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The holiday break is a good time for 30/40/50/etc.-somethings to take trips down memory lane and dig up games from their childhood. For those of us who either don't have old systems in their attics/basements or who have grown bored with their contents, there are always emulators.
The hassle with emulators is finding games to play on them: if you have the original disks, you can, with some effort, transfer them to your computer. There's also the path of least resistance, downloading ROMs, but that opens up complicated set of legal and ethical issues. Another option is to find emulators that include the ROMs--legally. Here are a couple I've found:
Miner 2049er and Bounty Bob Strikes Back
Big Five Software, makers of two of the best old-school platform games, released a dedicated emulator that plays the 8-bit Atari computer versions of both.
Classic99
Harmless Lion obtained permission to include the TI-99/4a system ROMs and many TI classics, including Hunt the Wumpus, Parsec, and Tunnels of Do... (OK, I just lost about half the readers of the blog here. Oh, back so soon? I know you are just looking for info on how to play Tunnels of Doom).
(These two bundles are Windows-only, but they played fine for me under VMware Fusion.)
Parabellum's Java Vectrex Emulator
The Vectrex Game ROMs are available for free, which makes it possible for Vectrex emulator developers to include the games along with their emulators. This emulator is cross-platform; you can download versions for Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X.
PDRoms
Be sure to check out the wealth of homebrew ROMs available. These are created by the community, and although they aren't the games you remember from your youth, they have an old-school feel and many are as good as the best from the old days.
Know of any other legal emulator/ROM combos out there? I'm sure there are more; post them up in the comments, please! My wish? Shamus.


Gaming Hacks
It doesn't take long for an avid or just wickedly clever gamer to be chafed by the limitations of videogame software or hardware. If you want to go far beyond the obvious, there's an awful lot of free fun you can have, using the creative exploits of the gaming gurus. Gaming Hacks is the indispensable guide to cool things gamers can do to create, modify, and hack videogame hardware and software.

Retro Gaming Hacks
Whether you're just discovering Tetris or you've been a Pong junkie since puberty, Chris Kohler's Retro Gaming Hacks is your indispensable new guide to classic games. Kohler has compiled the how-to information that used to take weeks of web surfing to find and presents it in highly readable Hacks style.
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Ever since Twitter came out I've been developing mini-apps that connect it with other services and utilities. Some have stood up over time, esp the Flickr-to-Twitter and Twitter-to-Identi.ca functionality, and others have fallen into disuse. I thought that Voicemail-toTwitter was going to be a big one, but I don't use it much, though it's a simple call from my iPhone to create one and shoot it up to Twitter. All this experimentation was made possible by Twitter's simple API.
2. There should be a simple way to notify FF that a feed has updated. We developed such a capability in the blogging world and then the RSS world around a site I started called weblogs.com. The ping protocol it used is still widely supported today both on the sending side by blogging tools such as WordPress, TypePad, Moveable Type, Blogger, etc etc and on the receiving side by Technorati, Google, Yahoo you name it. There's even a centralized pinger started by Matt Mullenwegg, pingomatic.com, that makes it easy to send pings to everyone who cares. There's absolutely no doubt in my mind that FF should support this protocol, it's very simple, it would take a couple of hours at most to implement. There's even a simpler REST version of the protocol if the XML-RPC version is too much.
We received a few HTC ExtUSB connectors from PodGizmo. The first thing we thought of, was making the T-Mobile G1 send the audio to an iPod Speaker set we have. There is a sea of iPod accessories, so naturally the dock connector has a well known pinout. Figuring out the pinout for the HTC ExtUSB connector wasn't too hard, I just split open my hands free adapter I got with my T-Mobile Dash.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Cellphones | Digg this!
Hello folks I'm back again with my PC Mod pic of the day- Project: Passive, built by Ville 'Willek' Kyrö.

This guy went ahead and build a PC that uses all passive cooling, that is, no fans whatsoever! Let's take a quick glance at what he did, and I'll tell you why I think it's so awesome.
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Here's a short piece about challenging car-dominated car culture (and, to a lesser degree, high-priced bike shops) in an unlikely city:
(via Treehugger)
We've got the Yellow Bike Project in Austin, which has suspended its bike-earning program while building out a new space but has kept a very-respectable commnity bike repair shop in action. What does your community have to help denizens create their own green transportation?
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These lovely images were created with PSCombine, a random image combiner program. From the site:
I've written a program that randomly selects photos from my collection and then combines them with a random opacity and blending mode. Generally, I generate 5,000 random combinations then manually sort though them and select my favorites. About 1 in 150 make the cut.


