

BATMAN SIGNAL LAMP PLUS
Plus there's a little bit of fun hacking apart a Series A USB plug and using the guts! You'll need It's dead easy if you have even the most basic making skills and great to try if you've never done any electronics before.

don't despair, that's plenty to work with, and if you follow this instructable you'll be casting the most wicked bat shaped shadows all over your bedroom, living room and office walls. But you don't have a gigawatt three phase power supply, all you have is a measly little 5V USB. You saw Batman Begins, you've now seen The Dark Knight, and now go on admit it, you want one of those mega spotlights with which Commissioner Gordon summons the help of the Caped Crusader. I supplied NULL for the first column which is the unique-id primary-key so that Sqlite would autoincrement, thus renumbering the rows being merged in. There's no Import GUI functionality but merging is pretty simple if you know SQL.

BATMAN SIGNAL LAMP DOWNLOAD
The download is one 4.3MB uncompressed executable file.Spent the morning looking for a good Sqlite Database Manager/Browser and have settled on SqliteStudio, currently v2.20.28, which I'm running on Ubuntu Linux 10.04. Very convenient for quick lookups though. Main gripe: can't seem to be able to change font size for table display and the default is a little too small at the beginning it's easy to get lost in the thicket of tabs, though overall I find the GUI very productive.īoth solutions are very stable in my experience, and both seem to offer occasional discounts, if you can afford to wait.įor just browsing data, try SQLite Spy - free and lets you execture queries, but no or little GUI support for editing.
BATMAN SIGNAL LAMP CODE
There is a separate, more specialized query builder (SQLite Code Factory), but you can make do with just the main Maestro application. Rich UI, easy access to all features, nice visual query builder and automatic SQL formatter for readability, lots of eye candy. Main gripe: you can't see the schema while editing a query (without flipping tabs in the program).

The GUI is fine, very good for quickly designing new databases a little less so for designing queries and working with large amounts of data. The flip side, if you look at version history, is that new releases seem to introduce new bugs, which are then fixed in sunsequent builds. The author is very responsive to comments and bug reports, and publishes updates frequently. For Windows: I've been looking for functionality and a comfortable GUI - it's been particularly hard to satisfy the latter requirement, but these two picks are both fine:
