Kevin Donovan is an expert at the Insight Community. To get insight and analysis from Kevin Donovan and other experts on challenges your company faces, click here.
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Looking to enhance MIDI -> control voltage conversion for his x0xb0x synth/sequencer, Robin designed and built his own converter using Arduino and a 16-bit DAC chip -
Having looked around the Arduino forums I found a lot of people using the PWM outputs on the Arduino and just running them through a low pass RC filter to get a smooth variable DC voltage out. This has the benefit of being quick to make but the downside of non-linearity across the domain of the duty cycly and the range of voltage out and the small portamento this approach will neccessarily come with. Having decided against using the PWM out and having recently been introduced to the analog devices catalogue by an a electronics friend I decided to get hold of one of their AD5668 DAC chips and dive into the world of surface mount chips and SPI. I’m not claiming to be the first to hook up a DAC chip to the Arduino as there’s a fair amount of evidence people have taken the same approach when building their own cv boxes but the approach worked and I’m pretty pleased with the results.- Homebrew midi-cv box Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Arduino | Digg this!
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The picture says it all, and you can even click on it to register (technology is so fancy):

ONLY 3 DAYS LEFT TO ENTER: Deadline is January 15! In association with CEA, Core77 hosts this year's Greener Gadgets Design Competition 2009, challenging designers to create the next generation of greener gadgets. Once again, finalists will be JUDGED LIVE at the Greener Gadgets Conference, this year slated for February 27th in New York City. Prize money is $3000 for 1st Place, $1000 each for 2nd and 3rd Places. Fire up those markers and tablets and get in the game!
Keep in mind this doesn't have to be something you've actually built yet, and get those designs in!
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If you're having a hard time justifying the relatively high price of speaker wall mounts, here's one approach to a DIY version using basic dowels + screws -
Whether for your new 5.1 surround sound system, your cramped media room, or when just wiring your home to fill it with music, it's best to get speakers off the ground, furniture, and other resonant surfaces, and up to ear level. And since non-powered speakers are actually not heavy at all, with less than $2.00 in materials and an hour of work, it's surprisingly simple to create custom brackets for mounting them on walls and ceilings.- How To: DIY Speaker Wall Mounts Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in DIY Projects | Digg this!
Pardon a little indulgence on our part, but our maker-pal I-Wei Huang (aka CrabFu) sent us this proud papa video of his new son, er... ShrimpFu seeing one of dad's bots for the first time. You never forget your first robot baby-terrorizing. I don't know which one is cuter. Okay... the human offspring is somewhat cuter...
All things CrabFu on Make: Blog
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Maker Cris Benton takes spectacular aerial photographs by rigging remote-controlled cameras to high flying kites. In the Maker Workshop John Park builds a Burrito Blaster, which can propel a burrito 50 yards, and Mister Jalopy shows off his giant iPod. The Maker Channel features vegetable flutes, cool remote control robots, printer that makes designs on a cafe latte, and a stealthy technique to park anywhere for free!"MAKE: television Episode 2: Aerial Kite Photography & Burrito Blaster"
The Boston Globe kindly shows us how to hallucinate using ping pong balls and a radio, as well as other fun perceptual tricks. How to hallucinate with ping-pong balls and a radio
We’ve had an amazing time during our stint as guest bloggers on the ever fabulous Boing Boing. In discussing our experience, we both noted how much we’d actually learned, and we don’t mean in terms of how or what to blog. We mean that the readers and commenters of this blog are smart and knowledgeable, and are generally cheerful in their sharing of this knowledge. So thanks for all the new links, new info, and new insights that we now have swimming around in our heads and on our Stickies.
It was also great fun reconnecting with long lost friends and coworkers, as well as meeting tons of new and interesting people. We hope you’ve all enjoyed our two weeks of blogging even just a fraction of how much we’ve enjoyed it ourselves. And, of course, thanks so much to Mark, Pesco, Xeni, and Cory for this fun-filled opportunity.
As our last offering, here’s a music blog we enjoy checking in on from time to time. Ska Blah Blah points to interesting documentaries and old footage of reggae and ska legends, as well as news about newcomers and the state of today’s reggae and ska scenes. We first heard about a fun band, The Aggrolites from a Small Talk podcast on Ska Blah Blah. And proprietor JJ Loy (also a Make author) recently introduced guest blogging to the site’s repertoire, so who knows, maybe we’ll land another guest blogging gig sometime in the future!
(Shawn Connally and Bruce Stewart are guest bloggers)
The folks at Macmillan digital in NYC produced this thigh-slapping contrafactual account of the internal workings of book publishing. I especially like the idea that "Second Life and World of Warcraft Avatars" constitute the bulk to digital publicity spending, and result in the majority of book sales.
From the Typewriter to the Bookstore: A Publishing Story
Larry and I developed screenplays at five different studios. We had two false starts in production on the movie. We were involved with prominent and commercial directors. Big name stars were interested. In one instance hundreds of people were employed, sets were being built - An A-list director and top artists in the industry were given their walking papers when the studio financing the movie lost faith.All in all, what Levin is saying is effectively the same point we've made about the innovation market over the years: the "idea" is a very tiny part. It's all about the execution. Fox wanted nothing to do with the execution and wasn't even that interested in the idea. Warner put up all the risk, and now Fox gets rewarded because at one point it bought the rights to just the idea. Once again, we're seeing society overvalue the idea and vastly undervalue the execution.
After all these years of rejection, this is the same project, the same movie, over which two studios are now spending millions of dollars contesting ownership. Irony indeed, and then some.
Through the years, inverse of the lack of studio faith has been the passionate belief by many many individuals - movie professionals who were also passionate fans of the graphic novel - who, yes, wanted to work on the film, but more for reasons of just wanting to see the movie get made, to see this movie get made and made right, donated their time and talent to help push the film forward: Writers gave us free screenplay drafts; conceptual art was supplied by illustrators, tests were performed gratis by highly respected actors and helped along and put together by editors, designers, prop makers and vfx artists; we were the recipients of donated studio and work space, lighting and camera equipment. Another irony, given the commercial stakes implied by the pitched legal dispute between Fox and Warners, is that for years Watchmen has been a project that has survived on the fumes of whatever could be begged, borrowed and stolen - A charity case for all intents and purposes. None of that effort, none of that passion and emotional involvement, is considered in the framework of this legal dispute.
