Dan sez, "Astromedia is a German science gizmo company that specializes in die-cut cardboard widgets: astrolabes, sextants, telescopes, etc. But this new one takes the biscuit -- a Stirling engine that works on the heat from a cup of coffee. Apparently, if you set it on a frozen compress ("Setzen Sie ihn auf eine Kaltkompresse..."), it runs for hours."
Link
(Thanks, Dan!)
Update: Pschemp prepared this translation for us!
The Stirling Engine
Runs on a cup of coffee or an ice packThe revolutionary concept for this hot-air engine was discovered in 1816 by the Scottish minister Robert Stirling and has been updated for today. The principle is as ingenious as it is simple: In a sealed cylinder, heated from the underside, a piston pushes the enclosed air back and forth between the hot and the cold side. The air therefore expands out and compress together every cycle and that movement is converted via a moving piston and crankshaft into rotary motion.
As an energy source, any type of warmth or cooling that produces a temperature differential can be used, from an open fire to solar energy or any other unused source of heat or cold.
Set this fully functional Stirling engine on a cup with boiling hot coffee (Tea or water also works of course) - give the flywheel a small push to the left - and the apparatus begins simply to pump up and down - for up to an hour!
This isn't everything it can do: Set it on an ice pack or ice cubes from the freezer and turn the flywheel to the right and it will also pump up and down for an even longer time.
(Caption:It is really a marvel)
Kit made from sturdy punched cardboard with gold stamping, complete with all accessories including laser cut aluminium plates, low-friction plastic axle bearings and spring steel bent wire.
Height 16.5 cm, width and depth 12.6 cm.

Hello,





Philadelphia Daily News columnist Stu Bykofsky, says terrorists need to attack the U.S. again in order to "quell the chattering of [anti-war] chipmunks and to restore America's righteous rage and singular purpose to prevail."
Old Super-8 movie teaches people how to shoot home movies (information still useful!).
Video game uses sensors on partners' undergarments to encourage couples-friendly play.
More issues of The Realist have been archived at Ethan Persoff's site.
Highlights: 1963 FUCK COMMUNISM! Poster, Norman Mailer (1965), Lenny Bruce (1961), Paul Krassner's First LSD Trip (1965). Impolite Interview: Lincoln Rockwell (1961) Head of the American Nazi Party and Confident Presidential Hopeful.
Kevin Kelly's three favorite podcasts (
Freakonomics on the pick-up artist's technique of "negging," (jargon for insulting a woman during initial meeting) designed to “lower her self-esteem, thus making her more vulnerable to your advances.” (This subculture was explored in the entertaining book,
By common consensus, Peter Bagge is the funniest cartoonist of his generation.
In the latest MAKE Weekend Projects video, Bre Pettis and Joe Grand show you how to use radio frequency modules to make wireless gizmos.
And now we pause for a sweet serenade by the Lady In The Radiator. "In Heaven" was written by 

...We were happy to wind up at the Chancery Executive Guesthouse, with a stout wall and two somewhat scary guards, who lounge around on plastic chairs holding snub-nosed shotguns.





Hammacher Schlemmer's $200 animated Frankenstein's Monster stands five feet tall and writhes and plays music when you walk past it, a Hallowe'en version of the giant, scary animated Santas. The fact that you can buy this much plastic and human labor for two hundred bucks is a tribute to the awesome might of the WTO and the Chinese labor force -- now that all trade barriers have been dropped and labor rates seek out the lowest level on the planet, we are slowly exploring the entire problem-space of "3D objects made from plastic that Americans will pay for."



the latest
latest episodes