Robot dog fashion
Homemade clothing, for your robot dog – An art competition at the Marunouchi shopping district, named “the Tokyo Competition 2005”. Some 40 robot dogs accompanied the would-be artists during the performance. Link.
Homemade clothing, for your robot dog – An art competition at the Marunouchi shopping district, named “the Tokyo Competition 2005”. Some 40 robot dogs accompanied the would-be artists during the performance. Link.
A little while ago I posted about some clever Metrocard art projects – and now here’s a lot more – Noah’s Metro card art collection. Purses, belt buckles and more… Link.
Hand cranked phone charger, radio, torch and “exercise in physics” all in one, as AAS (All About Symbian) look at the latest ‘really pratical’ gadget. Link.
This week, O’Reilly’s audio magazine program Distributing the Future takes a look at the Data for Web 2.0. Tim O’Reilly explains “What is Web 2.0,” Marc Hedlund thinks about the browsers of the future that might mash up the private data on your hard drive with data that lives on the Web, NAVTEQ’s Robert Denaro explains why NAVTEQ drives so many miles each day to gather the geographic information you use in your favorite online mapping applications, Phil Torrone is already hacking the iPod nano, and our “FOO Cast” is more of Richard Giles’ Gadget show interview with John Batelle. Link and MP3.
Brian has a nice write up of GameTap, you can of course always roll your own too… “GameTap is Turner Broadcasting’s subscription-based gaming on demand service. The list of games is pretty impressive, but what really jumps out at me is the platforms represented: Dreamcast, Sega Master System, Intellivision, Genesis, Atari 2600, Arcade games, and more. It looks like they’ll have a decent selection of modern games, but retro games currently dominate the list”... Link.
Handy non-techy HOW TO on fixing a Palm with a dead battery. There are tons of PDAs in desk drawers and on eBay that could use a little lovin’ – If you own a PDA that is a couple of years old that needs a new internal battery, but don’t want to shell out the extra 50 – 100 dollars to get it professionally replaced then this is the place for you! Thanks Andrew! Link.
Earlier I posted about Google’s secure VPN access, turns out you can use it with a Mac as well (here’s how) – and if you’re looking for another VPN client – Tom writes “There is a free and more trustworthy free VPN client software (called “iPig”) and the iPig server, so you can set up your own (WiFi) VPN in a few minutes. Worked very well for me!”