From my point of view, the flashpoint of this dispute, came in late spring of 2005. Both Fox and Warner Brothers were offered the chance to make Watchmen. They were submitted the same package, at the same time. It included a cover letter describing the project and its history, budget information, a screenplay, the graphic novel, and it made mention that a top director was involved.
And it's at this point, where the response from both parties could not have been more radically different.
The response we got from Fox was a flat "pass." That's it. An internal Fox email documents that executives there felt the script was one of the most unintelligible pieces of shit they had read in years. Conversely, Warner Brothers called us after having read the script and said they were interested in the movie - yes, they were unsure of the screenplay, and had many questions, but wanted to set a meeting to discuss the project, which they promptly did. Did anyone at Fox ask to meet on the movie? No. Did anyone at Fox express any interest in the movie? No. Express even the slightest interest in the movie? Or the graphic novel? No.
From there, the executives at Warner Brothers, who weren't yet completely comfortable with the movie, made a deal to acquire the movie rights and we all started to creatively explore the possibility of making Watchmen. We discussed creative approaches and started offering the movie to directors, our former director having moved on by then. After a few director submissions, Zack Snyder came onboard, well before the release of his movie 300. In fact, well before its completion. This was a gut, creative call by Larry, me and the studio... Zack didn't have a huge commercial track record, yet we all felt he was the right guy for the movie.
Warner Brothers continued to support, both financially and creatively, the development of the movie. And eventually, after over a year of work, they agreed to make the film, based on a script that, for what it's worth, was by and large very similar to the one Fox initially read and deemed an unintelligible piece of shit.
Now here's the part that has to be fully appreciated, if for nothing more than providing insight into producing movies in Hollywood: The Watchmen script was way above the norm in length, near 150 pages, meaning the film could clock in at close to 3 hours, the movie would not only be R rated but a hard R - for graphic violence and explicit sex - would feature no stars, and had a budget north of $100M. We also asked Warner Brothers to support an additional 1 to 1.5 hours of content incurring additional cost that would tie in with the movie but only be featured in DVD iterations of the film. Warners supported the whole package and I cannot begin to emphasize how ballsy and unprecedented a move this was on the part of a major Hollywood studio. Unheard of. And would another studio in Hollywood, let alone a studio that didn't show one shred of interest in the movie, not one, have taken such a risk? Would they ever have made such a commitment, a commitment to a film that defied all conventional wisdom?
Only the executives at Fox can answer that question. But if they were to be honest, their answer would have to be "No."
Shouldn't Warner Brothers be entitled to the spoils - if any -- of the risk they took in supporting and making Watchmen? Should Fox have any claim on something they could have had but chose to neither support nor show any interest in?
Look at it another way... One reason the movie was made was because Warner Brothers spent the time, effort and money to engage with and develop the project. If Watchmen was at Fox the decision to make the movie would never have been made because there was no interest in moving forward with the project.
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Matt of Liquidware brings us the elegant and able-bodied open source Illuminato - an Arduino compatible featuring 42 I/O pins, Atmega645 (2x code space of ATmega168) and chic white LED backlighting -
Great standout details on the board such as the side-mounted reset switch and symmetrical layout in black/gold. More videos, info, and insight to the development process over on his blog.
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Over at Morbid Anatomy, Joanna Ebenstein spotted a series of intriguing photos of medical curiosities from the National Museum of Health and Medicine and elsewhere. You may need a unicorn chaser after visiting.
This design makes good use of a small urban lot by maximizing the advertising space. The design above the marquee is one unit, the design below another. The projecting marquee attracts the attention of both driver and pedestrian. The exterior could be of concrete, plaster, terra cotta, glass or plastic, the lettering in copper or white metal.And from a note on the back of the Newsreel Theatre "Town" drawing:
"This spectacular design has been planned to care for a change in theatre patronage. It is meant to speak up to the people to come in and see what is inside, and is planned for a locality where the newsreel has become an attraction."S. Charles Lee
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David Silberberg's documentary, Oh My God, It's Harrod Blank!, about art car artist Harrod Blank (whose amazing work we've shown at Maker Faire) is premiering at the Slamdance Film Festival on January 16th.
Sayeth the press copy:
An obsessively made documentary filmed over 16 years, exploring the creative life and adventures of director Silberberg's friend, the eccentric art car artist, film-maker, and entrepreneur Harrod Blank. Blank is captured from his youth growing up in the woods with chickens and working as a camera assistant for his father - the venerable film-maker Les Blank - to the creation of his first attention-getting art car, to his current multi-faceted career as creator and head of a nationwide art car movement.Rarely does a film about an artist leave us with such a good feeling about life. This film goes far beyond a portrait of an artist, it covers home remedies for balding, attraction to black women, independent filmmaking, art cars, and most importantly it reminds us of the journey to discovering oneself that we all must take.
[Thanks, Sherry!]
Slamdance
Harrod Blank's Automorphosis
I came across this video today of a iRobot create robot autonomously navigating a hallway using a standard laptop webcam. The guidance software centers the robot on the perceived vanishing point, which can be picked up from visual cues like wall and floor lines, allowing the robot to cruise in a direct path down the center of the hall.
For implementing higher level network task of maintaining connectivity in the deployed sensor network, the mobile node (iRobot Create) must navigate through the indoor environment. Using only the laptop camera as a sensor we implemented the navigation and localization system.
Navigation uses vanishing point extracted from the corridor walls and edges. Robust Navigation is credit due to Pratap Tokekar. I worked on localization with fiducial (cones) and helped the robot estimate its position by measuring range from the cone-landmarks.
More from Pratap's blog:
I was responsible for vision-based navigation of the robot within the hallways. I used the vanishing points from the parallel lines present indoors to compute the robot heading. This was then fed into a controller to control the direction of the robot for navigation. The computation was made robust to change in light conditions, false detections, occlusions by a layered filtering approach that included RANSAC and least squares filtering among others.
I'm impressed with how well this works, and it seems like it wouldn't be too painful to implement for a special-case hallway rover like this. Pratap's project report has a lot of details about how the vanishing point detection system works. Check it out if you'd like to implement something like this yourself.
