Archive: Hardware

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November 15, 2008

Myvu Crystal as a wearable head mounted display

myvuwearable_20081115.jpg

Ralf Ackermann sent us a tip on using the Myvu Crystal headset in conjunction with a wearable computer. The Myvu glasses were designed to block out the rest of the world for private iPod video watching, but its VGA resolution and device compatibility makes it pretty suitable for tearing apart.

The consumer myvu crystal HMD (sold as a nice though still somewhat "socially unacceptable" 2 eyepiece video output device for the ipod and other devices generating a PAL/NTSC signal can be modified into a much smaller 1 eyepiece version. This one works very well with a multitude of devices like a Parallax propeller, a Nokia N95 via TV out or a Archos PMA 430. It is thus well suited as the core of "another wearable computer".

For this purpose it might also be combined with the iphone / ipod touch
Xbee IO extension
described earlier this week.

Ralf's project is still a work in progress, but it's a reminder that most of the hardware required for a wearable is now commonly available. Considering most of us already carry a sufficient computer (iPhone, N95, G1, etc.) around with us all the time anyway, it's only a matter of time before a HMD design is made cool enough to dodge the social stigma.

Myvu Crystal HMD Modification (Flickr Photo Set)

Posted by Jason Striegel | Nov 15, 2008 11:03 PM
Electronics, Hardware, Life, User Interface | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

October 14, 2008

Linuxstamp embedded Linux system

linuxstamp_20081014.jpg

If the Beagle Board caught your eye, here's another embedded Linux platform that's worth taking a peek at. The Linuxstamp is an ARM powered, ultra-tiny, open hardware Linux system that has a bunch of low-power goodies packed into what appears to be a 3 inch by 4.5 inch footprint.

Compared the the Beagle Board, the Linuxstamp has a bit less processor muscle and lacks video output. To its advantage, it has on-board 10/100 Ethernet, and (I presume) it has lower power requirements, making it a better fit for some embedded needs. Both projects are near the same price point (Linuxstamp: $120, Beagle Board: $150), so you'll be able to make decisions mostly on feature-set when choosing the platform for your next project.

Linuxstamp Project Wiki at Open Circuits [via ladyada]
The Linuxstamp Store

Posted by Jason Striegel | Oct 14, 2008 09:23 PM
Electronics, Hardware, Linux | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

September 26, 2008

Zoom H2 microphone modification

Berto Aussems wrote in again with another modification to the Zoom H2 recorder:

Listening to soundrecordings made in the 360 degree surround pattern mode of the Zoom H2, I found out that the directional sensitivity is bad. Even the stereo recording sounds mono. The front/back channel separation is the same story. So I had to turn the microphones in 4 times 90 degree. With 2 crossed disk's on top of the H2, the directional resolution is now much better. Maybe there are other ways to get better results; this is one. I hope to have some discussion with other H2 owners about this theme.

I'm not sure how much further you can push the recording quality of this little field recorder, but it's promising to see the results of warrantee voiding efforts like these.

Zoom H2 Microphone's Modification

Previously:
Zoom H2 line input hack - make a 4 channel field recorder

Posted by Jason Striegel | Sep 26, 2008 10:38 PM
Electronics, Hardware, Music, Podcasting | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

September 15, 2008

Zoom H2 line input hack - make a 4 channel field recorder

Berto Aussems wrote in from the Netherlends to tell us about his hack which replaces the microphones in the Zoom H2 recorder with 4 line inputs, perfect for 4 channel field recording. The Zoom H2 has gotten a lot of glowing reviews in its standard form, but converting it for line input gives you the flexibility to use external mics and direct input sources for a higher quality recording.

The Zoom H2 is a popular portable soundrecorder. It records HQ audio on the 4 build-in microphones on 4 tracks. This hack makes it possible to switch over to 4 self made line inputs on the back of the device. With a few electronic parts for about 10 USD people can make a 4 channel fieldrecorder.


This 3 minute instruction video shows the way you can make yourself a 4 track field recorder. I don't say its easy....but it can be done in an evening. Now I can record 4 channels from my computer audio interface when the softsynth is running.

This is a pretty affordable modification and the device itself is just short of $200. It might be just the solution for a decent 4 track recorder on a budget, whether you're recording your garage band, environmental sounds, or interviews.

Zoom H2 modification; now with 4 line inputs!

Posted by Jason Striegel | Sep 15, 2008 08:10 PM
Electronics, Hardware, Music, Podcasting | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

August 18, 2008

Beagle Board - ultra tiny, 2-Watt Linux system

beagleboard_20080818.jpg

Hackszine pal Patti Schiendelman tipped me off to the Beagle Board, a spartan little embedded platform, perfect for all things hackable. It's based on the TI OMAP3 processor, which is packaged with 128MB of DDR RAM and 256MB of NAND Flash all on the single chip in the center of the board.

