

Geeky Gadgets for Halloween Parties? 306
Neurotoxic666 asks: "Like many others, my friends and I are going to hold a costumed party for Halloween, however we do not want it to be the typical haunt. We have some talent in computers and electronics, but we're short of ideas. Are there any good gadgets and props that the average geek can build to spice up the party? Of course, there will be the usual ambient sounds and decoration, but we're looking for more interactive, dynamic and techie stuff. One idea I've had is to use the living room computer on the TV and have white noise, ghosts and other creepy effects appear throughout the night. Does anyone have some suggestions, ideas we could build, effects that worked well in your parties? Anything from heart-beating books to special lightning to mad science devices is welcome!"
May be too scary for people with a heart condition (Score:4, Funny)
Re:May be too scary for people with a heart condit (Score:5, Funny)
Every Hallowe'en party needs a zombie.
And for those who are really daring... (Score:2, Funny)
Guaranteed to scare the most seasoned geek:
You: "How are you, Grandmother?"
Your Grandma: "Why do all these nekked women keep popping up? Could I have a phish? 'Cause I read that Bill Gates tries to get everyone sick by adaware-ing that clickety-click-thing."
You: <begin shaking in terror>
Your Grandma: "Oh, and how come my computer doesn't fax? You said it could send faxes, so I jammed what I wanted to fax into the cu
Re:And for those who are really daring... (Score:5, Insightful)
Salesman with a screwdriver.
Using a simple EGA adapter and Monitor .... (Score:2)
There was a hack awhile back for using MS write in Windows to edit the flying through space screen saver, using something like smiley faces or frowny faces instead of flags. There is also the ability to get the windows 3.1 driver for a hercules monchrome orange and black screen with adapter and make it run in on Windows 95.
The combinmation of the two will give you a screen saver with orange frowny faces cascading through the black of space. On two phase t
Re:Using a simple EGA adapter and Monitor .... (Score:2)
Anyway, why not just get a few kids [pay them to sit in the basement], some microphones, some small amplifiers (LM386s, mixers, and/or computers), and some small speakers. Run wire from the basement to strategically placed speakers, give the kids a script, possibly add a small security camera [or more] for them to see if anyone is actually there.
Re:Using a simple EGA adapter and Monitor .... (Score:2)
Oh NO...! (Score:3, Funny)
BSOD inspiration (Score:3, Funny)
Get some poster-board, paint it blue, put some hex on it, tie it to your chest, and go to a party as the BSOD.
Re:May be too scary for people with a heart condit (Score:2)
Come on, where's your sense of tradition? This be hallowe'en, mon!
Now here's some costume ideas that will scare the shit out of everyone, not just your inner geek:
Re:May be too scary for people with a heart condit (Score:2, Funny)
Speaking of Ballmer (Score:3, Funny)
Alternatively, if it detects music it begins jumping up and down screaming "YEAAAH!"
It also doubles as a L'il John costume.
The free as in beer method (Score:3, Funny)
A method free as in beer, showing what's full of beer. Yay!
EL Wire! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:EL Wire! (Score:5, Informative)
-Chris
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:EL Wire! (Score:4, Funny)
-Chris
Re:EL Wire! (Score:2)
And so does gin-and-tonic!
Blacklight liquid? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:EL Wire! (Score:3, Interesting)
My solution was this:
Blue Raspberry Kool-Aid, unsweetened - 1 packet
Tonic Water - 1 cup
Water - 7 cups
Sugar - 2 cups
Prepare the Kool-Aid per normal, only with the above-listed ingredients. Blue Kool-Aid tends to look pretty bright on its own, bu
Re:EL Wire! (Score:2)
Offtopic? (Score:2, Offtopic)
-Chris
multichannel audio (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:multichannel audio (Score:4, Interesting)
Endlessly rising or descending tones using Shepard tones [uni-bonn.de] can be pretty creepy when done slowly and coupled with a distraction.
One of the creepiest effects I know of is Libet's Experiment [wits.ac.za]. It turns out that you can measure a brain signal called the "Readiness Potential" on an EEG that appears about 0.5-1.5 seconds before you consciously decide to push a button! Hook the EEG up to a light, and the light will come on when you're about to push the button; you can't fool it. It's possible these days to rig an audio card EEG [sourceforge.net]; a skilled geek should be able to build a Libet machine to leave lying around for folks to play with. Let us know if you achieve OpenLibet, as we will all want to build our own.
1. Theramin 2. Girls 3. Genuine geek (Score:3, Funny)
Want your party to be a cut above your average geek party? Get some real live girls to come. Bonus if they're geeks!
