When The Computer Makes Coffee
Starbucks in your PC. René G. from Munich, Germany, is one of these individuals, a tinkerer and inventor to whom performance and visual style alone have long ago ceased to be sufficient. As a passionate coffee drinker, René G. set a difficult goal for himself, one that took him nearly 80 hours to achieve: through laborious and precise work, he was able to convert a coffee maker into a standard PC shell. A case of extreme modding, if you will. He invested over $3,000 into the components alone. Link.
…ribbon controllers are touch-sensitive strips that let you control pitch continuously (i.e., not fixed to the pitches of a keyboard). The original Martenot instrument of the 1920s had an early ribbon controller, but rocker Keith Emerson probably gets the most credit for popularizing the design.. Here are some DIY instructions for building your own ribbon controller. These aren’t just any old ribbon controller, either: not only are they much cheaper than commercial models, but they can play two notes at once.

Interesting article about how much electricity we use. That big screen TV might just be the SUV of power consumption in your house. With all the sales of big screen TVs we might need to develop more energy saving technolgies. The average US household used 10,656 kilowatt-hours of electricity in 2001- what used the most? [
DVD ripping and transcoding with Linux. This is a very specific tutorial about the DVD rippping and transcoding, using Mplayer and Transcode. It is well organized and it contains specific information about the codecs, the aspect ratio, the audio and other specifics. Recommended. Mplayer HOWTO. The original Mplayer HOWTO. They are a huge and precious source of information of any kind about the video playing/encoding. Plus, the supported OS are Linux, Windows, MacOSX, FreeBDS… you got it. A must for any serious user, everybody should take a careful look at it.
Dale Dougherty and Phillip Torrone from MAKE Magazine will be on the airwaves 8am PST 90.9 WBUR Boston, MA- NPR. The Makers of MAKE: A new quarterly magazine wants America to go back to the garage and get in touch with its inner geek. It’s a throwback to the how-to journals of the ’50s like Popular Mechanics…but using 21st century technology. Call in, ask questions and say hi!