Instead of including things like ethernet and 802.11 on-board, they opted to keep the footprint small and only include the bare essentials: DVI for monitor output, SD/MMC for storage, audio in/out, and USB for device expansion. If you need any other hardware, just get a USB device that has a Linux driver.

Did I mention it's $150 and draws less that 2 Watts? This is definitely what you need for your next autonomous spy weather blimp.

BeagleBoard.org
BeagleBoard Embedded Linux Wiki
Linux Journal - The BeagleBoard: $149 Linux System

Posted by Jason Striegel | Aug 18, 2008 09:06 PM
Electronics, Hardware, Linux, Ubuntu | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

June 8, 2008

Star Wars music played by a floppy drive

I can't find any documentation for this, nor can I help posting it.

I assume it's a hardware hack that manually controls the floppy drive's stepper motor, but it'd make my day if this was done in software using standard I/O requests. Either way, the 3.5 inch FDD finally serves an important function again.

Star Wars Floppy Disk

Posted by Jason Striegel | Jun 8, 2008 06:50 PM
Hardware, Music, PCs | Permalink | Comments (11) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

May 23, 2008

Helmer render cluster: 186 Gflops in an IKEA cabinet

helmer_renderfarm_20080523.jpg

I usually get all excited about tiny, noiseless, low-power PC hardware, but I have to admit that this 24 core, 186 Gflop render cluster built into an IKEA Helmer cabinet is pretty inspiring. Most cool is that when it's not overburdened and jumping to swap, it's still a reasonably efficient setup for its performance specs:

The most amazing is that this machine just cost as a better standard PC, but has 24 cores that run each at 2.4 Ghz, a total of 48GB ram, and just need 400W of power!! This means that it hardly gets warm, and make less noise then my desktop pc.

Render jobs that took all night, now gets done in 10-12 min.

Janne opted for modifying the Helmer cabinet instead of using standard PC cases because the 6 cases would have cost about as much ass the motherboards and CPUs. Most of the modification involved cutting holes for airflow, power supplies, and cabling, but it looks like the Helmer's drawer dimensions accommodate the ATX motherboards almost perfectly.

I'm not all that familiar with the software behind 3D rendering (anyone care to point us to some howtos?), but Janne is using a batch management system called DrQueue that looks quite useful for a lot of distributed applications. It takes care of distributing jobs between the clsuter's nodes, allowing you to manage and monitor each of the nodes remotely from a central interface. Pretty cool stuff.

Helmer render cluster
DrQueue

Posted by Jason Striegel | May 23, 2008 07:48 PM
Hardware, Linux Multimedia, Linux Server | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

March 27, 2008

Shredz64: Guitar Hero for C64

shredz64_20080327.jpg

Toni Westbrook authored a new C64 game called Shredz64, bringing the best game of all time to the best computing platform of all time:

You can use the real Guitar Hero controller using the PSX64 PS2-to-DB9 converter which Toni also created. This takes the game controller input and maps it to the appropriate up, down, left, right and potentiometer lines for the Commodore.

Shredz64 uses the internal SID audio processor to play any of your favorite SID tunes. In addition to the built-in songs, you can import new SID files and even create new levels by editing note tracks (using the game controller, naturally).

I'm speechless.

Shredz64

Posted by Jason Striegel | Mar 27, 2008 07:32 PM
Electronics, Gaming, Hardware, Music, Retro Computing, Retro Gaming | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

March 25, 2008

iNoteBook: repurpose an old laptop

inotebook_20080325.jpg

It seems like I end up updating my laptop every couple of years, but as cool as new hardware is, sometimes the challenge of finding a new use for the old machine is more interesting. The iNoteBook mod is a classic example, transforming a broken, screenless iBook into a stealth desktop machine.

What's your favorite laptop reuse project? If you've got one, please share in in the comments.

The iNoteBook

Posted by Jason Striegel | Mar 25, 2008 07:56 PM
Hardware, Home, Mac, Retro Computing | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

March 19, 2008

From Nand to Tetris in 12 Steps

Shimon Schocken gave a really interesting Google Tech Talk titled From Nand to Tetris in 12 Steps. In the video, he describes a course where students design a complete virtualized computer system from scratch, building from the humble nand gate, to a functional cpu and memory architecture, to compiler software and an operating system, all culminating in a simple game that runs on the virtual hardware.

The hardware projects are done in a simple hardware description language and a hardware simulator supplied by us. The software projects (assembler, VM, and a compiler for a simple object-based language) can be done in any language, using the APIs and test programs supplied by us. We also build a mini-OS. The result is a GameBoy-like computer, simulated on the student's PC. We start the course (and this talk) by demonstrating some video games running on this computer, e.g. Tetris and Pong.


Building a working computer from Nand gates alone is a thrilling intellectual exercise. It demonstrates the supreme power of recursive ascent, and teaches the students that building computer systems is -- more than anything else -- a triumph of human reasoning.

