New Singer Sewing Machine Uses ... Game Boy
Spooticus writes: "I kid you not, your Game Boy can now sew using Singer's IZEK System! Excerpt: The Singer Sewing Company has teamed up with Nintendo to create a new sewing machine system using Game Boy technology that automatically sews stitch patterns, buttonholes and lettering. The system, called Izek, includes a sewing machine, Game Boy, connection wire and special cartridge that contains stitch pattern designs." I don't know what to say. My jaw has hit the floor.
Man.. that sure sounds like slave labour.
Hey, we could resell them to Martha Stewart of Cathie Lee! Think, kids all over the world will be cranking out clothing with technological rewards.
Probably the only way most third world kids will ever be able to play one, for that matter, since they cost half a year's salary in some countries.
--- Will in Seattle - What are you doing to fight the War?
This is really fantastic. Now all I need is to hook up a Game Boy emulator to the sewing machine instead, and make the sewing machine sew anything I want rather than just the preprogrammed things. How about a sewing machine that knows PostScript?
But seriously, one of the things that frustrates me the most about many embedded systems like sewing machines, microwaves, car stereos, and so on, is their lack of programmability. It frustrates me that my car stereo prefers to show me which CD track I'm on by default rather than what time it is. I'm a programmer, I could fix that... but I can't get at it. The more flexible and programmable these systems get, the better.
How bout a Sewing icon on top of the main page?
-atrowe: Card-carrying Mensa member. I have no toleranse for stupidity.
Next up is Siemens, who from 2Q next year will be shipping their top model refridgerators with an interface to the new Nintendo GameCube.
"This is the best way to controll that macaroni and cheese dish who has been in there for just too long" a sales representative claims.
There will also be an option for online connection against a global server, wich lets the users peek into what others have in their fridge, getting tips for keeping the fridge clean, and even help neighbours and friends out keeping their fridge under control while they are out of town. "How many times have you not been away, and suddenly rememberd that you forgot to throw away the last piece of lasagna?" the sales rep. asks.
---
This message has been ROT-13 encrypted twice for higher security.
> I kid you not
yes, me grown-up, ugh
PC driven sewing machines have been around for a long time. Im sure the hardware is the same.
Which isn't to say that it couldn't have also been used to hook a sewing machine up to, just like the parallel port on earlier model PSXes had multiple uses, but food for thought, I suppose.
Sean Daugherty "I have walked in Eternity -- and Eternity weeps."
Isn't this the reason why computers are nifty? That they are [b]such[/b] general purpose devices that you can take a games machine and use it as a sewing machine controller. As you get cheaper and cheaper computing devices they'll become more and more ubiquitous. We're gonna see such wonderful things....
~~~~~ BigLig2? You mean there's another one of me?
hmm.. talk to the ladies. I recently read an article about people swapping knitting patterns, and producers not being happy about it. Quite a lot like the RIAA...
//rdj
No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
--Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
For as much as we may laugh at such ideas (or feel a bit shocked), I'm just happy there's people who still dare to push new ideas and don't just rely on fighting and racing games to make a buck. I used to laugh at the first 'musical/dancing games' that took Japan by storm, but once I tried one I got hooked... (agreed, me jumping on one of those things is maybe not such a great idea for a game!) But yet, I can't but praise such people...!
whoa...score 3 funny? I was not intending to make a joke about those quilters or the sewing machines... I was serious about the machines they had...and all these newfangled lights and stuff....it should have been rater +5 scary or something.
The anti-salmon
Sounds like the Will Smith movie Enemy of the State...
No patent for you!! Prior Art!
We don't need no Net Explorer We don't need no Thought control
This seems pointless from a technological perspective, but think of the recycling potential for the bulkier Game Boys they were selling years ago :)
I once got a peek inside that *secret* briefcase carried by one of the President's aides, you know the thing they call "the football".
Guess what...all it had inside was a can of coke, some chips, and Gameboy with Duke Nuk'em Ver 1.
Going on means going far
Going on means going far
Going far means returning
..why not? Think of some people who do a lot of sewing: Housewives. Or Housepeople or whatever you want to call them to be PC. And these types of people have kids.
Is it so much of a stretch to imagine that a lot of houses out there have a Game Boy? It may be one the most successful portable game console ever.
If you don't need to reinvent the wheel, then don't do it! Sewing machines cost a lot anyway, a cheap old or new Game Boy doesn't add that much cost, and if it does the job, let it do the job.
