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One of my first builds for the MAKE blog was the mint tin fume extractor. I was hoping someone would make a version and post it on the web, and it finally happened. Thanks for the link Phil, and a big Thank You to Shawn for posting a video of your mint tin fume extractor.
More about a Reader built fume extractor from the MAKE blog
Did you ever make a project from the MAKE blog? If so, send us a link so we can share it with our readers. Thanks!
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Make a Mint tin fume extractor
One of my first builds for the MAKE blog was the mint tin fume extractor. I was hoping someone would make a version and post it on the web, and it finally happened. Thanks for the link Phil, and a big Thank You to Shawn for posting a video of your mint tin fume extractor.
More about a Reader built fume extractor from the MAKE blog
Did you ever make a project from the MAKE blog? If so, send us a link so we can share it with our readers. Thanks!
More:

Make a Mint tin fume extractor
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Here are some of my favorite posts from the CRAFT blog this week:
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Chad sends this on how John Sweeney survived the recent bad patch of weather in the Northeast by using his hybrid car to power many devices in his house.
During an ice storm last week Sweeney, of Harvard, Mass., powered his house by hooking it up to his Toyota Prius. The Prius, a hybrid vehicle, starts the gasoline-burning mode of its engine every 30 minutes to recharge the battery with an internal generator. In turn, Sweeney ran his refrigerator and freezer, wood stove fan, lights and television off the car's battery.
So if you have a hybrid, do you need a generator? people have talked about hydrogen fuel cell cars being used in a similar manner to power houses, but does it come in a full size version yet? How do you use your hybrid or electric car for uses other than getting groceries? Are you still waiting for your mass produced plug in hybrid electric vehicle? How about a street legal battery electric vehicle? What are you doing to release yourself and others from the carbon bonds of foreign oil?
Join the discussion in the comments and add photos and video to the Make Flickr pool!
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There's still time to start making or just watch this week's Weekend Project: Pole's Eye View. You can view the video here, grab the PDF here and subscribe in iTunes to get all our Weekend Projects and PDFs delivered each week.
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Tristan and Libby, sharing their cheese-making knowledge (photo via Mikey).
I was lucky enough to get a lesson in cheesemaking from Tristan and Libby, authors of the Whittled Down blog. A gallon of milk and a few other ingredients makes a pound of cheese, and you can go from milk to mozzarella in a couple of days. Check out their cheese-making posts here, and learn much more at at their highly-recommended favorite cheesiest of sites: Fankhauser's Cheese Page.
Christmas Tree Fire Safety Video from NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology). (via Esthr Dysn!)
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This is a really nice passive multitouch input by Randall Jones. It was designed to be an inexpensive, and extremely expressive, musical interface. I really like the simplicity, and it only cost about $50 to build. [Thanks Dan]
Physical modeling synthesis has proven to be a successful method of synthesizing realistic sounds, but providing expressive controls for performance remains a major challenge. This thesis presents a new approach to playing physical models, based on multidimensional signals. Its focus is on the long-term research question, "How can we make a computer-mediated instrument with control intimacy equal to the most expressive acoustic instruments?"
More about the Multitouch Prototype 2
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This is for a Make: television project Tod Kurt and I built -- a Wii nunchuck / Arduino "flight recorder" (more about the project to come). We used Tod's Epilog laser cutter to cut out a rectangle from the top of a Pelican case, so that I could mount a serial LCD panel there.
This turned out much neater than my Dremel cut version. The best part is the thick bed of evil yellow smoke that curls forth when you open the lid. I'm pretty sure this smoke is good for you, so I inhaled of it deeply.

I spotted this on eBay, a 1962 chemistry set from SEARS.

And here's another from the 1950s, The Gilbert Experimental Lab. Love the packaging...
"Today's adventures in science will create tomorrow's America".
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You know I like Tweetree, I gushed about it yesterday. The main thing I like is that it gives you a graphic view of things you link to from Twitter messages. So in addition to seeing a URL, you also see a visual image of the thing it points to. This is especially nice when pointing to a Flickr picture. But what about other photo storage systems? Will Tweetree have to implement special support for each of them? And what if I create a new app, how long will I wait for them to support it. Probably not very long now, because they're hungry, but what about when they're rich and famous? Maybe they'll think that supporting the big apps is all they have to do.
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If your goal is to improve the ways and tools with which you collaborate with your team, as well as the resources and approaches to to learn, discover and share more of what you know, here are the best 2008 MasterNewMedia articles about online collaboration.

