Useless Box

1952Viral gadget / DIY project / internet videoclassic

Also known as: Leave Me Alone Box · The Ultimate Machine · The Most Useless Machine

Useless Box or the Leave Me Alone Box is a 1952 concept by Marvin Minsky built by Claude Shannon that went viral in the late 2000s when DIY makers posted videos of mechanical devices that flip their own switches off.

The Useless Box, also called the Leave Me Alone Box, is a machine whose only function is to turn itself off. You flip a switch, a mechanical arm emerges from inside, flips the switch back, and retreats. The concept originated in 1952 from AI pioneer Marvin Minsky, was built by information theory founder Claude Shannon, and went viral online in the late 2000s when DIY makers started posting their own versions on YouTube and Nico Nico Douga311.

TL;DR

The Useless Box, also called the Leave Me Alone Box, is a machine whose only function is to turn itself off.

Overview

The Useless Box is exactly what its name says: a box that does nothing except switch itself off. The standard design is a small closed box with a single toggle switch on top. When someone flips the switch to "on," a lid opens, a mechanical hand or lever extends, flips the switch back to "off," and disappears back inside the box. The lid snaps shut. That's the whole show13.

What makes the device so compelling is its absurd simplicity. It's a machine built entirely around a shut-off circuit, a gadget whose sole purpose is to undo whatever you just did to it11. Variations range from simple single-switch designs to elaborate multi-switch versions with LED facial expressions, sound effects, and different "personalities" that react with varying speeds and attitudes2.

The idea came from Marvin Minsky during the summer of 1952, while he was working at Bell Labs411. Minsky suggested the concept to his colleague Claude Shannon, who liked it enough to have the company build several units. Shannon dubbed it "The Ultimate Machine," though that name never really stuck111.

Shannon kept one on his desk and gave others to AT&T executives1. Minsky later recalled: "I suggested this machine, Shannon liked it, and he got the company to build a bunch of them and gave them to various executives. I asked for a patent release on it, and they said no, and I didn't pursue it"1.

Science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke encountered Shannon's machine and wrote about it in August 1958 for *Harper's* magazine. Clarke's description became the most famous account of the device: "There is something unspeakably sinister about a machine that does nothing, absolutely nothing, except switch itself off"511. Clarke also described it in his book *Voice Across the Sea*, painting a vivid picture of the small wooden casket with its "angry, purposeful buzzing" and the hand that reaches down to turn the switch off "with the finality of a closing coffin"1.

Origin & Background

Platform
Bell Labs (invention), YouTube / Nico Nico Douga (viral spread)
Key People
Marvin Minsky, Claude Shannon, Michael Seedman, Kairoshi / 回路師, Brett Coulthard
Date
1952 (concept), 2008 (viral spread)
Year
1952

The idea came from Marvin Minsky during the summer of 1952, while he was working at Bell Labs. Minsky suggested the concept to his colleague Claude Shannon, who liked it enough to have the company build several units. Shannon dubbed it "The Ultimate Machine," though that name never really stuck.

Shannon kept one on his desk and gave others to AT&T executives. Minsky later recalled: "I suggested this machine, Shannon liked it, and he got the company to build a bunch of them and gave them to various executives. I asked for a patent release on it, and they said no, and I didn't pursue it".

Science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke encountered Shannon's machine and wrote about it in August 1958 for *Harper's* magazine. Clarke's description became the most famous account of the device: "There is something unspeakably sinister about a machine that does nothing, absolutely nothing, except switch itself off". Clarke also described it in his book *Voice Across the Sea*, painting a vivid picture of the small wooden casket with its "angry, purposeful buzzing" and the hand that reaches down to turn the switch off "with the finality of a closing coffin".

How It Spread

In the 1960s, a novelty toy company called Captain Co. sold a commercial version as the "Monster Inside the Black Box," featuring a mechanical hand emerging from a featureless plastic box. Around the same period, Don Poynter of Poynter Products, Inc. produced and sold a version called "The Little Black Box," later adding a coin-snatching feature and licensing the name "The Thing" from the producers of *The Addams Family* TV show.

The machine went dormant for decades before the internet brought it back. In 2003, Swiss kinetic artist Hanns-Martin Wagner built a version from an old trunk called "The Most Beautiful Machine". In March 2008, Kevin Kelly featured Wagner's piece on his blog *The Technium*.

