There are a lot of super interesting and super-odd plans as well as fully assembled Sci-Fi type projects over on Future Horizons. Before I click on through to the purchase side, has anyone ever ordered a set of plans from them, how were they?
I keep a sketch book (here) of my artwork but I’ve been looking to make my own for bigger drawings. This how-to shows you how to turn those old vinyl albums in to sketchbooks and you can of course extend that to other types of notebooks or books. Most garage sales have a variety of weird albums that are perfect for this sort of project.
English cut is a blog from Thomas Mahon, Bespoke Savile Row Tailor, London. I’ve been reading Thomas’s site since Hugh McLeod dropped it on me. Clive Thomson from Slate properly identified why I think it’s so appealing… “After all, suits have many of the things that geeks particularly appreciate: Intense levels of engineering, an obsession with structural elegance, physics, totally wicked gear that’s used to create them, topographic geometry, and materials science that burrows right down to chemistry and – these days – nanotechnology. And when it comes to ties, my god, you’ve got the most awesomely realized application of knot theory on the planet”.
Jeremy Wagstaff has a great collection of programs (or ways to run programs) off USB drives. Chat/instant messaging, Browsers, Operating Systems, PIMs/organisers, Email, Encryption, Office, Music, and Web Authoring- I have a few of these on my perpetually hacked up Shuffle so when I visit foreign computers I can get stuff done without installing anything.
This Brainboost search engine is kinda neat. You can ask it regular questions like “Why is the sky blue?” or “When was the great pyramid built?” and many other types of natural kid-like questions. Their site calls it an answer engine as opposed to a search engine- which takes the search results and answers your question (or tries to).
Make group pool Flickr member “tv” posted a couplephotos of a the $11 Mattel JuiceBox modified in to a photo frame. He says “I’m working on an LCD frame hacked out of a Mattel JuiceBox ($11 at Wal-mart). The ‘Box runs uclinux and accepts MMC cards”. Wow, this might be the way we can all have low-cost photo frames.
Check out this amazing gallery of latte artwork. It looks like most of the creations use milk/soy as their Jackson-Pollockian tools of choice. I want to drink this lion from Victrola barista Bob and this leaf.
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