Announcements

New Early Release from O’Reilly: Making Things See (Kinect, Processing, and Arduino)

New Early Release from O’Reilly: Making Things See (Kinect, Processing, and Arduino)

I’m proud to announce that my book, Making Things See: 3D Vision with Kinect, Processing, and Arduino, is now available from O’Reilly. You can buy the book through O’Reilly’s Early Release program here. The Early Release program lets us get the book out to you while O’Reilly’s still editing and designing it and I’m still finishing up the last chapters. If you buy it now, you’ll get the preface and the first two chapters immediately and then you’ll be notified as additional chapters are finished and you’ll be able to download them for free until you have the final book. This way you get the immediate access to the book and I get your early feedback to help me find mistakes and improve it before final publication.

Morse Code Scarf

This is the second awesome Morse code handmade item I’ve seen in just a few weeks! Candace at Crochet Spot posted this tutorial on how to make your own Morse code message scarf. Her’s says “I am me.” If you’re in the mood for more Morse code, take a look at Rebecca Scharlatt’s, and Bust […]

MAKE Volume 28: Toys & Games

MAKE Volume 28: Toys & Games

MAKE Volume 28 hits makers’ passion for play head-on with a 28-page special section devoted to Toys and Games, including a toy “pop-pop” steamboat made from a mint tin, an R/C helicopter eye-in-the-sky, and a classic video game console. You’ll also build a gravity-powered catapult, a plush toy that interacts with objects around it, and a machine that blows giant soap bubbles. Play time is a hallmark of more intelligent species– so go have some fun!

Make: Live 10/12/11 — Toys & Games (video)

Make: Live episode 18 featured makers in MAKE v28, the toys & games issue! Onyx Ashanti performs and talks Xbees and sensors, and Michael Colombo explains his reflective improvement to flashlight tag. David Harris made Charlie’s bear (above), originally designed for his nephew with cerebral palsy. It’s a location aware plush toy with an embedded RFID reader, speaker, Arduino and wave shield to play sounds when it interacts with objects.