Ooh, a third thought: How about a real geek - i.e. someone who bites the heads off live chickens???
Singing Buck (Score:2, Interesting)
Linux CDs (Score:5, Interesting)
-- @T4C
Bad Idea (Score:2, Insightful)
Would you run anything from a CD you received on "trick-or-treat" night?
Re:Linux CDs (Score:3, Funny)
Mwahaha!
Re:Linux CDs (Score:2)
I would suggest (Score:5, Funny)
Now that you mention it... (Score:3, Insightful)
Kinky and/or goth girls really know how to party.
Parallax (Score:2)
All kinds of neat things :-) (Score:5, Informative)
Just google a bit to get plenty of other ideas. Liquid latex is also a very nice thing to make fake body parts, that you can stick between a door or something.
Bad Idea (Score:5, Funny)
Re:All kinds of neat things :-) (Score:4, Interesting)
Since we work with kids who have developmental disabilities (and children of parents with developmental disabilities), we can't do anything with strobe lights (a lot of the kids would go into seizures.) or anything very scary. (Where "very scary" literally means anything that would bother a mentally hadicapped five year old...)
So, I decided it would be fun to write a "performance animation" program. Basically, there will be a 3D pumpkin character projected on one of the walls. He will have a background that appears perspective-correct to a person standing in the right spot, thanks to a two-pass rendering algorithm. The character will have a set of triggerable animations and gestures for his hands, and several facial morphs so that he can appear to talk. I will be in another room controlling the animation of the pumpkin king over VNC, and doing the voice, while I watch the kids on a hidden web cam in the room.
It should be pretty slick as soon as I get afew more things finished. It parses and displays the hand animation just fine - still need to add image loading, get texture coordinates from the object files, and add a bit of extra glue for my facial morphing code.
When all is said and done (friday), the kids will be able to have a complete interactiveconversation with a large friendly vegetable.
Of courtse, I would like a chance to work on the "soul stealing vertigo inferno" that I would do if this were for older, less challenged people. I wouldn't want to do it alone though. It would be way more work.
For the vertigo inferno, I wanted to have a few cameras, and some image processing code tied into the renderer, so that it would track the approximate position of the head of the person, and screw with the perspective projection. Given enough projectors to cover most of the visual field, and enough time, I'm pretty sure I could get just about anybody to lose their balance apon entering the room, if they kept their eyes open. Then the zombies would start to get mean...
Oh, the things I could do with a massive budget and a team of ten graphics programmers, modellers, and animators!
More with lights and speakers (Score:2, Interesting)
Another neat little thing you can do is get some kind of laser (brighter is better) and then affix a mirror to the cone or dustcap of a bass speaker (one that you don't particularly care about) so that it projects onto the ceiling. Get spooky patterns with your spooky music as the vibrating mirror projects moving light onto your ceiling or wall.
The ultimate Halloween drink dispenser! (Score:2)
Get a milk crate and a metal vat/trough/recepticle of some sort to stick inside the milk crate.
Next mount a skull dangling over this vat, attached to the top edge of the milk crate, dangling over the top of the vat.
Install a recirculating pump which pulls liquid out of the vat and shoots it out the skull's mouth, back into the vat.
Fill the vat with jungle juice and dry ice.
You now have the ultimate Halloween drink dispenser. People just hold the
Re:All kinds of neat things :-) (Score:2)
Yup. Been there, done that. There are indeed lots of neat ideas for halloween parties. But they're either childish or cost an arm and a leg. Thank you for your suggestions! I'm also looking for new things to do, fun ways to use that dusty webcam, cool computer-assisted games, totally geeky special effects with a simple LEDs-and-AA-battery setup, DIY motion detectors, sound effects for that logitech sub-woofer, sounds activated by something, toys to interact wi
Get this... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Get this... (Score:2)
Head in a Jar (Score:4, Funny)
Fire Breathing Carved Pumpkin (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Fire Breathing Carved Pumpkin (Score:2, Informative)
Yikes (Score:2)
Dot matrix printer motion controller (Score:5, Insightful)
The modern stuff is not as easy to hack in this way because its hard to talk directly to the hardware -- too many drivers, libraries, and embedded smarts between the CPU and the printer's motors.
If you have a good suit... (Score:5, Funny)
Smoke machine sensor (Score:2, Interesting)
But I came up with a much better idea. A montion sensor switch to trigger the smoke machine when someone approches.
I picked a "tomb stone" for $6 that has has a montion sensor. When the sensor is tripped it makes
Jacobs Ladder (Score:3, Informative)
Pumpkin projector (Score:4, Interesting)
Kind of low tech, but cool nonetheless.
