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nitro2k01 investigates using the versatile Arduino platform for use as synthesizer modules -
The idea of using my Arduino for modular synth utilities started out as a crazy idea that I’m now starting to seriously like. The pictures above shows my first design, an oscillator. (I have plans for other modules, see the bottom of this post)Definite potential for this application - a control voltage sequencer should be pretty straightforward to implement. Check out the site for detailed samples, analysis, and ideas for future iterations. - ModularDuino
The left picture shows the first prototype where I tried to use PCM to produce the sound. That didn’t sound too good, so I built an 8-bit resistor ladder passive DAC. But I only hade enough of one resistor value, so I used only that value. This gives a non-linear output voltage response. (Distorsion) Additionally I’m only using 6 of the possible 8 bits, further degrading the sound quality. The input voltage response does not conform to any standard (Eg 1V/octave) but has a inversely proportional relationship (f(V)=c*1/V, where V is the voltage, c is some constant and f is the resulting frequency) This relationship is not completely unlike how a Gameboy responds to sound values that you write to it’s sound controller. However, surprisingly enough, it seemed almost impossible to hit musically dissonant intervals, so it seems like I did something right.
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Arduino Pocket Piano Synth Kit
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Ed Piskor says:
Over the past year I put together a few graphic novels dedicated to hacking/phone phreaking/hi-tech history/culture. Thanks to some really great reviews on different podcasts, blogs, and forums, I've been able to distribute my books completely myself via my website completely bypassing traditional book distribution methods.There is a lot of historical/semi-historical references within like Steve Jobs and Woz in Alice in Wonderland garb selling Blue Boxes.

MAKE Gift certificates are available - Can't decide what to get your favorite Maker, Crafter or Hacker? Give them a gift certificate good for anything from the Maker Shed with the amount you choose. And best yet, you can choose to email it to them and avoid those long postal deliveries. A great last minute present that could spark a lifetime of making.


The Open Reel Ensemble plasticizes voice and instrument recordings by way of USB controlled reel-to-reel tape machines.
Sound Performance with Bending Reel-to-Reel Tape Decks. I Remade Old Reel-to-Reel Analog Tape Recorders to Musical Instruments and Enjoyed Music Session with Companion in University. And We Performed Music by Using this Instruments. ("Open Reel Ensemble" Will Perform 12th Japan Media Arts Festival in February, 2009)plus the gear looks rather neat-o! - Open Reel Ensemble [via Califaudio] Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Music | Digg this!
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John Updike You've said that it was fairly easy to write the Rabbit books. Do you write methodically? Do you have a schedule that you stick to?Daily Routines (via Kottke)Since I've gone to some trouble not to teach, and not to have any other employment, I have no reason not to go to my desk after breakfast and work there until lunch. So I work three or four hours in the morning, and it's not all covering blank paper with beautiful phrases. You begin by answering a letter or two. There's a lot of junk in your life. There's a letter. And most people have junk in their lives but I try to give about three hours to the project at hand and to move it along. There's a danger if you don't move it along steadily that you're going to forget what it's about, so you must keep in touch with it I figure. So once embarked, yes, I do try to stick to a schedule. I've been maintaining this schedule off and on -- well, really since I moved up to Ipswich in '57. It's a long time to be doing one thing. I don't know how to retire. I don't know how to get off the horse, though. I still like to do it. I still love books coming out. I love the smell of glue and the shiny look of the jacket and the type, and to see your own scribbles turned into more or less impeccable type. It's still a great thrill for me, so I will probably persevere a little longer, but I do think maybe the time has come for me to be a little less compulsive, and maybe the book-a-year technique which has been basically the way I've operated.
We've spoken to a number of writers who said they wrote a certain number of pages every day. There's a lot to be said for having a routine you can't run away from.
Right. It saves you from giving up.
These bailouts are an awful idea -- the worst of K St. capitalism (== kapitalism) inviting an insanely bad future for the industries affected. If there's one thing worse than Detroit managed by the managers who have been driving the American auto industry into the ground for the past three decades, it is Detroit managed by politicians....
People speak about this as if not bailing out Detroit means automobile production in America ends. That's not what failing to bailout Detroit means. Not intervening now would be these automakers would enter bankruptcy. And bankruptcy means the assets of these dinosaurs get reorganized: Someone else buys these companies, at a price the market sets, and runs them profitably, because of the price the market set.
People in Japan who enjoy sharing news about odors can use Nioibu.com to mark their location and circumstances.
A few examples: watermelon smell, ferret odor, old lady stench, gasoline fumes, and curry.
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Raelinda Woad is a storyteller and jewelry maker.
She began in jewelry in the 1980's working her way up from bead sorter to jewelry maker's assistant.On New Years Eve of 1989 Raelinda had a chocolate induced vision: Become a storyteller! Two years later she was sharing her 'true stories that haven't quite happened yet' with coffeehouse audiences across New England. This led her to create and host StoryLAB, a storytelling concert series in Harvard Square's legendary Club Passim.
In the early 90's Raelinda combined her love of storytelling with her skill as a jewelry designer. The result was Storyteller Jewelry, a line of wearable books with her own coffeehouse stories hidden inside.
Take a look at some of her work, and maybe even read one of her stories.
Do you tell stories? How do you combine your various creative selves? Add your comments below, or send your photos to the Make Flickr Pool.
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Here's a pretty cool video for Field Music's "In Context" featuring one very long sharpie line - eventually revealed as a sort of contour-drawing mural. Aah yes, drawing all over your walls does equal sweet, sweet freedom.
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Roger Asling wrote a program that draws pattens of polygons generated from a string of digital "DNA." He then mutated the DNA and selected the DNA that generated polygons that looked more like the source image (in this case, Mona Lisa) to live and have mutant babies. He repeated the process 904,314 times until he ended up with a 50 polygon image that looks just like the Mona Lisa.
Genetic Programming: Evolution Of The Mona Lisa (Via Presurfer)

