, of course, the permanence that is the issue: it may look good now, but how cool will I look with that Vic Rattlehead tattoo pooping in a retirement castle bed pan?
Still, I think awesome robot tattoos will be timeless. Here's 20, including at least one obvious fake.
20 Awesome Robot Tattoos [Botropolis via Giz]
Joel Johnson
When reader Dom suggested we checked out "Bebot", a "fantabulous singing robot in a tux [who] has Boing Boing written all over it/him", I was expecting a plastic USB crapbot that sang along to MP3s with Teddy Ruxpinesque conniptions.
Not so! Bebot is a precious little thing who lives inside a $2 iPhone app that responds to multitouch with a variety of chirps and whirrs. He even has autotune "just like pop stars use!"
Completely pointless and completely charming—you were right, Dom!
Joel Johnson

This interactive chart from National Geographic (seen here in full but non-interactive form) is gorgeous. [NatGeo]
John Brownlee

Photographer Chris Hornbecker has been taking a picture every day for a year. The gimmick? Starting at 14mm, he has zoomed in his camera by one millimeter a day. He's now at 398mm, with two days left of the project. Flipping through the archives is like a first person photoplay of The Amazing Shrinking Man: I'm disappointed Chris will stop before he starts sliding between atoms.
1 Millimeter [Official Site via Cool Hunting]
John Brownlee
Joel pretty much consistently sticks to his party line that there's no reason to jailbreak the iPhone now that the App Store is around. Since my iPhone is an old US one and I needed to carrier unlock it to use it in Berlin, I don't entirely agree... but he's right that jailbreaking is becoming more and more irrelevant for the average user. Hell, if not for carrier unlock, the only reason I'd jailbreak my iPhone is to get a five button dock. Or cut-and-paste, if someone came up with it...
Which they have! Clippy from iSpazio allows you to cut and paste any text on your iPhone. Simply hit the "123" button to reveal your copy and paste buttons. Totally simple execution. This should be default, Apple. Make it so.
Clippy [Spazio Cellular]
Joel Johnson
The Department of Homeland Security puts out a brief called "S&T Snapshots", a look at some of the upcoming projects that may be used by DHS agencies to protect, you know, Americans. (In theory! Let's not get bogged down here.) The last edition shows "The SQUID", a mine-like device that can be detonated by remote to unfurl elastic streamers into the undercarriage of a vehicle, slowing it down as the stretchy arms eventually immobilize the driveshaft, steering, and other moving parts. If it works, it'll be a safer alternative to spikes lines and other caltrops, but it also looks like it'll take a sharper eye and a quick response time from enforcement officers, with the included diagram mentioning that the SQUID must be triggered "half-a-second" before the target car drives over it.
The 1.5-foot-wide disc was conceived and developed by Engineering Science Analysis Corporation (ESA) of Tempe, Arizona. S&T’s Borders and Maritime Security Division manages the project.
“SQUID was inspired by a sea creature and a superhero,” says ESA president Martín Martínez. Like its oceanic namesake, SQUID ensnares its prey with sticky tendrils. Like Spiderman’s webbing, these tendrils stretch to absorb the kinetic energy of their fleeing target.
(Thanks, Charlie, whose email address I have not revealed...yet!)
John Brownlee
It looks like a gadget fished out of a Cracker Jack box, but you'd be more likely to fish it out of a cervix: this decidedly cheap looking cock ring measures BPMs, or "bonks per minute." Because nothing scientifically measures excellent love making than the friction burn of a thousand unlubricated, piston-like thrusts per second. £9.99, but someone should really make one of these that measures duration of intercourse. Beat your last record!
Counting Cock Ring [Love Honey via Shiny Shiny]
Rob Beschizza

Carbotron makes laptop cases out of sleek and expensive carbon fiber. There's a waiting list for any of the sizes on offer. Why? Because in a world where hundreds of supposedly hard cases exist, this one is the real deal:
This product's primary objective is durability, and if structural integrity is not compromised by an imperfection, we believe it adds character, and leave it in.
And yet, it is beautiful.
[Thanks, Ian!]
P.S. When they remake Robocop they should make him carbon fiber. That would be cool. And they should bring back Paul Verhoeven and Peter Weller. That is all. Thank you.
Joel Johnson
Scott from Electro-Harmonix doesn't just blog about their newer FX boxes. He also digs up videos of old products that EHX no longer makes like the "Golden Throat" talk box, a box that sounds like a vocoder, but wasn't, as it "physically pumped audio (not an electric signanl) up a tube, into the player's mouth, to then be shaped and captured via an external microphone."
Bad ass. (Several versions were released.)
Roger Troutman's group Zapp famously used a Golden Throat for the lead vocal line of "California Love", which was remade in 1995 by 2Pac and Dr. Dre with Troutman rerecording the vocals. "California Love" was itself a remake of sorts, with the foundation lick being lifted whole cloth from Joe Cocker's 1972 track "Woman to Woman". [Sample below.]
In the above video, a cornball French dude named "Mo' Cheeze" puts the Golden Throat off to hilariously right-on effect. (Fun experiment: Close your eyes, pretend you're listening to a track from the early '90s, then open your eyes to gaze on the smooze leer of Mssr. Cheeze.)
Other "Golden Throats" that are not this thing: throat lozenge; RCA Victrola
Related • The History of the Robot Voice from Kraftwerk to Kanye [Gearcrave]
John Brownlee

