Skip to Content

AOL Tech

Halloween posts

Video Games

'Mario' and 'Luigi' Rob and Beat Cabbie on Halloween

Police are on the lookout for two brothers. Occupation: plumbers, Clothing: overalls, Hobbies: saving princesses and collecting coins. Reports say they answer to these names: Mario and Luigi.

No, this isn't breaking news from the Mushroom Kingdom (unless Staten Island just got a new nickname). According to the New York Daily News, Staten Island police are searching for four men (two were dressed like the video game icons) who were caught on a gas station's surveillance video around 4 a.m. on November 1st robbing and beating a taxi driver. After apparently leaving a Halloween party, one of the men tried to steal money from the cabbie's pocket. The driver pulled into the gas station and asked the men to pay and get out of his car. They refused, beat the driver, and stole his cash anyway.

There's no word yet on whether or not the crooks were disappointed that the driver wasn't carrying large, gold coins. In all seriousness, let's hope these guys are caught soon. If a couple no-good criminals ruin one of our favorite Halloween costumes, we'll have to go out and regulate. And we won't use turtle shells, either. [From: the New York Daily News]

Web

Guy Wearing Breathalyzer Costume Busted for Drunk Driving

Whether it was a brilliant stunt or just sweet irony at work, we'll probably never know what 18-year-old trick-or-treater James Miller was thinking when he was arrested early Sunday, for drunk driving, dressed as a Breathalyzer.

Cops pulled over the intoxicated Cincinnati teen in Oxford, Ohio after catching him driving the wrong way on a one-way street, NBC 4 reports. As police searched the car, they found a can of Bud Light in the center console, the remains of the case strewn about the car, and a few Ohio IDs in Miller's wallet. An actual Breathalyzer test revealed the teen's blood alcohol content was .158, or nearly twice the state's legal limit.

The costume, which retails for about $30, shows three sobriety levels: "Boring," "Life of the Party," and "Sotally Tober." It also, of course, features a plastic tube (in the groin region, no less) bearing the instructions, "Blow Here." We're willing to bet that Miller would like to add another sobriety result to the costume's display, just above the blow tube, and right next to "Sotally Tober": "This blows." [From: NBC News and The Smoking Gun, via BoingBoing]

Celebrities, Web

Adult Care Bear and Balloon Boy Among Popular Costume Searches


If you've ever dressed up for Halloween, you've probably bumped into someone at a party or bar who's wearing the same costume as you. From experience, we can say it's a deflating feeling. While the holiday is practically upon us, you might want to quickly scan this list of popular costume searches before you head out into the night.

What costumes are in this year? Well, CNET News reports dead celebrities, anything sexy, and cartoon characters are among October's more popular Web search terms -- with Michael Jackson and Balloon Boy taking the top honors. Judging from that list, you'll see plenty of people Saturday night who are wearing single gloves and fedoras, skimpy sailor uniforms, and sexy Care Bear suits. Now, that's truly scary! In case those costumes don't strike your fancy, there are geekier options out there, too.

Read more →

Advice, Editor's Picks, Web

Last-Minute Halloween Guide (Best Online Resources)


Hand-sewn costumes, homemade popcorn balls, and bobbing for apples are all so last millennium. It's time to get with the high-tech late Aughts, our fair readers, especially since Halloween is upon us. If you still haven't settled on a costume, or done anything ghoul-related, then take a look at our high-tech DIY guide to all things crafty and creepy, and get your spook on this Halloween.

Read more →

iPhone

Human-Size iPhones Guaranteed to Be Halloween Hit

Halloween's just days away. If you still haven't found the creative yet snarky costume of your dreams, then you'd better get busy, because the witching hour is fast approaching. If you're completely stumped, you'll either be inspired or totally devastated by a few guys whose iPhone costumes have upped the ante on ridiculous get-ups.

