Dig this headline:
Cash, not idealism, behind ISP embrace of music biz
I had to laugh at this story. The tone is so incredulous....GASP!! The ISPs, they want...well you'll never believe it...MONEY!
Wait, they do?

Ok fine, there's idealism in plenty of companies. Google seems to be the current poster child for corporate idealism. But let's not forget that this particular Dot Com is also absolutely lousy with money, and that's the reason its idealism is possible.
I love ArsTechnica. Such an attitude of being shocked, shocked! cheapens ArsTechnica's credibility and makes it hard to take its stories seriously. Not to mention the fact that even though it's now a Wired property (hello, money?), spelling errors, mixed metaphors, and cliche abound.
Please clean up your act, Ars. Your smart readers deserve better. Have your new Wired bosses provide some editorial support.
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To rewind just a little, Kameleon was like a high-minded art school student's pet project; pretty, rule-breaking, expensive, and difficult to use as intended. It had a blank blue face. It was meant to turn on and show the available buttons when picked up, and sometimes that worked fine. More often though, it would turn itself on while sitting still on a coffee table, or I'd pick it up and it wouldn't turn on without a good hard shake. Because of this, it sucked batteries down vigorously.
To add to those issues, the flat, featureless face of the Kameleon remote made it impossible to use without looking at the thing. Even if you had your thumb right where a button was, you'd have to press the button once to turn the remote on, and then press it again to send the command, and odds are your thumb had slipped by that time and you weren't just perfectly on the button, and no command would be sent at all. The Kameleon was an extremely frustrating remote for me to use, and I'm glad that I got a Harmony.







Oh, one more thing:


The lens assembly cover came off easily, and it was neat to see all of the laser lenses arrayed inside. Some of them were mounted on coils that could be moved around with small magnetic braces around them (coincidentally, this is also how the armature in your hard drive moves the read/write heads around on the platters).
This is a shot of the laser in its chassis, removed from the main lens assembly. The through hole ribbon cable connector was removed by locking a corner of the diode chassis into the desk vise, and then using copper solder wick to remove the solder and get the pins free so that the connector could slide off of them.
This was an early test circuit. I don't know resistor color bars on sight, but it doesn't really matter, because this one got the laser diode to glow like a dim LED, but it was nowhere near lasing. At any rate, it's good to see some of the breadboarding and testing process. You can add up the resistor values for yourself if you like.
We were so excited to see lasing that we turned off the lights in the room and took photos of the blue laser on a wall, but it's a classic "you had to be there" moment; the photos themselves are unspectacular. I won't post photos of a black background with a bright blue dot here for the sake of your sanity.
You can see the dot I made on the case with a silver sharpie. To determine the right location for the hole, I simply popped in the collimator and lined it up with the natural front curve of the case. Where the lens ended up is where I needed my hole. I started the hole with a 1/16" drill bit, and then used an Irwin Unibit to step the hole up to 5/16" or so. I then used a Dremel grinding stone to deburr the hole.
I traced the smaller, inner collar size onto the outside of the case with the sharpie and used that as my cutting template. I didn't worry too much about keeping it neat, as the larger, upper collar would cover any small sharpie fudges I made.
My first "rotary tool" was a Black & Decker Dremel knock off, which I thought would be a good investment rather than a real Dremel because it took a VersaPak battery, along with several other tools I had at the time. Boy, did Black & Decker teach me a lesson. Dust Buster, yes. All other tools, no. They were right to kill off the VersaPak line, but it's too bad that I was suckered into buying any of that garbage in the first place.
We left work on the case for a while to experiment with more power settings for the laser diode.
Once I had the new laser diode extracted from its lens assembly, I was determined to seat it correctly in the collimator housing. This is difficult to do, as A.) the diode can is made of thin, crushable metal, B.) the diode pins are on the side that needs to be pressed from, C.) the back end of the diode has precious little surface area to press on, let alone avoiding the pins, and D.) the whole thing is small, fiddly, and difficult to tool up for properly without purpose-built equipment.
Now that we were truly up and running again, Eric got back to work on the power circuit. After the debacle of losing our first laser diode to carelessness, we decided that overkill for the sake of safety in the power circuit was warranted. Eric's new power supply would be transistor regulated.
The critical parameter in a driver circuit for an LED is the current. Most circuits provide a voltage, which is not desirable in this case. Therefore, we investigated current mirroring circuits using paired transistors.
Next came the soldering, which would be my job. I foolishly didn't have any flux on hand at the time, making the job much more difficult than it had to be.
Testing confirmed that our wiring was right and our resistor network was functional as designed. I then used the Dremel to cut the circuit board in half, leaving the other half for future projects and saving space in the case of the current one.
This was also a good time for final tuning of the collimator lens, which simply has threads on the outside of its plastic housing that match threads on the inside of the collimator collar and a spring between them to keep it all under tension.
Tuning the collimator was both easier and harder than expected. To dial it in, you simply move the threaded lens assembly around until you get the finest dot the optics will allow. Sadly, it's not the best collimator, and beam divergence is quite obvious at a range of fifty feet or so. Better collimation would do wonders for this unit, and might even yield enough light concentration power to pop balloons and light matches.