These fantastic Chobu 01 mechas were created by Japanese 3D artist Kazushi Kobayashi as relics from "a parallel 50s where the robots are the most popular transport system." I'm guessing the pilot seat in the pudendum explains a lot of that popularity.
You can buy one of these 1/12 scale models yourself if you wish for $315... assembly required.
Chubu 01 [Official Site via Bot Junkie]
Joel Johnson
From Outside's fascinating profile of Brit Eaton, a man who scavenges Western states to recover vintage clothing which he sells at a tremendous markup to collectors and fashion archivists:
THE LEADS FROM THE PEEPHOLE kept us busy for a couple more days, though they didn't produce any exciting finds beyond a human leg bone that I plucked from a hole in the ground after being directed to the location by a local landowner. The waistband from the buckleback jeans outside Modena was the closest we'd come to a big-game find, though the back of the truck continued to pile up with small-game items that might fetch $10 or $50 or $200. In addition to Theo's macbeth T-shirt, we had a stack of saddle blankets, assorted western-style button-up shirts, a pair of 1970s corduroy pants, a beat-up piece of Filson luggage, a Victorian-era women's coat made of velvet, a homemade coat rack of welded horseshoes and fencing staples, a leather rifle scabbard, old riding chaps, assorted trucker's hats, and a pair of cowboy boots that were so stiff with age, they felt bronzed. (Brit soaks leather goods back to life in neat's-foot oil, which he buys by the drum.)"Neatsfoot" is a yellow oil rendered from the feet and legs (but not hooves) of cattle. Wikipdia's entry is surprisingly fascinating, explaining why the oil remains liquid at room temperature unlike other animal fat ("This occurs because the legs and feet of such animals are adapted to tolerate and maintain much lower temperatures than those of the body core, using countercurrent heat exchange between arterial and venous blood") and why—oops!—neatsfoot oil "should not be used on important historical objects".
Prices seem to on par with other leather treatment oils; SouthernAgriculture.com sells a quart for ten bucks.
Photo: The Ghost Factory
John Brownlee

This is just another Yanko concept, so it's unlikely we'll actually be able to buy these anytime soon (or at all), but I still love the design of these bedside clocks by Antrepo Design Industry: slim, ruler-like bars with bright colors and gorgeously linear OLED screens.
My Alarm Clock is not a movie [Yanko]
John Brownlee
Like all of his other films, Zack Snyder's Watchmen will doubtlessly be terrible, but I will give props where they are due: the Watchmen viral team sure is doing some great work.
Consider this picture posted on the Flickr page of the Watchmen viral site, The New Frontiersmen. The caption: "Dr Manhattan photographs Neil Armstrong on the occasion of the Apollo moon landings, July 20th 1969."
Charlie Sorrel of Gadget Lab thinks the attention to detail to be pretty impressive:
The best part? That Doc Manhattan is holding the camera properly. The Apollo missions took medium format Hasselblads along with them. These cameras have waist level viewfinders, so you hold them low and look into them from above. This is the kind of attention to detail that is getting us so juiced about the movie.
And the other benefit, of course, is that a Hasselblad waist-level camera allows them to conceal Dr. Manhattan's blue, nuclear wang.
Apollo Moon Landings [Flickr]
John Brownlee
Ripped straight from OS X and made incarnate in black glossy plastic, iTunes' worst (but sexiest) music browsing interface becomes a sexy tray for the triumphant living room display of five CDs. Pick them carefully: I'd definitely leave out that Macy Gray.
Coverflow goes Manual [Yanko]
Joel Johnson
⌦ Rock Band 2 – For the Xbox 360, the popular game—no instruments—is available for $35, shipped. [Slickdeals]
⌦ LCD Monitor – A relatively junky Acer 19-inch flat panel monitor with 1,440 by 900 pixel resolution, but it's only $130 shipped. (If you're buying just one for yourself, though, you can do so much better if you're ready to spend around $200.) [Dealhack]
⌦ MacBook – Apple updated the low-end white MacBook, adding a faster processor, 2GB of RAM, and the Nvidia 9400M video chipset, all still for $1,000. If you can live without the aluminum unibody that's a nice little machine for the price. [Dealnews]
⌦ Tilimi – "Tilimi" is a strange little iPhone application that operates a lot like a ham radio, with a bunch of different "channels" to which you can tune to have push-to-talk voice communication with others. Why would you use it in lieu of other VOIP services? No idea. But it's cute and it's free for download today. [iTunes App Store]
⌦ Music Keyboard — Refurbished Yamaha KX-61 USB MIDI controlling keyboard for $220, shipped. These seem like nice gear, despite coming with a copy of Cubase AI4 "starring Haley Joel Osment". [Dealnews]
⌦ Tungsten Ring – Classy, understated beveled edge ring in solid tungsten for $60, shipped. It would be cool to have two or three rings that all looked exactly the same made from different elements of vastly different weights. [Dealnews]
⌦ Camcorder – Today's Woot is a Polaroid High Definition Digital Camcorder for $135, shipped.
Photo: Aftershow
Rob Beschizza
Sanyo's Xacti range of pistol-grip camcorders will see new models on Feb. 6., including compact HD models.
The HD2000 (left two models above) replaces the HD1010, does 1,920x1,080 video at 60fps (and lower-res video at even faster frame rates), and will be offered in champers and black. The CA9 (right three models above) will be waterproof, include a 30x optical zoom lens, and crank out 720p.
There's allso be versions in a standard camcorder format, the WH1 (specced like the CA9) and the FM11 (specced like the HD2000)
Most interesting for the sneaky shooter is the CG10, which offers 720p HD at a size competitive with the Flips and Kodak Zi6es of the world. These also take 10mp stills.
I'm seriously considering one of those high-def littluns: Joel warned me the other day all that Xacti's all look the same in photos, but that current HD models are much larger than the Flip-esque mainstays: up to 6 1/2 inches long. It's as if Sanyo was listening in and wanted to make sure I bought one. Yay magical thinking!
First commenter to post an "Is that a Xacti in your pocket, or are you--" joke gets a special reward.
Press release [Sanyo]
Rob Beschizza
iTurtle is a $46-ish speaker that dances to the tunes it plays. Developed by Tiger electronics, it has seven multicolor LEDs and works with portable music players (but obviously with anything else, too!)
Source (machine trans) [Robot Watch via Dvice]
Rob Beschizza
Is this Mother nature's spirit, emerging from the very wood to steal back the muse of fire? If so, she needs hand cream, badly.
iPhone Holder [Woodenart designs via Geekologie]
Rob Beschizza
This year's "pink Valentine's laptop promo" award goes to MSI, which offers its Wind U100 Love Edition for $430. Fifteen will be given away to competition entrants.
From the press release:
These limited edition Winds feature the Intel Atom N270 1.6G processor, Windows Home XP Home Edition™, a 6-cell battery and the same great light weight ultra mobile design as the other U100 models. MSI will also be offering free shipping on all the Valentine Edition Winds
Rob Beschizza
Buzzing out of Tinyminds' Etsy store comes this steampunk bee brooch, offered for $34 from Brighton in England.
The most beautiful tiny jewelled watch movement is connected to an itsy bitsy brass bee stamping and made into a brooch. the idea of a little clockwork bee buzzing round the flowers is such a lovely one :)
It conjures up images of some lavishly-illustrated Victorian children's tale: the young protagonists find one of these things sputtering about and get led into a dreamlike Tir Na Nog of clockwork insects and minuscule robots in their efforts to repair it.
Steampunk bee brooch [Tinyminds]
Rob Beschizza
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Designed by Jonathan Sabine and Adam Pickard, these beautiful and deadly Ninja Tacks--previously seen only as prototypes--are now available. Best of all, they're only $12 for a pack of three.
Ninja Tacks are injection molded ABS with a Chrome Plated finish. Each individual web order consists of 3 Ninja Tacks in a padded mailer. It's cheaper than mailing the retail packaging.
Ninja Tacks [Chromoly via Mocoloco]
Rob Beschizza
With its Atom CPU and small form, Sony's Vaio P looks like a netbook. But Sony doesn't call it a netbook: a PR staffer at the unveiling growled (good-naturedly!) and rolled her eyes when we made jokes about it. Today at Sony's Electronics blog, it lays out its rationale for avoiding this popular term.
The keyboard, it says, is closer to a larger notebook size than "most" netbooks. The 1600x768 display has a higher resolution than you'll find on a "typical" netbook. It has a cooler version of Intel's Atom processor, allowing a fanless chassis. It has bluetooth and 3G. It has GPS. It has a fast-booting Linux mode. You can get it with large-size solid state drives. And, yes, it's $900, a third more expensive than the higher-end netbooks.
Note those scare quotes. The fatter Eees, for example, have nearly full-size keyboards, and HP's Mini 2000 series has 768-line displays, though they aren't as wide as that on the P. The "wireless capabilities" claim doesn't withstand scrutiny, either: many netbooks now have 3G options alongside bluetooth and WiFi.
No other netbook has GPS, however, and while Asus and LG have Splashtop instant-on models in development, they're not out. Massive, fast SSDs are available to netbook owners, but only on the aftermarket, and at similar expense to those offered by Sony.
Sony's explanation, however, is unnecessary. The real reason the Vaio P isn't a netbook is because it's sexier than netbooks.
You Can't Tell a Netbook by its Cover [Sony electronics blog]
Joel Johnson
Animal Collective's new album uses a popular optical illusion for its cover ⌁ A local news station interviews interim Apple head Tim Cook's parents, which is a little strange ⌁ Samsung will go Android on at least one phone ⌁ Asus's Eee PC Touch UI, what using their tablet netbook will be like ⌁ New Sony TVs will shut themselves off if no one is in the room
Brandon Boyer
John Brownlee

