Make some gravity waves

Make some gravity waves

en.jpgThe Einstein@Home project is now open for general participation! Much like the SETI@Home and folding@Home efforts- this project uses the idle time of your computer to work on a distributed computing project. Einstein@Home searches data from the LIGO and GEO gravitational wave detectors to detect waves that ripple the fabric of time and space which may confirm predictions by the General theory of Relativity. You can read more about the project, gravity waves and other distributed computing projects here. If you’d like to join the Make Magazine team, visit our team page. Here’s a screenshot of the screensaver from the Einstein@Home application as well the 3 computers I’m running BOINC projects on (Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing).

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Un-DRM’ing the Senseo Coffee Maker

Un-DRM’ing the Senseo Coffee Maker

senseo.jpgWeekends are about coffee in my home. The Philips Senseo is a coffee maker that makes one cup of coffee at a time, insert single serving Fight Club reference here. I saw one at the store a few days ago and remembered reading about analogies to its “protected” coffee pods that keep you locked in to Philips pod system like DRM on many music players do. I never really thought about buying a Senseo, but today on the del.icio.us bookmarks a guide showed up on making your own coffee pods as well as a universal version. So, now I am thinking of getting one and writing this up for a future issue. Has anyone made their own pods out there? Is the Senseo that good?

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Fan Made Films

Fan Made Films

bh1552.jpgI’m really getting in to “fan made films” lately. Most are Sci-Fi and starting to become fairly high quality. While I was at the Seattle ComicCon I was surprised to see DVDs of all the ones I’ve viewed in the past for sale on tables with lots of other DVDs you can’t “buy” anywhere. Waxy.org posted a link to this one, a Thundercats fan film which is a fun watch. Other ones I’ve downloaded and used to test video playback on phones, devices, etc… have been Grayson, Duality, Fanimatrix, Hidden Frontier, and Starship Exeter. If you have any other cool ones post’em up!

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Rockbox OS for Archos provides cool functions

WFMU is a public radio station in New Jersey that has great eclectic programs . For instance, one show plays old Edison wax cylinders. The station also has an excellent blog, called Beware the Blog. I was reading a entry on it about high-end MP3 recording equipment, and in the comments section, someone mentioned the Archos Jukebox Recorder, a 20Gb MP3 player that you can buy for about $250. The interesting thing about this device is the alternative operating system for that’s been created by a community of Archos users. It’s called Rockbox. The commentor says “The replacement interface can even play games like tetris and solitaire. (It can announce menus by a robotic user-configurable voice…it can even play videos that are converted to a special format – though on a small LCD the results are far from satisfying.)” This sounds really interesting. If you’ve had experience with this system, please tell me about it by posting in the comments.

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Slashdot Make 01 review and IMterview with Mark

Slashdot Make 01 review and IMterview with Mark

0.jpgAlex Moskalyuk over on Slashdot has a review of our first issue of Make Magazine. He gave it a 10 out of 10. I really like this part “Make is the magazine for people who like to look under the hood, who like to work on do-it-yourself projects and who feel great accomplishment when a project is over, even though its practical usability might be questioned”. Mark was IMterviewed over on Gizmodo about the magazine as well.

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