Tag Archives: DIY

Best Buy, Home Depot Lock Up Goods to Fight Theft

Shoppers are finding more empty space on store shelves, but not because the retailer is out of stock. In many cases, the items are locked away to prevent theft.

At a

Best Buy Co.

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store in the suburbs of Houston, hundreds of items including Bose speakers and Fitbit activity trackers have been replaced by small blue signs that read, “This product kept in secured location,” and ask shoppers to find store workers for help.

“There used to be a lot more on the floor itself than locked up in cages,” said

Gary Pearce,

a 47-year-old manager at a disaster restoration company who shops in the store weekly.

The store is a sign of an endemic challenge for retailers: how to stop theft without shrinking profits or inconveniencing shoppers. Retailers have long dealt with theft, and frequency is down from a peak last winter for some, said retail executives. But theft attempt levels are higher than they were before the pandemic.

Many large retailers, including

Home Depot Inc.,

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have been locking up more items while testing other solutions. They track high-risk goods and lock up items in regions or stores being hit hardest, retail executives say.

Best Buy

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says it isn’t locking up more items overall than in the past, but continues to do so where needed.

It is a tactic that risks annoying customers and investors. In July a Best Buy analyst recommended selling the company’s stock after he observed conditions in dozens of stores and found items locked up or missing from shelves.

At Best Buy stores, less than 5% of its products are locked up or in backrooms for theft-protection reasons, about the same percentage as previous years. A Best Buy store in Lone Tree, Colo.



Photo:

David Zalubowski/Associated Press

“Putting products in cages certainly deters theft, but it probably hinders sales,” said R5 Capital CEO

Scott Mushkin

in the report titled “Heartbreaking.” Some stores, like one in Danbury, Conn., were in good shape, said the report, while others were messy or didn’t have enough items easily available for shoppers to buy.

Best Buy declined to comment on the research.

Around $69.9 billion worth of products were stolen from retailers in 2019, according to the most recent data from the Retail Industry Leaders Association, which surveyed members.

Theft surged after stores reopened early in the pandemic, retail industry executives say. In part, the rush to buy more online during that period led to more demand online for stolen goods, they say. In some cases stores have been understaffed due to the tight labor market or staffing choices, which means fewer watchful eyes, say some executives. In addition, well-organized theft groups working regionally have become prevalent, making the problem harder to solve than run-of-the-mill shoplifting.

Many retailers use a risk algorithm to determine which items to lock up and in what locations. A high-value item that is frequently stolen is a good candidate, say executives. Retailers often try other deterrents first, like moving a product closer to staffed registers, attaching an alarm that is removed at checkout or using more visible security staff.

Less-expensive items can get similar treatment. “For a store to be locking things up like toothpaste, Spam or honey, they would have had to have been repeatedly targeted over a period of time,” said

Ben Dugan,

director of organized retail crime at

CVS Health Corp.

and president of the Coalition of Law Enforcement and Retail, a group that facilitates planning between retailers and law enforcement.

Home Depot

has been locking up more products during the past 12 months as a stopgap while testing more customer-friendly, higher-tech solutions, according to the company.

“It’s a triage-type scenario. It’s stop the bleeding and give yourself some time,” said

Scott Glenn,

vice president of asset protection at Home Depot.

Overall theft attempts at Home Depot continue to rise compared with before the pandemic, Mr. Glenn said. Shoppers don’t like when items are locked and Home Depot tries to avoid it, he said. But after a high-theft item is locked up, sales gradually go up because the store stays more consistently in-stock, Mr. Glenn said. In stores where Home Depot has aggressive theft deterrents, it has reduced loss to theft, he said.

Best Buy has long locked up some products as a large retailer of high-value electronics, say executives. Across all U.S. stores, less than 5% of its products are locked up or in backrooms for theft-protection reasons, about the same percentage as previous years, said

Damien Harmon,

executive vice president of omnichannel for the company.

Included in the 5% figures is a tactic Best Buy started using last winter as retail theft jumped, he said. The company replaced some products on shelves with QR codes so shoppers could scan, then head to registers to pay and pick up the product.