The always-crafty and industrious Jeffrey and Jillian over at Because We Can have created these really cool CNC-milled puzzle-like wooden robots. They stand 10" tall and are made from 100% sustainably-harvested American Maple. Finished with water-based dyes and waterborne lacquer. Available in blue, dark brown and blonde. $40 each.
They also sell some pretty awesome wooden CNC-cut Christmas trees for $35 each. Very Dr. Seuss meets Tim Burton, i.e. pure win!
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Pizza Hack: Broil Your Pies (via Kottke)
And here’s the good news: Although the Domino's dough looks horrid compared to the corner pizza’s store (dense and flat and a weird color), for thin-crust pizzas made in this cast-iron-and-broiler fashion, Domino's is actually ... really good. In a four-person blind-taste test, the favorite between Domino's and our corner pizzeria was split right down the middle. Honest. People couldn’t tell the difference. And the Domino's dough, probably due to some mysterious ingredients, was very, very easy to stretch into a pie. This cooking technique took dough from one of the worst pizzas available and made it taste good. The fact that Domino's foists doughy, disgusting pizzas on the public when it could easily do otherwise is almost a crime.
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Robyn Miller writes on Cool Tools:
A few weeks ago, my 11 year-old son and I decided to sculpt, so we got out SuperSculpey Firm polymer clay. After working with this newer style of Sculpey for a while, we decided it totally kicks ass on softer styles of Sculpey. Why? Because it doesn't flop over on its side when handled. And it's firm enough to keep its shape when carved. My son began making a tank. So I made a tank. We have yet to paint them.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Arts | Digg this!The Sculpey brands are especially encouraging for beginners, yet professionals artists depend on them as well. Pros ranging from vinyl toy artists to designers for film use it. Unlike normal clay, Sculpey hardly changes shape or size when baked, and hardening takes place quickly, at the relatively low temperatures of a convection oven (even a toaster oven will do).
Because of its polymer base, there's loads of fun techniques to try with Sculpey, like baking your sculpture for only half the allotted time. When you take it out of the oven, prematurely, you'll find your little masterpiece has a soft, rubbery texture. In this state, it won't loose its shape and can be easily carved with a knife or a file. Have you cut too much away? Add a little more Sculpey and put it back in the oven for more cooking!
I buy my Sculpey at my local art supply store, but it can also be found online.
SuperSculpey Firm
$13 (1 pound)
Available from AmazonManufactured by Polyform Products Co.
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You can search for some magazines through Google Book Search new, of note... Popular Science, Popular Mechanics & Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. All of the magazines also have a map at the bottom so you can see where things were and/or mentioned, oh and some ads from Google - they are likely doing some type of revenue share with the publishers in that program. More info @ the Google blog.

