Take a tour of Volume 29 with the editors of MAKE.
Chicago-based artist Michael Dinges work is reminiscent of scrimshaw and trench art he decorates the plastic shells of discarded laptops. Page 18
Jeff Stone and his wife, Susan, made a telescope out of hockey sticks. Page 20
Dasparkhotel is a pay-what-you-want travel lodge with five rooms, each built from a 20,000-pound section of 7-foot-diameter concrete drain pipe. Page 21
Brothers Michael and Kenny Ham have a goal: to create cheap electric vehicles that get people interested in renewable energy. Page 22
Multitalented maker Matthew Borgatti built a MIDI-powered organ. Page 23
Andy Cavatorta collaborated with Bjork to design and build gravity harps. Page 24
Mechanical engineering student Charles Guan built a homemade Segway, called the Segfault. Page 25
Make a high-flying air rocket with some foam and a few household items. Page 123
Got a turntable that still turns? Got an old vinyl record? Make this pocket player in a few minutes for less than a penny. Page 155
Reverse engineering guru works to unlock our personal data. Page 32
A look back at the all-mechanical marvels that made fun sounds for over 100 years. Page 36
Surgical roboticist by day, health hardware hacker by night. Page 40
Drop the controller and shred songs using the electrical signals from your arm muscles. Page 44
A wearable device to give your projects a live heartbeat. Page 52
Two systems, EyeWriter and Eyeboard, let people draw, write, and connect using only their eyes. Page 57
The Shadowscope, the Transilluminator, the Light Swirler, and the Brain Scanner give you a personal glimpse into your own eyes. Page 62
Sensebridge makes devices that let people feel direction and see their heartbeat. Page 68
Make a blood pressure tester thats tough, smart, and mobile. Page 70
This ultrasonic bat glove lets you feel things at a distance. Page 78
A roundup of technologies that allow you to mod your bod.
Brain Rave
EEG Your Ride
Choscillator
Sleepers
Last Straw
Future Geniuses
Chem Lab on the Cheap
BioCurious?
DIY DNA
Smart Shoes
Highly Textured
Magnetic Touch
3D-Printable Trautman Hook
Lego My Hand
On Wings of DEMONS
Page 82
Starter robot autonomously navigates with a $2 microcontroller. Page 88
This radiation detector clicks, flashes, logs radioactivity levels, and shares its data with the world. Page 100
Build a metal foam-dart gun that blows away store-bought plastic models. Page 112
History is full of quirky tales of scientists who were first in line to try their own experiments. Page 11
Our favorite events from around the world. Page 15
Makers, lets make education better, together. Page 16
Many students reach their first year of college without much experience with tools. Page 27
For as little as $20, you can begin tracking the atmospheres most important greenhouse gas, water vapor. Page 28
When code doesnt work, we erase it. When stuff doesnt work, most of it goes to landfill. Page 31
Go from handwaving to coding with the Microsoft Kinect SDK. Page 124
Up, up, and away, with Scotch tape and a painters drop cloth. Page 134
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Build a sturdy, multi-position iPad stand for cheap. Page 140
Learn these tricks and turn plain wire into a head-bobbing toy. Page 144
Wash your hands of the toxins found in commercial soaps. Page 147
Make inexpensive linear actuators out of sewing machine bobbins. Page 150
Build a kit electric guitar and finish it like the pros. Page 152
Build your own air-powered muscles with everyday items. Page 156
Customize it and calculate your odds of winning the big teddy. Page 158
Heres a noninvasive hack that takes advantage of ReCon 6.0 Programmable Rovers cool features while adding a fun new function to make a Root Beer Pong Bot. Page 161
Bend PVC like a champ, outsmart your cards, geek out on Lego, and fly a tiny chopper. Page 162
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Everyone loves this robe, and theres room in it for everyone! Page 170
Build the 18th-century tool that replaced faulty pitch pipes. Page 172
Jay Settle combines a 1920s copper still with 21st Century Arduino technology. Page 176