Home Hacking Projects for Geeks
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Overview
Take a geek and a PC, add one soldering iron, a home, and a copy of Home Hacking Projects for Geeks, and you'll give new meaning to the term, "home improvement." From fearless neophytes to tool-wielding masterminds, the home hacker in any geek will find new inspiration and plenty of hands-on guidance to take on a variety of home-transforming projects once relegated to the world of sci-fi.
This fun new guide combines creativity with electricity and power tools to achieve cool—and sometimes even practical—home automation projects. Never again will you have to flip a light switch when you enter a room or use a key to open your front door. With a few off-the-shelf devices, some homemade hardware, and a little imagination, you can be living in your own high-tech habitat.
Home Hacking Projects for Geeks shows hackers of all ability levels how to take on a wide range of projects, from the relatively small but energy-conscious automating of light switches, to building home theaters using Windows or Linux-based PCs, to more complicated projects like building home security systems that rival those offered by professional security consultants. Each project includes a conceptual diagram, a "What You Need List" and a small "Project Stats" section that describes the relative difficulty, time involved, and cost of the project. What's more, each project is a workable, practical way to improve your home—something unique that you can customize for your individual needs.
The thirteen projects in Home Hacking Projects for Geeks are divided into three categories: Home Automation, Home Entertainment Systems, and Security, and include projects such as:
- Remotely Monitor Your Pet
- Make Your House Talk
- Remotely Control Your Computer's MP3 player
- Create Time-Shifted FM Radio
- Watch Your House Across the Network
- Build a Home Security System
Synopsis
Take a geek and a PC, add one soldering iron, a home, and a copy of "Home Hacking Projects for Geeks," and you'll give new meaning to the term, "home improvement." From fearless neophytes to tool-wielding masterminds, the home hacker in any geek will find new inspiration and plenty of hands-on guidance to take on a variety of home-transforming projects once relegated to the world of sci-fi.
This fun new guide combines creativity with electricity and power tools to achieve cool--and sometimes even practical--home automation projects. Never again will you have to flip a light switch when you enter a room or use a key to open your front door. With a few off-the-shelf devices, some homemade hardware, and a little imagination, you can be living in your own high-tech habitat.
"Home Hacking Projects for Geeks" shows hackers of all ability levels how to take on a wide range of projects, from the relatively small but energy-conscious automating of light switches, to building home theaters using Windows or Linux-based PCs, to more complicated projects like building home security systems that rival those offered by professional security consultants. Each project includes a conceptual diagram, a "What You Need List" and a small "Project Stats" section that describes the relative difficulty, time involved, and cost of the project. What's more, each project is a workable, practical way to improve your home--something unique that you can customize for your individual needs.
The thirteen projects in "Home Hacking Projects for Geeks" are divided into three categories: Home Automation, Home Entertainment Systems, and Security, and include projects such as:
Remotely Monitor YourPet
Make Your House Talk
Remotely Control Your Computer's MP3 player
Create Time-Shifted FM Radio
Watch Your House Across the Network
Build a Home Security System
If you've ever thought the Jetsons had it made, or looked around your house and thought, "I could make that better" then you're ready for "Home Hacking Projects for Geeks,"
Library Journal
Electricians make a good living, partly because the rest of us have no clue how to handle any project involving electricity other than replacing a light bulb. Assuming that we would be interested in learning how to do such things as building our own security systems or monitoring our pets remotely (which for the authors makes us geeks), this rather modestly designed but information-laden manual shows us how the combination of creativity and electricity can lead to such cool effects as, believe it or not, making your house talk. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Editorials
From Barnes & Noble
The Barnes & Noble ReviewIs this book for you? Let’s find out. Imagine you’d like to know what the weather’s like outside without leaving your bed. How would you do it? A. Buy a radio. B. Configure your computer to read weather data via automated web service, transform the data into digitized human voice, and transmit it to your bedroom’s wireless speakers. If the answer is self-evidently “B,” buy this book.
The inimitable Eric Faulkner and Tony Northrup offer up all manner of projects here. Check your pet across the Web -- or access your entire media collection. Build a home theater PC. Time-shift FM radio. Hey, just reading this stuff’s half the fun. You don’t even have to do it. But, why not? A few X10 modules, some stray hardware that’s surely already in your basement, a few lines of (provided) code, and you’re golden! Bill Camarda, from the February 2005 Read Only