
Additional details at The Electronic Peasant
That's a whole lotta knobs; 144 of them according to Magnus Olfsson. You might recognize the Peasant from this post. Thanks Magnus!
EVERYTHING SYNTH

What the... A toaster for a Micron! Title link takes you to the first shot in the set explaining what this is. There's a how-to included if you want to make something like this for one of your synths. Hmm... Somone should manufacture these. Could have been on that American Inventor TV show. : )
Korg's first polyphonic keyboard. What's interesting is this SOS article implies that the PE1000 was in essence only capable of electric piano sounds, while the PE2000 that followed it included organ, brass, chorus and strings.
Title link takes you to shots pulled from this auction. Note the address on the back of the unit. I decided to look it up just out of curiosity as I grew up in Hollywood. Turns out it's this house. I'm guessing it was Roger Linn's pad back then. If anyone knows feel free to comment. I'm left wondering how many other gear makers do this and why Linn would do this. Kind of interesting....
Title link takes you there. Some nice shots under the gallery. Synthoma is located in Barcelona. Via Moogulator. I love Bob Moog's shirt in this shot. Green. : )

I couldn't find a shot of a 101 on PunkDisco, so here a Future Retro 777 instead. Trippy shot.
Title link takes you to the Polivoks Filter Clone site by Marc Bareille.
Title link takes you to some shots and pdfs on Analogue Haven. Note how thin these are.
Title link takes you to more shots pulled from this auction. Something about synth shots in nature. And of course... Green.
Michael Weeks sent me a couple of links to shots of Josh Adam's studio. The first link takes you to Josh's website, Neopolitan Labs (make sure to check out the gallery). I asked Michael if Josh had any association with Metasonix considering the number of modules he owns. He said no, but Eric Barbour of Metasonix did pay him a visit. The shots here are from that visit. (Direct links for when the posts are no longer current: one, two, three).
Jason Nazarof sent in the following shot of his studio. Click on the image for a bigger shot. Title link takes you to Jason's MySpace site where you can hear this gear being put to use. Really good stuff.
Title link takes you to shots pulled from this auction. Details saved below for posterity. Via Music Thing.
Title link takes you to a monster video of the Musikmesse's Superbuth on Sonic State. Amazing analog gear fest.
"BallDroppings is an addicting and noisy play-toy. It can also be seen as an emergence game. Alternatively this software can be taken seriously as an audio-visual performance instrument. Balls fall from the top of the screen and bounce off the lines you are drawing with the mouse. The balls make a percussive and melodic sound, whose pitch depends on how fast the ball is moving when it hits the line. This delightful application allows experimentation with sound and vision which will compound and intrigue you. Whether you are an adult or child, scientific brainbox or avid gamer. It doesn't have a plot, no heroine, no villain. It has no guns or alien beings. It is simply time to get creative, and those who are creative will love this. --Gosfish Games "