Do It Yourself CD Changer 183
SuperDuG writes "This is a true homebrew solution to saving a few bucks when it comes to cd changers. And to make it even better the whole setup is controlled by none other than linux. Seems like a nice setup to do batch burns without user interaction. Source is provided if you wanted to build your own." Not sure if this is very practical, or even if it would be cheaper than buying a changer, but it sure looks cool.
Now that's a *true* hacker (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Now that's a *true* hacker (Score:5, Interesting)
I am however much more impressed by his organ [sentex.net] as he does not only need some manual skills but also a good ear to set it up.
Re:Now that's a *true* hacker (Score:4, Funny)
Too easy, dear god! Must...not...become...Slashdot...troll...!
Not only is he a true hacker... (Score:4, Informative)
1. Rather than buy a printer for his C64 back in the day, he elected to build a home made plotter [sentex.net] and make several improvements along the way. It's quite impressive!
2. Before digital imaging was even remotely on the minds of personal computer users, he constructed a slow but functional low-res scanner [sentex.net] That has to be a hallmark of a true hacker--his creations may not be practical and are of limited use, but they are fascinating and forward thinking.
3. Sometimes hacks really do save money, like this multi-megapixel digital camera [sentex.net] made from a cheap $100 scanner at a time when most decent digital cameras cost 10 times that much. Sure, it took 30 seconds to take a pic, but it served the purpose for non-action photography and when motion was involved it could produce some interesting effects.
(bows down) I'm not worthy....
Re:Not only is he a true hacker... (Score:2)
I love the smell of burning server in the morning. (Score:1)
...and a genuine /. statement to be sure (Score:3, Insightful)
Ah, that statement could describe well over half of
However, I still need to write this guy and if he's going to tear it down, I want it.
Re:Now that's a *true* hacker (Score:4, Funny)
Oh no! (Score:5, Funny)
"new math" (Score:1)
Great! (Score:5, Funny)
Nothing spells chick-magnet like a wooden contraption designed to require less movement.
Made out of wood? (Score:5, Funny)
Geek code 101: You are supposed to make things like this out of Legos.
Re:Made out of wood? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Made out of wood? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Made out of wood? (Score:1, Informative)
http://www.sentex.net/~mwandel/legos/legos.html
Re:Made out of wood? (Score:1)
Five gig photo collection? (Score:4, Funny)
Can we say: porn?
Re:Five gig photo collection? (Score:2)
Re:Five gig photo collection? (Score:2)
That device (Score:1)
I rather recommend you Beowulf cluster of CD/DVD drives, daisy-chained with SCSI or IEEE 1394 or something, as usual.
Actually... (Score:5, Funny)
how to improve it (Score:5, Funny)
That's simple. Just build an add on that carries it up stairs, sticks it in an addressed envelope and drops it in the mail.
Other goodies (Score:5, Informative)
Be sure to check out the rest [sentex.net] of his page. Fun stuff.
Re:Other goodies (Score:1)
Mislead by Title (Score:2, Interesting)
Does anyone anything about emulating a cd changer's controls so I might plug a computer into the back of a stock car stereo with changer support, and fake it into driving an ogg player?
From what I gather, each system's pinout is different, but generally they all have to
Re:Mislead by Title (Score:1)
Re:Mislead by Title (Score:3, Interesting)
Note that my post about emulating the Kenwood occured about a month before the people at PhatNoise (now makers of the audio Keg) started working on their device. They actually finished theirs, which is more than I did. They're not real keen on sharing their specs, though. At least, they haven't been helpful when I've contacted them. Kenwood's been useless, too. Not that I'm bitter or anything.
As far as how the things a
Re:Mislead by Title (Score:2)
P.I.E. [pie.net] makes adapters for Kenwood head units so you can hook up other brands of changer. They run about a hundred bucks. I just emailed 'em and asked them if they are planning a computer
Re:Mislead by Title (Score:2)
I've looked arou
Re:Mislead by Title (Score:2)
It is a shame that it's only Sony that's that easy to find. Sony can't make a laser pickup unit worth a shit to save their life. Good thing for them they don't have to.
breath of fresh air (Score:5, Insightful)
at least he is honest. no need to justify a tinkering project under the guise that it is somehow useful. Tinker for tinker's sake I say!
I got better (Score:3, Funny)
I'm working on training my dog next.
I always wondered... (Score:5, Funny)
How about a dot matrix printer? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:How about a dot matrix printer? (Score:2)
It actually looks kind of similar to this guy's wooden changer. Maybe he should add a small plotter that uses a Sharpie....
Re:How about a dot matrix printer? (Score:2)
He got the slider bar assembly from an IBM Selectric typewriter. And besides, as he explains, he didn't want to deal with the complex timing required to get stepper motors working. Printers use stepper motors. I you're not going to use the motors from the printer/typewriter, that leaves you with the slider bar assembly thing. Which is what he used.
