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Slashdot Asks: What Are You Doing For Hallowe'en?

Hallowe'en is my favorite holiday: I like seeing costumes (and walking around in my own), and seeing what people do to decorate their houses, yards, etc. For the second year in a row though, I've failed to come up with a really good scheme for making my own place appropriately spooky. So, in hopes of loosing some inspiration for myself and others, I ask today what you're doing to spookify your surroundings (or your person) tomorrow, especially if it means using technology in interesting ways. Sensor-activated scary sounds or lights? An Arduino or Raspberry Pi-controlled costume? Elaborate trap-door? Infrasonic hackle-raising subwoofer install? Maybe one year Alek Komarnitsky will switch to Hallowe'en instead of Christmas, and offer a webcam-equipped remote-controllable haunt.

26 of 273 comments (clear)

  1. Dressing up... by Nukenbar · · Score: 5, Funny

    and hitting on girls a decade young than me in short skirts.

    1. Re:Dressing up... by hercludes · · Score: 5, Funny

      I don't think the best strategy of hitting on girls is to wear short skirts.

    2. Re:Dressing up... by RubberChainsaw · · Score: 4, Funny

      This is only a problem because you are 22 years old..

      --
      I welcome our new 99% overlords.
  2. The same thing I do every night by decipher_saint · · Score: 5, Funny

    Try to take over the world

    --
    crazy dynamite monkey
  3. Hiding in the Shadows of my Porch... by AdamStarks · · Score: 4, Funny

    and when little kids walk up, I'll leap out in my Conan the Mathematician costume and roar out the skull-splitting multiplication rules for Quaternions.

    1. Re:Hiding in the Shadows of my Porch... by Frobnicator · · Score: 5, Interesting
      There are all kinds of fun things you can do if you want to hang out on your porch.

      One old couple in our neighborhood has a portable fire pit, every year they have marshmallows and chocolate and various types of crackers and cookies, and everybody can make s'mores. Some kids just grab a few marshmallows and a bit of chocolate, other people stand around and chat while warming their hands and treats.

      Another home in our neighborhood often puts together a little spooky maze in their rather large garage, with cardboard cutouts and black lights and such. They have sometimes recruited a few teens to make it into a spook alley.

      Something fun is a bit of basic chemistry. Fill a spray bottle with some methanol with Borox dissolved in it, squirt it over a lighter, you get a bright green flame. (Be careful since the methanol is poisonous if swallowed, but a small amount of vapor while outside is not really harmful. Don't let any of the liquid get on kids or candy, or anything that burns.) Making a bright green fireball is satisfying, and I've already got the ingredients to do this one again tomorrow night.

      --
      //TODO: Think of witty sig statement
  4. I carry. by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 4, Funny

    I walk around with an (unloaded) pistol on my hip.

    Scaring little kids is easy, I go for scaring the adults.

    1. Re:I carry. by mythosaz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      FFS, load the thing.

    2. Re:I carry. by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 4, Funny

      Scaring little kids is easy, I go for scaring the adults.

      One year we lugged around a rubber boat, dressed up like Greenpeace activists, threw the boat on a front lawn, jumped in, and staged a naval assault on the "Greenhouse that was destroying the ozone hole." Instead of ringing the doorbell, we peppered the windows with a hail of fire from airsoft electric machine guns, while yelling, "Nuke the Whales!", and other assorted non-sequitur nonsense.

      It didn't scare any adults, but they would come out of the house with a priceless confused look on their faces, like, "What the flying fuck is going on here?!" and "What in God's Hell is this supposed to be!?"

      The truth was . . . we didn't really know either.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    3. Re:I carry. by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Funny

      He leaves it unloaded to scare the NRA members.

  5. Down Under... by klingers48 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Being Australian? I can go grumpy old man on those few kids that usually go trick or treating. It's always fun watching blank stairs of incomprehension as I tell them that their mums and dads are bad parents for indoctrinating their children with an Americanized handout mentality as well as bad neighbours for expecting me to cross-subsidize their efforts with candy.

    Get off my lawn. Clean up those eggs and toilet rolls.

    1. Re:Down Under... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Halloween dates from 1745 and is of Christian origin, it was / it is primarily of Irish, Scottish and English Gaelic or Pagan origin. It is certainly not American in origin. Even trick or treating, traces back to the 15th Century UK and European practice of dressing up (to disguise themselves from souls seeking vengeance prior departing the earth on All Hallows Day) and children sharing and eating soul cakes as an act to pray for the souls in purgatory.