If anyone has other examples of vanishing point guidance, please leave a comment.
Vanishing Points Based Navigation - Project Report Details (PDF)
Pratap Tokekar: Vision Based Navigation
Video: Vision based Navigation and Localization
In order to prove how wonderful hydrogen fuel cell cars are, Rep. Eric Massa (D-N.Y.) decided to drive one from New York to Washington DC for his congressional swearing in. But the fuel cell car has a range of under 200 miles, and the trip for NY to DC is 300 miles. So here's what he did:
Massa drove one fuel cell car while a hybrid SUV [Chevy Tahoe] towing an additional SUV followed along. Once he got half way, he switched to new fuel cell car [which I assume was towed to the half way point sometime earlier so that it would be waiting for the environmentally-conscious congressman]. The empty fuel cell was then towed back by the first SUV. As he continued on his journey, the second SUV followed. Once Massa arrived in DC, the second SUV then towed the second fuel cell car back to NY.Rep. Eric Massa's excellent fuel cell road trip
I hesitate to call it steampunk, through the degradation of the term by people like me, but my attempts at describing it otherwise only end up being laughably convoluted loop-de-loops around the term. It reminds me very strongly of Disneyland Paris' Space Mountain aesthetic, which is furnished after the spaceship design of Verne's De la Terre à la Lune... all burnished brass and exposed copper cogwork. But, of course, that's all very steampunk too.Akribos XXIV DaVinci Skeleton Steampunk Watch
Regardless, I am in love with the watch...
Charles Platt says:
I'm fascinated by the conspiracy theorists challenging Barack Obama's citizenship. After front-page stories in The Globe this week and last week, there's now this ad which was refused by the major TV networks.I like the narrator's voice. It sounds like 1970s Saturday Night Live.I'm reassured that the Web is facilitating a freedom of the press that didn't quite exist before. The more nutty theories, the better!
'I cannot tell you what a relief it was to finally solve it,' the 45-year-old from Portchester, Hampshire, said. 'It has driven me mad over the years – it felt like it had taken over my life.
'I have missed important events to stay in and solve it and I would lie awake at night thinking about it.
'I have had wrist and back problems from spending hours on it but it was all worth it. When I clicked that last bit into place and each face was a solid colour, I wept.'
He's probably happy he solved it, but I predict that he is going to go through a period of depression.
Man takes 26 years to solve Rubik’s Cube (Via Arbroath)
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The community house at Westwood, with lots of solar thermal collectors on top
Here's a case study about a community in North Carolina building their own power. In part:
When most people think about solar strategies they generally consider using them in their own homes. But cooperative or community systems offer a lot of potential for substantially reducing energy consumption while providing convenient, reliable domestic hot water, space heating, or electricity for larger groups of people in a neighborhood or community setting. This approach is fairly routine in some European countries, but less common in the United States, although this is beginning to change with an increasing number of community-supported energy initiatives in some locations. This approach could--and probably should--be a primary strategy in community responses to peak oil everywhere.
Here's the neighborhood's homepage, and here's North Carolina Green Building analysis on the project. Let me know about any other projects seeking to make energy independence that you've found in the comments.

San Francisco underground icon (literally) John Law will be appearing on the History Channel's Cities of the Underworld. Scott Beale writes on Laughing Squid:
Laughing Squid's own head of special projects John Law will be featured tonight and tomorrow on The History Channel show "Cities of the Underworld" hosted by Don Wildmon, a series where Don travels the world exploring subterranean structures.
The episode with John is about San Francisco and in his segment they explore San Francisco's Word War II bunkers and talk about the San Francisco Suicide Club. John, along with assistants John Hell, Katy Bell, CJ Desoda and Simone Davalos, "kidnapped" The History Channel crew taking them on a San Francisco adventure.
John Law on The History Channel's Cities of the Underworld
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"What gives anyone the right to use someone else's property, even though they're not making money on it? I can guarantee you the phone company's going to charge you whether you're making money or not."First off, this shows an ignorance of what is and is not "property." It also shows no concept of the larger picture of how using copyright to limit singers from appearing is harming artists. As for the non sequitor about the phone company... it's not clear what that has to do with anything.
The Offworld Guide to the 2009 Independent Games FestivalBraid, World of Goo, Darwinia, Everyday Shooter, Crayon Physics, Audiosurf -- all truly became names of their own following IGF successes. In the spirit of looking forward, then, and because Offworld's initial mention of the 2009 winners amounted to little more than a rote list of names, I've taken the time to sit down with all of this year's finalists and try to contextualize each entry (bar those cases where my hardware unfortunately failed me).
Inside you'll find as many video demos as I could muster, links and mentions to those games currently available to try for yourself, and an independent summary of each of the 22 finalists this year.
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A man I knew was gunned down last week in Colombo, the capital of Sri Lanka. He was an editor and journalist, and he was murdered because he told the truth in a place where the truth runs you afoul of murderers. For those of us who knew him, and know Sri Lanka, his death was not a matter of how but when. He knew it too, and before he died he wrote the piece that I have attached here. I am asking you all to take just a few minutes to read it. As a favor. Thank you.Here are the first few grafs of the piece, which were the last words written for publication by Lasantha Wickrematunge of The Sunday Leader:
No other profession calls on its practitioners to lay down their lives for their art save the armed forces and, in Sri Lanka, journalism. In the course of the past few years, the independent media have increasingly come under attack. Electronic and print-media institutions have been burnt, bombed, sealed and coerced. Countless journalists have been harassed, threatened and killed. It has been my honour to belong to all those categories and now especially the last.And Then They Came For Me (Sunday Leader)I have been in the business of journalism a good long time. Indeed, 2009 will be The Sunday Leader's 15th year. Many things have changed in Sri Lanka during that time, and it does not need me to tell you that the greater part of that change has been for the worse. We find ourselves in the midst of a civil war ruthlessly prosecuted by protagonists whose bloodlust knows no bounds. Terror, whether perpetrated by terrorists or the state, has become the order of the day. Indeed, murder has become the primary tool whereby the state seeks to control the organs of liberty. Today it is the journalists, tomorrow it will be the judges. For neither group have the risks ever been higher or the stakes lower.
