Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Hardware Hacking Television Build Entertainment

A TV Show Based On MAKE Magazine 109

ptorrone writes "Make: television debuted online and on public television (broadcast / cable tv). The series encourages everyone to invent, reinvent, recycle, upcycle, and act up. Based on the popular Make magazine, each half-hour episode hopes to inspire viewers to think, create, and, well, make. Each episode can be viewed or downloaded DRM-free, in HD on makezine.tv — the show is also available on Vimeo, YouTube, blip.tv and iTunes."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

A TV Show Based On MAKE Magazine

Comments Filter:
  • If only... (Score:2, Funny)

    by calvert ( 1335203 )
    you could MAKE me watch it. Sorry, couldn't help it.
  • ...that will unfortunately never catch on. Sadly, people are lazy to the core, and would rather just throw old stuff out and buy kitchsy "rustic" art at some shop somewhere.
    • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @09:36AM (#26341923) Journal
      I strongly doubt that America's Next Top Model need fear for its slot; but as a niche program, MAKE is quite promising. Their magazine isn't on track to replace People on the newstands of America; but it has a solid niche, I suspect the show will be about the same.

      Also, you might be underestimating the willingness of people to try stuff like that. Look at scrapbooking: Most of the people doing it would be better off buying kitchy "rustic" art somewhere, given their skill and taste levels; but there are swarms of them doing it anyway.
      • It'll compete with ANTM, but only for the robotic girlfriend episode!

      • In light of our economy and a need to renew interest in science, It is POSSIBLE that it could replace top model. My guess is that it will require some interesting hosts and a tongue in cheek approach to it (think jon stewart). Heck, there are some bright actors and actresses. Approach one of them to do it.
      • Narrator: The depositions had been delayed, but the prosecution was about to get a Lord and Taylor bag full of evidence.

        Detective Munch: We supply the glitter, the glue, the crepe paper and the ready-made template pages for you to decorate and fill out with... "My Favorite Birthday," "Foreign Bank Statements," and of course, "Shh! Family Secrets."

        Narrator: The scrapbooking sting had helped the D.A. gather evidence against people as diverse as Ken Lay, Oliver North, but ironically not Martha Stewart.

        Detectiv

    • by that this is not und ( 1026860 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @09:37AM (#26341935)

      My main criticism of Make: is it's heavy reliance on kitch. There's some robotics in there, sometimes, but mostly it's kitch.

      • by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @11:33AM (#26343049) Homepage

        Exactly. Most of it feels like a bunch of guys still high from the last burningman, trying to make a knit hat and gourd into a eco friendly USB Automaton.

        They have some great gems, and I subscribe, but there is a pile of plain old, "what are you smoking" articles and ideas in it.

      • by smellsofbikes ( 890263 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @01:17PM (#26344499) Journal

        It's *hard* to try and carve out a niche where they are. On the one side you have Nuts&Volts, on the other Popular Mechanics.
        What they're aiming at is a group of people who *want* to experiment with interesting science/technology, but own a screwdriver and a closet full of obsolete servers.
        I look at it as a transitional magazine, trying to wean the Popular Mechanics crowd and turn them into the Home Shop Machinist crowd: people who actually can make things.

        But there is a big wide swath of creation that isn't addressed by many other magazines, particularly not mainstream magazines, and that's the hardware/software overlap area where MAKE is working: robotics, automation, and to some extent, art/technology (like Leah Buechley's sweaters knitted with conductive wiring and LED's soldered in so they can become wearable displays, or hardcore art cars).
        The question is: does it make sense, in light of the Internet, to have a magazine that covers this? The material's available on the Internet.

        I think the answer to that is similar to the answer of why do record companies still exist: because it's a way of connecting consumers to producers. You can't Google for things you don't know about, and most people, with TV mentality, just sit in front of the Internet and read about the same things they always have. MAKE brings up brand new things, shows (in some cases) how to build them, and introduces people to stuff they never would have tried. I would never have actually considered making pulsejets, actual thrust-producing, red-hot ones, if I hadn't seen the MAKE jam-jar pulsejet. Likewise I would never have considered actually machining Stirling engines if I hadn't seen the (Dean Kaman-designed?) pop-can Stirling they published. I'd read about both, thought they were cool, but actually seeing a step-by-step on how to build them, was motivational.

