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Curious Inventor has just released the Stribe touch LED controller project as a modular kit -
Each Stribe1 has a touch strip and double column of LEDs that can display and control music and video programs. Multiple Stribe1's can be daisy-chained together to form a low-res, multi-touch display. Use with Max/MSP or other software to adjust track volumes with VU meters, make a sequencer, control synth params and pitch, "scratch" through sounds, etc.- Stribe1 Touch LED Strip Controller
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The stribe - touch-sensitive mixers with a LED matrix

Sometimes it's just that simple - a bottle opener from Togo, made with a piece of stick and a screw, with a lovely beaded handle.
Togolese Bottle Opener Simplicity
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Bogged down by that big old oscillating clunker? Feel the freedom of the SIG Theremin Watch! (Hmmm, I'd be interested in seeing how a wearable theremin antennae performs) Now all we need is the dual mounted helmet version to complete the set.
From the MAKE Flickr photo pool

Mini-Theremin
Self-portrait of the artist, photographer and Boing Boing friend Clayton Cubitt (a.k.a. Siege), spattered in blood, from a series-in-progress: Fugue State. Self-portrait with Blood Splatter, 2008, another image from the series, but with ink, that is mildly NSFW, and Cubitt's portfolio, which includes some (beautiful) NSFW content.
Mikey Sklar, who lives off the grid with Wendy Tremayne, bought a battery desulfator kit to bring his dead electric vehicle batteries back to life. I hope it works!
I recently ordered a $37 battery desulfator kit. It looks like a pretty simple device that sends pulses to lead acid batteries to help clean the battery plates. There are many success stories on the net about resuscitating essentially "dead" lead acid batteries. Since we have two electric vehicles and live off grid we have a lot of motivation to take care of our batteries. I've seen kits that sell for hundreds of dollars, but this 555 based kit seems to kick out a lot more juice than the fancy ones with wimpy solar panels.Desulfator
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From the MAKE Flickr photo pool
Feeling nostalgic for the short-lived pop-up toaster action of G4 Cube? Check out Trademarklaser's acrylic stand which positions a Mac Mini to load discs topside. - Mac Mini Cube
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Mac mini Cube project
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Make has posted a video of a neat new kit from Adafruit called the Drawdio.
Drawdio is an electronic pencil that lets you make music while you draw! It's great project for beginners: An easy kit with instant gratification! Essentially, its a very simple musical synthesizer that uses the conductive properties of pencil graphite to create different sounds. The result is a fun toy that lets you draw musical instruments on any piece of paper.Shown here is a Drawdio mod called Unruly. How-to Tuesday: Drawdio meets Unruly
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In honor of Veteran's Day, I thought I'd share my interest in a strange but wonderful type of art production known as trench art. I've always been fascinated by military history, especially WWI trench warfare. What soldiers had to endure during "The Great War" is beyond comprehension. But it is a testament to the human spirit, the will to survive, and the desire to create beauty, that even while "eye deep in hell" (to steal a phrase and a book title about that conflict), artists and makers were busy in the trenches, taking the trash and spent bits of warfare and making inspiring and functional objects from it.
Here are just a few objects from Jane A. Kimball's wonderful book, Trench Art: An Illustrated History, and website Trench Art of the Great War And Related Souvenirs.

Submarine model made from rifle bullets, scrap brass, and twisted copper wire.

Three lighters made from (L to R) scrap brass, a belt buckle, and a bullet cartridge.

Dinner gong made from German 21cm howitzer and 77mm shell casing.

Ink well made from scrap brass, copper, and tin.
Trench Art of the Great War And Related Souvenirs
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Margaux Lange makes jewelry out of Barbie doll parts and sells them on Etsy.
This happy little ring is made of sterling silver with hand hammered detailing and a pink lipstick Barbie doll smile. Features an oxidized finish and hand hammered ring shank. Top part of ring measures approximately 1/2" x 5/8" Artist signature on back.Barbie Jewelry by Margaux LangeA fun little reminder, right there on your hand to SMILE and take life a little less seriously!
I have 2 really cool projects for this weeks How-to Tuesday. One is the Drawdio by Adafruit Industries, the other build is a modification of Drawdio called "Unruly". These are great projects to make with your kids. Although, when you are done you most likely will not be too willing to share it. It's just that much fun!
OK, let's get started making the Drawdio.
What you need:

Step 2: Soldering the resistors and capacitors
I started by adding both resistors and both capacitors. There is plenty of room to solder them in at the same time. Make sure you read the instructions carefully, the resistors look similar, but they are different.
Ian Silvestein's house was destroyed three years when the Buncefield Depot in England blew up. The companies that operated the depot -- Total and Chevron -- won't help him.
Literally, nothing has been done to help him with his situation — or anybody for that matter. The local authorities have failed him, the governments have failed him, insurance has failed him, and the companies that operated the facilities — Total and Chevron — have ducked blame entirely. The massive companies made more than £18 billion in cash last year, but can’t help a few people out when a leak in their tanks caused massive and catastrophic damage to dozens of people’s lives.Man's house blows up, companies responsible won't help (Thanks, Jake!)
Machine Project @ LACMAPlease join us this Saturday Nov 15th from noon until 10pm as we seize control of LACMA. We will be orchestrating ten hours of performances, workshops, and events dispersed across the seven-building, twenty-acre campus. Pieces are sited throughout the museum until 8pm, then join us on the BP Grand Court for performances, screenings, and lasagna cat. Featuring over 60 projects, this is the biggest thing we've ever done, and dare we say, the raddest. Tickets to the event are available for standard LACMA admission prices. Admission to the museum and show are FREE for all Machine Project members. Come by anytime during the day, or spend your entire Saturday with us.
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Wired's how-to wiki gives us "Cake in a Mug," perhaps the greatest thing to come to the microwave since peep jousting:
You're working at home and your mind starts to wander to snack possibilities. There are probably some prepackaged, good-until-the-next-millennium baked items in your cabinet, but you're in the mood for something warm from the oven. Something chocolate. However, your compulsion to work is just strong enough to keep you from leaving the computer long enough to make something from scratch. Guess it'll have to be another stale Twinkie after all.
A single-serving portion of cake. Baked in a microwave. In the mug I mixed it in. Just for me. Right now.
Hello future. You can keep the jetpack.
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Rebelscum has posted the results of their Halloween 2008 Star Wars costume contest.
Costume Contest Winners
News of a project's death travels, and soon scientists around the planet are competing for the chance to acquire some serious hardware. A hospital may need particle beams for cancer treatment, say. There are also commercial uses for power supplies. Out of odd parts, whimsical scientists can construct works of art. And particle accelerators, with their beam-bending magnets, are mother lodes of iron and copper. The car you drive may contain steel that in another life formed the core of a cyclotron. With commodity prices soaring and serious amounts of valuable metals in big physics projects, some machines and experiments may be worth more now than when they were built (see chart). Could selling them to others lead to even bigger machines and more profound discoveries?Science supermachines in the scrapyard (gallery), Where do science supermachines go when they die? (feature article)
Mr Saw Wai’s poem, entitled ‘14th February’, was ostensibly a Valentine’s Day verse published last January in a popular weekly magazine. “You have to be in love truly, madly, deeply and then you can call it real love,” it read. “Millions of people who know how to love, please clap your hands of gilded gold and laugh out loud.”Blogger jailed for 20 years over poem that mocked Burmese dictatorBut the first word of each line spelled out a pithier message about the leader of the country’s military government: “Power Crazy Senior General Than Shwe”. Mr Saw Wai was arrested the next day and charged with harming “public tranquility”.
Al Jaffee's Tall Tales collects the best out of over 2,200 "Tall Tales" daily strips that Mad Magazine's Al Jaffee drew for the Herald Tribune syndicate from 1957 to 1963. Jaffee conceived of Tall Tales while in desperate economic straits, and hit upon a winning formula for breaking into the lucrative comics syndicate game: rather than drawing a traditional horizontal strip that would compete with the existing material, he opted for a seven-inch-tall vertical strip, which gave editors a lot more flexibility as to where in the paper the strip would run. The tall format is a natural for wordless "double-take" sight-gags whose effect lies in the fact that your eye can't take in the whole strip in one go, so there's a little comic shock that comes after studying the page for a second or two.
All the strips in the book are at least cute, and many are fantastically funny (I like the posh "Fresh Seafood" restaurant in which a tuxedoed waiter standing by a table for two is signalling with two fingers to a nearby fisherman in a straw hat on a dock, who's grinning and giving a thumbs-up sign; and the first strip in the book, which shows two men laying checkered tiles from opposite ends of a long corridor, and one of them has just realized that their checkers is not going to line up, and has a look of perfect horror on his face). There's a charming foreword by Stephen Colbert, who is an Al Jaffee megafan (as it turns out), and Jaffee himself has given us a page or two of origin-story for the piece.
But the meat of this is just page after page of tall, skinny sight gags, executed in the classic Jaffee style that MAD Magazine nuts know down to our bones. This is a fine, thin little book and funny besides.
Walter Robot, aka Bill Barminski and Christopher Louie, produced this video for Gnarls Barkley's new track "Mystery Man." Here are previous Boing Boing tv episodes featuring Barminski's work.
Link to Boing Boing tv blog post, and here's the direct MP4 link for this video.
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Today is Veterans day in the USA, it honors the 24.9 million military veterans. We wanted to say thank you to all the past, current and future, men and women who serve(d) in the military. We have a lot of readers who have served or are currently serving around the world and we appreciate their dedication to the USA and always enjoy hearing about the MAKE-style projects you did in the past as well as the present.
Here's one of my favorite stories from a solider who recently wrote in to MAKE --
I'm an infantry soldier deployed to Afghanistan... long time MAKE reader (and recent subscriber). I've spent the last few weeks getting donations of books and DVDs for our MWR (Morale, Welfare and Recreation) Center. During that time we got some text books, and I've had the opportunity to teach some of my fellow soldiers a bit of algebra, trig, bio and physics. Recently I found out that some of the guys are interested in electronics and robotics.We received four MintyBoost kits a couple of days ago. In preparation for a longish mission we have coming up, several of the guys were interested in building them sooner rather than later (so we could keep our iPod's charged, of course). My wife has been kind enough to send us out some Altoids gum tins, so soon they will have more durable homes... right now they are living in the anti-static bags they came in. There were a bunch of guys wanting to try their hands at it, as many of the guys have never soldered anything. With only four kits and a pretty small room (where our Commo guys hang out, they had the soldering system) they drew straws ;-)
Attached are some pics, though not as many as I had intended to take, of the work that was done. A hearty thanks from all of the guys here. They were all very pleased with the result of their handiwork (they all worked without problems). I think that some of the guys are inspired to play around more with electronics. I'm trying hard to bring a little geek light to some of the less geek-endowed among us. Hehe!
The New York Times takes a peek backstage at the Hustler Club in Manhattan with an interactive panoramic shot of the unglamorous dressing room that lies beyond the stage lights.
"Where the Dancers Dress to Undress."In any act of fantasy — from a feature film to a political campaign — there is a hidden place where the dirty work gets done, where the make-believe is made.
In Hollywood, this is the editing room; in Washington, the spin room. At Larry Flynt’s Hustler Club, a strip joint on Manhattan’s West Side, it is the dancers’ private dressing room where the image of available sexuality and the naked facts collide.
Tucked behind a closed door upstairs from the dance floor, the dressing room is a shrine to female beauty — to the tireless attempts to tease the hair into a proper state of sultriness and adjust the bosoms upward at just the right incline. It is a small piece of the contemporary demimonde (strippers nibble take-out food in thongs and gold lamé). Near a plastic bowl of pretzels, a topless beauty steams the wrinkles from her ball gown with an iron. A tall brunette in nothing but a G-string wanders by. She is brushing her teeth.
Lest anyone think that Austin Bike Zoo is taking a break after Maker Faire, here's some footage of them at a Halloween ride:
Austin Texas Critical Mass 31 October 2008 from kevin on Vimeo.
(via Austin Texas Bike stuff)
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I love these custom Tonka trucks from Testar logistics via DnR...
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Mono-Scooter Is Speedy - Popular Mechanics, 1936-
With a little practice, you can get more speed out of this mono-scooter than out of a pair of roller skates. It is made from two roller-skate wheels and a hardwood block as wide as the shoe and about 5 in, longer. Round the ends of the block and slot them to take the wheels. Steel rods serve as axles, and washers are placed on either side of each wheel to keep it true. These should be lubricated. Triangular blocks serve as heel and toe plates, and a single toe strap keeps the scooter on the shoe. Tilting the foot to one side brings the block into contact with the sidewalk to get efficient brakingRead more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Modern Mechanix | Digg this!
"I talk to [New York Fed CEO Timothy] Geithner and he was pretty sure that they're OK. If the risk is that the Fed takes a little bit of a haircut, well that's regrettable.''Pretty sure they're OK? That's hardly a ringing endorsement for keeping the details of such loans a secret.

