Archive for the 'gadget' Category

iPhone Headset Roll-Up Box

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009
iPhone headset / earbud mess

iPhone headset / earbud mess

I struggled for a long time with the unbearable mess of the iPhone headset cord. It always snarled and contained several knots even after rolling it up properly and then putting it in my pocket. The rough rubber surface of the cord did encourage this mess.

Kinder Surprise Egg

So I thought for a while about using a yellow “Kinder Suprise” egg box and some holding mechanism to roll up the cord within the box.

But until now I didn’t come up with a proper holding mechanism. While zapping through a gadget-blog this evening and after having sorted a big box of Lego® these days I got it. Just use a lego bar with holes to make the holding mechanism.

Lego Technics Bar with holes

Lego Technics Bar with holes

So although it was past 2 AM I started tinkering with that. Using different sizes of the lego bars, putting slots at different sides and trying out different glues I found a really good working solution. Unfortunately it’s not yellow :( – the yellow ones did not move that smoothly.

iPhone headset cord box

iPhone headset cord box

The steps to create that are simple. First take a Kinder surprise egg, open it and eat the chocolate. The build whatever is inside the yellow box. Afterwards use a tool to make two holes (one big enough to fit the headset mike through it) in the larger piece of the box. Then take a dremel or whatever tool (saw) to cut a slice into the lego bar that is big enough for the cord. At last glue the opposite end of the bar to the middle of the smaller surprise box. If needed put some oil onto the rim.

Steps and tools for creating the iphone headset cord box

Steps and tools for creating the iphone headset cord box

Done

Take your headset and run it into the holes so that both ends of same length hang outside the box.

Box with iPhone headset cord

Box with iPhone headset cord

Put the part with the lego bar into place and see that the slice grabs the cord.

Turn both parts of the box in opposite directions

Turn both parts of the box in opposite directions

After turning both parts of the box until all the cord is wound up you are finished. Unroll the cord by just pulling on both ends.

iPhone headset cord partly pulled in

iPhone headset cord partly pulled in

That’s it.

Have fun

Lego Baby Spielzeug

Saturday, December 6th, 2008

Lego Technics Verbinder sind ein tolles Babyspielzeug:

Vorteile

  • viele Farben
  • abwaschbar
  • unzerbrechlich
  • 3 verschiedene Oberflächen zum ertasten mit Hand & Mund
  • gute Größe für Babyhände und Münder
  • billig

On LEGO Powered Time-Tracking; My Daily Column

Friday, August 1st, 2008

I’ve had troubles with time tracking my worktime for all the years. I always found this to be a tedious burden and inconvenience. So one morning in my blue hour (reading in a cafe before work) I spent the time pondering the alternatives.

I started listing software and realworld solutions to timetracking that are possible and tried to contemplate if they would (or had) worked out for me.

software:
spreadsheets
plain text files
browser based timetracking
Outlook/iCal
popup applications/widgets asking for the current task

corporeal:
sticky notes
paper
tally sheets
notebook
diary / filofax

But none of these seemed to work sufficiently for me. But the arrangement of events of a day in iCal struck me as beeing a stack of time boxes atop each other. Having played recently with my daughters legos (duplo), I quickly jumped on the thought of using them to build these stacks in the real world.

the lego box of 600 pcs, no 6177
So I bought an box of 600 legos from amazon for around 19 Euros. Opening the package showed me that fortunately there was a variety of colors (white, black, brown, red, orange, yellow, green, chartreuse, blue) and lots of different sizes (lengths) and two widths (one row and two rows of studs).

the content of the lego box
As a child I hated these one-rowers as they were not useful in building stuff. But here and now they seemed a perfect fit. Small enough and in the right sizes. I chose a time partitioning of a quarter of an hour. So I can use the lengths 1,2,3,4 to build 15,30,45 and 60 minutes worth of time in a row representing an hour.

Stacking these hourly rows on top of each other builds up the whole day. I use the different colors for the projects I’m involved in (8 are just enough), putting them on the stack whenever I want and have time to do so (but mostly quite instantly).

a single day of work as a column of lego bricks
I made up a single width column as ruler for the work hours (from at around 10 am up to 6 pm). So I can easily see whats missing and at what time I did something. For the days of the workweek I chose the rainbow color scheme (red, orange, yellow, green, blue – Monday to Friday) for the longer base row that I stack my hours on. So I can gather a whole week of time tracking until I have to enter them in some time sheet (software). I put the columns of a whole week on top of a green building plate to fix them.

a whole workweek as lego columns on a green plate
You can easily see how much work you did for any given project as you recognize the colored areas rather than time ranges (8:45-11:15). Having the relative time shares as part of this setup helps as well.

You can even plan your work by prebuilding your days on temporary bases with the planned amount of time for each activity (or putting at least the estimated amount of bricks aside).

The benefits are obvious:
it works (for about 4 months now)
I have something to play with while pondering stuff
it looks great
it’s incredibly fast with no overhead
planning is possible

The single disadvantage:
coworkers coming to your place and disassembling your time tracks


I’m still looking for a great name for the whole thing. Here’s what I have collected by now:
Names:
BrickLog
Daily Column
TimeStack
TrackStack
The timeful way of building

I appreciate any suggestion for a great name.

One last thing I have been thinking about is getting these daily columns recorded automatically. So using your webcam or phone camera, you just hold the “day” in front of it. After taking the picture it is processed. The extracted information can be used in any possible way.

Update: I started writing a small java application that shall exactly do this. It’s almost finished, so stay tuned. Writing the data to iCal should pose no problem as well.

Early preview image of the scan application:
rastered time column

Update:
Post on Lifehacker
InfoQ follow up article.


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