Popular Science. Looks like they have 1890 to almost present.

Popular Mechanics. Looks like they have 1900 to almost present.

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.
Ive spent the past two days seriously rocking out to the two-disc set Theme Time Radio Hour: With Your Host Bob Dylan, a collection of pop songs with fascinating written introductory material from Dylan. The variety of genres spanned here is amazing, from old reggae to swing to coutnry and western to the White Stripes, and Dylan mixes in rare finds with classics to make a collection that might as well be called "Pop: this is that it's all about" -- 50 incredibly catchy, funny, songs that use a deceptive accessibility to convey all kinds of messages.
Though many are just plain fun -- and amazing. I love Paul Chaplain and His Emeralds's cover of "Shortnin' Bread" -- if you've heard The Cramps version of this, now you know where they got it, a raunchy, rockabilly version with a mad drummer and a crisp, clapped Bo Diddley beat that makes it just rock. Other standouts are Betty Hall Jones's "Buddy, Stay Off the Wine" (imagine Anita O'Day attaining Mae West's cynicism and then singing lyrics by Gilbert and Sullivan); Slim Gaillard's "How High the Moon" (an arrangement so gonzo it might have originated with the Marx Brothers); The Sons of the Pioneers' "Cool Water" (not the version I knew -- a much more upbeat arrangement that makes you want to clap along), two back-to-back covers of "Pistol Packin' Mama" that show just how wide the distance between interpretations can be; and dozens of others.
It's like hitting shuffle on Bob Dylan's MP3 player and hitting the sweetest run of tappin' tracks serendipity has to offer.
Theme Time Radio Hour: With Your Host Bob Dylan
This wonderful illustration was done by Slade Oakes, age 6. His parents found it in his art pad shortly after Slade's dad brought home the Star Wars Trilogy on DVD.


Here's a great robot gift guide from the folks at robots.net, Steve writes -
It's time once again for our annual countdown of the top 10 Christmas gift ideas for robot geeks. With the growing popularity of robots, everyone knows at least one person who spends all their time building strange little machines. What do you get them for Christmas? Well, we're here to help. The robots.net founding editors, steve, Rog-a-Matic, and The Swirling Brain have made their lists and checked them twice. Then we took those three lists and, using a carefully measured and computed statistical comparison method that we call "close your eyes and poke things randomly with your finger", we determined what the top 10 gift ideas are. As usual, we've thrown in a few stocking stuffers and extras that we thought were cool even if they didn't make the list

For our MAKE Robot Gift Guide, we've put together a sampling of robot-related offerings from the Maker Shed, as well as some other robots we fancy. If you give or get any of these bots for the holidays, or especially if you or your recipients, hack them, we'd love to hear about it.

