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In the last few years, the world of hobby robotics has exploded. Driven by the plummeting prices
and ubiquity of microcontrollers, servomotors, and other electronic and mechanical components,
the growth in personal fabrication technologies, and the success of such commercial toy, hobby,
and domestic robots as Lego Mindstorms, the Robosapien line, Japanese mini humanoids, and
iRobot's cleaning machines, robots are finally becoming rather commonplace (if still only in
niche domains). And, of course, the robot growth being seeded by these new technologies is
watered by the Big Muddy of the Internet, with its rapid information and idea exchange. The next
generation of engineers and industrial designers who'll build tomorrow's robots are growing up
with Vex kits and Arduino microcontrollers in their hands today.
For our MAKE Robot Gift Guide, we've put together a sampling of robot-related offerings from the
Maker Shed, as well as some other robots we fancy. If you
give or get any of these bots for the holidays, or especially if you or your recipients, hack
them, we'd love to hear about it.
Fully-Assembled Robots
i-Sobot
I was given one of these last holiday season to review. At the time, I was pretty
impressed that TOMY was able to offer such a sophisticated mini-humanoid for the price (which was
then around $250 street). Now, sadly, after a year, TOMY has decided to discontinue the product.
But that means we can offer them in the Maker Shed for $106!. That's a very attractive price for
a very hackable little robot, making it the perfect gift for any techno-tinkerer on your list.
This 6 1/2"-tall humanoid uses 17 servomotors to somersault, stand on one leg, do push-ups,
perform martial arts. It has 180 pre-programmed movements, responds to verbal commands, and
performs up to 240 movements in sequence, allowing you to design countless routines, such as
programming the device to say "hello," introduce himself, play an air guitar, bow to his
audience, and say "good night." Using the included action chart as a guide, you simply enter the
alphanumeric codes into the remote control and i-SOBOT reacts in earnest with acrobatics, verbal
phrases, and greetings, or you can control his movements manually using the dual joysticks and
trigger buttons on the remote. In voice recognition mode, the robot moves in response to ten
verbal prompts, such as "Go forward" or "Back up," and acknowledges questions like "How are you?"
with appropriate retorts. Ages 10+.
Price: $105.95.
Robots-Dreams.com has some links to i-SOBOT hacking-related resources here.
Rovio Mobile Webcam
We've been fans of WowWee and their growing line of robots since the first Robosapien. Along with
iRobot, WowWee has been pioneers in making robot technology commercially viable. To date, most of
WowWee's product line has been robotic toys. So we were excited to see them offering a more
practical robotic system -- Rovio, a Wifi-enabled mobile webcam you can control from any
Web-enabled device over the internet. One of the first commercially-viable robot applications
iRobot looked into was basically the same sort of webcam on a robot which would allow remote
tele-presence. So, WowWee comes along with a really killer-looking three- (omni)wheeled,
semi-autonomous bot you can control over the Web for under $300. It's a start, but Rovio is
definitely still in beta. We've only had a day to mess with ours, but we've already encountered
many of the problems early users have cited: poor camera performance, especially in middle-to-low
lighting, poor audio on the mic, docking station problems, unreliable waypoint navigation, and
other annoyances. Also, in an ironic turn-about, the Windows network set-up is pretty much plug
'n play, while the Mac set-up is a little gnarlier. So, we can't recommend Rovio if you're
looking for a home/office mobile sentry (what the device is basically marketed as), but it has
all sorts of great hacks potential and there's already an enthusiastic hacking community that's
started figuring out how to extend capabilities, control it with the Wiimote, and other promising
improvements. And we have to mention the design -- it's seriously cool and the glowing blue LED
running lights make it look like something, well from that 21st century that hasn't actually
happened yet. In the hands of a robot hacker, this is a really fun system with lots of potential.
For everyone else, wait for the next version when WowWee will hopefully fix some of the
significant problems. Price: $299.99
Wrex the
Dawg
Meet Wrex, the first commercial "junkbot," or so he's been made to look. A dog that only Dr.