The Visible Hand by Dale Dougherty in Welcome. The DIY mindset must again become an essential life skill - Page 13.
I wrote this piece about a month ago as the Welcome for Make: 16, which will be on the newsstand soon...
As I write this, there is panic on Wall Street despite Washington’s $700 billion rescue attempt. The crisis is not contained by U.S. borders, but extends to Europe and Asia. Like many people, I’m incredulous. How could this happen?
Wall Street hired the best and the brightest, paid them handsomely, and gave them unlimited resources and technology. It turns out they were building enormously complicated castles made of sand. A great wave washed them away, astounding all the smart people who devoted their lives to speculation, not production. Their models based on historical data predicted future profits, not collapse. Few people saw this coming until it hit.
“It was the triumph of data over common sense,” said reporter Adam Davidson on the excellent episode of This American Life called “The Giant Pool of Money.” Economist Michael Lehmann in the San Francisco Chronicle called it “the triumph of ideology over common sense.” It’s obvious both common sense and the common man have taken a beating.
It’s hard to stomach that our government must bail out Wall Street. It really means we’ve bet our future on the same people who created the present situation. To paraphrase a joke I’ve heard: It’s like going to a casino in Vegas and rooting for the house. One New York Times reader expressed the frustration that many feel: “Why can’t we take half of the $700 billion and just build something?”
These events shake our belief that free markets work to the benefit of all. The fundamental tenet of capitalism is the “invisible hand”: Adam Smith wrote that “by pursuing his own interest [each person] frequently promotes that of the society.” This year, Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz said: “In this sense, the fall of Wall Street is for market fundamentalism what the fall of the Berlin Wall was for communism — it tells the world that this way of economic organization turns out not to be sustainable.”
A headline in the Christian Science Monitor says: “With finance crisis, hands-off era over.” Government will need to be more assertive in regulating Wall Street. But I think it goes beyond that. I wonder if we, as individuals, have been living in our own era of hands-off. Have Americans become so disengaged that we’ve become dependent on some invisible force to provide what we need? Have we gotten used to leaving important matters to experts, until they turn out to be wrong?
Isn’t it time for us to become hands-on again?
We, the people, face enormous challenges. Apart from the economic mess, we know fundamental changes are coming because of global warming. Our dependence on fossil fuels is not sustainable. Change is coming, whether we want it or not.
Better we meet the challenges head-on rather than hide. New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman summed it up: “We need to get back to making stuff, based on real engineering not just financial engineering. We need to get back to a world where people are able to realize the American Dream — a house with a yard — because they have built something with their hands, not because they got a ‘liar loan.’ ... The American Dream is an aspiration, not an entitlement.”
We have to believe it starts with each of us — not some faceless government or corporate bureaucracy. It’s time for us, individually and working together in business, to reconsider what it means to be productive, not just profitable. It’s time for us to reengage in how our government sets priorities for education, health care, housing, and transportation.
The DIY mindset celebrated in this magazine must again become an essential life skill, rooted once again in necessity and practicality. Our future security lies in knowing what we’re capable of creating, and how we can adapt to change by being resourceful.
A challenge this great can bring out the best in us. We need everyone, because every person has something to contribute. We need a showing of all hands.
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MAKE 16 - No mission is impossible when makers put their minds to it. Make Volume 16 will help you get smart with a special section on spy tech. Learn how to build and use tiny surveillance devices, and how to know if a spy is using them on you. From tiny video cameras to sneaky recorders, this volume has enough cool stuff to make James Bond's inventor Q envious.
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Jon Muller wanted a puzzle that could be done over and over again so he created this thing out of wooden cubes and magnets. It only goes together in one way, so far it takes first timers between 45 minutes and 2 hours to get it together!Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in DIY Projects | Digg this!
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JC sent in a link in response to 24 hours of Android. He was suggesting an adapter for the headphone, essentially usb to 1/8" stereo. The $6 purchase price indicates that there must be a simple way of doing it. While checking out some of the other accessories for HTC phones, I came upon this neat little terminal. Redfly is apparently a keyboard and screen to go with your smartphone. With no processor, memory or much else, it is likely pretty light. It looks to be about the size of the micro laptops or notebook computers running processors similar to the OLPC. It rides off the USB connection from the phone.
So what are the possibilities in these little computers and terminals when combined with the new, powerful phones on the market? Could I get my MSI Wind to be a terminal for my G1? That would have been handy last night, where I had ok coverage on the 2G network, but no wifi. Out here in the cellular fringe, 3G is not an option. The small screen and keyboard of the Wind would have been easier to use than the tiny screen and keyboard of the phone. Since both devices have USB ports, then it should be possible to program them to talk to each other.
If you have been poking around with this idea, then post up in the comments!
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I found this great set of Zome construction pictures from Bridges London Family Day at the London Knowledge Lab.
Zome is a great tool for playing with learning, and also just playing. You're not limited to right angles; my son manages to make some really expressive characters with his set.
We have lots of cool Zome sets available in the Maker Shed!