A knit piece by Ben Fino-Radin
Here's a cool panel at the New Museum this Friday:
CRAFT HACKERSRead more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Events | Digg this!Rhizome.org panel discussion
Fri, Dec 12, 2008 | 7:30 PM
New Museum of Contemporary Art
Craft Hackers is a panel discussion among artists who use crafting techniques to explore high-tech culture and the relationship between needlework and computer programming. Panelists include Cat Mazza, who translates moving images into stills knit in yarn; Christy Matson, who uses Jacquard Looms (some of the earliest computers) to knit landscape images from computer games; Ben Fino-Radin, whose witty needlepoint sculptures translate the World Wide Web into yarn and plastic, one pixel at a time; and Cody Trepte, whose embroidery of retired computer punch cards rekindles an old-fashioned love affair with the hand of the artist.
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Oh, and please pretend that whole time that they were taking away your toothpaste and X-raying your shoes (for X-ray-invisible explosives!) that they weren't willing to allow anyone with a part-time assistant harbor master's badge carry a gun into the cockpit.
Grant denies lying. He once worked for a Coast Guard subcommittee, which is a division of Homeland Security. However, he is not an agent, officer or employee of Homeland Security and has never been authorized to represent himself as a DHS agent.Man Accused Of Posing As Armed Federal Agent (via Schneier)On the license to carry he obtained from the Rockland Police Department, Chief John Llewelyn notes, "He put down DHS and had a polo shirt with DHS embroidered on it."
Grant is charged with impersonating a federal agent and making false statements.
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Warhammer Online to carve statuary of the top players Discuss this on Boing Boing Offworld
Mythic's introducing a rather cool little addition to Warhammer Online, aimed at making outstanding players feel more like ineluctable legends of the game lore. Starting with patch 1.1, Mythic will reward the top ten players on each realm with statues of their characters in the main city centers.I think it's a nice little touch. MMORPGs need more of these sorts of gestures to the player, incorporating their deeds and heroism into the fabric of the game lore to both inspire and garner the jealousy of their fellow players.
They found that countries where religious belief was strong, such as Ireland and Italy, tended to be the least accepting of nanotechnology, whereas those where religion was less significant such as Belgium or the Netherlands were more accepting of the technology.Religious 'shun nanotechnology' (BBC News), Religious beliefs and public attitudes toward nanotechnology in Europe and the United States (Nature Nanotechnology)
The US was found to be the most religious country in the survey, and also the least accepting of nanotechnology...
The researchers say it is understandable that there would be a conflict between religious belief and nanotechnology, especially when looking at what they call "nano-bio-info-cogno" (NBIC) technologies, the potential to create life at a nano scale without divine intervention.
"It's not that they're concerned about not understanding the science, more that talking openly about constructing life raises a whole host of moral issues," said Professor Scheufele.
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The UK NO2ID group has produced a fantastic video about one of the dangers of Britain's new database state: Take Jane tells the story of a woman whose vengeful ex- is able to follow her around because she has to update the national ID database every time she moves, and any database that has that many people who are allowed to consult it will have someone her ex-husband can bribe to let him know where she's living at all time.