For the room that doesn't have enough robots. Which, let's face it, is basically every room. $30.
Robot Lamp [Urban Outfitters via Bot Junkie]
John Brownlee
This Folding Bicycle Backpack designed by Bergmonch is undeniably sexy, although it makes me pine for the future, flabbier days of backpackable Segways.
Folding Bicycle Backpacks [Bergmoench]
John Brownlee
On the average day, I kiss a lot of people. Young, old, it doesn't matter... in the dark. Yet I also suffer from bronchial-searing halitosis.
In truth, this was why I originally purchased my budgerigar, Humbert Humbird: a little buddy to trim my nose hairs and pick the mottled skin off my lips most of the time, but whom also played the role of "canary in the mine shaft." It's Humbert's more sterling qualities of dignity and forbearance that have prevented me from cramming him down past my uvula for a whiff like his predecessors.
Thankfully, technology. For only $30 — only a bit more than the price of a budgerigar — you can get a portable Kiss-O-Meter to accurately gauge the stench emanating from the sunken butt of your throat.
Kiss-O-Meter [Urban Outfitters via Geeksugar]
John Brownlee

Another newly announced feature of the upcoming Palm Pre sounds like it could be pretty spiffy, depending on its ability to be controlled by the user: it will automatically send messages to people if you're going to be late to a meeting or appointment.
When you're late it — remember, this thing has GPS; it has a clock; and it has your calendar. So it not only knows where you are, it knows where you're supposed to be and when....so when it realizes you're going to be late, it says, 'Hey, not only are you going to be late, but I can take care of it for you. I'll send an email to your assistant or to the people in the meeting, which would you prefer? And oh, by the way, here's the map.'
That sounds ostensibly rad, as long as it can be turned off. But Matt Buchanan at Gizmodo — their sinistral but cute-as-a-button ginger — makes an excellent point:
The proper way to handle being late is to make it seem like your presence is imminent, no matter how far away you are.
Back when I worked at HSBC in Dublin, this tack was the exact method I used to stay at the pub and out of meetings all day long.
Why Elevation Partners Invests 425M in Palm [Yahoo Finance]
John Brownlee

Electrolux has just announced a vacuum cleaner "designed" by the implausibly named Lukasz Mistletoe: its main feature is the ability to instantly Hoover up any of the 3,730 pieces of Swarovski crushed glass that will fall off the side when the glue starts to degrade.
ErgoRapido Vacuum Cleaner Encrusted With Swarovski Crystals [Born Rich]
John Brownlee

