

Many (many) moons ago, I did some pieces for Mondo 2000 magazine and The Millennium Whole Earth Catalog on microsats — basically homebrewed flying PCs and radios in a box that hitched rides on spaceships. I heard amazing stories of literally building these craft on kitchen tables and baking components (i.e. curing them) in home ovens, sats being tossed out of hatches of Russian spacecraft to “launch” them, guys in basements using early desktop publishing systems to bodge up professional-looking aerospace firm proposals to get contracts, etc. All very exciting, pioneering stuff.
The microsat movement is alive and well today, and you can even buy a nifty CubeSat Kit, built around the MSP430 chipset. Seems like buying a kit would take a bunch of the fun out of it, but I guess a lot depends on what sort of “fun” you’re after. It also costs $6,000, but it is, after all, a spacecraft.
Begin your CubeSat Mission with the CubeSat Kit [via ladyada's ranting]


Mondo 2000? Gareth, your age is showing
I thought I was the only one old enough to remember that awesome zine!
You have been bumped up on my idol scale now.
Gawd, I loved Mondo 2000. I still have them in a box somewhere and the book Mondo 2000: A User’s Guide to the New Edge (first printing) is looking at me with puppy dawg eyes from the book shelf. I reread it every nine months, love all the shiny pictures too.
Mondo 2000 – The ephedrine/pumpkin pie diet was the best thing ever! What an amazing mag!
back on topic, what are people/schools doing with these things besides clones of sputnik 1? The best I can find by searching is “connecting sensors”.
AMSAT is the main org for amateur sat builders. There’s all sorts of info there about the various sats and what they’re up to:
http://www.amsat.org/
There’s also a community site for CubeSat-based systems:
http://cubesat.calpoly.edu/
// What's Trending
Raspberry Pi Design Contest
Maker Faire: Day One
A Photo Tour of Maker Faire
Arduino Announces New Wireless Linux Board
Seventeen Sneaky Secret Hides
10 Things to Connect to Your Raspberry Pi
Maker Faire Bay Area Ready for Showtime
New Arduino Robot Available in the Maker Shed at Maker Faire
// What's Shared
A better way to slice a pumpkin
DIY Nerf Darts
In the Maker Shed: Minty Boost USB Charger
100 Dollar Store Organization Ideas for Craft Rooms and Beyond
Mad’s Mouse House
Lace Princess Crowns
I Have a (Puzzling) Dream
Play the Rings of a Tree Trunk Like a Record
// Most Commented
DIY Hacks & How To’s: Get Emergency Power from a Phone Line
Resin Casting: Going from CAD to Engineering-Grade Plastic Parts
Ten Tips for Screws and Screwdrivers
Ten Tips for Better Measurement
Makers on TV: Big Brain Theory
Grow: A Portable CNC Router System
Pitches with Prototypes: Solar Tracker
Tool Review: BioLite CampStove
Trending Topics
Get our Newsletters
About Maker Media
Subscribe
to MAKE!
Get the print and digital versions when you subscribe