
Our keypal Jake von Slatt just sent us a link to this project about making your own workshop respirator with a portable, battery-operated air supply. For us four eyes in the crowd, they even have glasses built into them!
Hardware Beyond the Hype
Our keypal Jake von Slatt just sent us a link to this project about making your own workshop respirator with a portable, battery-operated air supply. For us four eyes in the crowd, they even have glasses built into them!
Well, we’re back from the Maker Faire. Very tiring, but supremely satisfying. I’d really wanted to blog the event as it happened, but ended up spending nearly all day, both days, in the Make booth, building mousebots. At night, I was just too wiped to do anything but keel over.
Everything at a Maker Faire is cranked to 11: the size of the event, the creativity of what’s being presented, the excitement of the fairgoers, the diversity of the people who show up. So, YOU end up on 11. I heard this jacked amperage was experienced by both fairgoers and presenters alike. The common chant went something like: “This is SO awesome. I LOVE it! There’s too much! I’ll never get to see it all.”
As workshop presenters, Blake and I saw little of the Faire. The first day, we did open-ended workshops, selling Mousey parts bundles and then helping people build them at workstations we’d set up (until they’d decide to stop and finish the project at home). This meant that we stayed at our post from 10am till I cried “uncle” at 4pm. That was probably the most tired I’ve ever been in my life. The second day, we ran three one-hour workshops. That was a much saner way to do business and gave us some time to wander around and see some of the Faire.
Our Mousey workshops went very well. For the Faire, we created two parts bundles (put together by the fine folks at Solarbotics). We thought most people wouldn’t want to try and build a whole robot at the show, so we made a quicker, easier “car kit.” We ended up only selling three of them! Everyone bought the full Mousey, and a surprising number of people actually sat down and started the build right there in the Make area. Several people were at the workstations for several hours. My favorite was a woman who saw the mousebots, really liked them and said: “You know what? This is really out of my comfort zone, but I’m going to do it anyway. I think I need to challenge myself more.” And she bought a parts bundle, chose an old mouse, sat down, and dove right in. There were a lot of kids with their parents, moms and dads alike, working together, which was nice to see. The mice we used for the workshops were provided by James Burgett at Alameda County Computer Resource Center. He was a great asset and fun to work with, so we’d like to give him ye ol’ shout out. Thanks, James!
Other highlights of the show for me were Mister Jalopy’s talk on Maker Day and his Urban Guerrilla Movie House on wheels (seen here), which he showed next to our Mousey build area in the Make booth. One of my favorite new words is hilaritas, which means “profoundly good natured, full of mirth.” It’s more than being friendly, more than being funny. Mister Jalopy is full of hilaritas. I also had a good connection with Bill Gurstelle, the Backyard Ballistics guy. Great fella. Smart. Kinda wacky. Supremely creative. Again with the hilaritas. There seems to be a lot of that within the Maker community. Besides Mr. Jalopy, our other Make boothmates were Phillip Torrone and Bre Pettis, running a cool drawbot exhibit. It was fun finally getting to meet both of them. SRL was at the show, displaying their infernal machinery. Still living up to their rep as the “Most dangerous show on Earth,” their stabbing robot, well, stabbed a guy (in the hand). Got a chance to meet Violet Blue, but not Karen Marcelo (SRL/Dorkbot SF), and never got a chance to say hi to Mark Pauline. Street Tech’s webmaster Tim Tate came to the Faire, too, and we finally got to meet F2F (after being virtual friends for some ten years!). Didn’t get to spend as much time with him as I would’ve liked, but we got to walk around to see some of the exhibits during one of my breaks. —>
Street Tech is representin’ at this year’s Maker Faire. I’m here to do “Mousey the Junkbot” workshops, my son Blake is here to help, and ST’s webmaster Tim Tate is coming too. Yesterday was Maker Day, an all day social with presentations for the Faire presenters, Highlights included Mark Pauline of SRL and John Law (of Suicide Club, Burning Man, Cacophony Society fame) in conversation with David Pescovitz, an awesome talk by Mister Jalopy, and Tim Hunkin talking about and showing videos of his hysterical coin-operated machines. Today is set-up, and tomorrow is the first day of the Faire. Should be a blast.
Here are some pics of yesterday shot by Scott Beale of Laughing Squid.
I’ve always wanted a lathe, but would likely use it like once in a forever, so I never felt I could justify the expense. But this hobby lathe, which uses your existing power drill as the business end, is only US$46. Hell, we probably have that much in the family change jar. But then, as they point out on Automata, the tools for it will likely cost more than the lathe itself. I’m just not going to overthink it. Now where is that piggybank…
[Via Make]
You may have seen Mark’s item on Boing Boing about the Philco Mystery Control, the amazing wireless remote for ’30s and ’40s(!) radios. That was nifty enough, but the site that it links to, The Philco Repair Bench, has lots more amazing material about antique electronics, mostly the Philco brand, but some applicable to other radios of the era. I have a ’40s-era radio that belonged to my great grandfather, from Lebanon. Looking at this site has inspired me to finally break down and try to figure out what’s wrong with it and to try to get it up and running. There’s a great collection of links to other radio repair and restoration sites.
These collector/fan-run sites are an eternal delight. Years ago, I was shopping for an Ericofon on eBay. I did a search, found this site, Ericofon, and within a few hours, I was an expert on these mod/atomic age wonders. I got a really a nice one on eBay that just needed some wire repair work. Found all I needed on the site. One of those “Gawd, I LOVE the internets” moments.
Please, dear Gopod, tell me that SRL’s going to be bringing this with them to the Maker Faire. It’s a Hovercraft powered by four pulse jets. No, you can’t ride on it (unless you want it to be your trip to the Pearly Gates), it’s radio controlled. And loud enough to animate the dead.
Check out this machine test video, and watch all the way to the end, with the nighttime shots. The jets look beautiful in the dark. Now THAT’S a glowstick you want to bring to a rave!
[Via Suicidebots]
This enterprising wirehead added a mechanical counter to his website. Hey, with Digg distributing physical badge counters, why not? The webpage counter has a low, cheap parts count. The daemon he wrote is for Linux, but you could fairly easily do your own for another OS.
Our pal Jake Von Slatt did a cool steampunk keyboard recently that we blogged about. A fan of his work tried to commission him to make another one, but as Jake put it, that sounded like work. So he asked his bud Doc, a.k.a. Datamancer, to take the job instead. The result, dubbed the Von Slatt Keyboard, is here. Very similar to Jake’s version, but in brushed aluminum instead of brass. Love the blue “jewel-style” instrument lights.
As if Tim Kaiser’s stash of absurdly cool music machines wasn’t enough, Brian and Leon Dewan’s Dewanatrons are here is give him a run for his money. Similar approach of marrying old tech and tech cases with hacked together electronic sound generators, with plenty of knobs to twiddle and switches to throw. Pictured here is the Dual Primate Console, Brian and Leon undoubtedly the primates in question. Dig the rotary phone dial.
[Via Make]
Instrucatbles has a new contest. We’ve blogged several of the wallet-building Instructables, made from keyboard membranes and FedEx tyvek. Now they’ve issued the Wallet DIY Challenge. Post a wallet Instructable in the next five days and possibly win an Instructables T-shirt or Eye-fi Eye-Film that wirelessly uploads images from your camera directly to the Web.
But that’s peanuts compared to the Laser Cutter contest. Post an Instructable, on anything, and add it to the contest’s Group. Five semifinalists will be chosen. You then need to submit a proposal for what you’d do with a US$6,000 BrightStar Laser Cutter. Winner bags the machine.