Four geeks from Tampa -- John Savio, John Matthews, Reko Rivera, and Bobby Hartman -- recently teamed up to create human-sized and, most impressively, functional iPhone costumes. Each costume weighs around 85 pounds, and is powered by a car battery worn, we're told, between the trick-or-treater's legs. Hooking up an iPhone 3GS to a 42-inch LCD screen effectively turns your average Halloweener into a bona fide human iPhone (see video, above). The two costumes took about three weeks to assemble, and cost the guys a handsome sum of $2,000. Still, they claim to have absolutely "no regrets."

Read more →

Web

Geek Up Your Pumpkin With 130 Nerdy Carving Ideas


Geeks absolutely love Halloween, since it finally enables them to don elaborate sci-fi and fantasy costumes without being mercilessly ridiculed. Not all nerds start planning their All Hallows' Eve decorations the second the New Year begins, though. For pumpkin procrastinators, (and those who spent too much time perfecting that 'G.I. Joe' Snake Eyes costume) Walyou has compiled an exhaustive list of carvings just for geeks, nerds, and dorks.

The incredibly diverse offerings -- 130 of them, to be exact -- encompass the full spectrum of dorkdom. 'Star Wars,' comic books, tech, video games, horror movies, and Bill Gates are covered and carved for the wannabe pumpkin Picassos. A few glaring omissions, though, since half of the pumpkin fun is watching them rot away, or explode on the street. We propose some notable dork bad guys like Jar Jar Binks and Scott "the 'Star Trek' destroyer" Bakula for starters. [From: Walyou]

Audio/Video, Computers, Top Lists

15 Scariest Ghost Videos on the Web


With Halloween finally here, folks are in a scary kind of mood. And since the economy is so scary itself right now, we decided to save you the bones you'd spend on renting 'Child's Play' 1 through 7, and instead give you links to 12 especially freaky (and free) ghost videos. Just don't blame us for the nightmares.

Video Games

'Pac-Man' Rendered in Pumpkin Form

Pac-Man Rendered in Pumpkin Form
Virtual pumpkins are fine for a little indoor holiday spirit, but nothing beats an interestingly carved version of the orange and fleshy variety, especially when it's with a geeky, video game theme. That's what we've got with the set of pumpkins (and gourds) above, a clever set of carvings posted at Indestructables, which took a lot of creativity, but no intricate carving skills.

The two ghosts, Pinky and Clyde (where's Inky?), plus Pac-Man himself are carved from your typical pumpkins, while the power pellets appear to be small gourds, and the cherries are crab apples held together with a little wire. They're all coated in fluorescent paint, ensuring that they glow with a trippy hue when illuminated via black light. It's the perfect decor for a gamer this Halloween. [From: Indestructables, via: Boing Boing]

Audio/Video, Computers

Haunted House Run Using Home Automation Gear


We've always thought our basement full of old Newtons and Amiga machines was pretty spooky, but we'd admit that we've been one-upped by Pennsylvania's Halloween Park, which built an entire haunted mansion using off-the-shelf HAI home automation equipment. Designed by Digital Panacea, the system is "run by typical motion detectors, contacts, resets, and timers," which trigger spooky sound effects and mechanical effects, including a leaping ghost nicknamed Dead Fred. That's way more interesting than the usual home-automation setup, we'd say -- any of you planning on re-rigging your systems at home before the kiddies come by?

Cameras, Computers

Zombify Your Photos

http://www.switched.com/2008/10/30/danny-elfman-launches-our-greatest-fear-political-video/
Since it's Halloween, we can't help but get in the spirit with a little bit of zombie making fun.

The online photo editor Picnik has added a fun seasonal tool under effects to "zombify" an image. The steps are simple, upload a picture with one or more people in it where the face is clearly visible. Then go to the create tab and select "effects." Then you can use a slider increase the level of zombification applied.

