Hey sudologists-
It seems that we have become a locus of sorts for bikes in various states
of disrepair, and they're starting to pile up in sudo. Until we (or I) can
get on top of the situation, can we keep the bike population where it's at
by holding off on donations/projects for the time being? Or, can we come up
with a better storage solution for the less likely candidates for immediate
rehabilitation? We're currently at seven bikes in sudo proper, which is
awesome on one hand but slightly overwhelming on the other.
(side note to Jenny- this does not apply to you, I agreed to help you with
your fuzzy blue Grover bike and that's still on...I'm currently waiting on
the tools to get 'er done. Inshallah.)
-chrisbee
I plugged my laptop into this weird power strip thingy, a Datashield Model
85, that is from the Beige era of computing.
i noticed a while later that it was not powered - so i hit the reset
button on the power strip, and it clicked and came back on.
after the third time i figured it was no good, and needed to be repaired
and not used until then, so i was going to unplug it. But i saw something
else was plugged into it, from far away via an extension cord.
The new color laser printer! Oh Noes!! the poor printer was getting
turned on and off repeatedly due to this bullshit powerstrip thing.
So if the laser printer is upset now, it may be because of repeated on and
off, which they don't like. I recommend it be plugged into a reliable
power socket, so it can be on or off, and if left on it can go to sleep
without being suddenly off and on again all the time.
-jake
http://mashable.com/2013/12/20/deltaprintr-3d-printer/?utm_cid=mash-com-g+-…
A College Kid Couldn't Afford a 3D Printer, So He Built One Himself
Deltaprintr Makes 3D Printing Affordable
Show As List
By Samantha Murphy Kelly1 day ago
When college student Shai Schechter didn't have access to an affordable 3D printer on his SUNY Purchase campus in New York, he set out to build his own model — one that would still crank out 3D-printed objects, but at a much lower cost.
"We have a laser- and powder-based 3D printer at school, but it costs about $500 for a bucket of powder and that only lasts for about one or two prints," Schechter said. "It's never used because it is so expensive and classes weren’t offered that much in the curriculum."
He approached his sculpture professor about building a new 3D printer that uses plastic instead, and sought the help of three good friends.
Schecter and his business partners launched a Kickstarter campaign to bring their low-cost design to the masses; the project nearly sold out of preorders in the first week alone. While a new MakerBot 3D printer costs $2,000, the Deltraprintr is significantly less: $475 unassembled or $685 assembled. It's available in two sizes, either 2 feet high (large) or 2.5 feet (extra large).
"We are targeting educational institutions first, so people can learn how to assemble them," Schecter said. "When you buy a MakerBot, and you read a manual about how to use it, you don't learn a lot about how the printer and technology works. This is why we are offering the assembly manual on Kickstarter, too — we want people to really get their hands on it."
The Deltaprintr uses three stepper motors, located under the acrylic platform where the objects are printed. Motors control the carriages that move the hot end and ultimately create the 3D-printed objects. Since a Deltaprintr design doesn't rqeuire as many parts as other 3D printers, the savings are passed on to consumers.
"MakerBot uses belts to move the print head, but ours uses a fishing line," Schechter said. "With the fishing line, you can expand it to make it taller if you want by changing the aluminum rods.
It allows it to go faster than the MakerBot and is more accurate.
It allows it to go faster than the MakerBot and is more accurate."
Although the Deltaprintr team is focusing on getting the product off the ground as an educational tool, it's eying the mass market, too.
"We want it to have a place in education, but it's still for the everyday user," Schechter said. "We have a lot of ideas that we plan to execute in the next year to make the Deltaprintr even better and lower the cost even more."
Image: Mashable, Christina Ascani
Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.
BONUS: I 3D Printed a Gun
Topics: 3D, 3d printer, 3D printing, Apps and Software, Gadgets, kickstarter, Tech
http://mashable.com/2013/12/20/deltaprintr-3d-printer/?utm_cid=mash-com-g+-…
A College Kid Couldn't Afford a 3D Printer, So He Built One Himself
Deltaprintr Makes 3D Printing Affordable
Show As List
By Samantha Murphy Kelly1 day ago
When college student Shai Schechter didn't have access to an affordable 3D printer on his SUNY Purchase campus in New York, he set out to build his own model — one that would still crank out 3D-printed objects, but at a much lower cost.
