Category Archives: Everything Else

Jasmine Fruit

Jasmine (Stephanotis) Fruit

Our jasmine vine produced a fruit. We didn’t know they could do that.
Heck, we didn’t even know what kind of jasmine we have. It can be a little confusing, because are several vines called jasmine: Jasminum (Jasmine), Trachelospermum (Star Jasmine), and Stephanotis (Madagascar Jasmine or Bridal Veil). There is a Gardenia called Cape Jasmine, and I’m sure there are still other flowers sharing the name.

Our plant is Stephanotis, which produces clusters of sweet-scented white blossoms. It attracts hummingbirds, who feed from the flowers and perch on the vines to keep watch over their territory. And, we have learned, it occasionally produces a large inedible mango-shaped fruit.
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JellyBean versus the Digi-Key packaging materials

JellyBean versus the Digi-Key packaging materials

Digi-Key is a great place to order electronic components. Their online search is great, they ship quickly, and their prices are reasonable. If you have cats, there’s one more good reason to order from Digi-Key: They use interesting environmentally friendly packaging materials.

A day when a Digi-Key box arrives is a red letter day at our house. I get the components in the box, and the cats get everything else, and those are (apparently) some extremely exciting packaging materials. Typically there are layers of both white tissue paper and perforated brown kraft paper. Both types are krinkly– which cats are really into for some reason– but the brown perforated stuff is a particularly special treat. Our two cats will perfect their running leaps to pounce on it. They will fight over it, where the victor gets to roll around in it and get cozy inside– as JellyBean above has done.

Why? Well, I’m no feline psychologist, but I’ll take a few guesses as to why it’s so popular: (1) it’s easier to sink teeth and claws into than regular paper, (2) it’s more flexible, (3) it tears more easily, (4) if you’re hiding in it, you can still see out, (5) it’s very krinkly, and (6) it slides well on the hardwood floor.

All in all, it’s much better than a plain cardboard box, although they often get that too.

Two strange little facts

I often come interesting little factlets while browsing wikipedia, but here are two that really struck me as remarkable:

1. The super bowl is, in fact, named after the super ball. That confirms which of the two is actually more important.

2. Trans fats are not only incredibly dangerous to humans, but the are also largely to blame for the fact that whales have been hunted to near extinction!

Some hands on time with the iPhone

iPhone

As a popular technology blog headquartered in Silicon Valley, we were lucky enough to get a chance to try out the final shipping version of the iPhone this week.

If you think that it looks somewhat different from the pre-release versions of the iPhone that were shown off at MacWorld, you’re right: Unlike those, this isn’t a prototype; it’s a genuine released product from Apple.
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Gettin’ your due from TPC

Telephone

Last week I was lucky enough to be able to go to MacWorld and worship at the altar of the iPhone, as so many others have done. That is one heck of a nice looking device, and I really wanted to own one right up until I found out about the soul-crushing “service” contract that comes chained to it. And that’s one of the reasons that I want to remind you that it’s important– no it’s your fundamental duty— to be as ruthless and cruel to The Phone Company as they are to us.

I saw an interesting article this month in an engineering magazine called EDN. (Isn’t it interesting how engineering magazines have exactly the sort of names that you would expect engineers to come up with?) It’s about how to (legally) steal power from The Phone Company. Not that you can steal enough power to run your microwave oven (or even an LED, continuously), but it’s the principle that counts, right?

Telephone lines provide 48 V with some decent current, intended for such purposes as driving a solenoid to ring the (physical) bell of an old telephone, like mine above. By law, a device that isn’t actually communicating must present a resistance of at least 5 megaohms to that line, which means that you can only get out 48/5e6 = 10 microamps of current. The article shows how you could use this tiny trickle current to charge a supercapacitor (slowly) up to 2.5V, and then use that charged supercapitor to use an ultraefficient switching power supply to do… well… something. Like flash an LED once in a while.

Of course, this idea has been around for a while; some details about this source of power are even discussed in The Art of Electronics. But who is actually doing anything about it? I’m working on some other projects right now, so it’s not clear that I’ll be building something like this any time soon, but I hope someone is. It’s time that we all worked a little harder at gettin’ our due from TPC.

Duchamp redux

Fountain

Last week I visited the Exploratorium with some friends, and we saw this remarkable drinking fountain. The exhibit cleverly produces a little bit of introspective psychological trickery: It notes that the water is clean, and that the toilet has never been used, but asks why you might hesitate to drink from it? Funny how our brains work sometimes.

Drinking aside, the exhibit reminds me in particular of one other famous fountain.
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The Evil Mad Science Auxiliary Flickr Group

Escher Cookies

We’ve started a flickr group called the “Evil Mad Science Auxiliary,” it’s located at http://www.flickr.com/groups/evilmadscience/.

The purpose of this group is to provide a place to show off your pictures of things that are (at least marginally) related to projects on our blog. Did you build a cylon-o-lantern? Some interesting Lego creations? Some LED Holiday decorations or build one of our kits? Post it in the group and let us see!

The action shot above, by fdecomite on flickr, shows some tasty Escher cookies.

My Sewing Machine (and how I make trebuchet slings)

Huskystar

Craft is currently asking for sewing machine pictures. I can’t compete with the lovely vintage Singers, but here is mine. I have had it for several years and I even made my wedding dress on it. It is a Huskystar, which is a descendent of the Viking brand. I went with the top of the mechanical line on sale at the end of the model year. (Did you know sewing machines have a model year?) I didn’t see a need for computer control since I wasn’t planning to do embroidery. This was a good choice and I have no regrets. My favorite feature is the automatic needle threader, with the automatic buttonhole coming in a close second.
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