HAL9000–Science Fiction Case Mod Contest
This is the best case mod ever. I built the HAL9000 based on the computer in the movies 2001: A Space Odyssey and 2010: The Year We Make Contact. I had seen many computers on the web that were no more than black (or painted black) computer cases with the name HAL9000 on them. A friend of mine told me to quit my complaining and build one, so I did. Link. Bonus link, here’s a webcam version!
Justin writes “I was searching around for a way to melt some aluminum to try and cast it into molds. This is what my search turned up. Don’t get me wrong, the microwave option was cool but I doubt my parents would think the same. Keep up the great work.. And here it is, the Tin-Can foundry with charcoal briquettes.
I think it might be fun to make a low cost version of one of these…this sleek little baseball from outerspace isn’t a baseball at all — it’s a sophisticated spy device that can capture video out to 25 yards, audio up to 5 yards, and is tough enough to survive a two-story drop. Say hello to the Eye Ball R1 Throwable Camera. Consumer-y version coming
MusicThing sums up the Russian DIY homemade DJ cassette decks nicely- DJ Aptem is a new MT hero – he’s done what I always dreamed of doing when I was little and couldn’t afford a pair of Technics. He’s built a pair varispeed tape decks, complete with ‘jog wheel’, EQ and motor off switches. He also has a nice minimal studio setup (he only uses Max/MSP). DJ Aptem, we salute you!

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.