"We have a laser- and powder-based 3D printer at school, but it costs about $500 for a bucket of powder and that only lasts for about one or two prints," Schechter said. "It's never used because it is so expensive and classes weren’t offered that much in the curriculum."
He approached his sculpture professor about building a new 3D printer that uses plastic instead, and sought the help of three good friends.
Schecter and his business partners launched a Kickstarter campaign to bring their low-cost design to the masses; the project nearly sold out of preorders in the first week alone. While a new MakerBot 3D printer costs $2,000, the Deltraprintr is significantly less: $475 unassembled or $685 assembled. It's available in two sizes, either 2 feet high (large) or 2.5 feet (extra large).
"We are targeting educational institutions first, so people can learn how to assemble them," Schecter said. "When you buy a MakerBot, and you read a manual about how to use it, you don't learn a lot about how the printer and technology works. This is why we are offering the assembly manual on Kickstarter, too — we want people to really get their hands on it."
The Deltaprintr uses three stepper motors, located under the acrylic platform where the objects are printed. Motors control the carriages that move the hot end and ultimately create the 3D-printed objects. Since a Deltaprintr design doesn't rqeuire as many parts as other 3D printers, the savings are passed on to consumers.
"MakerBot uses belts to move the print head, but ours uses a fishing line," Schechter said. "With the fishing line, you can expand it to make it taller if you want by changing the aluminum rods.
It allows it to go faster than the MakerBot and is more accurate.
It allows it to go faster than the MakerBot and is more accurate."
Although the Deltaprintr team is focusing on getting the product off the ground as an educational tool, it's eying the mass market, too.
"We want it to have a place in education, but it's still for the everyday user," Schechter said. "We have a lot of ideas that we plan to execute in the next year to make the Deltaprintr even better and lower the cost even more."
Image: Mashable, Christina Ascani
Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.
BONUS: I 3D Printed a Gun
Topics: 3D, 3d printer, 3D printing, Apps and Software, Gadgets, kickstarter, Tech
Hi Sudo folk.
Happy Holidays. Hope everyone's getting some quality time with friends and family. and Happy New Year to those of you already heading off somewhere for vacation.
2141 Broadway
Looking ahead to 2014, this email is about buying and rental possibilities for the current building 2135-2143 Broadway with actual numbers. If you'd like to get in touch with the landlords directly, you can email Laurie Cooperman Rosen at lscoop(a)comcast.net; or call George Rosen at 510-504-4259.
I wanted to update everyone on a meeting Matt & I had with the landlord earlier this month about the possibilities regarding renting/selling/co-op equity of the building where Sudo Room and the Bay Area Public School are currently located. Matt - please correct any of the information that I may have missed or gotten wrong in the inset text below.
Since the Bay Area Public School and Sudo Room may (or may not) imminently be moving to the Omni or other location, a new list has been created to further discussion and coalition-building that will continue to take place in the current space at http://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/hall. This proposal, to be very clear, does not and will not interfere with any of those plans to move nor with plans to stay at the current location decided by the collective of collectives.
Below are the notes regarding how much the southern section of the 2143-2145 Broadway have been rented for in the past, how much they're willing to rent each room individually, the whole floor as a whole, and a graduated occupancy/rate proposal that gives time to attract other potential collaborators visiting the space, and getting a reduced price for the rental of that whole section of $6,500/month for 3 months. Otherwise, according to the proposal discussed, rental of the floor will go up to the market rental price of $8,500 at the end of that 3 months. The other option that has been discussed is putting together a co-op sale where groups and individuals can buy equity in that section of the building, either as a real estate transaction, or as crowd-funding equity shares. Group and individual ownership will participate in any profits and in the governance of the building.
Peer Production / Sudo Hall
The resulting community will be provisionally called Peer Production. In order to honor the pivotal role that Sudo Room and the other people that first moved into this building have accomplished for the community, the proposed discussion list will be called Sudo Hall. It will also be a priority of the Peer Production project to reach out to the innovative and inspiring stories of the other tenants that are already in the building - including Sound Room, Uptown Kitchen, Yummmeee, and the Pan Theater, among others.
