Month: February 2006

PowerGlove Mouse

PowerGlove Mouse

Power1This is crazy, I just recieved my Powerglove off eBay and another Gyration mouse for a VR glove project and Leadingzero built one! – “The time has come to bring new life into our old friend and to welcome him back as a productive member of society with the ‘Powerglove Mouse’. With this hack I can strap on the Powerglove and have total control over the mouse cursor on my computer. I can control the cursor’s position with a wave of my hand and activate the mouse clicks by simply bending my fingers – a beautiful integration of old and new.” [via] Link.

Building an Autonomous Ground Robot

Building an Autonomous Ground Robot

Img413 15Chris Jang is building his own autonomous robot – “This robot is my first electronics and embedded systems project. I studied Electronic Circuits and Applications by Senturia and Wedlock for six months and then rebuilt and cross compiled my home computer systems with a Linux From Scratch book to prepare for it. This project is also the first time machining moving parts (as simple as the front suspension is, the parts do move). I’ve maintained what a friend referred to as an “mail blog” during the project. After some progress or discovery, I emailed a status report of sorts, usually with pictures and (rarely) movies attached. A coworker convinced me there is value in these emails as artifacts of the project history.” [via] Link.

Monsta-Mac-Attacker gets new face for 2006

Monsta-Mac-Attacker gets new face for 2006

97044906 198Ee68DfeAizeMashehu’s writes “I built two fan controllers into a happy-face baybus for two sets of fan arrays so I can hear the sound of silence while the eight large fans chug-a-lug-lug. One knob on the new fanbus controlls the two rear 80mm fans blowing into the water-cooling radiator (in addition to the existing 120mm fan with rear-mounted speed control knob sucking air out of the radiator from the other side) and the other knob controls the 2 front 80mm fans that blow air around 5 of the fastest hard drives in the machine. You can see a close up as well as an explaination of the switch here and the main machine that this is wired to in the other photos in this series.” Link.

Creative minds devise handy things

MakerscoverArticle on Cleveland.com about our new book The Makers! “The ability to create something from almost nothing is why the 100 grass-roots inventors profiled in “Makers: All Kinds of People Making Amazing Things in Their Backyard, Basement or Garage” so intrigued me. The book is written by Bob Parks, an editor and writer at Wired magazine, but it springs from the minds of the editors and contributors to Make magazine.” Link.