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Do It Yourself CD Changer

SuperDuG writes "This is a true homebrew solution to saving a few bucks when it comes to cd changers. And to make it even better the whole setup is controlled by none other than linux. Seems like a nice setup to do batch burns without user interaction. Source is provided if you wanted to build your own." Not sure if this is very practical, or even if it would be cheaper than buying a changer, but it sure looks cool.

28 of 183 comments (clear)

  1. Oh no! by mgcsinc · · Score: 5, Funny

    How long until the RIAA sends out a cease and desist for the publication of this "device to potentially increase the efficiancy of copryright-infringment?"

  2. Great! by sebi · · Score: 5, Funny

    Not sure if this is very practical, or even if it would be cheaper than buying a changer, but it sure looks cool.

    Nothing spells chick-magnet like a wooden contraption designed to require less movement.

  3. Made out of wood? by MCMLXXVI · · Score: 5, Funny

    What kind of geek are you?
    Geek code 101: You are supposed to make things like this out of Legos.

  4. Re:Now that's a *true* hacker by mirko · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You're right : he's a genuine hacker.

    I am however much more impressed by his organ as he does not only need some manual skills but also a good ear to set it up.

    --
    Trolling using another account since 2005.
  5. Five gig photo collection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    A five gigabyte photo collection?

    Can we say: porn?

  6. Actually... by UncleBiggims · · Score: 5, Funny

    Wouldn't a "do it yourself" CD changer be where you actually get up and change the CD yourself?

  7. how to improve it by calethix · · Score: 5, Funny

    " If I wanted to, I could SSH log into it while at work, load a CD in the tray, burn it, and remove it all remotely. Of course, the CD would still be in my basement, so the exercise would be somewhat pointless!"
    That's simple. Just build an add on that carries it up stairs, sticks it in an addressed envelope and drops it in the mail. :)

  8. Other goodies by vasqzr · · Score: 5, Informative



    Be sure to check out the rest of his page. Fun stuff.

  9. breath of fresh air by the_pooh_experience · · Score: 4, Insightful
    There isn't much that I plan on using this gadget for. I guess mostly its for bragging rights. That, and I hadn't hooked up anything to a PC's printer port in ages. If I wanted to, I could SSH log into it while at work, load a CD in the tray, burn it, and remove it all remotely. Of course, the CD would still be in my basement, so the exercise would be somewhat pointless!

    at least he is honest. no need to justify a tinkering project under the guise that it is somehow useful. Tinker for tinker's sake I say!

  10. I got better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Bah, I just use my kid brother. "Yo, urchin! Fetch the next batch of CD's will you? There's a nice shiny nickel in it for you and if they get burned before 5 o'clock, a chocolate bar!"

    I'm working on training my dog next.

  11. I always wondered... by Esion+Modnar · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...what a CD changer would look like if it was built by the Amish.

    --

    They say the first thing to go is your penis. Well, it's either that or your brain. I forget which...
  12. How about a dot matrix printer? by doomy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I was looking at this guy's wooden assembly and all I could think was, why didn't he use an used dot matrix/ink printer for the carriage. That would certainly be pretty interesting to play with, and would definitly be more precise, ofcourse he'd still need the up and down movement done using another motor.

    --
    ...free your source and the rest would follow...
  13. Another similar project using Lego blocks by WesG · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Check out the Rubiks cube solver made entirely out of Lego's.

    http://jpbrown.i8.com/cubesolver.html

    Even uses a cam to figure out what is on each of the cubes faces!

  14. This reminds me... by Botchka · · Score: 3, Funny

    of the time when my friends dad couldn't afford a new Playstation 2 for Christmas. Christmas morning rolls around and my friend finds a Playstation 2 carved out of wood under the tree.....

    --
    Money not found! A)bort, R)etry, D)eclare Bankruptcy
  15. Call that a geek project? by eyeball · · Score: 3, Funny

    Now if they were truely geeks, they would've made it out of a Lego Mindstorm kit.

    --

    _______
    2B1ASK1
  16. This actually addresses a very serious need by TerryAtWork · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We really need a cheap CD/DVD jukebox. I've seen them at Comdex etc for $25,000. The hell with that.

    Someone get a carousel CD player at Target for $100 and wire it up to a computer. There's 70,200 megs nearline.

    Anyone up for that?

    --
    It's Christmas everyday with BitTorrent.
  17. Usefull for a small inde band. by chrestomanci · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A friend of mine used to be in an unsigned Metal band. He told me that one of the most boring parts is copying CDs. Apparently commercial CD copy companies usually had a minimum order that was quite large, and always invented problems with whatever was sent to them, creating longer turn around and more hassle. The cost per CD was also quite high compared with burning their own on a CDR.

    Instead, what he would do, is to setup his PC next to a sofa in front of the TV, and manually swap CDs, while watching TV. He said that if he managed 20 CDs per hour (on his 40x burner) he would be doing well, but tropically managed less than that.

