Makers of MAKE 133
BoredStiff writes "An NPR show called The Connection inteviewed The Makers of MAKE.
They discussed who's behind MAKE magazine, and why they think there are a lot of people out there with an interest in re-inventing with the
gadgets that run our daily lives. MAKE magazine is a deliberate throw-back to the how-to science manuals of an
earlier era -- back when technology wasn't so cheap people did more 'do it yourself.'"
Good magazine so far... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Good magazine so far... (Score:1)
Re:Good magazine so far... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Good magazine so far... (Score:1)
Re:Good magazine so far... (Score:2)
Pick your Poison (Score:2, Funny)
It's great to have a magazine dedicated to the people who want to build their own stuff. I remember carving my first spoon. Out of a bigger spoon.
The problem is that you end up with all these little toy gadgets and nowhere to put them. I wish there was a magazine that explained how to build something that could be used to store those gadgets.
Re:Pick your Poison (Score:1, Funny)
Oooh, and a mouse based wired remote control for the old TV in
Re:Pick your Poison (Score:3, Funny)
$
checking for car... yes
checking for scheduling availability... yes
checking if living with mother... no
checking for cash... no
**ERROR cash >2.01 not found. REQUIRED.
$ make
make: *** No targets specified and no makefile found. Stop.
Hrmm...
Re:Pick your Poison (Score:5, Funny)
You'll run into compatibility problems when you start invoking the more advanced 'relationship' or 'marriage' functionality; the program will complain vociferously, but let's face it; most of us just want to play around with 'girl' for an evening or two, and then try something else. "cash.so.0.0.1" does fine, so long as you can pretend it's "cash.so.2.0.1".
Re:Pick your Poison (Score:2)
make: *** No rule to make target `love'. Stop.
Re:Pick your Poison (Score:1)
Re:Pick your Poison (Score:2)
Re:Pick your Poison (Score:2)
Get a subscription to MAKE... (Score:5, Informative)
Coupon, Amazon back-issues (Score:2)
If you want back issues, amazon is your best bet (you can sometimes find them on half or ebay, but most people hang on to them. Issue 1 [amazon.com] and Issue 2 [amazon.com] are available. If you do want to use them for a subscription, subscription, [amazon.com] you can get 4 issues for $35 and $5 off a future amazon order.
All of the amazon links have a short video
Even better deal: free issue AND $5 off (Score:2)
Re:Get a subscription to MAKE... (Score:1)
I'v had my MAKE subscription since they launched. Definately a cool mag.
mind if I borrow that sig? (it worked at least once)
But (Score:4, Funny)
Re:But (Score:1)
nice introductions (Score:2)
Re:nice introductions (Score:1)
url to the mag (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.oreillynet.com/oreilly/make/ [oreillynet.com]
uh.... try this: (Score:1, Informative)
make rocks! (Score:2)
I never could figure out how to use "imake". Too complicated. And remember the language Prolog that Borland tried to push!? It was really "make" in disguise.
"make" is really what's behind all the software we use. If it weren't for "make", there would be no new Linux builds.
Re:make rocks! (Score:1)
--
grof domru poct oft hadram
MAKE the magazine? (Score:1)
Yeah, I saw a copy of one at Hooters.
It may be a throwback (Score:5, Interesting)
As I've been digging to find resources for my new site (listed in my sig), I've been thrilled to discover just how many projects are out there fully-documented in arenas I've never messed in myself.
Last night, I made a batch of plastic in my kitchen to put a USB memory key back together. I found the recipe for casein plastic online, didn't have to leave the house because all of the ingredients were already there and I had never even heard of casein plastic until I stumbled across it for site research.
Projects like that, the little laser tripwire kit I found that can be combined with mirrors to give you the security grid shown in every bad heist movie, etc. are all over the place.
Fortunately, it looks like, via their blog and more recent web content (like their contest to start a dead car in the middle of nowhere) that their topics may become more diverse.
