A Can of Miller Just Made Off with My MacBook!

It seems like moments after a manufacturer releases a new security lock for mobile computers and similar devices, a hacker demonstrates how pitifully easy it is to defeat it. The latest security breach comes courtesy of Engadget and their new The Lockdown column, exploring high-tech security issues. It took the column’s author, Marc Weber Tobias, literally seconds to defeat the new Targus Defcon CL lock, using metal from a beer can.

Ironically, this test was prompted after a call from a St. Paul Pioneer Press tech journalist. He was the same reporter who wrote a detailed story on shoddy laptop locks in 2004. Two years later, doesn’t look like much has changed.

YouTube on your iPod

Lifehacker brings us news of two apps for downloading, converting, and adding YouTube content to your iPod: one for Mac, one for Windows. Adam writes:

“If you’re using PodTube (Mac), you need to browse YouTube in Safari, but one click will download the video, encode it for your iPod, and add it to your iTunes library ready for syncing (the whole process took me less than the time it took for the 54 second video I chose to finish playing). Using iTube on Windows, you paste the YouTube URL into iTube, at which point is also downloads, converts, and adds the file to your iTunes library. These programs are similar to previously-mentioned shareware app TubeSock, except they’re totally free (as in beer). iTube requires .NET.”

[Via Michael Berneis reBlog]

Robotic Winos Here We Come

Does Bender know about this? Those engineers over at NEC, always looking for a way to keep their perpetual R&D darling, the PaPeRo, in the limelight, have now tasked the hapless little Weeble with wine-tasting. Seriously. Hot on the heels of PaPeRo being turned into a health advisor and cheese snob (it can analyze food and determine its fat and sugar content and identify different types of cheeses), it can now perform a similar hat trick on wines. It does this using the same tech it used on food: infrared spectral analysis, measuring the degree of light absorption in different wavelengths and comparing that to its database. But it’s harder to do this with wine than with food, as the absorption signatures are similar to each other. Okay. Cool. Interesting. But what does this have to do with a small personal home robot that you’ve been promising consumers for almost six years now?

[Via Gizmag]

How-To: Turn a Cellphone Charger into a Shuffle Charger

Here’s a simple DIY project to bodge up an AC iPod Shuffle charger by crossing an old cellphone charger with a USB extension cable.

As someone in the comments section pointed out, you can also go in the other direction: make a cellphone charger from a USB cable. Gopod bless all of those indispensable pin-out diagrams that are usually just a Google search away.

Storing Data on Tiny Magnetic Tornadoes

How mind-boggling is this? “In a research first that could lead to a new generation of hard drives capable of storing thousands of movies per square inch, physicists at Rice University have decoded the three-dimensional structure of a tornado-like magnetic vortex no larger than a red blood cell.”

Read the full item here on PhysOrg.

Like a Robot Needs a Bicycle

In a recent talk at a conference, game designer Will Wright joked that he now has a robot to watch and record his TV for him (TiVo). Maybe he’ll want one of these next, a robot that can ride a bike for you. Who needs all that calorie-burning exercise and exposure to harsh direct overhead lighting, anyway? Make the robot do it. And hey, Tom Servo, while you’re out, could you grab me a pack o’ smokes?

PVR on your Cellie?

Texas Instruments is showing off its Personal Video Recorder (PVR) tech for mobile phones this week at the International Broadcasting Convention in Amsterdam. The tech utilizes TI’s Hollywood(TM) digital TV chip and OMAP 2 multimedia processor, along with software from partners PacketVideo and Software Systems (S3).

The system will allow “people to record a TV program on their mobile phone and then watch it later, on the train on the way to work, for example. The TI package also provides “picture-in-picture” capabilities, allowing a person to watch a prerecorded program and also track a live sports event in a smaller, on-screen window.”

Do we need this? Do we want this? I know I sound like a crotchety old d00d, always complaining about the crappy mobile reception I get, but seriously, I get REALLY crappy reception, in a major market! I rarely make it through a call without it getting dropped, or with me trying to figure out where the nearest tower is so I can point my phone at it to get decent signal strength. I don’t need freakin’ TV on my mobile phone, I need a mobile phone on my freakin’ mobile phone! And I’ve had it with these mother****in’ snakes on this… Oh, nevermind…

Read the full piece at PC World.

Classic Games on Keychains

It’s WAY too early to be starting in with the “would make a great stocking stuffer” line. We’ll be sick of that one long before we’re sick on Halloween candy corn, but check these out, for… oh hell, I might even buy one of these and I’m not much a gamer. For US$15, you get a keychain-sized Atari joystick or paddle wheel that actually works. The joystick model either contains Asteroid and Millipede or Centipede and Yar’s Revenge. The paddle controller has Pong, Breakout and Warlords. The controller comes with 6′ RCA cables so you can plug your keychain into any available TV, Now that’s going to leave an unsightly bulge in your pocket.

[Via Gear Factor]

PicoCricket: Mindstorms Meets Camp Crafts

What would you get if you crossed the DIY spirit of MAKE and its sister pub CRAFT, the power and digital sophistication of LEGO Mindstorms, and the childhood charm of macaroni and yarn art? You may get something like PicoCricket. Like its nerdier big brother, Mindstorms, PicoCricket grew out of a collaboration between the LEGO company and MIT’s Media Lab, and both building sets include electronics and a microcontroller, but PicoCricket is designed to appeal to a wider range of young builders, and to allow for much more diverse creations. To assist in this, along with the electronics, LEGO pieces, and the computer “brain,” the kit also contains more traditional kid crafting materials, right down to the pipe cleaners, glittery bits, and googley eyes.

The PicoCricket is not actually made by LEGO, although it contains LEGO components. LEGO partially funded the Toronto start-up, Playful Invention Company (PICO), that developed the kit and it provides the LEGO pieces under an agreement with PICO.

Read the entire piece about the PicoCricket at BusinessWeek.
Visit MIT’s Cricket site.
And PICO’s site.