I remember seeing a Gameboy cartridge along time ago that had a calendar and contacts with memory. It basically made your GB a PDA.
The processing power and the cheap cost due to high production makes gameboy more viable to do other things. Decode MP3's, probably not. But what about a addon cartridge that acts as a universal remote? A cartridge to download small texts (shopping lists, DeCSS, etc.) to read later? I'd like to see a small device that does certain things for me that I don't need an full-fledge computer for ("You have e-mail", "Network is down", "Packages delivered") that would sit on the side and act as a mini console.
this to get another piece of the market
gameboys are popular at nearly every age level: elementary school through college, and many adults still play, especially now with the GameBoy Colors....
but the one market that Nintendo has not been able to hit was the elderly...This is their attempt to make a product that old people will find useful, will want to buy because it's the "stylin'" thing (since they see all their grandkids playing it....and they can tell their golf buddies how they're getting into the high tech age...
just shows that Ninetnendo really -is- trying to take over the world...
just my theory
(mods: funny, not a troll)
--------------
Singer sold point-of-sale systems that it obtained from purchasing a company called Friden in 1963. The computer branch of Singer was sold in 1976 to ICL. Here's a German page with a listing for an old Singer computer, as well as another listing in English. This article on Computer Weekly describes Singer and NCR as being the kings of the point-of-sale terminal market in the mid-seventies.
Second Law of Blissful Ignorance
As one who bought the 4k$ PFAFF high end hoop machine for my wife, I can tell you these machines are AMAZING works of hardware and mechanics. They're like a very large Rolex. Totally programmable. You can code up patterns in windows and store them on a pcmcia like memory card that plugs into the machine. Then clip up the fabric and watch the thing sew the exact pattern perfectly. I've wanted to digitize a face and translate that into a 4 color pattern then looks photorealistic when embroidered, but haven't had the time. Remember the base color of a piece of thread looks different depending on which way the light hits it and which direction the thread is going across the material. I believe with just a few colors and threads laid down in the right patterns with a precision machine like this, you can get amazing picture quality. Beyond the embroidery function (the hoop portion), is the basic sewing ability which is breathtaking. the thing moves fabric forward and backward with thousandth of an inch precision, can stick intricate patterns, 2 needles at the same time, through thick leather, yada yada. Anyway, I took a weekend and satisfied (almost) my engineer lust with the machine, then gave it to my wife. Haven't touched it since.... :)
and thus... "Stichster" was born... the peer2peer sewing pattern version of Napster.
Just imagine a Beowulf cluster of sewi... **BLAM!** thud
Mr. Ska
80 hours times 44 bucks an hour is $3520. That's almost double what I take home in a month. I find it hard to generate much sympathy for that kind of money.
--
Pretend there is some witty statement here.
I'd bet they wanted to plug it into a windows95 pc at first, (usb or serial) until they thought about unlicensed software sharing. From there it was a short step to a cheap, proprietary hardware only solution.
What good would an unlicensed copy of the software be if you haven't already purchased the sewing machine to go with it?
I never did see the user manuals for this mythical machine, but she assured me that it was a real box and was quite well deployed in its day (1970's I think).
anyone ever run into one of these beasts?
--
--
"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
Why is it that every time I try to sew pattern #4 from the Nike GB Cartridge, it keeps embroidering the words, "Help! I am a prisoner in a child slave labor camp."? Is this some kinda bug?
Sewing machines are just the start. Soon we'll see Game Boy interfaces to sheet metal cutters, lathes, drop forges and welding robots. You'll be able to buy blueprint cartridges for the latest model Ford, plug 'em in, and watch it all whirl.
I had one, but the wheel fell off.
I remember reading, a while ago, about these copyrighted designs being shared on the internet. To order the patterns was mind-boggingly expensive, so all the sewing enthusiats began sharing their patters.
The rabid lawyers went to work, managed to destroy a few people's lives, made a bunch of money, and were compleatly unaffective.
Im just picturing grannie with her l33t 0-d4y s3w1nG w4reZ.
I think shawn fanning (napster) said this..
if you are selling water in the desert, and it starts to rain, you better start selling something else.. like umbrellas.
no
great, now i'm gonna have to fight with mom for my GameBoy.