The real viral moment came in April 2008 when YouTuber Michael Seedman posted a video of his own version, which he called the "LeaveMeAloneBox". The video pulled in over 500,000 views within three months and hit 1.4 million by January 2013. Seedman also launched a website to document his build process and showcase other people's creations.

Seedman's video inspired Japanese maker Kairoshi (回路師) to build his own version and upload it to Nico Nico Douga, where it earned over 958,000 views. Kairoshi called his creation an "Automatized Hikikomori Unit," referencing the Japanese term for socially withdrawn recluses. He later built a second version with LED lights that displayed facial expressions and launched an official webpage documenting his production method.

In December 2009, Brett Coulthard of Frivolous Engineering uploaded his version and posted the build pattern on Instructables the next day. This was the version that broke into mainstream media. In June 2010, *Make* magazine editor-in-chief Mark Frauenfelder brought a Useless Box built from Coulthard's pattern onto *The Colbert Report*, handing the device to Stephen Colbert. The project was featured in *Make* Volume 23 and named the #3 Best Project of 2010 by the magazine.

By January 2013, both Solarbotics and ThinkGeek were selling DIY kits, and YouTube had over 5,700 results for "useless box". The concept spawned increasingly elaborate variations with multiple switches, sound effects, and animated personalities.

How to Use This Meme

The Useless Box isn't a meme template in the traditional sense. It's a physical device and viral video concept. People typically engage with it in a few ways:

1

Watch and share — Videos of useless boxes (especially ones with personality quirks like angry arm movements, hesitant peeking, or defeated sighs) get shared as feel-good or absurdist content

2

Build your own — DIY kits and Instructables patterns let makers create their own versions, often adding personal touches like sound effects, multiple switches, or themed enclosures

3

Gift it — The Useless Box works as a novelty gift, essentially a physical joke about the futility of effort

4

Add personality — Advanced builders program different "moods" into the arm's behavior, from lazy and reluctant to fast and aggressive, making each interaction unpredictable

Cultural Impact

The Useless Box crossed from maker culture into mainstream entertainment when it appeared on *The Colbert Report* in June 2010. *Make* magazine's coverage brought it to a wider audience of hobbyists and tinkerers.

The device also appeared in prestige television. Episode 3 of *Fargo* Season 3, titled "The Law of Non-Contradiction," features a useless machine, along with a story-within-the-story android named MNSKY after Marvin Minsky.

In 2009, artist David Moises exhibited his reconstruction of Shannon's original machine, called *The Ultimate Machine aka Shannon's Hand*, and documented the intellectual lineage connecting Shannon, Minsky, and Clarke.

The concept taps into a long tradition of philosophical machines. Italian Futurist artist Bruno Munari was building "useless machines" (*macchine inutili*) as early as the 1930s, though his were artistic statements about machine culture rather than self-switching devices.

Fun Facts

Minsky called it "The Ultimate Machine," but the name never caught on. Most people know it as the Useless Box or Leave Me Alone Box.

Claude Shannon, who built the first one, also invented the mathematical definition of information and formally introduced the word "bit".

A plastic toy version existed in the early 1960s. One collector described it as making "all kinds of noise" and rumbling around before a white-gloved hand emerged to flip the switch off.

A lawyer used the toy as a metaphor in a book about insurance litigation, comparing insurance policies that refuse to pay out to "a policy whose job was to turn itself off".

Kairoshi's name for his version, "Automatized Hikikomori Unit," compared the box's behavior to Japanese hikikomori, reclusive individuals who withdraw from all social contact.

Derivatives & Variations

Multi-switch versions

— Boxes with multiple toggles, each with its own personality and response style, turning the single-joke concept into a more complex interaction[2]

Themed enclosures

— Grumpy cat boxes, robot-themed versions, and monster boxes that dress up the basic mechanism[2]

Coin-snatching variant

— Don Poynter's "The Thing" added a coin slot, turning the box into a novelty bank that grabbed coins with a mechanical hand. Licensed from *The Addams Family* TV show[11]

LED expression version

— Kairoshi's second build added LED facial expressions to the box, giving it visible emotional reactions before flipping the switch[3]

DIY kits

— Commercial kits from Solarbotics and ThinkGeek let people build their own without sourcing individual components[3]

Frequently Asked Questions

Useless Box

1952Viral gadget / DIY project / internet videoclassic

Also known as: Leave Me Alone Box · The Ultimate Machine · The Most Useless Machine

Useless Box or the Leave Me Alone Box is a 1952 concept by Marvin Minsky built by Claude Shannon that went viral in the late 2000s when DIY makers posted videos of mechanical devices that flip their own switches off.

