The LEGO Desk 110
It's a prety amazing sight to see. Check out how a full size desk is made of LEGOs - complete with drawers, and holes for wires. 35,000+ blocks of joy, and a lot of glue. Yum.
I put up my thumb... and it blotted out the planet Earth. -- Neil Armstrong
Lego Tux! (Score:2)
Any question of the coolness of Lego is now removed.
Re:Disgusted (Score:1)
A lego desk is less functional than a regular desk. It costs far more. It is a demonstration of the lack of maturity of the person who ordered it.
Does anyone else remember when legos were toys? Now they're on the same level as plaster of paris or stretched canvasses. Consumable art media. The previous lego projects here like the gun and the big lego Tux were at least disassemblable.
This is just a silly art project that some tasteless joker decided that he'd whine about until he got. I'm not faulting the artist for creating it, he wouldn't have even thought of it without being under contract.
Another reason I'm disgusted is the wastefulness of the whole project. Legos wouldn't need to be so expensive if people didn't keep using them up permanently in art projects. Lego went to a lot of work to make their bricks reusable.
We're in a spoiled, wasteful society. The lego desk is a demonstration on a higher order than almost anything I can think of.
Re:The joy of a tight labor market. (Score:1)
Re:LEGO: Not Open Source... (Score:1)
Me, I'm happier with the +es pluralisation of words ending in o than the +s ending:
Potatoes [dictionary.com] - good
Hoboes [dictionary.com] - good
Solos [dictionary.com] - not good
Legos - grim.
Only reason I can come up with is that the +s pluralisation tends to lead me to (think about) mispronouncing the word.(Cue for a Lin-ux / Line - ux subthread here...)
So, no, I can't deal with it. Sorry. Have to protest this one.
Re:Is LEGO a proprietary standard? (Score:2)
Re:LEGO: Not Open Source... (Score:1)
It's not really their fault I think. Companies have to show that they're protecting their trademark if they want to keep it. By putting all those disclaimers and maybe launching a half-hearted lawsuit every once in a while, they can say to a judge "hey, look, we've actively protected our trademark.". They probably don't really care if you actually use it incorrectly.
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Kids' stuff (Score:2)
Re:Offtopic but interesting... (Score:1)
We all know they have collections at home and play with them still
Mirror (Score:5)
Mirrored HERE [dhs.org]
Re:Can you imagine . . . (Score:1)
I have a desk with one computer, and a nice computer table with two computers. Desks are not the right height for typing anyway -- a table designed for computers is.
All I'm saying here is that if I had a desk made of LEGO(tm) bricks, I could write just fine on my computer table. The desk would be more for the coolness factor.
Surely a guy who can demand a desk of LEGO bricks gets more furniture than just the desk?
Re:Disgusted (Score:1)
Woz
Newspaper Article about this (Score:2)
(the article isn't online so it's a scan)
Re:The joy of a tight labor market. (Score:2)
http://people.netscape.com/toms/c ubicl e/computer/ [netscape.com]m l [hardocp.com]
'http://www.hard ocp.com/news_images/2000/january_2000/1-15-00b.ht
etc. I think the idea of a lego case has been dead-horsed around here before too, but I am too lazy this Sunday to look it up.
Re:Can you imagine . . . (Score:2)
Mirrored... (Score:1)
Re:I'm very cheap... (Score:1)
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Even more Offtopic...IIRC? (Score:1)
Someone care to clue me in on this one?
Any searches I do on it refer to IRC chat.
This is bothering me enough to lose sleep.
Bob.
Re:wowie! (Score:1)
As long as it's something new and interesting...why not?
And also, what's the point of a lego desk if it's glued together? Might as well be a wood desk with a lego top.
I'll venture to say that the 'point' is different from person to person. It could be that the person who requested the desk wanted to make a statement to their coworkers, or to the management of the place (ie, 'See how important they think *I* am?').
Gluing it together is extremely important when dealing with something as large as a desk. Think about trying to move it if it's not glued. I dont think the bricks would hold together with that much weight pulling them apart if you lifted the desk.
Re:Even more Offtopic...IIRC? (Score:1)
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Re:Woah! Cool! (Score:1)
(which is why I didn't submit a story about the Lego desk, but that's not important right now).
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Lego Mosaic (Score:1)
Well, this isn't a new idea, someone's already beat you to it.
A quick search for mosaic on lugnet brings up a few interesting images.
soldering irons (Score:1)
Something odd (Score:1)
Re:Even more Offtopic...IIRC? (Score:1)
ugh. or are you just being sarcastic?
Re:Is LEGO a proprietary standard? (Score:1)
Re:Is LEGO a proprietary standard? (Score:5)
From its earliest days making wooden toys, the Lego company prided itself on quality. Every toy got three coats of paint. One line of ducks was actually recalled in order to have the third coat applied. Lego might cost more, but you get a much better product. And of course, Lego offers a much larger variety of pieces than any of its competitors (especially Technic pieces).