... no matter what narrow purpose your embedded system is meant to perform ("This is for playing games", "This is for surfing The 'Net", "This is for IP routing") someone's going to look at your box, and say, "Hey, that's a general purpose computer!" They'll try to install Linux on it, or otherwise use it in ways that you never thought of.
---
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
Seriously, if the Sewing Machine uses Game Boy tech, it would be super cool to plug in a Pokemon Yellow cartridge and get a sewing machine in Jigglypuff Hot Pink or Pikachu Electric Yellow pattern/color.
And just provide an LCD for the game, so kids could be rewarded for doing sewing. You know, do an hour of sewing, play Pokemon for an hour. Parental control device (key enabled) to activate same.
I sew you, Pikachu!
[caveat - I own shares of Nintendo NTDOY]
--- Will in Seattle - What are you doing to fight the War?
And the three year olds would sew their clothes to the machine while playing "Super Mario Sewing Bros."
Definitions:
XML: Leading the way to make the web a ebiz thing
I, for one, refuse to provide any kind of physical armament to my video games. It's bad enough when your spaceship gets hit by an asteroid on screen. Now your computer can give you realistic puncture wounds to simulate micrometeroid damage.
And I still fear the ferocious Furby...
That's "Mr. Soulless Automaton" to you, Bub.
Computer controlled sewing machines are extremely expensive. The one-of-a-kind hardware is a pain in the butt, and big bucks all around.
I'd bet they wanted to plug it into a windows95 pc at first, (usb or serial) until they thought about unlicensed software sharing. From there it was a short step to a cheap, proprietary hardware only solution.
I doubt if there's enough interest to reverse engineer this to hack it to a PC, but you never know.
Even if reverse-engineering happened, though, I'm sure singer would still be happy to sell the sewing machines.
********* sig: If you don't like the law, get filthy stinking rich, and buy a better one.
That rumor was never confirmed, but it seemed plausible that the expansion port was meant for _something_. If so, maybe it was a Singer sewing machine, and maybe it was the start of the relationship which brings us this Izex thing.
11*43+456^2
If you want News for Nerds, not much hits closer to home than your paycheck. I'm beginning to join all of the whiners that say Slashdot is drifting from it's slogan.
You quitting proves that the karma kap worked. The most annoying of the whores shut up. --CmdrTaco
Sadly, most moderators seem to mod down anything with the phrase "Beowulf Cluster". Even if it is used *somewhat* in context. I don't care too much about Karma anyway.
-atrowe: Card-carrying Mensa member. I have no toleranse for stupidity.
to not make a 'funny' reply.
Moo
The system, called Izek, includes a sewing machine, Game Boy, connection wire and special cartridge that contains stitch pattern designs.
What's next? The Vic-20 powered washing machine?
Oops. Too late; I already did that when the washing machine blew its timer. Now, a bank of relays and a machine language program in ROM controls all the washing machine's functions.
For Singer, this is a great idea: integrate technology into their products, and using mostly off-the-shelf items.
Can it embroider game screens into T-shirts, though? Immortalize that high score into cotton? That's the *real* question.
Fire and Meat. Yummy.
Using AutoCAD to design stitching patterns and using a DXF2IZEK utility to port them to your Singer.
Then stitch pattern trading goes on to the 'Net. From then the obvious problem of 0-day St1tchz and p@tt3rns copyright violations surface....
"Hey D00dz! I g0t this k-rad T0mmy H1lf1g3r st1tch, l00king fer L@c0ste cr0c0dil3 or G@P l0g0 for tr@dez! L3v1s lamerz need n0t @pply."
---
Vote Inanimate Carbon Rod in 2000
Slashdot.org News for Nerds. Not News for Linux Professionals. Nobody ask why the internatioanl space station isn't running Linux.
The posting above is just this
>If I ever see a Sega Master System in my proctologist's office, I'm leaving.
I'd be more worried if I saw the robot from the NES Family Com.
I have the PDA cart you speak of, it does have a learning IR remote. Try the GameBoy Dev'rs site for more stuff. There's a MIDI cart, an MP3 player cart and someone even managed to get a robot running using a GameBoy and Lego...
Do you get points in Robot Wars if you use your opponent's components to make your own robot bigger? Maybe there are points for "assimilation".
I don't know about you, but I just like my Pokémon Red and my Super Mario Bros. Deluxe thankyouverymuch.
Definitions:
XML: Leading the way to make the web a ebiz thing
give me a break... how many people that are reading this can thread a needle let alone use it...
oh yah.. I watch Martha Stewart everyday...