Why then do we do it? I often wonder that. After all, I too am a husband, and the father of three wonderful children. I too have responsibilities and obligations that transcend my profession, be it the law or journalism. Is it worth the risk? Many people tell me it is not. Friends tell me to revert to the bar, and goodness knows it offers a better and safer livelihood. Others, including political leaders on both sides, have at various times sought to induce me to take to politics, going so far as to offer me ministries of my choice. Diplomats, recognising the risk journalists face in Sri Lanka, have offered me safe passage and the right of residence in their countries. Whatever else I may have been stuck for, I have not been stuck for choice.
But there is a calling that is yet above high office, fame, lucre and security. It is the call of conscience.
See also this page where news about his death, and remembrances by colleagues at the paper, have been posted: "A deadly drive to work."
And here, news about protests following his killing.
• Atenolol, a beta-blocker used to treat cardiovascular diseaseTop 11 compounds in US drinking water
• Atrazine, an organic herbicide banned in the European Union, but still used in the US, which has been implicated in the decline of fish stocks and in changes in animal behaviour
• Carbamazepine, a mood-stabilising drug used to treat bipolar disorder, amongst other things
• Estrone, an oestrogen hormone secreted by the ovaries and blamed for causing gender-bending changes in fish
• Gemfibrozil, an anti-cholesterol drug
I have always thought of abstract information—numbers for example—in visual, dynamic form. Numbers assume complex, multi-dimensional shapes in my head that I manipulate to form the solution to sums, or compare when determining whether they are prime or not.Inside the Savant Mind: Tips for Thinking from an Extraordinary Thinker
For languages, I do something similar in terms of thinking of words as belonging to clusters of meaning so that each piece of vocabulary makes sense according to its place in my mental architecture for that language. In this way I can easily discern relationships between words, which helps me to remember them.
In my mind, numbers and words are far more than squiggles of ink on a page. They have form, color, texture and so on. They come alive to me, which is why as a young child I thought of them as my “friends.” I think this is why my memory is very deep, because the information is not static. I say in my book that I do not crunch numbers (like a computer). Rather, I dance with them.
At long last, Joel, Rob, Brownlee, and the Boing Boing Video team (myself included) have departed CES and arrived at our respective homes. While we bathe in espresso this morning, and shake off the accumulated Vegas cruft, here's a recap of our video coverage produced from the floor of the annual electronics show last week. I hope you enjoy watching our "work" as much as we enjoyed all that "hard work" together producing them. Do also check out this blog post from Q-Burns Abstract Message, whose work we used in those episodes. He runs a label called Eighth Dimension Records, and we featured other artists from that label, too. - XJ
CES Videos on Boing Boing Gadgets:
* CES Video: Asus Netbookstravaganza, with Bamboo, Gold Lamé, and Lamborghini (MP4)
* CES Video: Palm Pre Hands-On with Joel and Brownlee, post-review huddle with Ars Technica (MP4)
* Boing Boing Gadgets at CES: Video Report, Day Two (MP4)
* Boing Boing Gadgets at CES: Video Report, Day One (MP4)
Or, watch them on YouTube with goofy annotations for maximum lulz:
* BB Gadgets @CES: Asus Netbooks, with Bamboo, Gold Lamé, and Lamborghini.
* CES: Palm Pre Hands-On with Boing Boing Gadgets, post-review huddle with Ars Technica
* Boing Boing Gadgets at CES: Day 2 Report
* Boing Boing Gadgets at CES: Day 1 Report
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I read a great article a few years called "Where to Get a Good Idea: Steal It Outside Your Group". Sociologist Ronald Burt argues that creative ideas aren't magically created, but rather, they are well-known concepts re-applied in new arenas. Maybe that cool paper punch found in the stationary store will become the next best thing in pizza cutters - all it takes is someone to connect the two. My favorite quote in the article is "People who live in the intersection of social worlds are at higher risk of having good ideas."
To this end, I enjoy putting myself in that intersection of social worlds. I'll ask my taxidriver about how he does his job; learn the ins and outs of the starting a small business from my hairdresser friend. Matt Blaze famously applied this when he brought techniques that were well-known among the computer security community to the world of physical locks.
So, I come to one of my favorite little websites: Transmaterial. Every two weeks, it describes an innovative new physical material.
Now, you ask, new materials are useful, but how does that website help the DIY hobbyist?
I love it for two reasons:
1. It exposes me to new ideas outside of my usual sphere.
2. A lot of the new materials seemed to have been formed by the same kind of cross-discipline thinking.
For example, the surface of a Lotus leaf has zillions of tiny bumps to repel water more effectively than a flat surface can. Sure, that's interesting, but how is it practical? Kenya Hara created a new kind of humidifier by selectively applying a coating that mimics this response to a sheet of paper. The result is a pattern of thousands of tiny drops of water with a greater surface area than found on other humidifiers -- leading to more effective evaporation without the need for electricity. Biologists knew about this effect; it took a creative leap to find a use for it in the HVAC world.
So, there's my first post. I hope to bring you lots of other cool information, but I probably just gave up some of my favorite ideas.
I love the people at Make and what they've done for the DIY community, so I jumped at the chance to guest blog here.
Just a quick introduction: I'm a hacker who loves how to understand how things work inside & out. At my job, I design electronic systems; at home, I usually tend to take them apart. I love learning, which is handy because I think that's one of the primary requirements of an engineer -- college gives you a great theoretical base, but technology marches on and there are always new techniques and devices to stay abreast of.
I'm probably best known for hacking one-time-use digital cameras and camcorders and making them reusable. For a couple of years (until the manufacturer fixed the security holes I found), this made cheap cameras available for all sorts of dangerous projects where the prospect of losing a more expensive would be too daunting. Tiny kids ran amok, taking pictures of anything and everything. The video camera's small size and light weight made it ideal for shooting a pilot's-eye view from model helicopters and planes; in Make 07, I showed how to put the camcorder in a model rocket (podcast).
More recently, I fulfilled a dream of building my own watch from scratch. First I made a Pong Watch - it's a smaller version of the classic game. Over the last year, I've been working on a more complicated version that will offer a variety of games, including Asteroids. I love this project because it's a mix of everything -- electronics, software, machining materials, a little bit of fashion, and a little bit of retro. More importantly, though, there was a lot of stuff I didn't know at the start of the project that I've had to learn to complete it.
