The element14 MAKE Magazine Giveaway
Our friends at element14 have graciously agreed to give away TEN one-year subscriptions to MAKE magazine in a giveaway here on the Make: Arduino page. That’s four rich, delicious quarterly print issues of MAKE, each chalk full of DIY project goodness. Each subscriptions is a $35 value.
To be eligible for one of these subs, all you have to do is tell us in the comments below what you’d hope to learn from the magazine — what skills or specific projects would you hope to see? That’s it. Leave a comment, and you’re eligible!
The eligible commenting period will last until this Friday (5/6) at 11:59pm PDT. The winners will be announced on Monday AM (don’t forget to check back here to see if you’ve won!).
UPDATE: And the winners are….
Kevin DeWitt
Mike Nereson
Robbie Pitts
Fightcube
Timbleer
Akkana Peck
Margret Treiber
Ulrika Anderson
Gary Marriott
Ben Phipps
Congrats to all of you. Please email us the mailing address where you want your subscription sent (and tell us if this is an addition to an existing subscription).
More:
The Make: Arduino landing page



I’d love to see some how-tos on getting professional-looking results in a Make. It’s okay having a hacked-together piece as a proof-of-concept, but so many projects don’t get past that stage just because (for me) I don’t have the knowledge of how to make a square hole in plastic (for example) look like something other than a scratchy melty mess…
Our subscription ran out and the kids and I miss looking through it for project ideas!! More Rocket Hacks please!
I would love to see some projects made completely out of paper/cardboard. It’s such a ubiquitous material that everyone has at the read and it has so much potential. So, some papercraft projects would be awesome. And if papercraft objects were somehow combined with an arduino…?
I would like to see more hacks to consumer electronics and kitchen/cleaning equipment. It’s when we address our own equipment that we start to really take charge of the technology in our daily lives, and changing/hacking the equipment we use daily, can be the first step to coming up with our own solutions for everyday situations.
What I hope to learn ? How could I possibly comment on that ?!?! One of the BEST parts of Make is that you never know WHAT ideas you’re going to get, or what you’re going to learn ! Just when you think it’s all been done, BANG ! another cool project you wish YOU had thought of !!!
I’ve been wanting a subscription for a while! I mostly love the electronics hacks, especially ones dealing with Arduino and AVR micro-controllers. The weekend projects are always fun, too!
I love to learn more about electronics and microcontrollers. Make vol. 4 and 9 were instrumental in getting me started on the path. Even volume 1 with Mr. Bunny with the Light stick a go go article, even though it was written well over my head at the time, was helpful in my quest for knowledge.
I love to learn more about electronics and microcontrollers. Make vol. 4 and 9 were instrumental in getting me started on the path. Even volume 1 with Mr. Bunny with the Light stick a go go article, even though it was written well over my head at the time, was helpful in my quest for knowledge.
I hope to learn enough electronics to be able to intelligently make use of an Arduino.
I’m interested in DIY garden projects. I want to be more self sustainable so I am getting into gardening this year. Also , pallets are easy to come by. I love seeing ways to reuse and give new life to pallets.
I’m interested in DIY garden projects. I want to be more self sustainable so I am getting into gardening this year. Also , pallets are easy to come by. I love seeing ways to reuse and give new life to pallets.
I’m interested in DIY garden projects. I want to be more self sustainable so I am getting into gardening this year. Also , pallets are easy to come by. I love seeing ways to reuse and give new life to pallets.
I’m interested in DIY garden projects. I want to be more self sustainable so I am getting into gardening this year. Also , pallets are easy to come by. I love seeing ways to reuse and give new life to pallets.
I’m interested in DIY garden projects. I want to be more self sustainable so I am getting into gardening this year. Also , pallets are easy to come by. I love seeing ways to reuse and give new life to pallets.
I’d like to learn about weekend projects I can do w/my two young sons so they can learn to be makers for life.
I’d like to learn about weekend projects I can do w/my two young sons so they can learn to be makers for life.
I’d like to learn about weekend projects I can do w/my two young sons so they can learn to be makers for life.
I’d like to learn about weekend projects I can do w/my two young sons so they can learn to be makers for life.
I’d like to learn about weekend projects I can do w/my two young sons so they can learn to be makers for life.
I would love to see more articles about making music and musical instruments. I’m still searching for a good cigar box to make a guitar (or maybe bass!) out of.
