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Orac^3 -- Not Your Everyday Casemod

jmke writes "G-nome has finished his amazing Orac case mod, which looks absolutely stunning." An excerpt from the site: "Ever since I saw the first series of Blakes 7 I have wanted my own Orac. For those that don't know, Blakes 7 was a late 70s/early 80s British Science Fiction series and Orac was this intellectually snobbish, difficult and incredibly brilliant computer, hand built by an eccentric scientist. The special effects were straight out of 60's Star Trek and a lot of the props were converted from (or later converted to) props from other classic BBC series such as Doctor Who and The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy (where the Bambleweeny 57 sub-meson brain looks like it was made by the same bloke!)."

56 of 328 comments (clear)

  1. Hi-Tech Eye Candy by erick99 · · Score: 4, Funny
    If you only look at one article this week or even this month you have got to look at this one. I have never seen such a gorgeous case in my life. The photographs are outstanding. The workmanship on this case is almost beyond what seems possible. THere is a surreal quality to the irridescent green color. THis is truly functional art.

    Go look!!!!

    Happy Trails!

    Erick

    --
    http://www.busyweather.com/
    1. Re:Hi-Tech Eye Candy by randyest · · Score: 4, Funny

      Is this a cruel joke? The site instantly went down -- I tried it before even the FP. Grrr. No love from the wayback machine or google cache either. sigh.

      --
      everything in moderation
    2. Re:Hi-Tech Eye Candy by techno-vampire · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Wrong. Checking dictionary.com, we find:

      The conscious production or arrangement of sounds, colors, forms, movements, or other elements in a manner that affects the sense of beauty, specifically the production of the beautiful in a graphic or plastic medium. The study of these activities.

      In one definition and:

      A system of principles and methods employed in the performance of a set of activities: the art of building. And, A trade or craft that applies such a system of principles and methods: the art of the lexicographer. Nothing about it needing to be useless. Have you ever considered learning what you're writing about before posting?

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  2. It's a radio. by DAldredge · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That thing doesn't look like it has ANY RF shielding. Bet the FCC and the people who live around him love it. :->

    1. Re:It's a radio. by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 2, Informative

      And this is? It's been done before, and I haven't heard of any problems stemming from a clear case.

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    2. Re:It's a radio. by DAldredge · · Score: 2, Informative

      That is a case, not a computer. The person/corp building the computer is responsible for ensuring it follows the correct specs. Notice how no large companies sell complete systems like that?

    3. Re:It's a radio. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      RF levels put out by computers are generally significantly lower than those put out by cell phones, and many other devices. You're generally bathed by much more radiation from other sources. In my testing, in order to really detect a computer's RF signals (with the case off), we had to put it in a shielded chambed because there was too much background noise.

      Also, most manufacturers of computer parts have to get the parts certified by the FCC by themselves. The computer as a whole also gets certified, but the individual parts also do.

      RF is crazy stuff. Since the inside of a case is mostly reflective, any small hole in the case (such as where your fan comes out, any air vents, etc) will effectivel cause all the RF to leak out. There's plenty of those in any standard case.

    4. Re:It's a radio. by treyb · · Score: 5, Funny

      It doesn't need any shielding: he used transparent aluminum.

    5. Re:It's a radio. by mikael · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I Bet a 20" multisync monitor will put out more RF than the main unit itself. My parents used to enjoy listening to BBC radio 4 on long wave (198 Khz). When I bought a new graphics card, the default video resolution (1280x1024x85?) happened to have a frequency that matched the radio station exactly. For a radius of 10 metres (the entire house), it was impossible to receive the radio signal. Until we found out what the cause was. A quick change of the refresh rate fixed this problem.

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    6. Re:It's a radio. by ttsalo · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Never seen a Faraday cage made of chicken wire then? A screen need not be solid.

      Anyone that talks about Faraday cages as RF protection doesn't know what they are talking about.

      Faraday cage is for protection from electric fields, not RF radiation. Sure, RF has the E-field component, but RF can go through the holes in a Faraday cage, depending on the wavelength. Would you think that a microwave oven with chicken wire as the door would be safe? Think again. There's a reason why the holes in the microwave oven doors are the size they are. Faraday cages and RF enclosures are not synonyms. Modern processors operate far above the frequencies where chicken wire would block RF.

      --

      --
      If the road to hell is paved with good intentions, where does the road paved with evil intentions lead to?
  3. Could you imagine a beowulf cluster of these? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I could.

