HOW TO modify the Belkin Tunecast2
The Belkin Tunecast2 is a nicely designed piece of technology, superior to other devices of its sort due to its ability to tune to any FM frequency that you desire. The device is only limited by its range of operation. Before I modded my Tunecast2, it would operate efficiently at a distance of up to about 20-30 feet. After the mod, I was able to rebroadcast audio clearly without interference througout my entire house and even outside the house! Link.
This experiment will test a real spam filter, not a specially designed chess program. It won’t aim to beat Deep Thought (I wouldn’t know where to start, and I have a feeling this could be difficult anyway ;-), but it will aim to show signs of “intelligence”, or we won’t claim success. Finally, since dry tables and graphs are no fun, a theoretical proof of concept is not enough: the spam filter must really play chess in a way that everyone can see, and try out at home. [
Story about beating the Simon game in a clever way, geek self realization…The effusively fun spirit of Make magazine got me thinking about the day I first realized I was a geek. It sure would be interesting to hear other people’s stories on when they first realized. On that day I knew I was different from everybody else. I also knew I was the same as the proud, the few, the geek.
Chuck writes- regarding the
…if you’ve got ten minutes to spare today, make some time to watch Multiple Sidosis. It’s a short, home-made film by Sid Laverents in 1969. It opens with Sid on his birthday morning, being given an Akai M8 reel-to-reel four-track by his wife (who shows that mixture of distain, confusion and mild concern that will be familiar to any married gear-head).
…a little tutorial about how to make your entire site more mobile-friendly without even touching your pages. You may think that since you write valid code and separate structure from presentation at all times, your site already works great on mobile devices. You may also think bad things don’t happen to good people. In both cases, you’d be wrong.