I would love to see more articles about making music and musical instruments. I’m still searching for a good cigar box to make a guitar (or maybe bass!) out of.
I would love to see an article or two on making your own astronomical instruments, possibly even including the optics. I have in my time found great enjoyment in being able, with only 18th Century technology, to grind telescope optics to accuracies better than 1/8th Wavelength of visible light.
You know, if I get a subscription it might even spur me into writing an article or two myself to allow anyone to make their own telescopes.
I love designing and building projects with my teenage children. We love electronics, woodworking, and crafts, and lately are embarking on welding. We can use all the guidance we can get, and MAKE Magazine would be a big part of that.
I want to learn more about intermediate level electronics.
I would love to see some mechanicals things easy to do,without requiring a lot of tools or stuff.
Also try to do some Cheap projects or easy projects that doesn’t require a Radioshack ! (We don’t have those in Argentina)
I hope the magazine would make me a better dad
Great magazine… would love a copy!
Thanks for all your “stuff” – very inspiring.
I am interested in any projects that my son’s and I can create together
Robot building with my kids -
Welcome Robot Overlords!!!
I appreciate the way that the articles cause you to look differently at everything, showing you different ways to approach “problems”. Regardless of the article topic, the methodology used is beneficial to understand, helping to expand the creative juices of the reader in a way that they can apply it to their own projects. I would love to be able to access this in a printed format, easily referenced when the creative bug bites.
I hope to gain more insight into HF system design and analysis.
I just bought my first house after three years of searching. It is a great house but it needs a bit of work. Make magazine would give me invaluable tips and in sites into how I could fix up my house myself and deck it out with awesomeness.
Would love to build my own set of speakers.
I am hoping to learn cool, new tricks with common things laying around my house.
I’d like to find some great projects to do with my son. He’s all about real world applications of science & tech.
I am always looking for inexpensive projects that kids can make that will get them interested in STEM (Science Technology Engineering Math) careers.
I want to put some miles on my Black & Decker drill! So far I’ve only used it to install shelves. Boring!
I like projects that involve soldering or even making my own PCB’s. As a ham radio operator I’m always on the lookout for projects that might have a radio related aspect and can provide an opportunity to hone my electronics skills.
I’m hoping to get new ideas on how to use all these big piles of ‘useful’ parts I’ve pulled from things otherwise going in the trash.
I already have a make subscription but I would like one for a friend or for a school.
I hope to see some garden specific MAKEs to help with growing fresh food.
Always looking for ideas to help our Boy Scouts with various merit badges – the newly added Robotics Merit Badge is a perfect fit with a lot of Make’s contents, but Make also covers ideas that could help in a slew of other merit badges.
Personally, I hope to pick up some knowledge of small electronics (i.e., Arduino) in order to augment and/or automate my wood shop projects.
Some home appliance repair skills have proven to be a money saver for me. I’ve managed to repair my malfunctioning fridge, dryer, and even my furnace, for next to nothing. I think it would be great to see these skills featured in Make.
Would love to learn how to make some electronics for use in photography.
Would love to learn how to make some electronics for use in photography.
I have a subscription, but my son’s middle school has greatly benefited from articles in the past issues. I thought giving their science program a one year subscription would encourage it even more. They have a fantastic staff that do a lot of hands-on projects with the kids, including a solar oven and compressed-air rocket so far this year.
I have a subscription, but my son’s middle school has greatly benefited from articles in the past issues. I thought giving their science program a one year subscription would encourage it even more. They have a fantastic staff that do a lot of hands-on projects with the kids, including a solar oven and compressed-air rocket so far this year.
I’ve built many things out of Make in the past. I just want to learn how to make more cool stuff!
I would love a subscription to help me learn more about robotics and Arduinos to make a robotic lawn mower among other things.
The internet randomly brought me to Make.com / Make.com showed me what Arduino was. / Im hoping this Magazines help me continue this “loop” of events so that I can finally find out what it’s all about.
Give a man a fish, and he’ll never buy a fishing license. Give a man a subscription, and he’ll buy stuff from your advertisers.
I will add to my existing Make magazine library and keep them on display proudly them at my shop, where people may look through them in order to find projects to enlighten their minds.
I would like to see content on detailed circuit design to eventually make an Arduino-based home automation system.
I’d love to see some ye ‘olde timey projects… a bit of diy blacksmithing could never hurt.