The Useless Box, also called the Leave Me Alone Box, is a machine whose only function is to turn itself off. You flip a switch, a mechanical arm emerges from inside, flips the switch back, and retreats. The concept originated in 1952 from AI pioneer Marvin Minsky, was built by information theory founder Claude Shannon, and went viral online in the late 2000s when DIY makers started posting their own versions on YouTube and Nico Nico Douga.

TL;DR

The Useless Box, also called the Leave Me Alone Box, is a machine whose only function is to turn itself off.

Overview

The Useless Box is exactly what its name says: a box that does nothing except switch itself off. The standard design is a small closed box with a single toggle switch on top. When someone flips the switch to "on," a lid opens, a mechanical hand or lever extends, flips the switch back to "off," and disappears back inside the box. The lid snaps shut. That's the whole show.

What makes the device so compelling is its absurd simplicity. It's a machine built entirely around a shut-off circuit, a gadget whose sole purpose is to undo whatever you just did to it. Variations range from simple single-switch designs to elaborate multi-switch versions with LED facial expressions, sound effects, and different "personalities" that react with varying speeds and attitudes.

The idea came from Marvin Minsky during the summer of 1952, while he was working at Bell Labs. Minsky suggested the concept to his colleague Claude Shannon, who liked it enough to have the company build several units. Shannon dubbed it "The Ultimate Machine," though that name never really stuck.

Shannon kept one on his desk and gave others to AT&T executives. Minsky later recalled: "I suggested this machine, Shannon liked it, and he got the company to build a bunch of them and gave them to various executives. I asked for a patent release on it, and they said no, and I didn't pursue it".

Science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke encountered Shannon's machine and wrote about it in August 1958 for *Harper's* magazine. Clarke's description became the most famous account of the device: "There is something unspeakably sinister about a machine that does nothing, absolutely nothing, except switch itself off". Clarke also described it in his book *Voice Across the Sea*, painting a vivid picture of the small wooden casket with its "angry, purposeful buzzing" and the hand that reaches down to turn the switch off "with the finality of a closing coffin".

Origin & Background

Platform
Bell Labs (invention), YouTube / Nico Nico Douga (viral spread)
Key People
Marvin Minsky, Claude Shannon, Michael Seedman, Kairoshi / 回路師, Brett Coulthard
Date
1952 (concept), 2008 (viral spread)
Year
1952

The idea came from Marvin Minsky during the summer of 1952, while he was working at Bell Labs. Minsky suggested the concept to his colleague Claude Shannon, who liked it enough to have the company build several units. Shannon dubbed it "The Ultimate Machine," though that name never really stuck.

Shannon kept one on his desk and gave others to AT&T executives. Minsky later recalled: "I suggested this machine, Shannon liked it, and he got the company to build a bunch of them and gave them to various executives. I asked for a patent release on it, and they said no, and I didn't pursue it".

Science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke encountered Shannon's machine and wrote about it in August 1958 for *Harper's* magazine. Clarke's description became the most famous account of the device: "There is something unspeakably sinister about a machine that does nothing, absolutely nothing, except switch itself off". Clarke also described it in his book *Voice Across the Sea*, painting a vivid picture of the small wooden casket with its "angry, purposeful buzzing" and the hand that reaches down to turn the switch off "with the finality of a closing coffin".

How It Spread

In the 1960s, a novelty toy company called Captain Co. sold a commercial version as the "Monster Inside the Black Box," featuring a mechanical hand emerging from a featureless plastic box. Around the same period, Don Poynter of Poynter Products, Inc. produced and sold a version called "The Little Black Box," later adding a coin-snatching feature and licensing the name "The Thing" from the producers of *The Addams Family* TV show.

The machine went dormant for decades before the internet brought it back. In 2003, Swiss kinetic artist Hanns-Martin Wagner built a version from an old trunk called "The Most Beautiful Machine". In March 2008, Kevin Kelly featured Wagner's piece on his blog *The Technium*.

