K750i headset – 3.5mm jack mod
The K750i is a stunning phone, here’s a mod for it! Hi there, I thought a few of you may be interested to see the adaptation that I have made to the hands free head set that comes with the k750i. I have had the handset for a few weeks now and have always been planning to do this mod. I got round to it this weekend and took a few pics along the way to show you all. Incidently all the pics here were taken with the k750i too! Link.
VOIP is spreading via its users. Leading the way is a Luxembourg-based start-up, Skype, which has signed up 40 million users for its Internet telephone service and is growing at a remarkable 150 000 users a day. The article goes on to talk about all the 3rd party tools, how folks are using it and our very own
Here’s how to make your own Root beer. Fermentation has been used by mankind for thousands of years for raising bread, fermenting wine and brewing beer. The products of the fermentation of sugar by baker’s yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae (a fungus) are ethyl alcohol and carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide causes bread to rise and gives effervescent drinks their bubbles.
Revival of the oldest laptop concept! In this recipe the Etch A Sketch tablet is digital. It even includes the feature of shaking the tablet to erase the screen, as in the original version. How to map a couple of analog inputs to X and Y coordinates of a simple drawing software. How to get a Boolean input from a sensor (tilt).
Here you’ll find a variety of rather unusual paper toys, all free for you to print out and enjoy. The toys include a hearse playset, coffin gift boxes (with occupants), a little cemetery, several unusual board games, a gloomy little haunted house, a rusty old-style robot, and quite a few other dark delights. So pick out some toys, print out the pattern pages, and with a few common supplies like scissors and glue you’re ready to create all these strange little curiosities. I hope you’ll enjoy them all. I like the mechanical bat.
Incremental optical encoders can be quite expensive...commercially available units from US Digital can go from $7 USD (mylar encoder disk) and $50 USD (encased encoder). Taking apart the ubiquitous $5 PC mouse, however, can give you two cheap but quite reliable encoders plus two infrared (IR) emitter-detector pairs. This tutorial will show you how to take apart a mouse, remove these parts and protoboard your own quadrature encoder in an afternoon or two.