In some locations including the Houston Best Buy—which sits in an area where many local stores face elevated levels of crime, according to data from the local police department—the share of locked items can be higher. Shopper Mr. Pearce said he understood the extreme measures given the threat of theft.

Best Buy’s store inventory is being held differently than it has in the past, with less on floors due to more buying online, said Mr. Harmon. Products are brought to shoppers directly, which has the added benefit of also reducing theft, said Mr. Harmon.

After an item is locked, Best Buy watches sales trends and doesn’t get many comments about products being locked up, said Mr. Harmon. The company is also experimenting with training store staff to stand near high-theft items, he said. Its internal customer experience scores for stores are at a 15-year high, said a spokeswoman.

InVue, a Charlotte, N.C., company that sells retailers locked glass cabinets, tracking sensors and software, late last year started getting requests from retailers asking for more customer-friendly options, said

Chris Gibson,

InVue’s chief product and marketing officer.

InVue is pitching more automated solutions that are more aesthetically pleasing or make it easier for store workers or shoppers to unlock a product quickly. Locking down products “became this draconian thing” during the pandemic, said Mr. Gibson. “A lot of our partners are saying, maybe that was a bridge too far.”

Browsing videogames at the local Best Buy used to be fun, said

Zion Grassl,

a 30-year-old video producer for a videogame website. Over the summer his local Best Buy in Eugene, Ore., removed the physical videogames from store shelves, he said, swapped with photocopy images of the front of the box that provide less information about the game.

Mr. Grassl said he understands the need to protect products from theft, but the change ruins the experience of browsing for something you didn’t know you needed.

“You still have this physical representation to look at, but it’s almost like they don’t want you to come in anymore,” he said.

Best Buy declined to comment on Mr. Grassl’s views.

Write to Sarah Nassauer at Sarah.Nassauer@wsj.com and Benoît Morenne at benoit.morenne@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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AMD Ryzen CPUs Sold More Than Intel’s Alder Lake CPUs Last Month, Continue To Retain Strong DIY Market Share Hold In Germany

The latest sales and revenue share of AMD’s Ryzen & Intel Core CPUs from Germany’s largest tech retailer, Mindfactory, have been published by Ingebor on Reddit.

Intel Alder Lake CPUs Boost Market Share Globally But AMD Ryzen CPUs Continue To Dominate The DIY Segment In Germany

Over the last couple of weeks, we have reported how the PC market is on a general decline due to rising inflation. Both AMD and Intel are expected to lose desktop revenue in the coming quarter but it looks like Germany’s DIY segment remains a stronghold for AMD’s Ryzen CPUs which continue to outsell Intel’s latest and greatest Alder Lake CPUs.’

Intel Core & AMD Ryzen CPU Sales/Revenue Figures By Mindfactory (Credits: u/Ingebor):

Looking at the sale figures, Mindfactory reports that in June, 63% of the CPUs sold were from AMD and 37% were from Intel. AMD Ryzen CPUs amounted to over 7,500 units while Intel CPU sales hit almost 5,000 units. Of all the AMD CPUs, sold, the most popular CPUs were the Ryzen 5 5600X, the Ryzen 7 5800X, and the Ryzen 9 5950X. In fact, the Ryzen 9 5900X sold more than the mainstream Ryzen 5 5600G and the Ryzen 5 5500. This is mainly due to the discounted deals that the Zen 3 line up received given it’s almost two years old now.

Intel, on the other hand, saw almost the entirety of its sales coming from the 12th Gen Alder Lake lineup. Intel’s most popular CPUs were the Core i7-12700K, the Core i5-12400F, and the Core i5-12600K The revenue split was also the same with Mindfactory’s 61% CPU revenue coming from AMD or over 2.5 Million Euros while Intel CPUs amounted to 39% or slightly above 1 Million Euros worth of sales. You can easily note the downward trend in the sales and revenue figures which is a recall to the declining PC market mentioned above.