Keep up the good work!
-atrowe: Card-carrying Mensa member. I have no toleranse for stupidity.
This idea is sew good! They have really got the market stiched up. Hey you could even play games while you sew.
-- remove NOSPAM for actual email address -- Things are not as square as they may seem
Time for a slightly OT tangent story:
Man... that's weird. Where I work, in the shop the lathes are P133s (I think.) They run Windows NT. It was really weird the first time I saw them, this machine the size of a van, with a desktop showing on the side.
(The operator was locked out once because he'd been playing in the control panels. This is my official endorsement for L0phtcrack. It's awesome! It had the lathe running in a couple of hours.)
What's the big deal here? We take an 750mz P3 with 512MB of ram and a graphics card that would have singlehandedly doubled NASA's computing capability back in the Apollo era, and we use that as a glorified gameboy! (I'm going to go play Half Life when I'm done writing this).
Face it -- The Game boy is a computer. Just because it's normally used to play cute games doesn't mean that it's not able to do anything else. Where's your hacker ethic? The 4Mz Z80-lookalike that runs it was one of the mainstays of hobby computing until the IBM PC overran the competition (remember CPM or the TRS-80? And with up to 2MB of ROM, it's got the program storage of a small hard disk of the era. (4K of RAM is a bit small, but quite livable -- equivalent to a VIC-20.).
With an external floppy (ooh! 1M of storage, I'd be in HEAVEN!) or some flash RAM, and a 1200 baud modem (no K there!), it'd make a quite respectable early-80s BBS. Your average home hobbyist would have been scandalized about using that MUCH processing power (mostly because of the hundreds of K of available storage) 'just' to run a sewing machine.
`ø,,ø`ø,,ø!
Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
You never can tell. I have a sewing machine. Of course, it's a completely analog type that wouldn't work with this. However, I've been thinking the I need to write a Linux program to convert GIF files into cross-stitch patterns.
And along those lines, especially in the area of cross-stitch patterns (which for those that don't know usually consist of a grid filled with symbols to denote colors), there are widespread piracy/IP issues causing havoc in the crafts industry. The pattern makers are screaming because the advances in the internet, home scanning, etc have made it much easier to share pirated patterns which were formerly limited to xeroxing from a friend's book (and obviously lost quality after the first generation).
I do not have a signature
I put in pacman and it ate my sweater
Actually if you get the mission impossible game boy cart. It has a universal remote control built in. Now if we can just get that robot to work.... -peel --computers never make mistooks--
Heh. I wonder what they'll be able to do with the GameBoy Advance that's due out soon. Already, just with the basic GameBoy and GameBoy Color, they've released a camera, a printer, etc.
Interact, the company that makes the ever-popular Gameshark cheating system created a device that lets you send and receive email through your GameBoy much like a Pocketmail device. Looks like all of those jokes about PalmOS devices looking like GameBoys can be applied the other way around as well.
Imagine throwing this thing on the network.
Solarwinds SNMPSweep:
IP Response Time System Name Machine Type Description
192.168.1.1 20ms Data Center Ancillary Synoptics BayStack 350F HW:RevA FW:V1.01 SW:V1.2.0.10
192.168.1.2 0ms DCServerBDC Windows NT Hardware: x86 Family 6 Model 7 Stepping 3 AT/AT Compatible
192.168.1.3 0ms Threadmeister1 Singer/Nintendo 150 stitch pattern Game Boy
THAT'D raise some eyebrows!
46. The Hobo smiles, his eyes glaze over, and he burps. "Beware the man who has lived longer than the Wasteland."
No, that would be using Nintendo to fight Sony.
Everything has just reached a new low... Once more my faith in the human race is gone.
--
--
You can't fight in here! This is the war room!
As some other posters have pointed out down below in the +1 area, current high-end sewing machines tend to be highly computerized and highly expensive. They're like special-purpose milling machines. They tend to use docking cables to laptops to handle the importation of sewing patterns, stitching patterns, whatever.
The obvious problem with this is that laptops are WAY expensive, and, let's face it, the overlap between the sewing machine crowd and the laptop crowd is not 100%.
The non-obvious problem is that sewing and stitching patterns are copyrighted, and the software on the laptops likewise. This led to some ferocious encryption stuff. The protocols spoken by the machines were highly proprietary and had to be run through printer-port dongles. It was fierce...and inconvenient.