Frankenstein could love, Wrex appears to have been cobbled together from discarded electronic and
mechanical parts. He's a literal junkyard dog. His personality is also stitched together. He has
various moods and needs, he can become incorrigible, and he will even go haywire and break down
on occasion. His rolling jackpots eyes spin around and have symbols on them that display his
moods and desires. He's a cross between Astro from The Jetsons, Scooby Doo, and codeHound (codeHound, you
say? It's an early Net-culture thing. I'm old). Like a lot of these highly motorized toys, this
thing eats batteries like they were Scooby snacks. The bot requires four Cs and two AAs, the
remote takes three AAAs. And be careful getting Wrex out of the big, impressive box he comes in.
It's a major undertaking, and cheap, easily-stripped screws are involved. All-in-all, this is an
adorable, slightly screw-loose robo-pet that kids will definitely love (and your inebriated adult
friends at holiday parties). I can't wait to see how he might get hacked. Price: $119.99
a
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2008 has been one of the most significant years for that strange and peculiar ragbag of eccentric
genii that made up the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. After sadly limping along for many years, the
organisation closed its doors a decade ago, one of the more poignant victims of cheap digital
technology and the bedroom aesthetic. This collection of releases is tellingly significant in terms
of the Workshop’s importance. nbsp; nbsp; The unaccountable legacy, though, is an imaginative
one. How many people in this country associate the future with electronic sound, and the Workshop
could well be the reason why. For those growing up from the beginning of the 60’s onwards,
television had the power to bewitch, an art form still capable of having a spectacular feel of the
event. nbsp; nbsp; Through providing jingles, effects, incidental music, theme music for TV and
radio (especially for educational school programmes) the Workshop enjoyed a truly inestimable
influence. Their output reached the lives of millions, every age and every walk of life, way beyond
the reaches of even the biggest of rock bands. They set a precedent by marrying electronic sound
composed in the most painstaking and laborious manner imaginable and elevated the sometimes
cheapest of images into something uncanny. Maybe the role of Dr Who cannot be over-estimated
enough- a pop cultural phenomenon possibly as significant as Elvis but wildly stranger.
I've got a question for all of you knowledgeable Mac devotees. I am waiting to purchase a 20" IMac
in mid-January (that's when I will have the funds available) and I couldn't be more excited. Wow,
who would've ever thought I could be so excited to purchase a computer. The anticipation is killing
me!
Anyway, I was at Best Buy the other day test-driving an IMac and I noticed that the one I was using
had a planet earth background that was a beautiful pic of the earth that was showing our lovely
planet in real time. In other words, it was a background showing the earth while it was rotating
(from a satellite?) in real time. Is that background a Mac application or is that something that's
available for Macs and PCs? I'm purchasing the IMac for home use but I'd love to have that
background for my office PC (sadly, that's all my office uses). Is that available?
Unlike another
automaker out
there, Fisker Automotive's eco-friendly vehicle looks a whole lot like the concept, and while
the Tesla Roadster is certainly a
sexy beast, we're having an exceptionally difficult time taming our fondness for this ride. The
$80,000 $87,000 plug-in hybrid has been officially revealed ahead of its "debut" at the 2009
Detroit Auto Show, but sadly, it seems that the '09 ship date has already slipped to "late 2010."
We can't say looking at the gorgeous pictures make that fact any less depressing, but they're all
there in the read link if you care to indulge.
