Sponsor

2012/08/11

[MAKE Magazine - daily] - MAKE

MAKE


Snake Cake! Run for Your Lives!

Francesca Pitcher from North Star Cakes in the UK created this amazingly realistic Burmese python cake for her daughter’s birthday. She posted it on her Facebook page and it’s gone viral from there. Duff Goldman from Ace of Cakes even tweeted about it.

Nice job, but maybe too realistic. I think I just lost my sweet tooth. Hey, wait, she could be onto something there — make all of those deadly sweets LOOK deadly.


Filed under: Food and Beverage





FeedBlitz Top Slot
powered byad choices

Maker Camp and Adam Savage, Live Tomorrow 10am PDT

Photo by Cody Pickens

Our online virtual summer camp, Maker Camp, has been getting unprecedented access to places like NASA, NatGeo, and the Smithsonian. Tomorrow is no exception. We will be broadcasting live from Adam Savage’s Man Cave. He will show us his epic setup, and we will ask him all about his life as a maker. This is behind-the-scenes, special access, and totally badass. To tune in, follow MAKE on Google+, and look for the Hangout on Air, starting at 10am PDT.


Filed under: Announcements, Kids & Family, Makers, Shop Craft




Build a Touchless 3D Tracking Interface with Everyday Materials


[ad_block]mz_radioshack_125x125[/ad_block]Combine low-tech materials with some high-tech components and build a completely Touchless 3D Tracking Interface. Explore capacitive sensing by using several panels of cardboard lined with aluminum foil. These panels, when charged, create electric fields that correspond to X, Y, and Z axes to create a 3D cube. With the aid of an Arduino microcontroller and some supplied code, movements inside the cube are tracked as your hand moves around inside the field.

For Weekend Projects makers looking for an introduction to Arduino, this is a great project to learn from. Once you’ve gathered all your parts, this project should only take a couple hours to complete – you’ll be playing 3D Tic Tac Toe before the weekend is over!

Once your touchless 3D tracker is up and running, what you do with it is only limited by your own imagination! The original implementation of this project comes from media artist Kyle McDonald, who has suggested the following uses and applications:

  • Make an RGB or HSB color picker
  • Control video or music parameters; sequence a beat or melody
  • Large, slightly bent surface with multiple plates + a projector = “Minority Report” interface

Sign up below for the Weekend Projects Newsletter to receive the projects before anybody else does, get tips, see other makers’ builds, and more.

[weekend_projects]

More:
See all of the Weekend Projects posts


Filed under: Arduino, MAKE Projects, Weekend Projects





FeedBlitz Top Slot
powered byad choices

Haunting Drone Instrument

Tom Fox of VulpeInstruments has unveiled another one of his creations, which uses the action of a grand piano to bend the notes in a motor-controlled drone instrument. It’s called the Dronemachine MKII.

From Tom’s site:

This latest instrument is an evolution of The Dronemachine I made a few months back. It uses the outer core of an electric fan motor as a pickup, a cassette player motor drives a piece of string which causes the musical strings to vibrate. The wooden peg looking things are actually part of the action in a Grand Piano, when you press down on the end, they raise the washers and shorten the length of the wire. It’s a pretty simple concept but it’s taken me ages to figure out how to put it into action!


Filed under: DIY Projects, Music




Mask Making for the Viking Procession in Providence

AS220 Artist-In Residence Dennis McNett (Wolfbat Studio) has led workshops in mask making all this week, and the results are remarkable. Over 70 people have made piles of masks and helmets, from the vacuum formed wolves and skulls above to the bird-embellished Viking helmets below. These will all be strapped to a menagerie of characters who will take to the streets in a viking procession in tomorrow’s Foo Fest and RI Mini-Maker Faire.

These masks were made in the AS220 Labs vacuum former. The purple flocking is recycled from a jewelry manufacturer, and the images were silkscreened in the AS220 Print Shop.

The mask forms are built up from cardboard and masking tape.


Filed under: Art





FeedBlitz Top Slot
powered byad choices

DIY Caveman, Today at Maker Camp

For today’s Maker Camp Field Trip Friday, we travel to the Smithsonian Institute’s Museum of Natural History to visit human origins researcher Briana Pobiner. From the Smithsonian’s G+ page:

Briana Pobiner will show us the tools humans used for the earliest DIY projects thousands of years ago. Humans have always been makers–you might say we have DIY in our DNA–and we're excited to host the next generation of young makers on Friday.

Join us at noon Pacific, 3pm Eastern on MAKE’s Google+ page.