The lack of a matte option on the unibody MacBook line continues to elicit protest on the Internet. I used to be a squealing member of this camp, since my reaction to my own reflected physiognomy is Medusa-like, if not in calcification than in nightmarish, shrieking ululation. But it's funny how quickly I became a convert: while the occasional reflection is annoying, ultimately, the colors on the screen really do look a lot better, and the ability to wipe mysterious genetic filth off of the screen with anything on hand can't be underestimated. Glass is great.
Regardless, if you still want a matte MacBook Pro screen, Techrestore can hook you up. It's not just a cheap matter overlay: it's a replacement LCD said to be the "same specs" as Apple's. I don't actually think the price is that unreasonable: $199 for the replacement LCD, which seems cheap compared to some of the $500 MacBook paintjobs some companies sell.
Matte Screen MacBook Pro [Techrestore via Ars via Crunch]
Rob Beschizza
Jenn of Mid Moves, embarking on a blogging tour using devices like the new OQO model 2+, takes a side in the long-running religious war over whether these things should have world-facing cameras.
I am sitting at a cafe near the entrance of Magic Mountain wishing the OQO Model 2+ I’m typing this on had a camera. And not even a very good one. Just *something* that would allow me to take a quick picture and add it to this post. ... The Model 2+ doesn’t have a memory card slot ... Expect more micro blogging and text-only posts than anything else today. *sigh* Not a good day so far.
There's a class of UMPC user who gets offended when this point is made. In that view, wanting a camera on a UMPC is impurely proletarian: why not leave such functions to smartphones such as Apple's iPhone or Sony's Xperia X1? How dare you blog on a handheld computer? It is for work!
Screw those guys: the lack of a camera, or at least an SD card slot, is the OQO's principal failing for precisely these reasons. And yes, utilitarian quality is just fine, too!
This could be fixed with an accessory, at least for those UMPCs and MIDs that have appropriately located USB ports: a rigid camera, the size of a small thumbdrive, that plugs into the slot. I can't actually find anything like this (they all have long cords and other flaws) -- anyone know where to get one?
Do MIDs need cameras? [MID Moves]
Joel Johnson

Of note to our readers, the "Technology Agenda" page.
An excerpt:
• Protect the Openness of the Internet: Support the principle of network neutrality to preserve the benefits of open competition on the Internet.The whole page could be excerpted, really, and I encourage everyone, especially American citizens, to give it a read. It's broadly encouraging, although it's clear that the most liberal of technoweenies—myself included—aren't going to get every reform we want.• Encourage Diversity in Media Ownership: Encourage diversity in the ownership of broadcast media, promote the development of new media outlets for expression of diverse viewpoints, and clarify the public interest obligations of broadcasters who occupy the nation's spectrum.
• Protect Our Children While Preserving the First Amendment: Give parents the tools and information they need to control what their children see on television and the Internet in ways fully consistent with the First Amendment. Support tough penalties, increase enforcement resources and forensic tools for law enforcement, and encourage collaboration between law enforcement and the private sector to identify and prosecute people who try to exploit children online.
• Safeguard our Right to Privacy: Strengthen privacy protections for the digital age and harness the power of technology to hold government and business accountable for violations of personal privacy.
Also, as @anildash noted, Whitehouse.gov has a blog!
Before and after screenshots by Brian Warren
John Brownlee
With the help of NYC Resistor, Flickr user revolvingdork etched the entire world map of Super Mario Land for the Nintendo Gameboy on the case of his Eee netbook. I assume he used a pattern he found on the Internet, but I could probably have managed to do this from memory, given an appropriate, pea-soup-green netbook lying around and a stray etcher.
Etching Overview [Flickr via Hack A Day]
Joel Johnson
Brando brings their F-game to the "Segon Turbo Flash Drive", a memory stick in the shape of...memory. The "DDR RAM appearance" has an "environmental green shell" — plastic, surely.
Like nearly everything Brando makes, it's so dumb that it's kind of awesome. (Super-overpriced, though: 4GB for $20? Get out.)
[via Coolest-Gadgets]
John Brownlee
Guest Review by Chris Abraham
After four years, I finally received my bespoke, hand-made, Randall Model 1 "All-Purpose Fighting Knife." Unstead of tearing right into the box, I paused and filmed a nine-minute unboxing video and took some photos of the knife — knife porn.
There are two iconic fighting knives known the world over for their service in World War II. The British Sykes-Fairbairn dagger and the American style of fighting knife, inspired both by the Bowie and the American hunting knife. There was one knife, above all other, that I coveted... coveted not just because it was considered "the best" by all of the knife magazines I bought but also because it was associated with doing hard service during World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. That knife was the Randall Model #1.
Rob Beschizza
In Japan, Fujitsu also makes phones. They're of the style so common in Japan—flat, rectangular clamshells—but are shiny, pretty and, as of now, waterproof. Offered by carrier NTTDoCoMo, it'll survive for half an hour in up to a meter of water.
Fujitsu phone gallery [NTTDoCoMo via CrunchGear]
Joel Johnson

Somehow I don't think I should have several hundred cookies from Gmail. When it works properly, I have, like, two.
I suspect some rogue Javascript is going kooky and dropping its drawers.
Joel Johnson
Because I'm so dumb that I think hot cocoa is the primary fundament of winter preparedness, I still haven't bought gloves—and it's been as cold as Dick Cheney's inverted pentacular anus in New York this year, too.
Is January too late to buy gloves? Because I want these "E-Tip" gloves from The North Face, despite their comically bad cybertwerp silicone grip pattern on the palms and fingers. That may not be slick, but the "X-static" fabric on the tip of the index finger and thumb certainly is. Woven with silver, the special tips let you use resistive touchscreens like those on the iPhone and G1 without taking your gloves off at all.
But you know what? I'm not paying $40 for gloves that look like I just slapped the smirk off of the Master Control Program. Make these in plain ol' black, North Face. (And take off the incongruous power button symbol while you're at it!)
[via Oh Gizmo! via Book of Joe via WSJ]
John Brownlee
Three weeks ago, I purchased myself a more-or-less top of the line second generation MacBook Pro... specifically , the $2499 configuration. Two weeks ago, I got it, and began to love it. One week ago, at CES, a slithering Samsung representative — his bifurcated tongue a nesting ground of sibilant s-es — handed me a press kit CD that, once inserted into my MBP's superdrive, stubbornly refused to eject itself. And a couple days ago, Apple charged me over $200 dollars to get that SuperDrive replaced.
At no point was I actually to blame for that drive failing, but I did make some blunders in actually dealing with the Apple Store Geniuses that cost me a couple hundred bucks. My tendency is to get furious with Apple, but another Internet bitch session isn't going to help anyone. Instead, I want to lead you guys through the problem I had and how I interacted with the Apple store representatives, which gave them all the excuse they needed to charge me a significant charge for something that was probably a manufacturing or shipping issue... even if the end result is just so much navel gazing.
Joel Johnson
Daft Punk's "Aerodynamic" is remixed by Adam Freeland as "Aer Obama", a celebration of our 44th president's entry into the halls of glory, people by toys and figurines (including a Speak & Spell!) and flashy, Infomercian graphics from GOLD.
Warm it up, Kris. (Thanks, Brandon "nn" Boyer!)
Rob Beschizza
Designed with the 15inch MacBooks in mind, Rainer Spehl's wooden laptop case is gorgeous, useful and likely very expensive: "For Purchases please contact Rainer Spehl."
Photographed here by Achim Hatzius, it's another one of those ineffable Do Want gadget porn situations.
Wooden Laptop Case [Rainer Spehl via NOTCOT]
Joel Johnson
"nru" is an application from UK developers lastminute.com, designed like so many other recent mobile apps to location food, shopping, and entertainment deals around you. What makes nru (pronounced "near you") compelling is in part its platform, running as it does exclusively on the T-Mobile G1 powered by Google's Android mobile OS.
Because the G1 has a compass inside, nru presents its data as a sonar-like spinning map when held parallel to the ground, but presents a snazzy augmented reality overlay when tipped up towards the horizon. It's easier to grok when you can see it in motion; there's a video up above.
You can give it a literal whirl today if you're an Android user in the U.K., where it's available on the marketplace.
The merit of nru itself aside, it's clear that the addition of a compass to the G1 is its superlative feature. It's this year's accelerometer. I'd expect to see one in the next iPhone revision. By next year they'll be in digital picture frames and blenders, a nickel's worth of "Why not?" silicon telemetry.
From the examples of the augmented reality software like nru and Google's own Maps program, however, it's clear that we're a little ways away from the portable rendering power necessary to make these truly feel magical. The iPhone and G1's camera has horrendous refresh rates, akin to primitive digital cameras. Before we'll get truly amazing "looking glass" applications, our handsets will need either faster cameras or more optimized visual processing. We're really close, though. Can't be more than a couple of years out.

