Linux Toys 226
Linux Toys: 13 Cool Projects for Home, Office and Entertainment | |
author | Chris Negus. Chuck Wolber |
pages | 360 |
publisher | John Wiley & Sons |
rating | 9/10 |
reviewer | Alex Moskalyuk |
ISBN | 0764525085 |
summary | Variety of Linux-based projects for home, business or just for fun |
Things changed in 21st century, so what's a geek to do? As for the household products, you can probably always get stuff cheaper at Wal-Mart than build it yourself. Radio-related projects just don't seem that much fun anymore, since there's little sense of discovery.
Linux Toys is just the book that fills that void.
What's covered
Chris Negus (author of the Red Hat Linux Bible) and Chuck Wolber (from Tacoma LUG) came up with 13 different projects that one can do at home. All of them require a PC running Linux (the authors use and recommend Red Hat Linux 9, since that's the environment where the projects have been tested) and a variety of hardware (including none besides the PC), depending on which project you decide to go with. What are the projects? The entire listing is at the book's Web site, but here's a list of all thirteen with short descriptions of what's accomplished in the end (not necessarily in the same order as the chapters):- Digital Picture Frame: excellent endeavor if you have an old useless laptop with nice LCD screen lying around. The book has detailed step-by-step guide with pictures on how to turn an old laptop into a fancy picture frame playing a slideshow of digital images stored on the hard drive locally or uploaded from network (in case the old laptop has a network card and you decide to keep it when assembling the picture frame). By the way, these things do cost a lot commercially, while P200 and lower laptops are virtually free.
- Arcade Game Player: how to turn an old computer with a good monitor into the arcade game player running XMame. Your house guests can then use joystick to play Donkey Kong, Pac-Man, Asteroids at your next Blast from the Past party.
- Digital Answering Machine: using the Red Hat Linux box as an answering machine that listens for incoming telephone calls (via vgetty), converts the voice messages into digitally compressed sound files and notifies the receiver about new voice message via e-mail.
- Home Music System: have an old PC with fairly large hard drive and some good home entertainment speakers? This project allows the reader to build a jukebox used to play Ogg Vorbis files. The authors use ltJukebox and freedb for music management and information retrieval. The ltJukebox software (which comes with the book's CD) automatically rips the music CDs into .ogg files, though digitizing your collection (if you haven't done it yet) might take a while. After that, however, a standalone computer nicely tucked somewhere in the room behind the speaker system can provide for hours of music. And if you plug it into the network, you'll have the ability to change settings and playlists via telnet.
- Home Video Archive: ever wanted to digitize your VHS collection? This chapter uses ffmpeg and nvrec for capturing and xawtv for adjusting television input. The authors then use Hauppauge WinTV Go and WinTV Theater TV capture card and then record the videos off the TV input into an AVI file. The resulting file is then burned to a CD/DVD (still using Linux tools) as well as into the VCD format that's recognized by most DVD players.
- Personal Video Recorder: ever dreamed of cutting TiVo's market share with your own devices? Well, perhaps, maybe within just one market -- your house. The authors use the same nvrec utility to record the TV input, XmlTV and WebVCPlus for downloading the data on television shows and using Web interface to choose the ones you would like to record. Unlike TiVo though, this home-built digital PVR can only play the recorded shows on a Linux PC in AVI format, but if you followed the previous project, you can burn the resulting file into VCD format.
- Providing dial-up access: this basic project is perhaps familiar to all those who bear the title Network Administrator or used to work for an ISP, but for beginners in the field (and especially for beginners with Linux) it provides a detailed step-by-step plan on how to setup your own dial-up server and become a small ISP. A computer permanently connected to the Internet with a static IP is required for this project.
- Web hosting business: assuming that a computer with static IP address from the previous project and a domain name are available, this project takes the reader through the details of becoming a Linux hoster. This project is especially interesting, since it's applicable to those who have pretty good knowledge of the OS. Numerous online how-to's and manuals take you through separate processes, like adding user accounts, configuring Apache, setting up disk quotas, but few are "turnkey" solutions, where after closing up the book on the last page you can start the hosting business right away.
- Home network with a Linux box: rather detailed description of properly configuring iptables, NAT, as well as DHCP and Samba servers to run the home network with a Red Hat Linux 9 box as a server with the firewall and various Linux/Windows clients connecting to it.
