Category Archives: Florida Inventors

TBMMF Application Deadline Extended to Feb. 22!

The variety of Maker applications rolling in has inspired us to extend our application deadline to February 22. Why? Because we’re curious, and curiosity is good. And because we still have a little room left, and we want to see what other wonderful stuff you can help us fill our space with!

In addition to our fantastic Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire Truck Rally, some remarkable commercial Makers (to be announced soon!), our community Makers include:

The West Central Florida Section of the National Association for Amateur Radio is joining us – “Amateur radio operators (hams) were the original Makers and Hackers,” they tell us. “Using new, used and scavenged parts to make transmitters, receivers, and antennas capable of communication with other hams anywhere on Earth. From microchips and robotics to time and space itself, the Makers within the Amateur Radio ranks build and explore new way to play with the radio spectrum. The Core Purpose of the ARRL: To promote and advance the art, science and enjoyment of Amateur Radio. ”   They’ll have some gear you can try your hand at!

The Tampa Bay Inventors Council is a 28 year old group in Tampa Bay that supports “the inventive spirit in us all”. They help educate new inventors about inventing and spread the innovation concept. Look for some innovative things at their exhibit!

The University of South Florida Robotics Interest Group , who will have on hand a variety of their robots, including four fighting robots from 3lbs all the way up to 220lbs, and an autonomous balance bot.

Our Young Makers with their NetBot invention – “ a generic open robot platform designed to be simple to modify to do whatever you want it to do. The goal of the robot is to be a cost efficient way for you to play with bigger robots. The main feature of the robot is the processor, which can be pretty much any kind of netbook or laptop you happen to have laying around the house.”  They hope to be able to drive it around our Mini Maker Faire .

Plus cars, arts, and more!  Don’t see something you do here – then join us and share what you Make with Tampa Bay!

 

Florida Inventor Launches Doctor Door Stop

Artstarkraft, Inc, a Sarasota company, just announced the launch of a new household safety device called “Doctor Door Stop,” developed by local inventor John Doyle, after his own 7 year old daughter was injured  when a door slammed on her fingers.

“My daughter was screaming, I was crying, and so were the ER nurses. Her injury required nine painful stitches and weeks of recovery,” said Doyle, in a recent PRWeb news release about his product.

Billed as ”the only automatic door holder you just set and forget,” the device requires no installation.  It’s simply placed anywhere on top of a door frame and “the safety arm automatically drops into place, holding the door open to your desired width. When you want the door closed, simply pull the cord and raise the arm. Re-open the door and the arm drops back into place. “

According to Doctor Door Stop, over 300,000 door related injuries require emergency room visits annually.   This simple solution could potentially lower those numbers significantly.

 

 

 

Call for Makers Open through January 31!

Want to be a Maker at the Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire?  If you’re just demoing, it’s free!  We welcome crafts, engineering, music, robots, workshop digital fabrication, energy, demonstrations, performances, projects and anything home made, innovative, instructive, artistic and interesting!

Our  Tampa Bay Mini Maker application is now live, and we’ll accept applications through the end of January!

Applying

The first step to participating in our Mini Maker Faire is to submit an entry that tells us about yourself and your project. Entries can be submitted from individuals as well as from groups such as hobbyist clubs and schools. We’ll want a short description of what you make and what you will actually bring to Maker Faire, along with links to photographs or videos of what you make. We particularly encourage exhibits that are interactive and that highlight the process of making things.   Here’s some of what we’re looking for:

  •  Student Projects
  • Music Performance and Participation
  • 3D Printers and CNC Mill
  • Textile Arts and Crafts
  • Home Energy Monitoring
  • RC Toys
  • Sustainability
  • Green Tech
  • Radios, Vintage Computers and Game Systems
  • Electronics
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Biology/Biotech and Chemistry Projects
  • Food and Beverage Makers
  • Robotics
  • Puppets
  • Kites
  • Bicycles
  • Shelter (Tents, Domes, etc.)
  • Unusual Tools or Machines
  • How to Fix Things or Take them Apart (Vacuums, Clocks, Washing Machines, etc.)

Types of Makers

Makers: Individuals, groups, schools and organizations that would like to demonstrate what they make and/or how it works in an interactive environment. For Maker groups, schools & organizations, we ask that you have one point person to coordinate your group efforts. Makers do not pay a fee to exhibit at Maker Faire for non-commercial exhibits.

Commercial Makers: Individuals who would like to sell products along with demonstrating what they make at their Mini-Maker exhibit. If you are a Maker with a product that you would like to sell at Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire, please let us know us that you are a Commercial Maker on your application.  There is a $75 fee for commercial makers.

Please note, companies or commercial entities do not qualify as Commercial Makers. If you are a company or commercial entity, please see our Sponsor page.

Potato Grower Grows Inventive with E-Sorter

Agsort founder and veteran potato farmer Greg Jones, of St. Augustine, at one time laid claim to being the largest, daily-volume, chip potato shipper in North America,  harvesting, washing, sorting, and loading as many as 4,600,000 pounds of potatoes per day, enough to fill 92  tractor-trailer loads.