So, thanks for the opportunity, and I'm looking forward to sharing with you interesting projects and ideas!
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Ok, ok, I know some of you out there might be thinking "That mod isn't very cool!" but hey - they fit an XP compatible computer inside of an original Gameboy case. That's gotta be worth something! I found this interesting and thus am discussing it in today's article.
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The next Make:SF meeting is Tuesday, January 13th at 6:30 PM
Location:
Instructables HQ 489 Clementina St. - 3rd Floor
San Francisco CA
To present contact Andrew at meetings [at] makesf [dot] org
Related sites:
http://www.makesf.org
http://www.meetup.com/makesf/
http://makesf.pbwiki.com/
http://www.flickr.com/groups/686701@N22/
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Check out this wonderfully disturbing piece by Jon Beinart! Via the AntiCraft
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The votes have been cast and the winners of the first five dpreview.com challenges have been announced. The response to the initial challenges has been incredible, and the standard of entries shows just how much photographic creativity and talent there is in the dpreview community. We'd like to thank everyone who enterered images and those who voted for helping us to iron out any wrinkles in this exciting new site feature. There's still plenty of challenges open and the second wave of voting starts soon, so please continue to try out the system as we prepare to move into the next phase of the Challenges Beta program, when the first user generated challenges will be announced.
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From the MAKE: Flickr pool
Æther uses electricity to draw patterns in wood, with beautiful results -
did some experiments last night: wood + saline + high voltage supply + variac = fractal burn patterns. tried different kinds of wood with various effects. unfortunately my recollection of which types of wood are displayed are spotty. will update later. stay tuned for photos of my fractal wood burning coat rack.Surely a technique other wood artists will be very interested in. - fractal wood burning on Flickr Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Arts | Digg this!
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This art installation called "Beacon" creates a kinetic light space that has integrated AI so that it interacts with visitors and its surroundings. Consisting of hundreds of modified emergency beacon lights, the project aims to create an immersive space that is navigable to visitors by sensing their position from the motion of the lights. Check it out live at the Lightwave festival this month in Dublin, Ireland.
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This month's Handmade Music event is shaping up to be a truly awesome hands-on showcase of sound maker bliss. Check out what'll be on hand -
Bizarre sonic objects made from dismembered mannequin torsos and legs, transformed into a Theremin and maracas
Mouse & the Billionaire's Gestural controllers, made with wood and 3D printers, shaping sound with movement
Brian Kerr's Dynamic Musical Interfaces

Rucyl Mills' over-the-shoulder musical fashion with snakeskin and leather

Notendo's prepared Nintendo NES
Make:Television screening with more projects, plus a presentation by Phil Torrone.
Plus -
Handmade Music
Free (+ free beer while it lasts)
Thursday, January 15
7:30-10:30pm (drop by for as long as you'd lie)
3rd Ward, Brooklyn NY
Directions to the Space
More info @ CDM - Like a DIY NAMM: Handmade Music Preview
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This story just drips with irony!
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"Walleye" is an interactive light installation that can generate large-scale light patterns based on the movements of visitors in a space. The project is built with an array of phototransistors and incandescent bulbs spaced on a 10 foot grid where the bulbs face the transistors on a 1 to 1 mapping. The project is currently on display at the Beall Center for Art and Technology at UC Irvine.
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Guilherme used Arduino, Braun hair removal device, XBee, servo, and casters to bring us - ratb0t!
One day my mother told me she had one hair-removal thing broken (Braun Silk Epil brand ), and she would bring it to me.Next up he intends to make this nervous remote-controlled bot autonomous (thankfully, actual hair removal abilities have been removed) - ratb0t [via Hacked Gadgets]
Of course I accepted, and I confess, I never tried to fix it :)This made me think a lot on how could I twist it and use it to give life to a robot.
The most dificult part was to transform the front blades onto a wheel, I did it using pieces of bike air-chamber, rubber and hot glue.
I like the final result and works quite well!Shame on me because I didn´t documented the building proccess.. I will try not to repeat it :)
If you have some interesting mechanical broken items I accept them :)
Photo credit: egal
There are many blogging platform out there and they all do pretty much the same: get you started to publish your own content. But WordPress is by far the favorite one by bloggers. Why? WordPress has an awesome list of plugins to help you personalize your blog and add extra features.
So I decided to start from the list by Ruchir Chawdhry on TechVivo, and extend it with some kind suggestions from Robin Good and MasterNewMedia SEO expert, Matteo Ionescu. The result is a collection of more than 30 plugins for professional web publishing with WordPress, organized in specific categories:
a) Content sharing b) Spam Fighting c) SEO d) Navigation Enhancement e) Stats f) WordPress Admin Enhancement g) Content Embedding h) MiscellanousEnjoy!