Time Machine (Score:5, Interesting)
Get a strobe onto some dripping milk. When the strobe is flicking at the same frequency as the driping it looks like the drops are suspended in time. Adjust the strobe frequency and you can watch the splashes form back into droplets and move back up into the spout they came from. I built something like this at a party once, in a darkened room, it was a big hit. Called it a "time machine".
Simon.
mad scientist props (Score:4, Insightful)
Steve Ballmer with throwing chairs! (Score:3, Funny)
1. Monkey dance and sweat!
2. Say "Developers, developers, developers, etc.
3. Cuss and throw chairs.
My trick (Score:2)
What about... (Score:2)
Scary? (Score:2)
So, to *actually* help you, here's an idea: go use google.
** Martin
Re:Scary? (Score:2)
Re:Scary? (Score:2)
All-time spookiest music from Kraftwerk (Score:2)
Unfortunately, it doesn't seem to be on iTunes.
-ccm
How about this....... (Score:2)
Never tried it, but it sure would be cool......
Re: (Score:2)
Great Costume site! (Score:2)
Especially check out the "papparazzi" costume
Standard Mad Scientist costume prop (Score:3, Informative)
Add fake eyeballs [sciplus.com] with LEDs wired through them. Flashing LEDs or wiring up a bread board to make them flash is extra points. A knife switch [sciplus.com] wired to turn the eyes on and off is a delicious addition. Resistors may need to be placed in series with the LEDs depending on the batteries used. Batteries are of course placed inside the body of the chicken.
Decorate liberally with old serial/parallel ports from old computers, scraps of wire, resistors and other interesting looking electronics equipment. I've even had a serial cable running from the chicken to an old defunct laptop.
Electronic gizmos, such as a cheap box from Radio Shack or similar which can record a couple seconds of sound and playback always add to the fun.
I have rigged the chicken with coathangers and fishing line so I could move the head around puppet-like.
Frankenstein bolts in the neck are easy to accomplish... a bolt can easilly be held on with a nut inside the neck and one outside the neck.
Stitch the whole thing up coarsely with thick black thread, possibly leaving a hole to be able to get to the battery/make spot repairs.
Best accompanied with a labcoat, miss-buttoned white or light blue shirt, rubber chicken tie [crazyhatsandties.com] poorly tied. Brown dress pants or curdoroys, one leg tucked into the socks. Bright yellow chuck taylor's make good shoes, although clunky dress shoes work too. A pair of welding goggles (don't have to be worn on eyes... up on forehead is good enough) is good. Having poofy hair which can be costume painted white/gray is great, although a white wig from a costume shop does the trick too (better if gray/bluish highlights are added with costume paint.) And of course, an Erlenmeyer flask or graduated cylinder to drink from (Red Bull works well, with or without liquor.) Pocket protector, comically large syringe (preferably real 60cc syringe with no needle) stethescope, doctor's head reflector, and other medical trinkets always a plus. Black facepaint/ash to simulate explosion leaving clean goggle lines is good for effect, but seems to be counterproductive in actually talking to people.
Find a good book on animatronics. (Score:3, Informative)
A quick search pulls up books like Animatronics: Guide to Holiday Displays [amazon.com], which seems to be right on target.
The problem is, you don't even have two weekends left to get stuff done -- if you need to look for odd parts, or mail order something, it's really, really, late to be planning anything big. (yes, we typically do a conversion the day of halloween, so no one sees it too far in advance, as it's outside, but we've been doing it for years, and already have the stuff, and plenty of people to help.)
Oh
Ideas we've done or considered (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Ideas we've done or considered (Score:2)
Eerie "projector" tv (Score:2)
Take a big sheet of plexiglass and put it at a 45 degree angle behind a garage window. Mask off the area behind it with dark cloth. Put a tv with spooky images facing up at the plexiglass and put fake bats/spiders/etc behind the plexi. Apparently what it looks like is a bunch of floating images moving around right behind the window, depending on the video that you put on.
I'm feeling lazy so I'll let someone else search a
A Few Ideas (Score:4, Interesting)
Get a Y shaped fiberoptic cable and place it out of the way in a dark corner with two of the ends pointing away from the corner. Set up a red LED at the other end of a timer...instant glowing red eyes from the darkened corner.
You can set up a ghostly appirition by taking a box with a 1-way mirror facing into the box, fill it with some smoke from a fog machine, and have a projector shining in from the back. The image bounces off the mirror and hits the back of the box and the smoke gives an interesting halo effect to the whole image.