      In fact, in the US, Halloween was not brought over by the Puritans, but rather was adopted later when the Scottish and Irish immigrants occurred in the 19th Century.

  6. Old Smart Phones are the best! by Wingfat · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have a few Smart Phones i am not using so i Downloaded a few apps and things to make the Cells make Spooky Noises when one ditects sounds. and another phone set closer to my door where it detects movement (using fishing line attached to the phone and the other side attached to a moving lawn spider i have, he is 8' and has moving legs but now when he moves it makes cool spooky noises ) My Sony Smart watch as a live view finder for my other non used Smart phone allows me to see kids coming up the drive way so i can be perpaird to make the fog machine spew out thick fog. I did make a Green Laser Vortext this year too.. Green Laser & small motor to make a mirror spin & Fog Machine & a small fan makes some of the coolest effects. So now i got Two green, two red, and two blue lasers for this halloween haunt going. FYI - blue lasers are great as Super Black Lights!!!!!!! man they make glow in the dark things bright!

  7. Don't bother... by colinjl · · Score: 4, Informative

    ... the kid in the LED suit on youtube has already won

  8. What am I going to do for Halloween? by Obfuscant · · Score: 4, Funny
    What I do every year -- try to take over the world.

    Unless some dinky laboratory mice with modified DNA beat me to it. Poit!

  9. Re:Spellchecker by amicusNYCL · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It might be considered "acceptable", but it still manages to annoy me. I don't speak Gaelic dialects, you see, so I don't see a reason in English to stick a seemingly-random apostrophe in the middle of the word. They also completely leave out the word "all" and drop the "s". "Halloween" makes sense as an English word that can trace it roots to other words, but I don't see a reason to alter the spelling to necessarily reflect that. It seems pompous to insist on the apostrophe.

    --
    "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
  10. Re:A fine evening by JustOK · · Score: 3, Funny

    I never use an apostrophe, I always use thepostrophe

    --
    rewriting history since 2109
  11. Re:Spellchecker by Desler · · Score: 5, Informative

    The submitter is Timmeh himself. He does this every year trying to act pedantic by spelling it "Hallowe'en". He thinks he's being smart or something.

  12. Re:Damn kids by Baloo+Uriza · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Personally, I hate Halloween. I have enough identity issues that I don't need to be wearing costumes and masks. The only time I put a mask on these days is when a safe word is involved.

    You literally sound as fun as a blanket party.

    --
    Furries make the internet go.
  13. Re:Ghost Hunts by geekoid · · Score: 3, Informative

    There is no actual genuine research anymore becasue it's all been done.
    There are no ghosts.
    Every aspect has been explained using a process known as science.
    Look into it.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  14. Don't answer the door. by Col.+Bloodnok · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I simply don't answer the door.

    In the UK, It's only kids (and their parents) who watch too much American crap on TV, who do it.

    Personally, I despise this ridiculous 'holiday'. The last thing we need are more shipping containers, full of Chinese plastic crap arriving at Felixstowe - being imported and sold by the supermarkets - who are desperate to encourage a new yearly orgy of consumerism.

    Modern Halloween is yet another bewildering American concept, borrowed from traditional European practices (mostly from Celtic Samhain, some early Pagan/Christian crossover, bits of Roman stuff), but distorted grotesquely by the lens of capitalistic greed.

    Bonfire night is so much more fun - and I mean a proper bonfire. The fireworks are, and should be, a sideshow. A proper echo of Samhain etc. - the celebration of the end of harvest and the start of a risky, cold, non-productive season. There is something wonderful about a good bonfire on a crisp Autumn night.

  15. Re:Snore by jaymzter · · Score: 3, Funny

    Halloween has been saved. Allow me to introduce you to Slutoween...

    --
    If thou see a fair woman pay court to her, for thus thou wilt obtain love
  16. Turnip lanterns + US invades Scotland via England by Dogtanian · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Guising...... but not "trick or treat" (Hey, you gotta earn your treats!)

    Are you Scottish or Irish? I'm Scottish, and that's what we called it when I was growing up and celebrating Hallowe'en (*) in the early 1980s.

    While that's undeniably a long time ago now in some ways (i.e. 30 years, a generation or so)- it actually seems bizarrely recent when one considers that in the era of the A-Team and Knight Rider, of Reagan and Thatcher, we still called it guising (and felt obliged to perform some sort of routine), dressed up in home-made costumes and went around with lanterns made out of turnips, not pumpkins.