FeedBurner FeedSmith
The FeedBurner FeedSmith plugin detects all ways to access your feed (e.g. yoursite.com/feed/ or yoursite.com/wp-rss2.php etc) and redirects them to your FeedBurner feed so you can track every possible subscriber. It will forward for your main posts feed, and optionally, your comments feed as well. http://www.google.com/support/feedburner/bin/answer.py?answer=78483&topic=13252 Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
Sociable
Sociable automatically adds links to your favorite social bookmarking sites on your posts, pages, and in your RSS feed. You can choose from 99 different social bookmarking sites. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/sociable/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
Akismet
Akismet checks your comments against the Akismet web service to see if they look like spam or not, and lets you review the spam it catches under your blog’s comments admin screen. With the ever increasing amount of spam on the web, you’d be dumb not to get this plugin. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/akismet/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
WP-Spam Free
Fed up of all that comment spam?< Stop wasting time checking and clearing your Akismet spam queue every day and download WP-SpamFree. It will eliminate 99% - 100% of the comment spam you receive. Yep, I’m not joking. And it does it without CAPTCHAS! WP-SpamFree uses a combo of JavaScript and cookies to stop the spambots. Since 99% of the spambots out there can’t process JavaScript, they won’t be able to submit comments. It also doesn’t slow down your blog one bit. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-spamfree/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
Simple Trackback Validation
The Simple Trackback Validation plugin helps to eliminate trackback spam by performing a simple a simple but effective test on all incoming trackbacks. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/simple-trackback-validation/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
All-in-One SEO Pack
The All-in-One SEO Pack is the ultimate SEO (Search Engine Optimization) plugin out there. It automatically optimizes your blog for search engines, and has several options for the more advanced users. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/all-in-one-seo-pack/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
Google XML Sitemaps Generator
The Google XML Sitemaps Generator plugin generates an XML sitemap of your WordPress blog. Ask, Google, Yahoo!, and MSN support this format. Having an XML sitemap and submitting it to the search engines that support it can really increase your blog’s search engine visibility, especially when it’s new. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/google-sitemap-generator/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
Redirection
Redirection is a solution to manage 301 redirects. Very useful if you ever need to change the URL of a post / page, Redirection becomes essential when migrating from another platform. http://urbangiraffe.com/plugins/redirection/ Review by Matteo Ionescu
HeadSpace
HeadSpace is meta-tag management on steroids. A great alternative to the popular All In One SEO Pack supporting an incredible number of features. http://urbangiraffe.com/plugins/headspace2/ Review by Matteo Ionescu
Yet Another Related Posts Plugin
Yet Another Related Posts Plugin (YARPP) inserts a list of related posts below each post on your blog, and in your blog’s RSS feed. It’s extremely configurable, and a must-have. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/yet-another-related-posts-plugin/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
TweetBacks
TweetBacks allows you to search the popular microblogging service Twitter for tweets that link to your blog posts. These tweets are then displayed under the entries on your blog site so that you and your readers know how many people shared your thoughts. http://danzarrella.com/wp-tweetbacks-plugin.html Review by Daniele Bazzano
SRG Clean Archives
The SRG Clean Archives plugin displays your archive listings in a clean and uniform fashion, that’s search engine and user-friendly, on a dedicated page or in your sidebar. If you’re still manually updating your archives page, stop doing it! http://www.idunzo.com/projects/clean-archives Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
Contact Form 7
Even though there are tens of contact form plugins out there, I’ve always liked Contact Form 7. The problem with most contact form plugins is that either they are too simple or way too complex. Contact Form 7, on the other hand, is extensible yet easy-to-use. It supports Ajax-powered submitting, multiple forms, CAPTCHAS, and Akismet spam filtering. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/contact-form-7/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
Democracy
Democracy is a simple but effective way to add polls to your WordPress website and enhance user interaction. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/democracy/ Review by Matteo Ionescu
Wp PostRatings
With Wp PostRatings you con allow your readers to rate your posts. Written in Ajax, is very light and unobtrusive. http://lesterchan.net/portfolio/programming/php/ Review by Daniele Bazzano
WordPress.com Stats
WordPress.com Stats is a traffic statistics plugin that shows only the most popular metrics a blogger wants to track – such as page views, referrers, top posts & pages, search engine terms, and clicks – and provides them in a clear and concise interface. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/stats/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
Google Analytics for WordPress
The Google Analytics for WordPress plugin lets you insert the Google Analytics code automatically throughout your blog. It discounts your own visits, automatically tracks and segments all outbound links from within posts, comment author links, links within comments, blogroll links, and downloads. It even allows you to track AdSense clicks, add extra search engines, and track image search queries. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/google-analytics-for-wordpress/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
One Click
The One-Click plugin allows you to upload themes and plugins straight to your WordPress blog from the browser. Just upload the zip file, and it’ll automatically unzip the contents and install the plugin for you. Now you never have to use FTP again! http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/one-click-plugin-updater/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
Dashboard Widget Manager
Ever felt your dashboard was too cluttered? Then download Dashboard Widget Manager. It allows you to remove unnecessary widgets from your dashboard so it’ll look clean and load faster. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/dashboard-widget-manager/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
Lighter Menus
Lighter Menus creates drop down menus instead of the regular admin menus for WordPress, so you can browse items in one click. It’s fast to load, adaptable to color schemes, and comes with some sleek icons. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/lighter-admin-drop-menus/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
PageMash
Customize the order of your pages, manage their parent structure, and hide them, all using PageMash. It features an Ajax drag-and-drop administrative interface, and is a great tool to re-arrange the order of your pages quickly. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/pagemash/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
Manageable
Manageable allows inline editing of the date, title, categories, tags, status, and more of both posts and pages without ever having to leave the "Manageable" admin section. No need to load each post or page individually. Simply double-click anywhere in the post or page row and when you’re done, press enter. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/manageable/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
Role Manager
Role Manager is a solution to handle user levels and allow deep customization of individual permissions. Very useful if you manage a multi-user blog! http://redalt.com/Resources/Plugins/Role+Manager Review by Matteo Ionescu
Embedit
Embedit is a very light plugin (ionly 10 lines of code) which lets you easily embed any HTML code into a WordPress page / post. Works seamlessly across different versions of WordPress. http://www.matteoionescu.com/wordpress/embed-html/ Review by Daniele Bazzano
Samsarin PHP Widget
Very simple but effective way to add custom widgets into sidebars with your PHP / HTML code. Samsarin PHP Widget functionality should be really implemented in WordPress itself! http://www.samsarin.com/blog/2007/03/10/samsarin-php-widget/ Review by Matteo Ionescu
Exec-PHP
Exec-PHP lets you execute PHP code in posts, pages, and in the text widgets of your sidebar. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/exec-php/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
WP Super Cache
I'm sure you’ve heard of the Digg Effect and the Slashdot Effect. They can cause a server meltdown, and if you’re on shared hosting, get your ass kicked out. To Digg-proof your blog, get WP Super Cache. It reduces the load on your server by generating static HTML files from your dynamic WordPress blog. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-super-cache/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
WordPress Database Backup
You should always backup your WordPress database regularly. However, doing it manually every time can be difficult and time consuming. The WordPress Database Backup plugin lets you easily backup your WordPress database tables. You can even schedule a backup, and it'll email the file to you every day! http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-db-backup/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
OIO Publisher
OIO Publisher is the ultimate ad management plugin. It’s great for those who want to sell ads on their blog by themselves. The great thing about OIO is that it removes all the hassle one gets from self-selling ad space: you only have to approve purchases. OIO Publisher handles everything else. Using OIO, you can sell reviews, links, ads, and even your own products! Heck, it even allows you to create your own affiliate program, so other people can sell your ads and products for you. http://www.oiopublisher.com/ Review by Ruchir Chawdhry
qTranslate
Multilingual support is one of the biggest missing features of WordPress, but with qTransalate you can easily accomplish the task of managing different languages for your blog site. http://www.qianqin.de/qtranslate/ Review by Daniele Bazzano
WP Lytebox
WP Lytebox lets you easily add a lightbox effect when clicking a thumbnail to display the fullsize image. http://grupenet.com/2007/08/03/wp-lytebox/ Review by Matteo Ionescu

Here's an interesting alternative design for a skateboard by Loren Kulesus. With this much space between wheels, it should make for some interesting shock absorption when doing tricks.