        It's easy to dismiss MAKE as kitsch. But the thing is: what's kitsch to YOU is something new and exciting to someone else who hasn't ever built anything more unconventional than a custom PC.

    • ...that will unfortunately never catch on. Sadly, people are lazy to the core, and would rather just throw old stuff out and buy kitchsy "rustic" art at some shop somewhere.

      What is your definition of "catch on" that would satisfy you? What percentage of garbage can actually be turned into something useful? And by "useful", I don't mean a bunch of garbage that's welded together and called art, which a microscopic number of people actually want in their homes.

      Anyway, too many people wring their hands about

    • by 0100010001010011 ( 652467 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @09:52AM (#26342041)

      Until the recession. There are stories all over the internet about how Goodwill/Salvation army is booming and how auto mechanics are seeing everyone repairing their old cars to extend the life.

      I'm hoping that changes the attitude of most Americans where 'old' isn't necessarily bad.

      • by Abcd1234 ( 188840 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @10:39AM (#26342441) Homepage

        The irony in this is that old cars, electronics equipment, and so forth, are typically far less efficient and/or environmentally friendly. As such, the unfortunate consequence is that the move to greater energy efficiency will likely be greatly hampered by the precise trend you've identified.

        Or: while old may not necessarily mean "bad", it sure doesn't necessarily mean "good", either.

        • Pffft. You just ain't thinking BIG. Hells, I took my old Trans Am with a blown engine... took a new engine right outta my old rider mower with the rotten deck. Try gettin a more efficient car anywhere in 'merica. Mofo run's on anything, too.

        • As such, the unfortunate consequence is that the move to greater energy efficiency will likely be greatly hampered by the precise trend you've identified.

          But are the newer vehicles, etc. actually enough more efficient to justify the energy cost of building them? There's more than one way to reduce energy consumption, and in general the manufacturing industry is a much heavier user than consumers.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by petgiraffe ( 539721 )

          ...the unfortunate consequence is that the move to greater energy efficiency will likely be greatly hampered by the precise trend you've identified.

          I disagree.

          In the long run old tech will eventually degrade beyond repair and will have to be replaced by whatever is available. Since the old equipment was kept running longer, more advances will have been made by the time the new equipment is purchased. I propose that it is more likely that by leapfrogging from the very old to the very new the energy savings and environmental impact from not manufacturing, transporting, and discarding all the interim equipment will outweigh the inefficiencies of maintai

          • That may be, but in the case of vehicles, we're talking decades of use before the hardware finally fails. The same goes with some computer hardware (for example, the firewall I use is an old, extremely inefficient PC, and won't be upgraded any time soon).

            As such, if the goal, right now, at this moment, is to move toward more efficient technologies in order to increase energy independence and reduce our impact on the environment, then any trend which encourages continued use of older technology will work pr

            • In the case of vehicles, my craptacular 2002 Saturn s-series (and my wife's 1996 model) easily gets 36 mpg with an automatic transmission with reasonably proper maintenance. If I watch the lead foot carefully, I can squeeze out around 40-44, especially on extended trips. My friend with the new prius only gets 49-50 on the x-way, although they get in the mid-50's in city driving. My parents and sister with a new Corrolla and Fit get 38ish on the x-way and 30-32 max in the city.

              My car has 75k miles on it and

      • by zappepcs ( 820751 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @10:43AM (#26342497) Journal

        There was a time, before surface mount components, when US manufacturers made products to last. Products that were repairable. Products of quality. About the time that surface mount components came along, everything turned to 'throw away' production values. If the electronics is not repairable, no need to make the rest of it last 27 years. This was before trade with China. Zenith televisions? Remember them? Motorola started making throw away radios about 1988. Before that you could use the mic cord to repel from a burning building. Walmart made stuff cheaper, and to keep up, manufacturers started making things of lower quality to be cheaper. Later on, there was a kind of backlash on the cheaper craze, and we have Lexus et al to show for it.