  4. this is good. by crazyray · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am happy someone is doing more than just adding neon or chrome to an otherwise-boring beige box. Many of you may think this is wierd, but I am happy to see people express themselves inside or outside of the PC.

  5. Why? by Cycline3 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    OK, this is a killer mod. But it just makes me wonder why so many people who do a total mod make it look just like a regualar tower PC case? With all that freedom... why is this still just a rectangular box?

    1. Re:Why? by Snad · · Score: 5, Informative

      With all that freedom... why is this still just a rectangular box?

      Indeed. And why is it called Orac when it doesn't actually look anything like Orac?

      I hate to sound curmudgeonly, and the case mod looks interesting and all, but it looks about as much like a Dalek as it does Orac.

    2. Re:Why? by evilviper · · Score: 3, Funny
      why is this still just a rectangular box?

      Because we have a hard time finding round motherboards...

      Seriously, it's not as if you could make it any shorter or much narrower, so the only option is bigger. Although good looks are nice, so is saving space.
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  6. Awesome... by sbszine · · Score: 3, Funny

    Just don't let Servalan get her hands on the key : )

    --

    Vino, gyno, and techno -Bruce Sterling

  7. Um No by moosesocks · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'll first congratulate whoever built this maagnificent piece of art. Very cool. You have way too much free time :) (He's also an excellent photographer. Not something you see very often in case modders :) )

    But it's just not functional!!!!

    All that metal tubing for the cables and stuff and the water cooling tubing must make it a nightmare to work in. Do all those tubes even go anywhere?? It seems awfuly crowded to work in there

    How would you change a hard drive?

    I'm also not a huge fan of watercooling. If there is a leak, two things happen.
    1) Your computer gets wet
    2) The chernobyl effect. Assuming it's survived this long, the coolant's now gone, and the computer keeps getting hotter. Uh oh.

    That being said, it's still beautifully crafted with incredible attention paid to detail.

    --
    -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
  8. FreeCache to the Rescue by DM_NeoFLeX · · Score: 3, Informative
    --
    -------------------------------------------------- - God is the tangent point between zero and infin
  9. Re:Case modding is evil by emorphien · · Score: 2, Funny

    What are you doing spending money to have a computer, or be online? If it's not your computer, why are you paying taxes instead of moving to africa and sharing your money with the poor?

    Why, why!? Ohhh the humanity!

    --


    Presently here, but not there.
  10. Partial mirror... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The site is chugging along slowly, but here's a mirror of the two shots on the front page so people can get the gist of the mod.
    Front
    Back

    1. Re:Partial mirror... by a.koepke · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here is another of the front

      Front
      Back

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  11. A beautiful piece of work. by neuro.slug · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Apple should hire this guy. In the world of cheesy 'look-through-the-window-at-my-neon-tubes' case-modding, this fellow has certainly showed us all something truly unique.

    -- n

  12. Yes, definently to the 3 power by thedogcow · · Score: 2, Funny

    The slashdotting of this server can be raised to the 3 as well.

    Exp[Server]=slashdotting

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  13. First two pics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
  14. image mirror by infonick · · Score: 5, Informative

    Thanks to my /. subscription, i was able to secure some images! orac3 images

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    You are confusing me with someone who cares.
  15. names are important by corian · · Score: 3, Informative

    from the story posting:

    "G-nome has finished his amazing Orac case mod, which looks absolutely stunning."

    from the linked web site:

    by G-gnome on 9th June 2004

    that's G-gnome, not G-nome. Note the extra "G".

    Proofreading, anyone?

    1. Re:names are important by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 5, Funny
      So, let's see:
      • The article submitters don't RTFA.
      • The editors don't RTFA.
      • The posters don't RTFA.
      • The moderators don't RTFA.
      As far as I can tell, nobody visits these web sites. So what exactly is the slashdot effect?
      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    2. Re:names are important by julesh · · Score: 3, Funny

      All ISPs have a techy that constantly reads slashdot. He looks for articles that link to sites on their servers, and when he spots one, he pulls the plug.

  16. Orac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Been a while, but IIRC...

    Orac was special because it had access to subspace, and could communicate with any computer anywhere.

    Orac met his demise when the occupants of subspace got annoyed at the signals he was transmitting though their realm. (Sort of reminds me of a STTNG episode too... perhaps I'm confused).