- Video streaming server: set up a camcorder, Web cam or security camera to broadcast the video to the Internet. The authors use a camcorder and ffserver software to stream the video.
- Temperature Monitor: here a temperature sensor kit from DigiTemp needs to be purchased and connected to the telephone cable, which, in turn, will connect to the parallel port. Apparently the ordering page is down as of writing this review, but DigiTemp developer uses Dallas Semiconductors temperature sensors. Then the software provided with the book (ltweather) allows you to look at the current temperature, log it consistently and display it on a Web page if needed.
- Linux and some games on a single floppy: re-using that 3.5'' drive for something practical is the purpose of this project. Although the result - single-floppy with some essential Linux and character-based games on it, can be hardly practical in the modern world, perhaps it's worth playing with just to see how little you need to get the whole OS going from scratch.
- Controlling RC cars from Linux: if you have a large collection of RC cars (and according to the spam messages I am getting, they're the hottest trend this Christmas), there's a variety of things you can do when suddenly instead of using the remote control you engage a Linux PC. Unattended races, testing your AI algorithms for entering DARPA autonomous vehicle challenge, writing some complex artificial life, where species of all sorts can see how well they can survive in a crowded world. The authors use a LynX-PORT board, a fairly expensive, but according to the authors, quite useful I/O board that could be re-used for all sorts of projects.
The Book
With 274 pages of useful information (excluding the cover pages), the book creates a very favorable impression. The writing is clear and succinct; each chapter follows the same structure with an overview of the project first, the list of things needed for the project second, a step-by-step guide third, some additional information for those willing to go further fourth, and summary of the project fifth. Each step that requires interaction with a Linux box has the exact command-line instructions spelled out, no matter how basic. (On page 44, for example, the authors provide the mount /mnt/cdrom command, even though knowledge of this step is expected of a Linux user at the command line). Where interaction with the GUI is required, a screenshot is provided. The Troubleshooting section explains what might go wrong with a Red Hat Linux 9 box and how to react to it.Furthermore, there is no dependence on previous chapters, making each project independent. You will not be told to "start up the video capturing as you have learned in the previous chapter" or refer to "previously described procedures". Theoretically, you could rip out the pages for a single project and give them to someone with no previous knowledge of the project and expect them to complete it.
Pictures are indispensable. Granted, they wouldn't be very useful for the Linux on a Floppy project, but for something like a digital picture frame, where you're required to disassemble an old laptop and play with the parts, it's essential. The pictures are all black-and-white, and by "pictures" I mean real photographs, not diagrams explaining how things should be done in theory.
The authors' sense of humor permeates the book, which makes it an enjoyable read. For example, on page 255, when completing the Linux RC toy car project, the photo of the race has a caption about every Linux car crossing the "Finnish" line. (Tip: Linus didn't always live in California). The layout of the book also makes it convenient to read and follow. A bar across the top of the page always tells you which project you're on. When enumerating the things required for the project, the authors use bulleted lists with clear explanations.
Another thing worth mentioning is the book's integration with the Web. The book's Web forums allow you to post questions and impressions from each specific project. The authors are also accepting submissions for new Linux Toys from the readers. The Web site in this sense is remarkable, as with too many technical books the so called "companion Web site" is not truly a companion, but a marketing pitch followed by a bookstore link.
Overall, I think Chris Negus and Chuck Wolber have done a very nice job. If I had more time, I would explore more of the projects personally (so far I am started on rebuilding my home network, but I do want to try out the digital picture frame, being a proud owner of Compaq LTE P100 laptop). The book would be a good read for anyone looking for some cool hobby projects, and perhaps would be a good gift for technically inclined kids, who are interested in technology.
Speaking from a different perspective, Linux Toys is the book needed by the open source community. While the usual arguments of being able to look at the OS's source code and concepts of Free software only vaguely interest most individuals, a book like this would spark interest in Linux OS as providing the opportunities to create a variety of cool toys and have fun doing it.
Read more of Alex's reviews of technical and tech business books. You can purchase Linux Toys: 13 Cool Projects for Home, Office and Entertainment from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to submit a review for consideration, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Mp3elf (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Mp3elf (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Mp3elf (Score:2)
Re:Mp3elf (Score:2)
You apparently do not like to build anything, not just simply take something apart. There is no challenge in that. Just make sure you have no left over pieces at the end?
