On Thu, May 16, 2013 at 11:08 AM, Hol Gaskill <hol(a)gaskill.com> wrote:
Hey Tommy,
I remember writing something on the meeting pad about this. Components
are pretty cheap in bulk and lots of people want to get started with
electronics. I think we could start by having circuit boards made for us
with sudo room branding, then eventually gain the capability to make the
boards ourselves either by etching or by milling (hint: there is already a
mill in sudo room and a few bags of concetrated etchant) but for now let's
just say we have them made offsite in bulk. Or we could just make layout
stencils ourselves and come up with an ingenious alternative to protoboards
like pre-bent wires for deadbugging
https://www.google.com/search?q=dead+bug+circuit+construction&tbm=ischor whatever. I
propose spray-stenciling zip-loc bags for packaging. My
early electronics experiments involved 555 timers and speakers - could make
an instrument somewhat easily with a little experimentation on
scratch-built keys.
A few kits that come to mind:
-basic 555-based tone generator
-basic microcontroller
-sensor modules with power out (DC or AC) for...anything you want, mix
and match
I really think printing bike-mountable lights or sensors or whatever is
a good racket...or should i say bracket.
aaaand i'll show myself the door
May 16, 2013 10:11:45 AM, tommy.york(a)gmail.com wrote:
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.
-----------------
Thomas Riley York (杨德民) 510.926.0510
http://www.linkedin.com/in/tommyyork
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