What to See, Do, Hear and Hack at the Maker Faire

8-bit CPU

Maker Faire, the largest festival for DIYers, crafters and hackers, happens Saturday and Sunday, May 30 and 31, in San Mateo, California. More than  80,000 people are expected to attend this year to check out what the 600 odd makers have to show, including robotics, music, crafts and food.

bug_makerfaireHere are some of the highlights:

  • Steve Chamberlin’s 8-bit homebrewed CPU.  Nearly 1,253 pieces of wire were individually hand wrapped to create the connection and Chamberlin has built a functional computer based on it. The computer and the CPU will be on display in booth 296 at the main Expo Hall.
  • A group of Disney Pixar’s Wall-E movie aficianados will also be showing their handmade Wall-E robots and other characters from the movie. The hobbyists have  created life-size, fully functional replicas from the scratch that are indistinguishable from their namesakes in the movie. The robots will be on display at booth 147 in the Expo Hall.
  • There will also be interesting musical instruments on display such as the Yotam Mann’s multitouch musical pad. The musical pad has optical lasers, a webcam and some custom software rigged together to provide an inexpensive way to make some cool music. The contraption will be on display at booth 211 in the Expo Hallo.
  • The Bay Area Lego Users Group (BayLUG), which has more than 100 members, will show an entire city constructed of Lego bricks. The exhibit, with individual members responsible for building a single city block, will measure about 2,000 square feet.
  • Other cool exhibits include Daniel Fukuba’s DIY Segway. Fukuba, with some help from other Segway enthusiasts, has created a balancing scooter, first with a wooden frame and then an aluminum frame.  “I started with raw, plain PCB boards and soldered on all the components for the speed controller and the logic controller,” says Fukuba. The project took about two months and $4000. And at the Faire, he will be sharing his expertise on how to do it yourself. Fukuba’s DIY balancing scooter will be on display at A1 in the Bike Town pavilion.
  • We are also eager to see the two-person self-propelled Ferris Wheel where riders use their arm muscles to shift their weight and turn the wheel. This Ferris Wheel is about 20 feet tall, made of plywood and will be in the Midway M2 area.
  • Don’t forget to also check out the CandyFab Project that uses low-cost, open-source fabrication to create 3D sugary confections. A completely new CandyFab machine will be on display at booth number 293 in the Expo Hall cranking out some sweet goodies.

Know of some other cool exhibits or events at the Faire? Post them in the comments below.

And follow @gadgetlab on Twitter, where we’ll be tweeting throughout the weekend with tips on the most interesting, fun and wacky things to see. Stay.

For more on the event, check out O’Reilly’s Maker Faire website.

Photo: Wire wrapped 8-bit CPU/Steve Chamberlin


Lego Geeks Build a Plastic City for Maker Faire 2009

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You’d have to have a heart of hollow plastic to not like Lego. Over the weekend, Wired.com had a chance to visit the Bay Area Lego Users Group, which will be exhibiting its Lego city at this weekend’s Maker Faire in San Mateo. Check out our gallery featuring some of the group’s projects with photos courtesy of Wired.com’s Jim Merithew.

See Also:

Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com


Frank Lloyd Wright Lego Sets

frank-lloyd-wright-lego

Brick by brick, Lego has been building its way out of the near bankruptcy it suffered around the turn of the century. It has done this by a seemingly simple strategy — making awesome product after awesome product. Now it is releasing the almost ridiculously fitting Architecture series, beginning with the Frank Lloyd Wright Collection, six planned sets including the Guggenheim in New York and Fallingwater, the iconic cantilevered waterfall-house outside Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

This, we don’t need to tell you, is inspired. Real bricks turned into Lego bricks. The sets are as yet unpriced, but are unlikely to be cheap. The Lego Taj Mahal, for instance, is $300. What’s better is that this is just the beginning of Lego’s Architecture series, as we can see from the teaser on the product page. We’ll put in a vote for Le Corbusier right now (as a bonus, his buildings should be pretty easy to construct in Lego).

Available now, if you can make it to the Frank Lloyd Wright exhibition at the Guggenheim.

UPDATE. The sets are priced at $45, plus shipping from $10 to $25 depending on how far way from the US you live. I have added a link to the online store below.

Fun Lego Facts:

  • Worldwide, seven boxes of Lego are sold every second.
  • Heo Young-Ho of South Korea left Lego on the top of Mount Everest in 1987.
  • According to Lego, even just two bricks give 24 different combinations.
  • All Legos are made equal. Every brick is compatible from the first brick made in 1958 (the year before the Guggenheim was completed and Wright died) to those made today.
  • The Lego minifig was born in 1974, and it took another 30 years for them to get proper, skin-colored faces when licensed figures dropped yellow for flesh-tone.
  • Kids waste around 5 billion hours a year playing with Lego.
  • I once got a Lego brick stuck in my nose and it took almost half a day to sneeze it out.

Product page [Lego]

Online store [Brick Structures. Thanks, John!]

