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Hard Diamond – Master Jeweller’s blog…

Hard Diamond – Master Jeweller’s blog…

Pillbox1-Thumb Paul is a master craftsman in all aspects of fine jewellery and tableware. He has been invited to exhibit at the Goldsmith’s Hall, London, several times in recent years, including in 2003 in the ‘Love Story’ exhibition, where he showed a hand-crafted and jewel-studded 18pc cutlery set complete with matching silver wine goblets. Now he has a blog and shows how he makes all this stuff…I really like the master crafter blogs Hugh has seeded. Link.

Bicycle powered VoIP

Bicycle powered VoIP

30Opreality2 The mission of Inveneo, a nonprofit group of inveterate high-tech adventurers, is to bring developing communities that never reached a 20th century level of infrastructure into the 21st century. Its bicycle-powered system brings not just VoIP but also e-mail and Web browsing to remote areas, using a combination of Linux and the Asterisk open source PBX. Link.

Phones for Electronic Freedom

Phones for Electronic Freedom

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Our pals over at Phone Scoop are auctioning off one silver RAZR, one black RAZR and one BLNC Bluetooth car kit to benefit our friends at the EFF, it’s the EFF’s 15th birthday this week. So if you want to help the EFF and score a cool phone, have at it. If you happen to win, we’ll help you get your own content on the phones too (videos play nicely on these). Link.

Build-a-bear – be aware….

Build-a-bear – be aware….

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I’ve always thought the Build-a-Bear stores in malls are kinda neat, the kids can build their own Teddy bears they way the want. I even made one once as a present. What I didn’t know- it seems it’s not so clear is what happens to the information the kids type in the computer terminal to get their bear birth certificates. The “opt in” preference apparently is pre-checked. The SF Chronicle has a story about this. The bears are cool, just watch the kids and don’t have them put their personal info at the end. Might be a good way to teach them about “opting out” [via] Link.

Amp monitor stand

Amp monitor stand

27261118 618Bc9Ba12 M We blew out our amp this year and were planning on tossing the thing. I was looking at it and figured that it would probably be the perfect height for a monitor stand. The only real problem was that the thing weighed a ton. It was easy weight to get rid of though. Old electronics were a lot more serviceable than they are now. I took out five screws on the bottom and the whole thing slid out from the wooden case. It took about five minutes to remove all the knobs and the faceplate. Link. Flickr photos here.