Cubeecraft is a site that features a new cube based papercraft toy/character each week.
Each toy is designed with interlocking tabs, so there’s no need for tape, glue, or other adhesives, and you simply print, cut, and fold your way to a cute and fun paper toy.
When a laptop ages, it’s easy to ponder a replacement for the outdated machine.
However, with some new software, outside the box thinking, or hardcore hacking, an old laptop can also take on a new life as a server, a photo frame, a backup, and more.
If you’re interested, Lifehacker’s got the guide to turn your old machine into a new toy, so check out the list to see what you can do with yours.
This Battery Eater might not do much, but it sure does look good while getting every last drop of juice out of your AAs. Just put your battery in the magnetic mouth, and the LED eyes blink away the remaining power.
Urban Monarch and Modern Drunkard put together two great guides about how to score free drinks when you go out. Put down the credit card, and slowly step away.
Artist Felix Beck created a non-visual graffiti project called Soundbombs, “innocuous-looking 6-inch plastic shells that broadcast short clips (lines from Shakespeare, flatulence, or anything else you record) to unwitting passersby”. He doesn’t sell them, but instead takes applications, and prospective users must tell him where they will use it and how much they’re willing to pay. Get loud.
Sodium Laurel Sulfate, and ingredient in toothpaste, blocks sweet sensors on your tongue, which explains why orange juice tastes so bad after you brush.
Stuart Haygarth created the Tide Chandelier out of man made debris that washed up along a stretch of the Kent coastline. “The sphere is an analogy for the moon which effects the tides which in turn wash up the debris”.
BallDroppings isn’t as much a game as it is a performance art piece, but if Line Rider can be thought of as a game, then so should BallDroppings dammit. The website describes BallDroppings as:
An addicting and noisy play-toy. It can also be seen as an emergency game. Alternatively this software can be taken seriously as an audio-visual performance instrument.
A series of balls fall from the top of the screen, and the “goal” is to draw lines with your mouse that the balls can then bounce off of. The balls make noise when they hit the line, and the pitch depends on the speed of the ball when it strikes. Surprisingly, no matter how you draw out your playing field, you’re almost guaranteed to have a pleasant sounding Zen device in the end. Give it a try, and I’ll get back to practicing BallDroppings, because I think I’ve almost won.