Whoops (Score:1)
Who was it? (Score:2)
Joshua
LEGO: Not Open Source... (Score:3)
They are also dogamtic about the use of the LEGO trademark on websites- Hemos, take note, assuming you ever bother to read posts... I know this was covered well last time Lego was mentioned but, one more time, from the above linked page:
I suppose it is too much to ask that this is the last time we'll ever see the LEGOs word on /.
Re:The joy of a tight labor market. (Score:5)
Having lego drinking glasses and other such things would do wonders for desk neatness.. nothing could tip over!
The guy who built this stuff is my new hero.
-Jeff
Can you imagine . . . (Score:2)
. . . writting on one of these things. Holy crap! Why do I keep getting these little holes in my paper!?
Ethan Jewett
E-mail: Now what spa I mean e-mail site does Microsoft run again?
Why the desktop isn't smooth... (Score:2)
Writing (by hand, you know; I think some people still do this) wouldn't be a problem with one of those desk-protector/calendar underlay thingys, but I'm sure the impression patterns from the dots on arms (and elbows, ouch!) aren't going to be much fun. Of course, there's always going to be the problem of cleaning it...
Re:He was actually PAID to do this? (Score:1)
Re:LEGO: Not Open Source... (Score:1)
LEGO will discover the same thing .. it's like trying to control the flow of the tides by legislation. Totally stupid, and unworkable.
I don't dig these large scale models (Score:1)
All the links are broken, but I'm willing to assume that this thing is totaly amazing. Still, I'm really not impressed by these large scale models, I think Legos are best when used at their intended scale (based on 'lego men'.) I can't believe anyone would spend their time sticking together thousands of blocks to make sheets. At this scale, all you end up using are thick 2xwhatever blocks, making hundreds (thousands if you count all the crap they're making now) of accent pieces useless. This incredible expenditure of pieces can't stack up (intended) to the intricacy of something like a space ship or Technics robot built at the proper scale. If you want to make a show off desk, take up wood working.
Re:He was actually PAID to do this? (Score:1)
Re:Why the glue? (Score:3)
With the stylus that clips onto the side of the screen of course.
I'm very cheap... (Score:2)
Re:Why the desktop isn't smooth... (Score:1)
A lot nicer for the finshed look than a blotter I would think.
Re:He was actually PAID to do this? (Score:2)
Re:LEGO: Not Open Source... (Score:1)
Even the mostly compatable non-lego bricks are never called "Lego". People usualy say something like "It's not a lego, but it'll probably fit."
-Andy
better stories... (Score:1)
Reading on some dude who has a desk made of Lego and thinks Alice in Wonderland is called Alice From Wonderland isn't one of those things.
There were some good stories over the last week after months of garbage. Please let's not go back to dark times of such.
Re:better stories... (Score:1)
Re:Is LEGO a proprietary standard? (Score:1)
Lego has been showing up on
Carbon Fiber LEGOs please, (Score:3)
There are added benefits:
whatever material you choose will revolutionize that material's place in the world. The volume of LEGO production is so immense (are you up to billions per year yet? per week, maybe?) that the infrastructure needed to supply this material will get a big boost and drive prices down in all industries using this material (palm and laptop cases, auto components, etc) This will be good for everyone.
With cheap and simple gluing techniques and immensly sturdy brick materials, people could build actual structures and drive the building supplies home in a compact car. This is good for Europe in particular, but maybe also in places like Siberia, Africa and Bangaladesh for all sorts of natural disaster/infrastructure reasons.
Let me add that I am assuming another LEGO form factor would be developed, with full sized structures in mind. I'm thinking in the 40-60cm range.
:)Fudboy
The Plural of LEGO is LEGO (Score:1)
Lego Clock in background? (Score:1)
Re:Is LEGO a proprietary standard? (Score:1)
Care about freedom?
Lego toilet (Score:2)
Re:Kids... (Score:1)
Ouch... (Score:4)
it would leave an interesting pattern, but still...
i've looked at love from both sides now. from win and lose, and still somehow...
Great! (Score:2)
Sucks to be an impulse buyer.
But I sure have a lotta kewl toys! =)
Vote [dragonswest.com] Naked 2000
The joy of a tight labor market. (Score:2)
Of course, this is what comes from having a market where anyone with real skills is a prime target for headhunters. I bet the reason the person who gets the desk made that really cool request is to insure that they would never have to leave the job they were on, then someone agreed to all their terms. Amazing. I would really love to know what the owner of that cool desk does for a living.
And, just think, someone could actually put a lego computer case on that lego desk...