Re:How about a dot matrix printer? (Score:2)
Re:How about a dot matrix printer? (Score:2)
That's all well and good for moving the thing, but that leaves the non-trivial problem of trying to interface the grabbing and lifting circuits to something. The way he did it was by far easier.
say wha? (Score:3, Funny)
Another similar project using Lego blocks (Score:4, Interesting)
http://jpbrown.i8.com/cubesolver.html
Even uses a cam to figure out what is on each of the cubes faces!
Re:Another similar project using Lego blocks (Score:2)
Re:Another similar project using Lego blocks (Score:2)
This reminds me... (Score:3, Funny)
Call that a geek project? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Call that a geek project? (Score:1)
To actually try to duplicate this cd changer with lego seems a little impractical.
Re:Call that a geek project? (Score:2)
just fyi.
Cool but... (Score:2, Funny)
This actually addresses a very serious need (Score:5, Interesting)
Someone get a carousel CD player at Target for $100 and wire it up to a computer. There's 70,200 megs nearline.
Anyone up for that?
Changers are kinda pointless (Score:2)
Re:This actually addresses a very serious need (Score:2)
Re:This actually addresses a very serious need (Score:2)
Anyone up for that?
My jukebox has 200,000 megs online and takes a few milliseconds between songs. Hard drives are too cheap to bother with cds.
Re:This actually addresses a very serious need (Score:2)
Which is roughly 70Gb?
For $100 or less you could get a 120Gb hard drive, copy the CD's to it, and they're online, none of this nearline crap.
But come to think of it, the carousel would still be useful if you wanted to set up a CD/DVD burner, and not just a reader. I have a Sony CD juke with a capacity of 400 CD's, and it was only $300.
So that would be 400 x 700Mb = 280Gb. Wow!
Re:This actually addresses a very serious need (Score:2)
One - disks die. All your data on a HD has a half life of somekind. I *suspect* that CDRs will last longer (but I could be wrong)
Two - When you move up to 18 GB DVDs your server capacity is now 1.8 Tera bits, which does not suck.
Three - you have lots of data you need but not evry day. It's a waste of capacity to keep it spinning on a HD. You should job it off to the carousel and use your HD for frequent stuff.
I think the big, cheap, long-lasting near-line thing is going to catc
you came up with a need right there... (Score:2)
Software could easily be developed to span the drive image over even dozens of CDRW disks--the final one being the index. When you ne
Linux ? (Score:1)
Maybe the poster will be sued and have SCO lawyers sending nastigrams for protecting their IP rights since this is technically derivative work ... Sorry, couldn't resist. Way too much S.C.O. FUD in the news the last few days.
Home built CD changer contraption (Score:1, Informative)
The mechanicals
My first thought was to come up with something extremely simple, with no electronics. Ideally, the motion of the cd tray would trip some sort of mechanism that would eject the CD from the tray and insert the next one. After months of thinking, I still hadn't thought of a mechanism that h
Interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
One thing I wish would be done is better control of the Sony CD changer. There are S-link projects out there but all use the parallel port, and IMO, that's too hacktastic, I'd want to continue or build a serial port S-link controller. There is some _very_ slick control software that can even ID all the discs and tracks in the changer, and you select a track on a computer and the changer will play your music. Most people would do MP3 instead, but man-machine and electrical-mechanical interfacing is cool.
Unfortunately, there aren't any Sonys that can burn discs, at least none that I know, and none that I know that can be used as a CD-ROM changer, at least affordably, so this project still has some merit.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Usefull for a small inde band. (Score:5, Interesting)
A friend of mine used to be in an unsigned Metal band. He told me that one of the most boring parts is copying CDs. Apparently commercial CD copy companies usually had a minimum order that was quite large, and always invented problems with whatever was sent to them, creating longer turn around and more hassle. The cost per CD was also quite high compared with burning their own on a CDR.
Instead, what he would do, is to setup his PC next to a sofa in front of the TV, and manually swap CDs, while watching TV. He said that if he managed 20 CDs per hour (on his 40x burner) he would be doing well, but tropically managed less than that.
It was of course, boring, and prone to error.
A contraption to automatically load, burn and unload CDs, like in the article, would have been much better. He could have loaded it up with 200 blanks, gone to bed and come back in the morning to find it jammed, but at least with ~100 CDs done :-)
Re:Usefull for a small inde band. (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, in the tropics I'm lucky to have the ambition to burn even 3 CD's per hour. (It's not the heat, it's the humidity.)