div align="center"a href="http://reviews.cnet.com/2300-10895_7-10000054.html"img vspace="4"
hspace="4" border="1"
src="http://www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com/media/2008/12/12-4-08-prod_fisker_karma_s.jpg" alt=""
//abr //div Unlike a
href="http://www.engadget.com/2008/07/09/gm-dropping-volts-range-from-600-to-360-miles/"another/a
automaker a
href="http://www.engadget.com/2008/09/08/chevy-volt-rolls-out-into-the-open-at-long-last/"out
there/a, Fisker Automotive's eco-friendly vehicle looks a whole lot like the concept, and while the
Tesla Roadster is certainly a a
href="http://www.engadget.com/2008/11/24/production-tesla-roadster-gets-glorious-hands-on-stifle-your-en/"sexy
beast/a, we're having an exceptionally difficult time taming our fondness for this ride. The
$strike80,000/strike $87,000 plug-in hybrid has been officially revealed ahead of its "debut" at
the 2009 Detroit Auto Show, but sadly, it seems that the '09 ship date has already slipped to "late
2010." We can't say looking at the gorgeous pictures make that fact any less depressing, but
they're all there in the read link if you care to indulge.br /br /[Via a
href="http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13746_7-10113388-48.html?part=rssamp;tag=feedamp;subj=Crave"CNET/a]pFiled
under: a href="http://www.engadget.com/category/transportation/" rel="tag"Transportation/a/pp
style="padding:5px;background:#ddd;border:1px solid #ccc;clear:both;"a
href="http://www.engadget.com/2008/12/04/production-fisker-karma-gets-revealed-shakes-that-sexy-thang/"Production
Fisker Karma gets revealed, shakes that sexy thang/a originally appeared on a
href="http://www.engadget.com"Engadget/a on Thu, 04 Dec 2008 22:10:00 EST. Please see our a
href="http://www.weblogsinc.com/feed-terms/"terms for use of feeds/a./ph6 style="clear: both;
padding: 8px 0 0 0; height: 2px; font-size: 1px; border: 0; margin: 0; padding: 0;"/h6a
href=http://reviews.cnet.com/2300-10895_7-10000054.htmlRead/anbsp;|nbsp;a
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rel="bookmark" title="Permanent link to this entry"Permalink/anbsp;|nbsp;a
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divimg alt=""
src="http://hits.guardian.co.uk/b/ss/guardiangu-feeds/1/H.15.1/30502?ns=guardianpageName=UK+news%3A+School+closures+and+road+chaos+after+heavy+snowch=UK+newsc3=The+Guardianc4=Weather+UK+%28News%29%2CTravel+and+transport+environmental+impact%2CEnvironment%2CUK+news%2CTransport+UKc5=Not+commercially+useful%2CEthical+Livingc6=Helen+Carterc7=2008_12_05c8=1129110c9=articlec10=GUc11=UK+newsc12=Weatherc13=c14=h2=GU%2FUK+news%2FWeather"
width="1" height="1" //divpHeavy snowfall caused traffic chaos and prompted more than 300 school
closures in the north yesterday as central and southern areas of England were deluged with rain.
/ppUp to 10cm (4in) of snow fell in north-east England and south-east Scotland as a wet weather
front from the Atlantic met cold air which has been sitting over the country. /ppStrong winds
caused drifting snow on higher ground, forcing roads to shut, or lane closures on dual
carriageways. There were numerous road accidents in North Yorkshire and County Durham./ppAround
15cm of snow fell in the Scottish Borders, and hazardous conditions were reported on roads in
Northumberland, Tyne and Wear, County Durham and across Yorkshire. /ppConditions on the M62 across
the Pennines at Huddersfield were appalling, and parts of the A1 in Northumberland were down to one
lane. Police said the A66 transpennine road was closed westbound from North Yorkshire to
Cumbria./ppIn Greater Manchester 86 schools in Rochdale were closed, 15 in Bury did not open, and
nine in Oldham were closed. A Rochdale council spokeswoman said: "Decisions to close schools are
not taken lightly, but health and safety has to be the priority." A further seven schools were shut
in Bolton. In neighbouring Lancashire there were 70 schools shut for the day, and 34 were closed in
Cumbria. /ppThe Met Office warned that there were frosty and icy surfaces in many northern and