        Chances are that your phone was designed to be replaced before or at the end of life of the battery in it. It's not designed to be upgraded or refurbished per se'... just replaced. Your microwave oven is the same, and on and on. Many things manufactured in the last 15 years can't be maintained. Look inside a blender or other such appliance. If a piece of the plastic breaks, it's fucked. Nothing short of a super glue miracle will fix it. Does your car come with a gizmo for reading information from the computer? The typical handyman toolkit from Sears doesn't have a spark plug wrench any more.

        It will take quite a bit to turn the throw away consumer into a maintenance consumer. There are some brand names that still represent value and quality. Hopefully they will see a benefit from all this and other will have learned their lesson about quality.

        Interestingly, computers have not quite run the same gauntlet. Hardware quality has remained about the same. Custom hardware like Compaq still sucks for upgrading etc. but all in, pretty much the same or better quality for systems as in the last 15 years. Software has only improved, no matter how bad it seems some days :)

        Furniture restoration should revive. Home DIY will/is. Computers remain throw away in as much as they always were. New OS available, buy new hardware. This is why I like Linux. It breaks that cycle.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by evanbd ( 210358 )

          On opening my oscilloscope, you will find a pair of warnings. The large one at the top says "DANGER HIGH VOLTAGE." The one underneath reads "It is desirable that only silver bearing solder be used on the ceramic terminals and for tinning the iron. Ordinary tin-lead solder may be used but repeated use will break the solder-to-ceramic bond. See your instruction manual." Above that is a small roll of silver-bearing solder.

          I wish it was still the case that the owner of a tool was expected to know how to re

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by zappepcs ( 820751 )

            Wow, Wish I still had mine. Moving overseas necessitated selling it. Your thoughts on knowing how to repair your tools should go for cars, appliances, homes, etc. I was shopping for a couple of hand tools lately, and was surprised at the number of people who work in tool stores that were confused. I was looking for an 'awl', a leatherworking knife, and and ice pick. Don't ask why, ask why they didn't know what I meant. Things are changing. I'm thinking my wire-twist pliers should be framed? I bought mine fo

            • by evanbd ( 210358 )

              Oh, my thoughts on the matter extend to most such things.

              Wire twist pliers are still used for safety wire in the aerospace world. They probably will be for some time to come.

              I actually got the scope for free (the company I worked at wanted the shelf space more than the scope, since they had better scopes and no particular use for the old one). Of course, I've replaced a number of the original adjustment pots and electrolytics, since they were starting to show their age. That, cleaning some of the dust ou

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          I don't think the good old days were as good as you remember. Everything works better now. Remember Magnum PI's Ferrari? My neighbor's new Camry makes more horsepower than that thing.

          There's nothing magical about surface mount components. They are just as repairable as the old through-the-hole components. It just takes a steadier hand and finer tip on the soldering iron.

          The difference is cost and fashion. I don't throw away much stuff because it is broken. I get rid of it because I don't want it anymore or

          • I don't think of those days gone by as particularly good. I'm just saying that things were made differently than they are today. Designed obsolescence is just how things are now. Apple is a hardware maker. An upgradable iWhatever is not in the company's best interest. Part of the problem is a quicker innovation cycle than previously. Part is manufacturing things so they are not upgradeable, never mind repairable. Have you seen any printer repair shops lately? You can still find cobblers, but used PC hardwar

          • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

            by ahoehn ( 301327 )

            Remember Magnum PI's Ferrari? My neighbor's new Camry makes more horsepower than that thing.

            More horsepower, but far less awesome.

        • Being able to fix SMTs makes me a bit of money on the side. People are seriously scared of them. It's not that hard with a good soldering iron. I use Wellers at work but I bought a very nice base station model for around $40.

          If it's a common problem a quick google will show sites like Make that have the parts and such that you need to fix common stuff. There are dozens of Washer, Drier, Dishwashers, etc DIY websites out there that show you how to do about anything you could want to do to them, including rep

          • by Hatta ( 162192 )

            I'd be interested to hear your recommendation for a soldering station. I'm interested in replacing my POS radio shack soldering iron with something I can control the temperature and replace the tips for some fine soldering. Mostly for modding game consoles.

