|
Recycling your iMac as lamp. |
|
Written by Chris Tangora
|
|
Wednesday, 09 July 2008 |
The early iMacs are icons of the computer industry. They broke new ground in giving computers colors and "flavors" to choose from. While their meager MHz CPU's can even come close to touching modern day machines, they are still easily recognizable by almost anybody who has been around computers for the past 10 years.
So what to do with the old iMacs that are dying off? Graeme Sheridan decided to make use of his by turning it into a floor lamp. A word of caution before you read on. The old iMacs are CRT displays. The wires inside can carry a DEADLY amount of electricity, and the tubes can implode if not handled properly. Do not remove the CRT unless you are trained in CRT handling. MacMod does NOT suggest you remove your CRT yourself.
With that said, click here to go to his mod in our misc. mod section and see how he did it.
Comments (5) |
|
|
Duct Tape can do anything. |
|
Written by Chris Tangora
|
|
Monday, 07 July 2008 |
Okay. So all modders know that Duct Tape can fix almost anything. We've also seen a lot of stuff made out of the wonderfully tacky material. But now we get to see it used for something, err, good? The Duct Tape Server II (DTS II) is the second of the duct tape servers. I missed out on the first one, so this is new to me. The original Duct Tape Server (DTS I) collapsed, so this one is built a bit more rigid and with more sides to support it's weight.
DTS II is made out of over 11 rolls of Duct Tape (9 gray, 2 translucent & a bit of black) and packs a modest computer to top. Running a 2.2 GHz Pentium with 1GB of DDR RAM and an 80 GB hard drive. The DTS II was used as a Teamspark server, FTP server and Armagetron Tournament in the Million Man Lan which finished up on the 6th.
Duct Tape really can do just about anything.
From DuctTapeServer.com via engadget, with a thanks to Jacob.
Be first to comment this article |
|
|
Japanese Anime Mod a unique taste |
|
Written by Chris Tangora
|
|
Saturday, 05 July 2008 |
Japanese modders Kanna Higashi & Katsuya Matsumura have a unique taste, Anime. They have built a simple computer with an extraordinary case named "KANA ". The Anime character is based around Vinyl Chloride Pipes (PVC) and Styrene Foams (Styrofoam), with a modest 1GHz CPU on the inside. The exterior was made with a resin, then painted and re-assembled.
The computer was built originally back in the day (2004), this is still an interesting mod to take a look at. Lots of details went into making the mod.
ERN005-PC *KANA* via kh-vids.net
Comments (2) |
|
|
Overclocking the MacPro made easy |
|
Written by Chris Tangora
|
|
Sunday, 29 June 2008 |
So this looks pretty promising from our German friends at ZDNet.de. ZDNet has released an application that allows you to overclock your Mac Pro for free. The ZDNet Clock Tool 1.0 for Mac Pro allows you to grab some extra processor powers for all Mac Pros. It has been tested with the first generation and the latest generation of the Mac Pro with some success. According to the article on ZDNet.de the 2.66 GHz first generation MacPro can run at 3.1 GHz and remain stable, while the recent MacPros start off at 2.8 GHz and can be clocked up to 3.24 GHz.
The overclocking does come at some cost, mainly a possibly unstable system and an increased system clock. ZDNet is working on fixing the clock issues with future releases, but the unstable atmosphere may never go away (as that is the nature of over clocking). Waking up from a standby mode may cause the overclocking to reset, and the app may even cause some Mac Pro's to not be able to reboot.
This software seems more like a beta than a release, but if you are interested in overclocking in a safe way (a hard reboot sets it back to normal) give this a look. No reports of totally hosed systems yet, so it is far safer than a hardware hack.
Read more at ZDNet.de via MacRumors.com
Download ZDNet Clock Tool 1.0 here.
Be first to comment this article |
|
|
Leopard Peeps - Tweaking your Terminal |
|
Written by Jacob Thomason
|
|
Monday, 16 June 2008 |
If you are anything like me, you live in Terminal. Over the years Mac OS X has become a very beautiful OS and looks nice. With the release of Leopard, Apple finally gave Terminal the much needed upgrade. You can now have multiple tabs, window groups, and even theme your window. Thats all well and good, but Apple left off some pretty important parts, like color coded text for highlighting different things in code and your directory structure. Also, the stock themes that Apple offers are kinda lacking.
So, during my quest to improve some of these pitfalls, I came across Todd Werth's blog on Infinate Red. Todd details how you can add color coding and a new theme he created thats quite nice, simple and black. So, if you live in Terminal as much as I, this is def worth a look.
Todd's install instructions
O yea, on a similar note. Every wondered what "sudo rm -rf /" would do to your mac? Watch!
Comments (3) |
|
|
|
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>
|
| Results 19 - 27 of 123 |