Personally I believe most of us here would rather build something ourselves and hope that you got it all right on the first try. That is what is fun.
Re:Mp3elf (Score:2)
meh (Score:5, Funny)
how 1994.
Re:meh (Score:3, Interesting)
one, at a school that has a fast connection, it would be great to offer students who don't have internet access at home the ability to log on...(this is a project i tried for a few years to get going, but district politics...arghhh). two, many times you go on vacation (and don't have an AOL coaster, er, CD handy.) you call home for 4-5 minutes at midnig
Re:meh (Score:4, Funny)
Why would you want to download porn on your g-ma's AOL account? Isn't she in trouble enough from all those MP3s you downloaded?
TW
age? (Score:5, Funny)
I think you vastly overestimate the average age here on
Re:age? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:age? (Score:2, Funny)
Post pics of the x-ray machine when you finish it.
Missiles from Scientific American "Am. Scientist" (Score:3, Insightful)
I had played with model rockets powered by Estes rockets. Model rocket engines that now fall under terrorism regulations even though they're pretty small. This book discussed turning a metal rocket engine bell on a lathe, mixing your own chemicals for the propellant and pouring it it into the metal fuselage, etc.
On the one hand that's madness. It's one thing to
Re:age? (Score:2, Interesting)
It included instructions on creating your own Tepee and lounge chairs made of rows of freshly cut saplings.
We would have had to clear an acre of forest to complete that project.
Re:age? (Score:2)
Re:age? (Score:2)
Re:age? (Score:2)
Much more expensive now... (Score:4, Informative)
As far as buying the supplies surplus it seems that the people that have them readily available think they are gold and want around $100 to $500 for the apparant junk. It would be cool if you could collect the stuff on its way to the landfill however and use it. Thats where I got a lot of my computer pieces before I had money.
Re:Much more expensive now... (Score:2, Insightful)
Damn this article for coming out AFTER my families' Christmas. Maybe I'll stock up for ne
Re:Much more expensive now... (Score:2)
Maybe you should try finding a different "project" to do with your computer...
Re:Much more expensive now... (Score:2)
none besides the PC? (Score:2, Offtopic)
11. Temperature Monitor: here a temperature sensor kit from DigiTemp needs to be purchased and connected to the telephone cable, which, in turn, will connect to the parallel port.
13. ...The authors use a LynX-PORT board, a fairly expensive, but according to the authors, quite useful I/O bo
Re:none besides the PC? (Score:2)
Re:none besides the PC? (Score:2)
Have you noticed that you can't spell "awkwardly" without "awk"?
Re:none besides the PC? (Score:2)
Modern version of the book... (Score:5, Funny)
With Backward by Darl McBride
Evolution (Score:5, Insightful)
I actually have a small colection of books.... (Score:2, Informative)
Book reprints and other good info (Score:3, Informative)
Look at The Boy Mechanic Series volume 1: (1913) "700 Things for Boys to Do. How to construct wireless outfits, boats, camp equipment, aerial gliders, kites, self-propelled vehicles, engines, motors, electrical apparatus, cameras and hundreds of other things which delight every boy."
You get wall-to-wall projects that in most cases are not too detailed, but are more than enough to whet the appetite and make you want to get started. Build
Re:Evolution (Score:2)
Good Lord, man! Did you learn nothing from "The Breakfast Club"?
Re:Evolution (Score:2)
Really now. Dad has to have a garage, some 'spare' lumber, nailes/glue, power tools (table-saw/plainer/jig-saw/hole-saw/router), paint/stain, brushes, clamps, drop cloths....,....,.... too make a bird house. Not to mention a garage, basement or yard.
Do you think those things cost more than some old, virtually free hand me down techno-trash for the interested Geekish family?
Dont get me wrong, i am currently renovating a 100+ year proletarian brown-stone
It's Wolber (Score:5, Informative)
Re:It's Wolber (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:It's Wolber (Score:2)
Just messing with you!
BBK
Re:It's Wolber (Score:2)
Re:It's Wolber (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It's Wolber (Score:2)
plenty of things lying around (Score:3, Interesting)
P200 with decent screen?! (Score:1)
By the way, these things do cost a lot commercially, while P200 and lower laptops are virtually free.
Where do you find a P200 with a decent wide-angle TFT screen that hasn't got the fluorescent tube dimmed out/grayed up/flickering??