Rob Beschizza
Technologizer's Benj Edwards unboxes Atari's 1984 touch tablet. Sat in its original box for 25 years, it's both a cute pastiche on a gadget blog fetish--and a reminder that there's nothing quite like mint-condition technology to whet the gears.
Here it is, folks: a brand-new Atari CX77 Touch Tablet in the original box. OK, so the box is scuffed up a bit. But as you’ll soon see, its contents are about as un-scuffed as you can get.Atari’s 1984 Touch Tablet: A Retro-Unboxing [Technologizer]
Joel Johnson
⌦ Band of Brothers – I already own Band of Brothers on DVD, but Amazon has dropped the Blu-ray version to $35 today (from $100) and I've just bought it again. I was skeptical that there would be any real difference since BoB was only ever shown in SD on HBO, but from the reviews it sounds like it must have been shot on film, allowing for an HD resolution in Blu-ray.
It's one of my very favorite movies or television shows ever. I watch it at least a couple of times a year from start to finish. [Amazon]
⌦ All-in-one printer – Epson Stylus NX400 color photo all-in-one inkjet printer for $60, shipped. Seems like a nice little unit for the price. Normally sells for around $100. [Dealhack]
⌦ Rolando – Ngmoco's Rolando game for the iPhone has been dropped to $6, down from the original $10 I paid and didn't regret one bit. It's a killer title and a load of fun to play and show off. [iTunes]
⌦ Pro Camcorder – Amazon is selling the Panasonic AG-HMC70PJ AVCHD 3CCD Flash Memory Camcorder for $1,204, shipped. That's about $700 off the price available from B&H, but I can't find anything out on the web to indicate if this is a good product or not. (Panasonic tends to make very nice camcorders all the way up to their professional models, but it's strange there appears to be no reviews out there on this model at all.) Still, 1080i recording, 12x optical zoom, SDHC support, XLR inputs, quarter-inch CCD, HDMI and BNC Component outputs — this is a heavy duty camera. [Dealnews]
⌦ Stapleless Staper – With this $3 plastic tube you can staple up to three sheets of paper together without using a physical metal staple at all. [Dealnews]
⌦ Sonos Multi-Room – We may have thumped on Sonos a bit in the past, but for multi-room setups that want perfectly synced music, there's really not a better option — especially when paired with the new Sonos iPhone/touch controller application. Best Buy is selling a multi-room system with a ZonePlayer 80, 100, and a wireless controller for $500 with in-store pick-up. That's half-price; I wonder if there's a new package from Sonos in the works? (I haven't heard anything.) Update: Sonos tells us, "Nothing on the near horizon." [Dealnews]
⌦ Mini Bluetooth Dongle – Tiny USB Bluetooth dongle for $3, perfect for a netbook and external mouse. [Dealnews]
⌦ R/C Cars – Today's Woot are the Excalibur Electronics Micro Zoomer desktop R/C cars in a 2-pack for $18, shipped.
Photo: 1leve
Rob Beschizza
Rovair rents out pre-activated wireless broadband modems. We used it for coverage of CES in Vegas. Apart from the general lack of available bandwidth at the modem-infested show, the service worked perfectly and we'll be sure to use it again.
It works like this: you tell Rovair the dates you need them for, then select the exact model you want. We opted for the broad compatibility of Novatel's U727 USB modems, but there's plenty to choose from. Rovair mails you the gear, which arrives on the specified date.
When you're done, you use a pre-paid envelope to overnight it back to them. Staff were pleasant and personal whenever contacted.
There are a few things to bear in mind. First, you're billed until the time the return envelope is scanned by the mail people. So it's best not to dump it in an airport mailbox, which might not be checked frequently or on weekends. Find a person to hand it to, like a FedEx worker, hotel concierge or clerk at Kinkos.
Remember the stick's phone number, too. You'll need it in a pinch: Verizon's Access Manager download page is guarded by a form that requires it, and Sprint won't even talk to you if you don't know it.
Finally, a WiMax offering is a must this year: EVDO used to be the secret to effective CES coverage, but now everyone's got it, it's as slow as dial-up!
Rob Beschizza
Authentic Chipmusic Soft Synth Emulation: Plogue Chipsounds Scoop from NAMM [Create Digital Music]
Brandon Boyer
Today on Offworld we watched: chiptune artist Leeni and her 8-bit pixel-kabuki video 'Underworld', someone beat Marble Madness in 2:30 with a peculiar flailing-palm technique while another performs feats of Tetris magic, and, while we were hanging around there anyway, played a round of YouTube Street Fighter.
We also saw fantastic Metroid, Zelda and Rock Band DIY jewelry, fantastic Swiss design-inspired remakes of classic game covers and a Left 4 Dead remake of a classic Beatles t-shirt, as well as the Game Boy's Super Mario Land etched on the case of an Eee PC.
Finally, we got word of new iPhone games coming from Rolando and Dr. Awesome publisher ngmoco, as well as a "Lemmings meets The Lost Vikings" superhero iPhone game from indie devs Infinite Ammo, and lost far too much of the day trying an online demo of the sci-fi followup to cult hit Puzzle Quest, Galactrix.
Rob Beschizza
Soundclip, a tiny plastic scoop to direct iPhone sound ($8) ⌁ An investor buys Republic Windows factory to build new efficient windowpanes ⌁ Acer's 10-inch netbook, shades of the Xbox 360 ⌁ AMD cut 1,100 staffers ⌁ "SkyBox", "SkyMarket" are Microsoft's rumored MobileMe, App Store equivalent for Windows Mobile ⌁ Hanging out with Alan Kay, god ⌁ Would Apple make a 15-inch MacBook Air? ⌁ Obama keeps his BlackBerry, but must use a monster for official business ⌁ Belkin employee was buying good reviews via Mechanical Turk ⌁ The next Puzzle Quest teased, playable online ⌁ For the first time, the Toyota Prius has a cash incentive ⌁ Ugly "Bone" is a better garage creeper ($200ish) ⌁ Crecente turns even parenting into pageviews with a LEGO Sonic ⌁ Kill-A-Watt + Twitter == Tweet-a-watt ⌁ There are those into retro batteries ⌁ Another Vaio P review, this time from Akihabara News ⌁ Speaker found in carton of milk ⌁ CrunchGear looking for an iPhone writer ⌁ Belkin paid for positive reviews.
Joel Johnson