These days he’s shipping out high-tech farming equipment, principally his potato sorting invention called the E-sorter, which he debuted at the 2012 Potato Expo in Orlando earlier this month (yes, farmers have expos, too!)

Jones created the E-Sorter, he told the trade magazine, The Packer,  because he wanted to give growers a better option at a better price, noting that there many of the current high-tech sorting and grading machines are designed with the process in mind, but not the grower.

“If the growers can’t afford to buy the machine, it’s no good to anyone,” he told the Packer.

“I started working on this idea while I was still farming,” Jones said at his booth on the Potato Expo trade show floor. “I worked on it for three years then and another five after I got out of growing.”

According to the Agsorter website, “The core of the system is the scanner module. The sealed enclosure of this is approximately the size of a short file drawer and installs/uninstalls in the same way. Inside there is a clear plastic tube, fastened in a vertical position to the top and bottom of the enclosure, with matching holes to allowing the product to pass through, falling straight down from top to bottom. This is where the scanning takes place.”

The machine uses nearly 1,500  infra-red, red, green, and blue LEDs which flash on and off independently 100,000 times per second, enabling it to sort 8-9 potatoes per second per lane – about a large truckload every 30 minutes.

You can see the E-sorter in action in the rather mesmerizing video below.

Miami Inventor invites you to “Touch My Keys”

Miami inventor, Ruddy Ugarte, with his partner  Joaquin Antonio,  has added a new level of usefulness to the plastic screen protector used to cover iPhone and similar products – a raised keyboard.

His invention, called Touch My Keys is a screen protector for the iPhone 4S that doubles as a transparent keyboard, that allows users to feel real buttons.

”Its both, the lack of a physical keyboard and that God forsaken autocorrect that at times causes those embarrassing or awkward text messages.” said Mr. Ugarte in his press release.

Touch My Keys features precision laser cuts of the iPhone’s QWERTY keyboard  with just enough texture that users feel real buttons. Check it out in the video below.

Edison’s Great Grandson Says Edison Would Have Loved New Light Bulb Law

Starting January 1, a new  light-bulb law went into affect nationwide, setting new efficiency standards . The 2007 Energy Independence and Security Act requires 100-watt light bulbs to use 72 percent electricity to produce the same amount of light by Jan. 1, 2012, according to the government’s Energy Star website.

David Edward Edison Sloane, a professor of English at the University of New Haven and the great-grandson of the inventor Thomas A. Edison, who is writing a book titled “Edison’s Daughter,” about his grandmother, Madeleine Edison Sloane, tells CNN he thinks his great-grandfather would approve.

“My great grandfather’s 100-watt incandescent will be replaced with new energy-efficient versions, including CFLs, LEDs, and — yes — new and improved incandescent bulbs. When better lighting is fully implemented throughout our country, we’ll be saving $13 billion a year in electricity costs and we’ll eliminate the need for 30 large power plants, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmental advocacy group.

“And my great-grandfather wouldn’t have it any other way.”

10 Year Old App Maker creates Jack’s Rosters

Inventor’s Digest reports this week on 10 year old north Florida foodball  fan, Jack Templeton, who has created Jack’s Rosters, a college football roster app.

The 99-cent app provides users with all 120 Division I college football team rosters and schedules, as well as 13,152 player profiles. Jack and his father, Tim Templeton, believe Jack’s Rosters is the fastest and most user-friendly roster app on the market.

“My app is so easy to use and has so much cool information, every college football fan should download it,” Jack told Inventor’s Digest.

His whole family is getting in on the app development act, with his little brother and sister helping produce and count laminated rosters and his mom and dad helping with social marketing.  Another Young Maker on his way…

2012 Cade Museum Prize

The Cade Museum Prize is an incentive competition for early-stage inventors and entrepreneurs in Florida.  The primary goal of the Prize is to provide seed capital for projects that are moving in the direction of a product or service that has a practical application.  While we accept all types of entries, the most competitive are those in the early stages that are developing a truly innovative idea.  We also believe in the power of a team and favor ideas with a multi-disciplinary team (or company) formed for the purpose of advancing the idea.

The Prize is open to all Florida residents or Florida-based companies.  At least one of your team members must be a full-time Florida resident or your company headquarters must be in Florida.     The deadline to submit an entry is January 13, 2012.

The Early Bird entry fee of $35 is valid until December 23.  ( After December 23 the fee will increase to $50). Once you click Submit you will be redirected to the payment page.   The entry will not be complete until you complete your payment.

Please e-mail all questions to cadeprize@cademuseum.org

Visit http://www.cademuseumprize.org/ for more details and to access the online registration form.   And learn about the Cade Museum here .

