Waxy: The Onion: Bush Dragged Behind Presidential Motorcade For 26 Blocks

Posted by on under presidential motorcade, staircase, crocodile, onion, kidney, briefs, bush |

latest in a series of briefs, including Bush Passes Three-Pound Kidney Stone, Crocodile Bites Off Bush's Arm, and Bush Tumbles Wildly Down Washington Monument Staircase  
Tagi: presidential motorcade, staircase, crocodile, onion, kidney, briefs, bush

Waxy: The Onion: Bush Dragged Behind Presidential Motorcade For 26 Blocks

Posted by on under presidential motorcade, staircase, crocodile, onion, kidney, briefs, bush |

latest in a series of briefs, including Bush Passes Three-Pound Kidney Stone, Crocodile Bites Off Bush's Arm, and Bush Tumbles Wildly Down Washington Monument Staircase  
Tagi: presidential motorcade, staircase, crocodile, onion, kidney, briefs, bush

Engadget: A tale of two Pico-ITX mods

Posted by on under sinclair zx81, cyberspace decks, timex sinclair, project aces, case modders, membrane keyboard, th guy, search and seizure, designer drugs, usb keyboard, secd, pico itx, technological breakthroughs, old game, cut throat, true measure, case mod, gibs, mey, |


As William Gibson once wrote, "the street finds its own uses for things." Of course, the future he envisioned was populated by cut-throat characters with names like Dex Cowb0t, mercenary-types who made their money the only way they knew how: with custom cyberspace decks, hopped up on designer drugs like "splurge" and "spazz." What he never understood was that the only true measure of a technology is its ability to aid a bored populace in its pursuit of nostalgia and novelty. And by these standards, the Pico-ITX board might be one of the most important technological breakthroughs of its time (roughly 2007-2010 CE). Where would the hackers and case modders of our humble era be if it weren't for this guy? They wouldn't be shoving PCs into old Game Boy cases, that's for sure. Case in point: the Linksys Bt320g seedbox project places VIA's EPIA PX10000G mobo and a 320GB HDD in an old Linksys shell (and a 400GB HDD in a second router). The man responsible doesn't say whether or not this one was intended to thwart they copyright police in the event of a search and seizure, but on the other hand we're assuming that he isn't going to be seeding OpenOffice on the thing either. If retro computing's your bag, we've found a Timex Sinclair ZX81 case mod that should bring you considerable joy. Unfortunately the membrane keyboard's been disabled, but if you don't mind using a USB keyboard with a machine that originally sported 1KB RAM (at a whopping 3.25MHz), you might want to hit the read link and see how it's done.

Read - Linksys BT320G case mod
Read - Sinclair ZX81 turned into PC

Filed under: Desktops

A tale of two Pico-ITX mods originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Dec 2008 12:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments


Tagi: sinclair zx81, cyberspace decks, timex sinclair, project aces, case modders, membrane keyboard, th guy, search and seizure, designer drugs, usb keyboard, secd, pico itx, technological breakthroughs, old game, cut throat, true measure, case mod, gibs, mey,

Digg: And you thought McCain was an impolite debater...

Posted by on under mccain, parliament, romania |

Two candidates for a seat in Romania's Parliament got into a ridiculous debate that ended... mmm, you better watch it.


Tagi: mccain, parliament, romania

In the UK, a Few Tweets Restore Freedom of Speech

Posted by on under oil trading company, libel lawyers, libel laws, uk parliament, slashdot, freedom of speech, mdash, guardian newspaper, tweeters, toxic waste, public record, gag, 19th century, bloggers, scandal, parliament |

Several readers wrote to us about the situation in the UK that saw the Guardian newspaper forbidden by a judge from reporting a question in UK parliament. The press's freedom to do so has been fought for since at least 1688 and fully acknowledged since the 19th century. At issue was a matter of public record — but the country's libel laws meant that the newspaper could not inform the public of what parliament was up to. The question concerned the oil trading company Trafigura, the toxic waste scandal they are involved in, and their generous use of libel lawyers to silence those who would report on the whole thing. After tweeters and bloggers shouted about Trafigura all over the Internet, the company's lawyers agreed to drop the gag request.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Tagi: oil trading company, libel lawyers, libel laws, uk parliament, slashdot, freedom of speech, mdash, guardian newspaper, tweeters, toxic waste, public record, gag, 19th century, bloggers, scandal, parliament