Intel Core & AMD Ryzen CPU Per-Chip Figures By Mindfactory (Credits: u/Ingebor):

The highest revenue came from the top three chips, the Ryzen 5 5600X (435,000 Euros), Ryzen 7 5800X (416,000 Euros), and Ryzen 9 5900X (391,000 Euros). Both Intel and AMD CPU prices are on the decline and Intel has recently initiated a retailer-specific price cut which would drop prices by up to 5% on certain 12th Gen Alder Lake CPUs. This price cut is planned for the current month so that won’t be reflected here since these figures are from the previous month.

As for the family split, both Intel and AMD have their latest Alder Lake (12th Gen) and Vermeer (Ryzen 5000) CPUs amounting to 75% of the sales and 83% of the revenue. The AMD Ryzen Threadripper and Intel Core-X HEDT lineup has entirely disappeared from the chips which are due to the fact that DIY enthusiasts haven’t gotten any new product family in over two years. AMD has announced that Threadripper 5000WX CPUs will be coming to the DIY segment but these will be full-fledged PRO parts which will require users to spend a lot more than they used to for the HEDT family.

Based on the report, it looks like Germany will continue to be AMD’s stronghold unless Intel comes up with something really really good. We will see if Raptor Lake is able to take away further market share from AMD in the mainstream segment later this year considering that the red team is going to focus its AM4 on the mainstream and AM5 on the high-end segment.

Products mentioned in this post



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What would you do with this cool DIY haptic knob?

Sometimes you come across a DIY project and immediately start figuring out ways you could use it in your life. That’s what happened to us here at The Verge when someone dropped the SmartKnob View, a proof-of-concept project by engineer Scott Bezek, into our Slack chat. While it doesn’t seem like it’s the type of project most people could go out and build themselves at the moment (more on that later), it’s easy to imagine a future where it’s available as a kit, or where somebody turns it into an actual product.

The smart knob kind of looks like a mini Nest Thermostat, but Bezek’s programmed it to have loads of modes. Of course, it can just act as a spinning dial, but you could also program its motor to provide haptic feedback and resistance, giving you the feeling of reaching an endpoint where the dial can’t turn anymore. Because this illusion is created through software instead of hardware, there’s a lot you can do. It can act as a turnable on-off switch, snap back to the center after you turn and release it, and even simulate ratcheted steps.

When my colleagues and I heard about the knob, one Verge staffer immediately suggested it’d be great for controlling shower temperature; another said they’d use it as a fancy scroll wheel or volume control. Personally, I thought it’d be a great way to dial in how much food my cat feeder dispenses.

According to Bezek’s GitHub page for the smart knob, the device (which has a far-from-finished design) can be built for “certainly less than $200 in parts.” The page also includes the code for the project, as well as an absolute wealth of information on how the knob is put together and which parts it uses. Bezek also said on Twitter that he’d make a video detailing the assembly and design process for his SmartKnob.

Unfortunately, we’ll probably have to put our dreams of knob-controlled home automation on hold for now. In the project’s FAQ, Bezek writes that he’s “only implemented enough firmware for the demo shown in the video,” and that the knob can’t actually be used to control much of anything right now. It’d also be a struggle to get parts — Bezek writes that “as a result of the popularity of this project, it seems like the recommended motors are unfortunately no longer available for purchase.”


Yes, the knob has USB-C.
Image: Scott Bezek

Even with just barebones firmware, though, and I still kind of want to build one and use it as the ultimate fidget toy. Perhaps by the time he’s nailed down a design and the parts are available, I’ll be able to build up my skills to the point where I could tackle the advanced soldering techniques needed to actually make the smart knob.

Bezek admits that the knob is “not yet a mature plug-and-play project,” but he does say that he’s going to keep working on it, and even has a roadmap of sorts on his GitHub page. I’m hoping he succeeds at turning this into a real thing that’s practical to make yourself — I want a future where I can build an army of knobs to control everything in my house. TV volume needs to be adjusted? Knob. Want to turn off my camera and end a Zoom call with a flick, instead of a button press? Knob. Need to stop procrastinating on writing an article? I can’t think of how I’m going to solve that with a knob yet, but I assure you I’ll figure it out.

What would you use a smart knob for?