Photo credit: Kirsty Pargeter
Whether you are into finding out the best videoconferencing, or screen sharing tools or interested in seeing how education and learning are transforming the way we look at schools and the world of work, in this set of hand-picked guides and articles you can find some of the best writing and research work we have done on this front in the last 12 months.
Here the best online collaboration and learning content from our 2008 archives. Enjoy:
Intro by Robin Good
Best Online Collaboration Tools 2008 - The Collaborative Map
The Best Online Collaboration Tools 2008, Collaborative Map is a live editable map of over 200 of the best free and low-cost online collaboration tools available, picked and selected by passionate users like you and me.
Best Video Conferencing Tools That Anyone Can Use - VideoConferencing Sharewood Guide
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Video conferencing tools allow you to use your standard webcam and broadband Internet connection to have multi-party videoconferences. Once reserved only to high-end and very costly proprietary hardware systems, videoconferencing tools and services have sharply grown in number and they now offer multiple useful alternatives that you can start using without having to spend a dollar.
Screen Share Top 25 - The Best Screen Sharing Tools - Sharewood Guide
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Screen sharing tools are a specific category of online collaboration tools that enable you to broadcast a continuous live stream of what is happening on your computer screen to individuals connected via the Internet at distant locations.
How To Send Files Larger Than 1GB - Sharewood Guide
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Large files sending web services are a category of online collaboration tools that is made up of those applications that allow you to send huge files, even larger than 1GB, to one or more people, and without resorting to email attachments.
How Do I Motivate My Team? The Three-Step Turbocharging Method
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Ken Thompson, bioteaming expert and author of the breakthrough Manifesto on effective collaboration, explains how you can quickly motivate your team in the right direction in three simple steps.
Effective Brainstorming: 7 Tips To Brainstorm Better With Your Team
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Brainstorming, nonetheless the popularity of the term, is one of the most challenging collaborative activities to carry out in a small group. While most people think they know how to brainstorm, very few have really gotten the basic rules needed to make a brainstorming session work effectively.
Learning Zeitgeist: The Future of Education is Just-in-Time, Multidisciplinary, Experimental, Emergent
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The skills that are highly valued today are not even distantly related to the skills that are developed in our educational prison facilities year after year, week after week, class after class, when students are put into classrooms, disconnected from each other to fill tests, amputated from their prosthesis of thinking like mobile phones and their intellectual capabilities being hammered into the dirt by requiring certain outcomes rather than creativity and imagination.
Educational Models And Learning In The Digital Age: What Is Connectivism And What Makes It So Special
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Connectivism combines important elements of many different learning theories, social structures, and of new communication technologies while having been designed to give birth to new ways of learning in the digital age.
P2P And Education: Robin Good Interviews Peer-To-Peer Evangelist Michel Bauwens
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Peer-to-peer is an emergent philosophy and way of working, collaborating and creating wealth among human beings. The peer to peer philosophy is based on living principles that are quite different from those that you may have been educated with but which in many ways may feel more "natural" and close to your nature than the ones you have seen at work in the business world around you.
Love For Education - A Shifting Paradigm: My Video Presentation For LeWeb08
This is my own video on the future of education, that completes and extends what I was able to deliver this past Wednesday at LeWeb in Paris.
The 10 Key Components Of An Ideal Learning Environment And The Timba Music School Model
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In my opinion, when it comes to effective, true learning, the one you do when you learn to play a new game, when you learn a language, or a new sport or skill, there are some key things which are vital in providing the setting and resources needed to make all of this possible.
Originally prepared by Robin Good and Daniele Bazzano for MasterNewMedia and first published on December 28, 2008 as "Online Collaboration And Learning: The Best Resources Of 2008 From MasterNewMedia".
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Cousteau and the undersea world. Cameron and Titanic. And now, Joe Reinhardt and Mike Fields and the depths of Lake Moraine in upstate New York. Every summer, Reinhardt and brother-in-law Fields tackle a new DIY project at the family's lakeside camp. In 2005, the pair built their own underwater ROV (remote observation vehicle) with two video cameras feeding live images to a shipboard laptop - all for about 100 bucks Making things is second nature for Reinhardt. 24, a computer tech in digital imaging. This time, he got to indulge his underwater fascination:"I always wanted to be a marine biologist," says Reinhardt. "I love the water, and ships, and watching Discovery Channel with the real ROVs exploring the Titanic." Reinhardt and Fields built their homebrew ROV's frame out of PVC pipe, and its transparent camera housing out of scrap quarter-inch-thick acrylic tube from the local plastics supply (milled to watertight tolerances on a friend's lathe). They joined the two with simple but strong carpenter's ratchet clamps, The B&W video camera was $29 from Harbor Freight, complete with infrared LEOs for night vision. power supply, and 80 feet of RJll cable.
