DIY Techno-hacks
Old hard drive platters make wonderfully good drinks coasters - they look dead smart and expensive and you've stopped people reading your old data into the bargain.
Have you taped all your remotes together, peep-show-style? Have you wired your doorbell to the toilet? What enterprising DIY have you done with technology?
Extra points for using sellotape rather than solder.
( , Thu 20 Aug 2009, 12:30)
Old hard drive platters make wonderfully good drinks coasters - they look dead smart and expensive and you've stopped people reading your old data into the bargain.
Have you taped all your remotes together, peep-show-style? Have you wired your doorbell to the toilet? What enterprising DIY have you done with technology?
Extra points for using sellotape rather than solder.
( , Thu 20 Aug 2009, 12:30)
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Oh my fucking God
I need this in my life! If it works, will you do one for me?
( , Thu 20 Aug 2009, 20:06, 1 reply)
I need this in my life! If it works, will you do one for me?
( , Thu 20 Aug 2009, 20:06, 1 reply)
You'd
certainly be welcome to have the software and code.
You'd have to get the RFID kit (I've just looked and I can't bloody find the one I have on ebay any more - I was rather hoping to use the same readers and tags for the whole house).
Short of having 4 PCs in each room I am struggling to think of a way to narrow the search down - I'm sure I'll think of something though ;-)
( , Thu 20 Aug 2009, 20:25, closed)
certainly be welcome to have the software and code.
You'd have to get the RFID kit (I've just looked and I can't bloody find the one I have on ebay any more - I was rather hoping to use the same readers and tags for the whole house).
Short of having 4 PCs in each room I am struggling to think of a way to narrow the search down - I'm sure I'll think of something though ;-)
( , Thu 20 Aug 2009, 20:25, closed)
Got it.
Arduino units with the parallax RFID reader sheild and the wireless network sheild (when it becomes available) telling a central TCPIP listener to update the database when any RFID tags get within range.
...or maybe some sort of pic.
Much cheaper than 4 PCs in every room, and much cheaper on electric too.
( , Thu 20 Aug 2009, 22:16, closed)
Arduino units with the parallax RFID reader sheild and the wireless network sheild (when it becomes available) telling a central TCPIP listener to update the database when any RFID tags get within range.
...or maybe some sort of pic.
Much cheaper than 4 PCs in every room, and much cheaper on electric too.
( , Thu 20 Aug 2009, 22:16, closed)
i'm by no means technologically minded
but would a portable reader work? [dunno if they can be portable...]
That way you could just wander through the rooms quickly and it'll scream at you when you're close.
Still WAY quicker than having to LOOK through every room.
[also, if you get this working, I fucking WANT one *clicks*]
( , Fri 21 Aug 2009, 1:30, closed)
but would a portable reader work? [dunno if they can be portable...]
That way you could just wander through the rooms quickly and it'll scream at you when you're close.
Still WAY quicker than having to LOOK through every room.
[also, if you get this working, I fucking WANT one *clicks*]
( , Fri 21 Aug 2009, 1:30, closed)
Yes
You could have one in a laptop I suppose, but it's just not geeky enough ;-)
( , Fri 21 Aug 2009, 8:46, closed)
You could have one in a laptop I suppose, but it's just not geeky enough ;-)
( , Fri 21 Aug 2009, 8:46, closed)
Can
you attach two readers to one PC and triangulate the location of the tags based on the strength of the signal? That would give you a much better location for the keys. Bear in mind I have no idea how rfid readers work.
( , Mon 24 Aug 2009, 15:08, closed)
you attach two readers to one PC and triangulate the location of the tags based on the strength of the signal? That would give you a much better location for the keys. Bear in mind I have no idea how rfid readers work.
( , Mon 24 Aug 2009, 15:08, closed)
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