A cactus door handle

It’s hard rubbish collection in our neighbourhood again.

hard rubbish day

I’m always amazed at the amount of junk the apartment buildings manage to vomit up onto the foot path.

cactus arm

My friend Tim found an arm off a wooden cactus decoration. Apparently two separate junk piles were sprouting wooden cacti. I love this sort of bizarre repetition.

cactus arm and door rod

I decided the cactus arm would make a good door handle. I drilled a hole in the base of the arm and hammered a square door-handle shaft into the hole.

attaching the cactus door handle

I then fitted the square shaft in the door and re-attached the other door handle.

cactus door handle

And here it is, a (rather large) cactus door handle.

If you have something similar at your place, let me know.

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Droog design and the bootleg objects project.

I’ve just been in Sydney for the weekend and had an opportunity to go browsing through some good book shops. I came across the new book by Droog Design, simply droog. I hadn’t looked at Droog closely before now, but I was aware that their work was probably relevant to my masters research (and I should have looked them up sooner).

Droog Design do a lot of object modification, they talk about making the object critically aware of itself. In cases were the designs don’t involve the modding of an existing object, such as ‘do hit’ and ‘do break’, the owner is encouraged to ‘do’ their own post-production modification. A visit to www.droogdesign.nl provides an almost endless array of information and is well worth the effort. Their new ‘100% hypertext’ site is yet another example of design that is critically aware of itself – the hyping of hypertext.

On page 34 of simply droog I discovered the ‘bootleg objects’ project. This is a design project by Max Wolf, Markus Bader and Sebastian Oschatz (details can be found here). The project involves the modification of classic stereo components to include an MP3 file server (and various other interesting bits of technology). One of these stereo components is a Bang & Olufsen Beocenter 1400. It’s been modded to include a slot loading DVD drive, an LCD display and a smart card reader. Operation of the new functions is via the original slider control. The Beocenter 1400’s design is comparable to the Beocenter 4600 and the whole project is alarmingly similar to the modding project I’m currently undertaking.

When I started my modding project it was not under the delusion that I would be breaking new ground but neither did I expect to be following directly in someone else’s footsteps. I’ve been viewing my project as a computer case mod, adding to the diversity of an already bizarre case mod world. This is such a dense field that similarities to existing case mods weren’t really a concern (I would have been surprised if they didn’t turn up). What has me concerned now is that the ‘bootleg objects’ project isn’t situated in the case mod field, it’s firmly located within a design context and this is also the context of my masters. What are the implications of completing a design project that other designers have already addressed?

After giving this much consideration I have decided to continue with my B&O case mod. I have contacted Max Wolf to inform him of my project, whether it is of any relevance to the ‘bootleg objects’ project remains to be seen. I hope that the questions raised by my projects relationship to ‘bootleg objects’ turn out to be helpful and productive. The ‘bootleg objects’ project will definitely inform and influence my masters research.

[The response from Max has been positive – thanks Max. He has also further developed the Bootleg Objects series, check it out at www.bootleg-objects.com]

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An mMa LOG

Along with providing internet browsing for the CLUBS project multipleMISCELLANEOUSalliances, I was asked by KNOTWORK (a collaboration between Mick Douglas and Katie Bowman) to set up a program that would allow them (and other artist and visitors to CLUBS) to add text to a continuos, scrolling list. Basically a text log. I decided to use an old Macintosh SE30 I’d picked up in the local hard rubbish (the machine is kind of log shaped).

SE30 mMa LOG
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Two drives on a PowerBook IDE bus?

I thought I’d try attaching two drives to the internal IDE bus on my PowerBook (Wallstreet). Using the IDE cable I’d constructed earlier I hooked up a 6GB hard drive set to master and a CD-ROM set to slave. The HD turned up on my desktop, but the CD-ROM didn’t. After trying a heap of different master/slave/cable combinations and not getting anywhere I decided to read the PowerBook Developers PDF. It says stuff like I/O channel select; not used on this computer and Device active or slave present; not available on this computer so it seems that the internal IDE bus will only support one drive. I’ll have to use either the SCSI bus or the expansion bay to connect a CD player.

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Attaching a desktop hard drive to a laptop

** Amendment: Before you embark on this journey (or maybe you’re just spectating?) I should let you know that, thanks to an industrious modder, you can now buy an adapter to connect a desktop drive to a laptop IDE connector. Check out this forum for details. **

I’m using a laptop for my MP3 computer mod, but I want to use a large, cheap desktop hard drive with it. This became strangely complicated. Although there seems to be an adaptor for every other connection you could possibly want to make in computer land, there doesn’t seem to be a simple solution for this. You can get an adaptor for connecting a laptop HD to a desktop IDE bus but not for connecting a desktop HD to a laptop IDE bus. I decided to make my own.

Powerbook WallStreet HD connector

The HD connector for my Powerbook G3 (Wallstreet) looks like this. It’s a fairly common situation were the laptops 2 1/2″ HD plugs directly into the connector. I needed to convert this to the larger 3 1/2″ style connector. I couldn’t find a male 2 1/2″ connector to plug into the existing socket so I decided to modify an adapter that’s designed to attach a laptop HD to a desktop IDE bus – these are quite common, I got mine for about AU$5.
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