central areas. There was misery for air travellers, Leeds Bradford airport was badly affected, with
13 flights cancelled./ppLancashire police urged drivers to travel prepared with enough fuel for
their journeys, de-icer and warm clothing as "even routine journeys can spell disaster if you are
caught out by bad weather", said Inspector Phil Cottam, of the force's motorway unit. /ppThe army
was mobilised to rescue 70 people trapped in their vehicles by heavy snow early yesterday morning,
according to Lancashire police. They were called in when 50 vehicles got stuck on one of east
Lancashire's busiest roads - the Grane Road. /ppThe road was closed between Helmshore and the M65
at Blackburn at around 7.30am as snow ploughs could not get through. Lancashire police and council
workers assisted two army off-road vehicles to assist the stranded motorists. The road was
re-opened after four hours./ppPolice warned motorists in certain areas to only make necessary
journeys. The road between Greenfield in Oldham and Holmfirth had been shut after gritters failed
to keep it clear./ppIn parts of east Lancashire and Bury many cars had been abandoned by motorists
earlier in the week. William Hill said it had taken a record number of white Christmas bets for
this time of year. /ppHills currently offer 2/1 for snow in Edinburgh, Aberdeen Glasgow and 4/1 for
the major English cities./pp"White Christmas betting is normally a fun festive flutter, sadly it
will be anything but fun for us should the forecast snow fall," said its spokesman, Rupert Adams.
/ppOfficers in Greater Manchester and Merseyside are warning drivers not to leave their cars
running while they defrost them. There have been 20 vehicle thefts reported in Greater Manchester
since the cold snap began on Monday. /ppChief Inspector Chris Gloster, of Greater Manchester
police, said: "People can be tempted to leave their car engine running on a frosty morning while
they keep nice and warm inside their house. However, it only takes a few seconds for a thief to
steal a car when the keys have been left in the ignition. /pp"It is not only high-powered vehicles
that are targeted and so our advice to all drivers is to stay in their vehicle when defrosting and
if at any time they need to leave the car to make sure they lock it, remove any valuables and take
the keys with them." He said motorists may not be insured if the vehicle was left unattended with
the keys in the ignition./ppTemperatures are expected to rise over the weekend./pdiv style="float:
left; margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px;"ullia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/weather"Weather/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/travelandtransport"Travel and transport/a/lilia
href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/transport"Transport/a/li/ul/diva
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this content is subject to our a
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ismap="true"/img/a/p
Ed Morrissey / Hot Air: The
sadly obligatory SCOTUS birth-certificate post — The Chicago
Tribune briefly revives the Obama-birth-certificate kerfuffle in an update today, if only to
throw more cold water on it. Tomorrow, the Supreme Court confabs over whether to grant a
review to Leo Donofrio's lawsuit after having …
pThe only thing a href="http://www.lilyallenmusic.com/" target="_blank"strongLily Allen/strong/a
has to fear isn't "The Fear", judging by the video for this song from forthcoming LP a
href="/article/news/146946-lily-allen-announces-new-album" target="_blank"strongemIt's Not Me, It's
You/em/strong/a; it's MOR. Apparently it really emwas/em us, not her, all along: If detractors of
Allen's debut LP a href="/article/record_review/37420-lily-allen-alright-still"emstrongAlright,
Still/strong/em/a were supposedly put off by the colloquial wisdom of a shit-talking independent
woman, there's a bit less of that here ("fucking fantastic" aside), and a lot more soothing
Dido-ish hooks ready for your next Bed, Bath, and Beyond shopping experience. "I am a weapon of
