Category Archives: Makers

The Robotic Zoo Comes to Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire 2013!

IA robotic zoo critterThe Robotics Zoo is coming to town, and to inanimate reasonTampa Bay Mini Maker Faire 2013, courtesy of Bill Shaw , of Inanimate Reason, and the North Tampa Robotics Club. 

We asked Bill to tell us more about the project, because honestly – animals? robots? What’s not to love?!

“The project started with the North Tampa Community Robotics Club,” said Bill, ” but a couple of my other clubs and after school programs wanted to participate. Some of the exhibit will be made by students from Learning Gate School and my South Tampa Community Robotics Club.”

Each critter in the Robotics Zoo  will be displayed in its habitat, said Bill. ” Some IA zoo critterwill be interacting with each other, some with respond to input from the audience. All of the animals and creatures will exhibit a behavior that responds to some sort of sensory stimulus.”

The prairie dogs, for instance,  will pop out of their warrens periodically, and when they detect a predator, “they get very excited and it gets a little crazy.”

“Mostly, the animals skeletons and behaviors are constructed with LEGO robotics (MINDSTORMS and WeDo) and we’re finishing them using a variety of craft and art materials. 95% of the work is being done by the kids with parents chipping in to help with more technical aspects or the trickier parts of the craft elements.”

The North Tampa Robotics club is for students interested in working with and Bill Shaw with kidslearning about robotics using LEGO MINDSTORMS and WeDo and other technologies. Students work in groups to take on a variety of projects. Other projects have included SUMO robotics, musical instruments using the sensors and programming, and a variety of FIRST LEGO League challenges.

The club meets weekly at Messiah Lutheran church in Carrollwood, and Bill’s started a similar club in South Tampa.  Both clubs are currently enrolling students in robotics summer camp programs. Details on Bill’s community programs is available at http://funwithbots.com .

See you at the Robotics Zoo, at Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire 2013!

FRETS1 Satellite Maker Aims High at Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire

wescapsule_200x150Fresh from showcasing in in Ann Arbor and Detroit’s Maker Faires, Wesley Faler, now in the Tampa Bay area, is bringing his remarkable FRETS1 Satellite to Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire in March. Powered by a homemade miniature ion engine that will actually fly in space, FRETS1 is a TubeSat-style nanosatellite that will fly at 310 kilometers high and over 17,000 miles per hour.

Intrigued, we asked Wesley to tell us more about his project.

“One day I was minding my own business in high school physics class,” he tubesatrelates. ” We were learning about voltage and charge, new yes but not terribly new considering a friend and I had built a particle accelerator years prior. What was new was an idea for using high charge for accelerating particles, something that seemed so much easier to do than using high voltage. So I tinkered and built a basic, and working, ion engine in the barn. (It still hangs in my lab, all wooden and full of steel wool and nails.) It was great fun but college came along then a decade focused on my career.

“In all, it was 15 years before I started tinkering with my own ion engine design again – being inspired by “Lifters” and their stranger cousins Asymmetrical Capacitor Thrusters. It turns out all of the easy things have been done for ion engines, so I’ve been on a quest to find new effects to apply. It’s taken me into some odd corners of physics and I finally found a way to significantly boost the thrust from an ion engine.

“That was well and good until one day I read two Internet articles. The first was from the Interorbital Systems company about their low cost satellite kit and launch package. $8K for most of a small satellite’s parts and it included the launch to orbit! Fantastic, and maybe someday I’d sign up I thought. Then I read an article about MIT’s brilliant idea for a new ion engine. (You see, the world is looking hard at ion engines these days.)

“The article said the engine works in the lab but they wanted to study it for several more years before launching. I thought that seemed ridiculous when they could have several flights per year with this new company, that they should really stop theorizing and start building. Silence. Silence. Sigh. I checked my savings account and opted for a satellite instead of a new car.

“Bottom line, I build a satellite to test an ion engine because I’m never done dreaming.”