In terms of values, integrating with the community we're in and remaining inclusive to attract a broad spectrum of types of people will take priority over political posturing and ideological orthodoxy. The community invitation to join is intended to be welcoming to for-profit, non-profit, small partnership, crowd-fund equity start-up, cooperative corporation, and any other structure under which people best think they can get done what they want to achieve.
The objective of Peer Production {Sudo Hall} still aspires to the core of Sudo Room's early description:
Doing stuff together to make our community more openly accessible.
Peer Production, I believe, is the common thread of the innovative and socially conscious projects that have emerged.
If you'd like to talk about this further or just find out what's going on - you can join the Sudo Hall mailing list at http://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/hall. We'll take it offline from the sudo-discuss list, but I just wanted to let folks know that this discussion just got started. First order of business is getting more photos and more data about the place. Sudo Room has started a good page at https://sudoroom.org/wiki/2141_Broadway and hopefully there can be more valuable and useful information that will be available through Peer Production and Sudo Hall.
> 2135-2143 Broadway
> Dec. 6, 2013. 5pm.
>
> George Rosen.
> Matt Senate.
> Eddan Katz.
>
> ----
> Sudo-Hall
>
> University used to pay $14,000 for the whole floor.
> EBMC paid $6,500. 8% annual increase.
>
> Sudo Room. $1500
> Robert. $1,000
> Dance Studio. $1,100
> Public School. $950.
> Room next to it. $950.
> Yellow Room $2,500.
> Corner Room. $2,200. (access to roof).
>
> total now at $8,500.
> willing to do $6,500.
>
>
> ----
> extra notes
> building $5.3 million.
> 1.2 million fees.
>
> Buy - income stream. $4 million for whole building.
>
> losing $65,000 per year by them being empty.
>
> $1 million selling price for Sudo Hall wing.
>
>
> Need to do pictures of rooms. & sq. ft.
> send photos.
> Non-profit rental.
>
> $6,500 x 3 mos.
> whole floor - to start with - $13,000.
>
I'm happy that the t shirt idea is spawning all sorts of creative designs! It's like a github source code. Everyone is tweaking the idea
I'm excited to see what weird creative things happen next
Thanks sudoroom. !
Sent from my iPhone
Hi everyone,
Tomorrow (and every Sat.) from 2-5PM at Sudo Room
<http://sudoroom.org>we'll be doing "Today
We Learned <https://sudoroom.org/wiki/Today_We_Learned>," weekly, open,
super chill co-learning. What is co-learning? It means that you bring
something you're working on or something you want to learn more about,
maybe some other folks are interested in it as well and want to
collaborate, or maybe you see what someone else is working on and want to
help with that.
Well what can you bring to learn about? Anything! One time when we were
doing a similar event at LOL space <http://oaklandmakerspace.wordpress.com>,
someone brought a broken clock and we tried to figure out how to fix it.
Many times folks work on programming stuff. Sometimes we follow rabbit
trails and try to explain and understand things like "well how do computers
really work."
If it's a thing to learn, we can learn it. We also have a projector set up
if anyone wants to demo anything - anything - so you should feel free to
bring something that you'd like to share.
See you tomorrow!
Marina
Newly-updated list of attendees tomorrow:
*Sudo Room*: Max Klein, Matt Senate, Jordan Cohen
*SALTA*: Sarah Pritchard
*Bay Area Public School*: Alana Siegel, Lara Durback, and I
Margit Galanter (dancer)
Liz Leger (visual artist)
Ali Tonak (activist)
Katherine Harr (tenants' rights activist)
Best, David
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Lillie Chilen <lillie.chilen(a)gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Dec 18, 2013 at 9:07 PM
Subject: [Double-Union] DU partnership with Lesbians Who Tech (and the
people who love them)
To: doubleunion(a)lists.doubleunion.org
Double Union is partnering with an awesome organization, Lesbians Who Tech,
to get the word out for their first summit<http://lesbianswhotech.org/summit/>,
this February 28th in San Francisco. They're offering Double Union members
and friends a 25% discount for tickets with the code LWTDU.
The event is open to queer women and the people who love them, so feel free
to share the discount code with other technically-inclined people who you
think could benefit!
More details + registration: http://lesbianswhotech.org/summit/
All the best,
Lillie
--
Lillie Chilen
@lilliealbert
('li-lee shuh-'leen)
_______________________________________________
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Doubleunion(a)lists.doubleunion.org
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