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November 22, 2009

New in the Maker Shed: Microbe Motel kit

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The Microbe Motel is the grossest, smelliest, nastiest science kit we've ever offered. Ever! Other than some common household items, the Microbe Motel includes everything you need to grow colorful, stinky, colonies of household germs, bacteria, molds, and maybe even a fungus or two. Don't worry, you can kill them when you're finished.

Here are just a few of the experiments and projects you can do with the MAKE Microbe Motel Kit.
  • Are dogs' mouths really cleaner than human mouths? Culture bacteria from your mouth and your dog's mouth to find out.
  • Is the average toilet bowl really cleaner than the average kitchen sink? Find out by swabbing both and culturing the bacteria.
  • Find the grungiest areas in your home by swabbing and culturing your computer keyboard, television remote, telephone, etc.
  • Is money really as filthy as your grandmother told you? Find out.

More:
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Are you interested in Science? Don't forget to check out all the other experiments in the Make: Science Room.

Posted by Maker Shed | Nov 22, 2009 08:00 AM
Maker Shed Store, Science | Permalink | Comments (0) | Suggest a Site

Science through graphic novels

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Science Friday's "Science Through Graphic Novels"... Great interview(s)! Using graphic novels to teach science...

In this segment, we'll take a look at two graphic novels that approach science from a different direction. One tackles Darwin's 'Origin of Species,' while the other deals with the life and ideas of philosopher and mathematician Bertrand Russell.

Michael Keller - Journalist, Author, "Charles Darwin's On The Origin Of Species: A Graphic Adaptation" (Rodale Books, 2009)

Apostolos Doxiadis - Co-author, "Logicomix: An Epic Search For Truth" (Bloomsbury, 2009)



Posted by Phillip Torrone | Nov 22, 2009 03:00 AM
Arts, Education, Science | Permalink | Comments (2) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

Tiny solar-powered brass engine in a wineglass

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This is the work of Szymon Klimek, who has been honored by the Internet Craftsmanship Museum. [via The Automata / Automaton Blog]

Posted by Sean Michael Ragan | Nov 21, 2009 07:00 PM
Green, Made On Earth, Makers, Retro, Science | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

Maker Shed kiosks at Fry's

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We're ecstatic about the fact that we now have Maker Shed kiosks, with magazines, books, and electronics kits, in several California Fry's stores. We think this is big news, not only for Maker Media, but for all indie makers -- a major retail chain is now giving small kit-makers this level of exposure. And, we think it's particularly cool that we designed and built these kiosks in-house, and even personally delivered them to the stores! What other publisher could claim that?

Here, Assoc. Publisher and General Manager of Maker retail, Dan Woods explains more:

Maker Shed kiosks are now installed in four of Fry's largest superstores. Each kiosk merchandises current and back issues of MAKE, Make: Project books, and kits, with an emphasis on maker-made kits produced by indie makers like Limor Fried's MintyBoost, Mitch Altman's Brain Machine, Ken Murphy's Blinky Bugs, Dale Wheat's Tiny Cylon and Wee Blinky kits, and Amy Parness and Ariel Churi's DIY Design Electronics kits. This indie maker angle was a really important selling point to Fry's. The kiosk's themselves are all-MAKE in their design and construction. The challenge was to create a merchandising/branding kiosk that could show off maker-made kits, as well as our books and magazines, all in a 2' X 2' footprint. The design we came up with incorporates the Maker Faire workbench framing as the internal structure, refurbished fence boards from West Sonoma, and some nicely weathered corrugated shed aluminum that was locally salvaged. The result is a nice combination of weathered shed and repurposed industrial tubing. They're uniquely MAKE, and Fry's is ecstatic. In fact, they were even trucked down and setup by Heather (Harmon-Cochran) and Rob (Bullington) in one day.

These are the stores that currently have kiosks. (San Diego will be set up by Fry's staff next week)

San Diego, CA
9825 Stonecrest Boulevard
(858) 514-4500

San Jose, CA
550 E. Brokaw Road
(408) 487-1000

Fremont, CA
43800 Osgood Road
(510) 252-5300

Sunnyvale, CA
1077 East Arques Avenue
(408) 617-1300

Posted by Gareth Branwyn | Nov 21, 2009 01:01 PM
Maker Shed Store, Makers | Permalink | Comments (13) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

New hackerspace in Chicagoland: Workshop 88

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Good news for those in Chicagoland! Planning is underway to form Workshop 88, a hackerspace in the west suburbs of Chicago. Here's your chance to get in on the ground floor!