    Last I heard, the actor that played the character "Avon", had bought the rights to the series, and was working on continuing it.

    Any torrents of the series?

    Back on topic: why would anone want to see the dust in their computer? Or end up a slave to constantly cleaning it, and carefully?

  17. Re:Um No by xtal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm also not a huge fan of watercooling. If there is a leak, two things happen.
    1) Your computer gets wet
    2) The chernobyl effect. Assuming it's survived this long, the coolant's now gone, and the computer keeps getting hotter. Uh oh.


    I did a lot of experimenting with watercooling for about two years, short answer is it isn't going to leak unless you do something stupid or are very unlucky. If you have a GFCI on the outlet, you don't actually have too much to worry about. Just use proper clamps, or even zip ties will work ok.

    So basically, I'd say this one is not worth worrying about. There have been very few meltdowns for all of the water cooling kits sold, and it HAS come a long way. Resevoirs aren't really needed with some of the new and adapted pumps that are out there. Fish tank 120V submersibles are obsoleted for 12V pumps. Good purpose built radiators are out there. Add silicone tubes and good hose clamps, and you shouldn't see a leak. Think of all the high pressure systems in your average car - rarely do those fail if maintained in far worse conditions.

    --
    ..don't panic
  18. warning! by Chris+Deegan · · Score: 3, Funny

    don't put this machine near your kids or anything - they might get assimilated...

  19. Looks nothing like ORAC by Usquebaugh · · Score: 4, Informative

    Really,

    it's a very nice case mod, but has no link to Blakes7 other than the name.

    1. Re:Looks nothing like ORAC by Bitsy+Boffin · · Score: 2, Informative

      I agree, that was the first thing I thought. For comparison, here is the real Orac

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  20. Re:Wow. by ralf1 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Needed. "I'll post a mirror as PDFs if needed."

    --
    "Would you, could you, with a goat?" Dr Seuss
  21. Amusing, but misguided. by DerProfi · · Score: 5, Funny

    Like millions of others, I'm always mucking around in my PC. For the past 15 years, all of the various incarnations of my main desktop have spent most of their time with the cover off. And I've yet to have a single cell phone problem, cordless phone problem, pager problem, AM radio problem, FM radio problem, shortwave radio problem, CB radio problem, 802.11b, g or a problem, TV reception problem, or flux capacitor problem. Best of all, chicks dig it! And who can blame them? I'm clearly the kind of guy who likes to live life on the edge.

    --

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  22. mirror of 55 of the pics by 770291 · · Score: 5, Informative
  23. Fast link to main pic by miknight · · Score: 2, Informative

    For those who just want to see the final picture of the case quickly go here.

  24. Re:Wow. by dave1212 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Holy crap, we killed it already. Oh well, here's the PDFs I promised, served happily again from Spymac:

    PDFs in zip format.

    If you're in OS X, it's not the double-clickable kind, Use Stuffit Expander to unzip it.

  25. ROFL This show led me into computing! by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Believe it or not I became interested in computing from that TV show and that same orac computer.

    No, I am not British. I am actually from one of the soviet block countries and believe it or not our national TV bought and broadcast that show. I can see now why they prefer it to Star Trek. I don't remember the storylines exactly, but Blake's 7 had a revolutionary overall story line -- it was a bit like Star Wars with a small revolutionary group fighting an evil empire. Also I am willing to bet Blake's was much much cheaper than startrek.

    Well I was a little kid and I asked my parents what a computer was ... and luck would have it they were both computer engineers. So they told me a all about how a computer is an intelligent machine, and from then on i decided that i would create computers like ORAC and was pretty much obssessed with them. Shortly thereafter i got my parents to buy my a BASIC book and was deeply mired in goto statements.

    Anyways, thank you Blake's 7!!! You made me a nerd!

    P.S. Am I glad my country did not buy Startrek instead! I would be a startrek nerd on top everything else!

    1. Re:ROFL This show led me into computing! by torpor · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If you liked Blake7, check out Farscape. Chances are you'll find yourself getting that old sci-fi show chill factor again.

      *sigh* Farscape.

      Why do they always cancel the good shows?

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    2. Re:ROFL This show led me into computing! by BlacKat · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Did you know that SciFi has made a four-episode mini-series to "finish" the story? It will be airied during the fall/winter season this year. :)

      Each episode is one hour, so less commercials about 40 minutes, or 160 in total, for just over 2½ hours. :)

      I would of prefered all of season five myself, but it will be nice to see a conclusion to the story instead of just "To Be Continued..."!

