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Posts Tagged ‘hack’

postheadericon RoboTouch brings a wired NES controller to a wireless iPad (video)

RoboTouch brings wired NES controllers to a wireless iPad
Oh Arduino, is there anything you can't do when put in the right hands? The hands in this case belong to a guy named Joven of ProtoDojo, and they whipped up the contraption you can see in the video below. Basically, it's a wired NES controller that goes to an Arduino board, which in turn controls a set of servos. Those servos articulate conductive arms to touch the screen in just the right places. The whole contraption enables a rather playable version of Reckless Racing, making it feel all the more like the RC Pro Am successor it's trying to be. Check it out in the video below, and then hope that Jovan hurries up and posts the instructions so we can start building our own.

[Thanks, Chad]

Continue reading RoboTouch brings a wired NES controller to a wireless iPad (video)

RoboTouch brings a wired NES controller to a wireless iPad (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Mar 2011 15:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceProtoDojo (YouTube)  | Email this | Comments

postheadericon LikeLight lights up your likes with Legos, Arduino (video)

Likelight lights up your likes with Legos, Arduino
How long has it been since someone lit up your life? Since someone gave you hope, to carry on? As it turns out all you need for that is a box of Lego, an Arduino board, and a bit of your time. Ad agency Redpepper has successfully proven its abilities to generate buzz by creating this "LikeLight," an up-scaled version of the blue pixelated thumb that makes Facebook denizens get all in a tizzy. This bigger version is almost guaranteed to generate even greater tizzies, glowing blue thanks to a combination of clear bricks outside and four LEDs inside. Code is even provided that pulls data from the Facebook Graph API to light up those bricks -- and your life.

Continue reading LikeLight lights up your likes with Legos, Arduino (video)

LikeLight lights up your likes with Legos, Arduino (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Mar 2011 11:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink NowhereElse  |  sourceRedpepper  | Email this | Comments

postheadericon Kinect + homemade Power Gloves = 3D modeling in free-space (video)

Kinect + homemade Power Gloves = 3D modeling in free-space (video)
The Kinect hacks keep rollin', and we just keep on lovin' every one of 'em -- despite most being decidedly non-practical. This one actually is, created by Sebastian Pirch at 3rD-EYE, a media production company. He's made a free-space 3D modeling tool using a Kinect camera to track his hands, which he uses to create points in space and draft a model. To provide greater control he then made two Arduino-powered gloves that detect finger touches -- basically DIY Peregrines. Using different connections of finger-presses he can move the entire model, move single points, create new points, create new polygons, and basically do everything he needs to do to create a mesh, which can then be imported into 3ds Max for further refinement. He even manages to make it all look fun, thus besting Lockheed Martin's similar system that's powered by zombies.

Continue reading Kinect + homemade Power Gloves = 3D modeling in free-space (video)

Kinect + homemade Power Gloves = 3D modeling in free-space (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Mar 2011 11:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Kinect-Hacks  |  source3rD Eye  | Email this | Comments

postheadericon Kinect hacked to control Tesla coils from a safe distance (video)


Just how does one come up with the bright idea to control Tesla coils with a Microsoft Kinect? In a pub, of course.

Kinect hacked to control Tesla coils from a safe distance (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Mar 2011 17:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Adafruit Industries  |  sourceTom Scott  | Email this | Comments

postheadericon MIT’s Junkyard Jumbotron turns your motley collection of devices into one large display (video)

Got a handful of mobile devices layin' 'round when what you actually need is one large display? The kids at the MIT Center for Future Civic Media got you covered! The Junkyard Jumbotron, designed by Rick Borovoy, Ph.D. and Brian Knep, is an ingenious project that makes stretching an image across damn near any collection of displays with web browsers. When you assemble the displays (such as in the picture above), the Junkyard Jumbotron website will ask you to point them all to the same URL. This will cause each device to load the same QR code, which -- once you snap a digital pic and email it to the project -- will allow it to calibrate and stretch a JPEG across your assemblage. It certainly does look like something scrounged up at a junkyard, doesn't it? Well, sometimes that's part of the fun. Hit the source link to try it for yourself. Video after the break.

Continue reading MIT's Junkyard Jumbotron turns your motley collection of devices into one large display (video)

MIT's Junkyard Jumbotron turns your motley collection of devices into one large display (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 14 Mar 2011 11:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gizmodo  |  sourceJunkyard Jumbotron  | Email this | Comments