    This wasn't done with the intent of being "traditional" and I was never aware of it seeming forced- that's still how it was then. I'd probably heard of "trick or treat", but would definitely have been aware of that as being an American (i.e. foreign) thing. Ditto pumpkin lanterns- I knew of the association, but while I wouldn't swear that I never saw a real one growing up, the things me and my friends trawled around the streets *were* mainly turnip based. (**) And there definitely wasn't the associated hype or paraphenalia in the shops.

    I say "bizarrely recent" because while one could have imagined the traditional Scottish Hallowe'en remaining relatively pure into the era of my Mum's childhood (i.e. early 1950s, most people didn't have TV, US culture was less influential), for it to have survived into the heyday of VHS, home computers et al is sweet, but also quite strangely anachronistic. I'd say I was probably lucky to have experienced that- 15 or so years later, I think the US influence on Hallowe'en *did* start becoming very influential to the point that the idea of a child today having a turnip lantern would seem unusual (and probably get strange looks from his/her friends).

    Strangely, despite the fact that Scottish culture became increasingly Anglicised (as part of the UK) during the 20th century, one thing I didn't realise when I was growing up was that guising wasn't a UK-wide thing, and the English really didn't celebrate Hallowe'en at all then. In fact, I only found this out recently, and ironically that was because they *do* now celebrate it... but they view the increasing prominence of Hallowe'en and its customs as an example of the influence of *American* culture!

    Which, of course, it is- but the "American" Hallowe'en was brought there by Scottish and Irish immigrants, and still retains some (if not all) of its original celtic form. I honestly can't see them going around with turnips though.

    And that *might* be why guising and turnips lasted as long as they did- in the UK, and especially in the 20th century, mass culture came to the "provinces" (*cough*) through the London-centric, Anglo-centric media, and they didn't care about Hallowe'en. So in a sense we were insulated from both the US influence and commercialism and kept our individuality a bit longer. Now we've lost it for a related reason- we're getting the American model via the same Anglo-centric media and retailers who don't have their own traditional Hallowe'en anyway so don't moderate it in the same way they would if they had their own tradition to defend.

    I think I said a lot more than I was originally planning to there...

    (*) I'm so used to the apostrophe-less form nowadays- probably another example of increasing American influence- I'd almost forgotten that this was a quite common spelling when I was a kid. Anyway, any Slashdotter that gets so annoyed by that spelling *deserves* to be annoyed, so "Hallowe'en" it is :-)

    (**) I mentioned this to my Dad recently, in a nostalgic way, and he complained about the amount of work it took to hollow out a turnip(!)

    --
    "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  17. Re:What am I doing on "halloween" ? by Gogo0 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I dont live in america and all of my friends are not americans, yet they celebrated halloween by dressing in silly costumes, going to parties, and having fun.
    it was HORRIBLE. the sooner people stop making excuses to have fun, the better. goddamn halloween

  18. Re:Spellchecker by Bite+The+Pillow · · Score: 3, Funny

    Is it ten o'clock yet? I can't wait until it's ten o'clock. Do you know why? I bet you don't. I just like ten o'clock. Especially when it's in the morning because I can say "top o' the mornin' to ya" and sound bright and cheery.

    And look at all the apostrophes I get to use! It's almost like apostrophes can do anything. They're magical and mystical and wonderful. Got to love apostrophes.

  19. Re:LED pumpkins by NoImNotNineVolt · · Score: 3, Informative

    Disclaimer: I only briefly glanced at the diagram. Basically, it's only two ICs: a 555 timer and a counter.

    If you're not familiar with the 555, it's little more than a chip that goes "high, low, high, low, etc." on its output pin. Not as accurate as a crystalline oscillator, but we're not building a stopwatch here. The speed at which this "clock" runs is determined by the capacitors and resistors wired up to it. In this circuit, one of the resistors is variable (a potentiometer), which allows you to adjust the clock speed by turning a knob instead of swapping out components.

    Now, this clock signal feeds into a 4017 Johnson counter. This IC has 10 output pins that go high one at a time, in sequence. For every clock cycle, an output pin goes low, and the next one goes high.

    Your circuit only has 8 LEDs though. That leaves you with 2 extra output pins. Once the counter gets past the 8th output pin, you want it to reset to the first pin, and then continue operating as before. An easy way of doing that is to wire the 9th output pin directly to the reset input. That way, when the 9th output goes high, the counter automatically resets. I'm guessing that this is where your circuit is failing.

    Make sure pins 9 and 15 are shorted on your 4017. Pin 9 is the 9th output, and pin 15 is the master reset input. That's likely to be where this is failing. That, or the clock stops running.

    --
    Chuuch. Preach. Tabernacle.