I've owned this watch for a couple years now(I paid $50), and frankly, I cannot find a good use for it. You can (kinda) use it as a accelerometer based mouse, but the novelty wears off quick. The display is like 80's LCD technology, so anything displayed has to fit in a couple 7 segment displays. I really wouldn't recommend if for the the casual hobbyist, but your own mileage may vary.
I've owned this watch for a couple years now(I paid $50), and frankly, I cannot find a good use for it. You can (kinda) use it as a accelerometer based mouse, but the novelty wears off quick. The display is like 80's LCD technology, so anything displayed has to fit in a couple 7 segment displays. I really wouldn't recommend if for the the casual hobbyist, but your own mileage may vary.
http://www.etsy.com/shop/ReAcoustic
No bluetooth, it uses a proprietary dongle to communicate with a computer. It does interface with a couple commercial heart rate monitors that speak it's language.
Hmm... assuming you want it full size, it would need to be printed in sections and welded together. My work area is about 220x220x100mm, but the X-Y is just limited by the size of the glass plate I am printing on. Theoretically, I could do a 600x600mm print - but at the moment that's just crazy talk.
I sized my glass to be roughly equivalent to a Mendel, but the other guys in the group have more Z height than I do.
Do you have any measurements to work from?
Alex
Does anyone have a quick link handy describing the process for creating
printable objects? I literally don't even know how you tell it to print
something. For instance, I tend to use Blender when I need to create 3D
objects, and presumably it could export some format that some other
utility would use en-route to create the printing-instructions file.
-Lynne
On Wed, Apr 4, 2012 at 11:22 AM, Lynne Whitehorn
<lynne.w...@gmail.com> wrote:
Tim