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Highway to the danger zone... replica fighter jet that travels at 5mph - Telegraph...
Measuring seven metres in length and four metres in width the £4,000 F-35 Lightning II Fighter Jet has been built at a scale of 1:2.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Made On Earth | Digg this!
Resembling Tom Cruise's jet out of Top Gun, it took 3,500 hours to construct the model.
The plane is constructed from iron, wood, hard foam, fibreglass and lots of epoxy filler, comes complete with cameras and monitors inside the cockpit, and is capable of achieving speeds of 5mph on the road.
The plane's designer, Arthur van Poppel, 49, from Tilburg, Holland, said: "I finished the plane at the beginning of last year.
"I had no drawings to work from, just some pictures and a small plastic Revell model to use as an example.

?This mod shows how to wire together a Fender Mustang guitar with new switches, pickups, pots, input jacks, and capacitor. Check out the modded switches on the front face in the picture above. Although we wish the aesthetic look of this guitarwas better, this maker has documented the entire process down to the last strum.
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The lovely Google theme I use, NOUS, designed by Philippe Starck, described as "Vision, subversion, rébellion, humour, amour sont les seuls paramètres structurellement modernes," with colorful changing messages: "WE MUST SHARE," "HUMOUR AMOUR," and the Boing Boing friendly "WE ARE MUTANTS."
That is our poetry. That is our beautiful story. It's our romanticism: Mutation. We are mutants. And if we don't deeply understand, if we don't integrate that we are mutants, we completely miss the story.NOUS.
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Matthias Wandel's wasp sucking machine... He writes -
This machine was the fulfillment of a childhood fantasy!Growing up in the country, wasps nests and the possibility of getting stung were a frequent nuisance. I have no sympathy for yellow jackets that do not produce honey, and sting!
In the summer of 1996, opportunity presented itself. Near a picnic table where some of us at work were always having lunch, there was a wasp nest in a crevice in the building. Wasps were frequently bothering us, but we could not even see the nest, just a gap in the concrete that they used for their entrance.
Now of course, I could have just used a shopvac, but you don't want to leave one of those running for hours on end, and then you can't see your catch, and how the hell is one supposed to empty it?
I happened to have this incredibly powerful blower that I bought at a surplus store thinking I might use it for a pipe organ, but never used. Given this opportunity, and the blower, I decided to build a dedicated 'wasp sucking machine'.
The blower and 1/3 hp motor came as one unit, connected together with a flatbelt. I know, the shopvacs are supposed to have 5 horsepower, but they don't suck much harder than this unit, and they just don't last. The box has a glass lid so you can see the status of the catch, and only bug screen for a 'filter' so there isn't much to resist the flow of air. A piece of metal or cardboard can be slid in a gap where the hose connects to seal off the box, and the box just sits on top of the intake spout for the blower, so it can easily be removed from the machine for purposes of showing off one's catch.

?This "useless" mod shows how to power your Thinkpad with a standard USB plug. We just hope that the maker didn't connect both ends of this mod to the same computer, thus creating a "Vampire" power device that depletes its own battery power even faster.
The USB to ThinkPad Power Supply Adapter
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Have an oscilloscope, have an Arduino - you need this! The Arduino ClockShield via Ladyada.
The latest incarnation of the Dutchtronix AVR Oscilloscope clock, the Hardware 3.1 Enhanced kit, uses the Atmega328p AVR with twice the code space. Using a 1KB bootloader (Arduino compatible) makes 31KB of application space available. This extra code space makes it possible to support multiple pre-loaded applications (clock, terminal, function generator).Once the Arduino system has been officially upgraded to use the Atmega328p (or at least is an official option), I'll make the Enhanced kit code available for the Arduino Scope Clock shield.
Programming the Arduino using the bootloader outside the IDE is possible using the batch file "uploadm168.bat". If there is a way within the IDE to uploaded external files, I'd like to know. Hitting the reset button at the right time with the Diecimila is sometimes a challenge.