The real viral moment came in April 2008 when YouTuber Michael Seedman posted a video of his own version, which he called the "LeaveMeAloneBox". The video pulled in over 500,000 views within three months and hit 1.4 million by January 2013. Seedman also launched a website to document his build process and showcase other people's creations.

Seedman's video inspired Japanese maker Kairoshi (回路師) to build his own version and upload it to Nico Nico Douga, where it earned over 958,000 views. Kairoshi called his creation an "Automatized Hikikomori Unit," referencing the Japanese term for socially withdrawn recluses. He later built a second version with LED lights that displayed facial expressions and launched an official webpage documenting his production method.

In December 2009, Brett Coulthard of Frivolous Engineering uploaded his version and posted the build pattern on Instructables the next day. This was the version that broke into mainstream media. In June 2010, *Make* magazine editor-in-chief Mark Frauenfelder brought a Useless Box built from Coulthard's pattern onto *The Colbert Report*, handing the device to Stephen Colbert. The project was featured in *Make* Volume 23 and named the #3 Best Project of 2010 by the magazine.

By January 2013, both Solarbotics and ThinkGeek were selling DIY kits, and YouTube had over 5,700 results for "useless box". The concept spawned increasingly elaborate variations with multiple switches, sound effects, and animated personalities.

How to Use This Meme

The Useless Box isn't a meme template in the traditional sense. It's a physical device and viral video concept. People typically engage with it in a few ways:

1

Watch and share — Videos of useless boxes (especially ones with personality quirks like angry arm movements, hesitant peeking, or defeated sighs) get shared as feel-good or absurdist content

2

Build your own — DIY kits and Instructables patterns let makers create their own versions, often adding personal touches like sound effects, multiple switches, or themed enclosures

3

Gift it — The Useless Box works as a novelty gift, essentially a physical joke about the futility of effort

4

Add personality — Advanced builders program different "moods" into the arm's behavior, from lazy and reluctant to fast and aggressive, making each interaction unpredictable

Cultural Impact

The Useless Box crossed from maker culture into mainstream entertainment when it appeared on *The Colbert Report* in June 2010. *Make* magazine's coverage brought it to a wider audience of hobbyists and tinkerers.

The device also appeared in prestige television. Episode 3 of *Fargo* Season 3, titled "The Law of Non-Contradiction," features a useless machine, along with a story-within-the-story android named MNSKY after Marvin Minsky.

In 2009, artist David Moises exhibited his reconstruction of Shannon's original machine, called *The Ultimate Machine aka Shannon's Hand*, and documented the intellectual lineage connecting Shannon, Minsky, and Clarke.

The concept taps into a long tradition of philosophical machines. Italian Futurist artist Bruno Munari was building "useless machines" (*macchine inutili*) as early as the 1930s, though his were artistic statements about machine culture rather than self-switching devices.

Fun Facts

Minsky called it "The Ultimate Machine," but the name never caught on. Most people know it as the Useless Box or Leave Me Alone Box.

Claude Shannon, who built the first one, also invented the mathematical definition of information and formally introduced the word "bit".

A plastic toy version existed in the early 1960s. One collector described it as making "all kinds of noise" and rumbling around before a white-gloved hand emerged to flip the switch off.

A lawyer used the toy as a metaphor in a book about insurance litigation, comparing insurance policies that refuse to pay out to "a policy whose job was to turn itself off".

Kairoshi's name for his version, "Automatized Hikikomori Unit," compared the box's behavior to Japanese hikikomori, reclusive individuals who withdraw from all social contact.

Derivatives & Variations

Multi-switch versions

— Boxes with multiple toggles, each with its own personality and response style, turning the single-joke concept into a more complex interaction[2]

Themed enclosures

— Grumpy cat boxes, robot-themed versions, and monster boxes that dress up the basic mechanism[2]

Coin-snatching variant

— Don Poynter's "The Thing" added a coin slot, turning the box into a novelty bank that grabbed coins with a mechanical hand. Licensed from *The Addams Family* TV show[11]

LED expression version

— Kairoshi's second build added LED facial expressions to the box, giving it visible emotional reactions before flipping the switch[3]

DIY kits

— Commercial kits from Solarbotics and ThinkGeek let people build their own without sourcing individual components[3]

Frequently Asked Questions