NEW GADGETS

Bug Labs debuts DIY Gadget-Building Kit

Pop Sci scores a look at the brand-new open-source hardware platform

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Creating new software has low overhead: All you need is a keyboard and patience. Heck, you can even grab hunks of ready-made code from open-source libraries.

But creating hardware is a lot, um, harder. At best, it’s a tedious process of soldering parts together. But often it’s plain impossible. Sharp may have a great miniature LCD panel you want to use. And they’ll be happy to sell it to you, as long as you buy 999,999 others along with it.

Bug Labs is tying to make hardware hacking nearly as easy as code mashing with its Bug platform: A series of components that snap together like Legos to form new gadgets. They announced their plans months ago and have shown renderings of the components, but today they took the wraps off the actual pieces. We saw them, and took pictures, a few weeks ago while working on an article for our upcoming January issue.

Key impression: The stuff is really small. Initially, I’d pictured a large, unwieldy, Rube-Goldbergian contraption. But this stuff is svelte. The Bug Base – a Linux computer that forms the heart of any gadget (top left in this photo) -- is a trim 5 x 2.5 x 0.6 inches. Not quite as small as an iPhone, but not much bigger. And the modules are a tiny 2.5 inches square by a quarter inch thick.

Four modules (enough to fill every socket on the base) will be available when the product debuts before the end of the year: A GPS receiver -- next to the base in the photo above -- and, from bottom left to right, -- a motion sensor, a touch-sensitive LCD screen and a camera. Bug labs hopes to release four new modules per season -- if they can score the parts.

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Peter Semmelhack, Bug’s founder, said that it’s very difficult to get component makers to sell them parts in smaller-than-typical quantities (a few hundred or thousand vs. hundreds of thousands). To get a mini LCD panel, for example, he had to convince the maker to buy into the overall idea of Bug Labs and do the sale out of the goodness of its corporate heart.

The struggle continues. Wi-Fi is supposed to be included in the Bug Base, but as of a few weeks ago, Semmelhack was still looking for a supplier.

One possible future piece will be easy for Bug to put together -- the Von Hippel module. It’s named for MIT professor Eric von Hippel, who advocates the theory of “user innovation” -- that end-users influence product innovation at least as much as manufacturers. His namesake module will contain just an empty circuit board, to which hackers can attach whatever they want.—Sean Captain

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Control + Shift

A new internal transmission makes it easy to ride hard

In the evolution of ride-over-anything mountain bikes, the ever-vulnerable rear derailleur—that gangly parallelogram that shifts the chain up and down the rear cogs when it’s not clogged with mud or bent by rocks—has been a glaring technical handicap. So GT (gtbicycles.com) got rid of it. With its $5,000 IT-1, GT moves gear-changing duties to an unsullied haven inside the bike frame, by way of an eight-speed internal transmission.

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Fistful of Browser

Replace your second computer with this portable tablet

Since the dawn of wireless, the roving Google junkie has faced two options: a bulky wireless laptop or a Web-page-cropping PDA. This fall, however, Nokia (nokia.com) will introduce a palm-size Internet gadget that surfs Web pages in full, albeit scaled-down, glory, anywhere. Measuring three by six inches, the 770 connects to the Internet via Wi-Fi or a Bluetooth cellphone. Think of it as a $350 replacement for that second PC.

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Italian Hardbody

An automotive designer best known for building sports cars shifts gears to invent a safer subcompact

Pint-size cars are the practical option in European cities, whose streets seem to be designed for wheelbarrows, but they come up short on safety. Keenly aware of this dilemma, Milan-based automotive designer Pininfarina has reconsidered subcompact safety from the inside out with its Nido concept car. Named after the Italian word for “nest,” Nido refers to the unique design for protecting passengers of this diminutive two-seater (it’s 2.5 feet shorter than a Mini Cooper).

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