This art project by integrates analysis by a video camera and image sensor to "reflect" the viewer based on their distance to the screen. As they approach, the image changes from a mirror to that of a painting and becomes more washed out as if it was composed with brushstrokes. Although we've seen this kind of thing before, this simple yet elegant way of integrating technology into traditional art forms is becoming something more of an everyday occurrence.
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Sam Lessin and Robin Good - Photo credit: Robin Good
Drop.io is a unique file sharing solution which allows you to upload any kind of file to your own virtual private space (called a "drop"), and then share it easily with your contacts, no matter what device or media they are likely to use. All this is possible without you needing to sign-up, register or login, and with no distracting ads.
100MB per drop at your disposal, hidden from search engines, ready to be shared what you want with whoever you want.
Drop.io allows you to share files from almost any kind of media (phone, email, widgets, Web, etc.) while keeping Google bots and crawlers away from them.
To use it, just go to drop.io, upload your files and set the file sharing permissions. From then on, only the people who have received from you the URL of your drop (and the password when you decide to enforce extra protection) will be able to access your content, and you won't have to worry about anyone stumbling upon your drop or sneaking into it without your consent.
In this video interview with Sam Lessin, CEO of drop.io, Robin Good tries to explore the key characteristics that make drop.io private media sharing approach so unique in the already very crowded landscape of file sharing applications.
Here all the details:
Intro by Daniele Bazzano
Why drop.io Is Different From Other File Sharing Services
Robin Good: Hi guys, this is Robin good, and I'm connecting live with Sam Lessin, of drop.io, a file sharing company that just gets out of the main group to provide something that is uniquely different. But I want Sam really to introduce what makes drop.io such a unique type of file sharing service. Sam? To you! Sam Lessin: Thanks for having me on. Drop.io is the easiest way to privately share any sort of media online with exactly whom you want, how you want, for as long as you want. Using drop.io you can take any file, from video and audio, to documents, upload them to a private URL with no identity, no registration, no search, no social, and then share with exactly whom you want, for how long you want, anything you need from... sharing pictures and video of your family that you don't want others to have access to, all the way to as a team, or a workgroup, or an organization, where you need to operate on information, and share files.
Create Your Virtual Basket Or "drop"
Robin Good: Fantastic. And it is indeed so. What I have realized myself for the few seconds that I've been on drop.io. By the way, d-r-o-p(dot)i-o, drop(dot)io, is not com, is not www something. It's simple. Just d-r-o-p, is four. I-o is two. That's six. Six letters in total! Drop.io: go there, try it, and you can see, the registration fact is very cool. You don't have to register or login, and you can immediately share. You've got an interesting metaphor for this sharing approach. Do you want to tell us more, because it also relates to your name. Sam Lessin: Yeah, so drop.io means "drop (dot) input output". Of course it's actually the Indian Ocean territory (Internet domain). But we pretend that "(dot)io" is "(dot)input output". With drop.io you make drops, which are these little spots that you can share files through. You can input files by almost anything, from the Web, and widgets, to email, voice, fax. Almost anything you can think of. And then output them from a drop via RSS, email, again basically any output. Our job and what we try to do, is to allow you take digital content from anywhere, and share it from where it is, to where it needs to be, as simply as possible, if that makes sense. A drop as a metaphor, is basically all we're creating is an envelope or media kitchen table, where you can put anything you need in, and then call anything you need out.
Robin Good: These (drops) are some kind of virtual baskets that I can create on demand, and I throw in stuff, and then I say: "I wanted to do to this, this, and this people, but to this guy send it by email, to this guy send it by fax he said, and to this other guy send it on the mobile phone". Sam Lessin: Exactly. Whatever you want. Our job is to create the metaphor that is useful for all these types of private share.
Limits and Pricing of Drops
Robin Good: And how large are the baskets? How much stuff can I throw inside? Sam Lessin: You can make infinite number of drops, each of which is a 100MB by default. If you want to make your drops bigger, we have very simple pricing plan, where is 10$ per gigabyte per year of capacity. You can put as many files as you want, through that gigabyte, remove files when you're done with them, whatever you'd like. It's a completely flat pricing model. But you can, again, make as many 100MB drops as you want and share it with whomever you want, however you want.
Unique Applications of drop.io
Robin Good: Have you noticed so far... how much time has drop.io been out there for the public to use? Sam Lessin: We're almost on our one year anniversary. When drop.io went live, almost exactly a year ago... and we've gotten to the point where every month several hundred thousand of people are using drop.io and there are millions of files with everything from small businesses, to families.
Robin Good: My question is: have you discovered of unique applications of drop.io that you would have never thought of when you were designing and marketing the system? Sam Lessin: You have no idea. So many! It's been one of my favorite things is that simple private sharing, and what we're enabling, is very broadly useful. Literally we hear stories everyday of people using drop.io for new exchange things that we hadn't thought of. There are preachers who are using it to share lectures with their congregants, so when they start the sermon, they turn on the voicemail feature, they record directly to their drop via the phone number and then share the email or RSS with everyone in the community. There are, believe it or not, we have also met several farmers who use drop.io to option off their farm animals, because they want to share pictures and videos of what their farm animals are, but they don't want the entire world to see it on Google, or for other competitive farmers who are going to look it up. That's one of the fun things about building something new but is very broadly useful, is that people life hack the create their own solutions on top of it. It's been really fun. We basically don't tell people how to use the system at all. We maybe suggest a few things, but it's really about people realizing that they need to share media privately, and figuring out what they need it for.
Privacy and Controlled Sharing
Robin Good: Good. I have one more curiosity. If I want to share with a great number of people:Is that appropriate, the use of drop.io? Sam Lessin: You can use drop.io for whatever you want. The answer is some of the largest drops have thousands of people who use them everyday. Actually some podcasters use drops to collect information from their people listeners about what they should talk about. If you know, Adam Curry runs a popular drop.io page called Daily Source Code. He collects incredible amount of feedback from his listeners every day. You can do that. In terms of managing subscriptions, as the administrator of a drop you can see who has subscribed to your drop. We don't ever promote your space, in fact search engines can't find it, it's completely off-path. But if you want to share your space, with whomever you want, however you want, that's your prerogative. You can do it with as many people as you want.
- First: do I have a limit?
- And second: how do I manage say, put in there a list of people that subscribe to my newsletter to share something with them.
Adam Curry's Experience on drop.io
Robin Good: Fantastic. Again, you tell me more about this thing of Adam Curry. How does it work that people can go on a drop and suggest questions? Can you tell more? Sam Lessin: Yeah, he sets up a drop. He was one of the very earliest drop.io users, and he's been very helpful to us thinking about new features. He started using drop.io, he set up a drop called drop.io/dailysourcecode. He and his listeners can go there, sharing videos, and links, and pictures, and any media that the whole community looks at, that Adam looks at, and then talks about on his podcast. So he uses it as a private file sharing media platform for his show, and it's really cool to watch how it has grown and how people use it. Whenever a listener have something they like they just put it up there and then people can interact with it. It's like a very open, simple blog in certain ways, the way he uses it.
Advantages of drop.io
Robin Good: What do they see or you see as a key advantage for this type of community in doing this privately rather than having a Ning-based community or a wiki when they put this. What is the key advantage in making it private? Can you help me see through that? Sam Lessin: Privacy is a concept, it just means that you share with whom you want. Adam's Daily Source Code drop is very large. He shares with probably thousands of people. But it's not that the privacy in that case I think is the key. The key is that the the right people know where it is, the wrong people don't know where it is, and it's dead simple to use. You don't have to sign up, you don't have to deal with complicated software. Literally if you want to add something you click a button and you add it, and that's it. I think that provides a huge benefit for a wide pace of people who just want to share. They don't want to deal with all these other things that have evolved in social media, they just want move information around. We made it that simple. Robin Good: I was going to say that from the guys who comes from Sharewood, the forest where you share things, there couldn't be a better place where to send my friends to. So guys go and share as much as you want at drop(dot)io! Thank you Sam, and have a great day for today. Sam Lessin: Thank you so much, talk to you later!