via Neatorama
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I recently stumbled into a site where three chinese circumvention tools (dynaweb, gpass, firephoenix) are now publishing aggregate data and offering to sell individual data about the web browsing histories of their users. These tools together represent a big majority of the Chinese circumvention tool market, with a few million users in between them.Popular Chinese Filtering Circumvention Tools DynaWeb FreeGate, GPass, and FirePhoenix Sell User Data (Thanks, Dan!)It's s pretty shocking finding merely that they are storing the data at all, let alone publishing and selling it. These tools are acting as virtual ISPs for their users. Selling the browsing histories of those users is like an ISP selling the browsing histories of its users, which is a big step beyond what companies like NebuAd and Phorm were / are trying to do. NebuAd and Phorm are at least adding a variety of pseudonymity and privacy layers to their tracking, whereas these tools are evidently directly storing (and selling) the full, individually identifiable browsing histories of their users. And the data about circumventing users is much more sensitive for obvious reasons than the data about most ISP users.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

SparkFun has a really interesting article about what a prototype means. The article includes a lot of interesting information on the development cycle that started SparkFun Electronics and the progression of the BlueSMiRF module.
Clearing out various boxes here at SparkFun Electronics, we come across piles of old prototypes. You may ask, what's a prototype? It's a design that we, the engineers, screwed up. May we bestow upon you a few rules to laying out a PCB.
More about Sparkfun's article "What a 'prototype' means"
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Roboduino is an Arduino compatible micro controller that has some extra features that make it great for anyone making robots. I really like the power buses along side the pwm and analog pins so you can easily plug in a standard servo.
The Roboduino is a Freeduino (Arduino software compatible) microcontroller board designed for robotics. All of its connections have neighboring power buses into which servos and sensors can easily be plugged. Additional headers for power and serial communication are also provided. The kits come with the surface mount parts pre-soldered. Skill level: Beginner to intermediate.
More about the Roboduino
In the Maker Shed:
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Make: Arduino

Goldenrod Foundation has created this nifty animated map to show how migratory birds use Plymouth Beach in Massachusetts.
Check out their interactive map showing the migratory path of some of the birds that pass through Plymouth. It is fairly amazing to see that the birds seem to fly to specific regions and towns in far flung locations. The birds then return to Plymouth after incredibly challenging flights, and may recharge before heading on to their destination, or may stay for their breeding cycle. Their resources page has lots of information and check out their Projects and grants pages as well.
How can you gather data from live wild animals who weigh less than a pound and travel tens of thousands of miles? How can that data be visualized so other people can understand? Does your community share birds with other parts of the world? What else do you share with those parts of the world? Have you got techniques for creating stunning wildlife photography? Share your ideas in the comments, and contribute your photos and video to the Make Flickr pool.
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<param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/i3FTaGwfXPM&hl=en&fs=1&en&fs=1&rel=0&fmt=18
"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/i3FTaGwfXPM&hl=en&fs=1&en&fs=1&rel=0&fmt=18
" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="600" height="485">
It's a sad time for those of you who appreciate the high-tech of yesteryear. QRS has decided to stop manufacturing player piano rolls. It's actually amazing that they were still making them up until early 2009. Luckily for us there will always be plenty available on ebay.
The halt in production comes 108 years after the company was founded in Chicago, and 42 years since it moved to Buffalo. Rolls used in player pianos reached their peak in popularity in the early 20th century, when a roll of paper was able to reproduce music through perforations signifying notes played on the piano.
More about QRS halts production of player piano rolls
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This year, for the annual gadget Bacchanal known as CES (the Consumer Electronics Show), we did something a little different -- we took a MAKEcation! From the sidelines, we covered a few things that weren't being covered, and some things through a uniquely MAKE lens. Here's our wrap-up. If you saw tech, at the actual show, or via online coverage, that you got particularly jazzed about, head to comments and share some of your enthusiasm.









Amongst this year's toybots (e.g. Joebot -- think: male analog to the Femisapien and Roborover -- successor to the Tri-Bot), the Spybot looks interesting, a leaner, meaning (next gen?) version of the Rovio. And it's only $170. It doesn't appear to use TrueTrack nav. Let's hope the light is brighter and the camera is better than the Rovio.
Strange among this year's offerings is the Cinemin, a family of palm-top video projectors using TI's DLP technology. They're designed to plug into iPods, phones, and other media devices, to project their content. Will the next Robosapien be able to project Princess Leia's cries for help? The Cinemins will retail for between $300 and $400.

Bug Labs announced five new BUGmodules... Each BUGmodule represents a specific gadget function (e.g. a camera, a keyboard, a video output, etc.) that can be snapped to the BUGbase, a programmable Linux-based mini-computer with four available BUGmodule slots.
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Step back a bit from your computer and see if this dog's snout doesn't appear to be otherworldly.
Cool, huh? (Thanks, Claire!)
(Shawn Connally and Bruce Stewart are guest bloggers)

Do you know what an ambigram is?,
Princess Bride DVD
(Thanks, Justin!)
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Nixon's "Sunny Side Up" tees have a trompe l'oeil effect that will proudly declare your allegiance to unfertilized dinosaur ova to all and sundry. Plus, no one will be able to tell if you get egg on your shirt.