    It was of course, boring, and prone to error.

    A contraption to automatically load, burn and unload CDs, like in the article, would have been much better. He could have loaded it up with 200 blanks, gone to bed and come back in the morning to find it jammed, but at least with ~100 CDs done :-)

    1. Re:Usefull for a small inde band. by Esion+Modnar · · Score: 5, Funny
      but tropically managed less than that.

      Yes, in the tropics I'm lucky to have the ambition to burn even 3 CD's per hour. (It's not the heat, it's the humidity.)

      --

      They say the first thing to go is your penis. Well, it's either that or your brain. I forget which...
  18. is it just me.... by sputnikid · · Score: 3, Funny

    or does every Flintstones episode come to mind at this moment?

  19. Re:Looks cool by Mr2cents · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's a shame wood is an underestimated material. There is nothing as easy to handle as wood. Now, what would the added value of aluminium be? price? the need to buy new tools?

    --
    "It's too bad that stupidity isn't painful." - Anton LaVey
  20. Yes, but... by tds67 · · Score: 3, Funny
    ...what about an automatic beer changer? Something that would remove an empty beer can from my hand as I sit in my lazy boy recliner, then put a fresh beer in my hand.

    Now that would be progress!

  21. Re:Now that's a *true* hacker by mistered · · Score: 3, Funny
    Yeah, Matthias has done some pretty cool projects. I like the Marble Machines personally. They're just so delightfully useless.

    --
    Enjoy your job, make lots of money, work within the law. Choose any two.
  22. Build a bridge out of her! by indros13 · · Score: 3, Funny
    ...Ah, but can you not also build "do-it-yourself cd changers out of stone?"

    (-1, Pythonic)

    --
    Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  23. The games begin, first congratulations. . . by ahfoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is definitely cool. For all the people saying this type of hack is irrelevant because of the storage difference between HDs and CDs, I must say that's rather short-sited when you consider that the form factor for optical media is most likely going to stay the same all the way into the violet laser media. So, while you could call this an out-of-date CD changer, you could also call it a cutting edge Blu-Ray changer. And commercial alternatives are insanely overpriced.
    But this is certainly not the last word on the matter. I've got my own plans as well. One thing we didn't see was any kind of performance specs about how big of an unattended stack the thing could handle. I read the part where he said it was just for fun, but I'd still like to know how many he could do consecutively.
    The option I'm considering is where you take a plastic housed stack of a hundred hundred discs sitting on a conveyer whith a slot at the bottom of the stack only big enough for one disc at a time to be rolled out. I think some of the commercaial solutions might work like this.

  24. Re:Now that's a *true* hacker by DChristensen · · Score: 4, Funny

    I am however much more impressed by his organ as he does not only need some manual skills but also a good ear to set it up.

    Too easy, dear god! Must...not...become...Slashdot...troll...!

    --

    --
    Mac OS X--Unix without the assholes^Whassles.

  25. Color Coding by Medievalist · · Score: 5, Informative
    From the article:
    Luckily, the cable manufacturer followed the black - brown - red - yellow - green - blue - violet colour numbering convention, so I didn't have to probe around with the ohmmeter too much
    In the days of the dinosaurs, when I was in 6th grade, we learned the mnemonic "BLack Boys Rape Our Young Girls But Violet Gives Willingly" which reduces to black - brown - red - orange - yellow - green - blue - violet - grey - white.

    They probably don't teach that particular bit of doggerel any more...
    1. Re:Color Coding by axis-techno-geek · · Score: 3, Informative
      No, it is just more "Politically Correct" now:

      Bad Boys Rape Our Young Girls But Vilot Gives Willingly, sometimes for Gold, some times for Silver, and sometime for No Charge at all.

      Value:

      • Black - 0

      • Brown - 1
        Red - 2
        Orange - 3
        Yellow - 4
        Green - 5
        Blue - 6
        Violet - 7
        Gray - 8
        White - 9
      Tolerance:
      • Gold - 5%

      • Silver - 10%
        None - 20%
      color1 + color 2 * ( 10 ^ color3 )
      color4 - Tolerance
      --
      This is not the sig line you are looking for... -- Old Jedi Sig Line Trick
  26. Not only is he a true hacker... by WebCowboy · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...he is also a very talented and prolific one:

    1. Rather than buy a printer for his C64 back in the day, he elected to build a home made plotter and make several improvements along the way. It's quite impressive!

    2. Before digital imaging was even remotely on the minds of personal computer users, he constructed a slow but functional low-res scanner That has to be a hallmark of a true hacker--his creations may not be practical and are of limited use, but they are fascinating and forward thinking.

    3. Sometimes hacks really do save money, like this multi-megapixel digital camera made from a cheap $100 scanner at a time when most decent digital cameras cost 10 times that much. Sure, it took 30 seconds to take a pic, but it served the purpose for non-action photography and when motion was involved it could produce some interesting effects.

    (bows down) I'm not worthy....