How-To: Kill Your Phone
If you ever get the sneaking suspicion that your phone might be up to no good, then maybe you ought to consider killing your phone by making your own signal-blocking pouch with this resourceful tutorial from Aram Bartholl.
If you ever get the sneaking suspicion that your phone might be up to no good, then maybe you ought to consider killing your phone by making your own signal-blocking pouch with this resourceful tutorial from Aram Bartholl.
If you ever get the sneaking suspicion that your phone might be up to no good, then maybe you ought to consider killing your phone by making your own signal-blocking pouch with this resourceful tutorial from Aram Bartholl.
My job at 3D Systems gives me the 3D tools to tinker at a high level. The highest level, really, considering we’ve got scanning, design, and 3D printing right here. I’m a lucky guy. So when my quadcopter started to show some of its design flaws, I took to a Batcave’s worth of equipment around here that’s just waiting to be used.
Phillip Burgess posted a fantastic new guide to Adafruit’s Learning System. It walks you through how to make your own custom digital point-and-shoot camera.
Andy Gikling built an open-source robot called BBot, a “remote-controlled robot that talks, sees, and serves drinks at the pool!”
Game of Drones have flown their experimental quadcopter through fire, crashed through glass windows, dropped it from great heights, and even blasted it out of the sky. Now this nearly indestructible airframe is available via a Kickstarter campaign.
Jason Kridner, co-founder of BeagleBone.org, took to the Electronics Stage last September at Maker Faire New York and demonstrated cool tricks you can do with the BeagleBone Black.