Month: February 2010

Mercury “beating heart” works with gallium, too

So it turns out, happily, that the mercury beating heart demo I wrote about a couple days ago can also be done with molten gallium, which is vastly less toxic than mercury and requires only slightly higher temperatures. The chemists at the University of Nottingham who produce The Periodic Table of Videos made this very informative video demonstrating the process, which is slightly different from the mercury beating heart demo in that there is no iron nail present. The gallium blob “beats” anyway, but much slower than the mercury with the nail. I bet using a nail would make the gallium version beat just as fast. [Thanks Filip!]

All radio united under autotune

Tim O’Reilly points out this hypnotic demonstration by Lucky Dragons – “PEACE ON EARTH” brings all radio stations together via frequency modulation – two radios with home-made autotune on every signal received. every station is in tune with every other station. even static is in tune. peace on earth. If current trends are any indication, […]

Young Makers at the Exploratorium

Young Makers at the Exploratorium

Last Saturday, we had the first Open MAKE day at the Exploratorium as part of the Young Makers program. The day’s program focused on hands-on activities for building circuits. The program also featured BlinkyBugs and Bristlebots and welcomed their makers, Ken Murphy of Blinkybug.com, and Windell Oskay and Lenore Edman of Evil Mad Scientists Laboratories. […]