They scored a Chinese color "Spy-Cam" for $1 on eBay (plus $35 shipping), and ran its video signal up the audio wire in the RJll cable. After an embarrassing misfire with ballast tanks ("We put 'em on top, so it sank upside down every time"), the explorers improvised a solution ("a big hunk of concrete and a bungee cord") and lowered their ROV to the lake bottom to capture video of sunfish, perch, and muskie sporting in the wild. The rig proved watertight to 40 feet. This summer, they're going deeper: their 2006 model has thrusters for true independent ROV mobility, using watertight 12VDC motors coupled to propellers by super-powerful neodymium magnets. It'll be rated to 200 feel, good enough to dive quarries or wrecks on Lake Erie, Reinhardt says, James Cameron might want to check his rearview mirror.
makezine.com/go/ROV
From the column Made on Earth - MAKE 6, page 23 - Keith Hammond.
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Annalee @ io9 pointed me towards a story we'll likely hear again and again until authorities realize that we're never going to encourage the next generation of chemists if we treat every kid with a home chem lab like a criminal... As Annalee said to me in email... "We should be championing this cool kid who created an awesome home lab" - Crimes Of The Future: Teen with Home Chemistry Lab Arrested for Meth, Bombs...
A Canadian college student majoring in chemistry built himself a home lab - and discovered that trying to do science in your own home quickly leads to accusations of drug-making and terrorism.
Lewis Casey, an 18-year-old in Saskatchewan, had built a small chemistry lab in his family's garage near the university where he studies. Then two weeks ago, police arrived at his home with a search warrant and based on a quick survey of his lab determined that it was a meth lab. They pulled Casey out of the shower to interrogate him, and then arrested him.
A few days later, police admitted that Casey's chemistry lab wasn't a meth lab - but they kept him in jail, claiming that he had some of the materials necessary to produce explosives. Friends and neighbors wrote dozens of letters to the court, testifying that Casey was innocent and merely a student who is really enthusiastic about chemistry.
More:
Student held on explosives charge released - Teen mistakenly arrested for meth production allowed home for holidays.
Casey, when you can talk about this - please let us know. Maybe we can hook you up with something from our Chemistry guide.
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Brad sends this about his son's gift project:
For Christmas this year, Lucas made his grandmom a battery powered amp for her guitar. This was a big project - first time with a soldering iron. Worked out well with only one minor burn. He did 80% of the soldering and drilled all the holes for the pots and LED. He turns 6 in Jan - seemed he should learn one last skill while he was still 5.
Great project! Parts to love: scrounging parts out of otherwise dead or useless devices...teaching new skills to kids...making something that couldn't be bought...online documentation...photos...
What have you made lately? Did it work right the first time? Did you catch some pictures/video/audio of the process? What is your experience teaching kids about electricity, electronics, soldering, programming, hacking? What should people do or not do when they venture out into projects with kids? What workspace, tools or materials would you suggest? Show us your stuff! Add your comments and park your photos and video in the Make Flickr pool.
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When I was about 12 years old I was given a "Young Scientist" electronics kit that included instructions and parts to build a basic radio, a small amp, a flashing lamp and so on. Which I really enjoyed making. I then subscribed to Practical Electronics magazine and spent my pocket money buying electronic components to build the monthly projects. By the late sixties I was building synth circuits such as oscillators, filters, amps etc. from scratch....Chris Carter's Gristleizer (Throbbing-Gristle.com), From Which the Gristelizer Came (Matrixsynth), Interview: Chris Carter (Planet Origo)
When I joined TG I built an effect unit called a Gristleizer for each of us. This (now infamous) box of tricks consisted of a smallish metal case containing an LFO, VCF, VCA, a pre-amp, various front panel controls and LEDs. Certain settings on the Gristleizers were very distinctive and it's often regarded as imparting one of TG's trademark sounds. We used them on almost everything: synth, guitar, bass, violin, tapes, rhythms and of course on Genesis (P-Orridge's) voice. The beauty of the Gristleizers was that its range of sounds was so extreme, which also meant it could sound completely different depending on the instrument. The sounds included slow modulated filtering, a metallic ring-modulation effect , clipped and fuzzed distortion and tremolo. At the time there was no other battery powered effect unit capable of such a wide and weird range of sounds. When TG finished I was constantly being asked by musicians to build more Gristleizers but it was something I only did for a few friends . Ultimately I built about 10 units in total but I know there are at least two (just about) working
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