  26. Re:Case mods are fine, if they add functionality by sjwt · · Score: 2

    dude, wear do you live??

    My 386 had a PS2 ports, mind you it was an IBM :)

    But my 2 486's one a random brand name one a no name had them..

    Next you'll be wanting a mod to put USB 1.1 on your Athlon XP case..

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  27. Re:Case modding is evil by psoriac · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This idiot should take his next pay packet and sponsor a child in Africa or something.

    Let me see if I understand what you're saying:

    1) Study hard.
    2) Work hard.
    3) Don't Profit!

    --
    I browse Slashdot at +3, Funny
  28. Re:Um No by Monkelectric · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I had my Koolance system fail twice, the first time soaked the entire mb, took a week to clean up and killed a stick of ram ... the second time it didn't spill but nearly fried the computer because even with antifeeze the pumps seized with some kind of growth...

    Note, both times it took over a year for the system to fail. It is my belief that on a long enough time line, all water cooling systems will fail. How long have you been using yours for?

    --

    Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

  29. Re:Um No by simcop2387 · · Score: 4, Informative

    put one drop of bleach in there (on a side note, if you ever have to sanitize water, one drop of bleach per gallon should kill most harmful bacteria and other living organisms)

  30. Its amazing what one can do with some silver loom by aardwolf204 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This mod reminds me a lot of my PC mod. I'm not trying to tute my own wistle here, just offer some insight into the wonderful things one can do with something as simple as silver loom and offer some advice

    My friends and I got into the case mod thing a while back. I ended up getting a nice case with a window, threw in a few blue cold cathodes, and watched in glee as all of my friends and I had the same exact thing albeit different colored LEDs and Neons. Wippdie-do. I needed something to make mine look a little different than my friends so aside from doing the invisible CD drive mod (case simplicity is bliss), I loomed all of my power and IDE cords with chrome loom you can pick up from automotive shops like Advance or Auto Zone.

    I also found the chrome loom at a few online retailers but the price was ridicilious. I think I ended up getting a few feet of the stuff from a local auto shop from the StreetGlow brand. This stuff can really make what used to be a boring case something plesant on the eyes. It really accents the colored LEDs or Neons in your case.

    The tricky part is figuring out how much to cut for each strip of wite. I suggest laying out all of your drives in your case and connecting the molexes. Make sure to leave an extra molex near the bottom for future upgrade as I'm sure most new graphics cards will require them. Cut the loom to size of the wire with a litte bit extra which can nicely cover that ugly molex. I went with 1/4" loom which worked perfectly for that huge motherboard connector, and works great with room to spare on the rounded IDE cables. If you want to give it something a little extra get some 1/8" also and use it for the smaller cables. I was going to cover my water cooling tubes with the stuff but that was a bit over kill. Still, the case looks more like something out of a badass anime while all of my friends cases look just about the same.

    You can also try colored chrome loom instead of traditional silver but since I've got blue lights I wanted as much reflection as possible.

    Has anyone else had experience with this, what problems did you run across? Can you share some advice?

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  31. Not Orac -- ORACLE by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 5, Funny

    Indeed. And why is it called Orac when it doesn't actually look anything like Orac?

    It isn't a Dr. Who homage. The problem is that he only used a half-size tower case. If he had gone with a full-tower, he would not have had to leave off the "le" on the end. At least he used something approximating the corporate font on the resevoir so you still kind of get an impression of what he was aiming for.

    --
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  32. DVD by sbszine · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's available on DVD now, finally.

    --

    Vino, gyno, and techno -Bruce Sterling

  33. Re:Um No by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 4, Funny

    Do not, however, believe the idiots who tell you this is a fine way to make river water potable when camping.

    It had rained during the night, so we were having trouble getting the campfire started to boil a pot of water. My buddy, who was an Army Ranger for chrissakes, says, "No problem!" He pulls out this tiny bottle with an eyedropper, and plops one drop of bleach into the pot. No more buggies. Nice and clean. Tasted nasty, but it was safe.

    Holy christ. Somebody needed to tell that to our digestive systems. About fifteen minutes later, somebody down there pulled the Big Red Switch and WHOOOM. More came out than ever went in, and it emerged with a force sufficient to lift me about a foot right up into the air. I expected to look down and see a pile of clean, white bones lying there. A couple of ribs, my left ulna, two vertibrae, and, right in the middle, my pelvis.