Re:Lego Clock in background? (Score:1)
He was actually PAID to do this? (Score:3)
Maybe LEGO should come up with certification or something:
LCBB - LEGO Certified Block Builder
Re:The joy of a tight labor market. (Score:1)
Re:Absurd Design? (Score:2)
Good idea aside, how often do *you* take your desk apart for modularity? I never have yet. You'd give up a lot of sturdiness by the Lego desk modular, unfortunately.
I want my kitchen island made out of Lego...
Why the glue? (Score:3)
I would have thought that you could design it such that the normal locking action of the pieces was strong enough to keep it together.
Woah! Cool! (Score:3)
Anyway, you don't get the full scope of the desk until you check out the pictu res [ericharshbarger.org].
He doesn't say how much he was paid, but he says that it was "worth [his] time."
Two Words:
Very Impressive.
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Re:Ouch... - don't you know anything (Score:1)
Re:Why the glue? (Score:1)
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wowie! (Score:2)
Don't let me mislead you, I love lego as much as the next 20 year old guy, but come on, do we have to make everything into lego then post it on Slashdot? A couple of weeks ago it was a lego train (but that was really cool). And also, what's the point of a lego desk if it's glued together? Might as well be a wood desk with a lego top.
Let's say for example I built myself a lego building. Would I glue it? No, because if I glued it together then I wouldn't be able to reshape the building on a whim, which would defeat the purpose of lego. Taking it apart and putting it back together (but let's ignore the fact that it'd probably break easily without glue)
Re:Disgusted (Score:3)
So you're saying that anything that costs a lot of money and isn't entirely necessary is unreasonable? By this logic, if I get a raise and decide to buy a new sports car, in spite of the fact that my current car is in perfect working order, it is unreasonable for me to by the sports car. I should, instead, donate my extra money to charity. Is that what you're saying?
I say: If you've got extra money, spend it on whatever the hell you want.
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Re:The joy of a tight labor market. (Score:1)
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well, if he's working in the computer industry, he's already getting all that and more.
Re:Lego toilet (Score:3)
Re:LEGO: Not Open Source... (Score:1)
I think when these companies ask people to use specific terminology it's more so they can say, "We tried to tell them, but they insist," rather than because they actually care. If I had a product and people called my competition by my name, I'd be stoked.
huh-huh, that would be cool.
Perhaps cuz the site got slashdotted? (Score:1)
Kids... (Score:2)
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*Condense fact from the vapor of nuance*
25: ten.knilrevlis@wkcuhc
Re:LEGO: Not Open Source... (Score:1)
I really hate this kind of garbage. I'm assuming they're doing it for the same reason that Band-Aids are now "Band-Aid brand bandages" and Jello is now "Jello brand gelatin dessert" and the like: trademark dilution.
I call them Legos (I'm sure they'll be irritated that I don't all-cap them, either), as does everyone I've ever spoken too about them. Whether it's convenient for their lawyers or not, when only one famous product comes from a company (Netscape, anyone?), that product tends to be referred to by the company's name.
Deal with it.
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-Esme
Mindstorm (Score:2)
Wow... I want one
Not to be confused with (Score:1)
The Guy's Contract (Score:1)
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Re:Disgusted (Score:1)
Waste is an unwanted byproduct from the process of converting one type of energy into another. A wasteful engine gives off a lot of heat when converting chemical energy into torque. This desk is not a waste because it is wanted. Whatever your pet cherity is, you didn't further it by making this post. The best thing about free enterprise is that the people who produce the most get to decide what's important. If you don't produce anything, you can't give it away.
Idiotically expensive just means you wouldn't pay that much for it. Something is worth whatever someone else is willing to trade for it. That isn't waste. As long as both parties in a trade participate voluntarily and have all the correct information they need to judge whether they wish to participate, then there is no waste. Waste would be if the transaction was taxed, because then there would be energy lost to an unwanted byproduct.
How do these things occur? Does Lego sponsor such or are they truly just some doofus's whim?
If the guy were that much of a doofus, he wouldn't be worth the desk. I doubt Lego had anything to do with this project other than making the materials and inspiring those involved. They don't need publicity. They have a quality product that sells itself.
Next time someone asks for such a stupid thing, why not try to talk them into donating to charity?
Next time you feel like making an emotional ('disgusted' was the subject) post because you're jealous that someone has enough resources to spare to get what they want, why don't you spend the time you would have spent posting working for your favorite charity? My favorite charity is Libertarianism, so this post is not a waste because I get to spout my self-centered tripe on a public forum and I feel like I might be convincing someone to go along with my view point. I'm probably wrong, but I value the feeling I get. Did you get your times' worth when you posted about what someone else should do with their resources? I doubt anyone was swayed by your arguments, so if that was your objective, it's very likely your energy was wasted. Heck, from your point of view, my post is a waste because it's not what you want.
Wasting thousands of dollars on a glued together lego desk is so far beyond reasonable that it can't even be expressed in words.
