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Build Your Own Earth Oven

Build Your Own Earth Oven

Earthoven Looks like a neat book. Build Your Own Earth Oven is a simple, fully-illustrated handbook for making a wood-fired, masonry-style oven out of inexpensive earthen materials (similar to adobe and cob). The book provides clear, step-by-step instructions for building and firing the oven, as well as complete directions for making sourdough bread in the best (and simplest) artisan tradition. Link.

Hacking the Microsoft MN-700

Hacking the Microsoft MN-700

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There are a lot of projects and hacks for the Linksys WRT54G routers, but what about some of the others- like the ones Microsoft made, now on Ebay for under $30. Here’s a good project that mods that MN-700 router to be something a bit more useful- you’ll need to crack the device open, upgrade the bootloader, download new firmware and then you should have a Linux running router. Link.

Cardboard folding chair

Cardboard folding chair

5 …designed for being in the city walking. in the urban landscape less public space are provided for sitting down. public benches are being moved away or replaced with a ‘leaning pole’ but the need of sitting down remains. YOC serves both as a carrying bag and as a stool to be used while rambling, shopping, waiting or when ever you want to sit down. the stool is folded out of coated fibreboard and can be flattened when not in use. Link.

Make a NES Pad work with a Pocket PC

Make a NES Pad work with a Pocket PC

Finished Portable retro gaming! I use my Pocket PC quite a bit for games, mainly old NES titles on the PocketNester emulator. But the hardware buttons on the iPAQ are too small, and it can be hard to use certain combinations. My solution for this was to interface an original Nintendo controller to my PPC. For this mod, I used a cheap IR keyboard (Belkin F8U1500) and wired the directional keys and PPC hardware buttons (circled below) directly to the NES. Link.

Homebrew Air Conditioning for under

Homebrew Air Conditioning for under $25

Dscf0292 DIY AC. …a student, with limited funds and a cheap house without air conditioning. To avoid dying this summer, I’ve built a primitive air conditioner. It’s a basic heat pump, using water as the medium. You’ll probably need to fiddle a bit with the dimensions of the supplies based on your resources and preferences. The system will cool an average room to a comfortable level in approximately 15-20 minutes. Depending on flow rate, a full bucket of water will last approximately 1-3 hours. It doesn’t rip quite as hard as central air, but for less than $30 CAD I’m not complaining. [via] Link.

Tic Tac iPod Shuffle case

Tic Tac iPod Shuffle case

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Here’s a neat little iPod shuffle case made from a Tic Tac 100 case- it’s a little larger than the usual Tic Tac cases so the iPod shuffle fits in there nicely with room to spare for the mints. If i ran Tic Tac or some other company for the day, I’d go out of my way to make all my candy holders fit the most popular music players and watch the creativity flourish (Altoids sorta does that now). Link.

Project Ukulele – Phase 1

Project Ukulele – Phase 1

Uke1 Finkbuilt writes- I am serializing the construction of the Grizzly Ukulele kit. I thought that you might be interested. I’ve known about the Grizzly guitar kits for a while and always thought that it would be neat to build one. A recent investigation into the ukulele sub-culture has pushed me past the tipping point where interest threatens to crescendo into obsession. The only way to get over it was going to be to dive right in, so I ordered up a Grizzly uke kit. Link.