massive consumption," Allen quips, her talent for wordplay intact if a bit behind. Nor does the
video spare any expense, showing Allen in a Veruca Salt-like (the Roald Dahl character, sadly, not
the band) wonderland of butlers, balloons, and presents. Daddy Warbucks had Annie, and we've got
Lily. Too bad we're broke. (via a href="http://www.thecultureofme.com/" target="_blank"strongthe
Culture of Me/strong/a)/p p object classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" width="480"
height="295"
codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"
param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" / param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" / param
name="src" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/q-wGMlSuX_camp;hl=enamp;fs=1" /embed
type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="480" height="295"
src="http://www.youtube.com/v/q-wGMlSuX_camp;hl=enamp;fs=1" allowscriptaccess="always"
allowfullscreen="true"/embed /object /p p[from emIt's Not Me, It's You/em; due 02/09/09 in the UK
and 02/10/09 in the U.S. on stronga href="http://www.regal.co.uk/" target="_blank"Regal
Recordings/a/strong]/p pa
href="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/EYtq6djU9F8sCW_K47_etRejZEM/a"img
src="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/EYtq6djU9F8sCW_K47_etRejZEM/i" border="0"
ismap="true"/img/a/pimg src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/pitchfork/today/~4/FQlJqa-OMO8"
height="1" width="1"/
pI'm not sure how many hours of my adolescent and teenage life I spent watching standup comedy on
TV (it seemed like every channel had a standup show). But I don't think it was a waste of time, and
expect to spend more hours browsing through the newly launched a href="http://www.jokes.com/"
target="window"Jokes.com/a site. br / centerbr / img alt="comcentral_finnegan.jpg"
src="http://blog.clickz.com/comcentral_finnegan.jpg" width="322" height="240"/centerbr / Comedy
Central has revamped the site in a big way. It's not just a facelift. They literally had multiple
editorial people plowing through standup video from their archives going back about 10 years,
attributing metadata to countless clips, and slicing and dicing shows into individual jokes, or
thematic riffs. /p pa
href="http://comedians.comedycentral.com/bill-hicks/videos/bill-hicks---plastic-surgery"
target="window"Watch Bill Hicks/a mocking creationism on the "A-List." Or check out a
href="http://comedians.comedycentral.com/bob-odenkirk/" target="window"Bob Odenkirk/a in his early
(awkward?) standup days. You might have to sit through an in-stream ad first. (Sadly, they don't
have that old a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yXLUncbZKbs" target="window"Brian Regan bit
about little league/a.) /p pOf course, there are lots of younger (and living) comedians, too. And
one of 'em, a href="http://comedians.comedycentral.com/christian-finnegan/"
target="window"Christian Finnegan/a, was at the launch lunch at Comedy Central HQ yesterday
(pictured here in his cool 'Mats shirt). /p pSure, all that editing and metadata-ing work
facilitates SEO. But there's another interesting and potentially revenue-generating outcome. The
site's content -- which also includes text jokes and text versions of the video bits (yes, more
SEO) -- can be readily organized according to theme. The Comedy Central folks created hundreds of
tags for Jokes.com content (George W. Bush, Gross-Out, Marriage). /p pThat means they can easily
generate a page dedicated to a certain theme or themes for a sponsor. Take McDonald's, which will
sponsor a football-themed video section in conjunction with the Superbowl. br / /pimg
src="http://feeds.clickz.com/~r/clickzblog/~4/474933536" height="1" width="1"/
Planning a day one purchase of a href="http://ps3.qj.net/tags/guerrilla-games/12143" id="tag"
title="Game Developer"Guerrilla Games/a' a href="http://ps3.qj.net/Killzone-2/cid/228"span
title="Killzone 2 for PS3" style="font-style: italic;"Killzone 2/span/a? Mark your calendars, then.
