All posts by Windell Oskay

About Windell Oskay

Co-founder of Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories.

Drink Making Unit

Drink-Making Unit!

One of the many kinds of machines that we have never made before is a cocktail robot. But recently, after being invited to participate in Barbot 2010, we put together this little drink mixer.

Cocktail robots are a funny breed. No two seem to work the same way and many (like ours) have few enough moving parts to barely count as robots at all. The granddaddy cocktail robotics event is Roboexotica (for which you can read about last years robots here), but we’re showing off our machine tonight and tomorrow night, much closer to home at the DNA lounge in San Francisco.
Continue reading Drink Making Unit

Linkdump: February 2010


  1. Crayon rockets!
  2. The original rolling ball clock — now available again!
  3. Also, ever seen the Arrow coin clock?
  4. Attention BF programmers that want better 3D graphics support: The bfopengl project needs more developers.
  5. Al Gore changes font (via)
  6. Food science: Why fry fries twice?
  7. Fordson Snow Machine from 1929 (on YouTube) (via)
  8. Virtual radar — Google maps + planes over Europe
  9. Measuring the ink used by different fonts, the analog way.
  10. Awesome Hopping Robot
  11. Self-slicing Pizza and many other interesting projects
  12. Multiwire circuit boards (link goes to patent). Fascinating older, specialized technology that was actually used. You can get a good idea what it’s all about from the illustrations in the PDF.
  13. We’re excited to see some hints that open-source embroidery may happen someday.
  14. Sea glass candy
  15. Awesome LED earrings at Etsy
  16. Gear generator program by Matthias Wandel; video demo here. Would be fully awesome except that it’s for Windows only. (A simple, online version is available here.)
  17. Make a tasty Ice Planet
  18. Remaking classic perpetual motion machines, at the Museum of Unworkable Devices.
  19. Interesting perspective: Is luck a skill?
  20. Some nice looking wooden notebooks

Evil Mad Scientist at Rods and Mods

While we don’t normally find ourselves as part of the case mod community, we’ve been invited to participate in the Rods and Mods event, “The Kustom Kulture of Radical Computer Modification” currently going on, Thursday through Saturday at the Exploratorium in San Francisco. We’ll be attending this Saturday, showing off some of our recent projects and maybe even some hacked devices.

You can read more about this event here, and we’ll hope to see you there!

What makes Blip tick?

blip - 05

After our Tabletop Pong project, someone suggested that we should check out the Tomy Blip, a handheld game dating to 1977.

And so we did. We snagged one on eBay, and here it is: “Blip, the digital game.”

Blip is unlike any other handheld that I’ve played, and (as you’ll see) it’s quite a piece of engineering. In what follows, we give it a test drive, and then take it apart and see what makes it tick.
Continue reading What makes Blip tick?

Roasting coffee at home: a DIY coffee bean cooler

Coffee Cooler - 03   Coffee Cooler - 01Coffee Cooler - 18   Coffee Cooler - 09

I never really set out with the goal of roasting my own coffee beans, it just kind of happened.

It started a month ago when we got a coffee grinder. Naturally we started getting whole bean coffee, which we used at a rate of about one pound per week. While I’m not (by any standards) a coffee connoisseur, I found myself noticing that the first pot of coffee out of the new can really was just betterthan the last pot of coffee out of the old can– meaning that the coffee quality does actually decline noticeably after just a week.

Now, that’s a minor annoyance, and hardly cause for action. But, two weekends ago I happened to be browsing in a home brewing store (needed champagne yeast– that’s another story) where there were sealed bags of green coffee beans just sitting there on the shelf. Fair trade, organic, and in a number of varieites. Only 5 bucks a pound. So what the heck, right?

It turns out that there’s a common and cheap method of roasting coffee at home: using a regular air popcorn maker. You put the beans in the popper as though they were popcorn kernels, heat them for a few minutes until they’re properly roasted, and then cool them. (You can read the details of this process here, here, here, and here, amongst other places.) This is kind of neat because it doesn’t take much in the way of equipment and it roasts just enough for a big pot of coffee.

The weak point in the popper method is the cooling. The beans keep roasting as long as they are still hot, so many of the sites suggest pouring the beans back and forth between a couple of metal colanders until they cool down. We tried it, and while it did cool them faster than a cookie sheet, it was more tedious than fun. It also seemed a bit silly to use this nice semi-automatic roaster and then turn it over to a manual process for the next few minutes. So, here is our better (if somewhat obvious) solution: a dedicated coffee cooling tower, built from a second modified air popper. Continue reading Roasting coffee at home: a DIY coffee bean cooler

A playable game of Tabletop Pong

Tabletop Pong - 92
Question: What the heck is PONG supposed to be?

When you’re playing it, it feels like the video game representation of some real-life sport. You’re bouncing a ball back and forth with another player, which at first glance sounds a lot like like table tennis, AKA ping pong– and that would seem to explain the name. And yet, PONG is two-dimensional and free of gravity. The ball goes in a straight line, at a fairly constant rate of travel. And you don’t play ping pong by rotating a wheel. Come to think of it, it’s not a darned thing like ping pong. So what the heck is it?

To answer this important question, we built this real-life Tabletop Pong game.
Continue reading A playable game of Tabletop Pong

Basics (updated): Using an accelerometer with an AVR microcontroller

ADXL335 - 10

Some time ago, we wrote up a tutorial about using an ADXL330 accelerometer with an AVR microcontroller. A couple of years have passed, and so we’ve returned to update and clean up some loose ends on this project.
Continue reading Basics (updated): Using an accelerometer with an AVR microcontroller

linkdump: December 2009

  1. Micro-KIM 8-bit computer kit
  2. Bony desk lamp
  3. Robot videos ftw
  4. The words of physics
  5. Best Lego costume ever.
  6. Sound sculptures by Zimoun
  7. Visualization of light moving from the earth to the moon
  8. How to weave glass
  9. Kitchenaid Flames
  10. Cat-o-lanterns?
  11. Interesting source of food-grade mold-making materials.
  12. A nice variation on the ice tube clock
  13. Awesome Giant Lamp
  14. Sausage link scarf
  15. A gentle introduction to bitwise operators
  16. Best zoo ad ever?
  17. Photos from the Russian space museum
  18. Star Trek films: Odd vs Even

Epic menorah is epic.

Star Trek Pez LED menorah 1

Joyce and Kaufman sent in this truly fantastic Star Trek Pez LED menorah that they made. Joyce made it last year to hold candles, and this year Kaufman brought it right into the 24th 21st century by mind-melding modding it with one of our Deluxe LED Menorah kits.
Star Trek Pez LED menorah 2

Let’s give them both double credit for a fantastic job. Overengineering at its finest, this is.