The GameBoy solution solves so many things, it just has to be elegant. The cartridge amounts to a dongle. The GameBoy provides all the computing smarts needed - a laptop was extreme overkill in this department. Also, you get to cut down on the solid state stuff in the sewing machine itself, and take advantage of the immense economies of scale of the Gameboy, which has got to be the most immediate benefit here.
Hey, at least it ain't the GBA or the N64 in this darned contraption. Personally, I'd expect something this crazy out of Sony or Microsoft, but the idiot who designed this thang must have also been the same idiot behind the Virtual Boy and Mario Brothers Movie. I mean, the GBC's popular and all that, but interfacing with a sewing MACHINE!!!??? Come on, if this is a sales attempt with the demise of the PS2 (reads massive shortage, $400+ USD) it's almost as bad as Sega's 32X system. AND BTW, I AIN'T NO F***ING COWARD!!!
DC rocks, PS2 sucks, can't wait for GameCube, X-box is a dud.
What? That was the most stupid statement I've read all day, shut your mouth and stop posting your non sensical jabber...
-TimmyC, Tech Guru
Of course, I also see this as a way to solve the CS gender gap, that is, if anyone sewed any more. In the urban technostate, we've lost most of those homesteading skills beyond gardening.
At the camp I work at, every year, a group of Quilters come in to quilt for a weekend using our facilities. They come in and quilt till 1 or two in the morning....they are insane quilters...and their sewing machines are simply incredible! Several of the quilters have high-end sewing machines with LCD, backlit displays and accept 3.5" floppy disks to program in stitches and such. This gameboy cartridge thing doesn't seem nearly as portable and as useful as a simple floppy! These women were incredible..they would go home and program stitches and download the latest stuff off the net so they could stitch some stronger seams and such. And that was more than a year ago....
The anti-salmon
You: Yeah, it's been acting up a bit, I'm wondering if maybe you could take a look at it...
Sewing Machine Repair Guy: Okay, well, let me see if I can--*CRUNCH* AAGH! MY HAND!! IT BIT MY HAND!! I'M BLEEDING!
Demon Sewing Machine: *growl* I WILL SWALLOW YOUR SOUL *snarl*
You: *gales of laughter at SMRG's expense*
Okay, maybe I've just been programming in JavaScript too much today, but there are endless possibilities for a demon-possessed sewing machine!
"Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
this was announced months ago, but i dunno when if the release date is/was accurate. game boys are also used as medical pdas and some other stuff as well
must not, ARGGGGGGGGGGHHHH!!
can you imagine a beowulf cluster of these? if beowulf clusters run linux and gbc is just an overclocked modified z80, technically i'm sure it's possible...
--
Peace,
Lord Omlette
ICQ# 77863057
[o]_O
But can I drive my 1965 Singer Gazelle car remotely?
When I can expect that plugin?
Hey - why isn't the international space station running Linux? I mean - it's soo superior!
;-}
You asked for it
slashdot username - at - email.domain.name
Singer has always been a diversified and innovative company (let's just ignore their past in WWII for a moment, shall we?) It's great to see folks breaking through the "appliance" marketing vehicle box and really free themselves to be creative with tools..... What else can we think of for game boys? Firmware programming? Automobile electronics testing?
My Mom will buy me that Game Boy.
:-)
Someone thought this would be a marketable idea why?
Finally, a way to make some adult sized underoo's!!!! (The adult-sized T's got real restrictive after the age of 17.)
Well, at least I didn't mention Beowulf.
Wait a minute. This is slashdot... where's the ob "But does it run Linux?" post? Or was I really the first out of 110 some odd people to ask this... wow
-- Is "Sig" copyrighted by www.sig.com?
Help!Help!
The sewing machines trying to kill me and the toasters been laughing at me!!
These pretzels are making me thirsty.
Gorkman
Sewing machines are pretty darn sophisticated these days. A typical automated embroidery system (about the same size as a regular ol' sewing machine) have color LCD touch-screens, a considerable amount of internal RAM, and use floppy drives or flash-cards to transfer data. They're pretty impressive. If Nintendo wants to try and make a mark in this area I wish them luck. -Bryan
pronoblem
I wish I knew what designs were copyrighted. I mean, does anyone care about the fine points of a zig-zag pattern or straight stitch? There are probably some fine embroidery patterns out there though.