The game's been dated for a February 27, 2009, release in a
href="http://ps3.qj.net/tags/north-america/2901" id="tag" title="a continent in the Earth's
northern hemisphere and almost fully in the western hemisphere"North America/a. Well, at least the
rumors got one number right.brbrThis news was announced on X-Play. The same episode also revealed
two new weapons: the Bolt Gun and the Flamethrower. If you didn't catch the episode, you can check
those out along with the release announcement in the vid at the end of the article.brbrAnyway, now
that the game's North American release has been confirmed, what about other territories? Sadly, we
don't have word yet on release dates outside North America. Keep checking back here for more
updates, though.brbrp style="text-align: center;"object id="VideoPlayer" height="418"
width="480"param name="movie" value="http://www.g4tv.com/lv3/35328"param name="allowScriptAccess"
value="always"param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"embed src="http://www.g4tv.com/lv3/35328"
type="application/x-shockwave-flash" name="VideoPlayer" allowscriptaccess="always"
allowfullscreen="true" height="418" width="480"/objectbr/pbrhr style="width: 100 ; height:
2px;"brspan style="font-weight: bold;"Related articles:/spanbrullia
href="http://www.qj.net/Rumor-Killzone-2-drops-on-February-17-Sony-responds-with-not-confirmed-/pg/49/aid/126539"span
title="Rumor: Killzone 2 drops on February 17; Sony responds with 'not confirmed'"
style="font-style: italic;"Rumor: Killzone 2 drops on February 17; Sony responds with 'not
confirmed'/span/a/li/ulbrbrimg src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/qj/ps3/~4/vMW5XJG2oOU"
height="1" width="1"/
We don't get out too often (blogger skin burns easily); the closest to the great outdoors we come
is squinting longingly through windows gone opaque thanks to lack of cleaning. We'd nearly resigned
ourselves to a life lived of dim illumination, but now have new hope thanks to Winboni, an
award-winning prototype robot from four mechanical engineering students at Michigan State
University. The 5 x 5-inch bot uses a fan to stick to the window (not unlike like Takara Tomy's
wall-climbing
AeroSpider, makes a great gift), and
relies on two AA batteries to motor itself around the window, scrubbing all the while. We
definitely like the concept and its promise of extra light for our dwellings, but until this thing
can find a way to get from one pane to the next without us having to get out of our chairs we'll
sadly have to keep squinting through the grime.
div style="text-align: center;"a href="http://media-newswire.com/release_1080602.html"img
vspace="4" hspace="4" border="1" alt="MSU's Winboni robot cleans windows, wins awards"
src="http://www.blogcdn.com/www.engadget.com/media/2008/12/winboni-20081203-600.jpg" //abr / div
style="text-align: left;"We don't get out too often (blogger skin burns easily); the closest to the
great outdoors we come is squinting longingly through windows gone opaque thanks to lack of
cleaning. We'd nearly resigned ourselves to a life lived of dim illumination, but now have new hope
thanks to Winboni, an award-winning prototype robot from four mechanical engineering students at
Michigan State University. The 5 x 5-inch bot uses a fan to stick to the window (not unlike like
Takara Tomy's wall-climbing a
href="http://www.engadget.com/2008/10/01/takara-tomys-wall-climbing-aerospider-rc-car-ships-this-month/"AeroSpider/a,
makes a a href="http://www.engadget.com/2008/12/01/engadgets-holiday-gift-guide-for-son/"great
gift/a), and relies on two AA batteries to motor itself around the window, scrubbing all the while.
We definitely like the concept and its promise of extra light for our dwellings, but until this
thing can find a way to get from one pane to the next without us having to get out of our chairs
we'll sadly have to keep squinting through the grime. br /br /[Via a
href="http://www.therawfeed.com/2008/12/students-build-window-washing-robot.html"The Raw
Feed/a]/div /divpa
href="http://www.engadget.com/2008/12/03/msus-winboni-robot-cleans-windows-wins-awards/"
rel="bookmark"Continue reading emMSU's Winboni robot cleans windows, wins awards/em/a/ppFiled
under: a href="http://www.engadget.com/category/household/" rel="tag"Household/a, a