If I'm not mistaken, this is a spy camera hidden in a belt buckle that is supposed to be carved in the shape of Barack Obama in profile. It's a bit difficult to discern: it's called the "Obaba" buckle, for one, which might not be the same as "Obama"; then again, it is described as a "handsome black man face have a hidden camera". I think it's safe to say this is supposed to be our president. With a camera for a face.
I can't actually find it in the Ajoka.com store where it is listed, which is a pity. As the worst bit of Obama-related junk I've seen so far, I sort of want to own it show my grandkids how stupid we were in the olden days, too. [via Red Ferret]
Rob Beschizza
Tamagotchi is back! Again! One came in the mail from Bandai. Here are my thoughts, bearing in mind that I have not played with one for 10 years.
1. They're are better games than they used to be. This latest iteration of the toy is themed on a rock career: raise your sprog and train it to sing or play instruments. There's a bunch of subgames of the sort children obsess over, but won't likely please anyone used to more sophisticated fare. It is, at least, much better than the original, which amounted to playing "Tapper with Turds" in very slow motion.
2. You can apparently link Tamas for vs. play.
3. You can also pause it. The originals lacked this facility, meaning that even a few hours distraction could result in your digital pet's death by starvation, or toxic shock from swimming in its own excrement. You know, as if there were some sort of child-rearing point to be made.
4. The display is still very low-tech, black-on-gray LCD as befits the watch battery that must power it.
5. It's cheap, tiny fun for kids 8 and up: good for shutting the little things up for a few hours without having to fork out for a Nintendo DS game.
Product Page [Bandai USA]
Joel Johnson

Author Terry Pratchett wears an experimental helmet that directs infrared bursts into his brain to promote cell growth in an attempt to halt the onset of Alzheimer's. [Daily Mail]
Joel Johnson
The only question: What took so long? [Flickr/Legohaulic via Brothers Brick]
Joel Johnson

Skot Wiedmann's Motus Mavis hand-built analog synthesizers sound like this. [via MAKE:]
Joel Johnson

Victory Motorcycles built this "CORE" concept motorcycle in cast aluminum and paired it with a 1,731cc engine in a bike that weighs only 469 pounds. [Motorcycle-USA.com via Core77]
Joel Johnson
Local mutant Danilo Campos has released Oddage, a new game for the iPhone that forces you to find the word that doesn't match the others as a timer ticks down. It's all the fun of a standardized test with none of the pressure of getting into a good prep school!
(I tease. I've been playing it for the last couple of weeks. It's perfect for whiling away a minute or two while standing in line for the unemployment checks while regretting how I didn't get into that good prep school.)
It's $3 on App Store. No charge for its default "Klingon Universal Remote" skin.
Rob Beschizza
It's not the job of Circuit City's liquidators to clear inventory. Their job is to make money. And the most effective trick in their book is to exploit the belief among consumers that great deals exist at the failed chain's closing down sale.
Though the 10% discounts make non-discounted premium items a little cheaper, many goods at Circuit City are more expensive than last week. This is simply because the blanket discount replaces better deals previously in effect.
I've just returned from my local CC, and the story there is summed up by the fellow I saw excitedly clutching a $30 ethernet cable, delighted at the 30 percent price cut he'd get on it at the checkout. On the deals desk at the front of the store were Nintendo Gamecubes, offered "half price" for $50 each.
More interestingly, they won't sell display models, even of out-of-stock items. The store seemed well-staffed. Perhaps they're still hoping for a white knight to come in and fix everything, despite the "Everyone's fired!" note that replaced the Circuitcity.com site over the weekend.
Either way, the deals are barely competitive with healthier brick and mortar stores, let alone Amazon or Newegg. Wait for a few weeks until they get serious about clearing stock before wasting your time there.
Joel Johnson
Those black SUVs that travel with a presidential motorcade? They very well may have a 7.62mm minigun inside.
Joel Johnson
"Don't undertake a project unless it is manifestly important and nearly impossible." – Edwin Land, Inventor of Instant Photography
That's the quote that opens "The Impossible Project", a group of obdurate men who have purchased the old Polaroid factory in Enschede, Netherlands, with the aim to restart production of instant film.
Producing instant film for a ratty old camera, no matter how charming it may be, is hardly "manifestly important", especially considering the environmental toll of instant film. (Which is not to draw a distinction between instant and traditional film, but instead to point out that there is the need for plastic, metals, and chemicals to produce a photo at all. [Besides the camera, but don't you dare...])
The "nearly impossible" part of their endeavor seems at first overwrought: can't they just turn the machines back on? Not exactly. Presuming they could secure the same reagents used by Polaroid, the exact process used is still entwined in patents like good ol' 6,227,729, which gives Polaroid the rights to a "film cassette for housing and dispensing film units of the self-developing type" until 2019.
But that's not what The Impossible Project claims to want to do. Their stated aim is to "develop a new product with new characteristics, consisting of new optimised components, produced with a streamlined modern setup. An innovative and fresh analog material, sold under a new brand name that perfectly will match the global re-positioning of Integral Films."
I understand that film for Polaroids is getting insultingly expensive. I understand that these guys miss shooting with their Polaroids. It just seems like an awful lot of effort to go through to recreate something that is not just antiquated, but practically obviated by modern technology. See that photo above? I shot it with my iPhone and processed it on the phone with Camera Bag before uploading it to Flickr with Mobile Photos. If I wanted to, I could print out a copy on a home printer or have one of Flickr's parters send me a copy. But instead I can show it instantly to my friends on my phone as well as anyone else in the world online. I find it nearly impossible to understand how that isn't better than shooting with a Polaroid instant in nearly every way.
[via this supremely interesting Metafilter thread]
Joel Johnson
"I'm gonna put Wild Things on while I hug my mom." Thank you, Ben Hoffman, for not making us the only assholes to wander around CES haranguing people.
Joel Johnson