            • I own a Circuit Specialists soldering station:
              http://www.circuitspecialists.com/level.itml/icOid/9258 [circuitspecialists.com]

              I own the CSI-STATION1A [circuitspecialists.com] which is $40. Replaceable tips. I got a needle point and a broad one and I use it at least once a month for the last year. I probably wouldn't have a problem using it 24/7. Much cheaper than weller and higher quality the cheap knockoffs. I find I get up to temp VERY quickly and it's just an all around solid product.

              CSI-STATION2A [circuitspecialists.com] has a digital temp display.

        • by Ruie ( 30480 )

          There was a time, before surface mount components, when US manufacturers made products to last. Products that were repairable. Products of quality. About the time that surface mount components came along, everything turned to 'throw away' production values.

          Surface mount components are not to blame. They are very desirable when working with high frequencies as you don't have to worry about lead inductance.

          Also, some of them make repairing boards easier - a through-hole component needs much care when removing

        • we have Lexus et al to show for it

          Do Americans realise that a Lexus is (a) just a Toyota with a different badge and (b) not really regarded as a prestige car outside the US?

          I am constantly taken aback by referenced in US films, TV shows etc to Lexii as though they are a status symbol of some worth.

        • Re: (Score:1, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward

          About the time that surface mount components came along, everything turned to 'throw away' production values.

          You're late, by about forty years, in most respects. I remember being at a party in the late 60s where a Magnavox salesman was gleefully explaining that his company was looking forward to the completely solid-state TVs then being developed. He said it would finally put an end to the home handyman/hobbyist taking the tubes down to the drugstore/hardware store, running them on the tube tester and buyi

          • I'm glad to see that I'm not the only one that has and appreciates quality older products. I still have a component stereo system that is 22+ years old. When I turn up the volume you can see the carpet rippling in front of the speakers, of which I have two pairs. Both speaker sets have been rebuilt several times, and either can hold their own against Bose speakers in terms of perceived quality of sound. I had to rebuild them mostly because you can melt crossovers if you try :)

            I still have several B&D to

    • by gad_zuki! ( 70830 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @11:44AM (#26343173)

      I also am turned off by the hipster attitude and kitsch. How many more TV-begone posts do they need? I mean, is being a jackass that shuts off the TV at a sports bar really that important?

      Or how many more lame PoV projects do we need to see? How many more random LEDs attached to random electronics? How many more times do I need to hear how cool "Steampunk" is? How many more pacman scarves do we need to see?

      There's a lot of potential at Make, but it stems directly from the boingboing tradition of urban American hipsterism thats very off-putting. Its just so provincial. Its really unwelcoming of anyone who isnt under 25 and lives in a big city and self-identifies with the indie rock movement. Heck, half the blog posts are needle and thread craft projects or just art projects, not tech projects.

      Id love to see Make grow up. Perhaps add a section for DIY automobile repairs/hacks/projects and home repairs/hacks/projects. I guess most Makers only ride tricked out bikes and rent.

      • While I can certainly understand your sentiment, I can't exactly give it an Amen.

        The boingboing mentality of adding "punk" to the end of everything does seem like a pointless pursuit and it does annoy me that Make tends to follow boingboing's trend too closely, but I view it as more of a trip and stumble than a downfall. Make simply needs maturation not reprehension.

        For many young Americans, Make is filling a gap that Popular Science and Popular Mechanics haven't filled for them. Some of these people have n

      • hi gad_zuki! - thanks for the feedback, i'd ask that you consider the following.

        -make is what makers are doing, many folks are learning electronics and kits like the miniPOV are very popular so they are building, hacking and sharing - that said, with over 20,000 posts and thousands of articles in print, there is maybe a dozen at the most of these projects.

        -as far as "DIY automobile repairs/hacks/projects and home repairs/hacks/projects" - please check the site and our past issues. we have "mod your rod" ton

        • by pspinrad ( 61417 )

          Thanks gad_zuki and ptorrone-- I work on the magazine, and like pt said, we have done automobile and car projects-- but want to do many more! Those are both areas where I personally at least feel less knowledgeable and would greatly appreciate any ideas or pointers you or anyone else might have. For example, I would love to start getting into lowriders, and hopefully also get some lowrider clubs to come and exhibit at Maker Faire.

