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Gmaps Pedometer

Gmaps Pedometer

23810616 Da1D704681 O As a runner training for a marathon for the first time, I found myself wishing I had an easy way to know the exact distance a certain course is, without having to drag a GPS or pedometer around on my runs. Looking at Google Maps, and knowing there was a vibrant community of geeks hacking it, I knew there had to be a way. So here it is. [via] Link.

HOW TO make a portable Wi-Fi Hot Spot

HOW TO make a portable Wi-Fi Hot Spot

How0805Hotspot-Drawg Mike Outmesguine…Popular Science How 2.0 article on turning yourself into a walking hotspot by using a mobile power source and a cellular-to-Wi-Fi gateway. The Voltaic Systems backpack makes a great platform to build from due to all of the internal wiring and myriad power adapters included in the kit. And I like the Junxion Box as a simple, clean appliance to handle the Wi-Fi to Cellular interface. Link.

VNC for PSP

VNC for PSP

Images-103 If you’re looking to control other PCs via a Playstation Portable, there’s a new beta out that will allow just that. Uses the D-pad as the mouse and the PSP soft keyboard to enter text. PVNC Beta 1 release, still a little laggy, but will be faster in future releases. Link.

Open Design for ~0 Swarm Robots

Open Design for ~$800 Swarm Robots

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“There are lots of multi-robot designs out there. Most are either research platforms well over $2K (often $10K or more), or are hobbyist bots under $400 with tiny brains and few sensors. But George Mason University’s new FlockBots wiki is interesting. They’re trying to pack as much functionality as possible into a roughly $800, 7″ mobile swarmbot, and publish the design and software as a free and open spec. So far their design includes a wireless 200MHz Gumstix linux computer, a camera, range and bump sensors, wheel encoders, a can gripper, and lots more. It’s a great-looking design and I think the cost could drop to $500 with vendors doing consolidation.” Link. See our interview with the CEO of Gumstix.