Re:It may be a throwback (Score:1, Funny)
Don't forget the whole Slashdot crowd has been doing-it-themselves for a long time as well! Maybe someday when we can get some chicks we won't have to take matters into our own hands.
Re:It may be a throwback (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:It may be a throwback (Score:2)
Re:It may be a throwback (Score:2, Interesting)
Now, the amount of old electronics that can be reused instead of trashed is amazing...LCD panels, mp3 player, interfaces between computers and motors and sensors, video and wireless transmissions. All for mostly dirt cheap. Tinkerers can always stay ahead of corporate development, and it's way more fun.
Danny
Re:It may be a throwback (Score:2)
They're only on the second issue. I have the first one and the feature story was about making a camera rig to hang from a kite. And the second most detailed story, as I recall, was the camera stabilizer that was featured on slashdot many months ago.
My point is that neither of these are computer-centric at all. They're the kind of traditional DIY projects that geeks of all sorts can sink their teeth into. I think the
Re:Care to share? (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.suzy.co.nz/suzysworld/Factpage.asp?Fact Sheet=114 [suzy.co.nz]
Make Casein Plastic
Casein is a plastic that is made from milk. It was one of the first plastics ever made and was used for making things like buttons.
What you need:
An adult to help you
2/3 of a cup of milk
8 teaspoons of vinegar
a pot
a pl
Re:Care to share? (Score:2)
This is by far the easiest cheese to make. Called Queso Blanco in the Spanish speaking (it means "white cheese") world it is used throughout the world by different names. It can be eaten strait or mixed in with various dishes. Try it in your lasagna recipes instead of Ricotta or in addition to it. Yum!
INGREDIENTS
.
1 Gallon Whole Milk
1/4 Cup White Vinegar**
.
1. Heat milk to 180 F (82 C) stirring constantly. Be careful not to burn
caesin is protein, you just made dried cheese (Score:3, Informative)
Another description of this "plastic" is acid-precipitated cheese.
You have made a lump of mozzarella and dried it out.
Re:caesin is protein, you just made dried cheese (Score:2)
Re:Use formaldehyde? (Score:3, Interesting)
9.4.5 Make plastic from milk casein
Casein is a phosphoprotein thermoplastic polymer that may be used to make insulators, buttons, handles, adhesives and artist's priming paint. We can make casein from the reaction of skimmed milk with ethanoic acid (acetic acid).
Calcium caseinate + 2H+ ---> casein + Ca2+
(i) To prepare an approximately 10% ethanoic acid (acetic acid) solution, add 1 mL of glacial acetic acid to 10 mL of water. Separate cream from milk or directly use skimmed milk.
Pour 200
Re:It may be a throwback (Score:1)
I'm sorry that it isn't yet ready. I stated pretty clearly in my post that it was a *new* site and, given that my aim is to have people help out in making it (part of the "making stuff" idea, you see), that not posting at all for fear of the not-yet-finished-site offending some seemed like a wasted opportunity.
Remember, t
Re:It may be a throwback (Score:1)
I'm not saying it does. However, MAKE and tons of "hacking" sites spend 25%-50% of their time on modifying iPods or making things for them.
And, there is no "my" iPod as I don't have one.
Re:in your sig (Score:1)
Tinker, hack, DIY...you know, making stuff. [makingstuff.net]
Don't know if they're visible to Anonymous Cowards or not, as I haven't visited the site that way in years.
Re:in your sig (Score:2)
Scientific American's Amateur Scientist (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Scientific American's Amateur Scientist (Score:2)
Re:Scientific American's Amateur Scientist (Score:2)
Anybody else remember the series of AS articles about polywater [wikipedia.org]. I'm sure that a lot of people tried to make the stuff before it was found that it did not exist.
Re:Scientific American's Amateur Scientist (Score:2)
Steve
This reminds me (Score:1)
- Know how they call 'root' in OS/400 lab?
- How?
- ROOT!