Sam Lessin and Robin Good - Photo credit: Robin Good
Drop.io is a unique file sharing solution which allows you to upload any kind of file to your own virtual private space (called a "drop"), and then share it easily with your contacts, no matter what device or media they are likely to use. All this is possible without you needing to sign-up, register or login, and with no distracting ads.
100MB per drop at your disposal, hidden from search engines, ready to be shared what you want with whoever you want.
Drop.io allows you to share files from almost any kind of media (phone, email, widgets, Web, etc.) while keeping Google bots and crawlers away from them.
To use it, just go to drop.io, upload your files and set the file sharing permissions. From then on, only the people who have received from you the URL of your drop (and the password when you decide to enforce extra protection) will be able to access your content, and you won't have to worry about anyone stumbling upon your drop or sneaking into it without your consent.
In this video interview with Sam Lessin, CEO of drop.io, Robin Good tries to explore the key characteristics that make drop.io private media sharing approach so unique in the already very crowded landscape of file sharing applications.
Here all the details:
Intro by Daniele Bazzano
Why drop.io Is Different From Other File Sharing Services
Robin Good: Hi guys, this is Robin good, and I'm connecting live with Sam Lessin, of drop.io, a file sharing company that just gets out of the main group to provide something that is uniquely different. But I want Sam really to introduce what makes drop.io such a unique type of file sharing service. Sam? To you! Sam Lessin: Thanks for having me on. Drop.io is the easiest way to privately share any sort of media online with exactly whom you want, how you want, for as long as you want. Using drop.io you can take any file, from video and audio, to documents, upload them to a private URL with no identity, no registration, no search, no social, and then share with exactly whom you want, for how long you want, anything you need from... sharing pictures and video of your family that you don't want others to have access to, all the way to as a team, or a workgroup, or an organization, where you need to operate on information, and share files.
Create Your Virtual Basket Or "drop"
Robin Good: Fantastic. And it is indeed so. What I have realized myself for the few seconds that I've been on drop.io. By the way, d-r-o-p(dot)i-o, drop(dot)io, is not com, is not www something. It's simple. Just d-r-o-p, is four. I-o is two. That's six. Six letters in total! Drop.io: go there, try it, and you can see, the registration fact is very cool. You don't have to register or login, and you can immediately share. You've got an interesting metaphor for this sharing approach. Do you want to tell us more, because it also relates to your name. Sam Lessin: Yeah, so drop.io means "drop (dot) input output". Of course it's actually the Indian Ocean territory (Internet domain). But we pretend that "(dot)io" is "(dot)input output". With drop.io you make drops, which are these little spots that you can share files through. You can input files by almost anything, from the Web, and widgets, to email, voice, fax. Almost anything you can think of. And then output them from a drop via RSS, email, again basically any output. Our job and what we try to do, is to allow you take digital content from anywhere, and share it from where it is, to where it needs to be, as simply as possible, if that makes sense. A drop as a metaphor, is basically all we're creating is an envelope or media kitchen table, where you can put anything you need in, and then call anything you need out.
Robin Good: These (drops) are some kind of virtual baskets that I can create on demand, and I throw in stuff, and then I say: "I wanted to do to this, this, and this people, but to this guy send it by email, to this guy send it by fax he said, and to this other guy send it on the mobile phone". Sam Lessin: Exactly. Whatever you want. Our job is to create the metaphor that is useful for all these types of private share.
Limits and Pricing of Drops
Robin Good: And how large are the baskets? How much stuff can I throw inside? Sam Lessin: You can make infinite number of drops, each of which is a 100MB by default. If you want to make your drops bigger, we have very simple pricing plan, where is 10$ per gigabyte per year of capacity. You can put as many files as you want, through that gigabyte, remove files when you're done with them, whatever you'd like. It's a completely flat pricing model. But you can, again, make as many 100MB drops as you want and share it with whomever you want, however you want.
Unique Applications of drop.io
Robin Good: Have you noticed so far... how much time has drop.io been out there for the public to use? Sam Lessin: We're almost on our one year anniversary. When drop.io went live, almost exactly a year ago... and we've gotten to the point where every month several hundred thousand of people are using drop.io and there are millions of files with everything from small businesses, to families.
Robin Good: My question is: have you discovered of unique applications of drop.io that you would have never thought of when you were designing and marketing the system? Sam Lessin: You have no idea. So many! It's been one of my favorite things is that simple private sharing, and what we're enabling, is very broadly useful. Literally we hear stories everyday of people using drop.io for new exchange things that we hadn't thought of. There are preachers who are using it to share lectures with their congregants, so when they start the sermon, they turn on the voicemail feature, they record directly to their drop via the phone number and then share the email or RSS with everyone in the community. There are, believe it or not, we have also met several farmers who use drop.io to option off their farm animals, because they want to share pictures and videos of what their farm animals are, but they don't want the entire world to see it on Google, or for other competitive farmers who are going to look it up. That's one of the fun things about building something new but is very broadly useful, is that people life hack the create their own solutions on top of it. It's been really fun. We basically don't tell people how to use the system at all. We maybe suggest a few things, but it's really about people realizing that they need to share media privately, and figuring out what they need it for.
Privacy and Controlled Sharing
Robin Good: Good. I have one more curiosity. If I want to share with a great number of people:Is that appropriate, the use of drop.io? Sam Lessin: You can use drop.io for whatever you want. The answer is some of the largest drops have thousands of people who use them everyday. Actually some podcasters use drops to collect information from their people listeners about what they should talk about. If you know, Adam Curry runs a popular drop.io page called Daily Source Code. He collects incredible amount of feedback from his listeners every day. You can do that. In terms of managing subscriptions, as the administrator of a drop you can see who has subscribed to your drop. We don't ever promote your space, in fact search engines can't find it, it's completely off-path. But if you want to share your space, with whomever you want, however you want, that's your prerogative. You can do it with as many people as you want.
- First: do I have a limit?
- And second: how do I manage say, put in there a list of people that subscribe to my newsletter to share something with them.
Adam Curry's Experience on drop.io
Robin Good: Fantastic. Again, you tell me more about this thing of Adam Curry. How does it work that people can go on a drop and suggest questions? Can you tell more? Sam Lessin: Yeah, he sets up a drop. He was one of the very earliest drop.io users, and he's been very helpful to us thinking about new features. He started using drop.io, he set up a drop called drop.io/dailysourcecode. He and his listeners can go there, sharing videos, and links, and pictures, and any media that the whole community looks at, that Adam looks at, and then talks about on his podcast. So he uses it as a private file sharing media platform for his show, and it's really cool to watch how it has grown and how people use it. Whenever a listener have something they like they just put it up there and then people can interact with it. It's like a very open, simple blog in certain ways, the way he uses it.
Advantages of drop.io
Robin Good: What do they see or you see as a key advantage for this type of community in doing this privately rather than having a Ning-based community or a wiki when they put this. What is the key advantage in making it private? Can you help me see through that? Sam Lessin: Privacy is a concept, it just means that you share with whom you want. Adam's Daily Source Code drop is very large. He shares with probably thousands of people. But it's not that the privacy in that case I think is the key. The key is that the the right people know where it is, the wrong people don't know where it is, and it's dead simple to use. You don't have to sign up, you don't have to deal with complicated software. Literally if you want to add something you click a button and you add it, and that's it. I think that provides a huge benefit for a wide pace of people who just want to share. They don't want to deal with all these other things that have evolved in social media, they just want move information around. We made it that simple. Robin Good: I was going to say that from the guys who comes from Sharewood, the forest where you share things, there couldn't be a better place where to send my friends to. So guys go and share as much as you want at drop(dot)io! Thank you Sam, and have a great day for today. Sam Lessin: Thank you so much, talk to you later!

