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2010/12/31

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A tour through a center that tests CFLs, LEDs, and human health (video)


A tour through a center that tests CFLs, LEDs, and human health...

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Best of Make: Online 2010 -- Math Mondays

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In looking at the best of what Make: Online had to offer in 2010, George Hart's wonderful "Math Monday" columns immediately sprung to mind. Each week, George does a fantastic job of covering the wonders on mathematics through a series of crafty projects. It's math and science meets arts, crafts, and various forms of making (from papercraft to wood- and metalworking, to playing with your food). Look for more cool "Math Monday" columns in 2011.

Here are a few of our faves:

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Mathematically-Correct Breakfast (Introducing Math Mondays)


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Wearable geometry


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3D Hilbert curve in steel pipe


See links to all of the Math Monday columns after the jump

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Maker Birthdays: Rodney Brooks

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Rodney Brooks (born December 30, 1954, in Adelaide, Australia) has had an impact on robotics and AI matched by few. And there is probably no one who's had a bigger impact on viable commercial robotics. In the 1970s, when everybody else was obsessed with complex AI-driven, map-building robots, Brooks shocked the AI community by creating bug-brained walking robots that had little computational power and built no maps of their world. They were solely sense-act. This approach led to behavior-based robotics and influenced other bottom-up robotic design approaches, such as Mark Tilden's BEAM robotics. And these simple bottom-up bot architectures gave birth to such commercial successes as Brooks' own iRobot and the Roomba line and WowWee's/Tilden's Robosapiens.

Brooks' unconventional approach to solving design problems can also be seen in what could be dubbed the "Brooks Design Heuristic." It basically involves figuring out, in a design problem, what are the assumptions that are so taken for granted that they've become invisible to those attempting to solve the problem. Then explore those. For instance, in trying to find collision-free paths for industrial robots, everyone was focusing on the "stuff," the things that could possibly be collided with. Brooks decided to focus on where the stuff wasn't. This turned out to be much easier to design collision-free for.

Brooks currently serves as Panasonic Professor of Robotics at MIT. He is also the CTO and boardmember of iRobot Corp.

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Homemade cold cast bronze ornaments

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Spotted in the MAKE Flickr pool:

Matt Jones made these Ojai Post Office Christmas Ornaments for his friends who just moved there. He drew the design in a vector drawing program, used a laser cutter to cut out pieces in acrylic and cardstock, then made a silicone mold of the model for casting. I always wonder how people make the models that they use for molding, so I appreciated his in-depth explanation. The full photo set is here.

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Self-Portrait Ski Mask

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Andrew Salomone used my electronic knitting machine to make this identity-preserving balaclava:

The balaclava is knit from cotton yarn and the design is from a bitmap file, in which pictures of my head from every angle were photoshopped together into a single rectangular image. I used the same images to make the bitmap file as I did for the original ID-Preserving Balaclava project.

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More:

How-To: Hack Your Knitting Machine

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Best of Make: Online 2010 - Crafts

In the Maker Shed: Monochron clock kit

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The Monochron clock kit from the Maker Shed is a completely hackable, open source, clock kit that has a funky retro feel. It can be programmed to display several different clock "faces" or you can program you own. The kit comes complete with all electronics (soldering required), laser cut case, and power plug.

From Make: Projects

Build a Monochron clock kit

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