Mention Africa and many of us westerners immediately conjure up images of war, famine, and genocide. But Sierra Leone’s 16-year-old Kelvin Doe is conjuring up something something altogether different.

Kelvin, AKA DJ Focus, helped create a DIY youth radio station made from discarded consumer electronics salvaged from local garbage bins. He designed his own generator to power the station’s amplifier and other components. The station’s 12-volt generator is made from a home-made battery which in turn is  charged by broken DVD players. In his spare time, Kelvin DJs at kids’ birthday parties.

Kelvin is coming to Maker Faire New York from Africa to participate in the “Meet the Young Makers” panel discussion Sunday, Sept. 30, at noon. If you want to renew your faith in humanity and the young maker spirit this is the event for you.

Kelvin is one of the finalists in the inaugural Innovate Salone 2012 high school invention challenge in Sierra Leone organized by Global Minimum. He presented his work on Maker Camp this past summer. In addition to his appearance at Maker Faire,  Kelvin will also be a resident practitioner with the MIT International Development Initiative. And, oh yeah. He will also be a guest presenter at Harvard School of Engineering.

Global Minimum’s mission is to “nurture and harvest the creative and innovative minds of Sierra Leoneans through design and implementation.”  Innovate Salone is dedicated to improving the quality of life in Sierra Leone through “the collaborative integration of scientific, socio-cultural, technological and entrepreneurial innovations.”

Given what Kelvin has accomplished, it sounds like Global Minimum and Innovate Salone are succeeding.

Maker Faire Project Profile

Meet the Young Makers

Meet the Young Makers

BY Stett Holbrook

Stett is a senior editor at MAKE.

6 Responses to Maker Faire New York: Kelvin Doe

  1. Capt. Price on said:

    Wow. I wish i lived in Africa and could scavenge from bins to source parts. Here in the UK you’d get arrested for that. I wonder if Harvard ever knew about the remote control van I made when I was 6? Probably not.
    Perhaps I should move to Africa? By the looks of Luton, there can’t be many people left in Africa, so getting a job shouldn’t be too hard.

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