Hello there, here are your daily updates from the MAKE blog - 2009/03/01.
Kite Buggy Skis
In December, I finally jettisoned the skis I got when I was a nanny/construction worker for the year after college. Michael needed them to turn into a Kite Buggy. Right now it is operating successfully as a sled/buggy, but the kite is already functioning. Finally able to get your skis to work! Next iteration will have shorter skis and slight camber to help cornering/ lateral load of kite. When the wind kicks up, there will be some more fun in the snow! What do you do to beat the winter doldrums? Add your celebrations in the comments and don't forget to include your photos and video in the MAKE Flickr pool. An AVR-based logging wattmeter This device monitors household power usage and logs it to an SD card. A simple analog front-end amplifies the signals from voltage and current detectors and an ATmega168 microcontroller computes the power consumption using the formula P=V*I. The voltage and current are each sampled at 9615 Hz so the integration should be fairly accurate even for highly non-sinusoidal loads such as computers or fluorescent bulbs. A graphical LCD shows the power usage as a strip chart and can also act as an oscilloscope to display the voltage and current waveforms. The current is amplified in three stages (1x, 10x, and 100x) so that different gains can be used giving accurate readings for both high and low power usage.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in DIY Projects | Digg this! Foam model in your wind tunnel
Design it, build it, test it, fly it Designing and building in three dimensions Once you have the cutter built, you can test out your designs.The promises of the online version of Make really comes out with the styrofoam cutter. There are loads of neat techniques in the online version of the project. Online, there are techniques that either didn't fit or were not developed in time for the print edition. There are some useful comments offering suggestions around materials and safety. Keep it Safe Make your wind tunnel - http://www.make-digital.com/make/vol15/?pg=148 Your wind tunnel could be made from lots of different materials. Many schools have at least a few paper boxes kicking around, which could provide some structure for the tunnel. Coroplast folds nice and tapes to close. Concrete footing tube would give you a round shape for the tunnel. A window fan could pull the air through, or you could even raid some out of some computer power supplies. For the straws you will need, you could raid the cafeteria or a burger joint for some drinking straws, though you should probably ask before cleaning out the straw bin. What will your students learn and do? Finding out more If you are looking for lots of resources on teaching Engineering, Celeste Baine has a great collection of the top 10 List of K-12 Engineering Education Programs. Design Squad has a resource page for educators with lots of printable materials for classroom use. While we are on the topic of aerodynamics, a look at Airplanes from How Stuff Works might come in handy. You might also find some ideas at Instructables on aerodynamics based projects. What do you think? Roll your own stereo turntableThe thought never occurred to me: scratch-building your own turntable. Paulo Rebordao writes: This is a record player complete with a servo controlled arm that I've designed and built during the last 10 months. It has a few unusual features and I think it looks Way Cool!!! Liquidware app store
Unsold cars around world
Make: television Episode 9: Computer Making Music & Personal Flight Recorder
Meet CCRMA, a group of musical makers who stretch the sonic boundaries by turning personal computers into an electronic symphony. In the Workshop, John Park hacks a Wii controller and turns it into a personal flight recorder that can measure the G forces of roller coasters and other high-speed activities. In the Toolbox segment, William Gurstelle demonstrates the slick, back-cutting action of a super-sharp Japanese saw. The Maker Channel features a tesla coil-powered guitar amp, an RFID reader implanted in a human hand, and LED fan sign to bring to baseball games, and a solar powered bicycle gondola. Get the m4v, subscribe in iTunes, or what in HD on Blip. Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Make: television | Digg this!Make: television Episode 9 - the torrent
Find PDFs to our projects and a guide to all of the previous episodes at makezine.tv Make: is available in HD on Public Television, Vimeo, Blip, and YouTube. Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Make: television | Digg this!Maker Profile - Computer Making Music on Make: televisionMeet CCRMA, a group of musical makers who stretch the sonic boundaries by turning personal computers into an electronic symphony. Based at Stanford University, CCRMA teams composers, artists and acoustical researchers together to meld music with new technology and explore the outer limits of audio from playground-activated sounds to laptop orchestras. Then see the origins of the synthesizer. Learn more about CCRMA at http://ccrma.stanford.edu/, or visit Chris Warren's website and blog. Get the m4v, subscribe in iTunes, watch on YouTube or Blip. Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Make: television | Digg this!Maker Workshop - Personal Flight Recorder on Make: televisionJohn Park hacks a Wii controller and turns it into a personal flight recorder that can sense and measure the stomach-churning G forces of roller coasters and other high-speed, high-risk activities. Download the PDF for this project. Download the Personal Flight Recorder program for the Arduino. Get the m4v, subscribe in iTunes, watch on YouTube or Blip. Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Make: television | Digg this!Maker Workshop PDF - Personal Flight RecorderMake a versatile and rugged personal flight recorder that will record the g-forces during any type of ride or trip. Check out the details for the Personal Flight Recorder that John Park builds in the Maker Workshop, and don't forget to download the Personal Flight Recorder software for the Arduino. Give this build a shot, and let us know how it turned out. We'd love to hear your feedback or see your pictures! Email us at maketelevision@makezine.com. Watch the Maker Workshop - Personal Flight Recorder segment. Or check it out on Vimeo, Blip, or YouTube. Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Make: television | Digg this!Personal Flight Recorder program for ArduinoHere's the .zip file for the Personal Flight Recorder project from the Maker Workshop in Episode 9 of Make: television. Check out the PDFfor full instructions on how to build your own Personal Flight Recorder. Share your questions or comments in the comments section below. Watch the Maker Workshop - Personal Flight Recorder segment. Or check it out on Vimeo, Blip, or YouTube. Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Make: television | Digg this!Maker to Maker - Japanese Saw on Make: televisionIn this Toolbox segment, William Gurstelle demonstrates the slick, back-cutting action of a super-sharp Japanese saw. Get the m4v, subscribe in iTunes, watch on YouTube or Blip. Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Make: television | Digg this!Maker Channel Ep. 9 - Tesla coil guitar, RFID implant, LED fan sign, Solar-powered gondola
Submit a video of your own project at makerchannel.org. Get the m4v, subscribe in iTunes, watch on YouTube or Blip. Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Make: television | Digg this!Share your skills with Boston Skill Share Photo from Boston Skill Share So you have a great idea, and you want to share it, but where will you find people to share with? If you can get to the Boston area for the April 18 and 19th 2009 weekend (perhaps you haven't yet scheduled your April Vacation?) then you should definitely check out Boston Skill Share, a community effort to help people get and share great ideas. The Boston Skillshare is an annual volunteer-run, donation-based weekend event that brings people together to share practical skills. It's happening this year on Saturday and Sunday, April 18 & 19 at M.I.T. in Cambridge. Everyone is invited. Looking for an overview of the weekend? Take a look at the Info page, pretty good place to start. Their Points of Unity, lets you in on their great mindset. If you would like to lead a workshop, then check out the Workshop Submission Form. Maybe you just want to go and learn loads of cool stuff, so explore the workshop page, which will fill up as the event approaches.
So check it out and let us know what you think in the comments. Have you attended one of the previous jsSO: Flash shared objects in Javascript
Without polling the server, an expensive operation, there isn't a simple way send a Javascript client frequently updated server data. This is a problem if you want to make a multiuser game or chat application in Javascript. A post on ajaxian proposes a solution: Daniel Prieler's jsSO library, which proxies real time communication between Javascript clients through Flash and an RTMP server: The data-transfer and the connection to the server are maintained by a simple embedded Flashmovie in your page. The communication with other clients runs through the local Flashmovie and the Red5-Server. Red5, by the way, is an open source implementation of Adobe's Flash Server. It can be used to stream or record video, or provide low latency, event-based communication via remote shared objects. Fast multiplayer Javascript games, here we come. jsSO - Flash Shared Objects in Javascript [via ajaxian] Fly Plane After coming across this lovely image depicting the construction of a fly powered matchstick airplane, I had to try it for myself. Here are the flies, trapped within their impenetrable polyethylene terephthalate dungeon of doom. As difficult as it may be, avoid pouring the hydrochloric acid in with them. They find it very unpleasant, and may refuse to fly for you. Wait until after you get bored with the plane before you decide to bathe them.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Flying | Digg this! How-To: Working gears from junk mailInstructables user Riblets writes: Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Paper Crafts | Digg this! More Recent Articles
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