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14 items tagged "television"
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home [+],
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tv cabinet [+],
todd treece [+],
tin [+],
television programs [+],
string telephone [+],
spiral pattern [+],
siri [+],
sensitive pen [+],
scart connector [+],
scart [+],
scan lines [+],
retrotechtacular [+],
rca plugs [+],
project [+],
profane [+],
power adapter [+],
power [+],
piece of furniture [+],
pen [+],
niklas roy [+],
networked devices [+],
network [+],
narrow bandwidth [+],
mechanical television [+],
mechanical [+],
lippy [+],
life companion [+],
knock outs [+],
killswitch [+],
iphone [+],
google [+],
function [+],
eckhard etzold [+],
eckhard [+],
don [+],
digital [+],
crt [+],
connector [+],
component [+],
com [+],
color television [+],
classic [+],
aussie [+],
audio synthesizer [+],
audio [+],
ambilight [+],
Wireless [+]
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11:31
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Hack a Day
Google TV is a network connected television. It does what you would think: plays television programs, streams media from the internet, and allows you to open URLs on your TV. But one nice feature is that it can also be controlled over the network rather than just via an IR remote. Google publishes apps which [...]
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7:37
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Packet Storm Security Advisories
The site at http://eenmiljardseconden.frankdeboosere.be/ had a cross site scripting issue and resolved it. What makes this noteworthy is that they took the high road and rickrolled any future attempts. More sites should add humor to their fixes.
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7:37
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Packet Storm Security Recent Files
The site at http://eenmiljardseconden.frankdeboosere.be/ had a cross site scripting issue and resolved it. What makes this noteworthy is that they took the high road and rickrolled any future attempts. More sites should add humor to their fixes.
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7:37
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Packet Storm Security Misc. Files
The site at http://eenmiljardseconden.frankdeboosere.be/ had a cross site scripting issue and resolved it. What makes this noteworthy is that they took the high road and rickrolled any future attempts. More sites should add humor to their fixes.
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10:01
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Hack a Day
A tin can and string telephone just doesn’t impress the kids anymore. Luckily, now you can turn that tin can telephone into a television, as [aussie_bloke] over on the Narrow-Bandwidth Television forum showed us. [aussie_bloke]‘s tin can TV is a mechanical television, a TV where the scanning lines of a CRT is replaced with a [...]
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11:01
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Hack a Day
Ah, the days when a television was a solid piece of furniture. When it comes to moving, we can’t say we miss it. But looking at this wooden TV cabinet with storage for its 7-function remote we can’t help but think that today’s TVs seem more… trivial… when it comes to the layout of the [...]
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13:01
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Hack a Day
If the addition of Siri to your iPhone has given you a somewhat-real life companion (and hope that you might not be forever alone) this hack is right up your alley. [Todd Treece] built a hardware fixiture for the living room which bridges the gap between Apple’s new digital assitant and your television. The box itself [...]
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8:01
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Hack a Day
Here’s the latest project from [Niklas Roy's] workshop. Lumenoise is an audio synthesizer controlled by drawing with a light-sensitive pen on a CRT television. The pen is a self-contained module which connects to the TV via audio and composite video RCA plugs. Inside the clear pen housing you’ll find a microcontroller which generates the audio [...]
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15:01
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Hack a Day
Finally, the USB port on the back of your television can be tapped for something useful. [Don] is using this add-on device to automatically cut the power to his Ambilight clone. Initially, he got tired of unplugging the power adapter each time he shut off the television, so he added a switch. But laziness overcame [...]
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13:31
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Hack a Day
[133MHz] cracked open a cheap tube television to add a SCART connector. He knew he had a chance at success when he discovered all of the knock-outs on the back of the connector panel because one of them was exactly the right size for the connector. But it wasn’t quite as easy as soldering in [...]
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10:00
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Hack a Day
This project explores the early days of television. Above you see a view from the back side of a mechanically scanning television. The black disk spins and the holes, aligned in a spiral pattern, create vertical scan lines for projected light to shine through. In this case, [Eckhard Etzold] is using red, green, and blue [...]