The Science Channel ran a BBC show called Making Millions the Easy Way, it was mostly about ways people have fleeced the casinos for millions of bucks using math, mechanics and group play. The MIT story was in there, but one thing I couldn’t find any information on was the wearable Blackjack computers that Keith and Marty Taft made. Read the transcript here, it’s amazing. For a mid-1970’s computer it was extremely advanced (it even used LEDs in the eye glasses). I’m thinking of making one and having an “open class” Blackjack game night at my house where everyone is encouraged to “play” any way they wish. Best hacker wins.
Here’s the MP3 of MAKE on Seattle’s NPR Weekday. I brought in lots of gadgets, chatted about some of the articles in MAKE, RFID gyms, water cooled grills and took calls. Special thanks to host Steve Scher and all the amazing inventors / tinkers that called in!
Yay, more PSP hacks. EsNetsc sent word that PSPVault has a story about playing two player Ad-Hoc games with one UMD game disc. It seems to (at the least) work with Tony Hawk Underground and Ridge Racer. You’ll need 2 PSPs, 2 people and one copy of the game. Complete instructions here and here.
Physics guy and mobile device hacker Dan Bjorkegren made a brilliant web service for Seattle residents that I’m going to use from now on. It’s called SpotBus. If you’ve used Google Suggest you know how handy it is when you start to type and Google “suggests” search terms. Spotbus works like somewhat like that, as you type your start or destination location (in landmarks) is can find the locations and return the results right away. It’s a lot faster than Metro’s tool or a timetable. Great DIY remixing of “suggest” user interfacing and transit data!
If you’re wondering what the strength of duct tape might be Make reader Taylor reports in with some possible clues…I decided I needed a hammock in my dorm room, and what better way than duct tape. I attached 4 strips on either side to the ceiling, making a loop at the bottom. I then used some clothes line and 2 carabiners to attach the hammock. The whole setup can hold my 200 lb friend (he fell asleep for 4 hrs in it). Under that stress each strip is holding around 25 lbs (assuming the weight was equally distributed, which I did my best to do). I haven’t pushed it to the limits yet, maybe this weekend I’ll see just how much it can take (Photo 1, Photo 2, Photo 3).
I can’t wait to get some time to hack up GPS project with Google’s new satellite photos for Google maps. Here’s the regular map of O’Reilly HQ and here’s the satellite photo version. Using this application from Glen Murphy, a high speed wireless connection like an EVDO card and a GPS unit, you could easily make a real-time satellite photo GPS unit for your car. You could also just hook this up to your laptop and walk around looking for Wifi too.
I’ve been playing around with a Java based SPOT RSS Reader/Sender program and it works really well. The developer included the source so I think I’ll be able to make my own mini-“MAKERSs” to alert when stuff happens here on the site like comments or questions. You grab the java app and the source over on SPOTDev. Here’s a test message I sent over to my watch for today.