There's really ROOT there sometimes because ofPASE (Score:1)
my inlaws (Score:4, Funny)
When he sliced open his leg, my brother-in-law was totally incensed because Walgreen's didn't sell a home suture kit (you think that I'm kidding, but I'm not). I was really scared when my wife decided that she need Lasik eye surgery and began looking at lasers on ebay and googling 'home eye surgery how to.'
Re:my inlaws (Score:2)
My wife and her family are big DIYers, as is mine, but these people sound like DIY gods.
Re:my inlaws (Score:2)
Re:my inlaws (Score:1)
Re:my inlaws (Score:5, Insightful)
I used to be a DIY type, making homebrew beer, DIY beer coolers, DIY fish "pond" (in my dorm room) with DIY biological filter, etc. Several years after college if finally occured to me that what I made was invariably more expensive, less effective/efficient, bigger and just plain uglier than the commercially produced equivalents. And so I quit. (I still subscribed to MAKE when it was first published)
I think the point of DIY is being creative in solving problems, to be inventive, to have a sense of accomplishment when something is made. "I did that" instead of "I bought that." It is something that any DIYer can appreciate himself, even if no one around him does.
On a distantly related note, I fear there may be a decline in ingenuity in general, as mass produced fare is so cheap and so readily available that few people feel the urge to fiddle, to improve anything, since they can just go out and buy something else.
I'm currently mulling over a project to convert an optical mouse into a DIY (right) foot operated computer pointer with (left) foot operated pedals instead of buttons. I know there are commercial products that do this ($130-$200+) but they aren't _exactly_ what I envision.
Re:my inlaws (Score:2)
I'm just the opposite. I used to always assume that I couldn't make things, and that people who did were s
Re:my inlaws (Score:2)
My first big financial investment will be a condo though. Ah well.
Re:my inlaws (Score:2)
Yes. You hesitate for fear of making a problem worse, but with time and experience, you reach a point where you find that you're more than capable of fixing any mistakes you make. Once you're operating beyond that point, the fears and risks evaporate, you can do anything (almost). Any problems you create, you can fix, so you don't need to worry any more, you can create on making/changing/fixing.
What's REALLY cool, is seeing a surgeon or a vetri
Re:my inlaws (Score:2)
Then, sometimes you are not interested in owning the object as much as in actually owning the experience of having built the object.
Re:my inlaws (Score:2)
I have a different view - most commerical stuff is crap, and I can do better. Either it's crap because it's cheap and badly designed, or, (more likely) it's crap because modern mass-production technology is very limited in what it can do. Seriously, surprisingly limited. That's why so much crap is hand-made in cheap-labour countries - because for so many things, hand-made is the ONLY way that's possible to make it.
Now, flip that around.
Noth
Some other DIY/tinkering stuff (Score:5, Informative)
Other great DIY 'tinkering' sites I like are AX84.com [ax84.com], 18watt.com [18watt.com], and Byonics [byonics.com].
I'd post a link to my site with pictures/notes on my own hand-built tube amp project or my mini-GPS/APRS project (not yet out of planning), but I'm afraid of the /.-ing I'd take. :)
Great mag for hobbyists (Score:3, Interesting)
I prefer... (Score:4, Funny)
And now a word from our content provider. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:And now a word from our content provider. (Score:1, Funny)
Made my day, thanks!
Re:And now a word from our content provider. (Score:2)
Your regex is broken. It matches
linix
lunix
linux
lunux
You want
{linu,uni}x
I don't think there's a 'better' accurate regex, except maybe {linux,unix} which might match more efficiently.
Man I'm a geek...and it's worse that this is a Saturday night...
make(1) (Score:2, Funny)
Oh, wait...