Come on, a person likened the complexity to those of CNC machines, which have a _basic_ standard to comply with so that they'll import programs. Sewing is apparently a very different market, but it seems vastly different from any other market of complex computer controlled mechanical objects. I mean, where would we be if dot matrix printers used encryption? Ink jets and lasers would to if the market accepted that. I used to write my own software to print stuff, writing my own "driver" into it. It was fun and impressed a few people.
I imagine that some sewing machines are sophisticated enough to take a raster image file and embroider it, which I wouldn't trust to a Game Boy unless there was a floppy disc attachment somewhere to enter the files.
Does this mean I can record the side scroll record of my super mario game into my shirt?
...are downloadable blueprints for those DeCSS T-shirts! ;-)
My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
Shameless Plug! If you like trance, tell me what you think!!
This is cool, but when will someone FINALLY make a GameBoy accessory that turns it into a collapsable Apache attack helicopter?
- "It's just a matter of opinion!" - PRIMUS
Parents wouldn't have to buy kids clothes at wally world anymore, cause the kids would make their own using the Game boy interface.
"We're gonna need a bigger boat"
HEY! Plenty of nerds and nerdgrrls sew.
It's a practical use for geometry for one, thing.
Granted, I wouldn't want a sewing machine that attaches to a gameboy (not enough long-term support there for me, and less tinkerability), but it's kind of insulting to assume that nobody here cares about this.
Sounds like somebody's a bit touchy about their story getting rejected. maybe that has more to do with more techworkers shifting to salaried vs.hourly anyway.
Soon we'll see Game Boy interfaces to sheet metal cutters, lathes, drop forges and welding robots.
Yes! OK, get cranking on making a Robot Wars welding robot with a Pokemon cartridge!
Red Robot for Fire (Welder)
Yellow Robot for Electricity (Arc Welder)
Blue Robot for Water (Water Cutter)
Let the Games Begin! plus you can play Pokemon when your robot is waiting for its turn.
[caveat - I own NTDOY Nintendo stock]
--- Will in Seattle - What are you doing to fight the War?
A neat, if decidedly weird, idea; just be careful you don't mix up your game packs.
I'd hate to accidentally stick Castlevania in there, and suddenly have my sewing machine possessed by a demon...
---
Granted, the Gameboy has limited input capability, but...with the economies of scale on this thing, how long is it going to be before someone puts out a limited-capability PDA cartridge, with address book, appointment list, and other stuff?
It's not like they couldn't adapt the "keyboard" code written to input names and other text for various games into serving this...
I wonder how long before some hacker emulates this???
Because I can dammit!
Actually, there is a Gameboy remote control- it's a homebrew ROM, and to use it you need a cart copier- AFAIk you go through the menus, then you aim the normal remote at the infrared part of the GBC and the data is stored. Repeat as necessary, then get to the part about using the controls. It can then be used to send the signals out to the TV, VCR, sewing machine, etc. Of course, it has virtually no range so it's kind of self-defeating...
It might be interesting to see t-shirts with woven screen shots from Game Boy games. Of course, the pornographers would jump on that. Ho-ho-ho, what will Nintendo think of that?
A truly excellent pizza parlor is a delight unto the heavens. Treasure the sauce and the toppings!
I see how it is Singer gets a Game Boy and my loom gets nada as usual.
Where am I going and why am I in this handbasket?
Nathan
If you don't have anything nice to say, say it often.
- Ed the Sock
Good thing we've got you to watch out for us. I don't know what I'd do if I had to figure out what was and was not interesting all by myself.
Not interested? Don't read it. Your brain is the best net filter yet invented.
Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
I was at an electronics store the other day, and I saw a magazine (Elektor, Oct 2000) with an article about a new use for a gameboy. Basically, you plug in this cartridge, and connect cables to it, and you gameboy becomes a hand-held oscilloscope! I found a website about it, which also has a ROM image available for download if you want to try it out on an emulator! Pretty cool if you ask me...
-MSD.dyndns.org
"Sucks to your ass-mar"
... 'cause, after having tried it, the only thing I can sew is frickin' Pokemons.
Needless to say, it was rather difficult to explain why my pants were hemmed with Pikachu designs at work yesterday, and my Bulbasaur jacket has taken on a life of it's own recently.
J
Considering that so many grandmas have PC's to email their grandchildren who never visit, why not just interface a sewing machine with a PC? That way there'll be a practical use for all of those pirated needlepoint patterns!