We're currently in the planning stage, and we're looking for interested people in the area to help us get started. We're holding bi-weekly meetings Mondays at 6:30 until we're ready to rent some space and move in. The first meeting is this Monday, November 23, at the Boilerhouse Cafe, on the campus of North Central College in Naperville (29 N Loomis St Naperville, IL 60540).

Some of the things we'll be discussing:

  • Legal structure of the hackerspace
  • Membership structure and guidelines
  • Work that still needs to be done to build out our online presence
  • Current projects

This information is also available on our blog, at http://blog.workshop88.com. Updates and meeting notices will be posted there, as well as on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Workshop88. For additional information, we have a mailing list at info@workshop88.com.

Workshop 88 Planning Meeting
Monday, November 23, 2009, 6:30pm
Boilerhouse Cafe
29 N Loomis St, Naperville, IL 60540

Posted by Matt Mets | Nov 21, 2009 01:00 PM
Events | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

Mint tin electronics dev kit packs the essentials

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From the MAKE Flickr pool

Once you've caught the 'electronics bug', spending time away from the workbench/lab can seem an unpleasant prospect. Luckily, one can carry on learning and experimenting with a minimal amount of hardware. Nick shares his own recipe for ultra-compact electronics prototyping - the Altoids Tin Electronics Lab

This is a small electronics lab in an altoids tin. It contains nearly everything to work on small projects, such as a breadboard, components (including several ICs), and a adjustable power supply. The power supply is a simple LM317 circuit, with the 317's metal tab cut off to make it fit.
For details, check out Nick's essential part list. I'm guessing quite a few of us have mobile kits along these lines. Share pics of your setup via the MAKE Flickr pool - we'd love to see 'em!

Posted by Collin Cunningham | Nov 21, 2009 04:30 AM
Altoids and tin cases, Electronics | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

Olympus BioScapes competition winners

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Olympus BioScapes competition winners, amazing photos!

Posted by Phillip Torrone | Nov 21, 2009 03:00 AM
Imaging, Science | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

Mac mailbox

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Mac mailbox from Te Atatu in Auckland...



Posted by Phillip Torrone | Nov 20, 2009 08:00 PM
Remake | Permalink | Comments (1) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

LHC tweets its first circulating beam of 2009

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LHC tweets its first circulating beam of 2009, good luck finding the Higgs gang. Photos here...

Posted by Phillip Torrone | Nov 20, 2009 06:45 PM
Science | Permalink | Comments (8) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

Building a shop presence notification system

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As a member of Hack Pittsburgh, our local hackerspace, one thing I've wanted to know if anyone else is there before I make the trek over. Well, so did Andy Leer and Marty McGuire, so they decided to build a shop presence notification system. They reasoned that they could measure the ambient light level to determine if someone was around, because people tend to turn on the lights when they show up. With this in mind, they hooked up a photocell to a donated iobridge module, and had a notification widget up on the website in record time. Excellent work!

Posted by Matt Mets | Nov 20, 2009 06:00 PM
Electronics | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

Vacuum tube prototyping board

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Bruce Heran made this prototyping board for his tube projects. He writes:


This is a project that I made to take care of an ever increasing need to prototype vacuum tube (valve) circuits. As you can see from the photos, it really is a test "board." I do a lot of work with tubes and love to design and improve circuits. In the process I often use various CAD type programs to rough out the designs. I have frequently found that the models do not agree with the final build. Some are right on, but most are off enough to turn a good idea into a waste of time. Thus the need to quickly prototype designs. Now I could have created this board with many additional features - speakers, output transformers, LEDs... But what I needed was a simple way to test single stage tube circuits. So for simplicity I wired the tube pins together (pin 1 to pin 1 and so on). The leads from the pins are brought out to terminals on a "Euro" style terminal strip. I included several other "Euro" strips, a pair of RCA jacks, a 100 k-ohm variable resistor and solderless prototype breadboard. This solderless breadboard is available in various sizes from several sources. If you build one of these boards, feel free to use the idea to adapt it to your needs and use whatever parts you so desire.

[Thanks, Gio!]


