They actually do exist. Metal 3D printers.
Just slightly more expensive.
Ponoko - Ponoko - United States - Ponoko
They actually do exist. Metal 3D printers.
Just slightly more expensive.
Ponoko - Ponoko - United States - Ponoko
Someone made a food printer, too. Except everything it prints taste the same.
This actually looks quite cool:
https://getmyo.com/
I'm thinking of grabbing a Roomba, and probably hacking the hell out of it (I have a soft spot for robots, and my house being cleaned by robot servants is exactly the kind of thing I'd do.
Long-term I'd like to build my own home automation system, and tie everything from lights and heat to security and robotic cleaning into one unified system. That's a project still in the conceptual stages - need to start doing my homework on that one.
You ever try a pink golf ball, Wally? Why, the wind shear on a pink ball alone can take the head clean off a 90 pound midget at 300 yards.
That ones cake if you're willing to spend the money. There are plenty of home automation companies that makes network attached RF transmitters and software that can communicate with RF light switches, outlets, motors in blinds, etc, etc. Most of the time, you can even open up the right ports and access it from the internet while you're away. You have to buy all of the receptacles and change them... they aren't cheap, but not absurd, either. I could understand it if you wanted to go cheaper and try to build all of that yourself from scratch, but ultimately, I'm sure you'd find it isn't worth the time and risk that you might be going against some very strict electrical code.
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You ever try a pink golf ball, Wally? Why, the wind shear on a pink ball alone can take the head clean off a 90 pound midget at 300 yards.
Recently thought it would be a good idea to get shower taps that are digitized, so you can input a temperature.
Hmm, that's a pretty neat idea too. Especially for me; I don't shower at a single temperature for the entire time. I like hot showers, but jumping straight to the final temperature would be painful because the skin is naturally cooler after sleeping and warming too rapidly is painful. So I usually do the 'boiling a frog' approach and start with a warm shower that I gradually increase in steps as my skin adjusts to the warmth.
I do wonder if that problem works well with open-loop control (i.e. in a computerized program, there would be no biological feedback in the loop anymore).
You ever try a pink golf ball, Wally? Why, the wind shear on a pink ball alone can take the head clean off a 90 pound midget at 300 yards.
Would be cool to have closed loop feedback through your nervous system with a brain implant to keep the water right at your pain threshold.
Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted
- Albert Einstein.
No programming language is perfect. There is not even a single best language; there are only languages well suited or perhaps poorly suited for particular purposes.
- Herbert Mayer