Create a macro lens from an old 50mm

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Lambert Smith has a great howto for converting a standard 50mm lens from an old SLR camera into a dedicated macro lens for your digital camera. By reversing the 50mm lens and using a number of extension tubes. The photo above is his conversion hack on a Canon Powershot G3, which has a non-interchangeable zoom lens. Custom adapters can be made by gluing filter rings back to back, so you can do this with a normal digital, a DSLR, or even a traditional film camera.

Once set up in this manner, your camera will have a fixed point of focus (unless you use a bellows). When taking a photo, you simply move the whole camera toward or away from the subject until it is in focus.

Reversed 50mm – A Dedicated Macro Lens

World Science Festival 2008 NYC (photos)

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MAKE hit the World Science Festival in NYC today, packed with tons of people – the event took over Washington Square park and parts of NYU. For the kids there were lots of hands on exhibits and for adults (and kids) lots of sessions/events/talks – it was so popular the ticketed events were sold out or standing room only – events like this and our own Maker Faire seem to indicated there is more demand than supply for science and that.. is a good thing! Great event, hope to see it happen each year in NYC! – more photos here & check out their site for additional day/evening events on Sunday.

Related:
World Science Festival.
Interview with Brian Green co-founder.


Editor’s note: This concludes our “mobile post” series which will appeared on MAKE – sponsored by Windows Mobile – pt.

How To: Make a simple WiFi Yagi antenna

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Nick sent in this great build for improving your WiFi connection. There are a lot of different ways to make WiFi antennas, many of them featured on the MAKE blog. This is a nice design based on the Yagi antenna, which has been around since the 1920′s.

I have been playing around with some wifi networking lately, mostly with the La Fonera, and finally decided to build a directional wifi antenna. Although the cantenna, however, I don’t really like Pringles chips and wanted to make something more interesting. I decided to try and make a simple Yagi antenna with a magnetic dipole as the driving element.

Learn how to make your own Yagi WiFi antenna

Related:
Fkunza00S8Eqzji5Dc.Medium
DIY USB Wi-Fi antenna made from a strainer

Magnetic core inspired door grill

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Joe sent in this is a really beautiful way of securing a door. The design was inspired from magnetic core memory that was used in early computers. In this case, the final product is used for keeping a dog from breaking the glass while trying to attack the mailman! [Thanks Joe!] Magnetic Core inspired Door grill

Before there were hard drives–before there was RAM (random access memory)–there was magnetic core memory: An arrangement of donut-shaped magnets, the polarity of each could be switched by the current of 2 wires passing through the hole. In this way each magnet could be set to an “on” or “off” (binary) position. Needless to say, they don’t make memory like that anymore.

And here is the inspiration for the door:

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More about making a Magnetic Core inspired Door grill

Begging robot creates sound, asks for money

Alexader Gurko’s “Begging Bot” plays music just by synching up the sounds a floppy and hard drive makes when spinning their motors. After the song is done, the CD drives opens up and the bot asks for donations from the public. The sound is actually pretty interesting if you watch the above video.

[via]

Tim Prentice kinetic sculptures

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I don’t know how I’ve missed Tim Prentice’s work; he’s truly amazing.

In my current work in kinetic sculpture, I am trying to concentrate on the movement, rather than the object. I take it as an article of faith that the air around us moves in ways which are organic, whimsical, and unpredictable. I therefore assume that if I were to abdicate the design to the wind, the work would take on these same qualities.

Tim Prentice Kinetic Sculpture
Tim Prentice on his Art, Architecture and Music

Related:
Arthur Ganson : Machines
Interview with Theo Jansen…

Join your fellow Makers this Sunday at the 2nd Maker Faire Austin Town Hall

Join your fellow Makers this Sunday at the 2nd Maker Faire Austin Town Hall

Day/Time:
June 1st 6-9 pm

Location:
La Madeleine
35th and Lamar
3418 N Lamar
512-302-1486

More Information/Agenda:
makerfaireaustin.pbwiki.com

RSVP on Upcoming:
http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/624269/?ps=5

P.S. And, if you are in to crafting, please join us for our first Austin area release party of CRAFT:07 earlier in the day:

Our hosts are Rachel Hobson (Average Jane Crafter, BurdaStyle) and Leslie Bonnell (StitchLab), with special guests Jenny Hart (Sublime Stitching), plus Katie Dougherty and Sherry Huss of CRAFT. Snacks will be provided by Cookie Madness and door prizes include T-shirts and box sets from CRAFT, plus goodies from Chronicle Books, Naughty Secretary Club, Sublime Stitching, , Stitch Lab and more!

CRAFT: 07 Release Party
Sunday, June 1, 1-4pm
@ The Work*Shop
2438 W. Anderson Lane, #C5
Austin, TX 78757

SafeHistory: protect your privacy from visited link analysis

A couple of days ago I wrote about the visited link javascript hack that lets any website operator query a user’s browser history to determine if they’ve visited any other particular site. One possible use for this is to detect which Web2.0 social applications a user visits so that you can display the appropriate link badges.

It’s a creepy scenario, though, that a website operator can effectively bypass the browser’s intended security model to invade your privacy by seeing if you’ve been visiting other sites. Hackszine reader Logical Extremes commented with a solution to this problem:

This is a common phishing vector. Rather than encouraging broader use, we should be educating and protecting against it. There is a Firefox add-on that explicitly blocks this.

Some hackers over at the Stanford Computer Science Department created SafeHistory, a Firefox plugin that protects against visited link tracking techniques. It works by only allowing the a:visited property to apply to off-site links that were previously visited from the current URL.

This seems to be a reasonable way to keep the functionality of visited links without leaking any additional information. I wonder how long it will be before this is adopted as a browser behavior standard.

Stanford SafeHistory
Protecting Browser State Using Same Origin Policy (PDF)

Previously:
Detect which sites a web user visits

Parsons Design & Technology show (photos)

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Tonight was the Design & Technology at Parsons the New School for Design MFA thesis show at the Chelsea Art Museum in New York. Lots of green themes and data visualizations, my favorite piece was the motorized “Controller nana” by Kan Yang (Kyle) Li – an experimental game controller hack for artists – More photos here.

2008 MFA Design & Technology Thesis Show

Opening:
Friday, May 30, 2008: 6:00 – 8:00 p.m.

Chelsea Art Museum
556 West 22nd Street

Hours:
Tuesday through Saturday,
11:00 AM-6:00 PM

Thursday,
11:00 AM-8:00 PM


Editor’s note: This is part of the “mobile post” series which will appear on MAKE – sponsored by Windows Mobile. Only the links and voice that appear in the mobile post box (below) are part of the campaign on MAKE – pt.