There are a lot of makers who read MAKE with Google's news reader (Google Reader) and now you can read it your native language with Google's auto-translate feature they just rolled out - more details here on the Google blog... and you can read MAKE here.
This is some crazy chicken wing flappin' action folks, and it looks like a lot of fun too! The system is powered by an Arduino and uses a hidden camera to analyze the players movement. There is a great flickr photo set of the build too!
Existing consumer toy chickens were hacked, removing all circuits before a custom circuit was designed that gave us control of legs, wings and beak. Arduino microcontrollers were used along with radio frequency modules to give wireless control of the chickens.
More about the Flap to freedom game powered by Arduino
In the Maker Shed:
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Make: Arduino
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IDEO labs shows you how to connect the Arduino to the Nokia 770-
In the vein of Arduino-controlled espresso machines and Lego bots, we’ve been playing around with Flash and the Nokia 770 Internet Tablet. With its flexible Linux-based OS, the Nokia 770 is great for rapid prototyping. Plus, you can snag one on the cheap ($65-170 on eBay).
Hardware aside, Flash is a great language for quick prototyping. It’s an environment that many designers are already familiar with, and it enables the user to create a graphic interface in minutes. For prototyping on small screens, Flash Lite can be used, but Flash Lite cannot communicate to other devices outside of the device it’s running on (aside from calling other phones). The Nokia Internet tablets are interesting because they are essentially tiny Linux computers and run full-fledged Flash. We got one of these tablets to run Flash and talk to an Arduino board. This enables any kind of sensor to communicate with the Flash application and allows the app to control things like lights and motors.
Detailed instructions for setting this up can be found in our Google Code wiki (here and here)...
Can you figure out how Daito Manabe makes the spoons dance? Check out the end of the video for a sneak peek of the electronics used to make Drum Spoons.
More details about Drum Spoons
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Camera and lens maker Sigma has bought Foveon, the sensor technology company that develops the sensors it uses. Foveon's technology uses three photosensitive layers to detect red, green and blue light at each pixel. Sigma says owning the company will allow the development of new types of sensors and improved integration between the sensors and its lenses.