    I was expelling so fast my butt actually got hot from the friction.

    I've had dissentary and I've drunk bleach-water. I'll take the amoebas any day.

    --

    I write in my journal
  34. Re:But it's still a PC by dave420 · · Score: 4, Funny
    "nowhere near a Mac"

    Whatever, buddy. Seriously. Come to think of it, I'd expect to hear a mac fanboy say that :)

  35. Re:Um No by ross.w · · Score: 4, Informative

    Chances are you didn't use enough bleach. The water in your tap, has been dosed with chlorine at much higher concentrations than what you would have drunk. Haven't you ever been swimming in a pool? Didn't you swallow any? That didn't give you the runs did it? I agree with the other poster who said you should have used more bleach and left it for an hour or two. I think the water purifying tablets you can buy say much the same thing in the instructions.

    --
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  36. Re:It's a radio. - shielding doesn't work that way by wowbagger · · Score: 4, Informative
    Surrounding an EMF generating component with a grounded metal case generally does very little.


    Excuse me, but BULLSHIT .

    I design radio test equipment for a living, and you DAMN SURE do keep the RF from a device from radiating by putting a shield around it - you just TRY to get a reciever working if don't have the local oscillators in cans!

    The problem with most computer cases nowadays is they are CHEEP (spelling deliberate) and poorly made. Most panel to panel connections are simply 2 pieces of aluminum resting against each other (in other words, two pieces of aluminum seperated by a sapphire insulator, as aluminum quickly develops an oxide coating) - no beryllium-copper fingerstock, no compression gaskets, no star washers, nothing. When you have a chunk of metal not bonded to the chassis, you have a passive radiator, not a shield.

    If you wish to evaluate a case for RF shielding, put a light inside it, turn out the room lights, and look for leaks. Any gap longer than about 20 centimeters will act as a slot antenna for 1.5GHz(ish). Most modern cases leak like sieves.

    If you ever have the chance, look at an old Atari 800 (NOT 800XL) - those things were TANKS and didn't leak any RF to speak of - potmetal case around all active components, proper gaskets - truely a joy to behold. Of course that adds cost to the system, and in this day that won't fly.

    I constantly have birdies on my 2 meter rig from my computer - I have to unload the Firewire drivers any time I am not using them or I get a signal that is half-full scale 100 meters from my house. I'm seriously thinking of making a full Faraday cage for all my computer gear (save user interface elements) just to avoid the problems.
  37. Re:Case modding is evil by Speare · · Score: 2, Funny

    This idiot should take his next pay packet and sponsor a child in Africa or something.
    --
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  38. More bandwidth on the way! by Bit-tech.net · · Score: 2, Informative

    Fear not, little chickens - we've spoken to our hosts, and a line upgrade is imminent! You guys have been maxxing out our line to 100% for 7 hours, so do your worst to the new one, eh? :)

  39. Cold water? by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Bleach will work if...

    1. You use the right amount (don't know the proportions off the top of my head)

    2. You leave it to sit and work based on the temperature of the water. Cold water requires you let it sit longer.

    3. Lots of particulate matter (protein!) can protect nasty buggies from the chemicals. Physically filtering the water through something to get the big bits out first is a good idea.

    I've had a 100% success rate by using a ceramic filter and my judgment. If the water looks really iffy (i.e. hepatitis) I'll look elsewhere or use iodine after filtering it. Fortunatly really nasty stuff (like viruses) isn't a problem in wilderness areas where human waste isn't present.

    --
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  40. Re:Um No by mikael · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'll take the amoebas any day.

    You really don't want an amoebic infection of the bloodstream. My stepfather got one while clearing out the drains in our cottage (disused farmhouse cottage). We don't know how long it had been brewing, but for about three nights he would go to bed and then start having "the shakes". He was deathly white, and was shivering with an amplitude of an inch. I was just about expecting something to burst out at any minute.

    Fortunately, we got him to the doctor for a checkup. As his white blood cell count was somewhere beyond the solar system, the doc immediately sent him to hospital. The medics managed to drain around 2 litres of gunk out of his liver, and then injected him full of antibiotics. After that, he had a full checkup to find out how the amoeba's got into his bloodstream. The doctors suspect the cause was a missing filling.

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