I also play a fair bit with simple digital electronics – getting some fresh and interesting project ideas for the Arduino (or pushing into more ‘hardcore’ development boards/chips) would be super cool as well.
I’m really hoping to get more involved in electronics and robotics. A MAKE magazine subscription would be a great way to get started!
If I won I’d read them then either donate them to the office reading pile or the hackerspace library. Would I learn anything? Probably. Would that benefit mankind? Almost certainly not. However it would be highly entertaining. Actually all of this will probably happen anyways but with the money I’d save from the free subscription I’d totally by a ROCKING ice cream float.
I’ve always been a fan of DIY person, but I am not very confident in my abilitys
I like the contents of Make: but just cannot afford to subscribe. I have used some of the projects for Cub Scouts and family.
I am a dunce when it comes to electricity. Ohms? Amps? Resistance? This is a subject that I’d really like to understand, ideally through beginner MAKE projects! (tiny robots, hint, hint)
It is an interesting idea. I believe I met some of the sponsors at last years fair here in NYC. I could use the subscriptions as it happens.
I would love to learn more about this stuff!
i need my own so i can stop borrowing my friends copies
I love to make things & DIY. Ive loved so many of the ideas Ive seen in Make’s Facebook feed and it has inspired me to want to make & craft more. A subscription would be the ultimate tool since I can’t currently afford one. Ive always had an interest in electronics & robotics and the tutorials have been such a help! My favorite bits, I have to admit, are the fan made items and the quick & low cost crafty ideas for making house decor, or fun pop-culture crafts, (the portal egg-cradle is so cute!).
I wan’t to read about and complete projects that I can do with my son (5yr old). While there are those in Make from time to time, having more of this type of project outlined would be great.
So much of the MAKE posts are taken straight from the magazines. Since my internet access is a little limited where I live, a MAKE subscription would make continuing my interest in DIY a bit easier.
I’d love to get a subscription. I’ve been meaning to subscribe, but don’t have the disposable cash. In any case, it would be great brain food for inspiring projects to do with my kids!
I’d hope to learn to actually DO the things I see and think about. Nothing specific, but anything! By reading the “how I got here” and “how tos” of other makers, large and small, I hope to give myself a big kick in the pants and get out there and DO!
*Disclaimer* DOing make cause nicks, cuts, burns, feelings of accomplishment, eurphoria, and the desire (and ability) to rule the world with hordes of minion robots!
I’d enjoy a subscription again (mine just expired but I’m in a bit of a cash flow crisis). As a home owner I’d love to see more about projects like home networking (wired or not; there may be times when a wired network is a more reliable option).
I’d like to get some tips on remotely monitoring the water level, pH, temp, and water flow rate in my backyard pond.
I would love to see some projects using zigbee/xbee radios.
I would like to learn about Arduino networks (wired or not) and protocals. I am very interested in home control and distributed type arduino systems.
I would like to learn about Arduino networks (wired or not) and protocals. I am very interested in home control and distributed type arduino systems.
I would like more good beginner outdoor projects like the do it yourself longboard and the fruit and vegetable dryer in 26
I’d hope to learn something more about hacking together electronics and some fun experiments/crafting to do with my daughter!
I’d hope to learn something more about hacking together electronics and some fun experiments/crafting to do with my daughter!
I’d hope to learn something more about hacking together electronics and some fun experiments/crafting to do with my daughter!
I would love to know how to make an Arduino controlled windchime for my garden!
I hope to learn more about my Current Arduino GPS tracking collar project for my dog, and how the Arduino Mega runs the current RepRap Mendel.
I would enjoy learning more about a great any things including but not limited to electronics in general and arduino and robotics in particular. I would enjoy learning more about metal working and wood working, circuit bending and sustainable farming. I want to learn more about wind and solar power. I would like to learn enough to design, build and market some unique clock ideas I have in mind, some of which would include weather display and other internet available information such as tide, stock ticker and sports ticklers.
I hope to see projects that are realizable with cheap electronic parts, and that are cool enough to impress kids and teenagers. I plan to open some kind of a hackspace in a specific country of the third world that will be free for kids: I want to give them the chance to get exposed to that kind of knowledge so they might chose go down that road when it’s their time to choose what/if to study.
Btw, thanks for the chance! =)
I look forward to seeing more green projects from alternate energies like a micro controlled reflector array, or an algae reactor and the like!