ColdHeat

I recently put in a 3.5 mm jack in my car stereo that I might listen to my iPod without an FM transmitter (with which I’ve had no luck) or one of those cassette tapes (my tape deck does not work). In using my bulky soldering iron which I am certain came from the 50′s, I soldered two pins together, and I’m sure I came close to breaking something on several occasions. Frankly, I’m surprised the whole thing worked in the end.

I had seen the ColdHeat soldering iron on ThinkGeek (my nerd toys site of choice), but found out that RadioShack sells them, too. (And at RadioShack, it was even the same price!) Being one who hates to wait for / pay for shipping, and seeing as Kevin and I are going to do the same little experiment on his car stereo this weekend, I hopped on down to RadioShack to get it. I had some other things on my RS shopping list for other projects that this store didn’t have, but so be it.

I got it home, turned it on, and overly-trustingly touched the tip. Nothing. I touched the tip to the solder, and it melted and a blob fell to the counter. As soon as I could, I touch the tip again. Room temperature. It’s pretty neat. Check out some of the videos of it out and about on YouTube and Google Video.

For those interested, I got the car-stereo jack idea from Lifehacker, who apparently found it on Make.

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Bump Key

Bump KeyIt is not unlikely that you’ve run across this technique on the internet (http://www.metacafe.com/tags/bump+key/). It involves taking a key that fits a given set of locks, and then for each pin, filing down to the lowest pin setting. Relatively simple, and the process on the whole is something that supposedly any mildly adroit beginner should be able to complete successfully.

Interviews of lock-picking hobby groups are filled with comments about the absurd ease and dull simplicity of this method. Admittedly, to a certain extent, I was skeptical.

I went to Lowe’s and bought a set of files (~$5) (the one I was after was axially triangular), and made a copy of key (~$1.50) I had laying around and to whose corresponding lock I had access. As per a suggestion in one video, I marked with a permanent marker the placement of the pins along the key, and then filed down to the lowest setting at those points, leaving a sawtoothed edge.

Cautiously, I inserted it to the first pin in the lock and tried to remove it. Down the fourth pin I was able to remove it. Upon inserting it completely, however, I was stuck. Opened the lock, removed the pins and slid it out. I filed down more so that the peaks between the pins were no more than approximately 45º. Thereafter, I was able to easily slide the key in and out. While removing the pin, I noticed that on top of the driver pins, there were springs, making me even more incredulous. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pin_tumbler_lock)

The first dozen attempts or so on one lock proved unsuccessful, but it was kind of an awkward setup – in order to unlock, the key had to turn counter-clockwise, and holding the key in my left hand was more conducive to turning it clockwise. I tried instead to lock the lock with the same method, and it worked! A second time! After those successes, it was harder to duplicate, but this lead me to believe that it was simply a matter of improving technique at this point. I moved onto another lock that they fit, and it was able to unlock it repeatedly.

From what I’ve read, and now from experience, the biggest difficulty is simply applying the proper amount of torque in the key when bumping it. On all attempts, however, when I released the torque in order to withdraw the key, I could very clearly hear pins being sprung back into position.

It amazes me that these kinds of locks are so vulnerable to so simple an attack. All in all, it was a fun and revealing experiment, and I encourage people to try it out themselves.

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Shoeboxed

I read about Shoeboxed today on Lifehacker, and have been trying it out. Up until this point, I really do keep physical receipts in a shoebox or binder (and probably still will) and have been tagging e-mailed receipts as such in Gmail, and then archiving them. That was all fine and dandy, but it’s nice to have something that’s built just for that. I took all my old Gmail-stored receipts from such various places as Basegear.com and Potion Factory, and it recognized them as receipts without a hitch and found the right amount in the e-mail. Well-done Shoeboxed.

It reminds me of a service called KeyFiler which lets you store your registration keys for software, etc. in a safe, secure and accessible place.

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Grand Central

I first read about Grand Central a few months ago, while overseas. It was open and free, but limited to the U.S., and so I put it on a list of things to do once I got back.

I checked up on it again once back in the motherland, and Google had since bought it, and it was invite-only. Armed with my invite, I signed up today, and am going to be using my new for-the-rest-of-my-life phone number. It’s exciting.

For those of you who haven’t heard of it, it’s a system where you can get a number local to you, and then when people call that number, all your phones ring – your cell phone, your home phone, your work extension, whichever. Of course this is configurable, and it’s even configurable by groups of contacts, so that when your mother in law calls, only your house phone will ring, but if it’s your adrenaline-junky emergency-room-frequenting brother, it will ring all your phones. Answer any phone.

It can screen unknown callers, and give each of your groups a different voicemail greeting. And speaking of voicemails, they are now all centralized, and organized like an e-mail inbox. No more checking your cell phone voicemail, and then your home, and then your Gizmo account’s. There’s even a feature to listen in to the voicemail message before you pick up, and you can start/stop recording phone calls simply by pressing ’4.’

What excited me most about this prospect is that it removes the tie between the implementation of your phone system (service providers, frequently changing cell phones / cell phone numbers) from how your friends and family interact with you. Until the day I die, I could conceivably keep this same number.

Check it out – http://grandcentral.com

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