href="http://www.engadget.com/category/robots/" rel="tag"Robots/a/pp
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href="http://www.engadget.com/2008/12/03/msus-winboni-robot-cleans-windows-wins-awards/"MSU's
Winboni robot cleans windows, wins awards/a originally appeared on a
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Monster Cable is a href="http://www.techdirt.com/search.php?site=#038;q=monster+cable"famously
litigious/a over its trademark -- suing just about ianyone/i who uses the name "Monster" as a part
of their corporate offering. Most of these lawsuits are bogus -- as trademark only covers the
specific areas of business you're in, and doesn't give you complete control over the name. Thus, if
you make a a href="http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20080722/1513011763.shtml"salt lick/a for deer
called Monster Deer Block, you shouldn't have to worry about a lawsuit from Monster Cable... but
you'd still get one, as pretty much everyone from the TV show Monster Garage to the Boston Red Sox
(for the "Monster seats" on top of the "Green Monster" wall in left field) have found out. br /br /
Earlier this year, the company went after a small mini-golf operation in California called a
href="http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20080515/1940111131.shtml"Monster Mini Golf/a, which we
doubted anyone would confuse with the cable makers. Apparently, that wasn't the only Monster Mini
Golf that Monster's lawyers were busy hassling. a href="http://addic.tv"Chris Collett/a alerts us
to the fact that a Rhode Island based Monster Mini Golf is a
href="http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem#038;item=250335844365" target="_new"also facing
a lawsuit, and asking for help/a. But, there's an interesting twist here. The company is pleading
it's case a href="http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem#038;item=250335844365"
target="_new"on eBay/a, and asking people to contribute to its defense fund via eBay. I'm not sure
if this goes against eBay's terms of service, though I hope it doesn't: blockquotei BUT...one man
is destined to crush what we have built. He is the founder of Monster Cable Inc. (a company that
makes Audio cables) and he's suing us for "Trademark Infringement". br /br / In a nutshell,
trademark infringement is based solely on "Likelihood of Confusion", or essentially, "could the
average consumer be confused between the two?". The answer is no, as decided by the Patent and
Trademark Office when they granted our trademarks, but Monster Cable Inc filed an opposition
against that decision, and sued us. br /br / To this day, this one man has opposed approx 400
companies...and it doesn't look like he EVER intends to stop. This is the true meaning of Corporate
Bully. br /br / Their tactic is to run the smaller companies out of money, and force them into a
settlement where they surrender their name to Monster Cable Inc, who then licenses it back to them
for a fee. Yes, so then we would be paying him for a concept and business we created and have
worked very hard for! It is essentially extortion, but sadly, it is cheaper than going to trial,
which can be crippling to small businesses like ours. br /br / Unlike the 414 companies he has
forced into settlement by bleeding them dry.... we have decided to continue on and fight the good
fight. We have chosen to stand up for anyone who has ever been bullied, picked on, abused, or
otherwise forced into an unfair or unjust situation by a bigger, stronger, (or in this case,
richer) opponent. br /br / Each small business that was forced to sign over their name is one more
brick in the massive Monster Cable Inc wall, held together by the blood of those crushed beneath
their corporate wheels. It is very very sad. br /br / So far our legal fees are well over $100,000.
(And counting) and will likely reach $250,000 when all is said and done. No wonder why 400
companies have waived the white flag!! 250K is the cost of "Winning"!! We need your help, we cannot
afford to do it alone. Wondering if this is real or not...just google Monster Mini Golf and Cable.
Or visit audioholics web site and you will also read about many other cases there as well. br /br /
What we are selling is a "Piece" of our legal defense and a small slice of Justice to you for $1.
