Latest Blog Entries
You probably can’t leap over this six-foot homemade Piranha Plant (nor should you try)
Posted On 10 May 2013 By Ben Gilbert. Under: Uncategorized.
We'd probably say something like, "I always thought it would be cool to build a giant fire breathing piranha plant," and then promptly forget about following through. Also, hey, that sounds dangerous! Hack-a-day's Caleb Kraft, however, doesn't all...
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Oculight LED hack gives the Oculus Rift a hint of peripheral vision (video)
Posted On 11 Apr 2013 By Jon Fingas. Under: Uncategorized.
Although the Oculus Rift is one of the more ambitious attempts at making virtual reality accessible, its lack of peripheral version is all too familiar -- it's much like staring into a pair of portholes. Rather than let the disorientation persist una...
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PBS shows how hacking is reclaiming its good name after a bad rap (video)
Posted On 31 Mar 2013 By Jon Fingas. Under: Uncategorized.
Hacking is still a loaded concept for many, often conjuring negative images of corporate espionage, fraudsters and prank-minded script kiddies. PBS' Off Book wants to remind us that hacking wasn't always seen this way -- and, thanks to modern develop...
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Barnes & Noble Nook HD+ tentatively rooted for the paper UI-phobic (video)
Posted On 09 Nov 2012 By Jon Fingas. Under: Uncategorized.
There's no doubt that Barnes & Noble in love with the paper-like interface of the Nook HD+. Not all of its new owners are quite so taken with the retro chic, with the proof being XDA-Developers member verygreen's early root for the Android tablet...
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Hexxeh ports Chromium OS to the Nexus 7 simply because he can (video)
Posted On 01 Nov 2012 By Jon Fingas. Under: Uncategorized.
Coder extraordinaire Hexxeh earned much of his reputation from porting Chromium OS to just about everything, some of his targets more audacious than others. It's about time he come full circle and port a Google platform to another Google platform, an...
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Holy Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown! Tetris ported to a jack-o’-lantern (video)
Posted On 30 Oct 2012 By Mark Hearn. Under: Uncategorized.
What happens when you gut a pumpkin and replace its insides with heat-shrink tubing, solder, 128 LEDs, eight AA batteries, an Arduino board and clever programming? You get what self-proclaimed tinkerer Nathan Pryor calls "Pumpktris." Over the years w...
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Invisible’s ‘The New Obsolete’ showcases self-constructed instruments, touts a typewriter-driven piano (video)
Posted On 28 Oct 2012 By Billy Steele. Under: Uncategorized.
If you're hip to repurposing old tech for new inventions, Invisible is right up your alley. The Greensboro-based unit calls themselves a "mechanical music museum" and "a reverse engineered folk science daydream" when describing their elaborate set of...
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Googler loads Ubuntu on an ARM-based Samsung Chromebook, gives solace to the offline among us
Posted On 22 Oct 2012 By Jon Fingas. Under: Uncategorized.
Samsung's ARM-running Chromebook is barely out of the starting gate, and it's already being tweaked to run without as much of an online dependency. By a Google employee, no less. Not content to rely solely on Chrome OS, Olof Johansson has loaded Ubun...
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Google patches SVG and IPC exploits in Chrome, discoverer banks $60,000 in the process
Posted On 11 Oct 2012 By Jon Fingas. Under: Uncategorized.
Google revels in hacking contests as ways of testing Chrome's worth. Even if the browser is compromised, the failure provides a shot at fixing an exploit under much safer circumstances than an in-the-wild attack. No better example exists than the resu...
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Adafruit releases WebIDE alpha for Raspberry Pi, eases beginners into coding
Posted On 05 Oct 2012 By Nicole Lee. Under: Uncategorized.
If you've been intrigued by the Raspberry Pi but were hesitant to get one because you're new to Linux, Adafruit has a solution for you. The team that brought us the Raspberry Pi Education Linux Distro has come up with a special WebIDE (Web Integrated...
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