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by ahoehn ( 301327 )

        Id love to see Make grow up.

        Hear Hear!

        I love MAKE, but they are a bit over concerned with making making "cool". Making your arduino chirp every time a new XKCD is posted isn't going to get anyone laid. Let's stop pretending.

      • "Provincial"? I think you need to look in the dictionary and look up the word...hipsters are hardly "provincial", they are sophisticated and urban. If you feel threatened by this, as it seems you do, then it is quite likely that it is you who are provincial. Let me guess, you must live in a place that has more churches than coffee shops? Do you know people who wear trucker hats...non-ironically? And would it kill you to do a few art projects instead of souping up the American JunkWagonMobile?
        • >hipsters are hardly "provincial", they are sophisticated and urban.

          No theyre not. They childish and ignorant. They are barely able to speak outside the confines of comics and bad 80s television shows. I should know, most of my friends are hipsters. Its depressing to talk to a 30-something who only knows Transformers and the latest Steampunk fashion.

          >Let me guess, you must live in a place that has more churches than coffee shops?

          Wrong again. I live in Wicker Park in Chicago. Its hipster central. Ther

  • by morgan_greywolf ( 835522 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @09:29AM (#26341865) Homepage Journal

    I just can't see how you can have very many episodes on Make. Maybe if they threw in autoconf, gcc, and a few other tools, then they could have good show...

    • It'll be like the flood of 'battle robots' shows from the late 90s.

      They have a contract that all nerds need to remain off-camera for those shows, don't they? Only the frat-boys allowed on screen.

      • It'll be like the flood of 'battle robots' shows from the late 90s.

        This is actually not such a bad idea.

        With an "emacs" robot vs. a "vi" robot, we might be able to finally resolve that issue once and for all.

        Up next, "make" vs. "scons", then "git" vs. "subversion".

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by elrous0 ( 869638 ) *
      Are you kidding? Any show that shows our nation's soon-to-be unemployed masses how to make their own flamethrowers is GOING to be a hit.
    • My first thought was of Makefiles too. I just can't imagine a show based upon that. Still. Make can be mysterious... and it scares most of the guys here... Kinda like the X-files... full of mysterious cross functionality just popping up from nowhere.

      .foo.bar:
              tr '[A-Z][a-z]' '[N-Z][A-M][n-z][a-m]' < $< > $@
      .c.o:
              $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $<

      Yeah... I guess that's pretty Scary!!

      --Ray
    • by HermDog ( 24570 )
      I think we can anticipate a lot of production problems with that whole tab requirement....
    • I really want to see Norm Abrams building GNU software.

      Always wear your safety glasses while building!

  • by that this is not und ( 1026860 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @09:33AM (#26341905)

    The whole Make: phenomenon had greater promise than I have seen yielded. Being someone brought up in the era of Popular Electronics, I thought that it would herald a continuation of the hobbyist tradition. However, I have been somewhat disappointed in what I found. Fad gadgets and flashy toys are fine, but remain just an extension of the consumer culture. Where are the schematics? Where is the technical background? Too many Make: articles detail trivial novelty projects.

    The spirit of Popular Electronics lives on in Bob Pease, Jim Williams, and yes in wonderful offbeat Don Lancaster.

    O'Reilly, I had far greater hopes of thee. Still the best row on my bookcase, of course.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Oh, and Steve Ciarcia and his Circuit Cellar, of course. How could I have missed mentioning that? Still a great publication. Make: can only hope to be that good. I just don't see the 'genius' anywhere in it's pages.

    • by ptorrone ( 638660 ) * <pt@adCOLAafruit.com minus caffeine> on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @10:28AM (#26342313)

      @that this is not und - every single volume of MAKE has source code, schematics and our site has tens of thousands of electronics articles.

      while you might say some projects are "novelty" they're not - taking apart a child's toy to understand how it works, how it can be modded and documenting all of it is very important. some articles are to spark the minds of future makers, others are "hardcore" and include hundreds of pages of data sheers on on our site, firmware, schematics and more.

      if you'd like i can provide hundreds of examples of extremely complex and well documented projects that include schematics - on a similar note, MAKE has the largest open source hardware online store on the web. every single kit that's OSH is documented on MAKE and has the source / schematics.

      i think you didn't take a good look around or looks at all of MAKE.