DIY Vacuum Tube Prototyping Board

Posted by Gareth Branwyn | Nov 20, 2009 03:00 PM
Electronics, Retro | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

Free LED Cookbook from TI

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By way of Andrew Q Righter of HacDC comes word of this free PDF from Texas Instruments, a 41-page "cookbook" of circuit designs and application notes for TI's LED-related components. [Thanks, Andrew!]


LED Reference Design Cookbook [PDF]


Posted by Gareth Branwyn | Nov 20, 2009 03:00 PM
Electronics, Toolbox | Permalink | Comments (1) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

How-To: Open source intervalometer for Canon, Nikon cameras

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Instructables user peterdr has put together a really excellent tutorial on how to build his CT-1 open-source hardware intervalometer for Canon and Nikon digital cameras. There's more info about the project at his personal website, and a parts kit is for sale on Amazon.com.

Posted by Sean Michael Ragan | Nov 20, 2009 02:05 PM
DIY Projects, Electronics, Instructables, Photography | Permalink | Comments (1) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

PYMT, a multi-touch library for Python

Interested in building programs with fancy multi-touch interfaces? Speak Python? Well, in that case you might want to have a look at PYMT. Designed for rapid interface design, it looks like it would be fun to play around with. [via the space station]

Posted by Matt Mets | Nov 20, 2009 01:00 PM
Computers, Something I want to learn to do... | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

Make: Projects - Pneumatic trough, part II

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Last week I wrote about how to construct a simple sheet metal "bridge," which, in combination with an ice cube bucket and an olive jar, makes an effective pneumatic trough for collecting gas samples over water. This week I'm going to show you how to use this apparatus to generate and collect pure oxygen, and how to use that oxygen to observe the brilliant blue flame of sulfur oxidation.

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Tools:

Materials:



Read full story

Posted by Sean Michael Ragan | Nov 20, 2009 12:30 PM
Chemistry, DIY Projects, Education, MAKE Projects, Science | Permalink | Comments (1) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

Cardboard tube battle

My local library picked up on the festive trend of Cardboard Tube Fighting. The Boston Globe covered the preparations:

The group discovered cardboard tube fighting last summer in time to incorporate a bit of it into a presentation on Greek mythology at a reading program party.


The weapons are cylindrical pieces of thick cardboard about 4 feet long. The appeal, explains young-adult librarian Ellen Snoeyenbos: "It's totally ridiculous.''

As word of mock combat with reliably harmless weaponry spread among the town's youthful warriors, Snoeyenbos and the Bookmarks seized on the fund-raiser as a chance to exploit their discovery of the fighting fad made popular by YouTube.

Saturday's event will feature one-on-one tournaments, guild-on-guild skirmishes (up to 10 fighters per team), "and an all-out battle for possession of the Royal Crown,'' according to the club.

They've gathered hundreds of tubes, and youth of all ages are uparmoring in a pulpy way.

More:
Cardboard Tube Fighting League

Posted by Chris Connors | Nov 20, 2009 12:00 PM
DIY Projects, Kids, Paper Crafts | Permalink | Comments (1) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

Make: Holiday Gift Guide 2009: Gifts for dads


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There's a funny thing about dads' toys. Very often, kids borrow dad's supposedly grown-up toys and dad plays with toys designed for a much younger demographic. With that in mind, we present the Gifts for Dads list, filled with stuff that may appeal to more than one generation in your household. And you may also want to check out the holiday gift guides over on the GeekDad blog.



Read full story

Posted by John Baichtal | Nov 20, 2009 11:01 AM
Electronics, Gadgets, Gift Guides, LEGO | Permalink | Comments (5) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

LEGO-sized hole punch by MUJI

Paper craft meets LEGO with MUJI's quad hole punch and kits, available November 27th at MUJI Japan. [via CRAFT]

Posted by Becky Stern | Nov 20, 2009 11:00 AM
LEGO, Paper Crafts | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

Cross multi-tool

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Dutch designer Michiel Cornelissen sells these cruciform screwdrivers, which are laser-sintered stainless steel. There's a flat-blade, a Phillips head, and an IKEA-sized hex bit. [via Dude Craft]

Posted by Sean Michael Ragan | Nov 20, 2009 08:58 AM
3D printing, Arts, Made On Earth, Toolbox | Permalink | Comments (6) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

How PCBs are routed

One hour of PCB routing with EAGLE, compressed to seven minutes, over at adafruit.

Posted by Becky Stern | Nov 20, 2009 08:00 AM
Electronics, How it's made | Permalink | Comments (4) | Email Entry | Suggest a Site

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