Techie, but lots of areas (Score:4, Interesting)
As a former computer magazine editor myself, I kind of wondered about the viability of a dead-tree magazine for hackers in the age of the URL myself, especially one that costs fifteen bucks an issue. But MAKE has been very well-received, and they're supporting it with an active daily blog. I've enjoyed both issues so far, and am eagerly anticipating the next. It probably helps that it's from the O'Reilly book people, who really grok hackers, since they come from the same gene pool. Plus their production values are incredible. Full color on every page, high-quality paper, etc. Copies of MAKE will be around at least as long as those old National Geographics in your grandfather's attic.
Re:Techie, but lots of areas (Score:2, Interesting)
I've only done one mod for my DTV... after the batteries going dead deep into the dungeon of the sword of fargoal, I added a coax jack for a wall wart. It was one with a bypass pin so I can leave the batteries in and it won't try to charge them.
If you are quick, you can also pull out the wall wart and it will switch to batteries before the DTV resets, and you can take your game with you. I imagine a capacitor to hold up the voltage would make the transistion much easier, it would be more like
Re:Techie, but lots of areas (Score:2)
When you're hacking around with tools, tech-trash, and consumer products, instead of on a computer, it's usually necessary (or least highly desirable) to have your reference on paper, with you as you work.
I have a computer monitor on my workbench, as well as a wireless tablet-pc, and yet even when working from URL reference material, I often find it's quicker and easier to print the material out - a sheet of
Seems another case of retro-mania (Score:3, Insightful)
I grew up reading do-it-yourself books, encyclopedias, magazines (especially Popular Science and Popular Mechanics of the 50s, 60s, and 70s saved by family). Casting aluminum myself was childs play given I went to school with kids who built calculators out of discrete components in elementary school. Do-it-yourself was just what we did. It wasn't different than catching carp yourself instead of pestering mom and dad to buy them for the tank, or sometimes pond you made with a shovel and hose.
Looking this over, I'll probably eventually get around to subscribing. If only American schools of today put more emphasis on the basics that allow us to build more complicated technology. Wood shop, metal shop, auto, electronics, so many are now cut to nothing no matter the administration being right (the basics are reading, writing, math, history) or left (the basics are sociopolitics, emotions, and safety which precludes hands-on anything). People should know how to build the machines they use in case they ever do need to make them.
Maybe I'll buy a couple subscriptions for my local schools.
subscription (Score:2, Interesting)
Bad move!
Re:subscription (Score:2)
Re:subscription (Score:2, Informative)
Re:subscription (Score:2)
But... (Score:1)
Re:But... (Score:2)
When I was a little boy... (Score:5, Insightful)
These books had *everything* from simple things like making your own arc-lamp to radios, to steam engines, to stirling-cycle engines, to lightweight gasoline airplane engines ( for free flight ) to chassis for a go-kart, to simple transmissions, to making your own lathe, and so on. Plus, a *lot* of pyrotechnics. A LOT of pyrotechnics.
All gorgeously illustrated in the clean slightly-post-art-nouveau style of the 20's, with little boys and teenagers doing things that would get you arrested today.
What broke my heart were paragraphs that would say "Just go to your local chemist's and buy 12 pounds of insert-highly-toxic-explosive-compound". I'd ask my dad and say, "where can I get insert-highly-toxic-explosive-compound". He'd say, "Son, we live in a pussy age where you'd get arrested for just asking about that stuff."
I guess this is how we grow up today. Sterile, hairless wimps.
Re:When I was a little boy... (Score:5, Funny)
No, the reason you grew up as a sterile, hairless wimp is because all those highly-toxic-explosive-compounds your father and grandfather played around with had horrible effects on their genes and reproductive systems.
Re:When I was a little boy... (Score:2)
Funny, I thought that t
Re:When I was a little boy... (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/12655 [gutenberg.org]
Re:When I was a little boy... (Score:2)
You have made my day. I haven't read those books in ten years, and seeing it -- in OCR PDF no less -- has brought a tear to my eye. Some things shouldn't be forgotten.
Plus, check out the editor's note:
Re:When I was a little boy... (Score:1)
Hard rubber comb? I've never seen one, since plastic is used universally in cheap combs.