SUNNY SIDE UP
(via Geisha Asobi)
Photographers criminalised as police 'abuse' anti-terror laws (Thanks, Marilyn!)With a studio near the 1960s shopping centre at the heart of this area in south London, he is a familiar figure and is regularly seen snapping and sketching the people and buildings around his home – currently the site of Europe's largest regeneration project. But to the police officers who arrested him last week his photographing of the old HMSO print works close to the local police station posed an unacceptable security risk.
"The car skidded to a halt like something out of Starsky & Hutch and this officer jumped out very dramatically and said 'what are you doing?' I told him I was photographing the building and he said he was going to search me under the Anti-Terrorism Act," he recalled.

Domestic Vacations
(Thanks, Marilyn!)
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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Most everyone I know loves a good inside joke. You know, the kind that makes fun of some stereotypical characteristic of some subset of human beings, yet applauds the lifestyle at the same time. I am no exception to this rule and have thoroughly enjoyed laughing at myself while reading Stuff White People Like.
I’ve recently discovered that I can enjoy the insider jokes of an even smaller subset of humanity, journalists. Journalists have a penchant for smugness, really reveling in the usage of large, unpronounceable words, and highlighting the great breadth of knowledge that is crammed into every square inch of their do-good, I'm-an-outsider mentality. I know this because I'm one of the often snide guilty parties.
Having previously worked in a newspaper newsroom for almost a decade, I especially take delight in the entries that editors Christopher Ortiz and David Young have posted about coffee, press passes, and free food. Here’s a snippet about the fact that journalists like to date other journalists:
Journalists like dating each other because only fellow journalists understand the phrase: “Not tonight dear, I’m on deadline.”
Attempts to date people outside of the newsroom who cannot name gubernatorial candidates, have a limited vocabulary and who don’t know who Hunter S. Thompson is will only lead to a return to dating journalists.
Bruce has warned me that this may all be a little too obscure for some people to see the humor in, but I have high hopes for people’s ability to enjoy making fun of reporters.
--Shawn
Stuff Journalists Like(Shawn Connally and Bruce Stewart are guest bloggers)

We've covered creating a hackintosh PC and putting OS X on the Asus Eee before. Making OS X work on a PC usually involves downloading a patched version of the OS X installer and running a patched kernel. It works, but the potential exists that you'll run into problems with Software Update.
This hack is a bit different. Instead of hacking the kernel, you use a bootloader called BOOT-132. It basically runs before anything else starts up and, with a few kernel extensions, it makes the system resemble the boot process of a stock Mac to the retail, unmodified Apple kernel. This means you can install OS X on your Eee with the Leopard disks you own, without modification, and without downloading a big ISO off bittorrent. It also means you can run Software Update without worry, since you are using a legit, unmodified OS X kernel.
EEEMac Journey has the full step-by-step instructions for making this all work. You have to boot off of the boot-132 CD a few times during the install process, but once you're done, the machine will be set up to boot straight from the internal disk. I'm not sure if it'll work, but there's a good chance this process will work with other netbooks and Intel-based PCs with supported hardware.
EEE Boot: Installing OSX on an EEE PC 901 or 1000 with an original Apple Install Disk
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Our friends over at Willoughby and Baltic are hosting the Boston Arduino Users Group on January 15th, 2009 from 7- 9pm. If you are in the Boston area, you really should stop by and check it out. This is a great opportunity to meet other Arduino enthusiasts, solder something up, or just see what others are making with this amazing little micro-controller.
The Boston Arduino Users Group returns to Willoughby and Baltic on January 15th. Bring your boards and hop on over for a lively discussion about what is new on the Arduino front. Meredith will be giving a demo on how to hook up your Arduino to run a small unipolar stepper motor, and we'll have one of Jimmie's "Open Heart" kits for you to review. We've also got some soldering irons to use if you want to put something together on the spot. Arduino people unite!
More about the Boston Arduino Users Group at Willoughby and Baltic [Willoughby and Baltic]
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From the MAKE: Flickr pool

One of the most fun gigs I have right now (next to getting to be a guest blogger on BB!) is working with the good people at Coverleaf, who produce digital editions of magazines. As part of my role there I get to read many magazine articles that I might not otherwise take the time to seek out, like this fascinating piece from the latest issue of Discover about a controversial archaeologist who says he's discovered massive ancient pyramids buried in some Bosnian hills. The image above is of one of these pyramid-shaped hills outside the small city of Visoko.
Pyramid Scheme by John Bohannon has a clearly skeptical take on Sam Osmanagich's bold claims that he has discovered the first-ever ancient pyramid in Europe and the largest valley of pyramids in existence. But Osmanagich is portrayed as a sort of national hero in Bosnia, and has apparently secured a great deal of government financing for his pyramid excavation project. Bohannon repeatedly tries to interview Osmanagich, including about his published claims of supernatural phenomena associated with the pyramids, but never is able to really pin him down. Osmanagich has been pursuing his excavation project and visions of national archaeological parks for several years, and it sounds like he has a significant following in Bosnia, but this is the first I had ever heard of any of this.
One crucial question seems to be whether flat plates of rock found at the dig site are handmade evidence of past civilizations or simply the natural remains of a 7-million-year-old lake bed. Wikipedia's not buying it, and frankly it all sounds pretty sketchy to me too. But clearly Osmanagich has convinced a lot of people that there's something to his pyramid theory.
There's some interesting clips on YouTube, like Osmanagich reflecting on the project, an enthusiastic ABC news story from 2007, what looks like a pretty large festival celebrating the start of last year's archaeological season at Visoko, and even a rap video of the "Bosnian Pyramid Community on the road."
The discussions I've read online about this seem to have fairly equal amounts of pyramid-believers and skeptics. I've been very impressed at the expertise that crops up in the comments section here, so I'm betting there are Boingers out there who can help me sort this one out. Is Osmanagich a rogue archaeologist who's seen a few too many Indiana Jones movies, or he is on to something with these pointy hills?
--Bruce
(Disclosure: I work on Coverleaf, the service that provides the digital edition of Discover and many other magazines.)
(Shawn Connally and Bruce Stewart are guest bloggers)
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The latest addition to WowWee's FlyTech line is the Lightstar, a simple, inexpensive flying blade (retailing for $20). They come in three different colors/infrared channels, so you can fly and remote-control three fliers at the same time.
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