You know what you could do if you were totally awesome? Build a wooden Vespa. Carlos Alberto did it. You know why?
Joel Johnson

Greetings from San Francisco! As wonderful as my travels have been, I’m really glad to be home. The skies are an incredible shade of blue, every day has been in the 70s, and my cat is very happy (and maybe a bit angry) to have me back in my little one-room studio apartment on top of a house on top of a hill, where I can see for miles through the crystal clear air.
I am still very excited about what I have seen and experienced throughout my 7 week tour of Chicago, the capitals of Europe, Philly, and New York City. The theme for the trip has been community with hackers.
If you’ve never been to a hacker conference or a hacker space, you may wonder what a bunch of hackers would do when they get together. Hackers are a very large group of individuals all around the planet who love learning about technology, making it better, and sharing it with the world. Hackers are a big driving force behind what makes the tech world happen. Think about all the open-source software, and the growing number of open-source hardware projects available. What hackers are dreaming up today becomes the reality we live tomorrow.
Hacker conferences happen year round. There is probably one coming up somewhere near you. Do a search for “hacker conferences”. Why not check one out for yourself?
The annual Chaos Communications Congress in Berlin is one of the highlights of my year. This year too! The hardware hacking area I set up was hopping 24/7, even during the few hours that I managed to sleep each day. The talks were top-notch, and the people I met were some of the more creative, intelligent, friendly people you’ll hope to find. I’m still buzzing from all the solder fumes from people building TV-B-Gone remote controls, Brain Machines, Trippy RGB Waves, and other projects of mine that I taught people how to make – many of whom have never built anything before!
Hacker spaces are popping up all over the world. These past 12 months have seen so many renting their own space: Philadelphia, New York City, Kansas City, Toronto, San Francisco, Montreal, DC, Vancouver, Paris, Boston, Providence, Chicago. And that list consists only of places where I have met the people who started them. Hackerspaces.org is a new, international organization that exists to promote the starting of and continuation of hacker spaces. A quick perusal through their website reveals a list of well over 100 spaces on planet Earth where people can get together and share, learn, and work on the next cool thing.
Noisebridge is a hacker space that is near and dear to my heart, as I helped start it here in San Francisco. Based on the models that evolved through the experiences of Chaos Computer Club folks in Germany, Noisebridge already has 50 dues-paying members, In a few short months we’ve managed to create a space where you can stop by at 1am and eat home made bread just coming out of the oven from our kitchen while listening to the latest dance music of one of our members being played on our juke box as someone else shows off a years worth of their 8000 photos flashing by as a 5-minute video and someone else solders their latest hardware project upstairs in the new electronics lab while others catch up on their emails. There’s always something happening. If you’re ever in the San Francisco area, please stop by for a visit – you are always welcome.
Joel Johnson

As Battlestar Galactica steams out for its final parade of weeping around the galaxy—Spoiler: Muffit is the final Cylon—the sets inside British Columbia's Vancouver Film Studios have been dismantled with atypical care to be auctioned off to fans. NBC Universal has given costumes, production art, props, set decoration and set pieces* over to Propworx, a company specializing in movie and television auctions, and it appears they've done a fine job of both archiving and contextualizing all the props they plan on selling. While it may be frustrating for true fans to feel they've lost a chance at some cheap memorobilia, it's a far sight better that these bits are being handled by professionals than tossed in a junkyard.
If you'd like to browse the entirety of the catalog, Propworx has provided a PDF version of the catalog for download, but they'll happily sell you a printed version of the Battlestar prop catalog for $35. You'll have to sate yourself with that—the auction ended yesterday.
* Dig that futuristic Microsoft keyboard!
John Brownlee
As part of has final project for a BA in Modelmaking for Design and Media, Thomas put together this jaw-dropping jet age Mini-Media Centre case mod, which has all of the foam green sexiness of a 1950's Frigidaire with the lines and svelteness of a Cadillac's fin. Thomas is looking for advice on how to sell the design to get it mass produced, if anyone knows how that's done... I'd certainly like to buy one of these.
Retro Mini-Media Center [Thomthom.net]
John Brownlee
English Russia is hosting a fantastic gallery of abandoned Soviet nuclear lighthouses, which were strung in the polar regions off of Russia's northern coast. A rather Russian-Engrishy description, but you get the idea:
he Communist Party of the Soviet Union decided to build a chain of lighthouses to guide ships finding their way in the dark polar night across uninhabited shores of the Soviet Russian Empire. So it has been done and a series of such lighthouses has been erected. They had to be fully autonomous, because they were situated hundreds and hundreds miles aways from any populated areas. After reviewing different ideas on how to make them work for a years without service and any external power supply, Soviet engineers decided to implement atomic energy to power up those structures. So, special lightweight small atomic reactors were produced in limited series to be delivered to the Polar Circle lands and to be installed on the lighthouses. Those small reactors could work in the independent mode for years and didn’t require any human interference, so it was very handy in the situation like this. It was a kind of robot-lighthouse which counted itself the time of the year and the length of the daylight, turned on its lights when it was needed and sent radio signals to near by ships to warn them on their journey. It all looks like ran out the sci-fi book pages, but so they were.
These are all ostensibly abandoned now, although some seafarers report the soft green gloaming of irradiated ghouls illuminating the granite outcrops of some of these isles at night.
Abandoned Russian Polar Nuclear Lighthouses [English Russia]
Joel Johnson