      • In this comment, and elsewhere in this topic, I notice that you preface your comments with "@parent", to make it clear to whom you are responding.

        Unlike most blogs, which are linear in structure, Slashdot uses a nested comment structure. It is already clear which comment you are responding to, based on the physical position & indentation of your comment.

        This isn't intended as a flame of any sort, it's just that, curiously, your mid-six digit userid # would suggest that you've been around long enough to

    • Yeah, I only recently discovered Make magazine, so ordered (rip-off shipping charges - no media mail option) an interesting sounding back issue to see what it was like.

      As you say, it's very light on depth - these generally aren't build-from-scratch projects that require much knowledge or attention span. They're more generally "hardware mashups" designed for instant gratification for the MTV generation. I guess it's a step up from pure consumer culture, but it's hardly really DIY.

      Still, there are some intere

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by vlm ( 69642 )

        The "real DIY" that you're referring to is pretty much based on using wikipedia, google, and downloading manufacturers data sheets. None of that works well in a magazine format.

        On the other hand, a magazine of weird ideas and unusual experiments does provide some fun and inspiration and something to begin moving along the wiki/google/datasheets path. Its difficult to read an issue and not find something new and interesting to think about.

        The intro stuff in Make and "real DIY" complement each other not opp

        • @vlm - "I wish they could do something about the high price"

          that's good feedback, what price would you like to see for a 200+ page quarterly with minimal ads? do you use the digital edition? do you subscribe? those are lower cost ways of getting MAKE.

          it's possible to get MAKE for less than the cost of just about any magazine/book comparable, we also have discount codes.

          if you don't have any money at all we can work something out and get you some MAKEs, and lastly much of the content is online for free, we d

          • by vlm ( 69642 )

            that's good feedback, what price would you like to see for a 200+ page quarterly with minimal ads?

            OK fair enough, a thick, well written magazine seems to deserve a heavier price... Somewhat... The ads are actually pretty cool in that they are very closely targeted toward a "maker mindset" and thus are actually very interesting to me, unlike the ads in most publications.

            Which brings up the good point, that in the old days, america's elite read scientific american, so they had "elite" ad rates, so the magazine was cheap and thick. Now in the modern era, since in my opinion Sci-Am began to suck, not chea

          • by vlm ( 69642 )

            that's good feedback, what price would you like to see for a 200+ page quarterly with minimal ads?

            I hate to give two replies to the same comment, but I came up with a better answer.

            When I got MAKE, my wife thought I was crazy to pay $$.$$ for one copy of a magazine, because to her the magazine industry has moved and magazine now means stuff like Electronic Design and Communications Technology which I get for free because I'm me (although I would pay just to get Bob Pease's column), or those womens magazines that are entirely ads, complementary copy, and a little scare-mongering. So she thinks something

        • Finally, your phrase "hardware mashup" is a fairly accurate way of looking at engineering design work.

          I disagree...there's a spectrum, but a lot of the Make projects seem to be closer to systems integration (hardware mashups) than engineering design.

          Contrast with something like Steve Ciarcia's Circuit Cellar... Back in the day I recall Steve doing an Apple II speech synthesizer project, with his starting point being a phoneme to speech IC. Everything else was built/designed around it, from the circuit desig

    • My Make: articles had schematics and circuit explanations. It was difficult to get the schematic graphics to properly scale using vectors instead of bitmaps. I used Open Office for the schematics in This Old Amp, and the magazine's production path kept mangling the vectors. I got better results after I switched to Adobe Illustrator.

