I can't remember exactly from last week, but maybe you brought this up, Marc?

I think this is a really great idea, which could bring in revenue (from the kits), more revenue (from workshops focusing on building the kits, and not necessarily for adults [sudo-kids?]), and members (from people who enjoy the workshops thoroughly).

Though it is currently being done: If I remember correctly, I think people in the community - Mitch Altman? - do workshops like this.  And though an internet "competitor" exists - Maker Shed's kits (http://www.makershed.com/) - and I haven't yet done a significant amount of research about the kind of kits that they offer and so forth, I think it'd be really neat to purchase the parts, design really fun, age-appropriate packaging, sell the kits at some kind of minimal markup online, then above and beyond that have donation-suggested workshops where we guide people through the process of assembling whatever the kit is. Even if other hackerspaces / non-hackerspace entities / for-profit corporations are doing a similar concept, we'll have people interested who are geographically proximate to Sudoroom.

Also, we have ideas: the lock picking class brought in great PR (in my opinion), and I'm guessing that the listserv would have a bunch of great ideas that are quirky, exciting, feasible, etc.

I've always wanted to build a bunch of modular synthesizer modules, but that's kind of a fringe / eccentric interest.

It'd be great to use Sudo-fund for this discussion, if people are interested.
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Thomas Riley York (杨德民) 510.926.0510
http://www.linkedin.com/in/tommyyork