I guess it would have been ok if he'd made just a chair? Or just a lamp? Or a cupholder to protect his dead tree desk? That wouldn't have been far beyond reasonable? It's the audacity of making an entire desk that bothers you?
This desk will probably last for decades, at least as long as a wooden desk, possibly longer. It will provide years of entertainment for all who own it, it serves as an excellent complement to the constructor, the company who bought it, and the employee who receives it. It is a work of art, and it is functional. A normal company would have bought modular cube-farm desks and would not have accepted this employee's demand. Your accusation that this work is wasted is short-sighted and almost as self-centered as my assumption that you care what I think.
Anyway, thanks for playing.
Re:LEGO: Not Open Source... (Score:1)
Re:I'm very cheap... (Score:1)
Been there, done that (Score:1)
Re:Disgusted (Score:1)
-JimTheta
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Re:Why the glue? (Score:1)
But one of the uncool thing is having some tyke disassemble it, on "Bring your child to work" day.
Re:I'm very cheap... (Score:2)
I've heard of picking up the pieces after a car accident, but... :)
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Re:Disgusted (Score:2)
What would have been TRULY fantastic... (Score:3)
With such a large surface and so many 1x1 bricks the guy could have actually made an image. All someone would have to do is open a nice desktop image (like some wallpaper of a nature scene or a space scene or hell, render something cool) and then convert it to a 2-bit (4 color) image. Scale to the size of your LEGO desktop.
For example, if the total desktop is 640 x 480 LEGO units in size, that's more than enough resolution for a very impressive image.
Damn, if I ever built my own lego desk, I definitely think that's the way to go. Maybe this is the next step in LEGO? Lego dithered art?
Re:Been there, done that (Score:2)
Actually, what the original poster was refering to was not a computer CASE made out of LEGO blocks, but, a computer made out of LEGO blocks.
The computer in question was a mechanical computer made of Tinker Toys. If it's indeed the one that I'm thinking of, it's a very task specific 'computer' that does one thing - play Tic Tac Toe. It's a pretty interersting contraption to look at - damned complex.
I would toss a link to the original /. article here, but, I can't find it anymore :-/
Re:get started on your own project... (Score:1)
It would be better if there was a larger selection available - although I can see the trees being used in some landscape somewhere...
Re:Why the glue? (Score:1)
Re:The joy of a tight labor market. (Score:2)
Honestly, some people just don't deserve their "good fortune".
Why are you so critical? (Score:3)
Just Wait.. (Score:1)
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Re:Why the glue? (Score:1)
While it would be nice to be able to build a hutch/printer stand/etc on top of the desk, it would still be a lot more flexible if you could change any of it.
But since the person who ordered it was apparently some overpaid weenie that was being catered to by a stupid high tech company, he probably wouldn't reconfigure it anyways.
A true geek would have no pride in using a LEGO desk unless he made it himself.
I bet after using it for a bit he'll want a normal desk.
Re:Woah! Cool! (Score:4)
Seems this dude does lots of other cool models [ericharshbarger.org] as well. This guy sure knows his Lego.
Also quite impressive, is his Model of Tux [ericharshbarger.org]!
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Re:About the desk-Drawers (Score:1)
The problem is that Lego doesn't sell all of their pieces in bulk yet.
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Re:Why the glue? (Score:1)
get started on your own project... (Score:1)
Eggo My Lego (Score:1)
Absurd Design? (Score:3)
Also if the entire desk is actually several components, then shipping becomes easier.
A more impressive design would combine the computer and the desk, but until I get the money, time, and skill to do it, I guess I should just sit back and be impressed.
Re:Why the glue? (Score:1)
Write? What do you mean by wri... ahh, that's that old analog medium of communication. You mean people still use that? :)
Expanding with mindstorms (Score:2)
How about adjusting height/tilt of the table top for different types of work with the touch of a button? Code locking the drawers, remote controlling stuff, automatically rearanging the desk (moving mousepad, phone etc for lefthand/righthand users) emptying the pencil sharpener when it's full and so on... Hey, it might even remote controll a small robot to carry out the trash and bringing your favourite refreshment for you!
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Here's a direct picture link (Score:2)
Is LEGO a proprietary standard? (Score:3)
Why is this? Does LEGO sue anyone who makes an exact clone? Surely any patent expired long ago (plenty of other people make raised-dot-and-hole building blocks). Can you copyright *dimensions*?
I know the brand is the big thing, but as a parent with LEGO-hungry kids (actually they're into Duplo, the toddler-size blocks, which are obscenely expensive) I'd happily buy a no-name if it worked. But there's nothing out there that does. Is this market failure or something more sinister from LEGO HQ?
Offtopic but interesting... (Score:4)
Re:About the desk-Drawers (Score:3)
http://slashdot.org/articles/00/06/14/1242242.s
The link to the site is....
http://www.lego.com/bulk