Re:Usefull for a small inde band. (Score:3, Informative)
You can get a brand-new autoloading CD Duplicator (either attached [summationtechnology.com] to your PC or standalone [summationtechnology.com]) for $1500. It will also print and attach the labels.
You can probably find something used on eBay [ebay.com].
It seems to me that $1500 - $2000 is a worthwhile investment if it 1) avoids pissed off fans whose CDs won't play because of errors caused doing this by hand, 2) saves hours wasted in front of a PC, and 3) gives a pro-quality image to the band.
Lazyness (Score:1, Funny)
is it just me.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:is it just me.... (Score:1)
Just have to figure out a "drip" tray, and refueling stations.
Call the RIAA! (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, but... (Score:3, Funny)
Now that would be progress!
Re:Yes, but... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Yes, but... (Score:2)
Oh no... (Score:1)
Anyway, when it comes to mechanical widgets in computer history, nothing comes close to the IBM "spacebar button" solution.
The story goes something like this: In the sixties, IBM was running two jobs at night, but between the jobs an operator had to press the spacebar. Apparently, changing the software was impossible due to lost source or something, so this guy came up with an ingenious solution. He mounted an iron arm to a clock with a Lego block o
That reminds me... (Score:2)
I just don't use my 300+1 Pioneer CD changer anymore. A couple of weeks ago I added in the SliMP3 player (replacing the CD player altogether) and added 2x120G (RAID-1) drives to hold the library.
Anybody interested in a _real_ CD changer?
I mean, I've tried GIVING this thing away. My brother, best friend, parents, wife's parents -- nobody wants it
Re:That reminds me... (Score:2)
Re:That reminds me... (Score:2)
Kintanon
Is there a similar project (Score:1)
Build a bridge out of her! (Score:4, Funny)
(-1, Pythonic)
The games begin, first congratulations. . . (Score:5, Interesting)
But this is certainly not the last word on the matter. I've got my own plans as well. One thing we didn't see was any kind of performance specs about how big of an unattended stack the thing could handle. I read the part where he said it was just for fun, but I'd still like to know how many he could do consecutively.
The option I'm considering is where you take a plastic housed stack of a hundred hundred discs sitting on a conveyer whith a slot at the bottom of the stack only big enough for one disc at a time to be rolled out. I think some of the commercaial solutions might work like this.
Re:The games begin, first congratulations. . . (Score:2)
I have been thinking about the problem of CD changing robots and I believe I have the answer. Unfortunately I would need more legos than I currently posess to prototype it without doing any machining. :) Basically the idea is tha
My friend did this years ago (Score:2)
You can do things remarkably cheaply (Score:2)
Re:You can do things remarkably cheaply (Score:2)
Re:You can do things remarkably cheaply (Score:2)
Re:You can do things remarkably cheaply (Score:2)
Re:You can do things remarkably cheaply (Score:2)
Color Coding (Score:5, Informative)
They probably don't teach that particular bit of doggerel any more...
Re:Color Coding (Score:2)
Re:Color Coding (Score:4, Informative)
Bad Boys Rape Our Young Girls But Vilot Gives Willingly, sometimes for Gold, some times for Silver, and sometime for No Charge at all.
Value:
Brown - 1
Red - 2
Orange - 3
Yellow - 4
Green - 5
Blue - 6
Violet - 7
Gray - 8
White - 9
Silver - 10%
None - 20%
color4 - Tolerance
That's almost a work of art (Score:3, Interesting)
Batch burns?? (Score:3, Funny)
Better yet? (Score:2)
As a Windows user (yes, there are still a few of us around) I don't find that better.
In any case, he's obviously a hardware guy and not a software guy. The program has to run as root, it's controlled through the printer port, and he is puzzled how to make it work through the printer port using Windows. It would have been cooler had he used something like TINI [ibutton.com] to allow control through a network. "TINI's networking capabi
Not really a new idea (Score:3, Informative)
Proper way to do a batch burn (Score:2, Informative)
Can he modify it to work with this recorder? (Score:2)
It would be more in keeping with the wooden construction, methinks...
My Version (Score:2)
Re:My Version (Score:2)
Sublime, very sublime (Score:2)
Well, at least now I know I'm not the only geek who reads Sublime Times [sublimedirectory.com] at Sublime Directory.com.
These Guys are Awesome! (Score:2)
Re:Looks cool (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Looks cool (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not a need, but an excuse to set up a metal shop in the basement.
It's shinier! (Score:2)
Must suppress Beavis laugh (Score:2)
Wood.
Must.... suppress.... Beavis... and
Immature as hell, but those guys still crack me up.
slashdocity ? (Score:1)
I am also sure Matthias doesn't have much pr0n on his machine : who'd backup pr0n when it can be found on that [asciipr0n.com] many [autopr0n.com] places [ninenine.com]?
Now, these might definitely be family pics.