Wow, this video of the "Multiple Kill Vehicle Test" is crazy, it's some type of weapon from Lockheed Martin and it's scary. That said, what an amazing project and precision rocketry...
This week I made the open source Trippy RGB Waves Kit by Mitch Altman. I like this kit because it's perfect for someone learning to solder, yet it has programming headers so the advanced user can hack it up. The original video was about 18 minutes long. Too long in my opinion, so I sped it up a bit. OK, a lot!
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If you have about 18 minutes to spare, and really like detailed step-by-step instructions, check out the full video in real-time below. Thanks!
var digg_url = 'http://digg.com/educational/How_to_Tuesday_Trippy_RGB_Waves_kit_v1_0';
In the Maker Shed:
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Trippy RGB Waves Kit v1.0
1. Rosemary's Baby"Drugged! The top 50 trips in movies"
2. The Big Lebowski
3. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
4. Altered States (seen above, with a new trance soundtrack by Bedrock)
5. The Matrix
Boing Boing Gadgets editor Joel Johnson writes:
The Philips Norelco Bodygroom ($50) is a shaver for men, specially tuned to the harmonic frequencies resonant with the hexagonal shafts of masculine hair for a shave that doesn't just cut your hair — it shatters it. (Or it's just a fancy double-edge electric clipper specifically marketed for men.)Episode duration: 04:22.Either way I tried one on various bits of my body, including, I discovered to my horror after I had already uploaded the video to the BBtv crew, what was to end up to be my exposed cock. Thankfully due to the magic of editing you can enjoy my aimless rambling without getting a flash of the juniors, which have been replaced with the soothing softness of a harmless kitten.
You can get an idea of how the Bodygroom works in the video, but here's a quick spoiler: I think the new Bodygroom is a pretty great, especially with the new attachments, although I don't know that it does a whole lot that you couldn't do with any other rechargeable clippers. Still, recommended.
Special thanks to fofurasfelinas for her very needed kitten pictures. And if you want a direct MP4 download, we have the technology.
Do let the fellas know what you think of this episode over in the Boing Boing Gadgets comments thread.
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Brent Marcus of Current points us to a pretty cool animated version of a 30-year-old interview with John Lennon.
In 1969, a 14-year-old Beatle fanatic named Jerry Levitan, armed with a reel-to-reel tape deck, snuck into John Lennon's hotel room in Toronto and convinced John to do an interview. This was in the midst of Lennon's "bed-in" phase, during which John and Yoko were staying in hotel beds in an effort to promote peace. 38 years later, Jerry has produced a film about it. Using the original interview recording as the soundtrack, director Josh Raskin has woven a visual narrative which tenderly romances Lennon's every word in a cascading flood of multipronged animation. Raskin marries traditional pen sketches by James Braithwaite with digital illustration by Alex Kurina, resulting in a spell-binding vessel for Lennon's boundless wit, and timeless message.I Met The Walrus (Current)
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Marina from Austria is a mouse agility trainer - check out this video of a mouse completing an entire course, it's really amazing! Via CuteOverload
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Monty on the Run
"Terence McKenna's Butterflies" by Erik Davis (Techgnosis.com), Klea McKenna's "The Butterfly Hunter" (kleamckenna.com)When Klea—who is now a fine art photographer earning her MFA at the California College of the Arts—first began excavating the trunk in 2007, she discovered that none of the butterfly packets had been opened. As she unfolded the the specimens, she discovered something else: the pieces of paper had their own stories to tell. She photographed about a hundred or so of the specimens, along with their paper wrappings, and turned these images into The Butterfly Hunter, an interactive gallery show and now a gorgeous limited-edition signed artist book available—along with select images from the project—at her website. A remarkable visual meditation on time, loss, and the culture of nature, The Butterfly Hunter is also a fascinating engagement—intimate yet cool—with what Klea described to me as her father’s “fanatical romanticism.”
Klea grew up in the swirling penumbra of Terence’s peculiar shadow, and, like many children of famous and colorful folk, had to consciously define her own creative voice apart from her father’s world. In its first, gallery iteration, The Butterfly Hunter did not mention her father’s name, because she wanted the work to stand on its own merit. It is a mark of her courage that her book takes on Terence's legacy, and a mark of her success that she does it with such candor and care.
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This "Magnetic Levitation Light Bulb" uses wireless energy transfer to power the floating bulb.The bulb is connected in parallel with a 100nF capacitor and copper wire coil and draws about 0.5 amps of current from the circuit below it. Check out the link below for the details on this interesting hack.
via Hacked Gadgets

Pooktre of Queensland, Australia grow trees into some impressive furniture forms among various other designs. A craft requiring much care and planning, their tree-working designs can easily take years to grow to completion -
In 1986 Peter had the idea of growing a chair. Nine years later Peter and Becky became partners. Pooktre was born. Together they have mastered the art they call Pooktre, which is the shaping of trees as they grow in predetermined designs. Some are intended for harvest to be high quality indoor furniture and others will remain living art.- Pooktre [via Environmental Graffitti]
More:

HOW TO - Grow A Chair: An interview with Richard Reames
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8-Bit Jesus: New Christmas Chip-tune Album by Doctor Octoroc via Waxy. He writes-
I’ve been working on a new album for the past few months and am releasing a free MP3 download of the first half - sort of a preview, I suppose. The album is entitled 8-Bit Jesus and contains 9 tracks thus far. Each one is a chip-tune version of a classic Christmas song done in the style of a different NES game.Super Jingle Bros is fun :) Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in Arts | Digg this!
?This GameBoy mod (called the "LightBoy") replaces the internal incandescent lightbulbs found in a typical system with ultra-bright LEDs to both save on power for the unit, as well as to illuminate the backlight even brighter. Check out the link for the how-to on this simple, yet effective hack.
via GetLoFi
Carlo Longino is an expert at the Insight Community. To get insight and analysis from Carlo Longino and other experts on challenges your company faces, click here.

