Triklits Video
I uploaded a low quality video taken with my cell phone. The first 3 minutes is a silent tour of the 30+ built in effects. At the 3 minute mark, you’ll see some of the effects and transitions I’m building into my script download app.
Update: I uploaded the app I wrote this weekend to download animations from a url to run on the lights. Details here.
Day one with Triklits!
I just picked up a box of Triklits from Mark of Network Wizards. I’ve been looking forward to these for a long time – I’m glad they are now available!
Triklits is a string of 24 lights. Each light can be assigned an RGB value. Inside each light are 3 leds (red, green and blue). The lights are $100 per set and have around 30 preset patterns including fades, blinking, etc. Each preset pattern has variations that you can set with a second button. I’ll put up a YouTube video tomorrow.
For an extra $25, you get a USB controller. This is where the real fun is going to be for me. The RGB values for every light can be changed 50 times per second. This is going to rock. C source code is supplied for the USB interface and is tested to work on XP.
I’ll update this post throughout the day as I play around with it (in between feeding Charlie, etc).
Thoughts:
- These lights are BRIGHT.
- The power supply never seems to get hot or even warm.
- The lights seem to be well designed and well constructed.
- You need a USB (printer style) cable and an RJ11 phone cable to connect the lights to your computer. I dug both out of my cable box.
- Doh! Don’t have cygwin installed on this computer (how is THAT possible?). Installing now.
- Attempted to make a video with my phone (CU320), but the lights are too bright and don’t look great with the crappy phone camera. I’ll stop by work tomorrow and use the company camera.
- Cygwin install was painless as usual.
- Mark’s notes suggest recompiling the test apps to specify the com port XP assigns your lights. Another option is to set the com port in device manager. Click on Ports, then Communications Port for USB4. Choose Port Settings, Advanced, Port Number. I set mine to COM 10, the one used in the test apps and everything works fine.
- Other blog posts about Triklits and Mark’s Burning Man 2006 installation. Google Blog Search and Technorati. Phil at Make has some nice things to say, too!
- YouTube has a video of Mark’s Burning Man creation (made of 100s of trilit strings). Another. More videos at the project site. Don’t look at this one if you are prone to motion sickness.
- Recompiling the driver and the test apps works as expected.
- The ethernet interface is going to be handy when it’s available.
- I built a very simple c app that sets the light colors based on the contents of a url. I want to add more transitions to the program, so that’s the next step.
- The supplied source code is easy to modify. I expect there will be several apps, soon, that will make it easy to customize patterns from your computer.
Update: I uploaded the app I wrote this weekend to download animations from a url to run on the lights. Details here.
Roady XT XM Radio – $60?!
I’ve heard great things about this radio. At $60 (with a built in FM Transmitter), it’s getting hard to resist the pull of XM!!
Origami/UMPC Video, Photo Comparison
WinFuture.de has a great video up on YouTube of the white UMPC from TabletKiosk.
Meanwhile, umpct.com is pointing to a photograph of the Nokia 770 against the Samsung UMPC. The image is reportedly from Internet Tablet Talk, but I couldn’t find it there.