It's all the fun of being a zombie with out all the brain eating. [From: URLesque]

Computers

Get Into the Halloween Spirit with a Jack-O-Lantern Screen Saver

Get Into the Halloween Spirit with a Jack-O-Lantern Screen Saver
It's that time of year again, and we're not talking about the silly-season of politics. No, it's almost time for Halloween, and that means it's time for ghosts, goblins, and Jack-O-Lanterns.

The problem? Jack-O-Lanterns are messy, and easy to screw up. Carving a pumpkin requires patience and a steady hand, and scooping out that gunk inside is unpleasant, to say the least. Killer Robots, a developer of Mac software, created a Jack-O-Lantern screen saver to get you in the All Hallows Eve mood.

The Jack-O-Lantern screen saver features a realistic 3D pumpkin rotating on a black background. There are a collection of pre-made cut outs such as a wolf and an Apple logo, but it also comes with a 'Photoshop' template for creating your own virtual carvings.

On the downside, a virtual Jack-O-Lantern can't provide you with delicious freshly roasted pumpkin seeds. [From: TUAW]

See everything shopping at AOL Shopping

Audio/Video, TV

Hallowindow Rig Turns Your Home Into a Haunted House


With Halloween just around the bend, Mark Gervais' creation is just too timely too ignore. Originally conceived around this time last year, the Hallowindow projector rig turns your peaceful, totally plain home into a nightmarish haunted house with just a beamer, a white sheet, a source, some speakers and Mark's own animation DVD. All's that left for you to do is hop on past the break for a pictorial setup guide and pick up the Hallowindow DVD from the read link. Oh, and before you pass this off as just a gimmick, give the video (also waiting after the break) a look. It's spooky, we tell ya.

Read more →

Cell Phones

Man Believes His Dead Wife is Contacting Him Via Cell Phone



It was five years ago when Frank Jones' wife and son died unexpectedly. His son, Steven, died of a brain tumor at an early 32. Three months later, his wife, Sadie died from a heart attack at the age of 69.

Sadie was a cell phone addict. "She always had a mobile with her," Jones told the Blackpool Gazette. So, of course, they buried Sadie with her cell phone.

Now Jones believes Sadie is getting service six feet under, and she has been sending him text messages with words only Sadie would say. Of course, there is no return number on the messages or missed calls, leading Jones to believe the communications are form his deceased wife.

Creepy? Yes. But here's where things get creepier: The house Jones lives in has a history of hauntings from a being called "The Thornton Thing". The entity drove a family from the house in 1971, and after the Jones family suffered hauntings as well, they had the house exorcised.

It wasn't until the untimely deaths of his wife and son did Jones start experiencing messages from beyond. The obvious question we can't help asking: What kind of service does one get up there? She's clearly getting a lot of dropped calls.

From the Blackpool Gazette

Related Links:

Top Lists, Google, YouTube

Even Search Engines Dress Up for Halloween

It's no secret that the Web's heavy hitters like to show their seasonal spirit with mods of the subtle and not-so-subtle variety to their brand identities. Google's logo has become especially known for its Google Doodles, and this year's full-on ghoulish painting logo continue that fine, quirky tradition.



The search giant has even dressed up its significant new addition to the family in some festive holiday threads (though if our TV became a pumpkin we'd be a little upset). BooTube, anyone?



Our last spooky Google shoutout comes via our friends at Geeksugar - we've been flying a witch through Google Street View all day! Head over and give it a try – a little rehearsal of the trick or treating route through your neighborhood for the evening can't hurt!



Google's not the only one having fun with logo ornamentation, though. In fact, our research indicates that Halloween logo competition may be just as fierce as competition for your search queries. Yahoo, for one, has made their logo the center of an entire bone-rattling animation. We only have a still to show you here, so check out its homepage for the show!



However, we think that Ask has won our haunted hearts by placing its entire homepage in a Jack-O-Lantern lit night. Can you think of a better setting for your last minute costume questions?



Until next year (or Thanksgiving, at least), thanks for indulging our logo lust, and stay safe out there tonight!