Meet the Young Makers:The NetBot Team

Chris Willingham and Andrew Remmers, both 19,  are former FIRST robotics team members turned mentors, turned inventors who have teamed up on the development of the Netbot. The Netbot got its start as the Skypebotabout a year and a half ago, the brainchild of Chris, who wanted to see if he could create

The Skypebot

his own remotely operated robot.   Tinkering with Vex parts and a Netbook computer, Chris wrote the rudimentary code that allowed anyone using Skype to drive the computer. Beta testers included a friend in California and his sister, who was studying abroad in London at the time.

Eventually, Chris teamed up Andrew, who he knew through the FIRST community and the Skypebot blossomed into the NetBot, “ a generic open robot platform designed to be simple to modify to do whatever you want it to do.

“The goal of the robot”, says Chris, “is to be a cost efficient way for you to play with bigger robots. “

The NetBot

The main feature of the robot is the processor, which can be pretty much any kind of netbook or laptop computer, bringing costs within reach of the everyday hobbyist, but also enabling the creation of a powerful, adaptable machine.   The basic platform consists of a 3-wheeled omnidirectional drive system controlled by an Arduino, with a two foot diameter frame topped by a telescoping center laptop holder that will extend at least four feet in height.   The developers’ goal is to make the robot available for under $1000.

“Since this is a sandbox robot,” says Chris, “you can program it however you want. We’ll provide an API for a variety of languages, but the main framework will be written entirely in JavaScript — that’s right, a full HTML5 robot!–  and the Cloud9 IDE will probably be bundled into the software making it easy to write software for the robot from a web browser.”

If the robot owners don’t like the framework, Chris says, it’s a simple matter of reprogramming the Arduino as needed or desired.

Chris and Andrew, who plan to debut the Netbot at the Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire in March, shared a little of their story with us, and some of their hopes for the Netbot.

TBMMF: Tell us a bit about yourselves.

Andrew: I have been involved with FIRST since 2007 and through the great mentoring of multiple people have become very good at what I do. I first became interested in mechanical engineering in 2009 (my second FIRST FRC game) when my FRC team collaborated with another team here in Florida. I had been on a mission to learn CAD and more about mechanical engineering and a mentor on that team showed me how to do very basic CAD, ever since I have been teaching myself CAD and actually do it professionally part time for a few companies.

Chris: I’m also a former FIRST student.  I currently attend St. Petersburg College and mentor Team Duct Tape, a successful FTC robotics team. I have been involved in FTC for 4 years and before that participated in FLL for 3 years. Throughout my participation in FTC, I taught myself a variety of programming languages, ranging from Java to C/C++ and Python and a couple of years ago, interned at AnyBots, a Telepresence robotics company in Mountain View, California. For the last few years I have been playing around with building a laptop controlled robot.  I eventually showed Andrew a prototype I made out of Vex parts with a laptop strapped to the top. He liked the idea and came up with a good drive system,  and we eventually it turned into a collaborative project. I work on the software, electronics, and budgeting (and a little PR) and he works on the mechanical side of the robot.

TBMMF: Give us some ideas of ways the Netbot might be used.

NB Team: The most practical application we have come up with so far is your basic Telepresence robot. Even though the robot is capable of far more, we have managed to control robots through pretty much every major video chat system including Skype and Google+. We will have Telepresence capability built into the robot so that no programming is required to use it as a Telepresence robot. With a basic Netbook or laptop strapped to the top, it is pretty much the most affordable Telepresence robot you’ll find.

However the robot is capable of far more. With a decent computer strapped to the top, it is possible to do advanced image processing, object tracking, face detection, or even SLAM algorithms .  Or you could have it tell you the weather. The API can be accessed through almost any programming language, so pretty much anything you come up with, you can probably program the robot to do.

TBMMF: What’s your ultimate hope/goal for the Netbot?

NB Team: We would love to see this robot used in Maker Projects. While the robot still costs a bit more than we would like, it is one of the most affordable robots of its size and capability. We would also like to see this robot used in businesses as Telepresence robots, and colleges, as a low cost platform for robotics projects. We are developing this robot because we see an enormous potential for it, and we think others will, too.

TBMMF: Will we see a working model at Tampa Bay Maker Faire?

NB Team: You bet! We hope to have a prototype of the robot finished by the end of January and the API finished by the end of February. We are planning to have a fully programmable prototype of the NetBot running at the Maker Faire drivable through a web browser (and maybe it’ll be able to tell you the weather too). Keep an eye on our site  . We will be posting updates as we continue to develop the robot.

TBMMF: We can’t wait to see what the NetBot Team brings to Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire!

K-9 Koolee is for the Dogs

83 Degrees media reports today on a cool invention – literally! While the weather has been seasonably pleasant in Tampa Bay in recent days, our more usual clime can trend towards hot and sunny with a 50% chance of heat stroke.  Florida dog lovers who enjoy hauling their canine companions along know the risks of overheating, especially for certain breeds.

That’s why long time dog lover Brian McClish, of Tampa,  developed the K-9 Koolee, a portable cooling dog bed.   McClish experimented a while before coming up with a medical grade polymer that holds its temperature over a long period of time – in the case of the K-9 Koolee, up to 8 hours – just right for a day at the beach!