It looks like most of the course materials are available online. The necessary hardware emulator and simulator software is open source and available from Shimon's website.

CS101 Digital Systems Construction
Video - Building a Modern Computer from First Principles [via Slash7]

Posted by Jason Striegel | Mar 19, 2008 09:02 PM
Hardware, Retro Computing, Science, Software Engineering, Virtualization | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

January 27, 2008

HOWTO: Make a roll-up keyboard

rollupkeyboard_20080127.jpg

Making a flexible, "roll-up" keyboard from a standard USB keyboard is a lot easier than I would have expected. Rolling your own is about as simple as removing the membrane from inside an existing keyboard and gluing key labels in the appropriate places.

Aside from having a portable full-size keyboard, and the additional geek-cred that your workspace will attain, it also seems like this is much easier to clean. Considering what a biological cesspit of a petri-dish most keyboards are, this may have a beneficial health impact for you too.

Make your own Roll-Up Keyboard - Link

Posted by Jason Striegel | Jan 27, 2008 08:04 PM
Hardware | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

January 21, 2008

OS X on the Asus Eee PC

eee_osx_20080121.jpg

We've posted about installing Ubuntu and Vista on the little Asus Eee PC, so to round things off, here's a guide for installing Leopard. Using a few tools of the hackintosh trade, Dan from Uneasy Silence was able to get OS X running on the little lappy.

So, ever since I got the eeePC I've loved how easy it is to tinker with. Since I'm not a Linux guy, I dumped the Xandros preload and opted for Windows XP so I could you my EVDO USB datacard and blogging software easier, but I wondered could I install OSX on it? And, after trial and error - you can!

One thing that Dan mentions is that Leopard is a bit pokey on the Eee. He opted to run OS X 10.4.8 instead, and it sounds like it performs quite a bit better.

Load OSX 10.5 Leopard on the eeePC - Link
Vista on the Eee PC - Link
HOWTO - Install Ubuntu on the Asus Eee PC - Link

Posted by Jason Striegel | Jan 21, 2008 09:35 PM
Hardware, Mac | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

January 4, 2008

Add Bluetooth to your iPod

btipod_20080104.jpg

fstedie came up with a nice hack for adding internal Bluetooth audio support to your iPod:

1st Ever Bluetooth-Enabled iPod!

If you're like me, you've often asked yourself why Apple has not added native Bluetooth capability to their iPod line up. Even the iPhone only supports mono Bluetooth!

Sure, there are numerous adapters that plug into the iPod's dock connector to give you wireless music, but they are clunky, they come off easily, can't use them with your case and you have to charge them separately!

So, here is my way to add "native" internal Bluetooth support to your 4G iPod. The same method may be used with other iPod versions, I leave that up to you.

The hack essentially involves disassembling a small Bluetooth audio adapter and wiring it directly to the iPod mainboard. Audio input is tapped from the headphone jack and draws power directly from the iPod's battery, giving you a completely wireless and dongle-free audio device.

Check out the picture above, though, and you'll also notice fstedie has replaced the iPod hard disk with a CF card. He has an instructable for that, too. I mentioned Mark Hoekstra's hack to create an iPod-to-CF adapter last year, and it looks like these are now more readily available and can be ordered online. Pretty cool little iPod hacks, I must say.

Add Internal Bluetooth Capability To Your iPod - Link
Convert your 4th Gen iPod to use Flash Memory - Link
iPod CF and SD Card Capability - Link

Posted by Jason Striegel | Jan 4, 2008 08:18 PM
Electronics, Hardware, Wireless, iPod | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

December 29, 2007

Laser projector

laserprojector_20071229.jpg

Instructables user echo_anomie posted a nifty howto for creating a very simple portable laser projector. With a bright enough laser, you can project an image across long outdoor distances and there's never any need to adjust focus.

When it's all assembled, you just drop photo slides in the path of the beam and they are projected wherever you have the thing aimed. It'd be interesting to try this with some kind of LCD in place of the slide. This should let you project eerie green videos on skyscrapers around town.

Laser Image Projector - [via] Link

Posted by Jason Striegel | Dec 29, 2007 10:00 AM
Electronics, Hardware, Photography | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

December 22, 2007

HOWTO - add a touch screen to the Asus Eee PC

eeetouchscreen_20071222.jpg

jkmobile added a touch screen to his Eee PC and he's posted a video showing how to do it. He was able to find a properly sized after-market touch panel that could be fitted on top of the stock screen just behind the bezel. It then connects to the PC using a USB connection, which he was able to completely hide by soldering the connector directly to the motherboard's USB pins.

I wasn't aware that these touch panels were readily available. It looks like this mod could be easily adapted to just about any laptop model. Cool stuff.

Add a Touch Panel to Asus Eee PC - Video, Link

Posted by Jason Striegel | Dec 22, 2007 07:15 PM
Hardware | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack | Digg It | Tag w/del.icio.us

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