We can’t think of a better reason to build a satellite!

 

Featured Maker: Chuck Stephens and his Noise Zoo

poster 3 copyChuck Stephens joined us last year at our inaugural Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire as RedSquid Art Stencils and Design, crafting a poster for us that everyone enjoyed.  This year, he’s gifted us with a new one and added a new component to his Maker exhibit – a Noise Zoo!  Intrigued by the multidisciplinary interests and skills Chuck brings to our Mini Maker Faire, we thought you’d enjoy learning more about him, too.

TBMMF: Tell us about yourself !
CS:  I’m a guy who likes to make things and think about stuff. I make electronic and acoustic instruments, I paint, I scribble in notebooks constantly, I work with metal and wood, I cook, and I read a lot. I learn every day.

My tools are my toys and my work is my play. I treat my brain as a tool and I’m never bored. My mother says that making me sit in the corner or go to time out never worked because I could entertain myself in an empty room.

TBMMF: You brought some stencil art to our inaugural event, but this year you’ve got a “Noise Zoo” – tell us about that. 
CS: In William Gibson’s Neuromancer there is a space station named Zion which is inhabited by Rastafarians. The station has an artificial intelligence that produces an original, computer generated dub reggae soundtrack that constantly changes. That image has stuck with me for years.

I turned 40 last year and instead of buying a sports car or chasing my secretary, I became obsessed with learning electronics. I saw a video of the Atari Punk Console on Make blog and decided to go for it. I was hooked. I bought Forrest Mims’ books and did a bunch of web research, but mostly I just did it. I started learning about analog synthesizers and sequencers and eventually my mind returned to the rasta dub machine from Neuromancer. I started working on ways to add randomness and variety to these circuits while still maintaining some level of musical structure and rhythm.

The Watcher from chuck stephens on Vimeo.

The Noise Zoo is the result of this work. It is a series of analog synth, noise and percussion circuits controlled by various lights, off-set gate sequencers, motion devices, video screens, and other gizmos. The overall effect is musical, shifting, rhythmic sound, what I think of as robot jazz.

TBMMF: What will folks be able to do at your exhibit?
CS: Build a Noise Zoo of your own! I’ve put together a reasonably priced kit with breadboards, components and an instructional booklet that you can use to explore the circuits on your own. I’ve included easy to follow directions for building circuits like the Atari Punk Console, various oscillators, an FM synthesizer, several different LED flashers and more. I’ll be giving a workshop at the Faire explaining the circuits and how I’ve applied them to my projects. Afterwards we can play with some circuits and make some noise. I’m also bringing some of my other musical projects for folks to play with. I can’t wait!

 TBMMF: You seem to make a lot of things – what do you like making best? Or – conversely – what about making anything do you like best? What’s your inspiration?
CS:I describe myself as a little boy chasing butterflies through a field. I just pursue what interests me. My favorite thing to make is the next thing I’m planning to make. I’m always looking for something new. My favorite part is the first hour or so after the project is done when you get to play with it (I make a lot of noisy projects so this is my wife’s least favorite part).

I’m inspired by patterns and rhythms inherent in the world around us- traffic, shifting urban shadows, sunlight through swaying branches, weather patterns and graphed statistics of population, consumption, distribution and other societal factors and cyclic events. My super secret next project involves turning these glacially slow cycles into beats and musical arrangements.
TBMMF: Anything else you’d like to share?
CS: I can’t wait for the Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire!

And we can’t wait for the Noise Zoo! Thanks, Chuck! You can see more creatures from Chuck’s Noise Zoo on his Vimeo channel.

Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire Featured Maker: Upcycled Studio

Upcycled StudiosKen and Diana Swallow are a husband and wife creative team based in Tampa, who will be joining us this year at the Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire with their awesome creations from their Upcycled Studio.  Ken and Diana took a little time to share a bit about their work and creative vision with us here at TBMMF.

