Build A Stereo From an Old Hard Disk
An anonymous reader pointed us to an amusing little hack site that demonstrates how you can build a little stereo out of an old hard drive. Of course I don't need a stereo for I am a human beat box.
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There's gotta be SOME kind of law this violates.
Whenever someone does something cool with music or technology these days, it seems they get SUED by some American company!
C'mon. DMCA maybe? RIAA violation? It's gotta be somethin!
Background: 28/M/Bi-Sexual; Owner of a Linux company; MBA Harvard 2003; B.S. Comp Sci MIT 2000
> Of course I don't need a stereo for I am a human beat box.
I thought marriage was supposed to fix that!
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
There was a different article like this one over a year ago. The other person made 3.
That's what i've been saying for years. I've used old harddrives for many things. These includes:
1. Weapon (seriously.. excellent self-defence tool. Saved my ass once)
2. Ash-tray (screw it open)
3. Toy (Am i the only one who find those rotating plates amusing?)
4. Paperweight
this is probably the most boring sig in the world
Does anybody else out there remember a program for the Commodore 64 that use the 1541 floppy disk drive to make music? By moving the drive head at different speeds, it played "Jingle Bells" or something else like that. The drive still ran OK after that one. Can't say too much on this project, though.
... mean that you can get a harddrive from an old speaker?
Check. I'll add that to: never solder in your underwear.
In any case it would work far better if the coil was kept within its original magnet, and the edge glued to a diaphragm. It is designed to work that way! If you were only wanting a woofer, you could simply attach the diphragm to the existing head arm, but don'y expect any response above a few 100 Hz.
I honestly wonder why anyone bothers with something so stupid anyway.