![]() ![]() It was an odd and somber thing, enjoying the sunny weather outside on our vacation and coming in to watch the latest horrors taking place just a few thousand miles around the coast, in the Gulf. We took the same trip last year – actually, we arrived on the first day of Katrina. It’s nearly September, and we’re headed to the Outer Banks, NC for a week at the beach in a few days. UPDATE: It wasn’t balsa wood but PixelBlocks that came to the rescue on an enclosure… Next step: construct a balsa wood enclosure painted flat black. See another user’s IO-Warrio project involving custom code pushing iTunes and EyeTV data from Mac to LCD. I made some free time this afternoon, pulled out the soldering iron, chopped up an old SCSI cable, and got things together. This weekend I received both the IO-Warrior 24 kit as well as the white-on-blue, LED-lit 4×24 LCD I ordered. Right now the only officially supported LCD controller is Code Mercenaries’ USB-based IO-Warrior. ![]() That’s when I noted that external LCD support had been added to the program. After upgrading from a dual G5 2.5 to a quad-core Mac Pro, I hit the Hardware Monitor website to grab a Universal version of the app. I’ve long used Bresink’s Hardware Monitor to keep a tab on the vitals of various Macs I’ve used in recent years. ![]()
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