The Combat Cutlery Gallery

Dinner time used to be a bit more interesting it seems. A new set of deadly eating-irons added for your pleasure and delectation. Note that the barrels point backwards, towards the user, so they’re not designed for plugging your host if he makes impertinent remarks about your table manners. It is difficult to imagine a social gathering where it is appropriate to shoot off your own elbows. Link.
Video of the video the CVS disposable video camera produces…took the camcorder to be “developed” at my neighborhood CVS and got the DVD back in an hour. The results were passable, given what I was expecting. The actual resolution of the camera is difficult to discern; it’s probably close to CIF (320×240); the MPEG-2 of the DVD has the smaller video scaled up by about 150%, with a black border around the frame.
A little update since the last time this was floating around….I was looking at the front grid on the computer one day, and it struck me that 3 mm LED’s would fit perfectly into the front grid holes. My first thought was to have my name in shining diodes on it, so I measured and drew up a blue print in Illustrator. After thinking a while I came to the conclusion that a clock would be cool. Said and done. I bought a clock radio, took it apart, and figured out how it worked.


Congressman Rick Boucher represents Virginia’s Ninth Congressional District and has some commentary on the Broadcast Flag worth checking out. If the MPAA expects Congress to ratify a rule that would limit the ability of ordinary consumers to share lawfully acquired digital broadcast television programs with one another, then it shouldn’t be surprised if Congress insists that the MPAA accept in return a restoration of the fair use rights taken from consumers through the enactment of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). In issue 02 we show ya how to make your own Boradcast Flag free system.