Frank Lloyd Wright LEGO Sets (and press release) [Prairie Mod via The Coolist]


Lego Sunglasses As Nerdy as They Sound

lego-eyeglasses

Sunglasses = cool. Lego = nerdy. Combining the two would clearly seem to be a recipe for destruction, a physics faux-pas on the same level as crossing the streams or shaking hands with your anti-matter doppelganger. But in reality, the combo actually works, and the universal clock continues to tick.

The thing we like best about the Lego shades is the opportunity for customization. Those bobbled arms could easily be modded to hold laser-pointers, cameras or any other geeky device. The sunnies are a collaboration between Lego itself and the online specs retailer Lynx Optique. The only thing they really need is a Cylon/KITT-style sweeping light across the top. Just sayin’ it would be cool, is all.

Lego sunglasses let you build your own fashion [DVice]


LEGO iMac G4 Junior is iMac G4’s smaller, friendlier sibling

We tend to go a little weak in the knees for anything in miniature, so this iMac G4 “Junior” made with a 7-inch digital photo frame and a bunch of LEGOs sent us into hysterics. DIY-er Bjarne Tveskov says the creation is inspired by the film Luxo Jr., and though it has no functional G4 innards, it does do dislay basic, totally adorable smiley faces. One more shot after the break, and hit the read link for the entire set.

[Via Boing Boing]

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A Stack of Wax: Giant Lego Candles

lego-candles1The Lego shape is simple yet iconic. From afar, it is a single block of plastic with nodules on the top. The internal technicalities are more complex, of course, but these outer aspects can be copied with ease to make anything from awful iPod speakers to brick-shaped hard drives.

Or, of course, a candle. The sheer size of this thing can be seen by the tiny minifigs standing atop. We’re sure that it wouldn’t actually look like Lego for long, either — after a few hours the nubbins would have burned down to the level of the main block, and upon further burning they will just become holes.

The price for this heavy, 7.5” x 3” x 3” bar of wax? A steep $48, and you’ll need to buy few if you want to stack ‘em (you do).

Product page [A Plus via BBG]

See Also:


LEGO MP3 player: another brick in your kid’s wall of sound

So this is pretty out-of-the-ordinary looking. LEGO‘s recently-announced MP3 player — produced through a partnership with Digital Blue — fits in nicely with the rest of the company’s kiddie gadget offerings, though we’ll admit that this is probably the first one we’re truly tempted to check out for ourselves. These bad boys have 2GB of storage, LCD displays, and unlimited attitude. It’s got that sweet brick shape that brings to mind memories of our olden days while staying on top of the latest tech that kids today demand… you know, MP3s of Miley Cyrus and stuff. Right? The MP3 players — in multi-color and pinkish (for girls) — will be available sometime this summer for $39.99

LEGO MP3 player: another brick in your kid’s wall of sound originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Apr 2009 14:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LEGO Boombox looks sweet, still can’t make your kid’s music sound good

The collaboration between LEGO and Digital Blue has already produced a couple of interesting gadgets for the wee ones, so here’s another one to add to the stack. The LEGO Boombox is a decidedley low-techish CD player / AM/FM radio, with two 1 watt speakers, and a few buttons to boot. The saving grace of this little guy is obviously its shape — which is awesome — but we really need to know if its going to come in other colors (like hot pink) before we can think about buying it. This bad boy is going to be available sometime this summer, and it’ll run $39.99

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LEGO Boombox looks sweet, still can’t make your kid’s music sound good originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 17 Apr 2009 11:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Steam powered USB charger keeps your iPod alive with Victorian sensibility

We love this steam powered USB charging device. It’s well built, useful, loud, and totally anachronistic — the same could be said of many of our editors here. According to the inventor, the thing is based on a Jensen #75 steam engine, which is used to drive a Lego Technic motor. The motor, in turn, feeds into a voltage regulator circuit, providing a continuous 5V charge to which ever USB device you might connect to it. This prompts us to ask a few obvious questions, including: “when is someone going to build us an appropriate steampunk PMP to go with the thing?” And, of course, “aren’t Legos awesome?” Video after the break.

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Steam powered USB charger keeps your iPod alive with Victorian sensibility originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Apr 2009 05:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Giant Lego DSi combines grand traditions of enshrining Nintendo products, photographing your diabolical cats

Built from 51,324 Lego pieces and the souls of several misbehaved kittens, this gargantuan DSi currently adorns a window of the Nintendo World Store in NY. While this is spectacular in itself, we’re even more impressed with the mirror images of “NAILS, HAIR, PSYCHIC” hovering menacingly over the scene, speaking of the powers and inherent evil of the cat captured by the DSi’s camera. While there are plenty of Lego / Nintendo mashups out there, we’d say this one definitely wins the price for malevolence.

[Thanks, Kun]

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Giant Lego DSi combines grand traditions of enshrining Nintendo products, photographing your diabolical cats originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 04 Apr 2009 05:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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