Category Archives: Gadgets

Mark Rober makes his cap fly at MIT Graduation

The Chork

Biggest Foosball Game

Why Soda Cans are shaped differently in Hawaii

What it’s like to drive a 100 year old electric car

How TETRIS was born

Happy Birthday, Max Headroom

Max Headroom - Wikipedia
April 4th, 1985 –

Wikipedia Article

Linus and Snoopy Cup

Ride on Landspeeder

Why “silent” light switches are illegal

but your wife wants a new kitchen…

A Treadmill Crane

Miniature Paper Jack Skellington’s House

Stairway to Heaven on a FRETLESS BASS!

How does a gas pump know when to stop?

How a Fire Engine Works

Anniversary of the first Android phone

Released on September 23, 2008, the world’s first Android phone had one mission: to challenge the iPhone. And in that goal, it succeeded. It was chunky (17mm), had a low-resolution display (320×480), and didn’t have a virtual keyboard, thus forcing users to bang away on the tiny pop-out keyboard. It also utilized a quirky trackball and physical buttons for navigation. Still, T-Mobile sold more than a million G1s in its first six months of availability.

Read all about it over on PCWorld.

This massive truck makes artificial earthquakes!

An electric fence for… FISH?

Anniversary of the TRS-80

It was with minimal expectations that, on August 3, 1977, Tandy Corporation teamed up with Radio Shack to release the TRS-80, one of the first personal computers available to consumer markets. While Don French — a buyer for the Tandy Radio Shack consumer electronic chain — had convinced some Tandy executives of the need to release a personal computer, most felt it was unlikely to gross substantial profits. This bulky item with complex operating procedures would never sell, they thought, more than 1,000 units in its first month… As it turned out, the TRS-80 surpassed even the most cautious sales estimates by tenfold within its first month on the market; the burgeoning prospects of a new era in personal electronics and computing could no longer be denied. It had no hard drive and four kilobytes of memory, according to the article. Radio Shack’s $600 PC was preceded by the MITS Altair, as well as PCs from both Apple and IBM, but “the TRS-80 was one of the first products that came fully assembled and ready to use, bridging the gap in accessibility between hobbyists — who took interest in the actual building of the computer — and the average American consumer, who wanted to know what this new, cutting-edge technology had in store for them.”