Photograph by Jonathan Jamieson
Jonathan Jamieson of Dumfries, Scotland, did more than whittle away his vacation in the summer of 2006. While on a break from school, he turned common bamboo barbecue skewers into a delicate sculpture that gracefully delivers a rolling metal ball bearing down a series of chutes and turns.
Jamieson built the 2-foot-tall wooden sculpture, and a smaller, dual-track one, in the glass garden room of his parents' house. The structures are rather delicate, so their 17-year-old architect probably won't be taking them to university when he goes to study mechanical engineering this fall.
But his parents have other messes to worry about. There's an entire room in their house devoted to their son's projects -- microcontrollers, an R/C car made from K'nex, a Van de Graaff generator that stands hair on end. There are also juggling and unicycling gear, guitars, and an amp cluttering up the room.
"I like the look of them," Jamieson says, explaining why he constructed the tracks. "It's fun watching these, because the ball keeps changing direction and, because you can't see a direct track, it looks like the ball is moving around randomly."
Working from the bottom up, Jamieson stacked 10-inch bamboo skewers into a scaffolding and connected them with 3-inch strips of garden wire. He didn't begin with a preconceived plan, so he had to adjust as he went. The ramp lengths and angles, for example, needed tweaking the higher he went, lest the ball get moving too fast and derail.
"You decide where you want to take it. That's the freedom of it," Jamieson says. "You have to test it constantly 'cause you often put something in and it goes wrong and you take the piece out and try again."
To show his far-flung friends his creation, Jamieson posted video of his sculptures in action on You Tube. The video-inspired comments include, "You are my idol!" and "Better than LSD." Guess they liked it.
>> Rolling Ball Sculpture: ohthebanter.com/rbs
From the column Made on Earth - MAKE 13, page 25 - Megan Mansell Williams.
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?This huge, wall crushing robot looks like it might disrupt even the most rocking party.With an old school CRT as its head, it might be the ghost that DOS forgot.
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This is a simple way to make an Arduino compatible circuit on a breadboard. The only additional components needed are a 0.1µF capacitor and a 1k resistor. This is amazingly simple. I have to try this out for myself.
Here is a recipe for using the atmega168 as a standalone arduino. It uses the internal oscillator of the arduino running at 8mhz, and is powered at 3.3 volts. I used this together with a xbee radio modem for my wind-up birds project.
More about How-to: Simple breadboard Arduino
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This looks like it could be useful technique for your next build. At the very least, it is an interesting electrochemical experiment to try out. Just remember, copper sulphate is extremely poisonous, so keep your kiddies away.
More about How to electroplate with copper
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If you need some more decorations for the holiday, give this project a try. It's a paper star ornament that can be made from recycled materials. I like the fact that it folds up into a neat little book when the holidays are over.
Learn how to make Star ornaments
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In covering DIY technology from Japan, there have been quite a few kits and projects that have come along that would be of interest to makers outside of Japan, but are either not available for overseas ordering, or are available but may be subject to high shipping costs and long waits. Luckily, one very consistent source of excitement in the world of DIY kits and resources in Japan is Gakken, the publishers of magazine Otona no Kagaku (Sophisticated Science for Adults), and in addition to their magazine that includes a new DIY kit with each issue, they also produce a wonderful line of stand-alone kits. Lucky for residents of the US, the Maker Shed is proud to be the exclusive US distributor of Gakken's line of Sophisticated Science Kits for Adults, as well as their Mechanical Animals Series, thus saving you, the maker, from exorbitant overseas shipping rates and unbearable overseas shipping wait times. Gakken's kits provide the perfect mix of DIY, science, and history as they entertain as well as educate.
Below is an extended list of the Gakken kits that we have in the Maker Shed with descriptions of each item. You may have seen some of these items such as the hack-loving SX-150 Analog Synthesizer and the Mini-Theremin on the Make Blog before, but this list also includes some of the lesser-known gems like the Gravity Clock, the Stereo Pinhole Camera, and the New Edison-style Phonograph. Check 'em out:
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IT’S EMAIL TIME - Innocent-looking “clock” monitors the unread-message pileup in your inbox - by Tom Igoe.
I have a lot of anxiety about email. Every kilobyte in my Inbox destroys another minute of my life, but I can’t stop checking it. So I decided to embody my anxiety in a device that would worry about my incoming mail for me. I’ve always liked clockwork mechanisms, so I made my email fetish object in the form of a clock. For each kilobyte of new mail I receive, the clock ticks relentlessly forward.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in DIY Projects | Digg this!
I was expecting for there to be some way to tell the guy who gave you the quest that no, actually I don't want to torture a prisoner, but there didn't seem to be any way to do that. Worse, the quest is part of a chain you need to complete to gain access to the Nexus, which is the first instance you encounter (if you start on the west of the continent, as I did). So, either you play along and zap the guy, or you don't get to go to the Nexus.Torture (part 1), Tortuous Replies... (part 2) (via Wonderland)I did zap him, pretty well in disbelief — I thought that surely the quest-giver would step in and stop it at some point? It didn't happen, though. Unless there's some kind of awful consequence further down the line, it would seem that Blizzard's designers are OK with breaking the Geneva convention...
When I signed up to play WoW I knew it had fireballs, so I expected killing. I knew it had rogues, so I expected thieving. I had to wait until the second expansion to find out it had gratuitous torture. This does not fall within the parameters of what I was expecting. It's as if you were reading the new book 8 of the Harry Potter series and Harry turns to drugs and uses his magic powers for sport to blind people. JKR can put that kind of stuff in her books if she likes, freedom of speech being what it is and all, but it's shattered your expectations. I wasn't expecting consequence-free torture quests in WoW. Getting one was a shock.
The transition has asked that all documents submitted to the review process be available to the public. Public.Resource.Org has submitted 5 1-page policy proposals:5 Suggestions For Change (Thanks, Carl!)Needless to say, all ideas and instantiations of those ideas are in the public domain. No patents, no trademarks, no service marks, no copyright. Just some ideas for change.
- Rebooting .Gov. How the Government Printing Office can spearhead a revolution in governmental affairs.
- FedFlix. Government videos are an essential national resource for vocational and safety training and can also help form a public domain stock footage library, a common resource for the YouTube and remix era.
- The Library of the U.S.A. A book series and public works job program to create an archival series of curated documents drawn from our cultural institutions, with full-quality masters of the books and research materials made available for other publishers to draw on. The program would employ the GPO master printers and would recruit writers, archivists, artists, and other creative workers through a national call for participation.
- The United States Publishing Academy. GPO should expand current training programs such as the Institute for Federal Printing and combine them with current workforce development efforts to create a national academy similar to the National Mine Academy and the National Fire Academy, training its own workforce, the government, and the local schools in the art, craft, and science of publishing.
- The Rural Internetification Administration. Repurposing the Amateur Radio League, modifying spectrum policy, and injecting capital into rural coops can bring high-speed broadband to 98% of rural Americans just as the Rural Electrification Administration did in the last century.

