Archive for the ‘Adafruit’ Category

Open Source DIY Retro Gaming Clock

Monday, March 1st, 2010

MONOCHRON - open source retro clock from adafruit industries on Vimeo.

They call it something else (for understandable reasons), but it still satisfies our grumpy old geek rant: “When we were kids, video games had two lines and a dot, and we LIKED IT THAT WAY!”

Hardware hacker “Ladyada” has released an open source retro arcade style table tennis for two clock called the MONOCHRON. According to MONCHRON project page they “wanted to make a clock that was ultra-hackable, from adding a separate battery-backed RTC to designing the enclosure so you could program the clock once its assembled.” It includes a ATmega328 processor (with’Arduino’ stk500 bootloader for easy hacking). It’s completely open source hardware, all firmware, layout and CAD files are yours to mess with.

GeekDad Day at the Wired Holiday Store FTW!

Sunday, December 6th, 2009
GeekDad corner at the Wired Holiday Store.

GeekDad corner at the Wired Holiday Store.

If you’d been following my tweets this weekend, you might have caught on that I was traveling back to New York for something special: the first GeekDad Day at the Wired Holiday Store. With the gracious support of our friends at LEGO, and the awesome help of Lee Magpili and his amazing Mindstorms builds, it all went off fabulously!

We had a great crowd of kids and parents come in, especially considering the day that turned from cold rain to snow. We held a number of build challenges with the loose bricks LEGO had sent us, and winners (based on the highly logical judging of myself and Lee) walked away with some great prizes (including kits from LEGO, some Drawdio kits from Adafruit Industries, and The LEGO Star Wars Visual Dictionary and The LEGO Book from DK Books, all graciously donated!).

If you’re in the greater NYC area, we’ll be doing this again in two weeks, December 19th from 1:00-2:30, at the Wired Holiday Store, 415 W. 13th Street.

More fun than a bucket of bricks!

More fun than a bucket of bricks!

A Visit to Adafruit Industries: the Model for Fab-it-Yourself Gone Pro

Sunday, December 6th, 2009
This machine attaches circuits to boards (and you can buy one too).

This machine attaches circuits to boards (and you can buy one too).

On my way to GeekDad Day at the Wired Holiday Store this weekend, I had the chance to drop in on Limor Fried (aka @ladyada) and Phil Torrone (@ptorrone) at the downtown New York (and I MEAN downtown - three blocks from the WTC) headquarters of Adafruit Industries. A lot of us GeekDads are aware of, and passionate for, the awesome products and kits that Adafruit puts out (both through their own site, and MakerShed) - like the Drawdio, MintyBoost, and TV-B-Gone. But you’d also be blown away by the operation they have set up in a 1,200 sf (or so) loft. It’s really a model for a company that does it all - fab, pack and ship - with their own equipment, and self-designed systems based on a lot of open-source tools.

This machines uses frickin' lasers to etch stuff (and you can buy one too).

This machines uses frickin' lasers to etch stuff (and you can buy one too).

What’s most impressive (beyond the board-fab machine or the Epilog laser), is their setup for processing orders. Everything is completely streamlined - print out a color invoice (with a bar code), fill the box, scan the bar code - shipping label prints and info sends automatically to UPS - seal it up, and toss it into a bin to go out. Even though they’re a bit swamped for the holidays, it still allows what is basically a two-person (for now) operation maintain a thriving fabrication and fulfillment company, all built on easy-to-recreate tech.

I know there’s not a lot GeekDad about it, but it’s pretty geeky, and it’s one of those times where knowing how something is made is actually way cooler than just having the thing. Thanks a ton to Ada and Phillip for hosting me at their shop! Also cool is that each week on Friday nights they live-stream from the loft.  Now, back to earning these awesome merit badges they gave me!

The Arduino and Soldering geek merit badges.

The Arduino and Soldering geek merit badges.