Month: November 2010

The Mechanical Glory of the IBM Selectric Typewriter

A “whiffletree” is a mechanical digital-to-analog converter. Brilliant science-and-technology documentarian Bill Hammack, professor of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering at the University of Illinois, has produced this fascinating video anatomy of IBM’s classic Selectric typewriter, in which a 7-bit whiffletree is employed to convert keypresses (digital) to precisely coordinated tugs (analog) on the control cables that rotate and tilt the type ball. Doubly awesome is the fact that the video features an appendix (yes, a video appendix) which focuses exclusively on the whiffletree itself, closely illustrating its operation with a simple 2-bit case.

How-To: Preserve a Candy Portrait

By Andrew Salomone Let’s say that you were overzealous with your Halloween candy purchases this year (or maybe trick-or-treater traffic was down in your neighborhood) and now you have a big bag or two of candy that you don’t really want to eat. And then let’s say that there is someone you’ve been meaning to […]

Feedbox, a noise-making machine

Christopher Carlson‘s “feedbox” noise machine is guaranteed to drive roommates and neighborhood dogs crazy, but it’s undeniably clever. this prototype noise machine was built for a lab assignment in music 250a – physical interaction design for music at stanford university’s center for computer research in music and acoustics (CCRMA). the task was to construct a […]

The iFixit Repair Manifesto

The iFixit Repair Manifesto

Inspired by Mister Jalopy’s/MAKE’s Maker’s Bill of Rights and Platform 21’s Repair Manifesto, the folks at iFixit have created this lovely repair manifesto and poster. They’re on a mission to get this thing up in hackerspaces, workshops, bulletin boards, and garages the world over. They’ve even printed 1500 copies of the poster that they’re giving […]