Real Wood iPod
An anonymous reader submits "People have tried modding their iPods using wood before, but it took the genius of ZapWizard to create the Real Wood iPod. Hand carved from a solid piece of African hardwood to a thickness of just 2mm, the end result has to be seen to be believed. Wood grain is the new Apple White!"
You mean like this? Actually I think this may have been on slashdot, or perhaps it was hardocp, but I recall seeing it a while ago. http://www.zaverio.net/
Yes, the touch-wheel still works. Touch-wheels are capacitance sensors, you can learn about them at www.qprox.com
See pictures of tits
Some softwood types are also sensitive - old-growth redwoods forests and high mountain areas. Forest Service roadbuilding typically costs about 10 times as much as the value of the wood that gets logged using those roads, so it's essentially subsidizing the destruction of old-growth forests; the Clinton administration belatedly got around to banning it in many areas, and the Bush Administration rapidly re-authorized it.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
Strangely enough, converting an entire tree into CO2 by either burning or decomposition will release exactly the net amount of CO2 that the tree absorbed over its life. Weird huh?
I'm guessing that wasn't on their radar screen...
+10 nerd props for actually starting the Yahoo group you mention in a /. joke :-)
I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
Cheers for the site!
:)
Here's the blurb for those too lazy to search the site
QWheel(TM) touch wheel technology can be thought of as a 'capacitive potentiometer', where the wiper is a finger. The electrode consists of a simple resistive ring element placed behind the plastic panel; three capacitive QT sensing channels are connected to this ring, and the signals processed to 7-bits of absolute position. The result is output on an SPI serial interface. The device can be set to sense through panels up to 3mm thick, and even through gloves.
The entire circuit with the electrode ring can be fabricated on a single-sided PCB for very low cost. In many cases the technology is less expensive than mechanical equivalents, and in all cases is more reliable.
"Who says nothing is impossible? Some people do it every day!" - Alfred E. Neuman
There's not a way to make plastics without oil, but there's a way to make oil out of organic wastes which can, of course, be used to make more plastics.
This was some pretty cool stuff.
Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens.
> How long until we can start getting, say... a mahongany powerbook?
You can't get your hands on real big-leaf mahogany nowadays as it's very rare and there has been talk of protecting it under CITES. Most reputable timber yards won't handle it.
The various replacements that are sold as "mahogany" are too soft and not dense enough.
> A pine iBook sounds appealing.
Again, too soft. What would be nice is one made out of African Blackwood. African blackwood is used for making woodwind instruments and is jet black and very hard wearing. Doesn't need any finish either and is fairly easy to shape with rasps etc.
The Machine stops.
Nope its a 4th gen. This is from the creator in the article discussion:
As many have mis-read. This is not a old generation iPod with a scroll wheel. This is a 4th generation iPod with touch click wheel. It is held together by little tabs.
Mole? 4? Cars?
See http://www.synaptics.com/technology/cps.cfm or http://reviews.cnet.com/4520-6450_7-5512416-1.html for more info.