Genetic Algorithm
(Thanks, Matthew!)

Behind Barbie of the Undead
(via Wonderland)

Nursery Rhyme Cupcakes
(Thanks, Amelia!)
Wearable Toy Piano (via Craft)
A Toy Piano embedded on a T-shirt. It has 8 keys from Do to Do (1 octave). You can play simple music by wearing the shirt and pushing the fabric button on the shirt. All the components from the toy piano (batteries, speaker, circuit board) are placed on the shirt and connected with poppers. All these hard components are detachable so that you can wash it if you wish.
"We believe there is special responsibility for companies who receive taxpayer dollars to ensure their workers have a voice on the job," SEIU's Lynda Tran said. "And those workers should have a seat at the table at the companies where decisions that impact the future of their families and the companies that employ them" are made.Citing bailout, union wants to organize bank workers
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We decided to put an offer up on Joe's website and MySpace. We told any fan that if they knew anyone who might be interested in Joe's music that they could send us an email and we send them as many copies of a two-song sampler CD as they wanted. Free. We even cover the postage. To keep costs down, we invested in a cd publishing system that burns and prints them robotically. Each CD has two songs, contact info, MySpace, and a reminder that the full cd was at iTunes. If someone lived near a place where a show was scheduled, we printed that show info on there as well. People requested as few as 2 and as many as 50. We sent all of them. Requests continued to pour in, and the more we sent out the faster the new requests came in. We're at the point now where we get about 15 a day. Joe writes a thank you in each and every one. And almost instantly, sales took off. Attendance jumped noticeably and MySpace/website action began a steady upward arc. More importantly, we built an incredible database of his most hardcore fans. And after receiving a mailbox full of cds for free, they are willing to do anything to help forward the cause. And it is the ultimate in target marketing.... you have people who already like your music passing it on to their friends, whose tastes they presumably know.The idea is definitely a bit different, but obviously can and does work on a small scale. The problem is that it wouldn't scale to a really large number very easily. It's also somewhat costly. Even if they've decreased the production costs, there are still costs in terms of resources, time and postage for every free CD they send out. It's good that it's allowed them to more closely connect with fans (and turn them into true fan promoters), but it seems risky to spend so much on promotions. So, while it can work on a small scale, and help a musician stand out as being especially fan friendly, it seems like it could be pretty costly if you tried to scale it up.

