Posted May 12th 2008 6:30PM by Eliot Phillips
Filed under: macs hacks
XBMC (formerly Xbox Media Center) has always been a popular choice for
retiring an original Xbox. Maybe people install it for lack of something better to do or maybe it's the pride in having better media support than the 360. The XBMC team has found another device that has a pretty weak television experience, the Mac.
Lifehacker took the latest XBMC for OSX beta build for a run now that it supports remote controls. It seems like a much more functional than Apple's built in Front Row. There are a few things that don't quite work yet, which you can
find in the FAQ. We're definitely going to try this on our old Mac mini... once we upgrade it to Leopard, which is an unfortunate caveat that might prevent people from running XBMC on legacy hardware. There is no Apple TV support planned because of limited horsepower and the hacking hurdles that might be required. If you're interested in repurposing your old Xbox with XBMC, check out
Lifehacker's install guide.
Posted Apr 15th 2008 12:58PM by Will O'Brien
Filed under: laptops hacks, macs hacks, misc hacks

I may hit my limit on DIY laptops soon, but [Ben Heck] has been extra quiet for a while. Now we know why. Just after the release of his
PS3 laptop comes his
Apple IIGS laptop. Thanks to [Ed] for the tip. It features original Apple hardware and even uses the original keyboard PC board. A CF drive adapter replaces the hard drive and a 15 inch screen shows off the true power of 8 bit computing.
Posted Apr 14th 2008 5:10AM by Will O'Brien
Filed under: laptops hacks, macs hacks, pcs hacks

[Phyro-Mane] sent in
his home built iMac mini. He based it on an old laptop with an install of
OSX86 XP with a mac theme. The forum is in German, but the photos in the thread speak for themselves.
Posted Jan 13th 2008 11:57PM by Will O'Brien
Filed under: macs hacks, misc hacks, pcs hacks

[Dave] sent in
his retro Mac project. Putting new guts into an old mac isn't really unheard of, but I liked his solution to use the original Mac 512k keyboard and mouse. He used an Atmel AT90USB162 to create his own standard USB HID device. The keyboard and mouse appear as a standard USB device, so the mac (or any modern USB PC) can identify use the keyboard and mouse without any additional software.
Posted Nov 1st 2007 9:36PM by Eliot Phillips
Filed under: macs hacks

Our friend [Rich Mogull] has been flipping the switches on Leopard's new firewall and scanning it to see
what's actually going on. There is some good and some bad. The new application signing is a mixed bag. It
breaks Skype and a commenter pointed out that automatically trusting Apple installed apps like NetCat isn't a good idea either. You can roll your own firewall using user friendly tools like
WaterRoof since ipfw is still included.
Posted Sep 20th 2007 4:47PM by Will O'Brien
Filed under: laptops hacks, macs hacks

Ever had a USB cable sticking out of your laptop bag? I've done it many time while I've been traveling. James built a
simple right angle USB cable so he could keep things tucked away and damage free. He epoxied a connector to some proto board, then soldered things back together.
Posted Nov 5th 2006 9:03AM by Will O'Brien
Filed under: macs hacks

Sure, you could
make it into a web server, but [markie] sent me his
Mac SE/30 visualizer. It was inspired by another's mac mod, but he was kind enough to write up an entire how-to. The audio signal was run directly into the deflection coils on the macs tubes. The mod is so simple, I might have to pick one up just for CRT experimentation.
[The next regular podcast cometh, but It's delayed by my cold.]
Posted Sep 5th 2006 1:44AM by Will O'Brien
Filed under: macs hacks

Macmod released some of the first entries for their contest. James and Mick submitted their M3 Mobile Mac Mini. That's a touchscreen lcd mounted in the rear, Up front it's equipped with video halogen lights and IR range sensors. The chassis is interfaced through a PIC 16F877A controller. You might want to check out the rest of the mods here.
Posted Aug 13th 2006 4:38AM by Eliot Phillips
Filed under: macs hacks
The Scalable Computing Laboratory has posted instructions on how to get Xen running on a Intel Mac mini. Xen is an open source virtualization system that lets multiple guest operating systems run on the same processor. The Mac mini is small, relatively inexpensive, and because it supports VT instructions you can run WindowsXP without modification. This makes the mini a really good choice for a hardware virtualization box. The install does have some quirks. You need a distro that uses lilo to boot because of Mac mini's lack of an A20 gate. Once installed you switch to a patched version of grub because that's what Xen requires.
[thanks steve, the good steve]
Posted Jul 25th 2006 12:00AM by Eliot Phillips
Filed under: macs hacks
Our friend [Markie] keeps insisting on dragging all of his old tech into the new millennium. In his recent article about cramming a non-airport WiFi card in his old iBook he hinted at another wireless project coming up. Well here it is: a wireless eMate. eMates were sold to the education sector as durable computers for classroom use. Markie had to build a serial cable to transfer the necessary software to the machine. With only 3MB of RAM and a 25MHz processor the machine isn't up for much, but it seems to work fairly well as a terminal.
Posted May 25th 2006 1:30AM by Eliot Phillips
Filed under: macs hacks
Feeling a bit nostalgic, reader [blurry] decided to write this Apple Game Server in Java using the rxtx library. The server eliminates the need for a floppy drive on your Apple //. You just need to connect the Apple // to your computer using a null modem cable and you will have access multiple games. To get started you tell the Apple // to accept serial commands. Then the Java program takes over, typing the loader program one line at a time. It takes about 15 seconds. Once that's done you're presented with a menu to boot whatever game you want.
Posted Feb 6th 2006 11:00AM by Eliot Phillips
Filed under: macs hacks
Hack-A-Day reader [Lee Olivares] stuffed a Macintosh Plus full of new hardware without butchering the case. From the original test fit he could see that the Mac Mini's DVD slot lined up well with the original floppy slot, so it just needed to be widened a little bit for clearance. The monitor is black and white, but a separate VGA port has been split off for an external monitor. The original motherboard was cut down so that the original power switch and ports could be used. Any new ports were hidden behind the battery cover.
[thanks Lee and Adam]
Posted Dec 10th 2005 11:00AM by Eliot Phillips
Filed under: macs hacks
This Powerbook 150 was purchased as a simple media reader. Once the hard drive failed the owner decided to replace it with a compact flash card since IDE adapters were available. There was a problem: the ATA device driver would probe the device and then immediately shutdown because the "identify device" bit wasn't the expected value. The device driver had been written before more recent changes to the ATA spec. Greg solved the problem by constructing a daughter card that plugs into the adapter board's 40-pin header and then flips the identifying bit when the device is initially probed.
[thanks iamdigitalman]
Next Page >
hack a day serves up a fresh hack each day, every day from around the web and a special how-to hack each week.
send us your hacks
have a hack you'd like to see here? tell us about it
Most Commented On (60 days)
Recent Comments