A man named James Gentles has come up with a way to take pictures from a camera suspended from a flying kite. The DIY piece he has created includes scematics for a simple modification to make the Aiptek Pencam take pictures every five seconds. With the 80 picture capacity of the camera, that gives you nearly seven minutes of flying time.
Skinning for Fun and Prizes
The Hardware Geeks are running a first annual Skinning Contest (for creating skins for such popular programs as WinAmp3, WinMeda8, Mozilla 1.2 and others). Prizes include a Leadtek Nforce2 motherboard. Check out the site for a full list of skinable interfaces and prizes.
DIY Cheap Projection Screen
GideonTech has a DIY Guide on selecting an LCD panel and an overhead projector for an inexpensive projection screen TV/computer experience.
DMCA a Two-Edged Sword?
A couple weeks ago, Wal-Mart and several other retailers forced FatWallet to remove postings in their forums that listed upcoming sale prices, claiming copyright over the info, and using the DMCA as a club. But according to Ars Technica, Wal-Mart may have gone too far, in demanding the info on forum posters. FatWallet is fighting back, using the DMCA itself:
Today, FatWallet sent each retailer a letter contesting its frivolous copyright assertion and demanding payment, under Section 512(f) of the DMCA, for all damages, including costs and attorneys’ fees, incurred by FatWallet in addressing the knowing and material misrepresentations of copyright protection. According to Megan E. Gray, “As the retailers well know, simple sales prices are not protected by copyright. Copyright only covers the expression of ideas, not facts.” Deirdre K. Mulligan noted, “This is an example of corporations using allegations of copyright infringement to silence speech.”
Oopsy!
Copyright Patient Zero
This article on Snopes, explainer of legends urban, traces the circuitous path of ownership of the song Happy Birthday, from it’s authoring by two kindergarten teachers who died childless and unmarried nearly a hundred years ago, to just another piece of AOL Time Warner IP.
This looks like a job for…
Single ladies of the city fear not! For Terrifica patrols the night for your safety!
But you know, if Fantastico needs a tech assist, he can drop me an email here.
Tiny, tiny mobo
I’m having serious delusions about this being the next base for my Home Entertainment Server. Included on the tiny 17*17 cm motherboard are VGA, LAN, Firewire, USB, video out and some version have the fanless VIA Eden processor at 500Mhz. Just add a harddrive, some memory, a powersupply and your kooky case du jour, and entertainment would supposedly occur. Tricky bit is, if you want the fanless version, the mobo might not pack enough punch to play DVD movies smoothly. Link: VIA EPIA mainboard
It’s a Retro-Futurific Christmas
I was wondering when someone was going to get around to doing this. Telestar Electronics, owners of the Predicta trademark, has started re-releasing all of those amazingly Jetsonian Predicta televisions from the 1940s and ’50s. They look like the originals on the outside, but inside, they have state-of-the-art electronics, color screens (natch), and they can tune in 181+ channels. Unfortunately, they come at a price that only Mr. Cogsley could afford (between US$1100-$3300, depending on model).
[Via boingboing.net]
“Pringles Can Antenna” Goes Commercial
Cool. Check this out. Some enterprising fellows are selling the popular Wi-Fi antennas that geeks have been building out of Pringles can. At only US$20, this ain’t a bad deal if you don’t feel like taking the DIY route, but still want to extend your Wi-Fi range. They even take PayPal.
[Thanks to boingboing]
Comdex Report
Peter Judson and our pals over at Neoseeker have a nice Comdex piece. Since no one from Street Tech Labs made it to the show, we’ll have to make pretend that’s our report.