Here's an interesting contest: recycle discarded mattresses into useful products! Deadline has been extended to December 19:
The competition aims to encourage entrants to form groups capable of creating a consumer product, instructions detailing how to make the product, and a plan for production on a larger scale. Entrants must create designs that take into account the volume of mattress waste generated each year. Groups are encouraged to utilize local resources, including existing manufacturing facilities and other waste products.
Via Core77.
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Man, this is super cute... Obento! "Cute lunches made for me by my girlfriend!" - her site is here.

Check out this neat wearable toy piano made by instructables user mikamike, it's hacked from a toy and uses conductive thread and fabric buttons. Via Fashioning Technology.
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This would generate far too many tweets to be humane, no one in their right mind would want to follow a user that was announcing the arrivals of every train in every station on the BART network, which isn't even that big a network. You can imagine what a PITA that app would be for a subway system like NY or London. Not cool.
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I traveled to the Twin Cities to shoot the Maker Workshop segments of Make: television, so I needed to bring along a lot of my tools, materials, supplies, and parts. Both for on-screen making, and hotel room tinkering. Sometimes, we figured out how to present our projects at the eleventh hour, so I had one night to cook up a demo to fit the new talking points. (Bill Gurstelle was probably up a lot later than I was, building brand new trebuchets and such...)
Once, I forgot to bring solder. I ended up twisting lots of wires together in my room late at night. I ought to get a big Pelican case or tackle box full of gear, that's ready to go. You never know when you'll be called on to hack something together in the field. Anyone have suggestions for their mobile workshop?
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Today on Offworld, we saw stunning side-by-side comparisons of the real D.C. versus the post-nuclear version in Fallout 3, watched Dragon Quest in ballet form, noted that the classic Space Invaders would be coming along with its latest futurist remake, and thought about the right and wrong ways to present in-game ads.
We also looked at Scribblenauts, a new DS game from 5th Cell that promises to make 'anything' you can think of a usable object in the game, coveted Meat Bun's latest gaming T-shirt designs, watched how a budding love story was scrapped as Left 4 Dead's opening cinematic evolved, and got deep with an existentialist meditation by way of Paperboy, Tapper, and Balloon Fight.
Finally, we listened to '8-bit Jesus', a new chiptune Xmas album that reinterprets holiday hits in the style of NES soundtracks, got even more retro with extruded 3D dioramas of 2D classics like Mario, Zelda and Pokemon, heard unsubtle hints of a new Crackdown sequel, looked at Gish creator Edmund McMillan's new video game mashup "album", and, most amazingly, learned how to build a portable talkbox with a bendy straw and the DS's Korg software synth so that we might remake Pete Drake's Forever in handheld form.
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From the all-important step #2 of this Instructable: "Don't Poison Gas Attack Yourself, etc."
Useful for anyone who wants to make welds without spending much:
Welding is usually the easiest and quickest way to build something. You just put the parts next to each other and weld them. You don't have to drill bolt holes and go to the hardware store for bolts. Metal doesn't split like wood. It doesn't have grain and knots that make every piece different. You can get all kinds of scrap metal for free. Bed frames, parts of old cars, etc etc. And you can make your own welder for free or close to it.Read more | Permalink | Comments | Read more articles in DIY Projects | Digg this!Don't have access to a welder? LIAR!! All it takes is some junk car batteries and a welding rod.
Or some dead microwave ovens to butcher for the transformers.
Make your own industrial revolution!
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