Re:P200 with decent screen?! (Score:2)
My last used laptop recently died...so I've been on the prowl for a replacement.
Old laptops and video drivers (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Old laptops and video drivers (Score:3, Informative)
Question for answering machine fans (Score:3, Interesting)
It made me wonder if there is there any free or inexpensive Linux software, even highly experiemental, for taking a voice file and producing a crude translation to text?
I notice that IVR systems nowadays aren't bad at translating "David Dennis" to my extension, so surely we should be able to translate speech to text.
I really, really, really, really hate listening to voice mails, so it would be so cool to do an answering machine that would create that. I know the project in the book can do text to speech, but speech to text, even crudely, seems a lot more interesting.
Thoughts?
D
Re:Question for answering machine fans (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Question for answering machine fans (Score:2, Insightful)
Lame. (Score:2)
Providing dial-up access? Web hosting business? Home network with a Linux box???!!!
Wow, what marvelous and exciting toys for a growing boy's mind. Clearly their editor wanted 13 "toys", and things got a little hairy towards the end, where they dump in extra hardware, etc.
Do you remember (Score:2, Funny)
Some of us were born in the 70's - 80's bub.
Re:Do you remember (Score:3, Insightful)
BSD has a similar book: (Score:5, Funny)
1. Managing graveyards
2. Payroll for gravediggers
3. Computerized coffins
4. Email from beyond the grave
5. Epitaph generators
$2200.00 for a digital picture frame? (Score:5, Insightful)
Product Page [ceiva.com]
The frame dials into the Cieva site and gets it photos from there based on the ID of the Frame. Charges for this are about $3.00-$8.00 per month or so. It's 5x7 frame, and works great for any of you that want your tech-unfriendly grandmother to see new photos of her grandkids.
Hijack this picture (Score:3, Funny)
Re:$2200.00 for a digital picture frame? (Score:3, Interesting)
Oh, and there's a fledgling linux-on-ceiva project that was my last enticement: I figured if granny didn't like it, I'd rip the guts out of it and make it mine.
For me, the ceiva 'Weatherchannel' with a 3-day localized forecast was the coolest thing
Thanks for the review! (Score:5, Informative)
We spent a lot of time working on the projects to get them just right for nearly every situation, so the instructions are very accurate. If you find a variation that doesn't work, be sure to submit it to us over at the website [linuxtoys.net].
If you don't mind, I have two corrections to your review:
1) My last name is spelled WOLBER (as noted in a previous post).
2) (SHAMELESS PLUG) I spend the majority of my time at my business [quantumlinux.com] rather than the LUG [taclug.org]
Re:done, done (Score:2)
No worries, thanks for fixing it!
-Chuck
RE: Digital Answering Machine (Score:3, Interesting)
For those that don't know, some public libraries offer a Dial-A-Story function for kids where they call up a local number and a recording plays a story that gets changed weekly or so.
I was trying to follow it as we are looking to implement something similar for an aging system that uses 8-track. I figure a low-cost, stable, low-maintenance, little-fuss system should do the trick for a public library.
Leo's hangup (apologies for the bad pun) was on tracking down a compatible voice modem to work with vgetty. I lost the trail since then.
Does any retail outlet sell compatible stuff or is it really a treasure hunt for one of those voice modems that work well with vgetty?
I figured it could be a cool thing to introduce Linux to a library that has seen nothing but MS products (thanks to a grant from the B&M Gates Foundation).
Re: Digital Answering Machine (Score:2, Informative)
Cool (Score:2, Interesting)
Linux Answering Machine (Score:4, Interesting)
The system is kind of cool though. You can set it up to email an ogg or mp3 to the voicemail box owner.
It also seemed to confuse the telemarketers too, before installing the system, we got several calls a day, now we get one or two a week.
Re:Linux Answering Machine (Score:2, Informative)
Asterisk is an AWSOME PBX system that doesn't get mentioned enough on
It's supported features [asterisk.org] are equivalent to a PBX costing several thousand bucks. Including support for VOIP and T-1(E-1)'s
Some of the other features include Voicemail, Conference calling, Caller ID, an Auto Attendant (press 1 for sales, 2 for support,), Call Queuing (for call centers), Call Detail Records, more [asterisk.org]
The documentation is a little sparse but they are currently working on the
Asterisk Han [digium.com]
Whee! (Score:3, Insightful)
Note: I'm not trying to bash on Linux...I'm just trying to point out that there are better ways to skin a cat.