Another one that gets me is instructions for building AM radios that tell you to buy a ferrite core AM tuner coil. You can't buy such a beast! At least not easily. Perhaps they were common in years past, but the onl
Re:When I was a little boy... (Score:1)
I don't know a whole lot about ferrite cores, but what about this place: http://www.adamsmagnetic.com/cores.htm [adamsmagnetic.com]?
Re:When I was a little boy... (Score:1)
And, they appear to sell to large customers, and in big lots. They do custom ferrite core design and manufacturing.
Finally, I don't see a shopping cart on their website. What if I just want one? What if I'm 10 years old and all I want to do is build a radio during summer vacation?
This is not the solution for an individual hobbyist who might be 10 years old,
Re:When I was a little boy... (Score:2)
Awww, I only found one at a local GoodWill store. It had some "Schwartz" kid's name scribbled inside the front cover.
Great book for the most part, but like many Popular Mechanics publications of its day, somewhat short on verification.
For example, the "How to build a one-man glider" article had a wingspan too short for a 20-pound toddler and the illustration suggested a flight path which began from the edge of a cliff and proceded over a road and a railway.
I'm guessing th
Free Issue Promo code (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Free Issue Promo code (Score:1)
Re:Free Issue Promo code (Score:1)
Re:Free Issue Promo code (Score:1)
Not only gets you a copy of the premier issue as a bonus, it's also a DISCOUNTED subscription of $29.95. [this is the only discount I've seen, the rest of the codes are just for a free issue]
Enjoy!
Philip Torrone Rocks (Score:3, Interesting)
I pay attention to what Philip Torrone is up to.
He started the engadget Podcast [engadget.com], hackaday [hackaday.com], and now MAKE [oreillynet.com].
it seems like he's really good at getting cool stuff off the ground and then he leaves it to other people once its up and running
http://flashenabled.com/ [flashenabled.com] is his site
make yourself magazine! (Score:1)
make
make magazine
you need to get the binding right, or it'll fall apart! and don't link to mobile libraries!
MAKE has some goods but a lot of junk (Score:2)
The how-to articles are decent though. I just wish they would drop the rest of the crap and stick to the goods.
And, many think DIY'ers are stupid... (Score:2)
I myself learned to design a radio receiver, weld, turn a spindle in wood or
I was a contributor to issue one &... (Score:2)
Make could be really good if they went beyond just replicating the kind of stuff that appears -- for free -- on the web. So far, however, they just seem to be payin
Re:I was a contributor to issue one &... (Score:2)
MAKE is aimed at the sort that enjoy DIY but don't want to spend all day on the web looking for things to do and trying to weigh the appearent quality of the information they do find.
I've seen numerous DIY sites online, hundreds of 'once off' DIY project sites, and the one constant all them have is their inconsistancy.
MAKE takes the information and puts it together into a cohere
So far I'm not that impressed (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course it tries to be many things to many people. There are so many varieties of geekery, so their coverage of any one variety is cursory. Maybe for the type of geeks that have never done anything outside the software area, it's something to get their feet wet.
Popular Science sometimes finds some real, inspiring news that I didn't already read on the net. That is nice. I used to like Electronics Now back in the late 80's and early 90's; they had some really unique projects. EE Times is also an excellent industry news source, but I quit subscribing to the paper version now that it's 100% online and free. With Make, I hope that it just hasn't found its stride yet, not that it's going to be permanently just fluff.
What wives think (Score:1)
make? hardware news? (Score:1)
Definitely check out MAKE (Score:2)
btw, here's the maker of make (the program) (Score:2)
Re:Why pay? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why pay? (Score:2)
Like playboy, you get editorial quality & some amount of community built up around the for-profit publication. Also like Playboy, you're also paying for a regular dose of what you like to peruse & for nicely bound dead trees which are useful to have on hand when you're actually trying to accomplish the task at hand.