No. But are you?
Michael Arrington has lifted his knickers to show "Prototype B," the latest revision of the CrunchPad, a Linux-based touchscreen internet tablet that has sprung fully formed from the genitals of his technological desire. It's more cumbersome than the initial mock-up, but it's just a proof-of-concept for the hardware inside: a VIA Nano-powered processor, a mobile processor on par with the Intel Atom found inside nearly every netbook on the market; 1GB of RAM, which Arrington claims is "more than we need"; and 4GB of Flash memory to store the Ubuntu operating system, a WebKit-based browser, and adjunctive cache.
It's an act of will not to pan the project—Arrington is a trembling blowhard who tends to mistake rage for insight—but taken on its own merit, the device itself, as well as its relative ease of development by Arrington's team, may further a new wave of small-batch consumer electronics designed not by marketing executives or insulated engineers, but by the very customers who want to buy them.
Or it may not. Remember the Chumby, the cuddly touchscreen internet device that was created to serve very much the same purpose as the CrunchPad? In development for years, the Chumby finally launched in late 2007, only to quickly be obviated by the iPhone and iPod Touch, two mainstream devices that sell for the same $200 price but offer a broader suite of applications and utility — and fit far more easily into a pocket than the plush lump. (Chumby isn't helped by its business model, which allows you to design your own widgets that are then sold through the advertiser-supported Chumby Network.)
Which is not to say the Chumby is a failure. (I cannot find unit sales numbers online, although I don't know anyone offhand who owns one besides hardware hackers who bought Chumby units at launch.) It may very well break even by selling to its niche. But a mainstream product it is not, nor likely will it ever be.* And it's hard to say that the success of Chumby making it to market heralded anything but another small electronics company setting sail.
Craft electronics, if I may crib a term from the American brewing industry, may end up filling the cracks in markets that are too small to be addressed by large manufacturers. There are pitfalls ahead: Will they provide user support? A warranty? Will they be able to create a unified, elegant touch-based interface when hundreds of others, like Microsoft and open-source teams, have had such a sticky time of it? Will they offer a recycling program?
Will anyone want to buy a CrunchPad instead of a netbook? Arrington says the original $200 price will probably end up more like $300, due primarily to a "much better, more expensive LCD." (Which is good: Prototype B has a 1,024 by 768 pixel display in a 4:3 aspect ratio.) I'd prefer a widescreen display and a real keyboard, as would many, since it's clear the CrunchPad will be competing with the iPod Touch and netbooks, offering neither the portability of the former, nor the utility of the latter.
Arrington has built a device for Arrington. (The CrunchPad is not some sort of crowdsourced project, as Robert Scoble bafflingly claims.) While it's easy to dismiss the entire project as a manifestation of his overflowing hubris—and it is—it would be a mistake not to also recognize it for what it also is: a consumer electronics project from a relatively small team that will probably make it to market.
Customers will decide if the CrunchPad will become more than an experiment in wish fulfillment, but even its failure would be useful. The easier it becomes for the average person—or average Silicon Valley networker, at least—to bring products to market, the less we have to rely on large corporations to develop the electronics we want to buy. Apple and HP and the like may continue to be the Anheuser-Busch of the computing world, but it's hard to imagine a healthy, blossoming craft electronics selection as being anything other than beneficial to the industry as a whole.
Because if Michael Arrington can will a gadget to market, imagine what anyone else could dream up.
* I am aware how douchey this sentence sounds, but it goes so well with this smoking jacket.
John Brownlee

This Space Invaders themed piggy bank has the wood paneled allure of a vintage arcade machine plucked from the corner of a dingy Jersey arcade, leaving an eternal silhouette in the carcinogen cake of the wall to mark its passing, like a Hirshoma shadow.
You can't actually play a game on it, of course, but it does its best: a coin plunked down the shoot causes a pixel squid blob invader to display on the screen. When all rows and columns of invaders are filled, the bank is full. I only wish a laser canon would vaporize the invaders when money was withdrawn.
Space Invaders Piggy Bank [Gizmo Diva]
John Brownlee

Tristan Eaton and AZK One created this gas mask Darth Vader helmet for the Vader Project art exhibition, which displays artist's colorful refashionings of sci-fi's most iconic fashion accessory.
What's strange to me is that, once seeing it, I realized that while I've seen a lot of steampunk Vaders, I don't think I've ever seen one take the gas mask approach. This is either a shameful oversight of the steampunk community or my memory... one or the other.
Thunderdog enters the Vader Project [Thunderblog via Gizmodo]
John Brownlee
Awesome robot horror. Wait around for the limb dismemberment.
John Brownlee
During the waning moments of the worst parties, someone always pulls out Scrabble (a game I hate) and tries to win me over from my face-curdled loathing by insisting I must be good at it, since I'm a writer. My response to this assertion is always just to stare, gobstruck, until silence sinks in the fact writing is not about randomly shaking up a tray of letters in one's heads and plucking words from the alphabetical mnemonic slurry... if it was, my posts would make more sense.
That all said, I like this Scrabble tile keyboard... there is something a bit nifty about knowing exactly how many triple word scores I'm racking up if I somehow glom onto 'Quetzalcoat' as my word of the day.
Scrabble Keyboard [Datamancer via Hack A Day]