Re:Whee! (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously if you don't concider building things (electronics, software, whatever) fun, then you are not a nerd.
I think you missed the point (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Whee! (Score:3, Informative)
Those are toys, not real routers. Fine for many SOHO uses, but not useful for real routing needs, while on the other hand using some nics, fast serial cards, and a linux box with IPTABLES can be (no
Re:Whee! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Whee! (Score:2)
Re:Whee! (Score:4, Interesting)
What are the best ways to skin a cat?
While I've never applied it to cats, here's a very slick way to skin most animals.
Note: If you've never been exposed to the realities of gutting, skinning and butchering animals, what follows may be somewhat disturbing to you. If this describes you, I recommend skipping this post. Reading it might interfere with your next juicy steak.
Start by cutting the skin from the genitals to the throat -- generally this is part of the gutting/cleaning process. Then cut through the skin forward of the ears, down around the side of the head and around the neck, taking care to make sure the cut around the front of the neck intersects the cut up the front. All of these cuts should go all the way through the skin to the subcutaneous fat, but not into the flesh underneath, obviously. Then cut all four legs off at the "knee", and slit the skin up the remaining stumps, connecting the cuts to the long cut up the belly/breast. Next, using the standard skinning technique of slicing the fat that connects skin to flesh, separate the skin of the top and back of the head from the head. The goal is to free a good flap of fur that includes the ears.
Preparation complete, here's the nifty part: Tie a rope (chain for larger animals, like mule deer) around the ears. A slipknot should allow the rope to tighten quite securely around the lump created by the cartilage in the ears. Tie another rope around the head (for deer, hook it to the antlers). Attach the rope on the head to some solid object (trees work well) and the other rope to some object that can pull. For small animals, a person or two can apply enough force. For large animals, a truck is recommended.
Next step: Pull. As long as you've got it cut in all the correct places, and as long is the animal's neck is intact (if it has been weakened by some sort of damage, it may separate) the skin should peel right off of the body.
This is a very quick and easy way of skinning a cat, but it can fail in various ways. In particular, it may damage or rip the pelt. If you just want the skin off, or if you just want some cat leather, but don't particularly need it all in one piece, this is a good approach. Most of the time it will come off cleanly, but there are exceptions, and if it matters, you should probably stick to a more manual approach. Obviously, if the neck or the pelt do break, you'll have to fall back on the manual process anyway.
I have a feeling that no matter what way I used, my daughter would be really, really pissed at me, though. :-(
Very true. Try it on the neighbor's cat.
GAH!! (Score:2)
Impractical? The reviewer must be quite young, or i'm just a dinosaur. Personally i quite enjoyed those "character-based games" (though i prefer to call them Text Adventures). In the days of FPS and classic literary works being turned into movies, perhaps some ppl lack imagination.
[/soapbox]
All in all, looks like an interesting read.
My own Linux toy project (Score:4, Interesting)
I wrote a quick-and-dirty program that would record from the soundcard, pipe the output into LAME, and break it up into 1-hour chunks. Later versions were a bit more sophisticated, using liblame instead of piping to a separate LAME process, and using libshout to send the output to a shoutcast server on localhost live.
There were also a couple cleanup shell scripts that would delete old files when the drive began to fill.
But probably the most interesting part was, it was web-accessible. I had a few quick-and-dirty CGI scripts that would make an HTML index of the files, and provide links to the files, and also links to
Rather than create an
Of course, I find out much later that mod_rewrite would probably have been a cleaner way to do it.
Naturally it had NFS and SMB access as well, so I could just pull up a show from any of my Linux or Windows machines over the network.
where? (Score:3, Funny)
Boy Mechanics were deadly (Score:4, Funny)
Some classics:
Fourth of July Fun - aka Pipe Bombs for the Feeble of mind
Classic Glider - They don't tell you that the original model killed the inventor Otto Lilienthal in 1896
How to manufacture Hydrogen or Acetylene for more explosive fun!
Thankfully today we only have idiots with the Anarchists CookBook in pdf format.
Re:Boy Mechanics were deadly (Score:2)
When I get on a commercial jet, they don't tell me that many people who flew on early planes were killed. It's pretty irrelivant, since designs have improved just a bit over the past 100 years.
