THE HERALD   EVERETT, WASHINGTON
HeraldNet on Facebook HeraldNet on Twitter HeraldNet RSS feeds HeraldNet Pinterest HeraldNet Google Plus
Welcome, Guest | Register | Sign In
 Home   Life        Follow HeraldNetLife on Twitter @HeraldNetLife   RSS feed RSS
Published: Monday, February 13, 2012

Make your valentine a custom mixtape -- digital, of course

Tuesday is Valentine's Day so think about this: Your gift could be one in a million, or one of 189 million.

The latter's the number of roses bought every February. The former? a custom mixtape.

A custom mixtape of favorite songs that mean something to both of you can be whipped up pretty easily online. Then put the song list on a USB drive to wrap up.

Check out Howto.cnet.com for instructions on how to personalize USB drives for someone special. You can load them with everything from music to video to scanned artwork and even show tickets.

There are lots of designs available in gadget stores.

Mixandburn.com will professionally mix 10 of your songs for under $15. If you order before 1 p.m. your order will be shipped today. Take heart, you may still make the Tuesday deadline.

Have some leeway? Go for a custom drive.

ThinkGeek has a thumb drive that looks like an old cassette tape; add some meaningful tunes, don a handmade label and, depending on your vintage, it'll be an amusingly evocative nod to high school or college romance.

Smediart.com has a 4-gigabyte wine cork drive for $84.

Meritline.com has a range of designs, including sleek mahogany slivers, pave-studded hearts, cellos, playing cards and bracelet styles (all about $12.99 and 8 gigabytes).

If your beloved is a nature lover, consider crafting a drive out of wood: instructions at Techcrunch.com.

Story tags » 

HolidaysMusicComputers & Information Technology
Comments


NORTHSOUND ClassifiedsNORTHSOUND Classifieds
Top Jobs
Homes
Autos

HeraldNet highlights

Twins have multiplied
Twins have multiplied: More than 50 sets of twins are graduating from local schools
In Everett, he trusted
In Everett, he trusted: Viewpoints: Scoop Jackson never forgot his roots
Special day in Seattle
Special day in Seattle: Back-to-back games don't create traffic nightmare
Blooming nuisance
Blooming nuisance: Scotch broom is bursting along roadways again