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The Penkesu is a DIY retro handheld PC with a mechanical keyboard

There aren’t a lot of ultra-portable handheld PCs anymore, outside of the GDP pocket and its gaming-focused successors. With tablets, smartphones, and even handhelds like the Steam Deck diluting the marketable needs of owning a laptop, there isn’t much space for mini laptops beyond the simple joy of owning a fun-sized version of a traditional computer.

But that’s not stopping DIY-er Penk Chen from building their own handheld PC called the Penkesu — a retro-futuristic ultraportable laptop with a mechanical keyboard. It could very well have existed as a working sci-fi movie prop in the ’90s or an R&B video plot device in 2002.

The case for the Penkesu is built using 3D printed parts paired with hinges designed for the Game Boy Advance SP. The clamshell lid is fitted with a wide 400 x 1,280 7.9-inch capacitive touch screen, wired through the hinge with a ribbon cable carrying the HDMI signal to a Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W at the base.

Then a USB interface with charging, plus a Li-ion battery round off the main computer components, following Chen’s goal to use a minimal amount of electronics. All that’s left for the Penkesu is the keyboard, which consists of an Arduino controller with low-profile Kailh Choc V1 switches, low profiles keycaps, and the rest of the electronics.

The innards of the Penkesu
Image: Penk Chen via GitHub

The result is a swanky handheld computer that kind of reminds me of the Raspberry Pi 400 compact keyboard that houses an ARM-powered computer — but with a screen.

This isn’t the first retro-tastic Raspberry Pi laptop we’ve seen, as there was also the apocalypse surviving Raspberry Pi cyberdeck computer. Like the Penkesu, it also has a mechanical keyboard. But instead of a compact design, the cyberdeck’s components are wrapped in a rugged water-proof pelican camera case.

Small laptop designs have gone through phases; at various points, manufacturers raced to build compact and affordable internet-focused netbooks or joined Intel’s war on the MacBook Air with Ultrabooks. But handheld PCs like the super desirable clutch-style Sony VAIO P could never quite catch on. In the case of the VAIO P, this was because it was not very usable due to the slow Intel Atom processor, odd 8-inch 1600 x 786 resolution screen, and a nearly $900 price tag.

Would be cool if manufacturers made compact computers like the Sony VAIO P again.

But if you loved the form factor of the VIAO P and have a use case for a Raspberry Pi, then maybe this cool retro handheld is something for you. If you can’t think of a reason to build one, just remember it could be the perfect computer for hackers.

If you’re thinking of taking on the project, Penk Chen has posted all the info you need on GitHub, including the 3D printable STL files. And yes, putting in a Matrix wallpaper will actually be tasteful on this device.

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Scientists Try, Fail to Find a DIY Hangover Cure That Actually Works

Photo: Jamie Squire (Getty Images)

No one really knows how to cure a hangover, a new roundup of scientific studies has found. The review found little good evidence for any one particular hangover cure, with existing studies generally being of low quality.

The review was conducted by researchers in the UK and backed by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), the country’s largest government funder of clinical research. The team reviewed 21 different clinical trials testing out a variety of purported hangover cures. These included curcumin (the primary ingredient that gives turmeric spice its bright yellow color), red ginseng, NSAID painkillers like loxoprofen, probiotics, artichoke extract, pear juice, and the supplement n-acetyl-l-cysteine (NAC), among others.

Most of the studies failed to find any benefit for hangover symptoms from these treatments, the team found. And even for those that did find a statistically significant effect for some symptoms, the researchers weren’t too impressed by the quality of the data collected. None of the studies looked at the same hangover cure, nor were any results independently replicated by other researchers, which is needed to validate whether something in medicine works as advertised.

The team also noticed some glaring flaws in many hangover cure experiments. Eight of the studies, for instance, excluded women entirely. Studies also had very different designs from one another, which can make it hard to compare results. Some involved food, others didn’t, and several different types of alcohol were used to get people intoxicated. Other common hangover remedies, like acetaminophen or aspirin, have seemingly never been studied in randomized and controlled trials.

The findings were published in the journal Addiction.

“We have a limited number of poor quality research studies which examine treatments for hangover,” lead author Emmert Roberts, a clinical researcher at the National Addiction Center of King’s College London, told Gizmodo in an email.

Out of the various cures they studied, three did appear to show promise when compared to placebo. These were clove extract, tolfenamic acid (an NSAID painkiller available in the UK) and pyritinol (an analog of vitamin B6). These treatments are the most likely to warrant a rigorous clinical trial, Roberts said. Ideally, any future studies should use more universal and validated standards, including one for measuring hangover symptoms. They should also be pre-registered, relatively large, and more representative of the population, women included.

For now, though, there’s only one clear method to avoid a hangover. “The surest way of avoiding hangover symptoms is to drink in moderation or abstain from alcohol,” Roberts said. “However, very low quality evidence suggests that clove extract, tolfenamic acid and pyritinol have the strongest evidence of reducing overall hangover symptoms when compared to placebo, and all appeared to be safe.”

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Doctors approve DIY diabetes treatment systems

Under the banner of #WeAreNotWaiting, diabetes patients and allies have been DIY-ing glucose monitoring and insulin delivery tech to create intelligent diabetes treatments. This has largely gone on outside official medical care, which could be an eyebrow-raising phenomenon in what’s generally such a highly regulated field. 

However, a group of doctors and experts just gave the trend a big thumbs up. With some notes, of course.

Over 40 doctors, legal experts, and other healthcare professionals published a consensus statement in The Lancet Saturday affirming the tech and the “citizen science” involved. 

“Health-care professionals have an important role in facilitating and supporting people with diabetes to obtain beneficial outcomes from AID [Artificial Insulin Delivery] systems,” the article’s conclusion reads. “Although we do not suggest that open-source AID systems be universally recommended over commercial options, strong ethical reasons support the use of open-source AID systems, with safety and effectiveness data derived from real-world evidence.”

Essentially, the experts say that people’s positive experiences with the systems they’ve created is enough for the medical industry to take these methods seriously, and to establish some standards and protocols for doctors and lawmakers to help further access and safe use.

The existing standard in diabetes treatments is a two step process of glucose level monitoring, and insulin injections. This is generally a lot of work, and maintaining recommended glucose levels is especially challenging at night when people with diabetes (or their caretakers) are, ya know, sleeping. 

That’s where the DIY-ing comes in. People with diabetes wanted a way for the two components of treatment to communicate with each other, so that when glucose levels spiked, insulin could be automatically injected. So diabetes patients with technical knowhow made that communication system themselves, and published it as an open-source program that people could create and personalize themselves. The effect is the creation of an “artificial pancreas,” which is how some refer to the systems. 

There are some commercial systems that do this, but they’re generally expensive and not available everywhere. That’s why the patients created the hashtag movement #WeAreNotWaiting, because they were sick of the slow-moving medical industry not putting algorithmic power to work in a widespread way.

Diabetes patients and advocates celebrated the publication on social media.

The review of available data and people’s experience shows that this use has improved care, reduced stress and anxiety, and improved sleep. Moreover, it supports individuals’ pursuit of treatments in a DIY way — within diabetes, and beyond.

The medical and legal position of do-it-yourself and citizen science approaches have been subject to a lot of debate and uncertainty,” Dr Sufyan Hussain, one of the study’s co-leads, said in a statement from Kings College London. “This paper not only clarifies the position for do-it-yourself artificial pancreas systems in diabetes as a safe and effective treatment but sets a precedent for achieving an international professional consensus for other treatments based on user-driven do-it-yourself technologies and innovations.”

Or, to put that more plainly: The paper’s endorsement of patient-conceived, DIY treatment methods for this one specific condition could also energize the wider support for patient-driven treatment innovations in other areas of medicine.



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This DIY iPhone 13 case launches candy straight in your mouth

No matter how much Apple hypes Ceramic Shield — the special glass mixture introduced with the iPhone 12 — and the build quality of the metal and glass sandwich that is the modern iPhone, expensive phones need cases. Maybe you ordered one alongside your new iPhone 13, but if you didn’t, may I propose an exciting and undeniably useful option — a giant case that rockets hard candy into your mouth (via Gizmodo).

