I've long been fascinated by Stirling engines. Their method of operation, where they convert essentially arbitrary heat gradients into mechanical work, is both simple and universal. There is something deeply elegant about how they exploit a simple physical property in a clever manner. Although my daily work is very remote from building physical engines, I still find the Stirling engine greatly inspiring - I hope to build things that are as elegant and simple. Therefore, I ordered a model Stirling engine from https://www.stirlingengine.co.uk/ and just received and assembled it. I would probably have bought it prefabricated, but I could not find the option on their website. Still, while assembly was fiddly (especially the O-rings), and I had to tune it a bit afterwards to get it to run, it was no great difficulty. And now I have my own tiny Stirling engine, able to (barely) run off the heat of my hand, or (easily) off a cup of coffee! My hope is that I can use it as a conversation piece and run it off available heat sources in my office, such as my laptop. I also considered getting a fanless passively cooled desktop computer - I've seen cases that are essentially big blocks of aluminium - and surely they'll provide enough heat for a Stirling engine to work...