So let me get this straight, the Beowulf reference is 'not at all funny', but it's also 'kind of funny'
And you called ME a moron?
-atrowe: Card-carrying Mensa member. I have no toleranse for stupidity.
Someone has to ask, if I sew DeCSS into a sweat shirt, and then wear that, am I violating that silly law you guys have down there? (Assuming I wear the sweat shirt while on vation down south.) I hope this gets moded down. I mean, aren't we sick of these references yet?
"You must do the thing you think you cannot do" E.Roosevelt
Well, we've just gone full circle now, haven't we?
Starting with the punch cards inspired by the textile industry, and using the icons inspired by embroidery... Now we're using a pocket gaming system to do the original functions we copied!
I guess that's a tribute to our history, albeit a sick one.
---
pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
This really scares me. Soon we could have the Game Boy remote control, the Game Boy robot, the Game Boy automated surveillance system... and then, Big Brother on the Game Boy! Aaaahhhhhhhhhh!
Sleep: A completely inadequate substitute for caffeine.
Seriously, I do understand the advantages involved here...but this seems like a really cheap way to go about it. How hard would it be to integrate the 'game boy technology' into some of the empty space inside the frame of the sewing machine? Especially since it looks like they created a new design case (rather iMac looking) just for this project. Having an extra cord and device around would only seem to get in the way, IMHO.
i was looking for a sewing machine a few years ago, yah for me, and their were some pretty nifty computer controlled machines available for a reasonable price--sewing machine wise. singer also produces satellites btw.
A few years back I was writing software to control tufting machines (like big sewing machines for making carpet). I almost used the GameBoy as the platform because it took almost zero processing power (the GameBoy has an 8Mhz Z80 clone - which is quite reasonable) and needed only about 64K to run, including the code and buffers to display a graphic of the patter. The GameBoy can actually address about 16MB of memory via page-flipping.
The real benefit of the GameBoy is if you try to price an industrial control with a few buttons and a nice LCD, you quickly exceed the $50 in small quantities that a GameBoy at Toys'R'Us costs.
Yes.. that is correct. They owned a company called Link Flight Simulation from at least 1975 until the 1980's sometime.
My father worked for Link then, and I could never figure out the connection between my mother's sewing machines and dad working Singer Link.
(I was only an egg, but then I cracked)
Nissin the company that also makes high-end motorcycle brakes and automotive transmissions, had a Mac based embroidery machine in the early '90's.
It was meant for consumer use and had a roughly 8-inch dia. work area. It had 7 or 8 thread colors that it could use. It used Mac PICT graphics. The embroiderer was controlled through the chooser and acted like an odd sized printer.
I remember seeing it working at a small Macintosh show in Los Angeles in the early '90s. I thought it was cool.
wrx-sti
Nobody else believes me, but I once took my bike wheel to a bike shop to have them calibrate it (ie, bang it back into shape). In order to make sure the wheel was perfectly "true", they hooked it up to some sort of electronic measuring device.
There were a couple of wires leading from the device into a Nintendo catridge, which was plugged into a NES that was displaying some sort of digital readout on the TV screen.
Cool, huh? I like this Singer/GameBoy story, since maybe now people will believe my bike calibration/NES story.
If I ever see a Sega Master System in my proctologist's office, I'm leaving.
OtakuBooty.com: Smart, funny, sexy nerds.
Wasn't this posted here months ago? I know that I read about it a while ago, where a cartridge could take kids pokemon and stitch them out. Perhaps I read it somewhere else. Cool anyhow.
Eh...
Looks like one more place to copy DeCSS ad infinitum.
Evan - needs to hit preview before submitting
Well, that's totally bitchin.. That's really neat eh.. BUT, can you imagine someone coming up with this.. OOOOOooh I know!! Let's have a game system sow for us!! YEAH we'll get that promotion for sure@!
:D
/.
Really, that's pretty silly.
Oh, btw; this IS NOT something that should be posted on
-TimmyC, Tech Guru
Ah, but get the new "Cube" and you can sew in 3 dimentions! Kind of like those 3D Printers, but a much more... interesting interface.
The idea is clearly innovative, but after a quick Google search I found evidence that something called "Nuotto" was already in the works back in April. They apparently jumped on the Pokemon connection too...
Sewkemon?
It does come with Tetris, right?
Drag n' Drop DVD Recommendations