On Sunday morning, I was out for a bike ride. On the way home, I took a shortcut from one road to another and had to walk my bike through a small gate. Once through the gate, I saw on the pavement, beside a blue Volvo, a twenty dollar bill and two singles, flattened out. Found money is always a pleasant surprise, but I realized soon that it meant someone had lost it. I knew there was a young family in this neighborhood and I wondered if in their haste to get the kids in from the car, money had fallen from a pocket.
Nearby where the car was parked, I saw a garage, partially opened. I approached and called inside. Initially, there was no answer, so I called again, a bit louder. “Yes,” came an answer. “Just a minute and I’ll be out,” he continued. A few seconds later, a man my own age emerged. His hands held a clipboard on which sat an HP calculator.
I said hello and told him about the money. It wasn’t his, he said, even though it was his car that was parked outside. The young family lived across the street and weren’t home at this time. So I gave him the money to give to them and he slid it under the clip on his board.
I noticed a blueprint of some sort on his clipboard. “Are you doing some kind of engineering?” I asked. He smiled broadly.
“Well, I’m designing a toy airplane,” he replied and showed me his drawing. He was shy about it, like a kid.
“Really,” I said. “That’s what you’re working on?”
“Yes,” he said. “I’ve got a shop where I like to work.”
“I do MAKE magazine,” I said. “Have you heard of it?”
“Wow. I’m a subscriber. I love MAKE,” he said with a big smile. “I’ve been to Maker Faire each year. It’s wonderful. MAKE’s a national treasure.” I smiled back.
I introduced myself and he told me his name was Mike. He’s a physicist who works at Agilent (a company that was split off from HP). “We’re neighbors,” I said. “I just live around the corner.”
“You know, there’s a maker right over there,” Mike said, pointing to another house. Mike told me that the man makes a widget to monitor home hot water usage. It learns about when you use hot water and then regulates the production of hot water so that you’re not running your water heater all the time.
“You should come back and I’ll show you around my shop,” he said, describing his shop in some detail. “I converted my garage when I moved here. That’s why all our cars are parked outside.”
We exchanged emails, then shook hands and I continued on my way, thinking how you can find makers everywhere, but finding one unexpectedly down the street is truly special.
6 thoughts on “Finding a maker: A true story”
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Good for you. A group of makers in Cinci have started a local hack/makerspace, the KOIpound (http://koipound.com/) and are despearate to find more local makers. Glad it was so easy for you! Congrats.
Any ideas about what the guy was doing for the water heater?
I’ve got a vacation home in a snowy place, and only want it keeping a lot of hot water around when people are actually staying there. I’m hacking the house thermostat with an Arduino ethershield to pay attention to Google Calendar and only heat it up when people are scheduled to be there, but I want to do the same thing with the water heater and have no idea how to start… Temp control is totally analog.
I need to go back and meet the guy who makes the water heater gadget. I’ll post info when I learn more.
I love your application, too. That would be a good Make DIY article.
Thanks.
Dale