TBMMF: So what’s Upcycled Studio?

Upcyled Studio: Ken creates upcycled mixed media assemblage sculpture DIANAandKENswallowusing broken electronics, vintage items and found objects. Diana has a passion for metalsmithing and jewelry design and incorporates found objects in her works. Individually we’ve created an online following and fan base, Ken under the name KenBots and Diana under Diana Swallow Designs. Together we participate in local art shows under the name Upcycled Studio. While different, our work shares the similar theme of upcycling and comes together beautifully at our shows.

TBMMF : What got you started?

Diana: Ken and I both started our artistic endeavors at a very young age. Ken took apart his grandmothers radio to see how it worked and has been taking things apart and putting them back together ever since. His math and science test scores caught the eye of a recruiter when he was in high school and was offered an apprenticeship in electronics, from there they sent him to university for all things computer related. He has been using spare parts to create sculptures for friends and colleagues for nearly 40 years, a few years ago when he was laid off from a job he found he had time on his hands and started tinkering again.

spinnerringI started creating things from anything I could get my hands on from a very young age, scraps of fabric and yarn from my mother sparked my creativity.  My dad had a construction company and on the weekends I’d watch him weld and fabricate things from metal. As an adult I worked for many years in graphic design and after deciding to change career paths a few times, I found myself in a metalsmthing class using those artistic skills and turning jewelry designs that had been in my head for years into actual jewelry.

One day while helping Ken sort through parts I noticed some interesting pieces: trikebikegears, strips of aluminum, saxophone keys and more. Instantly she knew these all had jewelry potential. Combining fabrication skills I learned in metalsmithing I started created upcycled jewelry. Ken was approached by the organizers for the Orlando Mini Maker Faire and asked him to participate so in May of 2012 we packed up the car with our creations and headed to Orlando to see what people would think. The positive feedback was overwhelming. We’ve done about seven or eight shows locally since, and are selling online worldwide.

TBMMF: What keeps you going?

Diana: We motivate each other. We love what we do. Hearing positive feedback. We believe in recycling and upcycling. Yes some stuff is junk but a lot of it still has life.

TBMMF: What’s your favorite part of a build?

Diana: For both of us its seeing the design in our head come together as a real object we can touch with our hands.

TBMMF: What’s your favorite building material?

Diana: For Ken its brass, for me gemstones and gears.

TBMMF: What would you tell other wannabe Makers who might think they don’t have any new ideas?

GE Blue BugDiana : Design is all around you, inspiration is all around you, don’t try to copy something else is doing, put your own spin on it. Trying to copy what someone else has done exactly will lead to frustration. Look at shapes you see in nature or what you’ve seen on TV and think about new ways something like that could work. You don’t know what you can do until you try, start small and take it from there.

TBMMF: What are you looking forward to at the Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire?

Diana: One of our favorite parts of displaying our work has been the light we see in peoples eyes when they recognize something they’ve seen before and seeing it used in a new way. When they see something that they have at home or threw away because they thought it was junk and then realize that what they see as junk, we see as art. We plan on having some parts on display on our table for people to come by and try to identify. Its always fun to see parents bring their kids over and tell them what things are from. Sometimes they get it right, sometimes they get it wrong but its a learning process and a lot of fun.

TBMMF: Anything else you’d like to share?

Diana: Before you throw something away, think about other uses it might have. Keeping things out of landfills benefits us all.

Ken: Is it simply junk or items that were allocated to the landfills and junk yards? Its all about transforming parts of discarded items into something original: in effect breathing new life into them and having fun while doing it.

You can meet Diana and Ken in person at Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire, and see those transformations firsthand.   Thanks, Upcycled Studio, for giving us an inside look at your life and art!

Meet Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire Maker Jamie Cunningham

Backyard workshopJamie Cunningham, aka  the Backyard Mad Scientist, will be showcasing his DIY inventiveness  as a Maker at our  2013 Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire in March, where he’ll be bringing his homemade 3D printer and some of the cool things he’s made with it, like parts for his homemade CNC machine!