Oh, sure, *now*. (Score:2)
My latest project was to hide the old laptop behind the tv and connect it up to one of the video in ports. Not the same thing as an always-on picture frame, but at least we could just push the tv input button and get the slide show for when guests come over, etc. Plus, biggest frmae you're gonna get :). The advantage to this app
Digitemp alternative ? (Score:2)
Re:Digitemp alternative ? (Score:2)
Re:Digitemp alternative ? (Score:2)
Linux Wonderland (Score:2, Interesting)
I used Apache, PHP and mySQL to orchestrate the whole thing. It had a web user interface to remotely view the Caller IDs, temperature/light values and also to switch ON and OFF lights (I drove my roommate nuts once with this feature)! The hardware required was a modem and X10 Fir
Help me find a book (Score:2)
Use and old Laptop Screen??? (Score:2)
That doesn't mean some engineer can't figure it out, but for even the average normally adept person this isn't a task worth taking on. If this huge supply of old 10-12.1" monitors was so easy to recycle into working monitors the whole w
Nope, reusing whole laptop (Score:2)
Actually, that's exactly what they're doing. This provides all the computing power necessry to run Linux and attach to a network. A laptop will work much better hidden behind a frame than a full sized PC.
I think most
book itself is pretty lame (Score:2)
My biggest gripe is they are only available in rpm format. I ended up using alien to convert them to debs but they still require some tweaking.
The book goes over a little (mostly stuff I already knew like init scripts and stuff) but I was looking for something a little more. (information wise) I don't want to just install some scripts and voila! I want to know what's going on and the book does little to
A web browser accessible mp3 player (Score:2, Interesting)
I plugged it into their LAN (and they plugged it into an RF transmitter) and through a web browser on any of their THREE machines they can see currently-playing tune
Linux Toys and LinuxToys.net (Score:2, Interesting)
FLAC Jukebox (Score:4, Funny)
The jukebox is killer, but the main reason I did all this was to permanently archive my CD collection. In the event it was destroyed or stolen, I would still have the master digital copies.
I don't think you need to use all that fancy database-driven jukebox software that he suggests in the article. I use plain old XMMS [xmms.org] in random/repeat mode, usually with every song from every CD in the playlist (this is guaranteed to impress the guests). If you structure your directory tree by music category (rock, jazz, new age, etc) then you can easily select playlists by category.
Of course, you will need a large hard disk in order to do this. I have one 120GB main disk, and another one for backup (yes I know it's not the most reliable backup solution), but large disks are getting so cheap that I'll probably buy another one for redundancy.
Anyone want to buy a 5-disc CD changer?
Top Seller... (Score:2, Interesting)
My project (Score:2, Funny)
Re:free laptops? (Score:3, Funny)
Just imagine a beow...... er ehem.....
Re:free laptops? (Score:2)
Re:free laptops? (Score:2)
Re:free laptops? (Score:2)
If you can't afford to drop about $200/mo on new toys...you seriously need to look for a new job/career...
I mean, unless you are a starving college student...this shouldn't be a problem I wouldn't think.
Re:free laptops? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:free laptops? (Score:2)
Re:free laptops? (Score:2)
If it's over, say, $50, then I hate to be the one to break it to you, but you can't afford $200/month for toys, either.
Damn, wish I had mod points right now. That's a fer-shure Funny/Insightful!
Re:arcade cabinets (Score:3, Funny)
Re:arcade cabinets (Score:2)
A friend of mine got all our cabinets and builds custom control stations. Mine is in an old Tempest cabinet...I have a 4 player station (joysticks and buttons) so I can play 4 player Gauntlent..plus trackball and spinner for other games (like Tempest). I still think Robotron is the best...
If you'd like to contact him about arcade stuff..email him at abefroman57@ya
Re:arcade cabinets (Score:2)
Re:arcade cabinets (Score:2)
Re:1000 projects for a boy (Score:4, Funny)
Re:DVR (Score:2)
I'm playing around building a media computer right now...have an old P3 600 I'm using...loading it up with harddrives. I've got quite a .flac library of my CD's now, and is great for parties (no one messes up the discs
Re:DVR (Score:4, Informative)
Just a suggestion, and so far it has worked out pretty good for me...
Re:DVR (Score:2)
Re:How to make my own PVR? (Score:2)
Freevo [sourceforge.net]
MythTV [mythtv.org]
Good Luck!