      The makezine.com site has a some of the detailed design information that is missing from the magazine. Authors are encouraged to put anything on the web site that was left out

  • You Tube Shorts (Score:4, Informative)

    by Canazza ( 1428553 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @10:12AM (#26342205)
    MAKE magazine have been doing Youtube shorts for quite a while now, which in itself is just bits of the magazine 'acted out' in fast motion, while leaving out a couple of details, like exact measurments for some things, or model numbers - refering you instead to the magazine (which you have to go buy)
    The fact they have a TV show means it'll probably be just an extension of this philosophy and - call me cynical - will just be another advertising platform (confirmed by the fact that being able to 'view the TV show' links at the top send you to the MAKE Youtube shorts channel)
    • Re:You Tube Shorts (Score:4, Informative)

      by ptorrone ( 638660 ) * <pt@adCOLAafruit.com minus caffeine> on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @10:32AM (#26342359)

      @Canazza - yah that is pretty cynical. go to makezine.tv and you'll see every single part of the show is available for download, there's also full HD downloads as well a direct link to the entire show and there are torrents starting.

      we do not leave out details, we do optimize for the format we are in, in print we suggest folks visit our site for downloads, in video we suggest folks visit our site for a schematic. all of these things work together and we give it away for free. we'd love if you bought a magazine, a kit or visited our maker faire, but it's not required to build the projects we have on Make: television.

      the links to youtube, blip and vimeo go to our video channel, these have additional videos we do that are not part of the TV show, it didn't make sense to do a new channel just for the show, we want everyone to see all we have to offer.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by tcoop25 ( 808696 )
        Also worth noting is that if you subscribe via iTunes they include a PDF version of the actual magazine article. Too many of you are confusing the intent of MAKE. If you are an electrical engineer, this may not be the magazine for you (try Nuts and Volts). If you only want robotics articles, go for SERVO instead. This magazine does a good job of showing you how to build a certain project without turning into a textbook. In many instances I have used MAKE to get me interested in something, and then I br
  • Don't forget Miro (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ruin20 ( 1242396 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @10:16AM (#26342235)
    I'm pretty sure the TV show has been available there longer than on itunes and what not. Of course just about all of Blip.tv [www.blip.tv] is available on Miro [wikipedia.org], as well as just about any rss delivered video.

    Although I hate miro as software, I have to give them credit for getting the concept right (Tivo for internet TV) and having a great library of content feeds (including MAKE and most of the TED series) which makes me happy enough to use it despite it's resource hogging and glitches.

  • Marge: "I'm going to ask you one last time. Are you sure you wont come with us to church ?"

    TV Announcer: "Coming up next: make your own ladder !"

    Homer: "Very sure."
  • Make is an odd niche (Score:4, Interesting)

    by stokessd ( 89903 ) on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @10:58AM (#26342639) Homepage

    Make is not a hardcore magazine that delves deeply into a few areas like "Glass Audio" or "Speaker Builder" tried to do (and sort-of failed at). But rather a liberal arts type of approach where you get a basic understanding of a wide range of topics.

    The above mentioned (and beat to death) PID example is a good illustration of this. Another 12 pages could have been consumed with a cursory introduction to PID control, but they used that space for another project.

    They have a target audience and I suspect are doing quite well hitting that target. But my projects tend to be a bit deeper and more involved than I see on the pages of Make. Shameless plugging: Electrostatic Loudspeakers with active crossover built from scratch. Allegro based stepper driver built from scratch. Etc (http://quadesl.com).

    I let my subscription lapse because it was too fluffy. No I don't want to litter LED thowies everywhere. No I already made 2 liter bottle water rockets in jr high school. They have too many of these sort of projects and not enough hard hitting "worthy" projects like these:

    http://www.softservice.com.pl/corolla/avc/
    http://www.cs.indiana.edu/~willie/lvr.html
    http://www.thebackshed.com/cnc/OtherMachines1.asp
    http://www.bgsoflex.com/megasquirt.html

    But that's just my preference, and I'm already a "Maker" I suppose. They just aren't quite my demographic.

    Sheldon

  • by ptorrone ( 638660 ) * <pt@adCOLAafruit.com minus caffeine> on Tuesday January 06, 2009 @02:14PM (#26345543)

    here's a torrent of the show for those interested, it wasn't in the article/post but there is one:

    http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2009/01/bittorrent_of_make_television_episo.html [makezine.com]

A morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable. -- Thomas Jefferson

Working...