Yep, just a buck....and as Sally Struthers once said, that's less than a cup of coffee! Geez...at
Starbucks, it wouldn't even buy you that! br /br / In return for your gracious purchase, you will
receive a heartfelt "Thank You" from us and the knowledge that you have helped defeat a corporate
bully who has been abusing the legal system for years! And, if you print your paypal receipt and
take it to any Monster Mini Golf location, we'll take $2 Off a round of Mini Golf! (that's double
your money back! Reg price for 18 holes is between $5.50-$7.50) /i/blockquote This is interesting,
as I hadn't heard that Monster Cable was apparently iselling/i the Monster name back to people it
bullied. That's even more obnoxious -- and a clear abuse of trademark law. Also, it's been a while
since we've seen companies using a href="http://techdirt.com/articles/20031218/101247.shtml"eBay
auctions for PR/a, so maybe that's making a comeback. Either way, if you want to help stop one of
the biggest trademark bullies out there, maybe try to buy a share of the legal defenses, and hope
eBay doesn't take the auction down.br /br /a
href="http://techdirt.com/articles/20081203/1332043008.shtml"Permalink/a | a
href="http://techdirt.com/articles/20081203/1332043008.shtml#comments"Comments/a | a
href="http://techdirt.com/article.php?sid=20081203/1332043008op=sharethis"Email This Story/abr / br
style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=8d99090b556f8667c4475f241988bb29p=1"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=8d99090b556f8667c4475f241988bb29p=1"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=8d99090b556f8667c4475f241988bb29" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/div class="feedflare" a
href="http://feeds.techdirt.com/~f/techdirt/feed?a=nqmHo"img
src="http://feeds.techdirt.com/~f/techdirt/feed?i=nqmHo" border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feeds.techdirt.com/~r/techdirt/feed/~4/474046231" height="1" width="1"/
a
href="http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/video/Zimbabwe-Hiding-Cholera-Epidemic-United-Nations-Says-Almost-500-People-Have-Died-But-Skys-Emma-Hurd-Hear-The-Numbers-Could-Be-Far-Higher/Video/200812115171289?lpos=video_Article_Related_Content_Region_1lid=VIDEO_15171289_Zimbabwe_Hiding_Cholera_Epidemic%2C_United_Nations_Says_Almost_500_People_Have_Died_But_Skys_Emma_Hurd_Hear_The_Numbers_Could_Be_Far_Higher"Zimbabwe
Hiding Cholera Epidemic/a. Sadly, no one knows what the real death toll numbers are. a
href="http://blogs.news.sky.com/frontlineblog/Post:a281aecf-2823-49cc-aebe-0be4693f838d"First hand
report/a from Sarah Jacobs with a href="http://www.savethechildren.org"Save The Children/a. Morgan
Tsvangirai, backed by former President Carter: a
href="http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/africa/11/26/zimbabwe.crisis/index.html?iref=mpstoryview"Zimbabwe
is in shambles...deaths from starvation and a cholera outbreak threaten to surge with the rainy
season approaching./a br / Please consider giving this season - the economic downturn is going to
be hardest on the poorest of our world. Here are a few clicks to get you started:br / br / a
href="http://www.savethechildren.org"Save The Children/abr / a
href="http://wvi.org/wvi/wviweb.nsf"World Vision/abr / a
href="http://technoserve.org/"Technoserve/abr / a href="http://www.care.org/"CARE/abr / a
href="http://www.theirc.org/"International Rescue Committee/a
Alright, it's been over a year since I last posted here. Been busy :(:D
My rig right now consists of:
AMD64 3200+
2 GB PC3200
Evga 6600
a 350W PSU
I have a few questions for you guys if you wouldn't mind :)
I want to get either the Powercolor or Sapphire HD 3850 AGP to replace the ancient 6600 in this
rig. That being said:
1. Will my PSU be able to run the card? Replacing the PSU isn't an option sadly.
2. Which drivers would you recommend if I actually get the card. And what about all this hotfix
stuff I read everywhere?
Now I know regardless that I am going to be seriously bottlenecked on this rig if I get the 3850.
But realisitically, what kind of performance increase would I be likely to see over my current 6600
card? I mean, I don't expect to be able to run Crysis maxed out or anything. But GTA4 on this rig
runs at literally 2 or 3 fps. I just want to know if I could actually play it at a decent frame
rate with some details not on super low :(
I've had a few friends tell me to get the 3650 instead of the 3850 due to the PSU issue, but I've
also seen many people online comment how they run the 3850 on a 350W PSU with no trouble. So, I
don't know what to do. What do you guys suggest?
a
href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/03/education/03college.html?partner=rssamp;emc=rssamp;pagewanted=all"Sadly,
colleges are one track/a to become a
href="http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2006/09/12/keeping_college_unaffordable/"unaffordable
for most Americans/a. br /
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