Ghost town gallery
While I’ve still got ghost towns on the brain, here’s a cool site documenting many ghost towns in the western US. Anyone want to plan a trip around visiting some of these?
Man, it just blows me away all the stuff people leave behind…
Battleship Island - Japan’s rotting metropolis

I have a thing for ghost towns. There’s something fascinating about the way they’ve been preserved since their last inhabitants left, almost like you can still feel their presence. Japan’s Battleship Island, as it’s called, has got to be one of the biggest and most impressive. Here’s an account of a visit Alex Hoban paid to the off-limits Battleship Island. Very cool.
A former coal mining facility owned by Mitsubishi Motors, it was once the most densely populated place on earth, packing over 13,000 people into each square kilometre of its residential high-risers. It operated from 1887 until 1974, after which the coal industry fell into decline and the mines were shut for good. With their jobs gone and no other reason to stay in this mini urban nightmare, almost overnight the entire population fled back to the mainland, leaving most of their stuff behind to rot.
House in a Greenhouse
Here’s a cool idea: build a greenhouse around your house, save heating costs, grow plants that normally wouldn’t survive the winter. First pioneered by Swedish architect Bengt Warne in 1976, the idea is catching on. The house shown below reportedly saves 50% on electricity costs, and the owner can grow many types of trees and vines in Sweden that normally only survive in warmer climates.
See more at: www.treehugger.com/files/2008/10/naturhus-is-a-house-wrapped-in-a-greenhouse.php



Panorama Rig for Aerial Kite Photography
I thought I’d share some plans I’m working on for an aerial kite photography rig. It holds a camera and rotates it through 360
External USB RAID 5 array using mdadm
In case you’re wondering, yes, using external drives in a USB RAID array is a little crazy. For anyone considering it, there’s a downside. First of all, USB drives almost always need a DC power source, which means you’ll have a ton of awkward power adapters to deal with. The worst part, though, is the risk that two or more, but not all of the drives will go down.
For example, let’s say you’ve got five drives - too many to plug into most USB hubs or directly into your motherboard, so you’re using two USB hubs. One of the hubs dies, and suddenly half your drives are dropped. If only one drive goes down, you’re array will be fine - just add the drive back and wait for it to rebuild. That’s assuming the disk is fine and it was just a momentary disconnection, of course. If more than one goes down, though, you’re going to have a very hard time rebuilding that array. The exact same issue applies to the power strips if you can’t fit all the power adapters on one.
The next issue is still a mystery to me, but I think it has to do with changing which USB port a given drive is plugged into. I’ve taken my server to LAN parties three times, and twice the array has been degraded when I power back up. Each time it’s just a matter of adding the dropped disk back and everything is fine again. And no, I never kept track of exactly where each drive was plugged in.
So why would anyone want to build a USB RAID 5 array? Well, it’s cheap! All you need to buy are the drives, and 1TB drives are currently under $100. Unless you’re fortunate enough to have a spare motherboard with loads of SATA controllers, it’s going to cost a ton to get a dedicated SATA controller. Second, you’ll never have to worry about your case overheating because of too many hard drives. Plus, it looks sweet as hell to have a whole line of external drives that make up your array.
What about speed, you ask? With three 1TB USB drives in RAID 5 I get 18 MB/s read, 31 MB/s write (don’t ask me how that’s possible). My other array - 3 x 500MB internal SATA RAID 5 - delivers 30 MB/s read and write.
Given the delicate nature of a USB drive’s connection, I have to recommend keeping your drives internal. However, if you don’t have enough SATA controllers and you want to build an array on the cheap, you can make a USB RAID array work. Mine’s been up for almost a year now and I haven’t lost any data, although it has been degraded three times: twice when I took it apart and moved it, and once when I stepped on one of the DC power adapters and momentarily cut power to a drive.
Update: I just added another two 1TB drives, for a total of five! This article about growing RAID 5 arrays was very helpful.

Auto Tuning at the Vimeo Office
This is hilarious.
Auto Tuning from Casey Donahue on Vimeo.
Mushrooms at Work
I saw these mushrooms in my plant at work yesterday. Let’s see what becomes of them…
Day 2
Day 3
Day 4
Hmmm… not very interesting, oh well.
Mechanical elephant sculpture

This amazing mechanic design was made out of transmission parts, electrical conduits, plumbing pipes and 20 gauge cold rolled steel. It is 36″ X 36″ X 18″ and weights about 85 lbs. All the joints move and lock in place, turning a gear on the elephant’s side winds a cable around a shaft which raises and lowers the trunk…
Continue reading at www.baekdal.com/Design/Art/mecanic-elephant.


