red@work

All Your Kitchen Are Belong To Us

Published Thursday, October 09, 2008 11:42 AM

Apropos of nothing, we’ve just moved into a new office to house our ever-burgeoning workforce, and naturally there are a few important tweaks that need to be made to make the place fit for use. Like upgrading how much sweet, sweet caffeine the new coffee machine will dispense in one go, for a start. Until 2 weeks ago, it gave precisely half a cup of coffee every time you pressed the button. Ok, not a problem, just press the button twice, yes? Except that you now have a mug so full that surface tension is the only thing keeping the coffee inside it. And its temperature is best described as ‘volcanic’, so sipping it down to more practical levels is not really an option.

The first hacked appliance

One of the more prosaic benefits of having seriously technical people in the building is that they are very good at tinkering with anything electrical. In this case, they managed to convince the coffee machine to give us a decent cup of coffee at a temperature more tolerable to human beings without fire-proof throats (and for that we are all eternally grateful). They’ve also had a go at reconfiguring one of our fridges, though I was too afraid to ask exactly what they hoped to achieve *. Email in the desserts, perhaps.

appliance 2 - we didn't think it was possible

It amused me to walk through the kitchen and hear this hushed conversation:

“Ahhhh…”

“So this is…”

“Yup, and then you need to press …”

“Right… so how do you get the next…?”

“Just press it again”

“Oh, ok.”

… and then turn around and find Nigel and Rob peering into the innards of the refrigerator. When I finally got the courage to ask them about it later, their only comment was:

“We are 133t h4x0r5”

I'm too scared to ask what’s next on their hit-list. Has anyone else hacked / modded an appliance?

What's next?!

post by Chris Massey

* I subsequently discovered that they were trying to get the top shelf of the fridge to cool down, as it was, at the time, actually hotter than the ambient room temperature.

Comments

 

RobertChipperfield said:

One of these days I'll get round to finishing my home central heating control system... I really quite like the idea of being able to turn the heating on via a web page as I leave work :-D.
October 9, 2008 5:56 AM
 

Harlequin7 said:

October 9, 2008 7:57 AM
 

Neil Davidson said:

Maybe Rob and Richard could hack the Park and Ride signs on Cowley Road to change them from "Think Bike" to "Don't run with scissors"
October 9, 2008 7:58 AM
 

RobertChipperfield said:

I've looked at the X10 stuff before, but it always used to be fairly expensive. http://www.homechip.com/ do some pretty cheap Dallas 1-wire sensors, which then plug into a USB dongle. This in turn appears as a filesystem under Linux, so interfacing with it is beautifully easy.
October 9, 2008 8:00 AM
 

RobertChipperfield said:

Neil - I've been tempted! Especially the ones controlled via radio link. In combination with an RDS-TMC broadcast (http://dev.inversepath.com/rds/cansecwest_2007.pdf), it could seriously ease congestion on your journey into work :-p
October 9, 2008 8:04 AM
You need to sign in to comment on this blog

















<October 2008>
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
2829301234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930311
2345678
Larry Gonick: Geek of the Week
 Cartoonist, mathematician, historian and environmentalist. Larry Gonick proved that learning could be... Read more...

A SysAdmin's Guide to Change Management
 In the first in a series of monthly articles, ‘Confessions of a Sys Admin’, Matt describes the issues... Read more...

Exchange: Recovery Storage Groups
 It can happen at any time: You get a request, as Admin, from your company, to provide the contents of... Read more...

Build Your Own Virtualized Test Lab
 Desmond Lee explains the fundamentals of building a fully functional test lab for Windows Servers and... Read more...

Rendering Hierarchical Data with the Treeview
 It sometimes happens that Web Server controls that visualize data don't quite fit with the way that... Read more...