Edit a video file to include random static and ghostly images and burn to DVD or stream from your computer- pretend like it's just a regular movie (The original Night of the Living Dead is available as public domain from Archive.org if you don't want to worry about copyright infringement and was a good scary movie). This can work even better if you record a movie off the TV with commercials and all so that it may be less obvious what you are doing.
Set the Air Conditioner on a timer so certain rooms can develop "cold spots".
A lot of digital video camers will pick up Infra Red light from things like TV remotes- this is a good way to create fake "orbs" in photos or videos to spook out your guests.
A good, edible fake blood can be made with corn syrup, corn starch (to thicken it and make it less transparent) and red food coloring.
A few more general notes, remember that things are often a lot more freaksom if there is less of a setup, include some really hokey and poorly done tricks to put your guests at ease, this can make the good stuff more effective. Also remember that panick spreads- so make sure to act freaked out and assure your guests that you had nothing to do with your tricks- this can make the entire thing much more effective. Also try to make sure that things are less predictable, if a spooky noise sounds off every time someone walks down a hallway it can ruin the illusion.
Try to get a couple of other people "in" on the setup before hand- that way you have a pool of people who can set things up so that your guests don't learn to expect something every time you excuse yourself to the kitchen or bathroom.
Above all, keep in mind that the scariest things are generally unseen or heavily veiled, props that are too goesh (grammar nazis, I tried to find the correct spelling of this word to no avail, anyone care to help?) often turn out to be humerous instead of scary.
Re:A Few Ideas (Score:2)
If the water is clean and fresh, it probably won't poison you :-)
Re:A Few Ideas (Score:2)
What, was he born halfway through the wedding?
Re:A Few Ideas (Score:2)
Gauche? Not exactly sure what you were trying to say nor what "gauche" means (in English), but I've seen the word used in a similar sense.
I sat there for half a minute trying to figure out what the two-syllable word "go-ESH" meant.
Re:A Few Ideas (Score:2)
Re:A Few Ideas (Score:2)
Re:A Few Ideas (Score:2)
True geeks don't go to parties. (Score:2)
A true geek doesn't like such silly traditions anyway, so it doesn't matter.
A true geek probably is home on their computer at halloween, avoiding those annoying kids who keep coming to the door begging for candy, disturbing us at a time which could have been well spent hacking.
But, what do I know? I hate halloween.
Re:True geeks don't go to parties. (Score:2)
I've had to deal with the trouble makers on more than one occasion. What's the point of everyone buying candy and giving it to kids anyway? Just buy candy for your own damn kids if it matters that much, I never got the point. Half the time we end up eating half the candy for halloween before halloween even comes so we have to buy some more....
Chicks dig monkeys (Score:2)
Books chock full of creepy ideas: (Score:2)
Halloween == /dev/null Nethack Tournament! (Score:2, Funny)
Boo Tube (Score:2)
Basically you put your TV on the floor so the screen is pointed straight up. Then you hang a piece of plexiglass at a 45 degree angle above the TV. The image will be projected on the plexiglass and look like a floating head that you can see through.
High Voltage!!! (Score:2)
Just make sure to keep it far enough away from the computers
Shock Photos (Score:2, Interesting)
fembots (Score:2)
I really like this question.. (Score:2)
One I remember we did was to swipe (british: steal) loads of flashing roadworks lights and spend a while synchronising them to an in sequence strobe effect along the lnegth of the halway..
Dry ice and liquid nitrogen were good ones with my chem. eng. room-mates but I'm a computer guy.. I don't see too much of that these days.. mh Cray XMP is still in the posr...
Fog machine and tombstones (Score:5, Informative)
For me the hardest part was making the drip mechanism and getting the drip rate right. You want a drip rate of several drops per second but not a running stream. I bought a used aquarium pump but it ran WAY too fast. So I ended up using gravity. I mounted a 2-liter pop bottle upside down on top of the box, with a piece of plastic tubing epoxied through a hole in the cap, extending down into the box. I fused the end of the tubing shut with a candle flame and poked several pinholes in it until it flowed right. Initially the thing stopped dripping after just a few seconds, so I had to poke a hole in the pop bottle's bottom end (which was at the top) to allow air to enter. Then the drip rate was too fast, so I heat-sealed some of the holes in the tubing. It was trial and error, and it ran a little too fast when the bottle was full and too slow when it was low on juice. Some sort of slow pump would work better. But what the hell, the parts were free.
The drops of glycerine instantly boil away to dense white fog when they hit the hot iron, and the fan blows the fog out the other end of the box. Commercial fog juice is a 25% solution of glycerine in water. A 12-oz bottle of glycerine costs about $8 at the drug store. Mix it with 3 parts water and you're there. This quantity will last a couple hours.
