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Technically brilliant and completely ridiculous, this really is in the spirit of old-school hacking.

My favourite bit was the author describing how the none of the lights have their brightness value set above 0xCC by the manufacturer, and while the lights accept brightness values up to 0xFF:

"I don't recommend it unless you really know what you are doing. It was probably set to this for a reason" (as if any of this should be attempted unless you really know what you are doing!).

I must confess I had never thought of controlling my christmas lights via webbrowser either. Fun stuff :)

I really wanted to use these exact lights for a giant display in some friends' Burning Man camp this year but the G-35's are pretty much impossible to find at the moment. These lights are on my wish list for Christmas :-)
Actually, I found palettes (plural) of them at Costco this afternoon. $65.
I love seeing hacks like this. And one can always pick up something awesome. Also, I never heard of Saleae logic before, but now, I must have it.
You will not be disappointed by the Saleae logic. Almost everyday I'm amazed by how beautiful and useful it is. My Logic16's in the mail!
I have 98 of these in a box on my wall...

You can "control" it via a web app running node.js. Had a bunch of kids over this weekend who loved playing with it.