Only for Windows and Photoshop CS3 or CS4. Download here. via NotCot
Loic Le Meur wants Twitter's search to emphasize people who have more followers over those that have fewer. I think this is a bad idea. On FriendFeed, Jeremiah Owyang wants priority given to people he follows. This is a better approach, imho. Loic's means centralization, and Jeremiah's goes the other way, it shards search into many networks, and lowers barriers to entry, where Loic's approach raises them.

Happy birthday Louis! French chemist and microbiologist Louis Pasteur was born 12/27/1822 pioneered the creation of vaccines for rabies, anthrax and helped developed pasteurization (he helped invent the method to stop milk and wine from causing sickness). Drink up!

Urban Studies - For Geeks, a Frat House and Lab, All in One - NYTimes.com... Great article on NYC Resistor!
Diana Eng is one of seven women in the collective. A former contestant on the television series “Project Runway,” she created a sweatshirt with a digital camera embedded in the hood that takes a picture when the wearer’s heart rate is elevated, creating snapshots of the day’s excitements.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Culture jamming | Digg this!
“My designs were too nerdy for ‘Project Runway,’ ” Ms. Eng said with a giggle. “But here they fit right in.”
To help pay the rent, the collective offers classes for $25 each on topics from basic electronics to the art of laser-cutting Christmas decorations.
The group’s success has not gone unnoticed.
“Resistor blew the doors off the scene here,” said Eric Moore, a hacker from Bushwick who is forming his own group. “They’re the next generation of American hacking. The rest of us are just trying to catch up.”

I love the funny and characterful scenes that Lenny & Meriel manage to capture with their Sparebots sculptures -- like this dude, obviously ready for a bellyful of button cell.
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Stair Porn blog has amazing images of unusual and creatively designed staircases - check out the beautiful Lello Bookshope staircase in Portugal.
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The idea of building with bottles isn't new, but most existing bottle buildings have fallen into disrepair. It's rare to find such a perfect and intact edifice as the bottle chapel built by restaurant owner and folk artist Martin Sanchez.
Sanchez has created an urban oasis, a Garden of Eden, hidden behind shrubs, trees, and a wrought-iron fence at his Tio's Tacos restaurant in Riverside, Calif. Sanchez' complex is located on a city block near the historic Mission Inn, and has several outdoor elements that he's continually creating, appending to the complexity of his design.
There's the sculptural chapel made out of ferro-cement, beer and soda bottles, bits of tile and glass, and fabulous statuary from his home country of Mexico. There are several gardens created out of found objects -- trash and ephemera otherwise thrown away -- that he's rescued and put to his own visionary use.
Down garden paths made of stone and bottle caps, remnants and rummage, you're led to a unique urban environment where broken Barbie dolls and other children's toys grow like flowers amidst the tree branches and handmade wrought-iron arches.
Sanchez has been working on his creation for almost ten years. Patrons of the restaurant can walk beneath cooling streams of water flowing from a fountain garden made of broken pieces of clay and old pipes, discarded bicycles, and other items. There's an incredible path through an archway lined in tubing that's pumping jets of water, creating an obstacle course where one can walk without getting wet.
Inside the restaurant, tile mosaics of sea creatures such as lobsters and marlins cover the tables and floors. Sanchez welcomes everyone to view his beautiful creation, and he hopes it will bring the viewer as much joy as it has brought him to build it.
>> Tio's Tacos: makezine.com/go/sanchez
From the column Made on Earth - MAKE 13, page 29 - Marlow Harris.
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They usually work so well, it's easy to forget about all the electronics crammed inside a compact fluorescent light bulb. MAKE reader Ollie AJ1O sent us a link to ham Michael J. Rainey's (AA1TJ) "Das DereLicht" radio, a transmitter made almost completely from the parts of a defective CFL bulb.
This electronic puzzle was a result of my changing a defective compact fluorescent lamp (CFL) in my kitchen. For some reason, I began to wonder if it would be possible to build a QRP CW transmitter using the electronic components salvaged from this derelict lamp.
Indeed, I'm pleased to report that a perfectly serviceable transmitter may be constructed! The only additional components required were the quartz crystal, and four of the five components needed for the output lowpass filter. The resulting transmitter produces up to 1.5 watts on 80m.
For all the hams out there: what's the coolest radio hack you've created or heard of? Send us a shout in the comments.
Das DereLicht - Ham Radio From A CFL Bulb
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Dig the psychedelic service provided by Apple Authorized Service centers back in the day. Far freakier than today's Genius Bars. Detail above. Joel posted the full painting over at Boing Boing Gadgets.
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Probably only a mockup, but such a wonderfully weird idea that I wanted to share. From Momentum:
Iron SaddleRead more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Bicycles | Digg this!
Who hasn't suffered from 'cold butt' while riding in winter, at least in the northern parts of the continent?... A battery, a 12 volt iron (without steam option) and voila! Toasty Buns! And of course if you are truly nimble you can iron your clothes while you ride.
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