Jamie will also have his latest project  ”Monster in a Box” , a Halloween prop that incorporates microcontrollers, stepper motors and electronics.

And he says, “I’m also planning a “top secret” project .”

We asked Jamie to share a bit about his work and rather than repeat himself so soon after a similar interview request, he referred us to his answers for EE Web

Here’s the highlights:

Air Force Tech school is what really inspired his creative enterprise, and over the intervening years, he wound his way from “bomb loader” for the Air Force to circuit board manufacturing to software development and quality control work, finally ending up as a CAM operator, and then tinkerer extraordinaire in his Backyard Workshop Maker’s oasis.

There, he told EE Web,” Recently  after building my CNC machine in the garage, I’ve started to mess around with micro controllers (Parallax Propeller to be exact),” hence the Monster in a Box.

Jamie told EE Web his favorite hardware tool is his home built CNC manchine, learning about CNC-cwhich is also one of his favorite and most challenging builds. But he’s also very fond of his homemade foundry, which while not technically a tool, is totally awesome.    We here at TBMMF have seen his foundry and   He uses the foundry to melt aluminum and cast his own parts “usually that were cut out of foam on the CNC machine.”

Jamie also used his CNC machine recently to cut out some three dimensional foam letters for the looking at CNC made gears-cTEDxYouth@TampaBay event back in December, a process he invited local high school FIRST Tech Challenge Team Duct Tape to come watch and learn about.  The kids had a great time and were totally inspired by Jamie’s mechanical self-sufficiency.

It’s worth quoting Jamie’s remarks on why he likes the CNC machine so much: “ I like it best because it has been the most challenging and also the most rewarding, I can make just about anything I can think up (as long as I can figure out how to model it). The first machine I made, helped me make parts for the second machine – can’t beat that .”

No. You can’t.

Wonder what that “top secret project” is?

You can learn more about Jamie’s projects at his website, Backyard Workshop and see some of his work in the photo gallery there.

Happy New Year!

IMG_0689To celebrate  the New Year, we’ve gone live a day early with our Maker application!

So have at it! Get your Make on!  Wow us with your incredible ingenuity and creativity!

Set our collective minds afire with your amazing DIY inventiveness, and let’s show the world how absolutely amazing Tampa Bay is – not just for our magnificent weather, views,  and recreational opportunities – but for our unstoppable creative, entrepreneurial and inventive productivity, energy and intellect.

makers-apply-here

Exhibits that are interactive or highlight the process of making things are especially desired. Here’s the process… 

ENTRIES

The first step to participating in our Maker Faire is to submit an entry that tells us about yourself and your project. Entries can be submitted by individuals or groups like hobbyist clubs and schools. You can apply as a Maker, Commercial Maker (individual makers primarily selling —$50 booth fee), Workshop or Presentation, or Performer.  The application asks you to to provide a short description of what you make and what you will actually bring to Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire. Photos, links and videos of exhibit  ideas are very helpful. The more we can see and learn about your exhibit, the better your chances of getting Maker space at the Faire.

 Here are just some of the things that we’re looking for:

  • Robotics
  • Kinetic & Installation Art
  • Music Performance
  • Hacks of Any Sort
  • Homesteader Projects
  • Workshops and Speakers
  • 3D Printers & Digital Fabrication
  • Textile Arts and Crafts
  • Student Projects
  • Rockets and RC Toys
  • Sustainability
  • Green Tech
  • Radios, Vintage Computers and Game Systems
  • Electronics
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Biology/Biotech and Chemistry Projects
  • Puppets
  • Kites
  • Bicycles and Human-Powered Machines
  • Shelter (Tents, Domes, etc.)
  • Unusual Tools or Machines
  • How to Fix Things or Take them Apart (Vacuums, Clocks, Washing Machines, etc.)
  • Food and Beverage vendors please write info@ebmakerfaire.com for more information.