I really enjoy large-scale robotic sculptures like Sixteen Birds. The website has a lot more information about the piece, including fabrication details and a nice video.
Sixteen Birds is the first multi-sculpture installation using Amorphic Robot Works' (ARW's) new Inflatable Bodies technology. The work consists of 16 large, white fabric shapes that recall the simplest line drawing of a bird, hanging limp and lifeless from the ceiling at eye level.
More about Sixteen Birds by Amorphic Robot Works
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WF-4RIV the flute playing robot... via LoL.
In 2007, we developed the anthropomorphic flutist robot WF-4RIV(Waseda Flutist No.4 Refined IV) with 41-DOFs which has enhanced its flute performance by producing more natural notes and smoother transitions between notes. In this year, the lips and tonguing mechanisms have been re-designed to reproduce more accuraterly the human organs.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in News from the Future | Digg this!

Scientist John Hart created a remix of Shepard Fairey's Obama poster from 150 million carbon nanotubes, each of which measured tens of thousands of times smaller than a human hair. That sure is a lot of tiny Obamas. Snip:
Even then, the finished product is only half a millimetre in diameter and almost indistinguishable from any other garden variety micro dot - unless you happen to be looking at it through a microscope.Obama under the microscope, and here is Hart's site at the University of Michigan Mechanosynthesis Group (Thanks, @mpesce)The magnification reveals tiny, three dimensional "carvings" of the now ubiquitous polarised image of the president-elect originally created by street artist and graphic designer Shepard Fairey.
The "Nanobamas" were created by a team of researchers led by Hart, an assistant professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Michigan.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Now that you can run commands as root on the Google phone, you may have been thinking about what else you can do with the device. You know, besides the usual talking, texting, and surfing while driving.
The device is Linux based, sure, but the installed software is relatively spartan and there isn't too much internal space to get dangerous. Thankfully, Jay Freeman wrote a nice guide for installing a more complete Linux distribution on the device, right alongside Android.
The main thing I've so far seen on this matter have been a few attempts to get busybox on there. I, however, think we can go a lot further: following the instructions in this article will end you up with a full distribution of Debian, one of the most highly respected Linux distributions, and the ability to install almost anything you want.
To do this, we need to think through a few of the details of getting this sort of thing running on the G1. The first question: where do we put it? The device has some internal flash, but it isn't really enough: only 128MB to share with the OS and other applications.We therefore turn our attention to the much more reasonably sized microSD card, a format which lets us get up to 16GB of space.
Debian & Android Together on G1

Dale Grover, host of GO-Tech, tells MAKE:
The next GO-Tech meeting is this Tuesday, November 11, at 8 pm. We'll be in our new location, A2 Mech Shop, the new shared technical space that several of us are setting up. (Directions at link below.) We're still moving in, but there will be plenty of space for meeting, and it will now be much easier to bring in vehicles and other demonstrations. I just got the wifi running this morning, and we'll have the usual video projector.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Announcements | Digg this!
At this meeting, we'll have a slide show from the Austin Maker Faire, a progress report on A2 Mech Shop, and your cool projects.GO Tech (formerly NotBAGO) is a meeting for Ann Arbor area readers of MAKE magazine, Circuit Cellar, Home Shop Machinist, Kevin Kelly's Cool Tools, slashdot, etc. That is, people who are interested in making things using technology, whether that's a metal cutting lathe or a Python script. A kind of generalized mixture of CerealBar, Dorkbot, Oxford Geek night, and Portland Machinist Guild. We have machinists, electrical engineers, software folks, industrial control types, and so on. We share projects, information about tools and ideas, and connect with like-minded people.
Past meetings have included: Solder your own Arduino, CNC basics and demo, laser engraving, designing/fabricating printed circuit boards, electric scooters, and so on. (Meeting minutes and some video and photos are on the site below.)
Meetings are generally the second Tuesday of the month at 8 pm.
For directions and to join the email list, go to the GO-Tech Yahoo page (under our old name, NotBAGO).

My studio-mate Nathan Lewis just finished this steampunk-ish Drool Collector. If you look closely you'll see a harmonica snorkel mouthpiece, a trumpet spit valve, and a baby food jar. Photo available at my Flickr. Another project of his is showmemytongue.com, where he beckons you to take pictures of a silicone replica of his tongue and post it online.
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If jeweled skulls is an art genre, I'll take these over Damien's any day... Jeweled skulls by Amy Sarkisian, via Who Killed Bambi?
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Frances Goodman's Toilet graffiti embroideries via NOTCOT. A little warning, these are adult-ish content, but nothing you haven't seen written on a public restroom wall.

These remind me of "Embroidered text messages" by Ginger Anyhow.
This is what happens when a couple of light-sensitive Thingamagoop analog synthesizers scan a blog. I'd love it if someone would compose a song on an incredibly long webpage for them to play!
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I understand Maker Faire Austin is done and gone, but I'm still thinking about how much fun it was. Over the next week or 2, I'll continue to share some highlights from the most make-tastic event Austin's ever seen.
Courtesy of Chris Connors, here's Steve Davee at Maker Faire Austin explaining some of his many mods to a Maker's Notebook:
What are your best notebook hacks?
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