Filed under: Events & Holidays, Science




Megoperation – Huge Fun at Maker Faire Detroit

This giant-size version of Operation from Brian of the Lansing Makers Network was an enormous hit at Maker Faire Detroit. The game is played just like the original and uses scaled up pieces and kitchen tongs as tweezers. An Arduino detects any false moves and reports them to a computer running a custom Processing sketch. In addition to keeping score, the sketch also keeps track of the the fastest times, peak usage, number of games played and any other information Brian, a self proclaimed data fanatic, could think of. I was a bit disappointed that the ‘scare you to death’ buzzer of the original was left out. Maybe he could work that in on the even larger version he’s building for next year?


Filed under: Arduino, DIY Projects, Projects, Hacks & Mods, Toys and Games




Motor Mashup Master

By William Abernathy

Photo by Randy Grubb

Randy Grubb has one sweet job: working from his Grants Pass, Ore., garage, he builds hot rods. His rides, however, are far from ordinary. No small-block Chevy engines or deuce coupe chassis litter his yard. He builds from supersized truck, jet, and tank parts.

The son and grandson of dentists, Grubb seemed destined to continue the family trade until a glassblowing demo in college led him astray. Using French "lamp work" techniques, he built brightly colored glass sculpture paperweights, which earned him a good living for 20 years. For fun, he built cars.

At age 40, Grubb decided to take a year off to work on a giant car. The next month, 9/11 occurred, cratering the high-end collectible market. "There was no career left to go back to," he says. He poured his life savings and a year of work into the Blastolene Special, a 9,500-pound roadster built around a 29-liter, 910hp M47 Patton tank engine. Flush with new owner Jay Leno's cash, he found a new career: extreme cars, built on spec.

With the success and acclaim that the Blastolene Special brought him, Grubb continues to work long hours on new rolling sculptures, winning awards and (he hopes) a place in the pantheon of great coachbuilders. His latest creation, the Decoliner, mashes up a 1973 GMC motorhome and a 1955 White Motor Company cabover truck with Buck Rogers styling cues. With its polished aluminum finish, nautical portholes, and rooftop fly bridge for land-yachting, the Decoliner is a truly unique ride.

"I consider myself really lucky," Grubb says. "I can spend 3,000 to 6,000 hours on a single project in a culture where you can hardly get a three-second sound bite in. That's what it takes to make something special."

From the pages of MAKE Volume 31:

MAKE Volume 31The maker movement is making science exciting again. Forget the lame baking soda “volcanoes” and the zillion-dollar supercolliders — just as punk rock took music back from the supergroups and big studios, “punk scientists” are making inexpensive new tools to conduct real experiments in garages, schools, and hackerspaces. In MAKE Volume 31, you’ll learn how to make DIY laboratory equipment (even a scanning electron microscope!), create high-voltage sparks from falling water, control a cockroach electronically, get started in biotech, and see how individuals and schools are networking their data for real scientific discoveries. Plus: Get started with multicopters or servo controllers, and build an automatic dog ball launcher, great-sounding speakers with flashing LEDs, a classic folding-wing Rocket Glider (a new MAKE kit), an iPad music desk, a levitating solar Mendocino Motor, and much more.

BUY OR SUBSCRIBE!


Filed under: Automotive, Made On Earth, Metalworking




Lego Continuously Variable Transmission

Lego hacker Nico71, whose mechanical loom we posted earlier, built this great CVT:

Based on modified version of Zblj’s Transmission. This CVT enables a variation of the speed (and the torque) from 40rpm to 200 (1/5, 1,1) with constant speed for the motor (200rpm). This device is on the way to be included in a lego car. The two mechanical tachometers show respectively the speed of the motor and the speed of the output.

[via Core77]


Filed under: Automotive, LEGO




More Recent Articles




Your requested content delivery powered by FeedBlitz, LLC, 9 Thoreau Way, Sudbury, MA 01776, USA. +1.978.776.9498

 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Keep a civil tongue.

Label Cloud

Technology (1464) News (793) Military (646) Microsoft (542) Business (487) Software (394) Developer (382) Music (360) Books (357) Audio (316) Government (308) Security (300) Love (262) Apple (242) Storage (236) Dungeons and Dragons (228) Funny (209) Google (194) Cooking (187) Yahoo (186) Mobile (179) Adobe (177) Wishlist (159) AMD (155) Education (151) Drugs (145) Astrology (139) Local (137) Art (134) Investing (127) Shopping (124) Hardware (120) Movies (119) Sports (109) Neatorama (94) Blogger (93) Christian (67) Mozilla (61) Dictionary (59) Science (59) Entertainment (50) Jewelry (50) Pharmacy (50) Weather (48) Video Games (44) Television (36) VoIP (25) meta (23) Holidays (14)

Popular Posts (Last 7 Days)