Maker Exhibit: Our standard setup for a Maker exhibit is a 10′x10′ space.  If you need more space for your exhibit or project, please let us know. Use this space to display your work and/or demonstrate how you make something.

If you have any questions about participating in Maker Faire, please contact us by email: info@learningis4everyone.org

OTHER WAYS TO PARTICIPATE

Exhibitors and Sponsors: We welcome exhibitors and sponsors at our Mini Maker Faire. For more information about becoming an exhibitor or sponsor, please check out our Sponsor page or contact us at info@Learningis4everyone.org

 Volunteer: For information about volunteering at East Bay Mini Maker Faire, please email us at the above address.

We look forward to seeing you at Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire 2013!

 

Are You Ready?

We are!  Maker applications and ticket sales go live January 2, 2013!  Click here to see what we’re looking for in Maker applications, for a head start on your application.   We’re deeply grateful to our event partners, The Concourse, Pasco County Libraries and Learning is for Everyone, and to our fantastic event planning team who will be working behind the scenes to do everything possible to help Make Your Day, at Tampa Bay Mini Maker Faire 2013

2013 event flyer

Polly Wants a Parking Space

Bird buggyPepper the Parrot provided unique inspiration for  Andrew Gray, a University of Florida electrical- and computer-engineering graduate student.  Wired Magazine reported recently on Gray and his “pet project”.

His parrot (appropriately enough an African “Grey”) is garrulous to the point of being ear splitting, when left alone.   A previous attempt to apply an engineering solution to the problem – a sound activated water gun intended to provide a little negative reinforcement by squirting the squawker – backfired when Pepper decided he liked his sound activated bird bath.  He also became comfortable with a sound activated noisemaker intended to startle him into silence.

Gray reasoned that a bird beak occupied is a bird beak silenced, and the third time was the charm: a joystick operated (by the parrot!), open-loop, two wheel drive, tri-cycle platform powered by a 12v battery and controlled by a microcontroller.

Check out the video below and check out the project specs at Gray’s Bird Buggy site.

All in Knots? Try Super Rope Cinch!

Timothy Bourke, of Estero, FL, is the inventor of the Super Rope Cinch, a device that locks rope in place without the need for knots.

Super Rope Cinch just got a super boost from Walmart, which plans to roll it out soon, according to Naples News.  HomeDepot.com and more than 70 Do-it-Best Hardware stores in the U.S. carry the product, and both  Lowe’s and Home Depot will begin carrying it in stores soon.  In tests, the product lifted more than 750 lbs.  , truly making rope tying – a cinch!

“This is the new bungee cord, Bourke told the Naples News. ” No more bungee cords.”

Chalk one up for another Florida inventor!

10 Yr. Old Tarpon Springs Inventor Win’s Nickelodeon’s “Figure it Out”

10 year old Alanna Meyers, of Tarpon Springs,  the inventor of the “Pain Free Bandage Remover”  was recently awarded the grand prize on Nickelodeon’s Game Show, “Figure It Out”, after stumping the show’s celebrity judges about her invention.

A fifth grader at Safety Harbor Montessori Academy in Clearwater,  Alanna’s Pain Free Bandage Remover was inspired by her long time dislike of the bandage removal process.  At the grand old age of 8, she decided that enough was enough, and experimented with several different combinations of safe, organic ingredients until she hit upon the perfect formula.  Her focus group was her then 2nd grade classroom, where kids and parents alike were immediately sold.

Since then, her product has been featured on “The Doctors”, “Rachael Ray” and several local news programs.  Alanna has applied for a patent trademark hopes to go into full production soon, marketing to childrens hospitals, pharmacies, health food and natural food stores, assisted living and nursing homes, with plans to donate 1% of all sales to the Arts for children.

Way to go, Alanna!