Related Links:

Computers, Advice

How to Print Your Own Halloween Mask



If you're like us -- busy as blogging beavers can be -- then you might have totally forgotten that it's Halloween this Wednesday, which means you've got to get a costume ready pronto, if only to keep those Halloween revelers off your back for not coming to the party (or work) prepared.

If you're got a decent color printer, you're in luck, because Microsoft has posted some nifty directions on printing and making your own mask-on-a-balsa-wood-stick, though we think the first line of the how-to is Halloween-SCARY:

"Imagine the perplexed looks of the neighborhood children when they come to the door and see you wearing a mask of your child's face."

(Totally off the wall, in a good way! You're totally weird, Microsoft, and we love it!)

The site goes on to suggest possibly going as your pet or spouse -- also kind of creepy/hilarious -- but we think most people will probably go as something more traditional, like, say, R2-D2? If so, check out the various 'Star Wars' character templates, which you can print out and use as masks, on the Lego site.

Got any other ideas for printable masks? If so, share 'em down below, 'cause I'm sure we're not the only people still trying to figure out who or what to dress up as on Halloween night.

From Microsoft and Lego (via GeekSugar).



Related Links:





Switched Video

Follow Switched on Twitter

Deals of the Day

Latest Reviews from CNET.com

CNET provides the latest tech news, unbiased reviews, videos, podcasts, software, and downloads, making tech products easy to find, understand and use.

Top Product Reviews

  • Home Audio Reviews

    9.0 out of 10

    Definitive Technology BPX
    Works great with Dolby Pro Logic and Dolby Digital. Full Review

    9.0 out of 10

    Denon AVR-4306 (black)
    Incredibly well-featured 7.1-channel receiver; excellent sound quality; three HDMI inputs; converts analog video to HDMI output; upconverts analog video to 720p/1080i HD resolution; iPod and USB MP3 player connectivity; Internet radio and MP3/WMA streaming audio via built-in Ethernet port; XM Satellite Radio compatible; touch-screen remote; multizone, multisource operation; browser-based control via home network; accurate autocalibration routine. Full Review

    8.8 out of 10

    KEF KHT3005 (black)
    The KEF KHT-3005 is one compact, beautifully designed speaker package with solid aluminum satellites that feature unique driver technology to produce incredible clarity. Meanwhile, the equally astounding dual 10-inch, 250-watt powered subwoofer delivers ultradeep bass. Full Review

  • Cell Phone Reviews
  • Digital Camera Reviews

    9.3 out of 10

    Canon EOS 1D Mark III
    Extremely fast, 10-megapixel continuous shooting; very low noise; highly customizable; well-designed body with weather sealing; 3-inch LCD; abundant optional accessories. Full Review

    9.3 out of 10

    Nikon D3 (body only)
    Full-frame sensor; well designed, pro-level weather-sealed body; very low noise, even at extremely high ISOs; fast. Full Review

    9.0 out of 10

    Canon EOS-1Ds Mark III
    Very low noise, high quality images; 21.1 megapixels; live view shooting; pro-level build-quality and performance. Full Review

  • Desktop Reviews

    8.9 out of 10

    Velocity Micro Edge Z30 (Intel Core i7)
    Best value among midrange gaming PCs; Velocity Micro's consistently high build quality; compact case makes few sacrifices; second graphics card slot previously uncommon at this price. Full Review

    8.5 out of 10

    Apple iMac (24-inch, 2.8GHz)
    A minor specification update results in some significant performance gains; graphics upgrade an option on this 24-inch model; sleek, polished design didn't receive an update, but we won't start clamoring for a new design until the current one is at least 12 months old. Full Review

Featured Galleries

Nissan Land Glider
Vintage Keyboards
Retro Computer Logos
Vintage Computer Festival
Motorola CLIQ
iPod touch
iTunes 9
Video iPod Nano
The Beatles: Rock Band

 

Switched Desktop

Get the New Switched Desktop

Latest tech news, Switched mail, and more.

AOL Tech Network

Resources