YouTube creator and inventor Matty Benedetto is responsible for the DIY case, which he calls the Candy Catapult. It’s 3D printed from flexible TPU filament with a hard candy container back for your poison of choice, be it M&Ms, Skittles, or Reese Pieces (only sickos would mix all three). To actually launch the candy out of the case, Benedetto added a pinball machine-esque spring-loaded plunger. It’s hard to gauge just how hard it launches its little sugary missiles, but it definitely seems strong enough to send a piece of candy clear across the room.


The Candy Catapult works!

My first thought watching Benedetto’s video is not relief that I suddenly have a way to dispense with my industrial-sized bag of lozenges (no help needed there) but really excitement over the other possible things one could launch from it.

I’m really just wondering how quickly this becomes a weapon with metal ball bearings in it. Is it launching it hard enough to break a window if you were to swap candy with something more… damaging? Some things are perhaps best left unknown.

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Ford launching DIY electric car kit for customs

It looks like Ford has a solution for Mustang fans who want an electric car, but aren’t into the Mach-E.

The Ford Performance division has announced that it will introduce an electric crate motor for custom car applications at this November’s SEMA show in Las Vegas.

The Eluminator borrows its name from Ford’s line of Aluminator crate V8s and looks like it was designed to easily swap in for one of them and possibly connect to a standard transmission.

Technical details – aside from the 570 mm length of the unit – have not yet been revealed, but Ford says it is intended “for your restomod or project.” Who’s up for building an electric Crown Vic?

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It’s a similar concept to GM’s Electric Connect and Cruise kit that was announced last year.

Additional information on the Eluminator will be released closer to the November 2-5 SEMA show.

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This DIY project turns an iPod into a click wheel-powered Spotify player

Classic iPods have their fans, but they’re not built for the modern age of music streaming — except for this one, which has been turned into a Spotify player by tinkerer Guy Dupont. While it may look like an iPod from the outside, inside, it’s got a Raspberry Pi loaded with software custom-built by Dupont to interface with Spotify, while still keeping the classic iPod style. He calls it the sPot.

In a video showing off the project and the process behind it, Dupont says he was inspired when his mother-in-law gifted him the old iPod. In a Hackaday post, he says he “had forgotten how good it feels to hold and use one of these things,” but he wanted to update it with some modern features, including (obviously) Spotify streaming, Bluetooth audio, and search. That’s right, the device can search the entirety of Spotify’s library and stream it.


We don’t need an iTunes library where we’re going.
GIF by Guy Dupont

Dupont put a Raspberry Pi Zero W inside the iPod because Spotify requires an internet connection — something most iPods don’t support. It also allows for the custom interface and Bluetooth audio. The sPot also needs a larger battery to power the Pi, but all of the hardware still fits inside the original iPod case.

iPod on the outside…
Photo by Guy Dupont

…all custom on the inside.
Photo by Guy Dupont

Dupont was able to keep the scroll wheel interface — and he even managed to improve it. There’s now haptic feedback when scrolling, instead of just the audible click. But while many of the original buttons are present, they haven’t all been as faithfully preserved as the click wheel has.

The hold switch now controls the power, instead of locking the iPod to prevent pocket-scrolling. And while the headphone jack is still there, it no longer does anything (RIP to a real one), as audio output is handled by Bluetooth. It also ditches the original 30-pin connector for an easier-to-find-in-2021 Micro USB port that handles charging.

The headphone jack is now just for decoration.
Photo by Guy Dupont


That beautiful scroll wheel action.
GIF by Guy Dupont

If you wanted to make one of these yourself, Dupont has posted all of the code you’ll need on GitHub. He also created a Hackaday page detailing the other software that’s needed to get Spotify working.

If you’re like me and are wishing for your own sPot, the video should give you pretty much all you need to get started. Doing the quickest of searches for the parts he’s listed, the project will cost around $100, plus the price of the iPod if you don’t already have one. But even if you have no desire to make one of these, the video is totally worth a watch just to experience the glory of what a modern iPod could look like and to see this really cool project come together.

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