The fog machine emits steam, which rises. To make the fog float along the ground you need a chiller, which you can build with an old styrofoam cooler. Cut a 3-inch hole cut in each end, with a tunnel of wire mesh connecting the two holes. You fill the cooler with ice and put the fog machine up against the hole at one end. When the hot fog passes through the chilled tunnel it will stay close to the ground. You don't actually need pieces of plastic pipe or anything, unless you want to duct the fog somewhere.
Instead of using my fog machine to fog up the living room I made a cemetery in the front yard. I had various slabs of styrofoam lying around from who knows what, in thicknesses ranging from 1/2" to 2". If you don't have any just get a 2x8 sheet of rigid foam insulation an inch or two thick. I cut out tombstone shapes with a scroll saw, and for good measure cut a few cracks and other defects into the edges with a serrated kitchen knife. Then I used a soldering iron with a large tip to carve out lettering on each one. The foam melts away at the touch of the iron, and the result has a nice deteriorated look. Then I spray painted the tombstones gray and then sprayed lightly over with black in a haphazard pattern to distress them.
I mounted the stones in the yard using a coat hanger stuck in the bottom of each one and into the ground. Lighting fog from the side looks really good, so I hung a lawn spotlight in a large bush about 15 ft away, downwind of the graveyard, shining through the leaves at the tombstones. The tombstones themselves were standing at an angle to accentuate the shadowing inside the carved letters. It made the lettering really visible. On the upwind side I set up the fog machine and aimed it toward the sidewalk. As the fog came out the slight breeze blew it gently across the yard, through the graveyard and toward the light. My wife hung small stereo speakers in the same bush as the spotlight and we had creepy organ music playing. All in all it was a really cool effect.
Be careful about fog machines (Score:3, Informative)
A pre-built fog machine costs about US$20 at most larger stores and is temperature regulated so you don't poison anyone, making it a wiser investment then strapping your clothes iron, a drip mechanism, and a small fan together (quieter and easier to work with too!). Also keep in mind the fine glycerin smoke can trigger asthmatics & other folks with breathing pr
Re:Have to say it .. (Score:5, Funny)
Needless to say, that effect has been disabled.
Re:Have to say it .. (Score:4, Funny)
Scariest screensaver ever made.
Re:Have to say it .. (Score:2)
http://news.com.com/2061-10805_3-5703006.html [com.com]
Re:Have to say it .. (Score:3, Funny)
A screen grab of a bash prompt that reads 'man mount'?
Re:Halloween? (Score:5, Interesting)
Hallowe'en is now the second-largest holiday cash generator for businesses, right behind Christmas.
People spend hundreds of bucks each on parties for ADULTS. Or go to any bar on Hallowe'en and try to say there isn't some serious coin being raked in.
It's #2 in terms of revenue, but its #1 in terms of profitability, because you don't see the wild discounting like you do weeks before Christmas.
You can always find something to buy on Christmas Eve - just TRY to find a costume the day before Hallowe'en - you'll be stuck wearing a "costume" you made from a roll of aluminium foil you scrounged from the pantry and some duct tape.
Re:Halloween? (Score:2)
Re:Halloween? (Score:2)
Great! I need a new tin foil hat to protect me from the effects of watching "Star Wreck - In The Pirkining". What do you recommend, oh great one?
Re:Halloween? (Score:2, Funny)
It's
Re:Halloween? (Score:2)
I got the foil and duct tape, noiw what do I do with it....
Re:Halloween? (Score:2)
Because the penalty for showing up at a Hallowe'en party w/o a costume varies:
Re:Halloween? (Score:3, Funny)
Well, you can always be the hit of the party with the chicks:
With any luck, they'll say "Oh yeah? Prove it!"
Of course, this being Hallowe'en and all, be careful not to hit on the woman dressed as a hooker - that might be me (you know how crazy we denizens of Kanuckistan
Dude, you need to get out more. (Score:2)
Kids do dumb shit, deal with it. Any kid that is not running around at night jacking cars or robbing liquor stores is f'n fine with me.
I honestly believe you are about 2 traumatic social experiences shy of a major phsychotic break.
Re:I Hate halloween. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Gadgets (Lasers!) (Score:2, Interesting)
The "time tunnel" effect is always a crowd pleaser. Drill a hole in a penny and press it onto the shaft of a small DC motor. (It needs to be almost, but not perfectly, perpendicular to the shaft.) Glue a small mirror (1" square or less) onto the penny. Turn on t